The Japan Times - Grief and discontent as Armenia marks WWI mass murders anniversary

EUR -
AED 4.16108
AFN 81.001142
ALL 98.503555
AMD 441.755448
ANG 2.041781
AOA 1037.719215
ARS 1328.335624
AUD 1.769022
AWG 2.039186
AZN 1.92956
BAM 1.949547
BBD 2.286806
BDT 137.608624
BGN 1.954067
BHD 0.427017
BIF 3325.006656
BMD 1.132881
BND 1.47978
BOB 7.826036
BRL 6.426073
BSD 1.132587
BTN 95.716527
BWP 15.504543
BYN 3.706477
BYR 22204.473748
BZD 2.275043
CAD 1.562526
CDF 3254.7678
CHF 0.934618
CLF 0.028082
CLP 1077.630556
CNY 8.237577
CNH 8.235844
COP 4793.164194
CRC 572.075184
CUC 1.132881
CUP 30.021355
CVE 110.597516
CZK 24.93982
DJF 201.335507
DKK 7.464385
DOP 66.669968
DZD 150.387504
EGP 57.579485
ERN 16.99322
ETB 149.370425
FJD 2.560255
FKP 0.845583
GBP 0.84974
GEL 3.109806
GGP 0.845583
GHS 17.344722
GIP 0.845583
GMD 81.003213
GNF 9805.087866
GTQ 8.722178
GYD 237.67187
HKD 8.78614
HNL 29.256661
HRK 7.536034
HTG 147.968009
HUF 404.477179
IDR 18755.813097
ILS 4.115189
IMP 0.845583
INR 95.797807
IQD 1484.074521
IRR 47708.467602
ISK 145.710975
JEP 0.845583
JMD 179.294916
JOD 0.803442
JPY 161.997502
KES 146.705244
KGS 99.070305
KHR 4533.79132
KMF 492.237077
KPW 1019.550457
KRW 1614.117547
KWD 0.347217
KYD 0.943889
KZT 581.22114
LAK 24487.229734
LBP 101506.165127
LKR 339.038528
LRD 226.12303
LSL 21.104967
LTL 3.345104
LVL 0.685269
LYD 6.179899
MAD 10.49303
MDL 19.440987
MGA 5109.294812
MKD 61.556315
MMK 2378.361699
MNT 4048.101269
MOP 9.049235
MRU 45.032185
MUR 51.161044
MVR 17.457405
MWK 1966.682376
MXN 22.217468
MYR 4.887817
MZN 72.504847
NAD 21.105486
NGN 1815.669043
NIO 41.587986
NOK 11.797258
NPR 153.151558
NZD 1.908847
OMR 0.436156
PAB 1.132587
PEN 4.153715
PGK 4.566076
PHP 63.187651
PKR 318.396563
PLN 4.27895
PYG 9071.144762
QAR 4.125387
RON 4.978109
RSD 117.175096
RUB 92.879069
RWF 1605.292821
SAR 4.24948
SBD 9.472358
SCR 16.129551
SDG 680.302723
SEK 10.937204
SGD 1.479996
SHP 0.890267
SLE 25.81846
SLL 23755.936311
SOS 648.008302
SRD 41.743267
STD 23448.355915
SVC 9.909864
SYP 14729.0541
SZL 21.106286
THB 37.815815
TJS 11.937422
TMT 3.965085
TND 3.357577
TOP 2.653318
TRY 43.628902
TTD 7.671529
TWD 36.305109
TZS 3047.450719
UAH 46.98356
UGX 4148.839198
USD 1.132881
UYU 47.655464
UZS 14665.148861
VES 98.263826
VND 29460.578562
VUV 136.409569
WST 3.136268
XAF 653.871269
XAG 0.034749
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.061668
XDR 0.81197
XOF 652.539777
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.499235
ZAR 21.065843
ZMK 10197.307186
ZMW 31.514475
ZWL 364.787321
  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    10

