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France's Chirac Pays Homage To Armenian "Genocide" Memorial

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  • France's Chirac Pays Homage To Armenian "Genocide" Memorial

    FRANCE'S CHIRAC PAYS HOMAGE TO ARMENIAN "GENOCIDE" MEMORIAL

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 30, 2006 Saturday 7:45 AM GMT

    French president Jacques Chirac attended a solemn ceremony at
    Armenia's monument to the 1915-1917 massacres of Armenians at the
    hands of Ottoman Turks in a move likely to irritate neighboring Turkey.

    Accompanied by his wife Bernadette, Chirac is on the first ever visit
    of a French president to the impoverished Caucasus nation, which is
    at odds with its Turkic neighbors Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    Chirac placed flowers at the towering Tsitsernakaberd monument where
    he was greeted by an honor guard playing mournful music before being
    taken on a tour of a "Genocide Museum."

    France, which has 400,000 citizens of Armenian descent, officially
    recognized the World War I-era events as genocide in 2001, putting a
    strain on its relations with European Union aspirant and fellow NATO
    member Turkey.

    Visiting dignitaries traditionally plant a fir tree at the memorial
    grounds and Chirac paused near a pine planted by slain Lebanese Prime
    Minister Rafiq Hariri, asking to be photographed before planting his
    own sapling.

    France became the first Western power to officially recognize the
    massacres as genocide.

    Many countries, including the United States and Israel, have so far
    refused to label the massacres as genocide.

    Armenians throughout the world have pushed for official recognition of
    the killings, in which they say 1.5 million of their brethren perished,
    as genocide.

    But Ankara argues that 300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks
    died in an internal conflict sparked by attempts by Armenians to win
    independence for eastern Anatolia and secure assistance for their
    bid from Russia -- Turkey's age-old nemesis.

    Armenia is also locked in a stalemate with Azerbaijan over the
    ethnic-Armenian enclave of Nagorny Karabakh, which it gained control
    of in an early 1990s war but which is still internationally recognized
    as part of Azerbaijan.
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