Sentence Can Be Reviewed

SENTENCE CAN BE REVIEWED

Lragir.am
06/02/10

The president of the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH)
Suher Belas and the employee of the organization Alexandra Kulaeva met
today with the Justice Minister Gevorg Danielyan. During the meeting,
they discussed the participation of the Minister in Yerevan forum of
the organization scheduled for April 6-8.

FIDH representative drew the attention of the minister on the
circumstances of the death of 10 people on March 1, 2008, noting that
so far nothing in this direction has been done. The minister also
presented the case of Nikol Pashinyan.

`We drew the minister’s attention to the fact that the sentence of
Nikol Pashinyan is too strict, which prevents to declare amnesty to
him. Pashinyan was denied the right to pardon, even though the
government promised amnesty’, said in an interview the president. Mrs.
Suher Belas said in an interview with the Minister, that no matter
what the person is accused, they have the right to justice and fair
trial.

In response, the minister stated that the accusation brought against
Pashinyan is too serious, and he did not think that the sentence was
inadequate, however, he assured that amnesty can be applied, just work
is needed in this direction, said Mrs. Belas.

She also presented the case of Sasha Davtyan who in December of last
year was partly justified by the court. `This case has received
particular attention because the court failed to decide about the
punishment which required the prosecution. It was obvious that force
was used in relation with both the accused side and witnesses’ says
Mrs. Belas who asked to refer the fact that to the Attorney General.

`When there are facts that are not refuted even by the court, there
should be held an objective investigation, and the perpetrators should
definitely be brought to justice. Until this is not taken into
account, there will be no ground to speak about justice’, believes the
human rights activist.

In the same context the case of Gulyan was presented. Gulyan’s family
registered a regular setback in court, although the perpetrators are
still excused. `We told the minister that we are dealing with
impunity, which is a good message to the fact that we will monitor
this case and others `, said Mrs. Belas.

Human rights activists shared their concerns about the Commission for
early release. The Minister listened to the arguments about the
shortcomings in the work of the commission. He noted that they are
working in this direction. The minister considered an important step
the fact of creation of the commission because before decisions were
taken by the court which contained corruption risks.

`The Minister acknowledged that the provision forbidding appeal the
decision of the commission should be reviewed’, said Mrs. Belas.

The human rights activist regarded the conversation with the Minister
as open and effective: `Of course, on certain issues, our views
differed. In particular, on March 1 and the other, the responsibility
of which bears the state. We say this before the international forum,
because during the forum we will discuss all these issues’, said the
human rights activist.

ZHANNA ALEKSANYAN

Yerevan Press Club Weekly Newsletter – 02/04/2010

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

JANUARY 29 – FEBRUARY 4, 2010

HIGHLIGHTS:

"PRESS CLUB" CYCLE: HISTORY AND PUBLIC

HEARINGS ON THE SUIT OF "ARAVOT" DAILY VERSUS GOVERNOR OF SHIRAK REGION
STARTED

PACE CALLS ON ARMENIA TO IMPLEMENT THE JUDGMENT OF EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN
RIGHTS ON THE CASE OF "A1+"

"PRESS CLUB" CYCLE: HISTORY AND PUBLIC

On February 2, another "Press Club" show went on the air of "Yerkir Media"
TV company. The cycle is produced under Yerevan Press Club project,
supported by the Open Society Institute. The guests of the program host, YPC
President Boris Navasardian were Nvard Manasian, professor of Yerevan State
Linguistic University, and prosaist, scriptwriter Vahram Martirosian. The
discussion centered on the influence of historical events’ interpretation on
public process.

The next "Press Club" show will be aired on "Yerkir Media" on February 9, at
21.15.

HEARINGS ON THE SUIT OF "ARAVOT" DAILY VERSUS GOVERNOR OF SHIRAK REGION
STARTED

On January 29 in Gyumri RA Administrative Court started to hear the case on
the suit of the founder of "Aravot" daily, "Aravot Oratert" LLC, versus Lida
Nanian, Governor of Shirak region. The plaintiff demands to hold the
inaction of the Governor, who did not provide information on expenditure of
budgetary funds. The plaintiff’s representative at court is the Freedom of
Information Center.

