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Los Angeles Times: As Centenary Of Armenian Massacre Nears, 'Genocid

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  • Los Angeles Times: As Centenary Of Armenian Massacre Nears, 'Genocid

    LOS ANGELES TIMES: AS CENTENARY OF ARMENIAN MASSACRE NEARS, 'GENOCIDE' DISPUTE SHARPENS

    3:05 21/04/2015 >> SOCIETY

    By Carol J. Williams
    Los Angeles Times

    The Turkish government on Monday offered condolences to descendants
    of Armenians killed in 1915, when the Ottoman Empire embarked on a
    campaign of terror and atrocity that many in the Western world have
    deemed the 20th century's first genocide.

    As Armenians the world over prepare to mark the anniversary of the
    beginning of the massacre that historians say took as many as 1.5
    million lives, Turkey holds fast to its rejection of the label that
    entered the lexicon of inhumanity only three decades later.

    Genocide -- from the Greek and Latin root words for race and killing
    -- was a term first used by Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin in his 1944
    report on "Axis Rule in Occupied Europe," which included proposals
    for redress of the crime defined as "the destruction of a nation or
    an ethnic group." Lemkin used the word in reference to the Holocaust
    but said the Armenian atrocities also came to mind.

    Broader definitions of "genocide" suggest that such annihilations
    are deliberate attempts to wipe out a population, the point where
    modern-day Turkish leaders depart from the growing consensus that
    their Ottoman forebears targeted Armenians for extermination. Ankara
    officials have acknowledged that atrocities were committed in the
    early years of World War I but contend that the Armenian death toll
    has been grossly inflated and that most of those who died succumbed
    to the brutalities of war and dislocation.

    "We once again respectfully remember Ottoman Armenians who lost their
    lives during the deportation of 1915 and share the pain of their
    children and grandchildren," Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
    said in his message of condolence Monday.

    But he criticized what he cast as an Armenian lobby to brand the
    wartime tragedies a concerted campaign of "genocide" for which today's
    Turkish leaders should take responsibility and make amends.

    "To reduce everything to a single word, to load all of the
    responsibility on the Turkish nation ... and to combine this with a
    discourse of hatred is legally and morally problematic," Davutoglu
    said.

    As Christians in a predominantly Muslim empire, the Ottoman
    Armenians were suspected of collaborating with pre-revolutionary
    Russia when World War I broke out, provoking German-allied and
    ultranationalist Ottoman leaders to declare them enemies of the
    state. Savage village-by-village mass killings followed, as did the
    forcible expulsion of the Armenian population from eastern Anatolia
    that pushed hundreds of thousands into death marches into the Syrian
    desert, where they died for lack of food, water or shelter.

    Diplomatic records from embassies in Syria a century ago noted the
    discovery of corpses strewn along desert paths from eastern Anatolia
    and of the arrival of starved, sun-scorched and dehydrated stragglers
    who survived what the Turkish government refers to as "resettlement."

    Pope Francis stirred the decades-old controversy with his reference
    last week to the Armenian slaughter having been "the first genocide
    of the 20th century." Ankara recalled its ambassador from the Holy
    See in protest of the pontiff's description of the atrocities that
    began April 24, 1915.

    Twenty-three countries and 43 U.S. states have acknowledged the
    Armenian massacre as a genocide, and the approaching centennial has
    stirred indications that others, including European powerhouse Germany,
    will follow suit before Friday's memorial observances.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman said Monday that the
    Berlin government would support a parliamentary resolution planned
    Friday declaring that the slaughter of Armenians constituted genocide.

    Most European states have already applied that term and condemned the
    Ottoman crimes. Switzerland, Italy, Greece and Slovakia have made it
    a crime to deny that genocide occurred against the Armenians.

    As a candidate in the 2008 election, President Obama called for
    recognizing the Armenian genocide but has refrained from applying the
    term on behalf of the United States, in a bow to the sensitivities of
    Turks who are key allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and
    in the fight against Islamic extremism. But after the shifts indicated
    by the Vatican and Berlin, analysts have predicted, Obama may yet refer
    to genocide when remembrances for the victims get underway Friday.

    http://www.latimes.com/world/europe/la-fg-armenia-genocide-anniversary-20150420-story.html
    http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2015/04/21/latimes/




    From: A. Papazian
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