Bako Sahakyan sends congratulatory message to Serzh Sargsyan on Army Day

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Artsakh
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Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan sent a congratulatory address on the Day of the Army to the President of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan.

The address runs as follows:

“Your Excellency, Mr. President,

On behalf of the Artsakh people, the authorities and on my personal behalf I extend the most heartfelt congratulations to You on the Army Day.

The Armenian valorous army was born and forget itself in an unequal struggle for freedom and independence, gained cherished victories, changing the course of history by the bravery and self-commitment of our courageous sons.

Today the Armenian soldiers continue to stand unwaveringly for the defense of the native country, perform new feats, carrying on the combat traditions of their heroic grandfathers and fathers.
The army is dear for every other Armenian.

Your Excellency Mr. President,
On this festive day I congratulate You and our entire people once again and wish peace, welfare, new victories and achievements”.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/26/2018

                                        Friday, January 26, 2017

Russian Envoy Details New Deal On Karabakh Truce Monitoring
January 26, 2018

Armenia - OSCE observers escorted by Armenian army officers monitor
the ceasefire regime in Tavush province bordering Azerbaijan, 16Feb,
2017

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe is to deploy
seven more ceasefire monitors in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone
under an Armenian-Azerbaijani agreement finalized last week, a senior
Russian negotiator said on Friday.

The Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers agreed in principle to
expand an OSCE mission monitoring the ceasefire regime along the
Karabakh "line of contact" and the Armenian-Azerbaijani border when
they met Krakow, Poland on January 18. The measure designed to prevent
truce violations was proposed by the U.S., Russian and French
mediators co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group and backed by
Armenia. Azerbaijan has been reluctant to accept it until now.

"There are some technical details that still need to be worked out,"
the group's Russian co-chair, Igor Popov, told the Azerbaijani APA
news agency. He said the OSCE mission will be boosted by an
"additional seven observers."

The existing, largely symbolic mission headed by a Polish diplomat,
Andrzej Kasprzyk, is similar in size. Its members travel to Karabakh
and the Armenian-Azerbaijani border once or twice a month to briefly
monitor the parties' compliance with truce agreements reached in 1994
and 1995.

The tentative agreement on the expansion of Kasprzyk's team reflects
some progress that seems to have been made in Armenian-Azerbaijani
peace talks in the last few months. Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
and his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov met twice, in the
presence of the mediators, after an Armenian-Azerbaijani summit held
in Geneva in October.

Popov said that he and the fellow co-chairs from the United States and
France will again visit Baku and Yerevan early next month for further
discussions on the proposed measures to minimize truce violations. He
said they also expect to "ascertain" the conflicting parties'
positions on details of a Karabakh peace plan put forward by the
mediators.

"We are making efforts to propose to Baku and Yerevan variants
acceptable to them and this is what we will be talking about in the
region," said the Russian envoy.

In a joint statement issued in Krakow on January 18, the three Minsk
Group co-chairs said they discussed with Nalbandian and Mammadyarov
"core sensitive issues contained in the working proposals currently on
the table." They did not disclose those issues.

Popov also told APA that it is too early to say whether Presidents
Serzh Sarkisian and Ilham Aliyev might been again soon.

Sarkisian will complete his final presidential term on April 9. He may
well remain in power as Armenia's prime minister.



Jailed Oppositionists To Testify At Another Trial
January 26, 2018

 . Karlen Aslanian


Armenia - The trial of opposition leader Zhirayr Sefilian and other
men accused of plotting an armed revolt in Yerevan, 19 Januay 2018.

The two arrested leaders of an armed opposition group that seized an
Armenian police station in 2016 will testify at the ongoing trial of
Zhirayr Sefilian, their prominent comrade prosecuted separately, a
court in Yerevan said on Friday.

Sefilian, who is the top leader of the Founding Parliament radical
opposition movement, was arrested in June 2016 on charges of plotting
an armed revolt against the government. He also stands accused of
planning to organize "mass disturbances" in Yerevan during the April
2015 official commemorations of the centenary of the Armenian genocide
in Ottoman Turkey.

