Genocide and ethnic cleansing Armenian genocide and published in 1918. In the
final years of the
Ottoman Empire's existence, the
Committee of Union and Progress (CUP)
committed a genocide against the
empire's Armenian population. The Ottomans carried out organised, systematic massacres and deportations of Armenians throughout the war, and they portrayed acts of resistance by Armenians as rebellions in an attempt to justify their extermination campaign. In early 1915, a number of Armenians volunteered to join the
Russian forces, and the
Ottoman government used this as a pretext to issue the
Tehcir Law (Law on Deportation), which authorised the deportation of Armenians from the Empire's eastern provinces to Syria between 1915 and 1918. The Armenians were intentionally
marched to death, and a large number of them were attacked by Ottoman brigands. While the exact number of deaths is unknown, the
International Association of Genocide Scholars estimates that 1.5 million Armenians were killed. The
government of Turkey has consistently
denied the genocide, arguing that those who died were victims of inter-ethnic fighting, famine, or disease during World WarI; these claims are rejected by most historians. Other ethnic groups were also attacked by the Ottoman Empire during this period, including
Assyrians and
Greeks, and some scholars consider those events different parts of the
same policy of extermination.
Greek genocide ,
Greece for the Greek genocide and
the Holocaust.
Genocidal policies against
Ottoman Greeks were already put in place by the CUP prior to World War I, and continued after the war began. According to a newspaper of the time, in November 1914, Turkish troops destroyed Christian properties and killed several Christians at
Trabzon. The CUP officially sanctioned the forceful migration of Greeks into the
Anatolian hinterland. In the fall of 1916, with
Allied forces advancing towards Anatolia, and
Greece being expected to
enter the war on the side of the Allies, preparations were made for the deportation of Greeks living in border areas. As such, in March 1917 the population of
Ayvalık, a town of c. 30,000 inhabitants on the Aegean coast, was
forcibly deported to the interior of Anatolia under the orders of German General
Liman von Sanders. The operation included death marches, looting, torture and massacres against the civilian population. between 1914 and 1922, and for the whole of Anatolia, there are academic estimates of a death toll ranging from 300,000 to 750,000.
Assyrian genocide ed Assyrian refugees in
Qajar Iran, 1918 Happening contemporaneously was the
Sayfo, a genocide of Assyrian people. In mid-1915, interior minister
Talaat Pasha ordered for an
ethnic cleansing campaign against the Assyrians of
Hakkari, and Ottoman forces proceeded to loot Assyrian villages there and destroy
cultural artifacts,
taking no prisoners as they did so. Many Assyrians fled to
Iran, but after the Ottomans began
occupying parts of Iran,
Djevdet Bey ordered massacres of
Christian civilians to prevent them from joining to fight for
Russia. Between February and May (when the Ottoman forces pulled out), there was a campaign of mass execution, looting, kidnapping, and extortion against Christians in Urmia, and Assyrian women were targeted for kidnapping and rape; seventy villages were destroyed.
Halil Kut and Djevdet Bey ordered the murder of Armenian and Syriac soldiers serving in the Ottoman army, and several hundred were killed. By 1923, the genocide killed an estimated 250,000 to 275,000 Assyrian Christians (about half of the population).
Deportations of Kurds A policy of
deporting Ottoman Kurds from their
indigenous lands also began during World War I, under the orders of Talaat Pasha. Although many Kurds were loyal to the empire (with some even supporting the persecution of
Christian minorities by the CUP), Turkish authorities nevertheless feared the possibility that they would collaborate with Armenians and
Russians to establish their own
Kurdish state. In 1916, roughly 300,000 Kurds were deported from
Bitlis,
Erzurum,
Palu and
Muş to
Konya and
Gaziantep during the winter, and most died from
famine.
Deportations in Ottoman Palestine In December 1915, the Ottoman's expelled roughly 6,000
Jews with Russian citizenship in
Jaffa to
Egypt. As British forces advanced towards
Palestine in 1917, Ottoman authorities began
deporting and expelling people throughout Palestine, targeting Jews in particular. In March 1917, everyone living in
Gaza (at the time, a town of 35,000–40,000 people, mostly
Arabs) was expelled, and the population would not recover until the 1940s. That same month – on the orders of
Djemal Pasha – tens of thousands of people were deported from Jaffa, an action that was accompanied by severe violence, starvation, theft, persecution and abuse. When
New Zealand troops arrived to Jaffa in November 1917, only 8,000 of the original population of 40,000 remained.
Ottoman mistreatment of prisoners of war == Russian war crimes ==