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Armenians mark mass killings amid fresh tensions with Turkey

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  • Armenians mark mass killings amid fresh tensions with Turkey

    Agence France Presse
    April 24, 2010 Saturday 7:09 PM GMT

    Armenians mark mass killings amid fresh tensions with Turkey

    Yerevan, April 24 2010


    Tens of thousands of Armenians on Saturday marked the 95th anniversary
    of mass killings under the Ottoman Empire amid fresh tensions with
    Turkey over the collapse of reconciliation efforts.

    Despite the political tensions, this year also saw the anniversary
    marked for the first time in Turkey, where rights activists and
    artists in Istanbul broke with taboo and commemorated the massacres.

    Under grey skies in the Armenian capital Yerevan, a stream of people
    marched to lay flowers at a hilltop memorial to the massacres, which
    Armenians insist constituted genocide.

    Turkey fiercely rejects the genocide label and the dispute has
    poisoned relations between the two neighbours for decades.

    Unprecedented reconciliation efforts begun last year fell apart just
    before the anniversary, when Armenia announced on Thursday that it was
    halting ratification of agreements normalising ties.

    President Serzh Sarkisian, who attended a solemn ceremony at the
    memorial, said international recognition that the killings constituted
    genocide was inevitable.

    "We thank all of those who in many countries of the world, including
    in Turkey, understand the importance of preventing crimes against
    humanity and who stand with us in this struggle. This process has an
    inevitable momentum which has no alternative," he said.

    In Istanbul, the IHD human rights group held a rally of about 100
    people outside the Haydarpasa train station, from where the first
    convoy of Armenians were deported on April 24, 1915.

    Hundreds later staged a sit-in at Taksin Square in the heart of the
    city as a strong police deployment kept a close watch.

    Turkish intellectuals and artists signed a petition calling on "those
    who feel the great pain" to show their sorrow. Avoiding an open
    confrontation over the term genocide, the petition speaks of the
    "Great Catastrophe".

    Tens of thousands of Lebanese-Armenians also took to the streets in a
    peaceful demonstration in Beirut, while others blocked a main highway
    into the city.

    In Paris several thousand people urged Turkey to recognise the
    genocide at a rally at the foot of the statue of Armenian priest and
    composer Komitas.

    Renowned French singer of Armenian origin Charles Aznavour later
    kindled the flame of the unknown soldier at the Arc de Triomphe in
    memory of the dead.

    "This is an important moment for us, to remember our parents and
    grand-parents," said 73-year-old Arsene Kalaidjian with tears in his
    eyes, telling AFP that his "father was nine when he was deported".

    Hundreds of protesters also rallied outside the Turkish consulate in
    the southern city of Marseille.

    In Brussels hundreds of Armenians and their supporters marched between
    the Turkish embassy and the EU headquarters shouting "justice for the
    Armenian people".

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were systematically
    killed between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of
    modern Turkey, was falling apart.

    Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says between
    300,000 and 500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil
    strife when Armenians took up arms and sided with invading Russian
    troops.

    The governments or parliaments of many countries, including France and
    Canada, have recognised the massacres as genocide.

    But US President Barack Obama for a second year avoided using the
    politically charged term in a traditional anniversary statement.

    He described the events 95 years ago as "one of the worst atrocities
    of the 20th century" but said he was encouraged by dialogue between
    Turkey and Armenia that would help recognise their "common humanity."

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, quoted by the Anatolia
    news agency, said Obama had "made a statement which takes into account
    the sensibilities of Turkey."

    Ankara recalled its ambassador to Washington in March after a row over
    moves in Congress to brand the massacres as genocide, but returned the
    envoy this month.

    Armenia and Turkey signed a landmark deal in October to establish
    diplomatic ties and reopen their border.

    But ratification of the deal faltered amid mutual recriminations that
    the other side was not committed to reconciliation and Armenia on
    Thursday announced it was removing the agreement from its parliament's
    agenda.

    Yerevan blamed Ankara for stalling ratification and linking the
    agreement with Armenia's conflict with Turkish ally Azerbaijan over
    the breakaway Nagorny Karabakh region.

    burs/dk

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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