Public Radio of Armenia Armenia’s acting Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian had a telephone conversation with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov. The interlocutors continued the discussions on the steps to be taken to ease the situation on the Armenian state border due to the actions of the Azerbaijani side. Acting Minister Ara Aivazian stressed the inadmissibility of any provocation by the Azerbaijani side and consequently any encroachment on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia. The Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Russia exchanged views on maintaining regional security and stability.
Author: Samvel Nahapetian
Chess Grandmaster Levon Aronian to move to US in August
14:36, 8 May, 2021
YEREVAN, MAY 8, ARMENPRESS. Chess Grandmaster Levon Aronian will move to the United States in August.
“I think my transfer will take place after the tournaments, in August”, he told reporters in Yerevan.
In February this year Aronian has announced his decision on leaving Armenia and joining the US team.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
Armenian Foreign Ministry salutes declaration of Latvia’s parliament recognizing Armenian Genocide
Armenian Foreign Ministry salutes declaration of Latvia's parliament recognizing Armenian Genocide
20:43, 6 May, 2021
YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS. Universal recognition of the Armenian Genocide is one of the key security guarantees for the Armenian people, ARMENPRESS reports, reads the statement of the Foreign Ministry of Armenia saluting the declaration recognizing the Armenian Genocide by the Latvian parliament.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry assessed the declaration recognizing the Armenian Genocide a step towards the universal recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide.
‘’This declaration is important not only from the perspective of justice and truth, but also for the prevention of similar crimes in the future. The universal recognition of the Armenian Genocide is one of the key security guarantees for the Armenian people’’, reads the statement.
Ishkhan Saghatelyan: New bloc committed to stopping collapse of Armenian statehood
Ishkhan Saghatelyan, one of the leaders of the opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF, Dashnaktsutyun) party, said that the party will run in the upcoming snap parliamentary elections in alliance with Armenia’s former President Robert Kocharyan and the Reviving Armenia party.
In a Facebook post on Thursday, Saghatelyan said the new electoral bloc is committed to stopping the collapse of the Armenian statehood.
"The alliance is ready to take full responsibility, form a new quality government, handle the serious challenges facing the country, stop the collapse of the statehood and build a guaranteed future for Armenia through national unity and joint efforts," he wrote.
Opinion: American recognition of Armenian Genocide and Turkish-Russian relations
On the one hand, this recognition declares the existence of tension in the Turkish-American relations, as this decision came as a result of the dissatisfaction of US members of Congress with the Turkish government.
Joe Biden has recognised the Armenian genocide – will the UK ever follow?
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The US’s formal recognition of the horrors that killed my ancestors is a historic moment, but the country is still one of just 32 to have acted.
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From a very young age, I could recite by heart two lists of countries: those that had recognised the Armenian genocide, and those that had not. The United Kingdom and the United States were on the latter list.
I imagine this rather niche childhood ritual might have been on the minds of many Armenians, particularly in the western diaspora, when Joe Biden delivered on his election campaign promise to formally recognise the killing of 1.5 million Armenians from 1915 as genocide.
As Armenians, we could finally switch a major world power from one mental list over to the other.
That makes 32. Thirty-two countries that condemn a brutal campaign of dehumanisation, massacre and deportation executed from 24 April 1915 by the Ottoman regime. Thirty-two countries that acknowledge the historic wrong that emboldened Hitler to invade Poland in 1939, and led to mass desert graves in the same killing fields used by Islamic State a century later. Thirty-two countries that do not deny the reason six ancestors on my family tree are remembered not with names but as “lost without a trace”.
Until Biden’s declaration on Armenian Remembrance Day – 24 April, when each year my family and I march through London to Downing Street to protest against the UK government’s position – there was cause for cynicism.
Barack Obama, who promised as a presidential candidate in 2008 to use the word “genocide”, never did in office, preferring the euphemism “Meds Yeghern” (“great catastrophe” in Armenian). Donald Trump also avoided the word, referring instead to “one of the worst mass atrocities of the 20th century” and distancing himself from the Senate’s unanimous vote to recognise the genocide in December 2019. Indeed, no US president has used the term “genocide” since Ronald Reagan in a 1981 speech – though this did not herald a change in policy.
