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Turkish Television To Air Film On Armenian Killings

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  • Turkish Television To Air Film On Armenian Killings

    TURKISH TELEVISION TO AIR FILM ON ARMENIAN KILLINGS

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 12, 2006 Wednesday 11:52 AM GMT

    A private television station will broadcast a controversial movie
    on the massacres of Armenians during World War I for the first time
    in Turkey where the subject still arouses nationalist feelings,
    a spokesman for the channel said Wednesday.

    Kanalturk decided to show "Ararat" by Canadian director Atom Egoyan,
    an ethnic Armenian, after a survey of viewers revealed that 72 percent
    of the participants wanted to see the film, the spokesman said.

    "We will show the movie with no cuts or censoring," he added.

    The film's showing, at prime time on Thursday, will be followed by
    a roundtable discussion by Turkish and Armenian intellectuals and
    historians on the killings during the last years of the Ottoman Empire,
    the predecessor of Turkey.

    Even though the Turkish government gave the go-ahead for the showing
    of the film, which was released in 2002, an Istanbul company was
    forced in 2004 to drop plans to screen the movie because of potential
    protests that would have required police presence in theatres.

    Turks have only recently begun to discuss the Armenian massacres
    between 1915 and 1917, one of the most controversial episodes in
    Turkish history.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings.

    Turkey categorically rejects claims of genocide, arguing that 300,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when the
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with Russian troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

    Egoyan's film deals with the estranged members of a contemporary
    Armenian family, who are faced with both Turkey's denial of genocide
    and their own individual plight.
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