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Francis Urges 'Frankness' Amid Row Over Armenian 'Genocide' Remarks

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  • Francis Urges 'Frankness' Amid Row Over Armenian 'Genocide' Remarks

    FRANCIS URGES 'FRANKNESS' AMID ROW OVER ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE' REMARKS

    Adnkronos International, Rome
    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency
    April 13, 2015 Monday

    April 13--In a homily on Monday calling for "frankness" and "courage",
    Pope Francis appeared to defend comments calling the World War I
    mass killings of Armenians "genocide" which sparked a diplomatic row
    with Turkey.

    "We cannot remain silent before what we have seen and heard," Francis
    said celebrating mass at the Vatican hotel on Monday.

    "Today, the message of the Church is to take the path of frankness,
    path of Christian courage...of freedom of speech," Francis said.

    Turkey on Sunday withdrew its ambassador to the Holy See after the
    pontiff said at a service in Rome attended by Armenia's president
    Serzh Sargysan and church leaders that the WWI killings "genocide".

    In the mass in the Armenian Catholic rite at St Peter's Basilica,
    Francis said humanity had lived through "three massive and
    unprecedented tragedies" in the last century.

    "The first, which is widely considered 'the first genocide of the
    20th Century', struck your own Armenian people," he said, in a form
    of words used by a declaration by Pope John Paul II in 2001.

    Sargsyan welcomed his comments, saying they sent a powerful message
    to the international community, but Turkey immediately summoned the
    Vatican's ambassador to Ankara for an explanation and later recalled
    its ambassador from Rome.

    In a furious note announcing the recall of its ambassador, the Turkish
    foreign ministry slammed Francis' remarks as biased, "unacceptable"
    and said they "contradict legal and historical facts".

    While Francis did not use his own words to describe the killings
    as genocide, it was the first time the term was spoken aloud in
    connection with Armenia by a head of the Roman Catholic Church in
    Saint Peter's Basilica.

    In 2014, Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan , then the country's
    prime minister, for the first time offered condolences for the mass
    killings of Armenians.

    But he also said that it was inadmissible for Armenia to turn the issue
    "into a matter of political conflict".

    Turkey still blames unrest and famine for many of the deaths and says
    ethnic Turks also suffered in the conflict.

    Armenia says up to 1.5 million people died in 1915-16 as the Ottoman
    Empire was disintegrating. Turkey has said the number of deaths was
    much smaller.

    Most non-Turkish scholars of the events regard them as genocide.

    Among states which formally recognise them as genocide are Argentina,
    Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Russia and Uruguay.

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