[see also: Will Armenia’s political turmoil undo its democracy?]
Western indifference to the Nagorno-Karabakh war of 2020, when half of the ethnically Armenian separatist region’s population was displaced, brought a fresh sense of betrayal. The realpolitik that has compelled so many nations to avoid using the word “genocide” in case it angers Turkey appeared to be reflected in a certain deference to the oil-rich autocracy of Azerbaijan, where the disputed land is located. The sluggish diplomatic response from the US during the conflict, marked by an abortive Washington-brokered ceasefire, left a vacuum for the Kremlin to fill.
Hours before Biden’s announcement on 24 April, it was still difficult as an Armenian to trust it would happen. An official briefed the Associated Press just two days beforehand that the President may still change his mind. I couldn’t bear to read any news reports – sent by friends and family in anticipation – suggesting his intentions. More than a century of waiting for justice should have detracted from the excitement of the occasion, but when it finally happened, it did feel like a historic moment. As the Armenian proverb goes, “hunger is the tastiest sauce”.
With Turkey increasingly isolated, the hope for Armenians is that other governments will now follow. The UK is still high up on my deniers list, after all. While all the devolved nations (and Derby City Council, lest we forget) do officially recognise the Armenian genocide, the UK government does not.
If Biden isn’t inspiration enough, perhaps Boris Johnson could look to his own ancestors. His Turkish great-grandfather, an Ottoman official called Ali Kemal, spoke out against the killing of Armenians by the regime and was lynched by the authorities for his treachery – left with a mock Armenian-sounding name, “Artun”, written across his chest.
Foreign Office memos over the years, released under Freedom of Information, have confirmed that the UK avoids Armenian genocide recognition for geopolitical expedience. After agreeing a Brexit deal with the European Union, the first free trade agreement the UK signed was with Turkey. As long as both nations remain somewhat stranded on the fringes of Europe, their relationship is likely to strengthen. For us British Armenians, there’s always next April.
VoA: Biden’s Recognition of Armenian Genocide Helps Armenia Heal
President Joe Biden became the first U.S. president to officially recognize the massacre of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as a genocide. Shake Avoyan has the story, narrated by Anna Rice.
Camera: Shake Avoyan.
Italian mayor slams Turkish ambassador for ‘intolerant interference’ over Armenian Genocide commemoration event – Panorama | Armenian news
The mayor of the Italian city of Ferrara slammed the Turkish ambassador for his “intolerant interference” in trying to achieve the cancellation of an event commemorating the victims of the Armenian Genocide.
“Ferrara is no Turkey,” infuriated Mayor Alan Fabbri said in a statement in response to Ambassador of Turkey to Italy Murad Salim Esenli’s letter, Armenpress reports.
The Turkish ambassador requested Fabbri to cancel the “Armenian Genocide Between Remembrance, Denial and Silence” event with participation of Antonia Arslan at a local theater in Ferrara. In his letter, the ambassador unsurprisingly pushed forward the Turkish denialism and called the event a “unilateral event” which is “based entirely on claims of Armenians.”
Mayor Fabbri didn’t hide his anger over this letter.
Noting that not only are there numerous proof of the Armenian Genocide, with the latest recognition coming from US President Joe Biden, but that the Turkish envoy is factually “suggesting in our own house to censor an event the only purpose of which is to commemorate the memory of 1,5 million innocent victims and struggle against denial which is taking place for too long.”
“We can’t allow the memory to be insulted, we can’t allow a country like Turkey, which doesn’t stand out with democratic indicators, to try and tangle democratic, peaceful and cultural initiatives which are carried out in a theater which is considered to be a temple of freedom. If with his intolerant interference the Turkish ambassador thinks he can dictate his rules in our own house, then I have to say he is deeply mistaken. Ferrara is a free city, which is against any dictatorship and denialism, and it will be that way forever,” the mayor said, adding that he will start the process of bestowing the title of Honorary Citizen of Ferrara to Italian-Armenian writer Antonia Arslan and Turkish historian Taner Akcam, who is known for his books on the Armenian Genocide.
“My respects and admiration to both of them,” Alan Fabbri said.
