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Hundreds Protest in Sydney for Genocide Recognition

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  • Hundreds Protest in Sydney for Genocide Recognition

    Assyria Times
    April 18 2010



    Hundreds Protest in Sydney for Genocide Recognition

    By Raymond Elishapour

    Hundreds of people had amassed outside the Turkish consulate this
    morning, divided by press and Police protesting both for the
    recognition of the Armenian and Assyrian Genocide and its denial.

    Armenians, Assyrians and other Human Rights Activists brought signs
    and their voices to the Sydney suburb of Woollahra ` protesting
    against atrocities committed during the early 20th century. The issue
    was the genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire against (a reported)
    two and a half million people made up of predominantly Armenian,
    Assyrian and Greek people.

    The two sides took up their place outside the consulate and there was
    a bitter and heated shouting match between the two groups. There was
    evident tension as the controversial and disputed genocide issue was
    contested. Among their chants, the Armenian and Assyrian empathisers
    asserted their desire to have justice for the atrocities committed in
    1915 ` shouting that justice was yet to be done for those murdered and
    that their quarrel was not with the Turkish Australian community in
    Sydney but in the Ottoman perpetrators, instigators and officials that
    oversaw the mass slaughter, rape and destruction that characterized
    the closing phases of the Ottoman Empire in Anatolia.

    The opposition to the genocide recognition included anti-Armenian
    chants, jeering and attempts to provoke the demonstrators into
    retaliation. Though separated by a strong police presence, Turkish,
    flag-bearing deniers took to insisting that this first group was
    lying, that there was no evidence and more summarily and
    inflammatorily that the fathers of those that were demonstrating were
    Turks (possibly alluding the rape of women and children during the
    same, alleged genocide). It seemed relatively evident that there was
    little substance to the Turkish denial, whose entire presence reveled
    in chanting slander, inciting violent retaliation and otherwise
    ridiculing the attempts at pressing the cause for recognition and
    acceptance of the otherwise forgotten genocide of 1915 ` 1920,
    encompassing Seyfo.

    If anything this demonstration reflects a resurgence of consideration
    of the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek Genocide in contemporary world
    politics, as progressively there is pressure being placed upon the
    Turkish state to consider its history and in a sense `come clean.'

    The evidence is clear however, that Turkey both nationally and abroad
    is intent on denying and avoiding liability and admission of the
    genocide.

    http://www.assyriatimes.com/engine/ modules/news/article.php?storyid=3416
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