A1+: Secretary Pompeo promises to study Armenian Genocide recognition issue (video)

Voice of America

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo promised to study the issue of the Armenian Genocide. Secretary of State said during the hearings in the US Congress, answering the Rhode Island congressman David Sisilini.

“As Secretary of State, will you do what many former secretaries have done, recognize the Genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire against Armenians during the First World War. Yes or no?”

“I cannot answer. I do not know the answer. I will study the issue,” the Secretary of State said.

 

Another Congressman from California, Brad Brenton Sherman, underlined that the US administration should prevent Turkey from selling US powerful F-35 fighter bombers. They were not weapons to fight terrorists, the congressman emphasized. Referring to the Armenian Genocide and the debate on the new bill, Brad Sherman said:

“I hope the US Department of State will at least neutralize Congressional decision on the memory of millions of Ottoman victims, Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians and Syrians at the beginning of the previous century.”


Armenia’s Pashinyan Pledges to Resign as Prime Minister If Conditions for Election Created

Sputnik News Service, Russia
May 5, 2018 Saturday 10:25 PM UTC
Armenia's Pashinyan Pledges to Resign as Prime Minister If Conditions for Election Created
 
 
YEREVAN, May 5 (Sputnik) – Armenian opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan, nominated for the post of prime minister, promised on Saturday to leave this post, when conditions for holding democratic election are created.
 
On May 1, the Armenian parliament failed to elect a new prime minister, with the only candidate, Pashinyan, receiving 45 votes out of the required 53, which led to the resuming of protests. Under Armenian law, the parliament has to elect prime minister in a week, or else it will be automatically dissolved. Pashinyan was renominated for the post.
 
"When I see that there are full-fledged conditions for holding truly democratic, legitimate and transparent elections, I will resign," Pashinyan told reporters.
 
Pashinyan also noted that there are several options for the composition of the future government, and the choice of options depends on the political situation.
 
"We will try to form a government of consent," Pashinyan said.
 
On May 2, following Pashinyan's non-election, his supporters took to the streets and started to block roads, the subway, railways and bridges causing almost a total blockade of communication lines in Armenia. Later in the day, the Armenian ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) said that it would not nominate its candidate for prime minister's post and would support the candidate proposed by one third of the parliament's lawmakers in the upcoming vote.
 
A political crisis in Armenia broke out earlier in April after ex-President Serzh Sargsyan was nominated as prime minister. This was largely regarded as a way for Sargsyan, who previously served as president for two terms, to stay in power. Last Monday, Sargsyan resigned amid large-scale anti-government protests. Armenian First Deputy Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan became acting prime minister. However, rallies in the country continued as the opposition demanded an interim prime minister who will not be from the ruling RPA.

Armenian President arrives to overcrowded Republic Square of Yerevan to negotiate with opposition MP (photos)

Category
Politics

President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has arrived to Yerevan’s Republic Square to meet with opposition MP Nikol Pashinyan.

The President went to the heavily overcrowded central square on foot from Abovyan Street.

“I am going to the square to meet Nikol Pashinyan”, he told reported.

Earlier Pashinyan said he is willing to meet the president in the Republic Square to negotiate.

19:28 – President Sarkissian, surrounded by bodyguards, walks through hundreds of protesters to his car and leaves the area.

19:25 – Course of events changes, the President and the opposition leader do not resume talks in the nearby hotel. Asked by reporters if negotiations will take place, the President said : “I hope so”.

19:22 – President Armen Sarkissian and MP Pashinyan begin walking towards Marriott Hotel to resume talks.

19:09 – President Sarkissian and MP Nikol Pashinyan negotiate. Reporters are unable to hear the conversation.

Genocide: Columnist Andrea Ayvazian: Wants U.S. to acknowledge Armenian genocide

Daily Hampshire Gazette

Friday,
   In 1995, my sister Leslie wrote a play called “Nine Armenians,” which opened in New York City to rave reviews and then toured to some of the finest regional theaters in the country.

The play is loosely based on our extended family, and the genocide of the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turks during World War I. The play weaves glimpses of every-day Armenian life in this country with stories of the genocide, which began in 1915.

My father, a genocide survivor, features prominently in the play, as do our grandparents, aunts and uncles. “Nine Armenians” also tells of my journey, as a young adult, to Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, to listen, experience, and observe for myself what life is like in Armenia today.

