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Today Armenia Commemorates Victims Of 1915 Armenian Genocide

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  • Today Armenia Commemorates Victims Of 1915 Armenian Genocide

    TODAY ARMENIA COMMEMORATES VICTIMS OF 1915 ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    arminfo
    2008-04-24 12:40:00

    ArmInfo. Today, Armenia commemorates victims of 1915 Armenian Genocide
    in Ottoman Turkey. Thousands of people move to Tsitsernakaberd Memorial
    form early morning to put flowers to the Eternal Flame. Representatives
    of the country's authorities: RA president, Parliament chairman, prime
    minister, chairman of the Constitutional Court, parliamentarians,
    ministers, members of different states' diplomatic missions,
    accredit in Armenia and Catholicos of All Armenians will visit
    the Memorial and lay wreathes. The Armenian Genocide was carried
    out in 1878-1922 in the territories of Ottoman Empire (Turkey),
    historically called Western Armenia (now Eastern Anatolia), populated
    mostly with Armenians at that time. The policy, which led to the
    Armenian Genocide, was conditioned, first of all, by the ideology of
    Pan-Turkism characterized by intolerance to non-Turkic peoples. 800
    representatives of the Armenian intellectuals, including the writers
    Grigor Zohrab, Daniel Varuzhan, Siamanto, Ruben Sevak, were arrested
    and then killed in Istanbul on April 24, 1915. Massacre and deportation
    of the Armenians in Western Armenia started in May-June, 1915. Over
    1,5 million Armenians were exterminated during 1915-1923, and 600,000
    escaped Armenians spread over different countries. The Armenians of the
    whole world have been achieving for many years for the world community
    to recognize the fact of Genocide officially. Argentine and Uruguay
    were the first to recognize the Armenian Genocide in1965. Later, the
    Genocide was condemned by the parliaments of Cyprus (1990), Russia
    (1995), Greece (1996) Lebanon (1997) and Belgium (1998). In 2000,
    the Armenian Genocide was recognized by the parliaments of Italy and
    France, and later, by a number of other European countries, as well
    as Head of Vatican - the Pope John Paul II. The Armenian Genocide
    was recognized in 43 of 50 American states. On November 15, 2000,
    the European Parliament adopted a Resolution demanding recognition
    of the Genocide fact by Turkey.
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