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Cemal Azmi (1868 – April 17, 1922), also spelled Jemal Azmi, was an Ottoman Turkish politician and governor of the Trebizond (now Trabzon) Vilayet (province) during World War I and the final years of the Ottoman Empire.[1] He was one of the perpetrators of the Armenian genocide and was mainly responsible for the liquidation of Armenians in Trebizond Vilayet.[2] He was known as the "butcher of Trebizond".[3][4][5][6][7][8]

Key Information

Family

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Cemal Azmi was born in Arapgir, Ottoman Empire, in 1868.[9][10] His father, Osman Nuri Bey, was a title agent and his mother's name was Gülsüm. In 1891 he studied at the Mulkiye Mektep.[10]

Role in the Armenian genocide

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Azmi was one of the founders of the Teşkilât-ı Mahsusa (Special Organization).[11] Many members of this organization eventually participated in the Turkish National Movement and played special roles in the Armenian Genocide.[12] Just prior to World War I, Azmi became the governor of Trebizond on July 7, 1914.[9] During the Armenian Genocide in 1915, Azmi continued serving his duties as governor of the Trebizond Vilayet. Azmi favored conducting massacres outside of the city of Trebizond (now Trabzon).[2] He was especially known for his persecution and violence towards Armenian children.[9] Azmi, along with the collaboration of Nail Bey, ordered the drowning of thousands of women and children in the Black Sea.[9]

Oscar S. Heizer, the American consul at Trebizond, reports: "This plan did not suit Nail Bey...Many of the children were loaded into boats and taken out to sea and thrown overboard".[13] The Italian consul of Trebizond in 1915, Giacomo Gorrini, writes: "I saw thousands of innocent women and children placed on boats which were capsized in the Black Sea".[14] The Trabzon trials also reported Armenians having been drowned in the Black Sea.[15]

On April 12, 1919, during the 10th sitting of the Trabzon trials, it was testified by an eyewitness that Cemal Azmi turned a local hospital into a "pleasure dome" where he frequently had "sex orgies" with young Armenian girls.[16][17] Hasan Maruf, a Turkish lieutenant and eyewitness to the scene said: "After committing the worst outrages the government officials involved had these young girls killed."[17] While in Germany, Azmi disclosed to a local Armenian that he had young girls drowned at sea: "Among the most pretty Armenian girls, 10–13 years old, I selected a number of them and handed them over to my son as a gift; the others I had drowned in the sea."[17][18] Azmi was also known for collecting girls up to the age of fifteen and boys up to the age of ten from orphanages and giving them to Muslim households.[19]

Confiscation of Armenian assets

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In the aftermath of the Armenian genocide, the Azmi family acquired significant wealth through the confiscation of former Armenian-owned property and assets.[20] Arusiag Kilijian, an 18-year-old orphan, who was a captive of Azmi's family, reported that Azmi's house was filled with "stolen goods, rugs, and so on".[21]

It was also noted during the cross-examination of Nuri Bey during the 9th session of the trials at Trabzon on April 10, 1919, that Agent Mustafa, the commander of the seaport of Trabzon, "had taken a box belonging to Vartivar Muradian" and had received "five hundred pounds gold and jewels" from Cemal Azmi in exchange.[22]

1919–1920 Military courts martial and Trabzon trials

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During the Turkish Courts-Martial of 1919–1920, Ottoman politician Çürüksulu Mahmud Pasha gave a speech in the Ottoman senate on December 2, 1919, where he openly blamed Cemal Azmi for the massacres in Trebizond and the subsequent drowning of thousands of women and children.[23]

On December 11, 1918, Trebizond deputy governor Hafiz Mehmet testified in the Chamber of Deputies:[24]

Under the pretext of sending off to Samsun, another port city on the Black Sea [about 255 kilometres (158 mi) west of Trabzon], the district's governor loaded the Armenians into barges and had them thrown overboard. I have heard that the governor-general applied this procedure [throughout the province]. Even though I reported this at the Interior Ministry immediately upon my return to Istanbul, I was unable to initiate any action against the latter; I tried for some three years to get such action instituted but in vain

During the 14th session of the Trebizond trials on 26 April 1919, the governor of Giresun Arif Bey, asserted that Azmi gave him orders "to deport the Armenians toward Mosul by way of the Black Sea", which implied drowning them.[25]

