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BEIRUT: Tens Of Thousands Of Armenians March In Beirut To Mark Genoc

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  • BEIRUT: Tens Of Thousands Of Armenians March In Beirut To Mark Genoc

    TENS OF THOUSANDS OF ARMENIANS MARCH IN BEIRUT TO MARK GENOCIDE
    Sebastien Malo

    The Daily Star
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?editi on_id=1&categ_id=1&article_id=114202
    April 26 2010
    Lebanon

    Organizers appalled by absence of Government representatives

    BEIRUT: Tens of thousands of Lebanese of Armenian decent rallied
    Saturday to commemorate the massacres of their relatives at the hands
    of Ottoman Turks almost a century ago, while organizers and political
    leaders expressed their worries at Turkey's growing influence in the
    region and in Lebanon.

    The boisterous crowd of Armenians who gathered at the yearly
    demonstration reaffirmed the claim that 1.5 million Armenians where
    killed in a genocide by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923.

    Sixty-thousand Armenians ignored the political divisions that
    frequently pit them against one another and marched together according
    to organizers.

    The protesters waved banners calling for the recognition of the
    genocide and flags of Armenia and Lebanon as they walked on the coastal
    highway - partially closed for the occasion - under the curious eyes
    of drivers caught in the opposite lane's congested traffic. Several
    troops of scouts, clad with their multicolor uniforms, could be seen
    chanting slogans and drumming as they strolled alongside families
    and dignitaries. They paraded for nearly two hours after a morning
    Mass at the Armenian Catholicostate in Antelias and headed to the
    Bourj Hammoud Municipal Stadium where they listened to speeches by
    Armenian political and social leaders.

    "This march is very important because 10 decades after the Ottomans
    committed the first genocide, authorities are still denying it took
    place," said 64-year-old Mardig, a teacher and businessman of Armenian
    descent whose parents settled in Sidon in 1920.

    For the Armenians whose relatives have been compelled to live in
    exile, universal recognition of the genocide has become a crucial
    quest. "Everybody knows the reality, but because of economic reasons,
    great powers are denying it happened," said Mardig, his son at his
    side. Since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in 1922 and the
    subsequent creation of modern day Turkey, authorities in Ankara
    have persistently denied the contentious accusations of genocide
    and claimed that both Turks and Armenians were killed as a result of
    their empire's chaotic breakdown.

    So far, only 20 countries - including Lebanon - have assigned the
    stigmatizing label of genocide to the massacres, often as a result
    of the large number of Armenian descendents among their population.

    Ankara has generally responded with hostility when countries have
    passed resolutions recognizing the genocide. Last month, such a
    declaration by the US House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs
    Committee saw Turkey reconsider its ties with Washington.

    Several organizers and political leaders said that with Lebanon's
    Parliament having already passed a resolution recognizing the genocide
    in 2000, they hoped the government would now curtail its growing
    economic ties with Turkey, and that it would show less contempt toward
    its Armenian population.

    With Turkey's growing importance in the region, Armenians accuse the
    Lebanese government of increasingly taking decisions that please their
    Turkish counterparts, but are unpopular among the Armenian community.

    In 2008, for instance, the Lebanese government stripped Martyrs Day -
    a tribute to the killing of Lebanese intellectuals by the Ottomans -
    from the list of public holidays celebrated in the country, a move
    many Armenians have yet to stomach.

    During a speech in Bourj Hammoud Municipal Stadium, Armenian Tashnag
    Party MP Hagop Pakradounian warned his Armenian audience against the
    growing influence of Turkey in the Middle East and in Lebanon. "We
    demand not to fall to Turkey's ambitions in the region. Turkey
    is trying to take a role of mediator, but that is only a cover to
    ... take control of the Middle East. We won't let Turkey go too far,
    especially in Lebanon," he said.

    Organizers said they were particularly appalled by the absence of
    representatives of the heads of the government's executive branch,
    which they said they perceived as a snub. "I'm very upset," said Krikor
    Khasholian, a member of the manifestation's organizing committee. "We
    sent them an invitation and expected they would [reply]."

    "The Lebanese are keener to establish relations with Turkey than
    to respect their Lebanese citizens," added Maral Joulouyan, another
    organizer.

    Several protesters at the rally said this year's march was particularly
    significant given the current peace talks between Armenia and
    Turkey. The talks are hugely unpopular among the Armenian Diaspora,
    which objects ways in which border issues are being discussed,
    and given Ankara's refusal to recognize the genocide as part of the
    process. "The talks have been a slap in the face of the whole Armenian
    Diaspora," said Rafi, an engineer at the march.

    The event was organized by the Central Committee of the Commemoration
    of the Armenian Genocide in Lebanon, which comprises all Armenian
    political parties, organizations and associations.
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