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World View: Turkey And Armenia Schedule Conflicting WWI Centennial C

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  • World View: Turkey And Armenia Schedule Conflicting WWI Centennial C

    WORLD VIEW: TURKEY AND ARMENIA SCHEDULE CONFLICTING WWI CENTENNIAL COMMEMORATIONS

    Breitbart
    March 5 2015

    A major battle of World War I was the Battle of Gallipoli, which ran
    from April 25, 1915, to January 9, 1916. Turkey has commemorated the
    battle in the past on April 25.

    According to Armenia, Turkey (the Ottoman Empire) committed a genocide
    against Armenians, and the genocide began on April 24, 1915, when the
    Young Turks government began deporting Armenians. Turkey denies that
    there was a genocide. Armenia had scheduled a centennial commemoration
    of the start of the deportations for next month on April 24.

    Turkey responded last month by rescheduling its commemoration of the
    Gallipoli campaign to April 24. Both countries have invited dozens
    of international country leaders to their respective commemorations,
    forcing every government to make a choice.

    So far, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev and Britain's Prime
    Minister David Cameron have already accepted Turkey's invitation;
    meanwhile France's President Francois Hollande plans to attend the
    events in Armenia.

    In this context, Armenia is canceling an American-mediated 2009
    agreement, the "Zurich Protocols," which would re-establish diplomatic
    relations between the two countries, and re-open their mutual borders.

    The agreement was signed in 2009, but neither country has ratified,
    and now Armenia is canceling it once and for all.

    A major reason why the Zurich Protocols were never ratified was
    opposition by Azerbaijan. From 1988 to 1994, Armenia and Azerbaijan
    fought a war over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave of Azerbaijan, which
    has a large Armenian population. Armenia won the war, and gained
    control of about 15% of Azerbaijani territory, creating hundreds of
    thousands of Azerbaijani refugees. That was the time when Azerbaijan
    and Turkey closed their borders with Armenia and imposed a blockade,
    closing off Armenia's trade routes to Europe and Asia.

    Today's Zaman and Daily Sabah (Turkey) and Jamestown and News
    (Azerbaijan)

    http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2015/03/05/world-view-turkey-and-armenia-schedule-conflicting-wwi-centennial-commemorations/

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