Sefilian denies the charges as politically motivated. He and several
other men went on trial last May.

Sefilian was taken into custody less than a month before three dozen
members and supporters of Founding Parliament seized a police compound
in Yerevan's Erebuni district to demand his release and President
Serzh Sarkisian's resignation. The gunmen led by Varuzhan Avetisian
and Pavlik Manukian laid down their weapons after a two-week standoff
with security forces which left three police officers dead. They are
standing three separate trials.

Sefilian's lawyers petitioned a district court in Yerevan to summon
Avetisian and Manukian for questioning at his trial. The presiding
judge, Tatevik Grigorian, granted the request, saying that the two men
could shed more light on the riots that were allegedly planned by
Sefilian.

Grigorian ruled that they will be questioned as witnesses at the next
court hearing. According to the prosecutors, Avetisian and Manukian
were aware of Sefilian's alleged preparations for the street violence.

It is not clear whether Sefilian will be able to put questions to his
comrades. The Lebanese-born oppositionist has been frequently expelled
from the courtroom for contempt of court. The judge twice refused to
allow him to attend Friday's hearing.



Armenian Opposition Insists On Tax Cuts
January 26, 2018

 . Astghik Bedevian


Armenia - Leaders of the opposition Yelk alliance hold an
anti-government rally in Yerevan, 19Jan2018.

The opposition Yelk alliance said on Friday that it will continue to
campaign for the scrapping of new government-drafted legislation that
raised income taxes for Armenians earning well above the average wage
in the country.

A Yelk parliamentarian, Gevorg Gorgisian, said it will table
amendments that would restore income tax rates that were in force
until January 1. "We are now working on a draft bill and it will again
be circulated [in the parliament,]" Gorgisian told RFE/RL's Armenian
service (Azatutyun.am).

He said the bill would also reverse increases in taxes on fuel,
tobacco and alcohol which also took effect on January 1. In addition,
Yelk will hold more demonstrations in Yerevan in support of its
demands, added Gorgisian.

The controversial changes made to Armenia's Tax Code raised from 26
percent to 28 percent the tax rate for monthly incomes ranging from
150,000 to 2 million drams ($310-$4,150). The rate for those Armenians
who earn more was set at 36 percent. The amended code at the same time
cut the tax rate from 24.4 percent to 23 percent for workers making
less than 150,000 drams a month.

Government officials insist that the more progressive tax will put a
heavier financial burden only on high-income individuals. They argue
that 90 percent of employed Armenians, who make between 150,000 and
280,000 drams, will not have any additional sums deducted from their
wages because of a complex method of income calculation. And those who
earn from 280,000 to 330,000 drams will pay an extra amount of only up
to 820 drams ($1.7) a month, the say.

The average monthly wage in Armenia stood at almost 188,000 drams
($390) as of November 2017, official statistics show.

Khosrov Harutiunian, the chairman of the Armenian parliament committee
on economic issues, dismissed opposition claims that the higher taxes
will hit the middle class hard. He too argued that 90 percent of
working-age people will not be negatively affected by them.

Accordingly, Harutiunian, who represents the ruling Republican Party
of Armenia (HHK), rejected the Yelk demands. He said the parliament
majority might only agree to an even more progressive tax that would
mean lower rates for wages not exceeding 150,000 drams and higher
rates for much higher incomes.

Yelk leaders pressed their demands for tax cuts when they rallied
hundreds of supporters in Yerevan last week in protest against recent
increases in the prices of fuel and some foodstuffs. The opposition
bloc blamed the fuel price hikes on the new Tax Code.

The authorities claim to be trying to ease the impact of the increased
prices. Harutiunian and another senior HHK lawmaker plan to introduce
a bill lowering a major tax collected from public transport
companies. It is aimed at discouraging them from raising bus and
minibus fares.