Part of the reason that Leslie wrote the play is so that Armenians “would be counted.” Our father, who called the genocide “the massacres,” spent his entire life — as have so many other Armenians — working to have the United States and Turkey acknowledge the genocide.

Numbers matter to Armenians. We want it known that 1.5 million Armenians were killed during the genocide — a number that represents half of the Armenian population then living in Turkey. Forty-eight states in the U.S. and 29 countries around the world formally acknowledge the genocide. But the U.S. government and Turkey, denying history and distorting facts, refuse to acknowledge the genocide.

The Armenian Genocide began on April 24, 1915, when an estimated 250 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople (now Istanbul) were rounded up by Ottoman authorities, arrested, and deported to the region of Ankara, in the interior. The majority of these men were eventually murdered.

Armenians care about numbers and being counted, which is why “Nine Armenians” tells the story of nine members of one family — and at the same time tells the story of millions of others.

Because Armenians like numbers, we are grateful to know that 135 memorials, spread across 25 countries, commemorate the Armenian genocide. Our genocide may be denied, but we will not forget.

This April 24, on Armenian Martyrs’ Day, the Armenian community in the Pioneer Valley and our allies will again, for the 22nd consecutive year, mark the genocide by gathering to reflect, mourn, and demand that our genocide be acknowledged. Led by my sister Gina, we will meet at the E.J. Gare Parking Garage in Northampton and walk together, in a solemn procession, to Memorial Hall, where we will hold a vigil and service.

For the first time in the 22 years of holding this commemoration on Armenian Martyrs’ Day, our mayor will come with a proclamation and read it aloud. Although Mayor David Narkewicz has stood with us for many years, witnessing to our pain and supporting our community, this year will be different. We are deeply grateful for the Armenian Martyrs’ Day Proclamation that will be delivered.

The proclamation contains appropriately strong language and names and condemns the massacres, which for too long were overlooked. “Whereas on April 24, 1915, a mass genocide of the Armenian population began in the Ottoman Turkish Empire, the first genocide in the twentieth century…” the proclamation begins. It continues, “Whereas Americans of Armenian descent have contributed to the quality of life in the United States and Massachusetts in the best traditions of our nation and states, in times of war and peace; and Whereas the Armenian citizens around the world and of the Commonwealth are dedicated to honoring the memory of the brave men and women who died; and Whereas our thoughts, offered in memory of the 1.5 million Armenians lost during the genocide, will serve to remind everyone that persecution, torture, and killing must cease.”

Armenians like numbers and we are grateful that Northampton can now be counted among the long list of towns and cities throughout the world that formally and publicly acknowledge the Armenian genocide and our painful history, which remains an open wound.

When the centennial of the beginning of the genocide was commemorated in 2015, Armenians throughout the diaspora demanded that it be recognized by the governments of the U.S. and Turkey. Our cries were not heard.

My father, who has now passed on, did not live to see the genocide that slaughtered members of his own family acknowledged by Turkey and America. My sisters and I, now in our 60s, wonder if the genocide will be acknowledged in our lifetimes.

We believe Armenians count. And we are still counting.

The Rev. Dr. Andrea Ayvazian, of Northampton, is part of the ministerial team of the Alden Baptist Church in Springfield. She is the founder and director of the Sojourner Truth School for Social Change Leadership, which offers free movement-building classes from Greenfield to Springfield. She writes a monthly column on the intersection of faith, culture, and politics, and can be reached at .

http://www.gazettenet.com/Columnist-Andrea-Ayvazian-calls-on-governments-of-United-States-and-Turkey-to-recognize-Armenian-genocide-16999053

Art: Russia and Turkey meet in Aivazovsky’s paintings

Vestnik Kavkaza (Azeri funded media)
15 Apr in 10:00 Daily Sabah

Known for his love of Istanbul and many paintings of the city's panoramas, painter Ivan Aivazovsky's paintings are on exhibit in St. Petersburg accompanied by pianist Anjelika Akbar's composition. As Daily Sabah writes in an article "Russia and Turkey meet in Aivazovsky's paintings", the Yunus Emre Institute (YEE) in St. Petersburg in Russia is displaying artist Ivan Aivazovsky's (1817-1900) 500 paintings at St. Petersburg Russian Museum with augmented reality. The opening ceremony of the exhibition titled "Aivazovsky's Istanbul" was held yesterday. Anjelika Akbar performed her "Aivazovsky Rhapsody" in accompany with violinist Danila Popov and percussion performer Berkant Çakıcı in the ceremony.

