Visit To Karabakh Provokes Questions Concerning Azerbaijan’s Close T

VISIT TO KARABAKH PROVOKES QUESTIONS CONCERNING AZERBAIJAN’S CLOSE TIES WITH ISRAEL: YAIR AURON

14:26, 10 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

“The Armenian-Azerbaijani ‘soft war’ over the Nagorno-Karabakh region
is still claiming lives. Arecent visit there provoked questions
concerning Azerbaijan’s close ties with Israel,” Prof. Yair Auron
writes in an article published by Haaretz.

Ever since I learned that I would be traveling to the Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic, my ears have hummed with the words of a song that I’d
heard in my youth and that was still etched in my memory, though
it had been many years since I heard it. The song was “At the Edge
of the Volcano,” written by Dan Almagor and Danny Litani in 1972;
I remembered Chava Alberstein’s hauntingly evocative rendition well.

Even 40 years ago, the song left me restive and edgy. Since
rediscovering it, I have been listening to it nonstop, singing the
lyrics: “Why don’t they run away from there, and seek a safer place,
where they can finally live in peace, once and for all… ”

I thought I was traveling to a dangerous, sad, perhaps forlorn and
hopeless place, a place where again people are being persecuted due
to their ethnic Armenian identity.

Now, after six extraordinary days in Nagorno-Karabakh, I think I know
the answer to the question of why they don’t run away from this small
republic in the southern Caucasus: It is an incredibly beautiful place;
legends say it is the entrance to paradise.

Still, even a beautiful place, in my opinion, it is not worth
dying for.

Three-hundred-and-fifty kilometers separate Yerevan, the capital
of Armenia, from Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, at
opposite ends of a road that traverses a flat plain, and most of which
passes through stunning mountains bisected by deep canyons. Most of
the mountains are covered in snow – snow that fell on us as we drove
and even more heavily once we’d arrived in Stepanakert.

About 51,000 people live there, all of them Armenian. It is a small but
beautiful city, astonishingly clean and well designed. Stepanakert is
the seat of an elected parliament, an elected president, a government
and a cabinet.

Nevertheless, not a single country in the world recognizes the Nagorno-
(Russian for “mountain”) Karabakh Republic. Even Armenia cannot
recognize the de-facto independent state, because then Azerbaijan
would cut off the tenuous channel of communication it maintains with
Armenia in the hope of furthering conciliation, via mediating parties.

The republic was established on May 12, 1994, following a cease-fire
agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Its total population
is 140,000 – 98 percent of whom are ethnic Armenians. (The total
population of Armenia is approximately three million.) The cease-fire
ended a bloody war that had begun in 1988, and that ended with the
Azeris being driven out. At the time, military observers and experts
assessed that Armenian Karabakh would not survive for long. They
estimated that it would vanish within days and that the region would be
reoccupied by the army of Azerbaijan, a force that is better equipped
and more advanced than that of Armenia.

Approximately nine million persons live in Azerbaijan, which
defines itself as a secular Muslim state (although it has recently
exhibited some extremist Islamic phenomena). The border between it
and Nagorno-Karabakh is 370 kilometers long; along it, on the Karabakh
side, are hundreds and perhaps thousands of bunkers.

I have no doubt that I am being subjective, and also probably partisan:
My prolonged efforts in favor of the State of Israel’s recognition
of the Armenian genocide have forged deep bonds between me and the
Armenian people.I am currently teaching at the American University
of Armenia in Yerevan, and enjoying myself immensely. From my first
day here, I have felt at home.

I decided to go to Karabakh for a few days. I am an “official visitor,”
if that can be said about a state that has no official visitors. For
even when senior-level visitors from other countries arrive, they take
pains to emphasize that they are on a private visit, so as not to
antagonize neighboring Azerbaijan. I was received by the president,
Bako Sahakyan and the head of parliament; I toured the border zone
and spent a few hours in an Armenian bunker, where I was able to
speak with complete freedom with the soldiers.

A sign at the entrance to the bunker read, roughly: “If we lose Artsakh
[the Armenian name for Karabakh], we will be sealing the fate of
Armenian history.” This feeling is shared by many of the Armenians
with whom I spoke.