On August 19, 2009 "Aravot" daily e-mailed all Armenian Governors requesting
on how the subsidiary funds of 70 million AMD (about $ 185,000), allocated
from the state budget in 2005-2009 to each region, are expended. Only the
Governors of Shirak and Lori regions did not answer to the request,
therefore, the founder of "Aravot" filed a suit with the assistance of FOI
Center.

At the session of January 29 the defender’s representative contended that
the inquiry was not received, as the e-mail address of the regional
administration is out of use for over a year. With this regard the plaintiff
made petitions to verify the e-mail addresses of "Aravot", from which the
requests to Governors were sent, and of Shirak region administration. Both
of the petitions were secured. The next session will take place on February
18.

PACE CALLS ON ARMENIA TO IMPLEMENT THE JUDGMENT OF EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN
RIGHTS ON THE CASE OF "A1+"

On January 27 at the plenary winter session of Parliamentary Assembly of
Council of Europe Recommendation 1897(2010), "Respect for Media Freedom",
was approved. Thus, Subpoint 11.5 of the Recommendation calls all the CoE
member states, particularly, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, Russia, Ukraine
and Belarus, "to ensure fair and equal access of all political parties and
candidates to the media before elections and pay particular attention to
this issue when assessing future elections". In Subpoint 11.7 PACE urges the
RA Government to revise the amendments to the RA Law "On Television and
Radio" (September 10, 2008), suspending the broadcast licensing competitions
until July 2010. The Recommendation notes that these amendments were "passed
as a countermeasure to the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights"
on the case of "A1+" TV company of June 17, 2008.

Several provisions of the Explanatory Memorandum of the "Respect for Media
Freedom" report, presented on the session of PACE Committee on Culture,
Science and Education on January 6, 2010 (rapporteur – Andrew McIntosh),
also regard the situation with Armenian media. Thus, the rapporteur
emphasizes that "harassment of journalists and direct controls on the media
intensified around the time of the February 2008 presidential election", a
number of journalists suffered assaults during the protest actions after the
elections. As examples of attacks on journalists, the Memorandum cites the
incidents with Hrach Melkumian, Acting Director of the Yerevan Bureau of the
Armenian Service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (August 18, 2008), Edik
Baghdasarian, Head of "Investigative Journalists" NGO (November 17, 2008),
and Argishti Kivirian, Coordinator of ARMENIA Today news agency (April 30,
2009). During the 20 days long state of emergency, declared in Armenia after
the presidential elections 2008, a strict censorship was imposed. Several
media closed down rather than submit to it. Armenia, Azerbaijan and Belarus
all maintain tight state controls over the management and work of their TV
companies, the Memorandum says. "Armenia is being strongly pressed to permit
the popular independent TV channel "A1+", whose broadcasting license was
taken away in 2002", to give a possibility for broadcast in line with the
ruling of the European Court of Human Rights, the Explanatory Memorandum of
the "Respect for Media Freedom" report emphasizes.

When reprinting or using the information above, reference to the Yerevan
Press Club is required.

You are welcome to send any comment and feedback about the Newsletter to:
[email protected]

Subscription for the Newsletter is free. To subscribe or unsubscribe from
this mailing list, please send a message to: [email protected]

Editor of YPC Newsletter – Elina POGHOSBEKIAN
_____________________________________ _______
Yerevan Press Club
9B, Ghazar Parpetsi str.
0002, Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+ 374 10) 53 00 67; 53 35 41; 53 76 62
Fax: (+374 10) 53 56 61
E-mail: [email protected]
Web Site:

www.ypc.am

Voluntary Vaccination Against H1N1 To Start In Armenia In 2 Weeks

VOLUNTARY VACCINATION AGAINST H1N1 TO START IN ARMENIA IN 2 WEEKS

ArmInfo
2010-02-05 14:54:00

ArmInfo. Voluntary vaccination against H1N1will start in Armenia in
2 weeks, Deputy Minister of Health Tatul Hakobyan said at Friday Club
on February 5.

