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Garegin Insists On Genocide Recognition In Turkey

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  • Garegin Insists On Genocide Recognition In Turkey

    GAREGIN INSISTS ON GENOCIDE RECOGNITION IN TURKEY

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    June 26 2006

    The head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Garegin II, said in Istanbul
    Sunday that Turks committed genocide against Armenians, a statement
    that is likely to increase tensions during the last two days of his
    weeklong visit to Turkey.

    Garegin II, whose official title is Catholicos of All Armenians, has
    been facing protests since his plane landed at the Istanbul airport
    on Tuesday. The protesters included prominent lawyers from the Turkish
    Lawyers' Union, who previously pushed for the prosecution of novelist
    Orhan Pamuk after he said that Turks had killed 1 million Armenians.

    Turkey vehemently denies that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks around the time of World War I was genocide, and several cases
    have been brought against those who say otherwise. The cases have
    been opened under a law making it a crime to "insult Turkishness."

    Armenians say that as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors were
    killing in an organized genocidal campaign by Ottoman Turks, and have
    pushed for recognition of the killings as genocide around the world.

    Garegin II was unreceptive Sunday to Turkey's requests that Turkey
    and Armenia, which are neighbors but have no diplomatic relations,
    open their historical archives to researchers from both countries
    to try to ease tensions and reach an objective conclusion about the
    killings. "For our people research is not an issue. This is something
    that happened and it needs to be recognized," the Dogan news agency
    quoted Garegin II as saying. "The genocide issue has been researched
    for 90 years by academics."

    Garegin II said the protests hadn't affected him. "They didn't break
    my spirit and they don't reflect my visit," he said. "But if these
    kinds of protests continue, it shows that we have a lot of work so
    that these two societies can live together."

    (Armenian Apostolic Church photo: Garegin II, right, and Patriarch
    Mesrob II, the spiritual leader of the Armenian community in Turkey,
    pictured outside an Armenian church in Istanbul.)
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