Great Britain encourages its satellites to attend Gallipoli-related

Great Britain encourages its satellites to attend Gallipoli-related
events – Vardan Khachatryan

14:43 * 12.04.15

In an interview with Tert.am, former member of Armenia’s Parliament
Vardan Khachatryan spoke of guests who are expected to visit Armenia
to attend events marking the 100th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide.

If Russian President Vladimir Putin and French President François
Hollande, as well as numerous French Armenians, arrive in Armenia, one
should consider the fact each of them has his “satellites” in global
politics, who are expected to arrive as well.

“In this respect, it is clear that representatives of Great Britain,
with its satellites, are going to Turkey to attend Gallipoli-related
events. That is, Great Britain encouraged the states in question to do
it in defiance of everything. It should also be noted that the leaders
of other states that plan to accompany British leaders in Turkey are
criticized for their decisions, in their own countries,” Mr
Khachatryan said.

He advises Armenia’s authorities to focus on other regions.

“I mean the Far East, which will be represented by a delegation,” Mr
Khachatryan said, mentioning China and Japan, which have a most
favorable attitude to the Armenian people and admit the fact of the
Armenian Genocide.

In response to a remark that too much attention has been focused on
who is coming, Mr Khachatryan said:

“The symbol of the Great Massacre has been exposed. In this respect,
it is clear that a watershed is in the making in this territory.
Whether we like it or not, it is a watershed in global politics when
the nations, assuming moral responsibility, announce their position in
the region and further steps to the world. This makes the situation
predictable for us.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/12/vardan-khachatryan/1643930

System of a Down review – noir-rock epics and the history of genocid

System of a Down review – noir-rock epics and the history of genocide

Wembley arena, London

The American-Armenian skull-pummelers deliver some worthy political
messages amid a messy sprawl of intricate, disjointed hardcore

Barrage of ballast … Shavo Odadjian of System of a Down. Photograph:
Joseph Okpako/Redferns

Mark Beaumont
Sunday 12 April 2015 13.47 BST

The entry queues are chaotic, the toilets are overflowing, and the PA
pours out a relentless two-hour bombardment of math metal, violent
thrash rock and Armenian folk anthems. Yet, if it feels as if
Californian skull-pummelers System of a Down are trying to make
Wembley feel like its own downtrodden mini-state, we’re soon put in
our place. The Wake Up the Souls tour marks the 100th anniversary of
the 1915 Armenian genocide – a subject close to the hearts of these
four politically voracious Armenian-Americans – and animated histories
of that and subsequent genocides in the second world war, Rwanda and
Cambodia are played out on the screens during interludes in the set,
narrated by Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello. So, suitably
humbled, we endure.

Singer Serj Tjankian is an arresting presence, part hardcore Zappa,
part minaret muezzin, part Russell Brand gone feral. As he entreats us
to “change this planet so we’re deserving of it” and yowls, “a whole
race, genocide, taken away – revolution, the only solution,” on
solidarity anthem PLUCK, you salute his, well, pluck. Otherwise, his
worthy messages on drink-driving and police brutality (Mr Jack),
pulling the heroin “tapeworm out of your ass” (Needles) and war (War?)
are buried beneath a messy sprawl of intricate, disjointed hardcore
that, like the average First Dates participant, never seems to know
how fast it should be going.

With the prospect of SOAD’s first album since the companion releases
ofMezmerize and Hypnotize 10 years ago looming, the faithful and
studious – this is rock that rewards only total immersion – circle-pit
with a semi-religious fervour. But the band only sparingly cohere on
the odd noir-rock epic such as Spiders or Hypnotize, moshpit
electrifiers Bounce and Toxicity, or when guitarist Daron Malakian
takes the spotlight for his crafty homage to House of the Rising Sun,
Lonely Day. Spots of relief in a barrage of ballast.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2015/apr/12/system-of-a-down-wembley-arena-london-review

Rio Gallegos Denominara A Una Plaza "Centenario Del Genocidio Contra

RIO GALLEGOS DENOMINARA A UNA PLAZA “CENTENARIO DEL GENOCIDIO CONTRA EL PUEBLO ARMENIO”

10.4.15

El Honorable Concejo Deliberante de Río Gallegos resolvio el jueves 9
de abrilnombrar “Centenario del genocidio contra el pueblo armenio”
a una plaza de la ciudad. Se trata de la primera vez que una plaza
en Argentina obtiene una denominacion donde explícitamente se habla
del genocidio contra el pueblo armenio perpetrado por el Estado turco
hace cien años, sumandose a la “Plaza monumento a las Víctimas del
Genocidio Armenio” situada en Caracas, Venezuela.