He said the vaccine was produced in the USA. "Voluntary vaccination at
polyclinics is free for everyone including the people included in the
risk group," T. Hakobyan said. He highlighted that acute seasonal flue
cases have significantly decreased in the country. As regards swine
flue, no new cases have been registered in Armenia any longer. "No
new lethal incomes of H1N1 have been registered. Earlier 3 people
died of swine flu in Armenia," the deputy minister said.

The first case of H1N1 was revealed in Armenia on November 10. It was
a citizen of Iran. Over 110 cases of swine flue have been registered
in Armenia. Schools and kindergartens were closed on December 8 for
preventive measures. The schools opened on January 11 and pre-school
establishments on February 1.

ANKARA: No Police Negligence In Dink Murder, Report Finds

NO POLICE NEGLIGENCE IN DINK MURDER, REPORT FINDS

Today’s Zaman
Feb 5 2010
Turkey

Nineteen police officers charged with negligence in the investigation
into the assassination of Hrant Dink have been cleared by a report
drafted by Interior Ministry investigators.

The Prime Ministry Inspection Board had requested that the Interior
Ministry investigate 19 police officers working at the Trabzon
Police Station and the National Police Department’s intelligence
unit following the filing of a request by Dink’s wife, Rakel Dink,
who accused the officers of negligence egregious enough to allow the
assassination to take place. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
also requested that the charges be looked into. The Inspection
Board decided that there was a "possibility" that the police —
including former intelligence unit heads Ramazan Akyurek and
Sabri Uzun, former intelligence unit deputy chiefs Necmettin Emre
and Vedat Yavuz and former Trabzon Police Chief ReÅ~_at Altay —
had demonstrated negligence and so requested that the Interior
Ministry investigate. Ministry investigators drafted a report upon
the conclusion of their probe, saying that the 19 officers named were
not criminally negligent in connection to the murder.

The Armenian-Turkish Hrant Dink was editor-in-chief of the bilingual
Agos daily until he was killed on Jan. 19, 2007.

Lawyers representing the co-plaintiffs in the Dink trial have long
alleged that the murder was the doing of Ergenekon, a clandestine
group charged with plotting to overthrow the government. One of
the Dink family lawyers, Deniz Tuna, told Today’s Zaman last month,
before the Interior Ministry’s investigation was concluded: "Security
personnel were informed beforehand about the assassination plot and
did not take steps to stop it. They are being protected by certain
authorities in an attempted cover-up. We are talking about the state’s
security forces: the gendarmerie, police and intelligence agencies."

Armenia: Cartoon Hero Hailed As Alternative To TV Crime Series

ARMENIA: CARTOON HERO HAILED AS ALTERNATIVE TO TV CRIME SERIES
Marianna Grigoryan

EurasiaNet
Feb 5 2010
NY

A feature-length cartoon about an Armenian epic folk hero, Davit
of Sasun, is receiving praise from many parents in Yerevan as a
long-overdue antidote to what is widely perceived as the debilitating
influence of TV crime dramas on Armenian young people.

Rich in traditional music, the 80-minute "Sasna Tsrer" ("The
Daredevils of Sasun"), was released on January 25. It is Armenia’s
first feature-length, animated production since the country regained
independence in 1991. Endowed with superhuman strength and a voice
that echoes throughout canyons, the protagonist, Davit of Sasun,
(or Sasuntsi Davit to Armenians) is a character that is part-Paul
Bunyan and part-David of Israel. His parents dead, Davit, son of
the king of Sasun, is taken to a neighboring Egyptian kingdom called
Msr. Davit ends up eventually killing Msr’s leader, who envies his
mighty strength and plots against Sasun.

The animated feature cost about 360 million drams, or almost $
1 million, to make, a large budget by contemporary Armenian standards.

Minister of Culture Hasmik Poghosyan described the feature, which
was mostly financed by the government, as "a work demonstrating the
people’s level of civilization." Cartoon producer Gevorg Gevorgian,
who is also the director of the National Cinema Center, seconded that
line, boasting that the cartoon, nearly eight years in the making,
gives young Armenians a hero worthy of the name – a hero who is
"masculine, victorious and noble."