YEE, which contributes to the ties of friendship and cultural bonds between Turkey and other countries, holding various events and programs to introduce Turkish culture and art in many countries in the world, brought together an important exhibition and art lovers in St. Petersburg in this context. The exhibition opened as part of the "Aivazovsky's Istanbul" project, which was organized within the framework of the 120th anniversary of the St. Petersburg Russian Museum's opening and 200th anniversary of Aivazovksy's birthday, is supported by the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, St. Petersburg Historical and Cultural Foundation, Turkish Airlines (THY) and Türk Telekom. Nearly 500 Aivazovsky paintings are reflected on canvases that are 5 meters in height and 75 meters in width, with animation effects and 360-degree presentation for 50 minutes at the exhibition, the general art director of which is Murat Öneş. With the augmented reality technique, participants feel like they visit Istanbul at the presentation where sound, light and animation effects are used.

Aivazovsky's love for Istanbul

The unique Istanbul paintings of world famous Russian artist Aivazovsky are a memory of the history in the city as they reflect the people of the period and views of the city. Aivazovsky became one of the most-loved artists for Turks with these aspects. He created many paintings, frequently visiting Istanbul in the periods of Sultan Abdülmecid and Sultan Abdülaziz. The artist, who had long journeys to Istanbul, witnessed the lives of three Ottoman sultans. Repeating Istanbul is the most beautiful city in the world in his memories, Aivazovsky, who has more than 6,000 paintings, was hosted by the three Ottoman sultans in the palace.

Akbar interprets paintings into musical language

Born in Kazakhstan in the period of the Soviet Union and educated in Russia, composer and pianist Akbar composed "Aivazovsky Rhapsody," interpreting the artist's paintings into the musical language. Akbar, who is also the project manager of "Aivazovsky's Istanbul," has been inspired by Ottoman and Tatar music, Caucasian and Armenian tunes and Russian music in her rhapsody, where she also used her own authentic tunes. For "Aivazovsky's Istanbul," the works of which have been continued for four years, the right of use for the 500 paintings, which have been collected from the world, especially from collectors and Russian museums, was received. The project was also supported by various parties in the arts and science worlds. The exhibition has previously met art lovers in the Crimea Feodosia Museum, Armenia, the U.S. and Turkey.

Sports: Armenia national team to face Malta

MediaMax, Armenia
 
 
Armenia national team to face Malta
 
 
Photo: Photolure
 
 
Armenia national football team will play a friendly match against Malta in May.
 
According to the webpage of Malta Football Association, the match will take place on May 29 in Austria, where they will hold a 9-day training camp.
 
Football Federation of Armenia announced that Vardan Minasyan was appointed as Head Coach of the national team. There is still no official information about the team’s further plans.

Armenian President highlights Russia’s key role in Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement

Categories
Artsakh
Politics
Region
World

Russia plays a key role in the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, new President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian said in an interview to TASS.

“Eventually, all regional conflicts find their settlement, they are quite surmountable. History has seen conflicts no less cruel and dramatic”, the President said.

“For more than 25 years talks on the conflict settlement have been held in the format of the OSCE Minsk Group, on the basis of the settlement principles and elements suggested by the co-chairs – Russia, the US and France. Russia plays a key role in the process of the Karabakh settlement as a co-chair of the Minsk Group”, the Armenian President noted.

President Sarkissian recalled that “a three-party ceasefire in Karabakh was achieved 23 years ago exactly due to Russia’s mediation”. “We highly value these mediatory efforts in the search for a peaceful political solution to the problem”, the President added. “It is obvious that political will to achieve peace and accord is necessary for the settlement of the problem. Armenia, for its part, is doing everything it can to achieve peace and expects the same moves from the Azerbaijani side”, the Armenian leader said.

https://en.168.am/2018/04/10/23647.html

Chess: Armenia’s Vladimir Akopian seals victory at first round of Dubai Open 2018 chess tour

Panorama, Armenia
April 3 2018
Sport 20:26 03/04/2018 Armenia

Armenian GM Vladimir Akopian showed a strong performance at Round 1 of the 20th Dubai Open 2018 international chess tournament on Monday. 

The Armenia player outplayed FIDE Master Mohannad Farhan at the first round, the Chess Federation of Armenia told Panorama.am.

Vladimir’s son Eduard, who is also taking part in the tournament, lost his game against GM Levan Pantsulaia of Georgia at the first round.

Round 2 is scheduled for today.