Durante esa misma jornada, la Camara de Diputados Provincial sanciono
por unanimidad la declaracion de reconocimiento y adhesion por el
Centenario del Genocidio Armenio, y ademas declaro de “interes
provincial la Muestra Fotografica ‘Centenario del Genocidio
Armenio-Pasado y Presente de un Crimen Impune’, organizada por
la comunidad Armenia de Santa Cruz, el Consejo Nacional Armenio y
el Instituto contra la Discriminacion, la Xenofobia y el Racismo
(INADI) Santa Cruz, que se realizara en la sala de las Columnas del
Complejo Cultural Santa Cruz desde el 24 de abril hasta el 6 de mayo
del presente año, al cumplirse el centesimo aniversario de este hecho
aberrante e impune que enluta a la humanidad”. Cabe recordar que Santa
Cruz adhirio a la Ley Nacional 26.199 a traves de la Ley Provincial
2.984, y posteriormente el municipio de Río Gallegos lo hizo en 2010
por medio de una ordenanza.

Alejandro Avakian (foto), delegado del Consejo Nacional Armenio en
Santa Cruz, recordo en la Camara legislativa los orígenes del trabajo
de la comunidad en la provincia, inicialmente con el objetivo de
nombrar Armenia a una calle de Río Gallegos. Habiendo cumplido esa
tarea, el trabajo se oriento tambien a la realizacion de actividades
academicas y culturales, para las cuales, señalo Avakian, siempre han
brindado apoyo institucional el Concejo Deliberante, la Legislatura,
la UNPA y el INADI. Asimismo, afirmo que los importantes esfuerzos
realizados por la comunidad y las instituciones que acompañan sus
iniciativas se orientan a que la República de Turquía “se encuentre
sola frente a su negacion del pasado, ya que el genocidio merece el
reconocimiento y una reparacion en sus diversas fases”.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.prensaarmenia.com.ar/2015/04/rio-gallegos-denominara-una-plaza.html

ISTANBUL: Turkey embarks on restoration efforts of Armenian churches

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
April 11 2015

Turkey embarks on restoration efforts of Armenian churches

ISTANBUL

Ankara has embarked on a series of restoration projects on Armenian
churches in Turkey, amid criticism that the country’s remaining
Armenian cultural and historical heritage not destroyed during World
War I has been left to ruin.

The restorations are part of the government’s bid to show that it is
improving the rights of Turkey’s Armenian community. For some
observers, the past year’s intensified restoration efforts of about a
dozen churches throughout the country are no doubt related to the
upcoming 100th commemoration of the World War I killings of Armenians
in the Ottoman Empire.

The government’s efforts to reconcile with Turkey’s small Armenian
community dates back a few years, with the reopening of the Akdamar
(Akhtamar) Church near the southeastern city of Van. The 10th-century
Church of the Holy Cross on Akhtamar Island in Lake Van was reopened
in 2007 as a museum.

Ankara spent 2 million Turkish Liras on extensive restorations of the
church, and in 2010 a religious ceremony was held there for the first
time in 95 years.

In addition, the word `Armenian’ could not be found anywhere on the
church’s original information signboard, but it was renewed last year
in order to emphasize that the church was a part of Armenian heritage
in Anatolia.

Similar changes are expected to be made during the renewal of other
signboards where `Armenian’ has been omitted.

Today, the Armenian community in Turkey, which numbers around 70,000,
is almost entirely concentrated in Istanbul.

In a historic first, the Turkish government last year offered
condolences for the mass killings of Armenians in 1915, which then
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an said had `inhumane consequences,’
expressing hope that those who had died were now at peace.

