Lawmakers praise Biden for expected recognition of Armenian Genocide

The Hill
April 22 2021
 

Mr. President, recognize the Armenian genocide

Boston Globe
April 22 2021

The contrast of the images are striking to me still. One bulletin board in my sixth-grade Armenian school classroom in Los Angeles was festooned with colorful construction-paper Easter bunnies and eggs, and glitter-and-foil-covered cardboard crosses and well wishes to celebrate the resurrection of Christ. The other bulletin board had only grainy black-and-white photocopied pictures of emaciated orphans, pyramids of skulls guarded by Turkish gendarmes, long winding caravans of women and children marching in rags with their tiny bundles through the desert.

April, the month of Easter, was also when we commemorated the Armenian Genocide, the mass extermination of 1.5 million people in the region — 75 percent of our population — at the hands of the Turkish government. I would stare deeply into the photographs to see if one of those children could have been my grandfather, orphaned in Diyarbakir when he was 5, before missionaries whisked him off to Lebanon.

We’re now at the 106th anniversary of this crime, for which the word “genocide” was first invented, and it’s been nearly as long that Armenian survivors and their descendants, strewn around the world in dozens of diaspora communities, have fought to have it formally recognized as a genocide in world capitals. There you will have found us, as soon our grandparents could take a first breath of newfound security — from France to Brazil, from Australia to the Vatican, from Egypt to Canada — pleading our case to legislatures to stand with humanity and condemn this brutal crime, and cheering when they did. There you find us still, pleading with President Biden to make good on the promise he made, and that so many prior presidents have broken, to formally say the words, “the Armenian genocide.”

Apraham Haroutunian, the author’s grandfather, on right, with a friend, at Armenian orphanage in Lebanon.SARAH LEAH WHITSON

Why, you might ask, have global Armenian communities invested so much time and effort, and so many resources, to persuade others to recognize the wrong done to our people? What difference does it make to our forebears, whose scattered bones have long settled in the banks of the Euphrates, or calcified in the mass graves of Syria’s Deir Zor desert, where the deportation caravans terminated? We still raise our children with the memory not just of the wrong done to our people, but also the wrong that continues with each year that the Turkish government denies it ever happened. Scholars learn more each year about the science behind generational trauma; we and our children continue to live it, with a deep, ingrained sense of injustice and an almost unexplainable, collective drive to resist the erasure the genocide intended. The need for recognition by the international community is a quest for at least a fraction of accountability: affirming the truth of what happened. One hundred six years later, that quest has only gotten stronger, no doubt fueled by Turkey’s own stubborn refusal to come to terms with its past.

’d like to think the Armenian people’s dedication to accountability, against the political odds that favor acquiescing to the power, wealth, and influence of the Turkish government, is an important contribution to the noble mission of global justice and what comes with it: the preservation of our humanity. After the Shoah, the world joined together to bring some of the key perpetrators to justice, to honor the dead, to compensate the living victims, and to vow “never again.” It was a critical moment for the world in establishing that we still share some modicum of a universal language of rights and wrongs, of truth and justice.

There has been no similar reckoning in the case of the Armenian genodice, a reckoning that would help strengthen the rule of law worldwide and provide some consolation and perhaps closure to the Armenian people. Coming to terms with the past is no less a favor for the people of Turkey, stuck as they are with a government whose denials give them no quarter to learn about or resolve all that transpired at the hands of their own forebears, and entangles them in perplexing global scorn.

This past year has been a particularly devastating and painful one for Armenian communities around the world, faced with the loss of territory to Azerbaijan from the republic of Karabakh in a war that took the lives of over 5,000 Azeri and Armenian young soldiers amid the coronavirus pandemic. A military defeat would have been sufficiently wounding, but what was most terrifying was the decisive participation of Turkey in the war, replete not only with advanced, lethal drones and Syrian mercenaries, but also propaganda in Turkish media that they would “finish off” what they started in 1915. Many Armenians were truly convinced that Turkish forces would attempt to slaughter the population of Armenia as well, making a politically negotiated solution all the harder for the now beleaguered Armenian prime minister, Robert Kocharyan.

Biden faces complicated conflicts and multiple competing priorities in the Middle East, for which the United States needs the cooperation of the Turkish government, or at least to prevent it from acting as a spoiler in the region. He must, however, remove the issue of the Armenian genocide from the negotiating table, because the recognition of our collective human history should never be used as a bargaining chip. With both houses of Congress having reaffirmed their recognition of the genocide last year, Biden has ample backing to make the American government’s position clear for the record. He will bolster his legacy and credibility as a president who meant it when he said human rights would be a priority for his administration. He can help lead the international community to place a wreath on this stain of history, and have hope that a better future may come.

