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Armenia hails Cypriot haven for Ottoman-era refugees

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  • Armenia hails Cypriot haven for Ottoman-era refugees

    Agence France Presse -- English
    November 24, 2006 Friday 4:09 PM GMT

    Armenia hails Cypriot haven for Ottoman-era refugees

    LARNACA, Cyprus, Nov 24 2006


    Armenian President Robert Kocharian on Friday laid the foundation
    stone for a memorial marking the spot where Armenian refugees landed
    in Cyprus after fleeing Ottoman Turkish persecution.

    Around 200 members of the Armenian community in Cyprus attended the
    symbolic ceremony at the marina of the southern resort of Larnaca.

    "I'd like to thank the Cyprus government for funding this memorial at
    this historic point," said Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian.
    "Cyprus gave our people a new home and we express our gratitude for
    that."

    Oskanian is accompanying Kocharian's official visit to a country
    viewed as a close ally of Armenia.

    The Mediterranean town of Larnaca was the first port of call for
    Armenian refugees fleeing the massacres that took place under Ottoman
    rule between 1915-1917.

    At least half of the 3,000-strong Armenian community in Cyprus can
    trace its roots to those refugees who sought a safe haven on the
    island, which was a British colony until independence in 1960.

    "The Armenian diaspora started from Cyprus. Larnaca was the first
    place they came by boat in the 1920s and the Cypriots welcomed them
    openly," Vartkes Mahdessian, the Armenian representative in the
    Cypriot parliament, told AFP.

    "This memorial is a reminder of the criminal act of genocide the
    Ottoman Turks committed," he added.

    Armenians say they were victims of genocide during World War I, but
    Turkey vehemently denies this version of events.

    Cyprus is one of a number countries, along with France, to recognize
    the killings as genocide.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label, arguing that 250,000 to 500,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    The Republic of Cyprus and Turkey do not recognise each other. Ankara
    invaded and occupied the northern third of the island in 1974 in
    response to an Athens-engineered coup aimed at uniting the island
    with Greece.
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