    -2.5%

  • CMSC

    -0.2300

    22.01

    -1.04%

  • RELX

    0.8400

    54.63

    +1.54%

  • GSK

    0.8800

    39.85

    +2.21%

  • RIO

    -1.4800

    59.4

    -2.49%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    9.92

    -0.91%

  • NGG

    -0.0400

    73

    -0.05%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    43.55

    +1.58%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.3

    -0.22%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.76

    +1.84%

  • AZN

    0.0800

    71.79

    +0.11%

  • BCC

    -1.2200

    93.28

    -1.31%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    22.25

    +1.48%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.91

    -0.15%

  • BP

    -0.6100

    27.46

    -2.22%

Grief and discontent as Armenia marks WWI mass murders anniversary
Grief and discontent as Armenia marks WWI mass murders anniversary / Photo: KAREN MINASYAN - AFP

Grief and discontent as Armenia marks WWI mass murders anniversary

A sea of flowers blanketed the cold concrete of the brutalist memorial to the Armenian genocide on the Tsitsernakaberd hill, overlooking the capital Yerevan. Tens of thousands went there on Thursday to mourn the victims of World War I-era mass murders of ethnic Armenians by the Ottoman Empire.

Text size:

But this time, the annual Genocide Remembrance Day was marked not only with grief, but also with some discontent that the Armenian government has stopped vociferously pushing for countries to recognise the massacres as a genocide amid progress in talks with Azerbaijan and Turkey.

According to Yerevan, up to 1.5 million people died between 1915 and 1916, when the Ottoman authorities, struggling on the battlefield, carried out repressions against the Christian Armenian minority, whom it viewed as pro-Russian traitors.

They were either killed or sent on deadly marches into the Syrian desert, deprived of food and water.

Turkey does not recognize this as genocide and denies the murders were systemic. It estimates Armenian deaths at 300,000-500,000 and claims that as many Turks died in civil strife after many Armenians sided with invading Russian forces.

Armenia and its influential global diaspora have long advocated for international recognition and to date, 34 countries, including the United States, France, Germany, Brazil, and Russia, have officially recognized the killings as genocide.

"What our government is even thinking? How can we trust Turkey, which openly supported Azerbaijan during the Karabakh war and still refuses to recognize the genocide?" said 72-year-old Aram Hayrapetyan, as he slowly climbed the hill up to the memorial in a solemn procession.

Relations between Ankara and Yerevan have been strained for decades over the massacres, which Armenia calls a genocide, and the Karabakh conflict, but Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has recently been pushing for a reset.

"We must not abandon the fight for international recognition -- for justice, and to ensure such a thing never happens again," added Hayrapetyan, who used to come to Tsitsernakaberd every year along with his wife, who recently died.

"She's gone, so I'm here for two today and I'll keep coming as long as I have strength in my legs," he told AFP.

This year, the unusual absence of any major official events in Yerevan on Genocide Remembrance Day left many disheartened, especially after Pashinyan recently told Turkish media that seeking genocide recognition was no longer a priority for Armenia.

"We must be strong to make sure their blood wasn't spilled in vain and to keep the memory of them," said Mher Madoyan, a 76-year-old economist with powder-white thick hair, who was wearing a tie.

- Fragile rapprochement -

Over the past four decades, Armenia and its neighbour, Turkic-speaking majority-Muslim Azerbaijan, backed by Ankara, fought two wars over the mountainous region of Karabakh amid a power vacuum left by the Soviet Union's collapse.

Karabakh was internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but was predominantly populated by Armenians.

In a swift offensive in September 2023, Baku regained full control of the region, prompting the exodus of more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians.

Last month, the two former Soviet republics agreed on the text of a long-anticipated peace treaty aimed at ending decades of hostilities, which could also pave the way for normalisation between Armenia and Turkey, which currently have no diplomatic relations.

But some remain sceptical.

"Of course, it would be nice to sign a peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, but I don't trust it," said Marine Balayan, a 65-year-old woman who lay flowers at the memorial.

"I am dubious, even after they sign it, that they won't go against our country again," she said.

"Every day, the Azerbaijanis put more and more humiliating demands on the table. Therefore, I don't think it is realistic to sign a peace agreement now," Aram Petrosyan, a 46-year-old lawyer, told AFP.

On Wednesday night, an Azerbaijani and a Turkish flag were burned as thousands sang patriotic songs accompanied by drumbeats in central Yerevan at a traditional torchlight procession on the eve of the Remembrance Day. The burning of the flags was later denounced by the prime minister's office.

"This is the fire of the souls of the one and a half million Armenians who died in the genocidal hell," said Gegham Manukyan, a lawmaker from nationalist party Dashnaktsutyun.

Y.Watanabe--JT