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Rpbert Fisk: The Turks brought whole families up here to kill them

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  • Rpbert Fisk: The Turks brought whole families up here to kill them

    Independent on Sunday (London)
    October 16, 2005, Sunday

    'THE TURKS BROUGHT WHOLE FAMILIES UP HERE TO KILL THEM'
    ROBERT FISK DESCRIBES HIS RETURN TO THE SCENE OF THE ARMENIAN MASSACRE;
    THE GREAT WAR FOR CIVILISATION BY ROBERT FISK FOURTH ESTATE £25

    by ROBERT FISK


    Robert Fisk recovers after being beaten by a mob on a road near
    Quetta, Pakistan, 2001 HUSSEIN MALLA/AP

    Exposed to the air, the bones became soft and claylike and flaked
    away in our hands, the last mortal remains of an entire race of
    people disappearing as swiftly as their Turkish oppressors would have
    wished us to forget them. As many as 50,000 Armenians were murdered
    in this little killing field, and it took a minute or two before
    Ellsen and I fully comprehended that we were standing in a mass
    grave. For Margada and the Syrian desert around it " like thousands
    of villages in what was Turkish Armenia " are the Auschwitz of the
    Armenian people, the place of the world's first, forgotten,
    Holocaust.

    The parallel with Auschwitz is no idle one. Turkey's reign of terror
    against the Armenian people was an attempt to destroy the Armenian
    race. The Armenian death toll was almost a million and a half. While
    the Turks spoke publicly of the need to 'resettle' their Armenian
    population "as the Germans were to speak later of the Jews of Europe"
    the true intentions of the Turkish government were quite specific.
    On 15 September 1915, for example " and a carbon of this document
    exists " the Turkish interior minister, Talaat Pasha, cabled an
    instruction to his prefect in Aleppo. 'You have already been informed
    that the Government... has decided to destroy completely all the
    indicated persons living in Turkey... Their existence must be
    terminated, however tragic the measures taken may be, and no regard
    must be paid to either age or sex, or to any scruples of conscience.'

    Was this not exactly what Himmler told his SS murderers in 1941? Here
    on the hill of Margada, we were now standing among what was left of
    the 'indicated persons'. And Boghos Dakessian, who along with his
    five-year- old nephew Hagop had driven up to the Habur with us from
    the Syrian town of Deir es-Zour, knew all about those 'tragic
    measures'. 'The Turks brought whole families up here to kill them. It
    went on for days. They would tie them together in lines, men,
    children, women, most of them starving and sick, many naked. Then
    they would push them off the hill into the river and shoot one of
    them. The dead body would then carry the others down and drown them.
    It was cheap that way. It cost only one bullet.'
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