George Clooney Visits Armenia To Meet President, Talk Genocide
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan (right) and U.S. actor George Clooney
(center) during the Aurora Prize ceremony in Yerevan, April 24, 2016.
Photo: 100 Lives Foundation
YEREVAN, Armenia — Hollywood A-Lister George Clooney has become the
latest U.S. celebrity to speak out over the Armenian genocide as he
visited the South Caucasus country to mark the 101st anniversary of mass
killings in the Ottoman Empire and present a new humanitarian prize.
Clooney awarded the $1 million Aurora Prize to Burundi orphan worker
Marguerite Barankitse at a ceremony in Yerevan and told guests,
including Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, that the “whole world”
remembered the Armenian genocide.
"We honor the million and a half lives that were lost 101 years ago.
And we honor those lives by calling their tragedy by its true name.
Genocide. The Armenian Genocide," Clooney said.
Historians maintain Ottoman ethnic cleansing of Armenians in what is
now eastern Turkey and northern Syria during the First World War killed
about 1.5 million people and amounted to the first genocide of the 20th
century. But Turkey, the successor state to the Ottoman Empire,
characterizes events as civil unrest, claims the death toll has been
vastly inflated and virulently denies that the crimes constitute a
genocide.
Clooney’s intervention comes one year after U.S. celebrity Kim
Kardashian made headlines when she visited Yerevan with her husband
Kanye West during a trip to re-discover her Armenian roots. Kardashian
has also urged the world to recognize the Armenian genocide.
U.S.
television personality Kim Kardashian (center) with her daughter North
West in hand walks during their visit to Armenia, April 11, 2015.
Photo: Reuters
As well as presenting the Aurora Prize, during a ceremony at
the city’s imposing genocide memorial overlooking Yerevan — comprising
of 12 stone slabs positioned in a circle with an eternal flame dedicated
to the memories of the victims at its center — Clooney paid his
respects to the Armenians who died.
“It’s ridiculous not to talk about it in terms of genocide because of course it was,” Clooney told reporters after he arrived in the Armenian capital Thursday.
Armenians all over the world mark April 24, the day when hundreds of
Armenian intellectuals were killed in Istanbul in 1915, as Armenian
Genocide Memorial Day. Commemoration events in Yerevan included a march
by over 10,000 people carrying candles and Armenian flags through the
city center, calling on countries, including the United States and the
United Kingdom, to publicly recognize the genocide. Demonstrators also
trampled Turkish flags.
Turkey "has not changed its hostile stance toward everything that is
Armenian," Sargsyan said in a statement to mark the occasion, the Agence
France Presse news agency reported.
A
woman carries a candle holder with a printed Armenian flag on it during
a march to commemorate the 101st anniversary of the mass killing of
Armenians by Ottoman Turks in Damascus, Syria April 22, 2016
Photo: Reuters
U.S. President Barack Obama provoked widespread condemnation
by Armenian-Americans last week when he declined to call the events
during the First World War a genocide, referring to them instead as the
“first mass atrocity of the 20th century” in a statement Thursday. During his campaign for the presidency in 2008 Obama pledged to recognize the attacks as genocide if elected to the White House.
The reluctance of many Western countries to use the word
genocide in the case of the Armenians stems from a desire to avoid
damaging their relationships with Turkey, a key regional ally.
Fighting in neighboring Syria and an uptick in violence between
Turkish security forces and the local Kurdish population in eastern
Turkey has re-opened old wounds and prompted fears
in Yerevan of Turkish aspirations in the region. A collapse in
relations between Moscow and Ankara over the downing of a Russian jet
over Syria has also created fresh tensions in the South Caucasus, where
Russia and Turkey have traditionally sparred for influence.
Clooney was visiting Armenia in his role as the co-chair of the
Selection Committee for the Aurora Prize, a new award funded by
Russian-Armenian philanthropist and businessmen Ruben Vardanyan. The
winner of the inaugural prize, Barankitse, was recognized for her work
with children and refugees during years of civil war in the landlocked
African country of Burundi.
Post a Comment