In a related development, the Agriculture Ministry announced on
Thursday that the government will subsidize the price of diesel fuel
widely used by farmers across the country.

Gorgisian dismissed these measures as "cosmetic." Yelk, which holds 9
seats in the 105-member parliament, will hold its next anti-government
rally on February 5.



Diaspora Philanthropist Makes $10m Donation To Armenian Army
January 26, 2018

Armenia - Defense Minister Vigen Sargsian inspects medical equipment
donated by Armenian-American philanthropist Mike Sarian, 25Jan2018.

A U.S. philanthropist of Armenian descent has donated modern medical
equipment and supplies worth about $10 million to Armenia's armed
forces, according to the Defense Ministry in Yerevan.

The ministry reported late on Thursday that the lavish donation by
Mike Sarian includes large quantities of nearly 100 items, including
X-ray and artificial respiration systems, ultrasound machines and
other medical diagnostic equipment. In a statement, it said Defense
Minister Vigen Sargsian inspected them during a visit to the central
warehouse of the Armenian army's medical service.

The donated aid will be distributed to the country's military
hospitals. Some of it will also be provided to civilian medical
institutions in towns and villages close to Armenia's border with
Azerbaijan, added the statement.


U.S. - Armenian-American philanthropist Mike Sarian, 5 May 2017.
Sarian is the president of Hospital Operations for Prime Healthcare
Services, an American hospital company based in California. He has
more than 25 years of executive management experience in healthcare in
the United States.

Sarian has regularly contributed large sums to Armenian-American
charities, schools and churches. In 2014, he donated through his
company $2 million worth of medical equipment to over a dozen
hospitals in Armenia.



Press Review
January 26, 2018


"Haykakan Zhamanak" comments on an attempted Azerbaijani military
incursion reported by the Nagorno-Karabakh military on Thursday,
saying that it has more political than military implications. "In that
sense, it even plays into the Armenian side's hands," writes the
paper. "We would have certainly not been able to draw such a
conclusion had the Karabakh army suffered casualties while repelling
Azerbaijani special forces."

"Zhoghovurd" says the incident followed the delivery to Azerbaijan of
a new batch of Russian weapons, mainly armored personnel carriers. "I
don't know on what terms Azerbaijan buys weapons from Russia,"
Vladimir Kazimirov, Russia's chief Karabakh negotiator from 1992-1996,
tells the paper. "At any rate, Azerbaijan's leadership should bear in
mind that Russia and Armenia cooperate very closely. It is nave to
hope to solve the Artsakh issue with a single local military
operation." Such an "adventure" would have negative consequences for
Baku, says Kazimirov.

"Chorrord Ishkhanutyun" dismisses Central Bank Governor Artur
Javadian's assertion that the price of butter in Armenia rose sharply
last year because of increased global demand that stems from recent
international research suggesting that butter is a healthier foodstuff
than cooking oil. The paper argues that the price of oil has not
fallen as a result. "Sugar also has not become cheaper even though
that product is often called `sweet death,'" it says.

"Hraparak" says that President Serzh Sarkisian's speech at the Council
of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) coincided with the
publication of a government bill on the structure and powers of a new
Armenian cabinet that will be formed after the end of his final term
in April. The paper says this is a further indication that Sarkisian
will become prime minister.

(Tigran Avetisian)



Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Armenian genocide: How Valley prosecutor missed his chance to be ‘immortal symbol of justice’

The Fresno Bee

Attorney James Lindsay, defendant Gourgen Yanikian, District Attorney David Minier, attorney Vasken Minasian in 1972. Contributed
Valley Voices

Armenian genocide: How Valley prosecutor missed his chance to be ‘immortal symbol of justice’

By David Minier
January 26, 2018 01:22 PM

Twice each year, my thoughts turn to the Armenian Genocide. On April 24, the anniversary date of the 1915 massacres orchestrated by the Turkish government. And  on Jan. 27, when 45 years ago Gourgen Yanikian assassinated two Turkish diplomats in Santa Barbara to avenge the genocide.