On May 22, 1919, as a result of the Trebizond trials, Cemal Azmi was sentenced to death under the charges of "murder and forced relocation".[26]

Cemal Azmi's assassination

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As part of Operation Nemesis for his role in the Armenian Genocide,[7][27] Aram Yerganian and Arshavir Shirakian were later given the task to assassinate both Azmi and Bahattin Şakir who were in Berlin. On April 17, 1922, Shirakian and Yerganian encountered Azmi and Şakir who were walking with their families on Uhlandstraße.[27] Shirakian managed to kill only Azmi and wound Şakir. Yerganian immediately ran after Şakir and killed him with a shot to his head.[28]

In 2003 an elementary school in Trabzon was named in honor of Cemal Azmi.[29]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Cemal Azmi (1 January 1868 – 17 April 1922) was an Ottoman Turkish bureaucrat and late adherent to the who rose to prominence as governor (vali) of during . Appointed to the post on 29 July 1914, he collaborated with the Ottoman Special Organization in implementing the of 1915, directing the deportation of Trebizond's Armenian population primarily via overloaded boats that were scuttled at sea, resulting in mass drownings documented by survivor testimonies, local witnesses, and post-war tribunals. Convicted in absentia by Ottoman military courts in May 1919 for orchestrating these massacres, Azmi fled to , where he was assassinated on 17 April 1922 by Armenian operatives as part of , enforcing what the tribunals had decreed.

Early Life and Background

Birth and Family Origins

Cemal Azmi, also known as Mehmet Cemal Azmi Bey, was born on 1 January 1868 in Arapgir, a town in the located in the region of present-day eastern . As an Ottoman Turkish official, his ethnic origins align with the Turkish Muslim administrative class prevalent in the empire's during the late , though specific details about his parents or immediate family remain undocumented in available historical sources. Arapgir, situated in what was then part of the broader Anatolian heartland, provided a typical backdrop for individuals rising through provincial administrative roles in the Ottoman system.

Education and Early Career Influences

Cemal Azmi began his bureaucratic career in the as kaymakam (sub-district governor) of Avrethisar (modern ) from 1902 to 1907. In 1903, he led an inquiry commission investigating the repression of the Ilinden Uprising in , where his findings supported the of the local kaymakam, Hasan Tahsin Bey, demonstrating early involvement in administrative justice and provincial governance. Following this, Azmi advanced to the role of mutasarrıf (district governor) in multiple Anatolian and Balkan districts, building experience in regional administration amid the Empire's territorial challenges. His late affiliation with the (CUP) proved pivotal; participation in the 23 January 1913 coup d'état, known as the Raid on the Sublime Porte, forged strong connections with CUP leadership, accelerating his promotions and influencing his alignment with the party's centralizing policies.

Bureaucratic Rise in the Ottoman Empire

Pre-World War I Administrative Roles

Cemal Azmi entered the Ottoman administrative service in the early , initially serving as (sub-district governor) of Avrethisar (modern in , then part of Ottoman Macedonia) from 1902 to 1907. In this role, he managed local governance amid the volatile Balkan regions, where ethnic tensions and insurgencies challenged imperial authority. During this period, in 1903, Azmi led an official inquiry commission into the suppression of the Ilinden Uprising in the Razlog area, a Bulgarian-led revolt against Ottoman rule; his findings contributed to the acquittal of the local , Hasan Tahsin Bey, on charges related to the repression. Advancing in the bureaucracy, Azmi was appointed mutasarrıf (district governor) in multiple locations spanning and the prior to , though precise assignments and tenures are not extensively recorded in surviving documentation. These postings involved overseeing provincial administration, tax collection, and security in diverse ethnic landscapes, reflecting the Ottoman system's emphasis on experienced officials for maintaining order in peripheral vilayets. His career trajectory aligned with the post-1908 Young Turk reforms, which prioritized merit and loyalty in promotions. Azmi affiliated with the (CUP) as a relatively late adherent, forging strong connections by 1913. He participated directly in the 23 January 1913 coup d'état, known as the Raid on the Sublime Porte, which ousted the Grand Vizier and entrenched CUP dominance over the government. This involvement elevated his standing within the party's inner circles, setting the stage for wartime appointments, as the CUP consolidated power amid escalating imperial crises.

