Madrid: On the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Spain:

 

This year marks the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the destruction of Armenian communities in the Ottoman Empire from the Mediterranean coast to Eastern Armenia, including the six provinces of historical Armenia within the Ottoman Empire: Van, Erzurum, Harput, Bitlis, Diyarbekir and Sivas. The massive raid against Armenian intellectuals in Constantinople – among them, for example, the great musician Komitas Vardapet – and the burning of Smyrna, symbolically mark the beginning and the end of what Armenians have called the “Aghet” or “the catastrophe”. The Young Turk regime, and in particular the triumvirate of the Union and Progress Committee formed by Enver Pasha, Kemal Pasha and Talat Pasha, put an end to the cultural, economic and political life of the first people to convert to Christianity. The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute puts the death toll at 1.5 million. The consequences – for example, the demographic imbalance caused by the massacre – persist to this day.

The path that led to the Genocide started with the “Hamidian Massacres” between 1894 and 1896 and went through the Adana Massacre of April 1909. The rise of nationalist doctrines such as Pan-Turanism and Pan-Turkism paved the way for genocide. Propaganda portrayed Armenians as traitors, enemies of the homeland and conspirators. The Syriac Christians and the Greeks of Pontus suffered similar fates. In the empire dreamed by the military and nationalist poets, the Christian minorities and, in particular, the Armenians were regarded as foreign bodies.

The entry of the Ottoman Empire into the Great War provided an opportunity to accelerate the process of destruction of the Armenians. In a combination of public and secret instruments, the means to exterminate a people were arranged: laws depriving them of their heritage under the pretext of “protecting” it, paramilitary units executing orders to kill, forced transfers of civilians who were then abandoned in the desert to die of hunger and thirst, massacres of intellectuals who could sustain the Armenian national identity, slavery and forced marriages for women, forced conversions to Islam… The Armenian Genocide prefigures the imaginary of the horrors of our time: platoons of soldiers razing villages to the ground, trains driving victims to certain death, detentions without guarantees or trial, starvation and thirst as effective forms of mass murder.

But the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire did not go to their deaths like sheep to the slaughter. Wherever they could resist, they fought bravely. The Armenian resistance in the summer of 1915 inspired Franz Werfel’s great novel “The Forty Days of the Musa Dagh” (1933). There were witnesses who recorded the horror that unfolded before their eyes; for example, German soldiers in the service of the Ottoman Empire, Christian missionaries and diplomats. There were also heroes who refused to witness the crime without acting. For example, Al Husayn Ibn Ali, hierife of Mecca, issued a decree calling for protection and aid to the Armenians. In Eastern Armenia, where resistance stopped the final Ottoman offensive at the battle of Sardarapat (1918), Armenian life was sustained.

In the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union, in Persia, in France, in Argentina and in the United States, the survivors did not forget their suffering.

The Armenian Genocide, perpetrated 108 years ago, continues to cast its shadow over our times. It is the responsibility of the democracies of our time to prevent the history of genocide from repeating itself with this people or with any other.

Dozens of Tegh families in difficult social situation

NEWS.am
Armenia –

As a result of the invasion and illegal presence of Azerbaijani armed servicemen in Armenia, dozens of families of Syunik's Tegh Municipality found themselves in a difficult social situation. Arman Tatoyan, former Republic of Armenia Human Rights Defender, director of Tatoyan Foundation, wrote on his Facebook.

"Behind every corner of our Motherland is human destiny, parental home and family.

As a result of the invasion and illegal presence of Azerbaijani armed servicemen in Armenia, families of Syunik Tegh community found themselves in a difficult social situation. People are deprived of their lawful pastures, the opportunity to earn a family income. About 4 dozen families have certificates of ownership, but cannot even come close to their lands,” Tatoyan said.

“I continue to insist that the demands to remove them and provide a security zone for the protection of the civilian population are absolutely justified," he added.

Armenia responds to Azerbaijan’s decision to withdraw from European Championships

Panorama
Armenia –

The Armenian Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports says Azerbaijan’s decision to withdraw from the European Weightlifting Championships in Yerevan is a “matter of concern in terms of sports ethics.”

Citing safety concerns, Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Youth and Sports and National Olympic Committee withdrew its team from the championships after the country’s flag was set on fire during the opening ceremony on Friday evening.

In a statement on Saturday, the sports ministry stressed Armenia ensured compliance with all security standards from the very beginning.

“No problems concerning the safety of the weightlifters who arrived in Yerevan to participate in the championships did not and could not arise,” the ministry said.

“The incident, which occurred during the opening ceremony and was settled very quickly, has nothing to do with the safety of athletes and their normal performances. All necessary conditions have been fully met.

“The Republic of Armenia stays true to its commitments to the International Weightlifting Federation and reaffirms its readiness to hold the 2023 European Championships at a high level,” reads the statement.

