Strong earthquakes unlikely, aftershocks possible, Armenia’s Emergency Ministry says

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 13 2021

Strong earthquake are unlikely, but minor aftershocks are still possible, the Ministry of Emergency Situations says. A total of 46 aftershocks were registered after a 4.7 earthquake rattled Armenia.

The Crisis Management Center has received about 3,000 reports on collapse, of which four have been confirmed so far.

A major 4.7 magnitude quake hit 8 km southeast of Yerevan at 15:29 local time. It measured 6-7 at the epicenter, and was felt in Aragatsotn, Ararat, Shirak, Armavir, Kotayk, Vayots Dzor provinces.

The Tragic Untold Story of the 19th Century Armenian Genocide

The Grunge
Feb 9 2021
THE TRAGIC UNTOLD STORY OF THE 19TH CENTURY ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

BY MARINA MANOUKIAN – FEB. 9, 2021 

According to the University of Minnesota, many consider the Hamidian massacres of 1894-1896 to be a "dress rehearsal" for the 1915 Armenian Genocide. The Hamidian massacres were a little less systematic than the Genocide was. Though ironically, it was the Young Turks, the revolutionary opponents to the Hamidian regime, who expanded upon "Abdülhamid's vision of imperial preservation," as Ronald Grigor Suny wrote in "The Hamidian Massacres, 1894-1897: Disinterring a Buried History," posted at Open Edition Journals.

Hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives, and the number of forced conversions was also very high, although this offered no guarantee of protection. In the province of Harput alone, there were at least 15,000. According to "The 1895-1896 Armenian Massacres in Harput" by Deborah Mayersen, also posted at Open Edition Journals, local officials even reached out to the government, which gave its official position on November 14, 1895, stating that Armenians should essentially "apply again when order is restored, then their conversions can be processed according to the proper procedure."

The National Council for the Social Studies (posted at Genocide Education) writes that thousands of Armenians also escaped, becoming refugees in Europe and the United States. Others went to Russia, and found themselves deported back to the Ottoman Empire by the end of the century, per the Journal of Historical Sociology (posted by the Wiley Online Library).

And while Sultan Abdülhamid II downplayed the massacres, the next generation was taking notes. This is the tragic untold story of the 19th century Armenian genocide.

LEADING UP TO THE MASSACRES

Heritage Images/Getty Images

During the end of the 19th century, Sultan Abdülhamid II was faced with what he considered "the Armenian Question." As Sara Cohan writes in "A Brief History of the Armenian Genocide" (posted at Olma.org), the 1878 Treaty of Berlin had meant to provide Ottoman Armenians with more rights, "including fair taxation practices, protections from tribal attacks, and the right to give evidence in Ottoman courts of law," but Sultan Abdülhamid II never granted Ottoman Armenians these rights.

This mainly occurred because, according to the National Council for the Social Studies, Sultan Abdülhamid II had also replaced the Russians in the role of "ensuring that the Armenians in Ottoman territory would gain more rights." As a result, the promised reforms never came. In response, Ottoman Armenians continued protesting the various discriminatory laws.

Two revolutionary parties, the Hunchak and the Dashnaktsutyun, had also emerged, and though neither were too popular, Sultan Abdülhamid II was still worried about their influence, per Encyclopedia Britannica. However, as Ronald Grigor Suny notes in "The Hamidian Massacres, 1894-1897," the later "massacres were more likely to occur where there were no revolutionaries than in places (like Van) where Armenians activists were more numerous," although this is not to say that Van wasn't also targeted. The History Net writes how Van resisted the Hamidian massacres, although the "cityscape was still scarred by numerous burned and pillaged Armenian homes and properties."

TARGETING ARMENIANS ACROSS THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE

Library of Congress/Wikipedia Commons
One of the first massacres occurred in 1894, when Armenians in the Sasun region were protesting an oppressive tax. According to Encyclopedia Britannica, Kurdish tribesmen and Ottoman soldiers burned several villages and killed thousands of Armenians in response.

According to The Thirty-Year Genocide by Benny Morris and Dror Ze'evi, in 1891, Sultan Abdülhamid II had also created the Hamidiye Light Calvalry Regiments. Recruiting Turks and Kurds, their job was to "incorporate or at least to neutralize the non-state spaces" that the state couldn't govern, though they were mainly deployed to places with high Armenian populations. The Hamidiye also joined in on the massacres, propelled by the sultan's sectarian rhetoric that aimed to "replace the multiethnic commitments and religious toleration of Ottomanism."