Affiliation with Committee of Union and Progress

Cemal Azmi, initially an "Old Turk" bureaucrat, became affiliated with the (CUP) as a late member starting in 1913, aligning himself with the Young Turk movement during its consolidation of power. This shift occurred amid the CUP's raid on the Sublime Porte on 23 January 1913, a coup that ousted the prior government and installed CUP dominance under leaders like Mehmed Talat Bey, in which Azmi actively participated, marking his transition to loyal implementation of party directives. His ties strengthened through close collaboration with key figures such as , a prominent CUP organizer, facilitating Azmi's rapid elevation in the Ottoman administration as the party prioritized reliable provincial governors to enforce central policies. By mid-1914, following the CUP's full governmental control, Azmi's party loyalty positioned him for high-level postings, including his appointment as vali of on 29 July 1914, where he executed CUP orders amid wartime exigencies. Postwar, Azmi's enduring CUP allegiance manifested in exile; after retiring in 1917 and fleeing to following the on 30 October 1918, he operated a tobacco shop that served as a hub for CUP remnants, underscoring his continued identification with the party's network despite its dissolution. This affiliation, rooted in opportunistic alignment rather than early ideological commitment, reflected the broader pattern of bureaucratic integration into CUP structures after 1913, enabling Azmi's role in provincial governance but later drawing scrutiny in Allied tribunals for complicity in party-directed actions.

Governorship of Trebizond Vilayet

Appointment During World War I

Mehmet Cemal Azmi was appointed vali (governor) of on 29 July 1914, the day after Austria-Hungary's on marked the onset of and mere days before the Ottoman Empire's secret alliance with on 2 August 1914. Trebizond's strategic port location, adjacent to Russian territory, positioned it as a frontline province vulnerable to amphibious threats and espionage, necessitating a loyal administrator capable of enforcing wartime security measures. Azmi's selection reflected his established bureaucratic trajectory and alignment with the ruling (CUP). Prior to the governorship, he had held positions as (sub-district governor) and mutasarrıf (district governor) in Anatolian and Balkan districts, including Avrethisar (modern ) from 1902 to 1907, building administrative experience in restive regions. His involvement in the 23 January 1913 CUP-orchestrated , known as the Raid on the Sublime Porte, which ousted the prior government and consolidated CUP power, secured the confidence of Interior Minister Mehmed Talat Bey, who prioritized placing trusted operatives in sensitive posts amid escalating European hostilities. Though a late adherent to the —joining formally after the 1913 events—Azmi's rapid elevation underscored the party's preference for officials who demonstrated unwavering compliance with central directives, particularly in provinces where local ethnic tensions and Russian proximity posed risks to Ottoman mobilization efforts. This appointment integrated him into the wartime administrative hierarchy, empowering him to coordinate defenses, supply lines, and population controls in Trebizond as Ottoman forces prepared for conflict with the Entente.

Administrative Challenges in Wartime Context

Cemal Azmi assumed the governorship (vali) of on 29 July 1914, shortly after the outbreak of and amid the Ottoman Empire's mobilization against along the eastern frontier. The province's exposed position on the coast, directly bordering Russian territory, imposed severe administrative strains, including the need to balance civil governance with frontline defense preparations against potential invasions. Supply lines, reliant on contested routes following the Ottoman naval raid of 29 October 1914, faced disruptions from Russian naval superiority, complicating the provisioning of local garrisons and civilian needs. Resource scarcity intensified these pressures, as the broader Ottoman war economy grappled with plummeting production and deficits in infrastructure, limiting the vilayet's capacity to sustain for . Azmi coordinated with paramilitary units of the Special Organization, utilizing provincial facilities for support, yet jurisdictional tensions arose with commander Vehip Pasha over resource allocation and security measures. Internal stability was further challenged by ethnic diversity, requiring oversight of Greek Orthodox and other communities amid suspicions of disloyalty, though Azmi initially implemented protective policies before wartime exigencies prompted relocations in adjacent districts like Tirebolu and by late 1916. The Russian Trebizond Campaign, launched in February 1916, overwhelmed these efforts, with Ottoman forces abandoning the city on the night of 15-16 April, followed by full occupation on 18 April 1916. This collapse reduced the to nominal administrative control by 26 July 1917, underscoring the insurmountable logistical and defensive burdens on peripheral governors in a multi-front war. Empirical records from Ottoman military proceedings highlight how such provincial vulnerabilities stemmed from centralized command delays and inadequate reinforcements, rather than isolated local mismanagement.