Armenian Lawmaker Faces Criticism After Spitting On Man Who Called Him ‘traitor’

April 8 2023
Armenian parliamentary speaker Alen Simonyan has issued an apology after he was caught on camera spitting on a pedestrian earlier this week. In a statement posted on his Facebook page on Thursday, the 43-year-old acknowledged his lack of self-control in response to an insult directed at him. “I’m sorry, I lost my self-control because of an insult directed at me,” the speaker wrote.

Despite the apology, the incident has continued to generate widespread attention in Armenian media outlets, with many calling for Simonyan's resignation, including former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, as per a report from the South China Morning Post. The incident has also sparked broader discussions about political accountability and the appropriate conduct for elected officials.

Simonyan's actions have been widely condemned, and the incident has added to the political turmoil in Armenia, which has been grappling with a range of challenges in recent years, including political unrest and a conflict with neighbouring Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Earlier this week, Armenian parliamentary speaker Alen Simonyan was caught on camera spitting on a pedestrian after he was allegedly insulted on the street. The man claimed that Simonyan ordered his bodyguards to restrain him before spitting in his face. Simonyan did not deny the incident, but initially defended his actions by stating, "Get it into your head that your impudence will not go unanswered, an insult directed at the legitimate authorities of the state will receive a legitimate response."

Following the public disclosure of the incident, the top official of the National Assembly and a prominent member of the ruling party Civil Contract faced significant pressure. Armenia's government is currently seen as fragile following its defeat in the 2020 war against neighbouring Azerbaijan over the disputed area of Nagorno-Karabakh. The war had a profound impact on the country, exacerbating an already challenging situation. The ceasefire agreement signed by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, which involved ceding significant portions of Nagorno-Karabakh, is viewed by many citizens as an act of betrayal.

Asbarez: Israeli Activist Yaron Weiss Dedicates Journey Across Galilee to People of Artsakh

Yaron Weiss standing next to an Artsakh flag which he plans to carry with him throughout his five-day journey


Israeli activist and author Yaron Weiss, who has traveled extensively in the Caucasus, is starting a five-day journey across the Galilee dedicated to the people of Artsakh.

“The landscape of the Galilee, the region where I live always reminds me the landscape of Artsakh. The size of the area is also the same,” Weiss said in a Facebook post as he announced the journey.

“I remember those days when I crossed Artsakh by hiking on the ‘Janapar Trail’ – The first national trails network in the Caucasus. Unfortunately these days most of the ‘Janapar Trail’ is under hostile occupation,” he said.

“In recent months, the people of Artsakh are in difficult situation under siege. In addition tens of thousands of refugees cannot return to their homes. One of the main reasons of the worst situation is also due to the use of Israeli-made weapons that changed the balance of forces in the conflict,” Weiss added.

“To sympathize with the people of Artsakh and to raise awareness in Israel and the entire world about their difficult situation, I decided to go on a journey of crossing the Galilee from the western side in the Mediterranean Sea to the eastern side in the Jordan Valley on shores of the Sea of Galilee,” he said.

Weiss plans to hike for several days, holding the Artsakh flag in order to remind the many people that he’s going to meet along the way that “this journey is dedicated to those heroes who live in their ancient homeland despite all the difficulties. The homeland that is very similar to the Galilee.”

“I would greatly appreciate if you follow the journey on social media and share. You are more than welcome to join me on the Trail,” Weiss concluded.

Appalling video from Lachin Corridor shows Azeri ‘eco-activist’ threatening to SLAUGHTER Armenians for KEBAB

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 10:28, 21 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 21, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan’s fake eco-activists who’ve been blocking the Lachin Corridor for already 100 days are now explicitly threatening to kill Armenians, despite their own president Ilham Aliyev’s repeated claims that Azerbaijan stands ready to provide security and rights to the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh according to Azeri legislation.

A video online shows one of the fake eco-activists in the Lachin Corridor threatening to “slaughter” Armenians.  “We will soon slaughter an Armenian for Nowruz here and will add his blood on kebab,” one of the fake eco-activists says smilingly looking into the camera. Those standing next to the man are heard laughing.

Armenia’s Ambassador-at-Large Edmon Marukyan reacted to the video. “It's never enough for a bloodthirsty regime and its puppets to starve 120000 people of Nagorno Karabakh,” he tweeted. “Now their pseudo-eco-activist threatens to kill all Armenians and literally drink their blood. Are we truly in the 21st century? Is there a civilized world somewhere around?”

Ex-defense minister rejects Pashinyan’s claims about ‘fifth column’ in army

Panorama
Armenia –

Armenia’s former Defense Minister David Tonoyan has dismissed as “unacceptable” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's claims about the “fifth column” in the Armenian military and its further discussions.

Speaking at a news conference last week, Pashinyan blamed the "fifth column" in the army for Armenia’s defeat in the 2020 Artsakh war. He said more than 50 former military officers had been accused of espionage and treason.

Meanwhile, the premier warned of a high risk of an escalation on the border with Azerbaijan and in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Tonoyan, who was arrested in 2021 in a criminal probe into supplies of allegedly faulty ammunition to Armenia’s armed forces, called the statements a “political speculation aimed at splitting the army,” his legal team said on Thursday.

