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A drastic change was witnessed
in Turco-Armenian relations with the decline of the Ottoman
Empire towards the end of the 19th century. As
a result of activities carried out by instigators infiltrating
the Ottoman territories from the West, mostly under a clerical
guise, Armenians began to pull themselves away from the Turkish
community in the religious, cultural, commercial, political
and social fields. Armenians who used Turkish as their language,
who conducted their religious sermons in Turkish and even
those who had attained high positions within the Empire, such
as cabinet ministers, undersecretaries and the like, collaborated
with the enemy forces in a bid to attain the downfall of the
Ottoman State.
It is during this period that
the Armenians began to present themselves as an 'oppressed
community' and claimed that their sovereignty rights over
Anatolia had been seized by the Turks, this with the aim of
securing the backing of the West. States aspiring to attain
their goals by exploiting the Armenians, did in fact encourage
such propaganda and helped to create public opinion in a drive
to have a say in the sanctions to be imposed on Turkey, and
to be able to intervene when necessary. Thus, all initiatives
with the pretext of supporting the Armenians and safeguarding
their rights found serious backing within their own public
opinion.
Once they lost their privileged
status, with the Reformation Bill granting equal status to
muslims and non-muslims alike, the Armenians asked Russia
not to withdraw from Eastern Anatolia, which she had invaded
during the 1877-1878 Ottoman-Russian war; that autonomy be
granted to these territories, or that reformation be conducted
in line with their interests. These stipulations found the
partial backing of Russia, and henceforward the Armenian issue
began to assume an international dimension with the Yesilkoy
Agreement, formerly known as the Hagia Stephanos Agreement,
signed at the end of the Ottoman-Russian war and the subsequent
Berlin Agreement. Thus, foreign powers aspiring o divide the
country, started intervening in Turco-Armenian relations.
Once, efforts to organize Ottoman
Armenians to take action against the State, by means of committees
set up in Anatolia as a result of activities carried out by
missionaries proved futile, it was then decided that Russian
Armenians set up such committees in regions outside the boundaries
of the Ottoman State. Thus, the moderately militant Hinchak,
with socialist tendencies, was set up in Geneva in 1887, followed
by the extremist and pro-independence Tashnak Committee set
up in Tbilisi in 1890, favouring terror, rebellions and struggle
to achieve its goals. These committees had been targeted at
' liberating Anatolian territory and the Ottoman Armenians'.
Attempts to launch a revolt, instigated by the Istanbul-based
Hinchaks and aimed at provoking the Ottoman Armenians by drawing
the attention of European nations to the Armenian issue, were
followed by acts carried out by Tashnaks who had launched
a political struggle. These attempts, masterminded by committees
outside the Ottoman lands were supported by missionaries positioned
in Anatolia.
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