Sarah Leah Whitson is the executive director of DAWN (Democracy for the Arab World Now).


ANC International on Azerbaijan’s Threats Against Armenia



ANC International

The recent actions and statements of the Azerbaijani authorities have justly elicited anger among Armenians. The outcome of the war has become an opportunity for Aliyev to set a new standard of anti-Armenian rhetoric, to try to trample on the Armenians’ national dignity and to question the territorial integrity of Armenia. Baku’s political antics, which are greatly influenced by Turkey’s posturing, irrevocably are crossing all red lines, forcing our people to come together and to protect the security of the homeland and the inviolability of its existing borders. The Azerbaijani-Turkish threats also fully fit into the context of genocidal intentions, manifested in the overt desire to deprive the Armenian people of their homeland and to seize it.

Stung by defeat in the first Karabakh War, Azerbaijan is behaving not as a side that won the war, but rather as a side that has lost all sense of reality as a result of committing a crime against humanity.

“The recent opening of a “Military Trophy Park” in Baku is yet another example of hatred toward mankind and is a manifestation of such a malice that the civilized world has not seen since the second half of the 20th century, when national liberation movements gained momentum following the fall of modern dictatorships.

Azerbaijan’s continued internment of Armenian prisoners of war and their inhumane treatment, the attempts to use them as a political bargaining chip, its overt aspirations toward the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia, the violations of the rights of our people, as well as the threats emanating from Turkish-Azerbaijani leadership, cement the long held Turkish-Azeri ambitions to guarantee continuous enmity between the Armenian and Azerbaijani people.

The resulting situation is extremely explosive, especially given Turkey’s significant role in the matter. We have already initiated necessary steps and efforts with states, international organizations and the global community in general.

We sternly are warning the dictator of Azerbaijan: do not toy with the national dignity of our people. Almost all dictators and war criminals in the history of mankind have met a disgraceful fate.

The Karabakh conflict continues to remain unresolved. Hence, we will continue the just struggle of the Armenians for the restoration of Artsakh and the dignity of Armenia.

Armenia strongly condemns Azerbaijan’s threats to use force

Public Radio of Armenia








Armenia strongly condemn the Azerbaijani President’s claims on the
territorial integrity of Armenia and his threats to use force,
Spokesperson for the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Anna
Naghdalyan says.

The comments come after the President of Azerbaijan threatened to use
force against Armenia in a TV interview.

“Such statements seriously damage regional peace and stability. They
reveal the false nature of Azerbaijan’s recent statements on peace and
reconciliation,” Naghdalyan stated.

“It is noteworthy that such threats are made on the eve of the
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, with the aim of speaking to the
Armenian people from a position of strength,” she added.

“We are in constant contact with our strategic ally, as well as with
all our partners interested in peace in the South Caucasus,” the
Spokesperson concluded.


 

CivilNet: OSCE Minsk Group Calls for Return of all POWs

CIVILNET.AM

14 Apr, 2021 11:04

By Emilio Luciano Cricchio 

The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs have released a statement calling for the release of all POWs and for high level talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The OSCE Minsk Group was founded in 1992, to encourage a peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and consists of three co-chair countries, France, the US and Russia. 

The statement outlined several unresolved issues which according to the Co-Chairs are necessary to establish the environment needed for a long-lasting peace. This included the release of POWs, the exchange of intel regarding existing minefields that have yet to be dismantled, lifting restrictions on access to Karabakh, including for international humanitarian organizations, the preservation of cultural and historical heritage, and encouraging direct channels between the two peoples. 

The statement went on to appeal to both sides to restart high-level talks, under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs. 

The statement by the Co-Chairs furthermore affirmed their intention to continue its activities and operations, and called for a possible expansion of the mission of the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, adding that both sides of the conflict should give the OSCE Minsk Group access in all areas necessary. 

This entails resuming visits to Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions, as well as carrying out assessment and mediation roles.

“The Co-Chairs remind the sides of the requirement to provide unimpeded access and maximum flexibility of movement with regard to the Co-Chairs’ travel itineraries,” the statement read. 

The statement did however point out some areas which it described as “satisfying,” including the consolidation of the ceasefire, the return of the deceased, the return of the internally displaced and refugees, the provision of humanitarian assistance, and unblocking transport communication in the region. 

This statement by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs is one of the most comprehensive statements the group has released in some time. 

The previous statement by the Co-Chairs on February 16, merely stated that video conferences had been held separately with Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazian and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov. 

Another statement on December 14, 2020, did call for the release of POWs and high-level talks.