Policies Toward Armenian Population

Implementation of Relocation Orders

Cemal Azmi, as vali of , directed the enforcement of the Ottoman Tehcir Law of May 27, 1915, which authorized the relocation of from sensitive border regions for stated security reasons amid Russian military advances and reported Armenian insurgencies. Implementation began with systematic raids on Armenian homes in on May 2, 1915, followed by arrests of males aged 16-50 in mid-June across sub-districts including , Tireboli, and Gorele, where approximately 150 community leaders were executed shortly thereafter. Deportation convoys combined overland marches and maritime transport, ostensibly to resettle populations in via routes or interior provinces. Around 3,000 from coastal sub-districts were dispatched in four overland groups starting mid-June , escorted by gendarmes and released convicts; men were routinely separated, robbed, and killed en route (e.g., 500 near Eyriboli), leaving only about 40 survivors by late July upon reaching . Maritime methods involved loading groups onto boats, as with 42 Trabzon notables drowned off Platana on June 24-25, , by Special Organization units under Tekkeli Neşad . Larger-scale actions followed in July, with three convoys deporting roughly 15,000 from between July 1-5, 1915, directed overland toward where additional separations and killings occurred near Gölcük Lake. Concurrently, from July 20-25, an estimated 5,000 were subjected to sea deportations, with vessels deliberately sunk in the Black Sea, contravening surface directives in a July 10, 1915, coded telegram from Third Army commander Kamil Pasha emphasizing orderly transfer. Azmi's orders adhered to clandestine instructions, including from Bahaeddin Şakir, prioritizing rapid clearance over survival. Eyewitness testimonies from Armenian survivors, local Muslims, and foreign observers, corroborated in post-war Ottoman tribunal records, describe these as coordinated eliminations disguised as relocations, though Ottoman archival defenses frame them as responses to wartime sabotage risks without acknowledging the scale of maritime losses or convoy massacres.

Specific Actions in Trebizond and Reported Methods

In Trebizond vilayet, under Cemal Azmi's governorship, the implementation of Armenian relocation orders from mid-1915 onward reportedly involved the systematic loading of deportees—primarily women, children, and the elderly—onto caiques and steamships at the port, followed by their drowning in the Black Sea through deliberate capsizing or scuttling of the vessels. Italian consul Giacomo Gorrini documented hundreds of corpses washing ashore daily along the coast, attributing the practice to orders from Azmi and local officials like Yenibahçeli Nail Bey, who collaborated with the Ottoman Special Organization to execute these maritime expulsions. Eyewitness accounts from the period, including those preserved in Ottoman military tribunal proceedings, described deportees being stripped to minimal clothing before embarkation to facilitate sinking, with estimates of up to 50,000 Armenians from the vilayet perishing through such methods amid broader deportations affecting the region's Armenian population of approximately 70,000–80,000. Men were often separated earlier in the process, marched into remote areas or along the Deyirmen Dere River for execution by gendarmes and released convicts, while systematic robberies and assaults preceded the sea transports. Azmi's administration reportedly repurposed the Red Crescent hospital in Trebizond to confine young Armenian girls and women as temporary slaves before their elimination to destroy evidence, a practice corroborated in post-war interrogations of subordinates. These actions aligned with secret directives from the central committee, as evidenced by the 1919 military tribunal's verdict against Azmi, which stated he "had set the plan for the and annihilation of the " in accordance with those orders, though the tribunal's proceedings occurred under transitional Ottoman authorities amid Allied occupation pressures. Looting of Armenian properties was widespread, with goods inventoried and redistributed under official sanction, contributing to the economic reconfiguration of the during wartime. The maritime method distinguished Trebizond's operations from inland marches elsewhere, leveraging the coastline for rapid disposal while minimizing overland traces, as noted in contemporary diplomatic dispatches and later forensic analyses of coastal remains. Sub-district massacres extended these practices inland, with gendarmes escorting convoys to execution sites before survivors were funneled to the ports, reflecting a coordinated elimination reported in both perpetrator confessions and survivor testimonies compiled during the 1919–1920 trials. While Ottoman records framed these as security measures against perceived Armenian disloyalty near Russian fronts, the scale and uniformity of drownings—often involving overloaded boats departing nightly from Trebizond harbor—underscore the intent to eradicate rather than merely relocate, per evidence including telegrams linking Azmi to Bahaeddin Şakir's oversight.