Yanikian, age 78 and a former Fresno resident, was charged with murder, and I was his prosecutor.

The aging Armenian had lured the diplomats to a cottage at Santa Barbara’s exclusive Biltmore Hotel, promising gifts of art treasures for their government. Instead, he pulled a Luger pistol from a hollowed out book and emptied it at them. He then called the reception desk, announced he had killed “two evils,” and sat calmly on the patio awaiting arrest.

Yanikian’s purpose was to create an “Armenian Nuremberg” – a show trial to call world attention to the genocide, as the Nuremberg trial had done with Nazi war crimes. And perhaps to be acquitted. Yanikian’s hope was not unreasonable.

In 1921, a German jury had acquitted Soghoman Tehlirian of murdering Talaat Pasha, the Turkish official most responsible for the genocide. Tehlirian later settled in Fresno, and his tomb is the centerpiece of Fresno’s Masis Ararat Cemetery.

Talaat had been sentenced in absentia to death for “crimes against humanity,” and had fled to Germany. Tehlirian found Talaat and shot him to death on a Berlin street. As planned, Tehlirian pled not guilty, and his trial was reported worldwide.

‘They Simply Had to Let Him Go’

Tehlirian testified about the rape and murder of his sisters, the beheading of his mother, and the killings of his brothers. It took a jury less than two hours to find Tehlirian not guilty. The New York Times headline read, “They Simply Had To Let Him Go.”

Fifty-two years later, in a Santa Barbara courtroom, Yanikian sought his “Armenian Nuremberg,” and an acquittal. As prosecutor, it was my duty to convict him.

The trial proceeded without personal rancor. I have a photograph of Yanikian, his attorneys and me, standing together, smiling, during a court recess. And another, with the inscription “to our admired and respected District Attorney and friend.”

Yanikian’s attorneys told the judge they wanted to call as witnesses eminent historians and elderly Armenians who had survived the genocide. And survivors were available. Bused daily from Southern California, they sat silently in the courtroom among family members, ready to recount unspeakable horrors.

One of Yanikian’s attorneys, Vasken Minasian, asked me to allow the testimony. He gave me a copy of “The Cross and the Crescent,” about the Tehlirian trial. In it he wrote: “The tragedy in Santa Barbara has brought destiny and God to your doorstep,” and he urged me to “bring forth an indictment against genocide.” He added, “You stand to become an immortal symbol of justice around the world.”

This was heady stuff, and I faced a dilemma: to allow a parade of eye-witnesses to the genocide, risking an acquittal, or to block the evidence to obtain a conviction. I knew such evidence would likely lead to “jury nullification,” where a jury disregards the law and acquits for a perceived greater justice, as the Tehlirian jury had done.

I took the safer path, and the judge sustained my objection to the witnesses. But I could not in good conscience block the testimony of Yanikian himself, no matter how it inflamed the jury. He commanded the witness stand for six days and described in detail, without objection, the Armenian genocide.

Turks slaughter 27 family members

Yanikian told how, as a boy of 8, he watched marauding Turks slit his brother’s throat, and of the slaughter of 26 other family members. He testified in Armenian, translated by Aram Saroyan, former Fresno grape shipper, San Francisco attorney, and uncle of author William Saroyan.

Jurors were moved to tears by Yanikian’s testimony, but they were denied the corroborating testimony the defense hoped would sway their decision. The Yanikian jury, unlike the Tehlirian jury, followed the law and gave me what I asked: two first-degree murder verdicts. There would be no nullification. Yanikian was sentenced to life in prison. He was granted compassionate release to a care home in 1984, over objection of the Turkish government, and died of cancer two months later.

Yanikian failed to get his Armenian Nuremberg, and “The Forgotten Genocide,” denied to this day by the Turkish government, was never proved in a court of law by the testimony of eyewitness survivors.

