Armenia’s president has accused Turkey of an
“utter denial” in failing to recognise the mass killings of Armenians in the
Ottoman empire during the first world war as genocide.
On Wednesday the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan,offered condolences over the massacres, calling them “our shared pain”.
The US hailed the move as historic.
But in a statement on Thursday marking the 99th anniversary
of the start of the killings and mass deportations, President Serzh Sarkisian
made no acknowledgement of Erdogan’s statement and instead accused Turkey of
continuing to ignore the facts.
“The Armenian genocide … is alive as far as the
successor of the Ottoman Turkey continues its policy of utter denial,” he said.
“The denial of a crime constitutes the direct continuation of that very crime.
Only recognition and condemnation can prevent the repetition of such crimes in
the future.”
He said the looming 100th anniversary offered “Turkey a good
chance to repent and to set aside the historical stigma in case if they make
efforts to set free their state’s future from this heavy burden”. He stressed
that the events of 1915 “should not prevent Turks and Armenians from
establishing compassion and mutually humane attitudes towards one another”.
The US state department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said
Washington welcomed Erdogan’s “historic public acknowledgement of the suffering
that Armenians experienced in 1915″.
Thursday was a day of national mourning in Armenia. Requiem
masses were held in churches across the country marking the anniversary. All
national television channels ran live broadcasts of an annual ceremony in which
thousands of Armenians flock to a hilltop memorial above Yerevan to lay flowers
at an eternal flame.
“I came here for the first time with my father when I was a
five-year-old, today I came here with my grandson and he knows what we expect
from the world and from Turkey,” said Narine Balayan, 58, a resident of
Yerevan. “I do hope that when he comes here with his grandchildren all problems
with Turkey will be resolved.”
Commemorations also took place in Istanbul, but on a far
smaller scale, gathering a few hundred people. A group calling itself The
Platform for the Commemoration of 24 April’s Armenian Genocide organised a
rally on the steps of Haydarpasa train station, from where the first Armenians
were deported on 24 April 1915.
The group carried black and white photos of deportees and a
banner that read “We commemorate the victims of Armenian genocide: some wounds
do not heal with time”.
Another demonstration was to be held later in Taksim Square,
which was the scene of mass anti-government protests in June.
Traditionally, thousands of members of the Armenian diaspora
arrive in Yerevan to take part in the ceremony. This year saw many from Syria –
descendants of those who fled Ottoman persecution in 1915 – return to the
ancestral homeland. Sarkisian said the fate of Armenians in Syria was “our open
wound and the issue of our primary concern”.
On Wednesday, young activists of the nationalist Dashnaktsutyun
party burned Turkish flags and led a 15,000-strong torch-lit procession in
Yerevan. They held placards that read “Recognition-Condemnation-Compensation”
and “Turkey still hides behind lies”. One of Dashnaktsutyun’s leaders, Kiro
Manoyan, denounced Erdogan’s statement as an “attempt to deceive us and the
world”.
Erdogan acknowledged that the events of 1915 had “inhumane
consequences” but also said it was “inadmissible” for them to be used as an
excuse today for hostility against Turkey. Using both diplomatic levers and its
influential diaspora abroad, Armenia has long sought international recognition
of the massacres as genocide. More than 20 countries have given such
recognition.
Young activists of the nationalist Dashnaktsutyun party have
on their placards that read “Recognition-Condemnation-Compensation” and
“Turkey still hides behind lies”.
Now let me express my consideration on this matter: Of
course i’m for recognition and condemnation of genocide as recognition should
be the primary issue of Turikish goverment on the looming 100 aniversory of the
massacre against Armenians at the end of 19th and at the begining of 20th
century. They should accept the fault of their preceeding goverment . Secondly
saying condemnation I mean that not only turkey but the world should
denounce and condemn every display of genocide against every nation in the
world, if not different occurance of killing and mansacure should be prevented.
In the long run if a nation holds carnages for the sake of their interests like
it happend in Kenia, Seria, Ukraine and anyhere are displays of genocide in the
small scale. I think EU should pass a new law of not permiting any nation to do
such things. Saying compensation I understand 3 kinds of compensation;
financial, phsychological and teritiorial. If the fist two are possible the
third one is impossible to realize as until EU passes such kind of law. But the
treatment of Sevre in 1920 august should be call into life and have a juridical
power.
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