A “prolonged war” – or “soft war” – is now under way, one that is
liable any day to develop into a full-scale conflict. This is the
tensest and most difficult period since the cease-fire was declared,
21 years ago. Twelve Armenian soldiers were killed in January alone,
and farmers working their land along the border are also killed
every so often. Thirteen soldiers serve in the military position
I visited; the Azeri military post is a mere 200 meters away. The
Armenian outpost was clean and orderly and heated; the temperature
outside was below freezing.

The Armenian soldiers are forbidden to shoot without explicit orders.

However, the Azeris fire indiscriminately, and one mustn’t walk erect
through the tunnels of the outpost. The Azeris also employ snipers. I
was allowed to peer toward the Azeri lines for only a few seconds.

The Armenians are also forbidden to use aircraft other than helicopters
in Karabakh: Azerbaijan has vowed to shoto down anything else. Several
weeks ago, an Armenian helicopter was shot down during a training
flight, and crash-landed inside the 250-meter-wide no-man’s-land that
separates the two armies. For 10 days, the Azeris refused to return the
bodies of the three pilots. International mediation efforts failed. It
was then decided at the highest levels of Armenian and Karabakh
officialdom to enter the border zone in the darkness and extricate
the frozen corpses of the three pilots from where they had been left
in the field, and bring them home for burial.Two Azeri soldiers were
killed during the rescue operation, which could have served as the
trigger for all-out war. The Karabakh army was placed on high alert.

A civilian airfield that was built in recent years near the capital
city of Karabakh and that is ready to commence operations has been
paralyzed, because Azerbaijan has openly declared that it will shoot
down any civilian aircraft flying in proximity to it.

Seeking peace,â~@¨ready for war

The biblical story of David and Goliath stayed with me all through the
week. The Karabakh David is certain of the justice of his ways and of
his eventual victory. Everyone shares this feeling of certainty, from
the president to the head of the parliament and senior army officers,
down to the lowest-ranking soldiers. The prevailing sentiment is “We
want and we seek peace, but we are ready for war and we will win it.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan told me he is prepared to make
significant territorial connection between Nagorno-Karabakh and
Armenia. Armenia has only held off from officially annexing the enclave
and the additional section of Azerbaijan it has occupied because it
knows it will lead to all-out war.

The Armenians in Karabakh receive significant aid in the conflict
from Armenia, but not from anywhere else. “We have no one to rely
upon other than ourselves,” is another refrain I hear more than once
during my visit. “We are alone, totally alone.”

The Karabakhis exude determination, and confidence in their power
and in the righteousness of their struggle. They speak proudly of
the “Karabakhi spirit” as a significant factor in bolstering their
military prowess.

Often, during my visit, I thought of my own country, Israel, in its
early years, during the 1948 War of Independence. And in the 1950s
and the early 1960s, times when the nascent country fought for its
existence. The pre-1967 years eventually gave way to an extraordinary
military victory, which has been leading us to the brink of an abyss
ever since. Today Israel’s is no fighting for its existence, but is
rather in a struggle over control of territory. I am nagged by the
thought that we Israelis, too, are fighting a David and Goliath war,
only with the roles reversed from what they were a half-century ago.

I told this to the Karabakhis I met – students, men of letters and
writers with whom I had fascinating and instructive conversations.

They were familiar with the story. They belong to the Armenian
Apostolic Church, and they know the Bible; some even know it well. But
the thought – which I share with them – that in our dispute with
the Palestinians we are like the Azeris and the Palestinians are the
Karabakhis – this thought is disconcerting.

The Israeli weapons that are shipped to Azerbaijan, valued at billions
of dollars, and the denial over the years by the State of Israel of
the Armenian genocide have in the past few weeks been supplemented
by new developments in the complex relationship between Israel and
the Armenians.

Rafael Harpaz, Israel’s ambassador in Baku, Azerbaijan, told a
press conference there in January that Israel would not recognize
as “genocide” the killings of Armenians perpetrated by the Ottoman
Empire 100 years ago. (He did not, however, use the word “never,”
as some Armenians charge.) No Israeli diplomatic representative has
ever said such a thing. Asked who gave him the authority to make this
statement, the envoy replied, “I am not saying anything new. Foreign
Minister Avigdor Lieberman has said the same thing.”

I have found no evidence of that claim, but there is no doubt that
the ambassador’s position meets with the approval of the Israeli
foreign minister.