Looking back, I regret I hadn’t the courage to allow such evidence, and trust the jury to follow the law. And attorney Minasian’s words still haunt me: “… bring forth an indictment against genocide.” History’s darkest chapters – its genocides – should be fully exposed, so their horrors are less likely to be repeated.

Notwithstanding Turkish denials, the historical evidence of the Armenian genocide is so abundant that 48 American states, and at least 25 nations, have memorialized and condemned it.

Valadao pushes resolution on genocide

Not so the American government. For years, Congressional Resolutions condemning the genocide have been defeated after intense pressure from Turkey, where American  military bases exist at Turkish pleasure.

Passage of the current version, House Resolution 220, “would be a critical step towards ensuring an event like the Armenian genocide never takes place again,” says Hanford Congressman David Valadao, a co-sponsor.

But H.R. 220 has languished in the Foreign Affairs Committee for 10 months, and chances for passage are remote. The House will doubtless take the safer path, as I did in the Yanikian trial.

And once again, truth will fall victim to expedience.

David Minier of Fresno is a former district attorney of both Madera and Santa Barbara counties, and a retired Superior Court judge who sits frequently by assignment in Valley courtrooms.

The debris of history: Christians and Arabs of the Ottoman Empire

Ahval News

Jan 28 2018

Ümit Kardaş
Jan 28 2018

With the 1913 Treaty of London, signed between the victorious Balkan League nations and the Ottoman Empire, the Turks lost not only the Balkans, but also the Christians and Arabs living in the Middle East as well.

These factions had not been successfully assimilated to that of the Ottoman Empire for centuries, and following the successes of the new nation states, it was almost impossible for these Middle Eastern counterparts to the Balkan League to acquiesce the sultanate anymore.

The Young Turks were especially wary of Hellenism spreading from western Anatolia and the Black Sea regions to central Anatolia since the Greeks at the time were both economically stronger and more literate than the Turks.

Another significant minority within the Ottoman Empire with financial means were the Armenians. The Young Turks believed these two Christian factions threatened the existence and power of the state, and their presence was a direct result of the tolerance of the previous Ottoman governments. The Young Turks maintained that, with the influence of the Germans, the Christian minorities that were slowly becoming an economic and political power would eventually seize control of the state.

After the Second Balkan War, ended in 1913 a decision to destroy all Christian elements in Ottoman society and to seize and confiscate their wealth was made. A systematic plan to achieve this goal was implemented. Towards the autumn of 1913, local militias started to form.

While the militias were gearing up for possible clashes, the local inhabitants were subjected to intense propaganda against the Christian minorities. Journalists wrote inflammatory articles to radicalise the public. Huseyin Kazim, a member of the pan-Islamist association, wrote:

“The existence of such infidels among us is an abscess for us and is a curse for our religion. Every relationship with them is a stain for us, and every connection is spiritual calamity …

Regardless of the standing of any Christian, for us, he is blind just because he is a Christian; and he lacks human dignity just because he is a Christian."

Every possible method was employed to incite hatred against Christians, especially the Greeks. The state spread propaganda that as long as these Christian elements remained, Turkish people were destined to be poor, Muslims were doomed to live without safety or dignity, and the Turkish state was under tremendous danger.

The counties that seceded were coloured black on maps, and those maps were hung on school walls marked with the word; revenge. The clergy and government mouthpieces spread vengeful and hateful rhetoric across the country.

The attacks launched against the Greeks in 1914 would target the Armenians a year later.

For the armed forces, Pan-Turanism almost became a new denomination; lower-ranking officers were taught Pan-Turanist theories. For the Turkish Unionists, it was clear as day that the Arabs, who had resisted assimilation for centuries, could not be spared either. According to this mindset, Arabs, who evidently could not be Turkified, had to be humiliated with a huge blow to stop them from seceding.

The Arabs had never accepted Turkish rule and always demanded autonomy. They considered themselves as a noble race, being the proprietors of Islam and proud of the fact that the Quran was revealed in their language.

The abuses of Turkish officials who did not know Arabic or Arab culture angered many Arabs. Security forces suppressed all Arab protests with extreme force.

