News Mideast Human Rights Group Call on Turkey to Recognize...

Mideast Human Rights Group Call on Turkey to Recognize Armenian Genocide

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The facts of the Armenian Genocide are well known. Encouraged by the cloak of war and alarmed by the crumbling of the Ottoman Empire, the Young Turk leadership saw the Armenian population as a threat to the Empire's future survival, and decided to exterminate their Armenian subjects. Beginning in the spring of 1915, in one of the first genocides of the twentieth century, the Young Turk regime and its state officials presided over the mass deportation and annihilation of up to a million and a half Armenians from different parts of the Empire. Despite wide-scale global recognition of these facts, successive Turkish governments have refused to acknowledge the events of 1915 as genocide or to make any reparations or amends to the survivors. Discussion of the Armenian Genocide remains controversial inside Turkey, and the vast majority of Turks are ignorant about the history and facts of the genocide. 

 

The government of Turkey today presents itself as a model for nations around the world, often championing human rights throughout the region and in the Muslim world. By recognizing the massive crimes and human rights abuses that took place within its own nation, even if a century ago, Turkey could initiate a unique path in a region whose political conflicts have degenerated into bloody ethnic and sectarian conflicts. As activists and representatives of human rights organizations in the Middle East and North Africa, we call upon the Turkish government to now, one hundred years later, acknowledge the scale and magnitude of the atrocities committed against the Armenian people. Without truth, recognition and accountability for past crimes, it is difficult to change course and set a new path for respect, tolerance and protection for minorities in the world today, and especially in the Middle East and North Africa.

 

Signatories:

 

Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights 

 

Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies 

 

Arabic Network for Human Rights Information 

 

El Nadim Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence 

 

Tamkeen for Legal Aid

 

World Amazigh Assembly 

 

Aleppo Compatriotic Charitable Organization 

 

National Federation of Amazigh Associations in Morocco 

 

Lawyers Without Borders

 

________________________

 

http://eipr.org/en/print/pressrelease/2015/04/22/2373

 

?s=96&d=mm&r=g Mideast Human Rights Group Call on Turkey to Recognize Armenian Genocide

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The facts of the Armenian Genocide are well known. Encouraged by the cloak of war and alarmed by the crumbling of the Ottoman Empire, the Young Turk leadership saw the Armenian population as a threat to the Empire's future survival, and decided to exterminate their Armenian subjects. Beginning in the spring of 1915, in one of the first genocides of the twentieth century, the Young Turk regime and its state officials presided over the mass deportation and annihilation of up to a million and a half Armenians from different parts of the Empire. Despite wide-scale global recognition of these facts, successive Turkish governments have refused to acknowledge the events of 1915 as genocide or to make any reparations or amends to the survivors. Discussion of the Armenian Genocide remains controversial inside Turkey, and the vast majority of Turks are ignorant about the history and facts of the genocide. 

 

The government of Turkey today presents itself as a model for nations around the world, often championing human rights throughout the region and in the Muslim world. By recognizing the massive crimes and human rights abuses that took place within its own nation, even if a century ago, Turkey could initiate a unique path in a region whose political conflicts have degenerated into bloody ethnic and sectarian conflicts. As activists and representatives of human rights organizations in the Middle East and North Africa, we call upon the Turkish government to now, one hundred years later, acknowledge the scale and magnitude of the atrocities committed against the Armenian people. Without truth, recognition and accountability for past crimes, it is difficult to change course and set a new path for respect, tolerance and protection for minorities in the world today, and especially in the Middle East and North Africa.

 

Signatories:

 

Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights 

 

Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies 

 

Arabic Network for Human Rights Information 

 

El Nadim Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence 

 

Tamkeen for Legal Aid

 

World Amazigh Assembly 

 

Aleppo Compatriotic Charitable Organization 

 

National Federation of Amazigh Associations in Morocco 

 

Lawyers Without Borders

 

________________________

 

http://eipr.org/en/print/pressrelease/2015/04/22/2373