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Armenia Court Reference To Killings Angers Turkey

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  • Armenia Court Reference To Killings Angers Turkey

    ARMENIA COURT REFERENCE TO KILLINGS ANGERS TURKEY

    Reuters
    http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/ne wsdesk/LDE60J1UB.htm
    Jan 20 2010

    Jan 20 (Reuters) - Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on
    Wednesday that a ruling by a top court in Armenia could derail efforts
    to end a century of hostility between the two neighbours.

    Here are some details of the troubled history between the two
    countries.

    NAGORNO-KARABAKH

    Turkey closed its land border with Armenia in 1993 in protest at
    Yerevan's backing for ethnic Armenian rebels fighting for control of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway region of Azerbaijan populated mainly
    by ethnic Armenians.

    Turkey is a close ally of Muslim Azerbaijan and the two countries
    share close cultural and linguistic ties.

    Some 30,000 people were killed in the war, which ended in 1994 with
    Armenian forces occupying Nagorno-Karabakh and seven other, adjacent
    districts of Azerbaijan.

    CONFLICT

    In the late 19th century, the Ottoman Empire's some two million
    Armenians began to assert nationalist aspirations.

    Repression by Ottoman irregulars, mainly Kurds, led to the massacre of
    30,000 Armenians in eastern Anatolia in 1894-1896. Several thousand
    more were killed in Constantinople in August 1896 after Armenian
    militants seized the Ottoman Bank.

    As the Ottomans fought Russian forces in eastern Anatolia in World
    War One, many Armenians formed partisan groups to assist the invading
    Russian armies.

    On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Empire arrested and killed hundreds
    of the Armenian intelligentsia.

    In May, Ottoman commanders began mass deportation of Armenians from
    eastern Anatolia. Thousands were marched towards Syria and Mesopotamia
    and Armenians say some 1.5 million died, either in massacres or of
    starvation and exhaustion in the desert.

    DIFFERING VIEWS

    The Zurich accords signed between the governments of Turkey and
    Armenia in October 2009 call for the creation of a commission of
    international experts to study the events.

    Armenia insists they should be declared a genocide. President Serzh
    Sarksyan said in a speech to mark Armenia's annual Genocide Day that
    securing international condemnation of the killings was a priority
    for his administration.

    Ankara strongly rejects the "genocide" description, saying large
    numbers of both Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks were killed
    during the chaotic break-up of the Ottoman Empire. Use of the term
    genocide has led to court cases under a law which forbids insulting
    the Turkish state.

    WHAT NEXT?

    Armenia's Constitutional Court last week rejected opposition complaints
    over the legality of a government push to end a century of hostility
    with Turkey.

    The ruling means accords calling for the establishment of diplomatic
    relations and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border can move to
    parliament, although there is little sign they will be adopted soon.

    The accords, which need parliamentary approval in both countries,
    have been gathering dust since they were signed by the two governments
    last October, with Turkey facing a backlash from close ally Azerbaijan,
    a key energy supplier to the West.

    Erdogan said on Wednesday the Armenian court's reference to the mass
    killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks -- a position strongly rejected
    by Ankara -- and to a conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan meant
    "the process will be challenged unless this mistake is corrected."

    Sources: Reuters/Dictionary of Twentieth Century History.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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