Among the Arabic-speaking regions, Syria stuck out like a sore thumb for the Turks. Syria had a wealthy class that was in correspondence with the politicians and business people of European countries. Christians and Muslims living in Syria wanted to build and maintain a harmonious system for themselves in line with their multicultural past. The Turkish Unionists were bitter and annoyed of these attempts to secede and were waiting for an opportunity to implement their anti-Christian and anti-Arab policies in Syria.

The unionists had no intention of granting autonomy to the Arabs even at the expense of losing the hearts and minds of Arabs altogether. Lebanon, which had gained autonomous status with the support of the French, was the first target of the Turkish Unionists.

Lebanon's autonomous status was abolished on Nov. 1, 1916, and the Christian administrator Ohannes Kuyumcuyan was removed to be replaced by Pan-Turkist Ali Munif. Istanbul deputy Salih Cimgöz said: "Lebanon become a part Turkey instead of being a cyst on (the Empire’s) body."

The seizure of animals in Lebanon accompanied with a shortage of seed, resulted in mass starvation. On March 10, 1917, during a congressional meeting, Lebanon deputy Emir Adil, speaking of the deaths of thousands, said:

"We consider no difference between dynamite or bread when it comes to Lebanon and Beirut. For example, it is forbidden to transfer even one okka (about 1280 grams) of flour. "

The Ottoman government also seized camels in Syria, making it impossible to transfer trade goods to Lebanon.

Cemal Pasha, who played the leading role in the oppression of the Arabs, threatened bankers and merchants to keep the paper money and gold on par. When he rejected U.S. aid to the region, a large part of the population quickly vanished. Cemal Pasha persecuted leaders in Syria, especially those holding higher positions in local governments and the educated. Abdulhamit Zohravi, a member of the delegation of Ayan, and former deputy, Sefik al-Mawyid, was among 36 people executed on the orders of Cemal Pasha during this period. The families and relatives of those convicted were exiled from Syria to Anatolia, hence, wiping out the local leaders of the Syrian people.

Their crime, according to the military courts, was “forming an underground organisation”. The activity of the organisation was determined to be establishing relations with British and French diplomats in order to gain autonomy for Syria. Military courts were closed to the public, they did not allow defendants to bring their own counsel, and verdicts were immediately carried out.

When Mecca's Amir Hussain Pasha's son, Faisal, made a plea to Cemal Pasha on behalf of prisoners, Cemal Pasha not only declined the request, but also ordered the arrest of Faisal for constituting a danger to the state.

Following these events, Mecca's Amir Hussein, a descendant of Prophet Muhammad, declared his independence in July 1916 and occupied a large part of the Hijaz region. Hussein afterward restated his commitment to the Caliphate and the Sultanate. His rebellion was against the Turkish Unionists and he cited Cemal Pasha's atrocities, including the persecution of the Christians.

Because of the security policies and the atrocities of Ottoman Empire officials, Arab warriors ended up cooperating with the British in Syria and Mesopotamia. Thus, the empire lost two of its sacred cities, slashing the clout of the caliphate in the region.

Strictly centralised, racist, nationalist and oppressive policies cost the empire those lands, but more importantly, it cost the empire the hearts and minds of the people living in those areas.

History, in some sense, keeps repeating itself. Those who are ignorant of the Ottoman Empire's history now found themselves pawns in the game of superpowers seeking to dominate and control the region.

Just like Walter Benjamin said, knowing about the past is crucial for freedom and liberty. But how we learn it is even more critical. Everything that happened in the past still constitutes a danger, but at the same time, atonement for what happened in the past is also possible.

Civilised societies are ones able to solve their problems by compromise and reconciliation. Uncivilised societies, on the contrary, keep trying to solve their problems through violence.

The unjust world system that is standing on the violence created by the hegemons of the world proves that humanity has yet to emerge from its primitive state and has yet to civilise.

Turkey and the world continue to be a hell for those with tender hearts.


