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Beirut: Armenians Rally Against Turkish UNIFIL Force

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  • Beirut: Armenians Rally Against Turkish UNIFIL Force

    ARMENIANS RALLY AGAINST TURKISH UNIFIL FORCE

    Monday Morning, Lebanon
    Oct 16 2006

    As troops from various countries were traveling or preparing to travel
    to join the reinforced UNIFIL, thousands of Lebanon's Armenians
    rallied in Beirut against Turkish troops taking part in the force,
    on the same day France moved to make denial of the "Ottoman genocide
    of Armenians" a crime.

    Armenian political and religious leaders attended the demonstration,
    which came just two days after the first contingent of Turkish
    peacekeepers arrived.

    The rally took place on Beirut's Martyrs' Square, which honors six
    Lebanese nationalists who were hanged by the Ottomans during World
    War I.

    The crowd, drawn from an Armenian community of about 140,000 people,
    held high banners denouncing the presence of Turkish troops as "an
    insult to the collective memory of the Armenian people", while waving
    Armenian, Lebanese and French flags.

    Overriding widespread opposition, the Turkish Parliament approved a
    government motion on September 5 to contribute troops to UNIFIL.

    In total, Turkey is to deploy some 700 soldiers in Lebanon, including
    troops aboard naval ships. Those who landed last Tuesday were the
    first Muslim peacekeepers to arrive in the country.

    Turkey contests the term "genocide" and strongly opposed the French
    bill. It says 300,000 Armenians, and at least as many Turks, died in
    civil strife when Armenians took up arms for independence and sided
    with invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire fell apart during
    World War I.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their ancestors were slaughtered
    in orchestrated killings, which they maintain can only be seen as
    genocide.

    The French bill must now go to the Senate, or upper house of
    Parliament, for another vote.
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