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The Armenian Genocide

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April 25, 2020

Why in news?

This year (2020) marks the 105th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

What is the Armenian Genocide?

  • The Armenian Genocide is called the first genocide of the 20th century.
  • It refers to the systematic annihilation of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1917.
  • Approximately 1.5 million Armenians died during the genocide, something Turkey has consistently denied.
  • The Armenian diaspora marks April 24 as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day.

Why did the Armenian Genocide occur?

  • The Armenian Genocide is a direct result of the developments during the First World War.
  • Although Armenians had always faced discrimination, harassment and persecution in Asia Minor, this heightened around 1908.
  • The Armenians were an educated and wealthy community, characteristics that drew resentment from others.
  • The Armenians in the Ottoman empire were Christians by faith.
  • The Ottoman Caliphate feared that they would bear allegiance to Russia with similar religious affiliations than the Ottoman Empire.
  • Hamidian Massacres (1894–1896) - It is the first state-sanctioned pogrom which is a result of the continued hostility towards Armenians.
  • [Pogrom - An organized massacre of a particular ethnic group]
  • The Hamidian Massacres were a prelude to the Armenian Genocide.
  • But, the reigning monarch, Abdul Hamid II was never held accountable for the massacres.

Who were the Young Turks?

  • In 1908, a political reform movement that called itself the Young Turks formed of intellectuals and revolutionaries.
  • It led a rebellion against Abdul Hamid II in an attempt to overthrow the monarchy in favour of a constitutional government.
  • When the monarchy was overthrown, Armenians believed they may finally get a chance at equality in the state.
  • However, as the political ideology of the Young Turks changed, they became less tolerant of Armenians.
  • The Russo-Turkish wars and the conflict in the Balkans and Russia further increased hostilities against the Armenians.

What happened during World War I?

  • After the World War I broke out in November 1914, the Ottoman Turks participated in the war, siding with Germany.
  • The Armenians began organising volunteer battalions to fight for Russia against the Ottoman Turks.
  • This resulted in the Ottoman Turks engaging in a mass-removal campaign of Armenians from the border areas along the Eastern Front.

  • On April 24, 1915, Ottoman Turkish government officials executed many Armenian intellectuals.
  • It was the start of the Armenian Genocide.
  • As the Armenian were forced to walk for days in the deserts of Syria and Arabia, many died in the journey.
  • They faced brutality in concentration camps across Syria and Iraq.
  • Armenians in villages were burned in large groups and were intentionally drowned in the Black Sea.

What happened in the aftermath?

  • Many documents and evidence pertaining to the Armenian Genocide were destroyed a few years before and after the end of the war.
  • Many Armenians were displaced.
  • They fled to countries around the world seeking refuge.
  • Diplomats posted in the region during the Armenian Genocide had documented the occurrences in personal diaries and official records.
  • Displaced Armenians were not permitted to reacquire the property that they were forced to leave behind during the genocide.

Does Turkey recognise the Armenian Genocide?

  • Turkey has dismissed the use of the term “Armenian genocide”.
  • In 2007, then Turkish Prime Minister, called for an alternative term to be used for the ‘Genocide’ - 1915 Olayları, the ‘Events of 1915’.
  • In Turkey, intellectuals who have openly written about the Armenian Genocide have faced violence, arrest and have even been killed.
  • As of 2020, 32 countries and Parliaments have formally recognised the Armenian Genocide.
  • Only Turkey and Azerbaijan openly deny its occurrence.
  • Remaining countries, including India, have not officially recognised the Armenian genocide.

 

Source: The Indian Express

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