"We have tried to keep with international standards for [cartoon]
images and keep away from Armenian stereotypes of curly hair and bushy
eyebrows," elaborated animator Vardan Zakarian, one of the cartoon’s
creators. "I’ve produced a piece of work of which I’m proud."

Many Armenians welcome the cartoon for promoting Davit of Sasun as
a wholesome alternative to the underworld toughs made popular in
TV crime series. The programs are blamed for corrupting youngsters’
language and values, as well as boosting crime rates. [For details,
see the Eurasia Insight archive.]

"I’m sure this cartoon will definitely have a positive impact on young
people," Col. Sayat Shirinian, a spokesman for the national police,
said. "Many people will not read the poem, but will definitely watch
the cartoon and see strong and worthy characters."

Thirty-seven-year-old Yerevan resident Natalya Nazarian agrees that
the story of Davit of Sasun, which has existed in written form for
over 1,000 years, provides a model for both grownups and children.

"I’m just proud we can have our own hero at last," she gushed, after
taking her children to see the feature at Yerevan’s Moscow Film
?heater, the cartoon’s sole venue. A Moscow Film Theater box office
cashier reported that ticket sales were brisk.

The feature’s emphasis on national unity against scheming neighboring
powers might appear likely to strike a potential political chord,
as well. Fierce opposition to the proposed reconciliation with Turkey
has recently given new life to Armenian nationalist sentiment. So far,
no political party has commented on the cartoon. [For background see
the Eurasia Insight archive].

The film does have its detractors. Its dialogue, using dialect
contained in a 1903 version of the poem by Tumanian, baffles many young
viewers. One six-year-old girl complained that the characters were
"talking a village language" and that she "didn’t understand anything."

Sixty-seven-year-old grandmother Laura Harutiunian agreed that the
cartoon may be "? bit complicated" for children. She also voiced doubt
that any single film or program could counteract the influence of the
TV crime series. But Harutiunian still noted the cartoon’s significance
in a market that features a lack of high-quality Armenian-language
entertainment for children.

Cartoon producer Gevorgian acknowledged that the cartoon might have
certain "shortcomings," but added that the feature would be presented
at the Cannes film festival in May. Already, production has begun
on a second feature-length cartoon, tentatively titled "Anahit." The
work reportedly will tell the tale of a village girl who refuses to
marry an Armenian king until he learns to make carpets.

Editor’s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
in Yerevan.

Chloroprene Rubber Output Drops 64% In Armenia In 2009

CHLOROPRENE RUBBER OUTPUT DROPS 64% IN ARMENIA IN 2009

Interfax
Feb 1 2010
Russia

CJSC Nairit Plant, Armenia’s sole producer of chloroprene rubber,
saw output drop 64% to 1,949 tonnes in 2009 from 5,414 tonnes in 2008,
the national statistics service said.

Plant specialists attribute the cessation of operations to an accident
on May 14 last year. The plant was idle for repairs and restoration
starting June 12, and only resumed full-cycle chloroprene rubber
production on October 20.

Rhinoville Property limited owns 90% of the Nairit stock, and the
Armenia government the other 10%. Rhinoville was founded by Poland’s
Samex, Intertex of the United States, and Russia’s Eurogas.

ArCa: Global Recession Has No Major Impact On Card Business In Armen

ARCA: GLOBAL RECESSION HAS NO MAJOR IMPACT ON CARD BUSINESS IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Feb 5, 2010

YEREVAN, February 5. /ARKA/. The global recession had no major impact
on card business in Armenia, Shahen Hovhannisyan, executive director
of Armenian Card – ArCa payment system, said in an interview with
ARKA News Agency.

"We have done completely what we have planned, but we could reach
even higher results, if it were not a crisis," he said.

In his opinion, card business in Armenia still has unfilled niches,
but understanding and a real turnover, not only demand and supply,
are needed to fill them.

"We don’t want to give cards to everybody, if they won’t be in use,"
Hovhannisyan said in his interview. Growth will become possible
only when the necessity of cards is acknowledged well by population
and economy."

The executive director of ArCa said that the card culture being
implemented by the payment system in Armenia should be economically
justified, and the economy shouldn’t hobble development of card
business.