Michigan’s cities of Novi, Livonia and Southfield commemorate Armenian Genocide

Public Radio of Armenia

Michigan’s cities of Novi, Livonia and Southfield have issued proclamations recognizing the Armenian Genocide in commemoration of the 106th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide this year, reported the Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region (ANCA-ER).

The proclamations are a result of the work of the ANC of Michigan and the grassroots efforts of its activists to reaffirm and recognize the Armenian Genocide, especially in light of the Azerbaijani and Turkish attacks on Artsakh last year.

“The ANC of Michigan thanks the cities of Southfield, Novi and Livonia for their proclamations and their joining in solidarity with the Armenian American community in commemorating the 106th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,” said Dzovinar Hamakorzian. “These proclamations are important to bring awareness to the ongoing genocide against the Armenians that we witnessed in Artsakh just last year as Armenians were forced to leave their ancestral lands that Azerbaijan is actively destroying – including centuries-old Armenian cultural and religious sites. Turkey and Azerbaijan need to be held accountable and brought to justice to prevent future genocides and these proclamations are one step in that direction.”

Michigan, which is home to nearly 50,000 Armenian Americans, has seen the support of city, state and federal leaders with regard to recognition of the Armenian Genocide over the last six decades. In fact, former Michigan State Governor Romney first recognized the Armenian Genocide on April 24, 1967. Since 1967, several governors and state legislators have formally recognized the Armenian Genocide.

The Armenian American community in Michigan has been hard at work to bring awareness to the injustices committed against the Armenian nation for decades including the Armenian Genocide and, most recently, the Artsakh War.

On the heels of the Azeri and Turkish attack on Artsakh, Michigan State Representative Mari Manoogian used her voice and platform to advocate for the safety and security of the Armenian nation with the introduction and passage of House Resolution 319 in the 2020 session of the Michigan State House condemning the attack on Artsakh.

https://en.armradio.am/2021/04/13/michigans-cities-of-novi-livonia-and-southfield-commemorate-armenian-genocide/

Turkey’s revision of hostile approach towards Armenia could be grounds for considering relations – majority leader says

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 15:49, 5 April, 2021

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS. Parliament Majority Leader Lilit Makunts believes that if Turkey were to revise its hostile approach towards Armenia, even through small steps, it could become grounds for Armenia itself to think about establishing relations with it. 

“I think that one of the most important commitments of any state official is to do the maximum for strengthening, empowering our state, our statehood, at the same time with the preservation of national identity and historical memory. And I think that it is the mission of any official to combine these two approaches in an harmonious way,” My Step bloc leader Lilit Makunts told reporters, speaking about Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s recent statement, where the Armenian leader had said that many in the region consider Armenia an enemy, and Armenia in turn considers as enemies many, and that lasting and stable peace requires Armenia to change its position, attitude and perceptions in the region, and that regional countries must do the same.

Makunts emphasized that the statement don’t contain anything about becoming friends with Turkey.

Makunts further noted: “At least until recently, Turkey explicitly showed that it has a non-friendly or hostile attitude towards the Republic of Armenia and the Armenian people. I think that even with small steps, Turkey’s revision of its approach could become grounds also for Armenia to think about the establishment of relations.”

The Parliament Majority Leader stressed that every statement must be considered in depth. “The statements that are voiced are in the context of regional reorganizations and changes. As state officials, statesmen, we must take them into account and make decisions accordingly, position or re-position,” she said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

ARF’s Ishkhan Saghatelyan says police used force to detain his three relatives after Sunday’s rally

Panorama, Armenia
March 29 2021
    

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF, Dashnaktsutyun) party’s Supreme Council of Armenia member Ishkhan Saghatelyan, who coordinates the activities of the opposition Homeland Salvation Movement, said police used force to detain his three relatives after the opposition rally in downtown Yerevan on Sunday.

“The Turks [referring to police officers] attacked my aunt, brother and nephew in central Yerevan and detained them,” he wrote on .

The opposition leader warned Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan against attempts to pressure the opposition, adding they will continue to take every effort to remove him from office.

https://www.panorama.am/en/news/2021/03/29/Ishkhan-Saghatelyan/2477029 

Film director Anna Melikyan among the laureates of GQ Super Women award

Panorama, Armenia
April 3 2021

Culture 11:21 03/04/2021World

Russian-based Armenian film director Anna Melikyan was named the winner the GQ Super Women award in the nomination of Film Director.  As TASS reported, among other  laureates  are Katerina Gordeyeva in the "Media" category, Yekaterina Shergova in the "Charity" and Yelizaveta Tuktamisheva in the "Sports" category. 

The Editor-in-chief of the GQ journal Igor Garanin said at the award ceremony that for the past four years the annual event has helped to build relations among representatives of different spheres.