This is another “gift” from the State of Israel to the Armenian people
on the occasion of the centenary of the genocide, which has not been
recognized by most of world’s other countries either. But it’s not
only that the genocide is merely “not recognized” – it is denied
by Israel, a country of many Holocaust survivors. Without a doubt,
the prime minister, defense minister and president all know that the
sophisticated Israeli arms sold to Azerbaijan are intended to achieve
a single goal: that of defeating and occupying Karabakh. Of banishing
the Armenians from there.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has publicly reiterated this
objective, in nearly every speech he has made in recent months.

Nonetheless, as early as 2012, there were published reports that
Israel had agreed to a colossal arms deal, valued at $1.6 billion,
by which it would supply drones to Azerbaijan.

Moreover, last summer, immediately after Operation Protective Edge,
Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon saw fit to travel there for a visit.

Afterward, Aliyev declared to his soldiers on the border: “We have
beaten the Armenians in politics, we have beaten them in terms of the
economy. Now we will be victorious over them in the battlefield. We
will destroy their villages and cities and we will restore our lands
to us. We have the most advanced weapons in the world.”

He was referring to the weapons sold by Israel, among other countries.

For their part, during the war, the Armenians seized a substantial
amount of territory from Azerbaijan, mainly in that country’s
southwest, and they have expelled nearly all of the ethnic Azerbaijanis
from both there and Karabakh. They also lost some territory ni
the north. The Karabakhis justifiably claim that the latter are
territories belonging to historic Karabakh that were wrested from
them by the Soviet Union in the 1920s, during the rule of Lenin and
Stalin. They cite the presence of ancient Armenian churches in the
area, some dating back to the 10th century and even earlier.

The Soviet Union divided up the regions inhabited by the various
ethnic groups it controlled, as part of a well-known imperialist
policy of divide and conquer. So it was that Karabakh was annexed to
Azerbaijan, against the will of the Karabakhis, who were ethnically
Armenian, and the region was severed from the Armenian Soviet Socialist
Republic. “Soviet Karabakh,” however, was not identical in terms of
its territory to historic Karabakh.

During the years of Soviet rule, the Azerbaijanis adopted a variety
of methods to augment the proportion of their compatriots in Karabakh
and to reduce the number of Armenians, who in the early 1920s numbered
about 95 percent of the residents.

‘We’re not barbarians’

At the start of the war, in the late 1980s, war crimes and crimes
against humanity were almost certainly perpetrated by both sides. I
saw several destroyed Azerbaijani villages close to the border. The
remnants of the houses and fences now stand as monuments, in a
stunningly beautiful region. The sites remind me of destroyed cities
from other wars in other places. However, in all of the villages the
mosques were left intact. “We are not barbarians,” one soldier told me.

The Ottoman Empire, Turkey in its wake, and then Soviet Azerbaijan
demolished hundreds of churches – converting some of them into mosques.

In a wide-ranging and informal conversation with President Sahakyan
over lunch, he refused to say a bad word about the Azeris. He said
repeatedly that his country seeks peace, but is certain of victory in
the event of an all-out war. But he wishes to emphasize: Our long-term
vision is to gain independence and peace, and to take our place in
the family of enlightened and democratic peoples.

The days I spent in Karabakh were formative ones for me, and I intend
to return.I identify with the struggle of the Karabakhis for freedom
and independence, and as much as possible will endeavor to take part
in that effort. I am doing so, first and foremost as a human being,
but also as a Jew and an Israeli.

If out-and-out war breaks out in Nagorno-Karabakh during the centenary
year of the Armenian genocide, the Karabakhis will once more be
alone, with only Armenia to rely on. The world was silent in 1915,
was silent during the Holocaust, was silent during the genocide in
Rwanda, and has been silent in the face of many other similar events.

The thought of Israeli weapons going to Azerbaijan makes me lose
sleep at night. This is a betrayal of the memory of the Holocaust
and the memory of its victims; it is an act of moral bankruptcy.

While I was there, I heard from Itai Mack, an Israeli lawyer who
has been working with me to expose the Israeli arms sales that were
made to the governments of Rwanda and Serbia during the months when
genocide was occurring in those countries. Up until now, Israel’s
judicial system has rejected our petitions – based on the Freedom
of Information Law – for the release of information, citing security
considerations. We are now awaiting a ruling from the Supreme Court,
which Mack told me has not been scheduled fro Decemebr of this year.

