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  • Armenians mark massacre anniversary

    The Boston Globe
    April 25, 2009 Saturday


    Armenians mark massacre anniversary

    Call on Turkey to recognize WWI deaths as genocide

    By Avet Demourian, Associated Press



    YEREVAN, Armenia - Tens of thousands of Armenians marched through the
    capital yesterday to commemorate the 94th anniversary of the start of
    mass killings by Ottoman Turks, many calling on Turkey to recognize
    the slayings as genocide.

    Armenia and Turkey said Thursday that they are close to restoring full
    relations and reopening their border after 15 years. But neither side
    has indicated how they might resolve the dispute over the killings
    that President Obama yesterday referred to as one of the 20th
    century's ``greatest atrocities.''

    Throngs marched through the Armenian capital with torches and candles
    to mark the anniversary of the rounding-up of a few hundred Armenian
    intellectuals in what was then known as Constantinople - present-day
    Istanbul - by Ottoman authorities. Their arrest was swiftly followed
    by the military's forced evacuation of ordinary Armenians from their
    homes in actions that spiraled into the mass slaughter of the Armenian
    population.

    Armenia says up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Turks in what
    was then the Ottoman Empire, while Turkey says the killings occurred
    at a time of civil conflict and the casualty figures are
    inflated. Scholars widely view the event as the first genocide of the
    20th century.

    Yesterday's procession began with a burning of Turkish flags, and many
    carried placards blaming Turkey for spilling the ``blood of millions''
    and calling on Ankara to acknowledge the killings as genocide. It
    ended in central Yerevan at a monument to the victims of the killings,
    and a liturgy was served at churches throughout the country.

    ``Crimes against humanity don't expire in the memory of nations,''
    President Serge Sarkisian of Armenia said in a
    statement. ``International recognition and condemnation of the
    Armenian genocide . . . is a matter of restoring historic justice.''

    The procession, led by nationalist groups, is an annual event and is
    not expected to affect the reconciliation process.

    The two countries also differ over Azerbaijan's Nagorno-Karabakh
    region, controlled by Armenia after a six-year war that broke out in
    the waning days of the Soviet Union. Turkey - which shares close
    cultural and linguistic relations with Azerbaijan and wants it to
    absorb the region - insists its talks with Armenia proceed in parallel
    with Armenian-Azeri discussions. The United States and European Union
    have urged Turkey and Armenia to resolve their differences.
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