April/11/2015

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkey-embarks-on-restoration-efforts-of-armenian-churches.aspx?pageID=238&nID=80896&NewsCatID=375

Second Armenian Soldier Killed In Border Clash With Azerbaijan

SECOND ARMENIAN SOLDIER KILLED IN BORDER CLASH WITH AZERBAIJAN

Agence France Presse
April 8, 2015 Wednesday 11:33 AM GMT

Yerevan, April 8 2015

Another Armenian soldier was killed this week as clashes intensified
between arch-foes Azerbaijan and Armenia, locked in a decades-long
dispute over Nagorny Karabakh region, Armenian officials said on
Wednesday.

“On April 7 (Tuesday), a soldier was shot dead on the Karabakh
frontline by an Azerbaijani sniper,” the separatist region’s defence
ministry said in a statement.

Another Armenian soldier had been killed on Tuesday in a clash on
the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The latest death takes the number of people reported killed on both
sides this year to 25.

Yerevan and Baku have been locked in a dispute over Azerbaijan’s
Nagorny Karabakh region since a bloody war erupted in the early 1990s.

Yerevan-backed ethnic Armenian separatists seized control of Karabakh
and another seven adjacent districts of Azerbaijan during the conflict
that left some 30,000 dead.

Despite years of negotiations, the two sides have not signed a final
peace deal following a shaky 1994 truce, and Armenian-populated
Karabakh is still internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan.

However, Karabakh’s ethnic-Azeri community — around a quarter of
the population before the war — was entirely driven out.

Baku, whose military spending exceeds Armenia’s entire state budget,
has threatened to take back the territories by force if negotiations
fail to yield results.

Armenia, backed militarily by Russia, says it could crush any
offensive.

From: Baghdasarian

A 100 años del genocidio armenio los residentes marplatenses conmemo

El Retrato de Hoy, Argentina
10 abril 2015

A 100 años del genocidio armenio los residentes marplatenses
conmemorarán el hecho

Del 20 al 24 de abril, de 11 a 19 habrá una carpa informativa frente a
la Catedral, en la cual distribuirán folletos y brindarán información
alusiva.

El viernes 24 a las 10 se realizará un Acto en el Honorable Concejo
Deliberante de la Municipalidad de General Pueyrredon y posteriormente
se colocará una ofrenda floral en el busto del general José de San
Martin.

Y a las 21 en el Teatro Municipal Colón, con entrada libre y gratuita
se llevará a cabo un Concierto del Cuarteto de Cuerdas dirigido por
Aron Kemelmajer que presentarán obras del Padre Gomidas-

Actuarán Aron Kemelmajer (1º violín); Perla Deluchi (2º violín); Juan
Pablo Gez Carballo (viola); Jorge Perez Tedesco (chelo) y Claudio
Campos (percusión)

Cabe destacar que se trata de un genocidio al que la comunidad
internacional le ha dado la espalda durante muchos años y aún hoy no
termina de ser reconocido por sus responsables, el estado turco, a
pesar de ser contemporáneo y generar un antecedente. La impunidad de
esos hechos sirvió como fundamento para el Holocausto. Hay una frase
que la historia no olvida de Hitler en Auschwitz: “¿Quién se acuerda
hoy del genocidio contra los armenios?¨, se jactaba. Eso significa que
el hecho de que no se haya condenado implicó, de alguna manera, una
vía libre para que el nazismo haya planificado y ejecutado lo que
después hizo.

El genocidio armenio fue el exterminio sistemático premeditado de la
población armenia en el Imperio Otomano, que luego se convirtió en el
actual estado de Turquía. La fecha simbólica del inicio es el 24 de
abril de 1915, día en que las autoridades otomanas asesinaron a unos
250 intelectuales y líderes armenios en Constantinopla, aunque las
matanzas de los años previos ya anticipaban lo que vendría. El
genocidio se ejecutó en el marco de la Primera Guerra Mundial, con la
complicidad y silencio de la comunidad internacional.

Durante este período, se produjeron matanzas a la población masculina
en su mayoría, deportación forzada de mujeres, niños, ancianos y
enfermos en marcha de la muerte, obligándolos a transitar el desierto
sirio sin agua ni alimentos, campos de concentración móviles,
esclavización y violación de mujeres, robo de identidad y confiscación
de propiedades.