Hovhannisyan also said that card business has considerably reduced
shady dealing in Armenia by shrinking cash circulation, on which the
shadow sector stands.

Armenian Card payment system member banks have issued 190,346 cards
as of 2009.

More than 6.8 million deals worth AMD 331 billion were effected on
cards in 2009.

Armenian Card CJSC was established on March 16, 2000.

Twenty of 22 commercial banks in Armenia are Armenian Card members.

The member banks issues ArCa Classic, ArCa Gold, ArCa Business,
ArCa Affinity, ArCa Co-branded, ArCa Debit and ArCa Platinum cards.

Armenian Card is a full member of MasterCard Europe international
payment system.

The company process VISA (Third Party Processor) cards. ($1 = AMD
376.03).

ISTANBUL: ‘Patriarch’, ‘co-patriarch’ chaos among Turkey’s Armenians

Hurriyet Daily News

‘Patriarch’ and ‘co-patriarch’ chaos among Turkey’s Armenians

Sunday, January 31, 2010
Vercihan Ziflioðlu

ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News
Elections for the Armenian patriarch in Turkey have been cast into
confusion with two separate applications filed to hold the polls.
While the patriarchate’s clerical board intends to elect a
‘co-patriarch,’ an ‘Entrepreneur Committee’ of community foundation
directors is insisting on electing a completely new patriarch
Mesrop II.

Upcoming elections to select a new patriarch for Turkey’s Armenians
have become increasingly enveloped in confusion as two separate
community applications to hold the polls were recently filed with the
Istanbul Governor’s Office.

The patriarchate’s clerical board recently decided to elect a
co-patriarch for the Armenian community due to the deteriorating heath
condition of current Patriarch Mesrop II. The elected co-patriarch
would then become the patriarch following Mesrop II’s death.

At the same time, the Entrepreneur Committee, a body consisting of the
directors of the community’s foundations, has initiated proceedings to
elect a completely new patriarch. This means that two separate
applications to elect the community’s religious leader have now been
filed with the Istanbul Governor.

After learning of the committee’s application, the clerical board
released a statement condemning the filing of election papers, as the
double application has cast a shadow over the co-patriarch elections
tentatively scheduled to be held May 12.

Mesrop II was elected in October 1998 as the 84th Patriarch of
Turkey’s Armenians by the community of 50,000. In addition to
fulfilling his clerical and communal duties for the past 12 years,
Mesrop II has also played an active role in bringing the problems of
the Armenian community to Turkey’s agenda.

Mesrop II fell suspiciously ill following the Jan. 19, 2007,
assassination of Hrant Dink; the patriarchate has since declaring his
illness to be dementia. His duties have been assumed by the clerical
board under Archbishop Aram Ateþyan.

Intra-communal debate on the matter has led to calls for the election
of a co-patriarch. According to the canon law of the Armenian
Apostolic Church, an elected patriarch holds his title until death,
meaning that it is impossible to elect a new patriarch until the
passing of the incumbent one.

Possible legal problems

Speaking to the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review about the
situation, Arsen Aþýk, one of the former directors of the committee,
said the community was going through a very sensitive time, adding
that he approved of the committee’s actions.

"Mesrop II is in a condition in which he cannot fulfill his duties.
Let us assume that a co-patriarch is elected and then a legal problem
occurs. At that point, the co-patriarch might say, ‘I do not have
authority’ and isolate himself [from the situation]," Aþýk said.

Sarkis Elbe, one of the current members of the foundation, also
approved of the committee’s actions but expressed some wariness about
the general situation. "Nobody knows what is going on behind closed
doors," he said, referring to the clerical board’s decision to elect a
co-patriarch.

‘Mesrop II is the community’s choice’

Sevan Ataoðlu, a young member of the community, disagreed with Elbe
and Aþýk, saying he is against the idea of electing a completely new
patriarch and adding that the community wants to see Mesrop II as full
patriarch until his death.

"I believe the government is interfering with the Entrepreneur
Committee. That is why they are so determined," Ataoðlu said, claiming
both the state and the committee had a secret candidate in mind for
the position.