Asked whether Pashinyan had discussed the matter with Tonoyan, the former minister said there was not even a hint of it. He also noted that he did not know whether the prime minister had any evidence, although Pashinyan himself claimed his statements were well-grounded.

"I believe that it is necessary to stop the public debates on the political speculation and to wait for the disclosure of the facts also given the high likelihood of renewed hostilities," the ex-minister added.

Azerbaijan preparing for Armenian genocide in Karabakh region: Armenia FM

 Iran –

Armenia says Azerbaijan is preparing an escalation against Yeravan via the use of an “aggressive rhetoric” aimed at undermining existing agreements between the two countries, claiming that Baku is preparing for genocide of Armenians in the Karabakh region.

In a statement, the Armenian Foreign Ministry warned that Baku is doing everything to make regional peace establishment impossible.

“Having violated basically all the points of the trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, the president of Azerbaijan is obstructing the process of opening of regional communications,” the statement said.

This comes after Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman Aykhan Hajizada laid the responsibility on Armenia's door on Wednesday and said that Yerevan “is not interested” in peace and stability in the region as it rejected a peace proposal that would include provisions ruling out Armenia's territorial claims in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

“Azerbaijan not only keeps under occupation the sovereign territories of the Republic of Armenia which it illegally occupied on May 12 and November 17, 2021 and in September 2022, but also introduced the so-called "Western Azerbaijan" discourse and declares practically the entire territory of the Republic of Armenia as Azerbaijani land,” the statement said.

The speech of the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, delivered on March 16 during the summit of the Heads of State of the Organization of Turkic States (OTS), was a clear manifestation of territorial claims against the Republic of Armenia and preparation of another aggression.

“The assessment of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia is clear: with its aggressive discourse and actions Azerbaijan makes preparations for subjecting the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh to genocide and for a new aggression against Armenia,” the statement said.

In the end, the Armenian foreign ministry suggested launching international mechanisms for the prevention of genocides, sending an international fact-finding mission to the Lachin corridor and Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as directly condemning Azerbaijan's aggressive actions and policies.

On February 18, 2023, Azerbaijani President and Armenian Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, held peace talks in Munich and following the negotiations, Aliyev said that the main issue was that the peace treaty between the two countries should be drawn up on the basis of international norms and principles, but the negotiations have been stalled so far.

The decades-long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh on the border between the two countries flared up again in September 2020, marking the worst escalation since the 1990s.

Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but has a primarily Armenian population that has resisted Azerbaijani rule since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

In 2020, the second Karabakh broke out, killing more than 6,500 people during a six-week conflict. The war ended with a Russian-brokered deal that saw Yerevan cede swathes of the Azerbaijani territory that it had been occupying for several decades.

Since December 2022, the Lachin Corridor — a road that runs through Azerbaijani territory and serves as the only link between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh — has been blocked by a group of people from Azerbaijan described by Baku as environmental activists protesting alleged illegal Armenian mining around the area.

What is Armenia’s alternative to CSTO? Defense minister does not answer this question

News.am
Armenia – March 15 2023

On the one hand, Armenia continued to take some steps, take actions, sign agreements related to the CSTO, on the other hand, yesterday at PM Pashinyan's press conference, an opinion was voiced that the CSTO is leaving Armenia. Opposition MP Gegham Nazaryan stated this at Wednesday’s meeting of the Standing Committee on Defense and Security of the National Assembly of Armenia.

Then, he asked Defense Minister Suren Papikyan this question. "Does the Minister of Defense share this point of view. If not, why are we signing so many agreements? What is the CSTO’s alternative for Armenia today?"

In response, Papikyan said: "I don't want to get into the discussion about what is the CSTO alternative because if you refer to the Prime Minister's press conference, he said that Armenia is not leaving anywhere, if there are those leaving, they are leaving Armenia. But we are concerned about that, too. The Ministry of Defense and the Minister of Defense [of Armenia] are also carrying out the activities that we should be guided by according to our international obligations. That is, if we have a current work today, we are obligated to do it, and we do it properly. If documents have been signed, work has been carried out, naturally, within the framework of execution, the Minister of Defense is obligated to report, which I am doing."

Armenian PM says no humanitarian disaster in Karabakh thanks to peacekeepers

 TASS 
Russia –
It was also added that Russia had assumed the role of the guarantor of the security of the population and civil infrastructure of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020

YEREVAN, March 16. /TASS/. The humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh caused by Azerbaijan's blocking of the Lachin corridor has not turned into a catastrophe thanks to Russian peacekeepers, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at a government meeting on Thursday.

"I cannot but note the special role of Russian peacekeeping troops. Thanks to them, the humanitarian crisis that emerged after the illegal closure of the Lachin corridor in Nagorno-Karabakh did not turn into a humanitarian disaster," he said.

Pashinyan also added that Russia had assumed the role of the guarantor of the security of the population and civil infrastructure of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020. "We hope that the Russian Federation will fulfill this function, but if our ally cannot fulfill this role for any objective reason, I think it should turn to the UN Security Council and warn the civilian population in Nagorno-Karabakh of the danger," he added.

https://tass.com/world/1589463