Edit
Seattle Post23 Apr 2014
In a statement released Wednesday in nine languages — including Armenian — Erdogan said he hoped Armenians who lost their lives are in peace and expressed condolences to their descendants....(size: 0.8Kb)
Edit
Austin American Statesman23 Apr 2014
Erdogan acknowledged the deportation of Armenians in 1915 had "inhumane consequences" but did not use the term "genocide," which Turkey strongly rejects....(size: 0.8Kb)
Edit
Al Jazeera23 Apr 2014
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has offered condolences to the grandchildren of Armenians who were killed by Ottoman soldiers during World War I. Erdogan made the statement on Wednesday, on the eve of the 99th anniversary of the start of mass deportations of Armenians ... But Turkey says 500,000 people died because of fighting and starvation during World War I and refuses to term the killing of the Armenians a genocide....(size: 2.1Kb)
Edit
The Guardian23 Apr 2014
The Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has offered his condolences over the massacre of Armenians during the first world war, calling it "our shared pain", in Turkey's most significant overture yet over the deeply divisive episode ... "The incidents of the first world war are our shared pain," Erdogan said in what Turkish media described as an unexpected statement that was issued in several languages, including Armenian....(size: 3.2Kb)
Edit
Boston Herald23 Apr 2014
This one’s for John Baronian, who, though he’s been dead six years, had something to say, not only to Armenians who know their tragic history, but especially to those who would dismiss that history as dubious myth ... Like Jews who seethe at those who would deny what happened to their forebears in World War II, Armenians are vigilant about keeping aglow a flame deniers would extinguish....(size: 3.0Kb)
Edit
Fox News23 Apr 2014
ANKARA, Turkey – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has issued a conciliatory message to Armenians on the eve of the anniversary of the massacre of Armenians almost a century ago, calling the events of World War I "our shared pain." ... Erdogan acknowledged the deportation of Armenians in 1915 had "inhumane consequences" but did not use the term "genocide," which Turkey strongly rejects....(size: 2.7Kb)
Edit
Reuters23 Apr 2014
... his condolences on Wednesday to the grandchildren of Armenians killed in World War One by Ottoman soldiers....(size: 0.6Kb)