"There may be government advice [but] not interference," Elbe said in
response to such claims. "Such rumors were seen during the previous
elections too; they do not seem that believable."

Armenian Officers Sue Glendale Police Department for Discrimination

Armenian Officers Sue Glendale Police Department on Charges of Discrimination

Tert.am
14:18 – 30.01.10

Four current and one former police officers of Armenian descent have
filed a joint lawsuit against the Glendale Police Department, alleging
years of discrimination, derogatory comments and harassment because of
their ethnicity, reports the Glendale News Press.

Officers John Balian and Robert Parseghian; Sgts. Vahak Mardikian and
Tigran Topadzhikyan; and former Officer Benny Simonzad filed the
lawsuit in U.S. District Court last week, alleging myriad incidents of
on-the-job discrimination and harassment.

In a city in which nearly half the population is of Armenian descent,
the lawsuit threatened to draw out some of the political vitriol of
years past.

On January 25, City Attorney Scott Howard rebuffed the claims made in
the lawsuit, but said officials were still reviewing the case in its
entirety.

Robert Fisk’s World: Israel Can No Longer Ignore The Existence Of Th

ROBERT FISK’S WORLD: ISRAEL CAN NO LONGER IGNORE THE EXISTENCE OF THE FIRST HOLOCAUST

The Independent
ommentators/fisk/robert-fiskrsquos-world-israel-ca n-no-longer-ignore-the-existence-of-the-first-holo caust-1883686.html
Saturday, 30 January 2010

Recognition of the Armenian genocide is a paramount moral and
educational act

While Israelis commemorated the second Holocaust of the 20th century
this week, I was in the Gulbenkian library in Jerusalem, holding the
printed and handwritten records of the victims of the century’s first
Holocaust. It was a strange sensation.

The Armenians were not participating in Israel’s official ceremonies
to remember the six million Jewish dead, murdered by the Germans
between 1939 and 1945, perhaps because Israel officially refuses
to acknowledge that Armenia’s million and a half dead of 1915-1923
were victims of a Turkish Holocaust. Israeli-Turkish diplomatic and
military relations are more important than genocide. Or were.

Related articles

* In the West Bank’s stony hills, Palestine is slowly dying * Robert
Fisk: Why does the US turn a blind eye to Israeli bulldozers?

* Israel blamed for murder of Hamas chief * Search the news archive
for more stories

George Hintlian, historian and prominent member of Jerusalem’s
2,000-strong Armenian community in Jerusalem, pointed out the posters a
few metres from the 1,500-year old Armenian monastery. They advertised
Armenia’s 24 April commemorations. All but one had been defaced, torn
from the ancient walls or, in at least one case, spraypainted with
graffiti in Hebrew. "Maybe they don’t like it that there was another
genocide," George told me. "These are things we can’t explain." More
than 70 members of George’s family were murdered in the butchery and
death marches of 1915 – when German officers witnessed the system of
executions, rail-car deportations to cholera camps and asphyxiation
by smoke in caves – the world’s first "gas" chambers. One witness,
the German vice-consul in Erzurum, Max von Scheubner-Richter, ended
up as one of Hitler’s closest friends and advisers. It’s not as if
there’s no connection between the first and second Holocausts.

But the times, they are a-changing. For ever since Turkey began
shouting about Israel’s slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza a year ago,
prominent Israeli figures have suddenly rediscovered the Armenian
genocide. Who are the Turks to talk about mass murder? Has anyone
forgotten 1915? For George and his compatriots – there are in all
10,000 Armenians in Israel and the occupied West Bank, 4,000 of
them holding Israeli passports – they had indeed been forgotten
until the Gaza war. "In 1982, the Armenians were left out of a
Holocaust conference in Jerusalem," he said. "For three decades,
no documentary on the Armenian genocide could be shown on Israeli
television because it would offend the Turks. Then suddenly last year,
important Israelis demanded that a documentary be shown. Thirty Knesset
members supported us. We always had Yossi Sarid of Peace Now but now
we’ve got right-wing Israelis."