For the past few months, we have been raising the call to end
widespread arms shipments to Azerbaijan. The entire region is
recognized by international organizations as one of tension, where
humanitarian catastrophes and war crimes are liable to occur.

Yoram Ziflinger, the acting director of the Defense Export Controls
Agency, an arm of the Ministry of Defense, wrote us this past February
24: “Every decision embodies a variety of considerations, the common
denominator of all of them being the national interest.”

In response to a Haaretz request to address the subject of defense
industry sales to Azerbaijan, a Ministry of Defense spokesman said:
“The ministry is not in the habit of relating to issues of subjects
related to security exports.”

Prof. Yair Auron is a genocide researcher who has for the past 30
years struggled on behalf of recognition of the Armenian genocide by
the State of Israel.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/10/visit-to-karabakh-provokes-questions-concerning-azerbaijans-close-ties-with-israel-yair-auron/
http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/.premium-1.651064

Azerbaijan Blacklists NYT Journalist For Visiting Nagorno Karabakh

AZERBAIJAN BLACKLISTS NYT JOURNALIST FOR VISITING NAGORNO KARABAKH

15:56, 10 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

New-York Times journalist Seth Kugel has been included in the list of
undesirable persons of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry for visiting
Nagorno Karabakh, MFA Spokesman Hikmet Hajiyev told Trend.

Seth Kugel of the New York Times traveled to Armenia and Nagorno
Karabakh and wrote down the impressions in an extended article titled
“A warm welcome in the Caucasus mountains.”

Azerbaijan calls the article “biased” and claims it distorted facts.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/10/azerbaijan-blacklists-nyt-journalist-for-visiting-nagorno-karabakh/

Taste Of Armenian Agricultural Products Unrivaled, Sargsyan Says

TASTE OF ARMENIAN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS UNRIVALED, SARGSYAN SAYS

YEREVAN, April 10. /ARKA/. Taste of the Armenian agricultural
products is unraveled elsewhere, but the agrarian sector still lacks
profitability, Armenia’s president Serzh Sargsyan said in his interview
to Mir TV on Thursday.

Higher competitiveness of agricultural produce will help boost the
production, Sargsyan said.

According to the president, sooner or later the import replacement
situation will improve, and it is important to ensure compliance with
the international standards in this process.

Insufficient commercial quantity of products is one of the problems
of the Armenian economy, the president said.

Today Armenia deals with big EEU market that demands a huge amount
of products, Sargsyan said.

Armenia’s agricultural output amounted to about 993.4 billion
drams in 2014, a growth of 7.2%. ($1-475.55 drams). –0-

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/taste_of_armenian_agricultural_products_unrivaled_sargsyan_says/#sthash.37fCr732.dpuf

Intellectuals, Activists Reveal History Of Deliberate Ignorance Of 1

INTELLECTUALS, ACTIVISTS REVEAL HISTORY OF DELIBERATE IGNORANCE OF 1915 EVENTS

16:51, 10 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Intellectuals and activists gathered in Ä°stanbul on Wednesday evening
for an eventcalled “Confront 1915,” where they peeled away the layers
of history that have been presented by the Turkish government when
discussing the shrouded massacre of Armenians in 1915, Today’s
Zamanreports.

Dr. Ohannes Kılıcdagı, a professor of sociology at Istanbul Bilgi
University and a columnist for the Armenian Agos weekly newspaper,
discussed how Armenians who were deported and survived persecution
were unable to return to their former homeland.

“[The period between] 1918-1920 was actually the time during which
the genocide was most openly discussed in the history of this land,
at a time when the Turkish Republic did not yet exist. After the
Kemalist regime and as the Ankara government began to stabilize
and become rooted, and wars were won … there was then a period of
‘clearing the air.’ What I mean by this is that arrangements were
made to prevent Armenians who were sent away from returning to their
property and possessions,” shared Kılıcdagı.

