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According To Turkish Newspaper, 65% Of PBS Stations Aired Rond Table

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  • According To Turkish Newspaper, 65% Of PBS Stations Aired Rond Table

    ACCORDING TO TURKISH NEWSPAPER, 65% OF PBS STATIONS AIRED ROND TABLE
    FOLLOWING DEMONSTRATION OF "ARMENIAN GENOCIDE"

    ISTANUL, APRIL 20, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. The film "The
    Armenian Genocide" of Andrew Goldberg was aired on April 17 by the
    Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Citing BBC Radio, the newspaper
    "Marmara" (Istanbul) reported that over 348 TV stations aired
    the film. Prior to the airing, it was announced that many Armenian
    organizations and families have assited with the film making. According
    to the one-hour film, the mass extermination of the Armenians in Turkey
    started in the 1890s under Sultan Abdul Hamid. During their deportation
    in 1915, the Armenians were killed on the orders and decison of the
    central authorities. Such leaders of "The Young Turks" as Enver Pasha,
    Taleat Pasha and Jemal Pasha were sentenced to death and pleaded guilty
    to committing the genocide. It is noted that the Armenian massacres
    are qualified as a genocide. Taner Akcham, of the Minnesota University
    (US), Fatma Myuge Gochek, of Michigan University, historian Halil
    Berktai express their opinions in the film, their position on the
    issue of the Armenian Genocide differing from the official position
    of the Turkish state. The documentary also features some ordinary
    citizens of Istanbul and Eastern Anatolia, telling in Turkish or
    Kurdish what they heard from their grandparents, undelining that,
    to put it simply, these events were massacres. Some young Turks note
    that there is no information about such a genocide in the history of
    Turkey they know and that "the Turkish people is not the one to have
    committed a genocide". At the same time, the Turkish daily "Sabah"
    reported in the April 18 issue that following the demonstration of
    "The Armenian Genocide", 65% of PBS TV stations aired a round table
    with the participation of American Armenian scientist and writer
    Piter Balakian and progressive Turkish intelelctual Taner Akcham,
    from one side, and such deniers of the Armenian Genocide as Turkish
    historian Omer Turan and American historain Justin McCarthy, from the
    other. To recap, prior to it, tens of thousands of Armenians from the
    US and many other countries called on PBS not to broadcast the round
    table, pointing out that the Armenian Genocide is an established fact,
    and the issue of whether it was committed indeed should not be made
    a subject of debate.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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