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Pope Francis' Armenia "Genocide" Declaration Angers Turkey, Recalls

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  • Pope Francis' Armenia "Genocide" Declaration Angers Turkey, Recalls

    The American Register
    April 12 2015

    Pope Francis' Armenia "Genocide" Declaration Angers Turkey, Recalls
    its Vatican Ambassador

    By Jessica Smith


    Turkey recalled its ambassador to the Vatican on Sunday after Pope
    Francis declared the massacre of Armenians under Ottoman rule 100
    years ago as genocide.

    The Turkish foreign ministry said in a statement that the pope's
    comments were "null and void" to the Turkish people, and withdrew its
    envoy in the Vatican back to Ankara.

    It added that the Turkish people would not recognize the pope's
    statement "which is controversial in every aspect, which is based on
    prejudice, which distorts history and reduces the pains suffered in
    Anatolia under the conditions of the First World War to members of
    just one religion."

    Earlier on Sunday, Francis described the massacre of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians the "first genocide of the 20th century," marking the
    centenary of the mass killing.

    Armenians have long campaigned for recognition that the killings,
    which happened between 1915 and 1917 under the rule of the Ottoman
    Empire, constituted genocide.

    Turkey accepts that many Christian Armenians died in clashes with
    Ottoman soldiers when Armenia was part of the empire ruled from
    Istanbul. But the country denies hundreds of thousands were killed and
    that this amounted to genocide.

    The killings are recognized as genocide by a number of countries
    around the world, but Turkey's allies Italy and the United States have
    avoided using the contentious term.

    The United Nations defines genocide as acts intended to destroy a
    national, ethnic, racial or religious group, in whole or in part.

    Prior the recall of its ambassador, Turkey's embassy to the Vatican
    canceled a planned news conference for Sunday. Instead, the Foreign
    Ministry in Ankara issued a terse statement conveying its "great
    disappointment and sadness" over the pope's statement.

    It said the pope's words signaled a loss in trust, contradicted the
    pope's message of peace and was discriminatory because Francis only
    mentioned the pain of Christians, not Muslims or other religious
    groups.


    http://www.theamericanregister.com/pope-francis-armenia-genocide-declaration-angers-turkey-recalls-its-vatican-ambassador/11692/

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