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Political enemies in Armenia come together to mark massacre by Ottoman Turks

Day after prime minister pushed out of office, government and opposition mark 103rd anniversary

Yuras Karmanau
Tuesday 24 April 2018 14:35 EDT
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Armenian officials lay flowers at the monument to the victims of mass killings by Ottoman Turks
Armenian officials lay flowers at the monument to the victims of mass killings by Ottoman Turks (AP)

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Armenia’s government and the country’s opposition put their differences aside on Tuesday to mark the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians a century ago by Ottoman Turks.

A day after the opposition succeeded in pushing the prime minister out of office, Armenians across the country are commemorating the massacre that began 103 years ago and which Armenians and many historians consider to be genocide.

Turkey, successor of the Ottoman Empire, vehemently denies the claim and insists that the massacre was part of hostilities around the First World War.

Armenia’s acting prime minister and other officials laid flowers at a hilltop memorial complex in Yerevan, the capital of the Caucasus Mountains country, early on Tuesday along with thousands of residents.

Leaders of the opposition and some 10,000 supporters marched to the memorial later. Protesters carried the Armenian tricolour and chanted the name of the protest leader Nikol Pashinian who was leading the procession.

Opposition supporters were celebrating the resignation of Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan on Monday after days of anti-government protests.

“We need a change of government,” said 43-year-old businessman Gregor Adamyan. “We’re tired of pressure and corruption of one clan.”

The protests, which lasted 10 days, mostly focused on people’s frustration with the current authorities.

The coalition of the three parties leading the protest currently holds just 7 per cent of the parliamentary seats and has not taken any stand on relations with Russia, Armenia’s key ally and economic donor.

Ties with Russia did not appear to be at the forefront for most protesters, and many of those marching in Yerevan spoke favourably of Russia.

Ruben Ter-Martirosyan, a 37-year-old unemployed man, wants to see a more balanced relationship between the two former Soviet nations:

“Armenia needs to be a bridge between Russia and Europe, not a vassal of the Kremlin.”

Earlier on Tuesday, a deputy Russian foreign minister earlier met with the Armenian ambassador in Moscow. The ministry said Moscow is following developments in Armenia closely and wishes the country a smooth and peaceful political transition.

The Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a statement on Tuesday offered condolences “to the children and grandchildren of Ottoman Armenians who lost their lives during World War I”.

But in an apparent stab at Armenian authorities, he took the chance to criticise “those who resort to create hatred, grudge and hostility by distorting our common history”.

Russia has recognised the massacre as genocide. Donald Trump last year described it as “one of the worst mass atrocities of the 20th century”, but stopped short of calling it genocide.

AP

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