The Republic of Turkey was established in 1923 after its founder,
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, and Turkish nationalists had emerged victorious
over Greeks, Armenians and Western forces in the Turkish War of
Independence. Today, despite international pressure, the Turkish
Republic does not recognize the events that took place during the
fall of the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

Kılıcdagı continued his discourse on the perception of history,
explaining: “And then began a period that I call the ‘period of
silence,’ which slowly began to create the perception that nothing
had happened here. Even more so, the perception that there were
never Armenians here [in the first place] was formed,” adding,
“A deliberate ignorance was spread and this was actually successful
to a large extent.”

Kılıcdagı went on to share the results of a survey performed by Dr.

Ferhat Kentel of Ä°stanbul Å~^ehir University. When participants of
the survey were asked, “When do you believe Armenians came to Turkey?”

One-third of the respondents said they believed that Armenians had come
to Turkey after the fall of the Soviet Union, while another one-third
acknowledged that they simply had no idea when the Armenians had come
to Turkey.

“Therefore, we see that two-thirds of Turkish society believe that
a people [Armenians] who were the first people of this land to be
written down in history, who existed here before the Common Era,
are commonly believed to have only arrived at the beginning of the
1990s,” he concluded.

Another speaker at Wednesday’s meeting was prominent human rights
lawyer Eren Keskin, who addressed the audience, saying, “We are very
late to be speaking about this issue.”

In line with Kılıcdagı’s argument that such ignorance was enforced
deliberately by the government, Keskin noted, “I think the Turkish
government has been very successful in its mission to cover up these
events.”

She told a personal story of her first encounter with the tragic past
of the Armenians in Turkey in which she explained how her grandfather
had demanded that her aunt Josephine, an Armenian, convert to Islam
before marrying his son, which she did.

Keskin believes that the example she shared highlights the ongoing
injustice and how the experience in her family, which was discussed but
went undisputed, gave her the opportunity to learn about discrimination
against Armenians from a young age. She then went on to describe her
career as a human rights lawyer with the Ä°stanbul branch of the Human
Rights Association (IHD). She noted that although she believed it to
be quite late, the IHD released a press statement in 2005 recognizing
the events of 1915 as genocide. After the IHD took this stance,
Keskin said they were condemned and their office building attacked.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/10/intellectuals-activists-reveal-history-of-deliberate-ignorance-of-1915-events/
http://www.todayszaman.com/national_intellectuals-activists-reveal-history-of-deliberate-ignorance-of-1915-events_377541.html

Faktxeber.Com: PACE Co-Rapporteur On Azerbaijan Avoids Visit To Baku

FAKTXEBER.COM: PACE CO-RAPPORTEUR ON AZERBAIJAN AVOIDS VISIT TO BAKU BECAUSE OF COUNTRY AUTHORITIESÂ~@~Y PRESSURE

12:34 10/04/2015 ” LAW

The visit to Azerbaijan by PACE (the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe) co-rapporteur, Spanish MP Pedro Agramunt, planned
for 8-9 April has been postponed due to unforeseen circumstances,
PACE official page on Twitter reads. However, the Azerbaijani media
outlet Faktxeber.com has learnt that Agramunt avoids visiting Baku
because the authorities of Azerbaijan put pressure on him and insist
that he change the term ‘political prisoners’ into ‘prisoners whose
criminal cases have got alleged political motives’ in his upcoming
report in PACE on the human rights situation in that country.

According to the article, Agramunt, in his turn, tries to use his
‘health problems’ as an excuse for postponing the visit. Citing Saida
Gojamanli, a member of the Joint Working Group (JWG) on Human Rights,
the outlet writes that one way or another the Spanish MP will have
to pay a visit to Azerbaijan till the end of June, that is, till the
beginning of the summer session.

The outlet reminds that PACE commissioned Agramunt to file a report
on human rights in Azerbaijan in June 2014 following numerous appeals
from the local activists, and that period coincided with Azerbaijan’s
chairmanship in the Committee of Ministers of the CoE. During this
period Azerbaijan not only failed to make a progress in the field of
human rights, but it also saw dramatic aggravation of the situation
due to the arrests of the activists and the journalists.

The outlet writes that Agramunt had been keeping silent for a long
time and did not pay a single visit to Baku till March 2014 when he
arrived on a shot-term visit to Azerbaijan with his Polish colleague
Tadeusz IwiÃ…~Dski, the co-rapporteur of the PACE Monitoring Committee.

However, as the outlet highlights, the PACE rapporteurs avoided public
statements and press conferences during that visit.