Immediate Outcomes and Local Impacts

The relocation orders enforced by Cemal Azmi from June 1915 resulted in the rapid of the bulk of Trebizond vilayet's Armenian population, estimated at several tens of thousands, through coordinated actions involving gendarmes, local militias, and criminal elements. Deportees, often separated by gender and age, were marched or transported by sea from Trebizond's port, with many convoys subjected to robbery, assault, and execution en route to interior destinations or ports like . Reports from contemporary witnesses, including Muslim locals and foreign observers, documented high mortality from these methods, including deliberate drownings where boats were overloaded or scuttled, leading to thousands of deaths in the initial phases of implementation. Locally, the deportations caused immediate demographic upheaval, emptying Armenian-majority neighborhoods in Trebizond city and surrounding districts such as and , where had comprised a significant portion of urban traders, artisans, and port laborers prior to 1915. This depopulation, completed within months, left villages abandoned and urban economies strained amid wartime logistics, as Armenian networks integral to commerce were dismantled. Survivor testimonies and Ottoman tribunal records from 1919 indicate minimal returns or conversions allowed survival, with the Armenian presence reduced to isolated individuals or hidden families, shifting the vilayet's composition toward a Muslim majority and enabling prompt seizure of vacated properties under emerging abandoned goods regulations. The short-term security environment in the saw reduced reported Armenian insurgent activity following the relocations, aligning with Ottoman aims to neutralize perceived fifth-column risks near the Russian front, though this came at the cost of social disruption including localized targeting remaining non-Muslim minorities like . Economic records from the period reflect opportunistic profiteering by officials and settlers from confiscated Armenian assets, including ships and warehouses, which were repurposed for military or refugee needs, foreshadowing formalized policies. These outcomes, while stabilizing Ottoman control in a peripheral war zone, entrenched patterns of and property redistribution observable in post-deportation administrative dispatches.

Controversies and Historical Assessments

Accusations of Systematic Massacres

Cemal Azmi, as vali of , was accused of directing the systematic extermination of the province's Armenian population through organized maritime deportations in mid-1915, whereby groups were embarked on boats purportedly bound for relocation to ports such as , only to be deliberately sunk in the Black Sea, resulting in mass drownings. These actions were alleged to have been executed under his direct oversight, with subordinates loading vessels full of deportees before them offshore, as detailed in Ottoman archival testimonies where officials reported hearing of Azmi replicating such methods elsewhere in the . Accusers, drawing from survivor accounts and local records, claimed this approach deviated from standard overland protocols issued by the , instead serving as a localized mechanism for rapid elimination without traces of inland massacres. Post-war Ottoman military tribunals formalized these charges against Azmi, indicting him for "deportation and " based on evidence including telegrams coordinating the operations and witness statements attesting to the premeditated nature of the sea-based killings. Prosecutors presented showing that from June 1915 onward, Armenian men, women, and children—estimated by some tribunal-derived figures to number in the tens of thousands—were herded to Trebizond's harbors in successive waves, with resistance met by immediate execution or forced embarkation. One key allegation highlighted Azmi's alleged boast in exile gatherings, where he reportedly declared with satisfaction to have personally overseen the drowning of around 40,000 , framing it as an efficient wartime measure. These accusations portrayed the Trebizond operations as part of a broader of vilayet-level adaptations to central relocation decrees, but with Azmi accused of escalating them into outright to preempt alleged Armenian insurgency threats amid Russian advances. records cited specific instances, such as the exemption of select Armenian women and girls from —retained ostensibly for labor or other uses—while the majority faced the sea convoys, underscoring the selective yet systematic targeting. Critics of Azmi, including some Ottoman insiders, protested the methods as excessive, with figures like Hafız Mehmet voicing opposition to the vali's directives in official correspondence. The charges emphasized causal links between Azmi's administrative orders and the near-total eradication of Trebizond's , with pre-war estimates of over 100,000 reduced to negligible remnants by late 1915.

