ArmInfo.Today, April 24, marks the 109th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide committed in Ottoman Turkey in 1915. Today, Armenians all over the world pay tribute to the memory of the Holy Martyrs. On this day in Armenia, citizens bring flowers to the Memorial Complex in Tsitsernakaberd in order to pay tribute to the innocent victims of the first mass murder of people based on ethnicity in human history.
In the evening, torchlight processions were held in Yerevan and in several regions of the country to mark the 109th anniversary of the Armenian massacre.
As a result of the genocide, 1.5 million people were massacred and the same number of people were scattered throughout the world. Thousands of Armenian manuscripts, hundreds of historical and architectural monuments were destroyed, more than 60 Armenian cities and 2.5 thousand villages were burned.
On April 24, 1965, demonstrations were organized in Soviet Armenia demanding recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Thus, the wall of silence created around this issue was destroyed. In 2015, the Armenian Apostolic Church canonized the victims of the Genocide.
The Armenian genocide is recognized and condemned by many countries of the world and influential international organizations. The parliament of Uruguay was the first to officially condemn the massacres of Armenians (1965). The extermination of the Armenians was officially recognized as genocide (according to international law[177]) and also condemned by France (1998, 2000, 2001, 2006, 2012, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland - National Council (lower house of parliament), Sweden, Russia (1995), Poland , Lebanon (2000), Italy, Lithuania, Greece, Slovakia, Cyprus, Argentina (2 laws, 5 resolutions), Venezuela, Chile, Canada (1996, 2002, 2004), Vatican, Bolivia (2014), Austria (2015), Luxembourg (2015), Brazil (2015), Paraguay (2015), Germany (2016), Czech Republic (2017), Portugal (2019), USA (in 35 states by law), Latvia.
The Armenian Genocide was recognized by the European Parliament (1987, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2015), the parliamentary coalition of South American countries (Mercosur), the UN Subcommission on the Prevention of Discrimination and the Protection of Minorities, the Parliament of Latin America (2015). Recognition of the Armenian genocide is not officially a prerequisite for Turkey's entry into the EU, but some authors believe that Turkey will have to do so on the path to EU membership.
The Turkish Republic spends heavily on PR denial campaigns and donates to universities that provide credibility to the Turkish position. Whenever parliaments or governments of different states discuss the recognition of genocide, Turkey threatens them with diplomatic and trade sanctions and repression of its own minorities. In order to destroy traces of the physical presence of Armenians in Turkey, monuments of Armenian architecture in the country are systematically destroyed.
Deniers' arguments are usually modifications of one of the following statements: the massacre of Armenians never happened in the Ottoman Empire; the death of Armenians occurred due to negligence from hunger and disease during their expulsion from the combat zone; there was no deliberate policy on the part of the Young Turks to exterminate the Armenians; The death of the Armenians was a consequence of the civil war in the Ottoman Empire, which also killed many Turks.