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Turks, in first, commemorate massacre of Armenians

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  • Turks, in first, commemorate massacre of Armenians

    Agence France Presse
    April 24, 2010 Saturday 6:21 PM GMT

    Turks, in first, commemorate massacre of Armenians

    istanbul, April 24 2010


    Hundreds of rights activists and artists in Istanbul commemorated the
    1915-17 massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks for the first time
    Saturday, breaking a near century-old Turkish taboo.

    The biggest rally was in Taksim Square, in the heart of modern
    Istanbul, where several hundred people staged a sit-in, holding red
    carnations and candles and listening to recordings of Armenian music.

    Police in riot gear guarded the event and kept at bay a group of
    counter-demonstrators, AFP journalists saw.

    Earlier the Istanbul branch of the IHD human rights association
    organised a rally attended by about 100 people on the steps of the
    Haydarpasa train station from where the first convoy of 220 deported
    Armenians left on April 24, 1915.

    Under the slogan "Never Again" and, again, the watchful eye of the
    police, demonstrators carried black and white photos of some of the
    deportees, most of whom never returned.

    Counter-protesters also gathered near the IHD demo, including former
    diplomats waving the Turkish flag. Forty-two Turkish diplomats were
    killed by the extremist Armenian Asala organisation in the 1970s and
    1980s.

    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 -- which the
    Turkish government fiercely rejects -- the petition speaks of the
    "Great Catastrophe" of the massacres.

    "The genie is out of the bottle," Cengiz Aktar, an Istanbul academic
    who backs the petition, told AFP.

    "These broken taboos concern not just Armenia, but also other hidden
    subjects" such as the rights of minority Kurds, he added.

    He said that despite the police presence, organisers feared a backlash
    from people opposed to the demonstration.

    The Istanbul rallies came as tens of thousands of Armenians marked the
    95th anniversary of the mass killings in the Armenian capital Yerevan,
    amid fresh tensions with Turkey over the collapse of reconciliation
    efforts.

    The dispute about the genocide label has poisoned relations between
    the two neighbours for decades.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan welcomed a statement by US
    President Barack Obama on Saturday which avoided the use of the term
    and instead referred to "one of the worst atrocities of the 20th
    century".

    "President Obama has made a statement which takes into account the
    sensibilities of Turkey," Erdogan was quoted as saying by the Anatolia
    news agency.

    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.

    ba-ms/dk/ach
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