In January 2013 European Stability Initiative NGO demanded PACE
co-rapporteur Pedro Agramunt’s resignation because of making a biased
report and hiding the whole truth about the authoritarian regime
in Azerbaijan. It called him an active representative of ‘caviar
diplomacy.’ During the winter session of PACE European Stability
Initiative issued a report titled “Caviar Diplomacy” which highlighted
the names of those who were engaged in Azerbaijani lobbying and got
‘caviar in return.’ Pedro Agramunt’s name was the first in the list.

Earlier, in 2012, Azerbaijani human rights defender Leyla Yunus had
reported that PACE rapporteurs on Azerbaijan, Agramunt and Gresh,
were being bribed by the Azerbaijani authorities. Yunus said that the
rapporteurs ignored all the materials they were given regarding the
facts of human rights violations and did not include them in their
preliminary report. In particular, the report did not include the
cases of Turach Zeynalov’s death from tortures in the detention centre
of the Ministry of National Security of Nakhijevan; the tortures
of Nakhijevani activist Zeynal Bagirzade; and the tortures of two
journalists from Hayal TV. The section “Freedom of Expression”
did not include the cases of the arrest of the journalists Avaz
Zeynalli and Anar Bayramli, Idrak Abbasov’s beating and Khadija
Ismayilova’s persecutions. The issue of rejecting NGO registration
was not highlighted while considering the “freedom of assembly,” etc.

Related:

”Caviar price” in PACE and struggle of Armenian diplomacy; head of
Armenian delegation in PACE commenting…

http://www.panorama.am/en/law/2015/04/10/pace-azerbaijan/

Valery Permyakov Found Sane

VALERY PERMYAKOV FOUND SANE

14:10 09/04/2015 >> LAW

Russian serviceman Valery Permyakov, who is charged with the murder
of the Avetisyan family in Gyumri city of Armenia, was found sane,
Interfax reports citing a source familiar with the situation.

“The psychiatric examination revealed that the serviceman is sane. He
was absolutely aware of his actions at the moment of the murder,”
the source said.

The experts have detected some mental disorders in him, but overall,
he was found sane, the source added.

Meanwhile, Kommersant has learned that the court extended Permyakov’s
arrest on April 8. The Investigation Committee toughened the charges
against him. On two counts alone, he may face life imprisonment.

Six members of one family, including a two-year-old child, were shot
dead in their house in Gyumri on January 12. A six-month-old baby
was hospitalized with stab wounds. He died in hospital on January 19.

Valery Permyakov, a serviceman of the 102nd Russian military base
stationed in Gyumri, the main suspect in the murder, was detained by
Russian border guards while attempting to cross the Armenian-Turkish
border near Yerazgavors village in Armenia’s Shirak province.

Permyakov is held in custody at the Russian military base. He was
questioned and confessed to the crime. Permyakov is charged under
Article 105.2 and 338.2 of the Russian Criminal Code (murder and
desertion). Also, Armenian Investigative Committee brought a charge
against Permyakov under Article 104 part 2 point 1 (murder of two or
more persons) of the Armenian Criminal Code.

Source: Panorama.am

Zhoghovurd: Armenian FM’s Shanghai Trips Costs Budget $3.5m

ZHOGHOVURD: ARMENIAN FM’S SHANGHAI TRIPS COSTS BUDGET $3.5M

09:25 * 09.04.15

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian’s recent visit to Shanghai
has cost the State Budget an equivalent of over $3,500, the paper
has learned.

But the trip would not have been so expensive had Nalbandian chosen
a flight by Econom Class, where the paper says the price for one air
ticket is slightly above $1,700 (850,000 Drams).

“So those people [top government officials] do all their best to day
by day impoverish Armenia and its population in return for a bonus
to travel exclusively by business class,” the paper says, commenting
on the report.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/09/joghovurd3/1640975

Kardashian Sisters Promise To Learn Armenian

KARDASHIAN SISTERS PROMISE TO LEARN ARMENIAN

YEREVAN, April 8. / ARKA /. The Kardashian sisters, who arrived in
Yerevan on April 8, apologized for not speaking Armenian when they
were received by the country’s prime minister Hovik Abrahamyan today,
but said they are learning their native language and will continue
the struggle for the international recognition and condemnation of
the Armenian genocide.