El genocidio, aún negado por Turquía y por Azerbaiyán, ha sido
ampliamente reconocido en el campo académico y legislativo por la
Argentina, Armenia, Bélgica, Canadá, Chile, Chipre, Francia, Alemania,
Grecia, Italia, Lituania, El Líbano, los Países Bajos, Polonia, Rusia,
Eslovaquia, Suecia, Suiza, Uruguay y Venezuela, 43 estados de los
Estados Unidos, las Naciones Unidas, el Parlamento Europeo, el Consejo
de Europa, el Consejo Mundial de Iglesias, la Asociación de Derechos
Humanos de Turquía, el Tribunal Permanente de los Pueblos, el Mercosur
y la Asociación Internacional de Expertos en Genocidio, entre otros.

En la Argentina, en 1987 el presidente Raúl Alfonsín reconoció el
genocidio armenio durante un acto ante la comunidad armenia. En 2007,
el Congreso de la Nación aprobó la Ley 26.199 bajo la presidencia de
Néstor Kirchner, declarándolo el 24 abril como el “Día de acción por
la tolerancia y el respeto entre los pueblos”, “en conmemoración del
genocidio de que fue víctima el pueblo armenio y con el espíritu de
que su memoria sea una lección permanente sobre los pasos del presente
y las metas de nuestro futuro”. En 2011, la justicia argentina
resolvió en un fallo que “el Estado turco ha cometido delito de
genocidio en perjuicio del pueblo armenio.

La República de Armenia tiene una superficie de 29.743 km² y una
población de 3.018.854 personas. Es un país euroasiático, ubicado al
sur del Cáucaso. Limita con Georgia al norte; Turquía al oeste; la
República de Nagomo Karabagh (RNK) y Azerbaiyán al este e Irán al sur.
Su moneda es el tram. El idioma oficial es el armenio, lengua de
origen indoeuropeo que utiliza un alfabeto propio de 36 letras, creado
en el año 405.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.elretratodehoy.com.ar/ver_nota.asp?cod=36120

Damascus: Culture Minister: Those Who Committed Massacres Against Sy

CULTURE MINISTER: THOSE WHO COMMITTED MASSACRES AGAINST SYRIANS AND ARMENIANS ARE ONE AND THE SAME

Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA), Syria
April 8, 2015 Wednesday

Damascus, SANA- Minister of Culture Issam Khalil said that those who
committed the genocide in Armenia in the early twentieth century and
those involved in bloodshed in Syria in the 21st century are one and
the same.

During his meeting with Armenian ambassador in Damascus Arshak
Poladian on Wednesday, Minister Khalil said it’s no coincidence that
the Ottomans committed the Armenian genocide in the past and now the
“neo-Ottomans” are supporting the terrorism which targets the Syrian
people; rather this shows the aggressive nature of the Ottomans that
seeks to exterminate civilized, peace-loving people.

He also pointed out that the Syrian and Armenian people are linked
by historical friendship and ties, and both of them suffered Ottoman
oppression, saying genocides are always committed by powers that
don’t respect human standards or international laws and that carry
out agendas of colonialist states aiming at destroying Islamic and
Christian cultures in our region.

Khalil underlined the positive role of the Armenian people throughout
history and their deep-rooted culture, asserting that the Armenians
have the right to never forget the suffering they went through at
the hands of Ottomans.

In turn, Ambassador Poladian said that the Armenian people faced the
biggest catastrophe in history in an attempt to exterminate them,
noting that they have their right and the world must know about what
they went through and work so that such atrocities are never repeated
in the way they are repeated now by neo-Ottomans in Syria through
supporting terrorists and through their attempts to marginalize the
Armenian issue.

Ambassador Poladian presented to Minister Khalil an invitation from
Armenian Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosyan to attend the international
conference for dialogue of civilizations and culture exchange due to
be held in July in Armenia.