Another protest in September 1895 (per Armenian-Genocide.org) in Constantinople, now known as Istanbul, also turned into a massacre after police responded to a demonstration. According to Facing History, another non-violent demonstration one month later, on October 1, also "turned into a slaughter." Soon, massacres had erupted in almost "every major Armenian-inhabited town of the empire." Across the empire, from Constantinople to Erzurum, the massacres continued for another two years.

One of the worst atrocities occurred in December 1895, when 3,000 Armenian women and children, who had taken refuge inside the Armenian cathedral of Urfa, were trapped and burned alive. Children in History writes that the massacres lasted until 1897, and claimed between 80,000 and 300,000 lives.

INDISCRIMINATE ANTI-CHRISTIAN POGROMS

W. L. Sachtleben/Wikipedia Commons
Although initially Armenians were the main targets of the massacres, soon others of Christian faith, like Assyrians and Greeks, also came under attack. Greek City Times writes that the Massacre of Amida, also known as the Massacre of Diyarbakır, resulted in the deaths of 100,000 Greeks and 25,000 Assyrians.

In "Native Christians Massacred" (posted at Scholar Commons at the University of South Florida), Hannibal Travis notes that a description of the city of Diyarbakır in 1895 from the French vice-counsul "reminds us of Kristallnacht in Nazi Germany." Facing History notes that while Ottoman officials repeatedly claimed that the massacres were in response to an armed rebellion, it was clear to observers that the massacres "followed a similar pattern."

The bodies were also often mutilated. The Turks Before the Court of History quotes W. L. Sachtleben, an American who was in the Ottoman Empire photographing during the massacres, describes the bodies as "fearfully mangled and mutilated." The bodies were so mutilated, that Sachtleben initially thought the damage was done by dogs. 

In "The Hamidian Massacres," Suny notes that mostly the world reacted with indifference. Many bought into the provocation theory, and when accounts were reported in American newspapers, they were accused of engaging in "atrocities pornography." But by 1897, the international community was openly disparaging Sultan Abdülhamid II's actions, and as a result the massacres started to peter out.

During World War I, the Ottoman Empire also went on to commit systematic genocide against the Assyrians and the Greeks, in addition to the Armenians.

Armenia approves Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine – Russia’s RDIF

WHBL.com
Feb 1 2021
Sheboygan, WI, USA / 1330 & 101.5 WHBL
Syndicated Content

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Armenia's health ministry has approved the Russian Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine for domestic use, the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), responsible for marketing the vaccine abroad, said on Monday.

Other countries that have approved the vaccine so far include Algeria, the Palestinian Territories, Venezuela, Serbia, Argentina and Guinea.

(Reporting by Anastasia Teterevleva; Writing by Alexander Marrow; Editing by Catherine Evans)

Ex-Armenian minister Seyran Ohanyan unveils plans to run for parliament

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 5 2021

Armenia’s former Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan on Thursday unveiled plans to run for the National Assembly in the proposed snap elections.

“It is the constitutional right and at times, especially in this difficult situation, also the obligation of each individual to join the elections. I, as a citizen of Armenia, will have my participation in the process, but I still have to decide with which political team or in what format,” he told a program aired on Kentron TV.

Ohanyan reiterated the opposition claims that fair elections cannot be held under the current regime, which will use “all administrative resources” to win them.

“That is why the Homeland Salvation Movement, all 17 parties comprising it call for the election of a new person to organize the electoral processes,” the former minister said. 

Artsakh resumes search operations for war casualties after two-day Azeri ban

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 10:45, 5 February, 2021

STEPANAKERT, FEBRUARY 5, ARMENPRESS. Rescuers of Artsakh resumed their search operations for bodies of the 2020 war casualties and MIAs in Hadrut, Varanda (Fizuli) and Jrakan (Jabrayil) after a two-day halt.

Hunan Tadevosyan, a spokesperson for Artsakh’s State Service of Emergency Situations, told ARMENPRESS that 5 detachments are dispatched for the operations.

On February 3, the Azeri authorities had indefinitely banned the Artsakh rescuers from resuming their operations without giving any explanation.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Syrian mercenaries must leave Nagorno Karabakh, CSTO Secretary General says

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 16:50, 2 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 2, ARMENPRESS. Syrian mercenaries must leave Nagorno Karabakh, their activity near the borders of the member states of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) poses risks for the CSTO, CSTO Secretary General Stanislav Zas said at an online press briefing.

“We have information about the presence and actions of mercenaries from Syria in the Karabakh conflict zone. Any Syrian mercenary, militant must leave that territory, stop his activity as the creation of militant groups, squads and illegal armed units near the borders of the CSTO member states contains certain risks for our collective security”, he said.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Expert: War could have been averted if Armenian authorities had not destroyed state systems

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 26 2021

Information security expert, coordinator of the specialized military website Razm.info Karen Vrtanesyan on Tuesday denounced the claims of the current authorities that the recent war in Artsakh and Armenia’s defeat were “inevitable”, adding they are simply trying to clear themselves of any guilt.