The Kardashian sisters are in the country to make a documentary on
the Armenian genocide, ahead of April 24 when Armenians around the
globe will mark its centenary.

The Kardashian sisters were said to thank the prime minister for
reception, noting that they were impressed by Armenia and the warm
hospitality of Armenians. The sisters said they are going to visit the
sights of Armenia to get acquainted with its cultural and historical
heritage and discover their homeland. The Kardashian sisters said
they had long dreamed of visiting their historic homeland and are
happy to be here.

Prime minister Abrahamyan praised the Kardashian family for their
contribution to the international recognition and condemnation of
the Armenian Genocide and welcomed their visit on the threshold of
the Armenian Genocide centennial.

He said the Kardashians as well as many other Armenians scattered
around the world do not forget their roots and visiting their
historical homeland they make it much more popular.-0-

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/kardashian_sisters_promise_to_learn_armenian/#sthash.neb8fHN0.dpuf

Armenian Genocide Centennial Commemoration Events In Norway

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CENTENNIAL COMMEMORATION EVENTS IN NORWAY

15:21, 09 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

This year marks the 100th year since the Armenian Genocide by Ottoman
Turkey of 1915-1923. The Armenian Genocide, first genocide of the 20th
century, was planned and carried out by the “Young Turk” government
of Ottoman Turkey in 1915 (with subsidiaries to 1922-23). One and a
half million Armenians were killed on their ancestral lands.

The Armenian genocide is considered one of the three archetypes of
what constitutes a genocide by Norwegian and international historians.

Events and initiatives marking the centennial are being held around
the world throughout the year of 2015. Leaders from around the world
including presidents of France, Russia, Poland, Cyprus among others,
will gather in capital of Armenia, Yerevan, on April 24, to commemorate
this event.

Prime Minister Erna Solberg has not accepted the invitation to join the
commemorations in Yerevan. Neither is she willing to send a minister
or a state secretary.

The Armenian Cultural Association in Norway presents various
commemorative events marking the Armenian Genocide centennial in
Norway. Events on such a solid scale in Norway signal that the
country and the people of great explorer, scientist and humanist
-an outstanding advocate for the rights for the Armenian people –
Fridtjof Nansen, carry on his mission and demand that justice be
served, regardless of the controversial position of their government.

There is a wide variety of events planned in Oslo this year, as well
as events in Bergen and Stavanger. Organizations and individuals like
Norsk P.E.N., Jahn Otto Johansen,

Kirkelig KulturVerkstad, FN Sambandet (i Rogaland), the Armenian Church
Society and s at the Armenian Cultural Association among others have
been instrumental in keeping the memory of the 1.5 million martyred
Armenians alive in this country.

Over 12 successful events have already been organized in February and
March (some of them supported by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Norway and the Fritt Ord Foundation) and there are over 10 different
cultural events planned in the month of April, presented below:

April 14 – Commemorative Concert by the acclaimed Armenian National
Philharmonc

Orchestra in the Royal Cathedral in Oslo

April 18 – To Survive and Thrive: Public Lecture about Calouste
Gulbenkian (Oil Entrepreneur and philanthropist)

Presented by Jose Rodrigues dos Santos (Portugal)

Cello concert – Martin Rasten (Norway)

April 19 – Historic Sunday: The Armenian Genocide

By Jahn Otto Johansen

April 21 – Norsk PEN’s Annual Meeting-Seminar: The Centennial of the
Armenian Genocide

Meeting with a prominent Turkish Human Rights Activist Ragip Zarakolu

April 22 – Meeting about the Armenian Genocide with Otto Johansen

April 24 – March for Recognition of the Armenian Genocide

Route: The march with torches begins at Youngstorget at 19.00, and
then moves through

Torggata, Stortorvet and up Karl Johan gate to Stortinget (the
Parliament).