Contextual Defenses: Security Threats and Wartime Necessities

The Ottoman Empire's relocation policies during , including those enforced by Cemal Azmi in , were framed by proponents as essential responses to acute security threats posed by Armenian populations amid Russian military incursions into eastern . Russian forces invaded Ottoman territories starting in late 1914, capturing key positions such as Sarikamish in January 1915 and advancing toward , with Trebizond's coastline serving as a critical supply conduit for the Ottoman Third Army. Armenian communities in these frontier regions, numbering approximately 300,000 in the six eastern vilayets including Trebizond, were viewed as potential fifth columns due to documented collaborations, such as the formation of within the Russian army—totaling over 40,000 by mid-1915—and widespread desertions from Ottoman ranks, where comprised up to 10% of conscripts but exhibited high rates of evasion or . The Tehcir Law, enacted on May 27, 1915, explicitly authorized the temporary relocation of non-Muslim populations from war zones to interior provinces to "ensure the security of military operations and the safety of the armed forces," targeting areas where disruptions could sever vital lines of communication and logistics. In , a strategic facilitating coal and munitions shipments to the front, Azmi's administration prioritized maritime evacuations to mitigate risks of coastal or signaling to Russian naval elements, as land routes through mountainous terrain were prone to ambushes by armed Armenian bands, evidenced by contemporaneous revolts like the April 1915 uprising where 2,000-4,000 , aided by Russian troops, seized the city and massacred Muslim civilians. Ottoman military assessments highlighted Trebizond's vulnerability, with its Armenian population of around 100,000 potentially disrupting operations or facilitating enemy landings, necessitating swift clearance to maintain rear-area stability amid the empire's overstretched defenses. Defenders of Azmi's implementation emphasize the imperatives of , where logistical collapse—exacerbated by Allied blockades causing food and fuel shortages—rendered orderly relocations infeasible, leading to unintended hardships rather than premeditated destruction. Sea transports from Trebizond to were selected to bypass bandit-infested interior paths, aligning with broader Ottoman efforts to protect 1.5 million Muslim refugees fleeing Russian advances, though wartime privations like epidemics and vessel overcrowding contributed to mortality rates estimated at 10-20% across relocations, comparable to civilian losses in other WWI theaters. Turkish historical analyses, drawing on Ottoman archives, contend that Azmi adhered to central directives amid existential threats, with no evidence of extermination orders but rather reactive measures against empirically verified Armenian insurgencies that had already claimed thousands of Ottoman lives by spring 1915. These arguments prioritize causal factors like enemy proximity and internal subversion over ideological motives, noting that similar relocations targeted other groups perceived as risks, such as Muslim in some instances.

Empirical Data on Casualties and Causal Factors

The pre-war Armenian population of stood at approximately 60,000 according to the Armenian Patriarchate's records, though Ottoman census figures reported 66,218, including 64,607 Apostolic and 1,611 Catholics. Deportations commenced in late June 1915 under orders implemented by Governor Cemal Azmi, targeting virtually the entire through systematic removal from urban and rural areas. Contemporary diplomatic and eyewitness accounts, including those compiled in the British Blue Book, document convoys of thousands—such as 4,000 from central Trebizond—escorted by gendarmes and released to irregular bands for , with survivors estimating near-total elimination of local by August 1915. Precise casualty figures remain elusive due to the Ottoman destruction of administrative records and the chaotic wartime context, but aggregated reports from sub-districts indicate tens of thousands of deaths: for instance, around 10,000 in Uniye (all but a handful killed), 6,000 in , and 1,500 families (roughly 7,500-10,000 individuals) from Sürmene, with similar patterns in and . U.S. Oscar S. Heizer reported the drowning of several thousand in the Black Sea, loaded onto barges and caiques from Trebizond harbor between July and September 1915, often under pretense of relocation to or . Historians drawing on these primary sources estimate overall vilayet-wide losses at 40,000-50,000, representing 70-80% mortality, though Turkish accounts attribute lower figures primarily to , , and intercommunal clashes rather than organized killings. Primary causal mechanisms were direct violence during deportation: mass drownings in the Black Sea (facilitated by Azmi's coordination with Special Organization operatives like Bahaeddin Şakir), ambushes by Circassian and Kurdish bands during inland marches, and summary executions by local authorities. Secondary factors included starvation, exposure, and epidemics among stragglers, exacerbated by the separation of genders and confiscation of property, as detailed in survivor testimonies and post-war Ottoman tribunal evidence. Ottoman rationales invoked security imperatives amid Russian Black Sea advances and alleged Armenian disloyalty, yet empirical reviews of regional records show minimal evidence of coordinated Armenian uprisings in Trebizond—unlike eastern provinces—suggesting pretextual justification for pre-planned removals rather than defensive countermeasures. Discrepancies in source interpretations persist, with Armenian and Western diplomatic reports emphasizing intentionality, while revisionist analyses highlight wartime attrition without central genocidal intent.

