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Armenian Genocide Commemoration Highlights Struggle For Caucasus

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  • Armenian Genocide Commemoration Highlights Struggle For Caucasus

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION HIGHLIGHTS STRUGGLE FOR CAUCASUS
    Bill Weinberg

    World War 4 Report, NY
    http://ww4report.com/node/5394
    April 24 2008

    Thousands marched in Yerevan April 24, the 93rd anniversary of the
    start of the mass killing campaign of at least 1.5 million Armenians
    by the Ottoman Empire. More than 10,000, mostly youths and students,
    carried torches and candles, demanding Turkey join several other
    countries around the world in officially recognizing the massacres as
    genocide. After burning a Turkish flag in Yerevan's Freedom Square,
    participants marched to a monument to the victims of the genocide,
    where they laid wreaths and flowers. Many carried flags of the
    23 countries whose governments or parliaments have recognized the
    killings as genocide, including Canada, France, Switzerland and Poland.

    Turkey rejects the killings constituted genocide, saying that 300,000
    Armenians and at least an equal number of Turks were killed in civil
    strife between 1915 and 1917. The dispute remains a major obstacle in
    relations between Turkey and Armenia, which have no diplomatic ties
    and whose border has remained closed for more than a decade. Some
    marchers in Yerevan held banners reading "Save Europe! Keep Turkey
    out of the EU!" (The Austrialian, April 24)

    Turkish media reports highlight recent overtures by Ankara to normalize
    relations. Turkey's Foreign Minister Ali Babacan wrote a letter to
    his Armenian counterpart April 22, saying that Turkey is open to
    dialogue. Yerevan also says it is for dialogue, but calls for the
    re-opening of closed borders first. (Turkish Daily News, April 22)

    In October 2007, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US House of
    Representatives approved a resolution officially recognizing the
    Armenian genocide. The issue is yet to be discussed on the House floor.

    Armenian political scientist Arman Ayvazyan, head of Yerevan's Center
    of Strategic Research, said US reluctance to recognize the genocide is
    due to Washington's need to secure Turkey's cooperation in stabilizing
    northern Iraq. He said the Armenian genocide "should be considered
    not as a historical but as a modern problem," and also linked it to
    the contest over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "The problem of Nagorno-Karabakh emerged as a result of genocide
    of Armenians," he said. "Turkey calls us aggressors, saying that we
    occupied Nagorno-Karabakh... Turkey...occupied the western part of
    our territory and now helps Azerbaijan occupy our eastern lands as
    well." (Today.az, Azerbaijan, April 23)

    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic--known to Armenians as Artsakh--has been an
    unrecognized de facto independent state since a 1994 ceasefire left
    Armenian separatist forces in control there. Negotiations continue
    on the return of Azeri prisoners of war still held by the Artsakh
    authorities. (De Facto News, April 23) A two-day conference on the
    Armenian genocide held at Artsakh State University was pointedly
    entitled "Western Armenia: past and present"--a name clearly implying
    that Turkey's eastern provinces are considered occupied Armenian
    territory. (PanArmenian.net, April 11)
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