Maariv and Yediot Ahronot began to mention the Armenian genocide and
George Hintlian turned up on Israeli television with Danny Ayalon –
the foreign office minister who humiliated the Turkish ambassador by
forcing him to sit on a sofa below him – and Knesset speaker Reuven
Rivlin who said that Israel should commemorate the Armenian genocide
"every year". The Israeli press now calls the Armenian genocide a
"Shoah" – the same word all Israelis use for the Jewish Holocaust. As
George put it with withering accuracy: "We have been upgraded!!!"

This piece of brash hypocrisy has not gone unnoticed by Yossi Sarid who
has described how, a few months after Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced
the Gaza war, "an important Israeli personality telephoned me and said
the following: ‘Now you have to hit back at the Turks, to denounce
them for the crimes they committed against the Armenians You, Yossi,
have the right to do so…’" Sarid was appalled. "I was filled with
revulsion and my soul wanted to puke," he wrote in Haaretz. "The
person who telephoned me was an example of the ugly Israeli who had
disgracefully been at the forefront of those who denied the Armenian
Holocaust." So now "new tunes" – Sarid’s phrase – are being heard in
Jerusalem: "The Turks are the last ones who have the right to teach
us ethics."

The bright side to this anguished debate is that one of Israel’s
top Holocaust experts bravely insisted – to the fury of then-foreign
minister (now president) Shimon Peres – that the Armenian massacres
were undoubtedly a genocide. Tens of thousands of Israelis have
always believed the same; several hundred are expected to turn up at
the Armenian commemoration on 24 April, and most Israelis refer to
the Armenian genocide as a "Shoah" rather than the tame "massacres"
hitherto favoured by the political elite.

Yet the most extraordinary irony of all occurred when the Armenian and
Turkish governments last year agreed to reopen diplomatic relations and
consign the Armenian Holocaust to a joint academic enquiry which would
decide "if" there had been a genocide. As Israeli Professor Yair Oron
of the Open University of Israel said, "I am afraid that countries will
now hesitate to recognise the (Armenian) genocide. They will say: ‘Why
should we grant recognition if the Armenians yielded?’ Recognition of
the Armenian genocide is a paramount moral and educational act. We
in Israel are obliged to recognise it." And American-Armenian UCLA
Professor Richard Hovannisian asked: "Would the Jewish people be
willing to forgo the memory of the Holocaust for the sake of good
relations with Germany, if Germany were to make that demand?" George
Hintlian described the Armenian-Turkish agreement – which in fact
may not now be ratified by either side – as "like an earthquake".

We walked together in the cold afternoon through the darkened
interior of the great Armenian monastery of Jerusalem with its icons
and candles. George opened a cabinet to reveal a hidden staircase
up which priests would creep for a secret week when invaders passed
through Jerusalem. In this dank, pious place, Ronald Henry Amhurst
Storrs, governor of British Mandate Jerusalem, would often sit to
ponder what he called "the glory and the misery of a people".

Miserable it has been for thousands of Armenians here. Up to 15,000
lived in Palestine until 1948, many of them survivors of the first
Holocaust. But 10,000 of these Armenians shared the same fate as the
Palestinian Arabs, fleeing or driven from their homes by the army of
the new Israeli state. Most lost their businesses in Haifa and Jaffa,
many of them seeking refuge – for the second time – in Jerusalem. A
few set out for Cyprus where they were dispossessed for the third
time by the 1974 Turkish invasion. As George put it bleakly, "Today,
6,000 Armenians are residents of Jerusalem and the West Bank. They
cannot travel and they are counted as Armenian Palestinians. For
Israeli bureaucracy, they are Palestinians."

George himself is the son of Garbis Hintlian who, as a 17-year-old,
survived the death march from his home at Talas in Cappadocia. "We
lost my uncle – my grandfather was axed to death in front of him."

After the 1918 armistice, he worked for the British, carrying files
of evidence to the initial (but quickly abandoned) Constantinople
trials of Turkish war criminals. To no avail.

And glory be, if the tables haven’t changed again! Turkey and Israel
have made up and become good friends again. Yossi Sarid anticipated
this. "Let us assume that Turkey will renew its ties with Israel. Then
what? What then? Will we also renew our contribution to the denial
of the Armenian Holocaust?"

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/c