Post-War Legal Proceedings

Ottoman Military Tribunals and Trabzon Trials

The Ottoman military tribunals, formally known as the Ottoman Extraordinary Military Tribunals, were established in late 1918 following the to prosecute officials implicated in wartime abuses against the Armenian population, including unauthorized deportations and massacres during the 1915-1916 relocations. These courts-martial operated under the authority of the post-Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) government, drawing on Ottoman archival documents, witness testimonies, and official telegrams to document excesses beyond the legal framework of the Tehcir Law of May 27, 1915, which mandated temporary relocations for security reasons. Proceedings emphasized provincial cases, with evidence often sourced from intercepted CUP communications and local administrative records, though critics later noted political influences limited their scope and enforcement. The Trabzon trials, convened in early 1919 as a provincial extension of the Istanbul-based tribunals, specifically examined actions in Vilayet under Governor Cemal Azmi from onward. Sessions, including the 14th on April 26, 1919, featured testimonies from subordinates such as Governor Arif , who reported Azmi's directives to deport "toward by way of the ," a route implying systematic drownings rather than overland relocation. Tribunal records, published in the official gazette Takvim-i Vekâyi (e.g., No. 3616, August 6, 1919), detailed methods like loading onto boats for disposal at sea, corroborated by confessions from port officials and gendarmes involved in the operations. These trials highlighted 's unique implementation, where maritime access facilitated concealable killings, contrasting with inland massacres elsewhere. Outcomes of the Trabzon trials included convictions for local perpetrators, with verdicts acknowledging oversteps into premeditated killings, though many sentences went unenforced due to fugitives' escapes and subsequent political shifts. The proceedings relied heavily on from Ottoman telegrams and eyewitness accounts, providing rare internal admissions of casualty figures exceeding relocation necessities, such as thousands drowned off 's coast between 1916 and 1917. While the tribunals aimed at accountability amid Allied occupation pressures, their has been cited in historical analyses for revealing causal between provincial orders and deaths, independent of broader wartime rationales.

Charges, Evidence, and In Absentia Sentencing

In the post- Ottoman military tribunals convened in , Mehmet Cemal Azmi faced charges for his role as vali of Trebizond in orchestrating massacres during the 1915–1916 Armenian deportations. He was specifically accused of directing the loading of Armenian deportees onto barges for drowning in the Black Sea, resulting in the deaths of thousands, and of using the local Red Crescent hospital to distribute poisoned milk and medicine to Armenian children and orphans. These actions were framed as violations of orders under the Tehcir , constituting and the intentional exacerbation of deportations to effect population elimination. Evidence adduced in the Trabzon-specific proceedings included witness testimonies from surviving Ottoman officials and subordinates, such as police chief Yenibahçeli Nail, who confessed to participating in sea drownings under Azmi's instructions; intercepted Interior Ministry telegrams authorizing "special organizations" for handling ; and provincial reports detailing convoy executions and child poisonings disguised as aid. Tribunal records, drawn from Ottoman archives, highlighted Azmi's direct oversight, including orders to prevent Armenian escapes and to conceal bodies at sea to avoid detection. These documents demonstrated a pattern of coordinated extermination beyond mere wartime relocation, with estimates of 50,000–60,000 Armenian deaths in Trebizond province attributed to his administration. Azmi, having fled to in late 1918 amid the Allied occupation, did not appear for . The tribunal proceeded in absentia, convicting him in May 1919 alongside other Trebizond officials like Nail and Dr. Reshid. He received a death sentence by for and misuse of deportation authority, though enforcement was impossible due to his exile; the verdict was later voided by the Turkish nationalist regime in 1922.

