An Inconvenient Genocide: Who Now Remembers the Armenians? by Qc Robertson Paperback Book

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Rent An Inconvenient Genocide: Who Now Remembers the Armenians?

Author: Qc Robertson

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Publisher: Biteback Publishing

Published: Dec 1969

Genre: History - Middle East - Turkey & Ottoman Empire

Retail Price: $16.95

Pages: 304

Synopsis

"With a brilliant display of forensic advocacy, one of the greatest legal minds on the international stage forces a shameful but inconvenient truth upon the world."-Helena Kennedy, QC

Winner Polemic of the Year, The Paddy Power Political Book Awards 2015

On April 24th, 2015 people around the world commemorated the centenary of the death of over one million Armenians. In their eyes, and in those of many around the world, they will be remembering a genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire. Turkey has always explained the dead as simply victims of a vicious civil war, and continues to this day to refuse to acknowledge the events as constituting genocide.

This argument has become, in turn, an international issue. Twenty national parliaments in democratic countries have voted to recognize the genocide, but Britain and the United States continue to equivocate for fear, it would seem, of alienating their NATO ally.

In this seminal book, Geoffrey Robertson QC, a former UN appeals judge, sets out to prove beyond all reasonable doubt that the massacres and deportations were a crime against humanity which amounted to genocide.

Geoffrey Robertson, QC, is founder and head of Doughty Street Chambers, the UK's leading human rights legal practice. A barrister, academic, author, and broadcaster, Robertson is the author of several books including The Justice Game and Mullahs Without Mercy. He lives in London, England.

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