Qabas / Hazem Sabbagh

From: Baghdasarian

http://sana.sy/en/?p=35361

BAKU: Political Analyst: Journalists’ Visits To Occupied Azerbaijani

POLITICAL ANALYST: JOURNALISTS’ VISITS TO OCCUPIED AZERBAIJANI TERRITORIES SHOULD BE PROHIBITED BY THEIR OWN COUNTRIES OR COMPANIES THEY REPRESENT – COMMENT ON BBC REPORT/SPAN>

APA, Azerbaijan
April 8 2015

[ 08 April 2015 17:10 ]

Baku. Malahat Najafova – APA. BBC correspondent Rayhan Demytrie paid
a visit to Azerbaijan’s occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region and prepared
a report.

The author says in his report that the Armenians and Azerbaijanis
fought for these lands in 1990s.

“Azerbaijan lost control over the territories and hundreds and
thousands of ethnic Azerbaijanis fled their homes. Despite the
20-year ceasefire, the frontline remains heavily militarized. There
are frequent firefights and casualties. Nagorno-Karabkah calls itself
an independent republic. It has its own government, universities,
even an international airport. Though in reality, Karabakh Armenians
are isolated from the outside world.

Last year, “Nagorno-Karabkah republic” marked “20 years of its
independence”. But this independence and republic itself has not been
recognized by the international community, which considers this land
part of Azerbaijan. This conflict remains unresolved, one such example
is the airport, renovated a couple of years ago, its seats are empty.

There no aircrafts flying in or out. The planes, risks being shot
down by Azerbaijan, because there is still no official peace agreement.

De-facto government says its exclusion from negotiations is holding
back the process.”

Later on, the author presents an interview with Karen Mirzoyan who
declared himself the foreign minister of the illegal regime. The report
ends with a video showing trainings aimed at protecting children.

In his statement to APA, political analyst Gabil Huseynli
condemned such reportages, saying that foreign journalists’ visits
to Nagorno-Karabakh is one of the basic elements of the propaganda
policy pursued by the separatist regime there.

According to him, the regime uses media as a tool.

“The invaders pretend to be seeking to tell the world through media
about their myths that there is a national freedom movement out there
and the occupied territories in fact belong to the Armenian population
of that region. At the same time, journalist movement to that region
helps with their legitimate recognition. Visits of journalists and
art figures to the region without Azerbaijan’s permission and their
propaganda in this respect are blatant violation of the law. Because
the illegal regime has not been recognized by anyone and is accepted
as part of Azerbaijan by the international community,” he said.

G. Huseynli said the only possible way to visit the occupied
territories is with an official permission from Baku.

“Baku blacklists all journalists who make illegal an illegal visit
to that region and bans them from ever entering Azerbaijan in future.

This is a painful issue for Azerbaijan. The country is working hard
in this direction, and perhaps it will yield a positive result,”
said Huseynli.

According to the politician, those journalists’ visits to the
occupied territories should be prohibited by their own countries or
the companies they represent.

“If a country recognizes Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity but allows
others to violate this integrity, it means that country has created
conditions for violation of the law, kind of trampling the norms of
international law. Not only journalists and the media corporations
and televisions that they represent bear responsibility for this
matter but also their countries,” said the politician.

From: Baghdasarian

http://en.apa.az/news/225413

ISTANBUL: Let us be informed, remember and respect

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 11 2015

Let us be informed, remember and respect

DOÄ?U ERGÄ°L
April 11, 2015, Saturday

The writing of history can be essentially the writing of a fiction,
the result of carefully choosing and editing from countless events
over the years.

But, of course, turning out a history that swells our chests with
pride winds up creating a fake impression of the past. Not only is it
misleading but it can also lead to great disappointment when one
dreams of a future based upon a past that never actually existed.

The whole idea of `New Ottomanism’ is precisely in this category. It’s
apparently difficult for some to accept that certain things, no longer
fitting with the times, have had to withdraw from the stage. And so,
some begin to dream of reforming this past based on its strongest
form. According to this dream, once it’s been recreated, all the
former peoples of the Ottomans will once again gather under its flag.
The dimensions of this sort of self-deception become clear when one
looks at the Middle East of today.