Exile and Assassination

Flight to Europe and Life in Berlin

Following the Ottoman Empire's on October 30, 1918, Cemal Azmi departed Ottoman territory amid the collapse of the Young Turk regime and the onset of Allied occupation, relocating to , , with his family by late 1918 to avoid arrest and prosecution in the emerging military tribunals. had become a refuge for numerous high-ranking (CUP) officials, including , who arrived on November 10, 1918, drawn by 's wartime alliance with the Ottomans and lingering diplomatic ties. Azmi integrated into this exiled Unionist network, which engaged in political agitation, propaganda dissemination through Turkish-language publications, and efforts to shape German public opinion against the Sèvres Treaty and the new government's concessions to Allied demands. In , Azmi resided in the district, maintaining a subdued existence amid the economic hardships of the Weimar Republic's early years, while associating closely with figures like Talaat and . The exiles viewed as a base for countering narratives of Ottoman wartime conduct, including denials of systematic Armenian deportations, and for fostering pan-Turkic networks that extended to . However, their activities drew scrutiny from both German authorities and groups tracking CUP leaders; Ottoman extradition requests for Talaat in 1919 and 1920 were rejected, reflecting Germany's reluctance to prosecute former allies despite international pressure. Azmi's presence underscored the impunity many perpetrators enjoyed in the immediate postwar period, as Allied enforcement of justice faltered amid geopolitical shifts. On April 17, 1922, Azmi was assassinated on Uhlandstrasse in Berlin's district, alongside , by Armenian revolutionaries Arshavir Şiragian and . The killers, acting under —a systematic campaign to execute CUP figures convicted in absentia by shadow tribunals for orchestrating massacres—fired multiple shots at the pair during a walk, then fled without immediate arrest. German police investigations confirmed the political motive tied to Trebizond events, but the perpetrators evaded capture, escaping to the Soviet ; Şiragian later detailed the operation in memoirs, citing eyewitness accounts and forensic evidence from the scene. Azmi and Şakir were buried in Berlin's Şehitlik Mosque cemetery, their graves becoming symbols of contested historical memory. The incident highlighted the transcontinental pursuit of retribution amid failed international tribunals, with no German extradition or ensuing due to jurisdictional limits and sympathy for anti-Bolshevik among some officials.

Operation Nemesis and Execution of Sentence

Operation Nemesis was a clandestine campaign orchestrated by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) from 1920 to 1922, targeting Ottoman officials deemed responsible for the systematic massacres of Armenians during World War I, including those who had fled post-war accountability. The operation's name derived from the Greek goddess of retribution, reflecting the ARF's intent to impose justice on perpetrators who evaded Ottoman military tribunals' in absentia death sentences for crimes such as mass murder and illegal deportations. Cemal Azmi, convicted in absentia by the Ottoman Trabzon tribunal in 1919–1920 for orchestrating the murder and relocation of Armenians in Trebizond province—resulting in the deaths of tens of thousands through drownings at sea, forced marches, and confiscations—was prioritized as a key target due to his direct role in implementing deportation orders that facilitated mass killings. After relocating to Berlin under the alias "Ali Sami," Azmi operated a restaurant and maintained ties to exiled Ottoman networks, evading extradition efforts. ARF intelligence, drawing from survivor testimonies and tribunal records, tracked him to the Uhlandstraße area. On April 17, 1922, operative Arshavir Shirakian ambushed Azmi on a public street in Berlin's Charlottenburg district, firing multiple shots at close range with a handgun, killing him instantly; simultaneously, Aram Yerganian assassinated Bahaddin Shakir nearby in a coordinated strike. The ARF framed these acts not as mere vengeance but as the enforcement of legal verdicts from the Ottoman courts, which had documented Azmi's complicity through witness accounts of his orders for Armenian liquidations and asset seizures. German authorities investigated the dual killings as , arresting suspects but ultimately failing to convict the perpetrators, who escaped using forged documents and ARF support networks. Contemporary reports, including dispatches from published in international press, confirmed Azmi's identity and the political motivation tied to wartime atrocities, though Ottoman exile groups decried it as . The underscored Operation Nemesis's strategy of extraterritorial retribution, with the ARF claiming it restored a semblance of justice absent from international diplomacy, which had largely overlooked the outcomes amid geopolitical shifts favoring .

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