CoE: Judges and prosecutors in Armenia getting trained on hate speech
Sixteen judges and prosecutors from Armenia started on a training course on hate speech, organised by the PGG project “Strengthening access to justice for victims of discrimination, hate speech and hate crime in the Eastern Partnership countries” (funded by the European Union and the Council of Europe and implemented by the Council of Europe), in co-operation with the Justice Academy of the Republic of Armenia. The training course includes the translated version of the Council of Europe’s HELP course on hate speech, as well as tutored activities like case studies, analysis of national legislation, discussion on assessing cases etc. This pilot training course will be implemented in order to support legal professionals in Armenia to better grasp the concept and manifestations of hate speech, the European acquis on the topic and to become readier to tackle such cases as part of their work in Armenia.
Considering the relevance of the topic for the Armenian context, the Council of Europe carries out this training course on hate speech in Armenian during the months of April / May 2021, also to clarify the concept and its legal framework for prosecutors and judges in Armenia, preparing them to tackle the problem in their practice. At the end of the tutored course, the participants will be able to demonstrate knowledge of:
- the concept, different and links between hate speech and freedom of _expression_
- the impact of hate speech on victims and communities
- the effective responses to hate speech in their context.
The course will run until end of May 2021.
Turkish press: ‘So-called Armenian genocide claim nothing but fiction’
MOSCOW
A Russian historian has said "Armenians know that it is not possible to verify the validity of this propaganda term (genocide) with historical and legal documents", stressing that the claims of the 1915 events are fictional.
Oleg Kuznetsov, who is the author of History of Transnational Armenian Terror in the 20th Century, and authored about 170 scientific studies, reminded that the Armenian gangs continued their activities against the Ottoman Empire during this period.
"Naturally, Armenians were sent to areas far from the war line. Most of the Armenians were sent to northern Iraq and areas which is Lebanon today," he added.
He underlined that it is a fantasy to say that the Ottoman actions against the Armenians in 1915 were extraordinary.
He pointed out that various measures were taken for the security of the army in the countries participating in World War I, exemplifying that the Germans and Jews were exiled in the Russian Tsarism.
"All these were done to prevent (those groups) from taking the side of the enemy and to ensure the security of the army. This is a part of military politics," he said.
'Armenians cannot confirm in thesis that genocide took place'
Stressing that Armenians wrote many theses in Russian schools and that those theses could not confirm that the genocide took place, he said: "Armenians know it is not possible to verify the validity of this propaganda term (genocide) with historical and legal documents.
"Therefore, the so-called Armenian genocide claims are nothing but fiction," he added.
'Russia has always been behind Armenian terror'
Pointing out that terrorism is the ideology of Armenian nationalism, Kuznetsov said, "The essence of the Armenian state is terrorism. Armenians carried terrorism into state politics."
Reminding that the Armenian revolutionary Dashnak Party was founded in Tbilisi in 1890, he said, "Russia was always behind the Armenian terror."
He noted that Armenians had no other solution to solve the difference of opinion among the political parties in their country than terrorism.
'Armenian genocide claims product of geopolitical game'
He pointed out that claiming the events of 1915 as genocide is a product of geopolitical games, he said the Soviet Union aimed to influence Turkey and NATO's southern flank by using Armenians.
"The Soviet Union, using the spirit of nationalism of its small nations, kept Central Asia and the Middle East region in the constant military and political tension and tried to prevent NATO from using these regions as military bases," he said.
He stressed that genocide allegations were put forward after Turkey became a member of NATO in 1952.
Noting that the central committee of the Communist Party of Armenia took a decision in 1962 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the so-called genocide, he said: "From this moment on, the propaganda about the Armenian genocide started."
"It is a product of the Soviet Republic of Armenia, approved by the Supreme Committee of the Soviet Union," he added.
Turkish stance on 1915 events
Turkey's position on the events of 1915 is that the deaths of Armenians in eastern Anatolia took place when some sided with invading Russians and revolted against Ottoman forces. A subsequent relocation of Armenians resulted in numerous casualties.
Turkey objects to the presentation of the incidents as "genocide," describing them as a tragedy in which both sides suffered casualties.
Ankara has repeatedly proposed the creation of a joint commission of historians from Turkey and Armenia as well as international experts to tackle the issue.
*Writing by Havva Kara Aydin