April 24 is drawing closer. That date marks the symbolic start of
events the Armenians refer to as `genocide’ and which we tend to call
`forced relocations’ or `reciprocal massacres.’ They are going to
attack, and we are going to defend ourselves. But which dates are we
going to use in our references? The ones they have written, or ours?
Or will we perhaps finally find a more objective history we can all
use?

The third option seems very unlikely, since there has been a
purposeful erasure of this topic from society’s memory. Which is why
most of us are not able to complete the whole subject of World War I
in either our minds or our spirits. Quite a few countries in the world
believe what the Armenians have to say on this topic. Our government,
seeing the trouble it will inevitably face on this matter, has
abandoned its former `It wasn’t us massacring them, but they us’
thesis, instead clinging to the newer `fair and just memory’ thesis
that both sides experienced pain and loss.

Here is the new scenario: The Ottoman Empire, which had many Armenian
citizens, was the target of an imperialist attack. While the empire
was busy fighting for its life in Çanakkale, in the east, the
Armenians had fallen under the influence of the Russians and were in
the midst of an uprising. And so it was, responding to an essential
defensive reflex, that `what had to be done was done.’ And so, let us
celebrate the victory at Çanakkale, which came only through so much
loss, as an opportunity to commemorate and recognize all the pain all
sides experienced.

The Armenians have already declared that they view this date-flipping
maneuver as not only inappropriate but immoral. First of all, the
Allied attack on the Çanakkale Strait began in February 1915; on March
18, 1915, after they had experienced some great losses, the Allies
pulled back. As for the land attacks, they came to an end on Jan. 9,
1916. None of these dates has any link whatsoever to April 24.

There are two other important topics that we have overlooked, in the
midst of all the comfort lent by forgetting and willful ignorance. The
first is the role played by the German fleet and military personnel in
the defense of Çanakkale. And the other is the role played by
non-Muslim soldiers who fought to defend their land.

During World War I, there were around 35,000 German officers, NCOs and
privates shouldering duties on various Ottoman fronts. Among the
officers, there were top figures such as generals and admirals.

Overseeing the fifth unit of the military in the defense of Çanakkale
as its commander was Gen. Otto Liman von Sanders. And in the Gulf of
Saros, the commander of the first unit, Gen. Colmar von der Goltz,
protected the forces under him. It was Adm. Guido von Usedom who was
responsible for the defense of both the Çanakkale and Ä°stanbul
straits. Similarly, Vice Adm. Johannes Merten was on duty in
Çanakkale, while in Ä°stanbul, Marine Brig. Friedrich von Kühlwetter
was at the helm. The heads or commanders of quite a few units at that
time were German.

On the Çanakkale Front, fighting next to Muslim soldiers were also
Armenians, Greeks, Jews, Assyrians and Chaldeans. Of those who lost
their lives fighting at Çanakkale, 558 were non-Muslim citizens of the
Ottoman state. They shared the same fates as their Muslim
counterparts. Let us recall this, and show respect. May they all rest
in peace.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist/dogu-ergil/let-us-be-informed-remember-and-respect_377636.html

Cypriot MPs To Attend Armenian Genocide 100th Anniversary Events

CYPRIOT MPS TO ATTEND ARMENIAN GENOCIDE 100TH ANNIVERSARY EVENTS

Cyprus News Agency
April 8, 2015 Wednesday

A delegation of Cypriot politicians will attend the Armenian Genocide
100th Anniversary events in Armenia between 22-25 April, to express
solidarity to the Armenian people.

According to a press release by the Office of the Armenian
Representative at the Cyprus House of Representatives, the delegation
comprises Averof Neophytou, member of Parliament, DISY right – wing
ruling party leader and Chairman of the Cyprus-Armenia Friendship
Group in the House of Representatives, Stephanos Stephanou, Nicosia
District AKEL left – wing opposition party Secretary General, Party
Political Central Committee member and former Government Spokesman and
Marios Garoyan, member of Parliament, former DIKO party President,
former President of the Cyprus House of Representatives and member
of the Cyprus-Armenia Friendship Group in the House of Representatives

Vartkes Mahdessian, Representative of the Armenian Community in the
Cyprus House of Representatives, will also attend the above mentioned
events.

From: Baghdasarian