April 24, STAVANGER – Armenian Liturgy for the 1.5 mln martyrs of
the Armenian Genocide at St. Svithun Catholic Church

April 24, BERGEN – Commemorating the Centennial of the Armenian
Genocide

Place: Near the Nansen Khachkar memorial outside Reksten Samlingene

April 25 – Armenian Liturgy

Place: Royal Cathedral, Oslo

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/09/armenian-genocide-centennial-commemoration-events-in-norway/

Genocide Studies International New Issue Dedicated To Centenary Of T

GENOCIDE STUDIES INTERNATIONAL NEW ISSUE DEDICATED TO CENTENARY OF THE ARMENIAN, ASSYRIAN AND GREEK GENOCIDES

By MassisPost
Updated: April 8, 2015

TORONTO — The International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights
Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute) is pleased to announce
the release of Genocide Studies International Volume 9, number 1,
Spring 2015. The new issue is dedicated to the Ottoman Genocides of
the Armenian, Assyrian, and Greek peoples, marking the upcoming 100th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in April 2015.

This peer-reviewed journal was edited by Roger W. Smith. The new
issue includes six articles:

– “Introduction: Ottoman Genocides of Armenians, Assyrians, and
Greeks,” by Roger W. Smith

– “Contending Interpretations Concerning the Armenian Genocide:
Continuity and Conspiracy, Discontinuity and Cumulative
Radicalization,” by Robert Melson

– “The Genocide against the Ottoman Armenians: German Diplomatic
Correspondence and Eyewitness Testimonies,” by Tessa Hofmann

– “Academic Denial of the Armenian Genocide in American Scholarship:
Denialism as Manufactured Controversy,” by Marc. A. Mamigonian

– “The Complexity of the Assyrian Genocide,” by David Gaunt

– “The Genocide of the Greeks of the Ottoman Empire, 1913-1923:
A Comprehensive Overview,” by Vasileios Th. Meichanetsidis.

Prof. Smith’s article introduces the themes addressed in this special
issue of GSI and emphasizes how careful consideration of the Ottoman
genocides deepens our understanding of what genocide is and how it
can be enacted.

Prof. Melson’s article examines the relationship between the
Armenian massacres of 1894-1896 and on the process that initiated
the Genocide during and following WWI. One group of historians argue
that the Genocide was a continuation of the 1894-1896 massacres and
that its origins were rooted in Islam and Ottoman culture, whereas a
second group of scholars contend that the Genocide was qualitatively
different from the massacres and that it was driven by a policy of
radicalization during WWI. The article concludes with an evaluation
of some of the assumptions of the second view.

Hofmann’s article documents and analyses the genocide of the 1.5
million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during 1915 and 1916 and is
based mainly on the German diplomatic correspondence of the time,
which is preserved at the Political Archives of the German Foreign
Office, in Berlin. A special subsection of the article is dedicated
to the clandestine intelligence organization, TeÅ~_kilat-ı Mahsusa
(Special Organization), which planned, implemented and largely
conducted the destruction of the Armenians. Germany’s involvement in
the destruction of Ottoman Armenians, Aramaic-speaking Christians,
and Greek-Orthodox Christians is also examined.

Mamigonian’s article traces the early development of Armenian Genocide
denial and focuses on the more recent refinements and the penetration
of denial into mainstream American academia, posing as a legitimate
intellectual position within a historical debate.

Prof. Gaunt’s article focuses on another group targeted by the Ottoman
Empire for extermination: the Assyrians. The Assyrian Genocide involved
many non-Armenian Christian groups native to eastern Anatolia and
northern Mesopotamia. Among them were the Assyrian Church of the East,
the Chaldean Church, the Syriac Orthodox, and some smaller sects.

Meichanetsidis’ article refers to the 1913-1923 Genocide of the
Greeks of the Ottoman Empire and provides a comprehensive overview
of the overall genocidal process. The article aims at providing an
understanding of the Genocide and a sense of the Ottoman projects of
destruction that included Armenians, Assyrians/Arameans and Greeks in
an attempt at a total restricting of Ottoman society and the creation
of a Turkish Muslim national state.

Also included is a book review: The Young Turks’ Crime against
Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman
Empire by Taner AkÃ’”am, reviewed by Dr. Rouben Paul Adalian, Director
of the Armenian National Institute.

For information on subscribing to the journal,
or to purchase single copies, please visit

or contact the International Institute for Genocide and
Human Rights Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute) at
[email protected] or by telephone 416-250-9807.

http://www.utpjournals.com/Genocide-Studies-International.html
http://massispost.com/2015/04/genocide-studies-international-new-issue-dedicated-to-centenary-of-the-armenian-assyrian-and-greek-genocides/