“Some examples of propaganda theses based on these claims are the following: "The war was inevitable because the former authorities had brought the negotiation process to a standstill", "The defeat was inevitable because the former authorities had robbed the army", "The defeat was inevitable, because Turkey was fighting against us", “The defeat was inevitable because the Russians did not help us” (this is spread from the Ministry of Defense in the form of gossips like “I will say something, but don't tell anyone else”),” he wrote on Facebook.

“The reality is the following:

1. The war could have been averted if the Armenian authorities had not destroyed the state (especially the defense) systems before the whole world, they had not divided the society, had not resorted to adventures in international relations and had not demonstratively failed the coronavirus fight, making it clear to the enemy that they are just idle talkers and incompetent ignoramuses. In short, if they had just done their job normally, at least not worse than the former authorities.

2. It could have been possible not to suffer defeat in the war and even to win it, regardless of the use of mercenaries and even Turkish drones, if the right orders had been given in time and they had worked normally instead of going hysterical in live videos, spreading panic, destroying the rear and accusing the former regime,” the expert said, adding power could have been handed over to experienced people during the war.

“But the most important thing for them was to cling to power, rather than to win the war or at least not to suffer defeat,” he stated, adding even in the event of defeat, capitulation was not inevitable and there were different ways to get out of the situation with minimal losses.

“3. Therefore, you are the one responsible for the start of the war and the disgraceful defeat with maximum losses,” Vrtanesyan said. 

Artsakh reports 21 new cases of COVID-19 over past day

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 12:22, 26 January, 2021

STEPANAKERT, JANUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. 21 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Artsakh in the past 24 hours.

36 tests were conducted on January 25, the ministry of healthcare told Armenpress.

A total of 2306 cases of coronavirus have been confirmed in Artsakh.

The number of active cases is 34.

The death toll stands at 31.

The ministry of healthcare has again urged the citizens to follow all the rules to avoid new outbreaks and overcome the disease.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Turkish press: Turkey remembers diplomat martyred in US

Ahmet Gençtürk   |29.01.2021

ANKARA

Turkey on Thursday remembered its martyred diplomat Kemal Arikan. 

Recalling that Arikan, Turkey’s consul general in the US city of Los Angeles, was martyred by Armenian terrorists affiliated with the JCAG terror group, Serdar Kilic, Turkey’s ambassador to the US, noted that he will be remembered with respect as a distinguished diplomat.

Arikan was shot to death 14 times by Hampig Sassounian and Krikor Saliba. Saliba escaped justice, but Sassounian was arrested and sentenced to life in prison in 1984.

Since the 1970s, Armenian terror groups martyred 31 Turkish diplomats and their family members, according to data compiled by Anadolu Agency.

The vast majority of the attacks were conducted by the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) and JCAG.

The assassinations took place in the US, Austria, France, Italy, Spain, Lebanon, Greece, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Canada, Portugal, Iran and the UK.

Robert Kocharyan: If Armenia’s Prime Minister was Turkey’s agent, he would do everything that has already been done

News.am, Armenia
Jan 27 2021

All efforts have been made to split the society into blacks and whites, rich and poor, pro-Russian and anti-Russian. This is what second President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan said in an interview with several media outlets today, responding to a reporter’s question if there is an impression that the leader of Armenia favors Turkey and Azerbaijan.

“I have to answer your question indirectly. How does one state act against another state, if it considers that state a threat or it views that state as an enemy? First, it splits the society. Then, it weakens the army and all security system. Later, it instills lack of confidence in state institutions and destroys the state’s relations with allies and friendly states. Which of these actions has the Prime Minister of Armenia not taken? All efforts have been made to split the society into blacks and whites, rich and poor, pro-Russian and anti-Russian. The army has been destroyed, and attempts have been made to discredit Armenian heroes. There was no assignment to detect a network of the enemy’s agents in Armenia,” he said.

According to the second President, Armenia didn’t know when the war would begin because the normal people working within public administration bodies were assigned to seek devils, and they were doing that.

“After all the lies that have been told, nobody can believe in the state institutions in Armenia. It’s not only about the lies told during the 44 days of the war, but also the lies told over the past three years. I can’t say that the authorities of Armenia are Turkey’s agents, but I can say that if the Prime Minister of Armenia was Turkey’s agent, he would take all the actions that have been taken in Armenia. Is this by chance, or is it a pattern? Was this done with lack of understanding? This is a big issue that needs to be clarified. Every citizen of Armenia can think that, yes, there is a serious issue that needs to be identified,” he added.