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ANKARA: Greek Cyprus criminalises denial of 1915 Armenian 'genocide'

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  • ANKARA: Greek Cyprus criminalises denial of 1915 Armenian 'genocide'

    BGN News, Turkey
    April 4 2015

    Greek Cyprus criminalises denial of 1915 Armenian `genocide' claims


    Greek Cyprus on Thursday made it a crime to deny claims that Armenians
    in the Ottoman Empire were victims of a genocide campaign a century
    ago, a move likely to rile Turkey as peace talks on the
    ethnically-split island remain stalled.

    The Greek Cypriot parliament passed a resolution penalizing denial of
    genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, modifying existing
    legislation, which required prior conviction by an international court
    to make denial a crime.

    "Today is a historic day," speaker of parliament Yiannakis Omirou
    said. "It allows parliament to restore, with unanimous decisions and
    resolutions, historical truths."

    The east Mediterranean island, split into a Turkish Cypriot north and
    a Greek Cypriot south after a Turkish military intervention in 1974
    that followed a Greek inspired coup, was one of the first countries
    worldwide in 1975 to recognize the Armenian claims of genocide,
    commemorated annually on April 24.

    Turkey accepts that many Armenians died during the First World War
    years but says the death toll offered by the Armenians, up to 1.5
    million people, is inflated and denies that the deaths resulted from
    an act of genocide. Ankara says Turks were also killed when Armenians
    took up arms in pursuit of an independent state in collaboration with
    the Russian forces then invading the eastern Anatolia. Armenia, on the
    other hand, accuses the Ottoman authorities at the time of
    systematically massacring large numbers of Armenians, then deporting
    many more, including women, children and the elderly and infirm in
    terrible conditions on so-called death marches.

    The issue has long been a source of tension between Turkey and several
    Western countries, especially the United States and France, both home
    to large ethnic Armenian diasporas. Greek Cyprus too has an Armenian
    population.

    The Greek Cypriot government has been at loggerheads with Turkey for
    decades. Greek and Turkish Cypriot populations have lived estranged in
    the south and north respectively since 1974, but seeds of division
    were sown earlier when a power-sharing government crumbled amid
    violence in 1963.

    April 2, 2015 | BGNNews.com with wires | Ä°stanbul


    http://world.bgnnews.com/greek-cyprus-criminalises-denial-of-1915-armenian-genocide-claims-haberi/4810

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