BBC Radio 3 Program: The Forty Days of Musa Dagh

BBC 3 Radio

Jan 28 2018
Sunday Feature
Listen to the program at 

In 1933 Franz Werfel's epic novel "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh" was published to huge acclaim. The story of a guerilla army of Armenian villagers holding out against overwhelming Turkish forces on themountain of Musa Dagh in 1915, before evacuation by French forces to Port Said in Egypt. The mass murder of more than a million Armenians during this period had led to an international outcry during the war and, after 1919, the beginning of a campaign of denial by the Turkish government that succeeded the collapsing Ottoman empire. Germany, former ally of the Ottoman empire, also rejected any guilt by association but the assassination of Talaat Bey, former Ottoman Minister of the Interior and the key architect of the Armenian extermination, who was gunned down in Berlin in 1921 by an Armenian, caused a furore. The subsequent trial became a major media event and exposed the knowledge of the German government about the massacres. The fate of the Armenians was widely discussed and many on the right explicitly linked them with the 'Jewish question' as Hitler rose to power.

Franz Werfel, already a famous poet and well-known author, touring the Middle East in 1929 with his new wife, Alma Mahler, encountered pathetic Armenian refugee children. Their plight was the spark for his vast work. For both Werfel and its many readers "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh" was not just an epic tribute to Armenian resistance and survival but a warning. Werfel's works were burned and banned after Anschluss and in 1938 he and Alma Mahler fled to America. Hollywood's attempts to film it soon after publication began a decades-long campaign of long-distance censorship by the Turkish government. Maria Margaronis tells the extraordinary story of an extraordinary book and its impact as Europe descended into barbarism.

Former attorney regrets he made wrong decision in Armenian Genocide case

News.am, Armenia
Jan 27 2018
Former attorney regrets he made wrong decision in Armenian Genocide case Former attorney regrets he made wrong decision in Armenian Genocide case

00:42, 28.01.2018
                  

Former district attorney from California David Minier wrote an article describing a trial of Gourgen Yanikian who assassinated two Turkish diplomats in Santa Barbara to avenge the genocide.

“Yanikian, age 78 and a former Fresno resident, was charged with murder, and I was his prosecutor,” Minier wrote in the article published by Fresno Bee.

“The aging Armenian had lured the diplomats to a cottage at Santa Barbara’s exclusive Biltmore Hotel, promising gifts of art treasures for their government. Instead, he pulled a Luger pistol from a hollowed out book and emptied it at them. He then called the reception desk, announced he had killed “two evils,” and sat calmly on the patio awaiting arrest.”

Minier says Yanikian’s purpose was to create an “Armenian Nuremberg” – a show trial to call world attention to the Armenian Genocide.

In contrast two Soghoman Tehlirian  who murdered Talaat Pasha and was acquitted by a Germany jury, Yanikian was sentenced to life in prison.

“Yanikian’s attorneys told the judge they wanted to call as witnesses eminent historians and elderly Armenians who had survived the genocide.”

“He commanded the witness stand for six days and described in detail, without objection, the Armenian genocide.

Yanikian told how, as a boy of 8, he watched marauding Turks slit his brother’s throat, and of the slaughter of 26 other family members. He testified in Armenian, translated by Aram Saroyan, former Fresno grape shipper, San Francisco attorney, and uncle of author William Saroyan.”

Although the jury were moved to tears, the man was sentenced. Hewas granted compassionate release to a care home in 1984, over objection of the Turkish government, and died of cancer two months later.

However, former attorney regrets he had not the courage to allow such evidence. David Minier slams U.S. government for failure to recognize the Armenian Genocide, admitting that chances for genocide resolution passage are remote.

“The House will doubtless take the safer path, as I did in the Yanikian trial.

And once again, truth will fall victim to expedience.”

Armenia family detained near Ukraine-Slovakia border

News.am, Armenia
Jan 27 2018
Armenia family detained near Ukraine-Slovakia border (PHOTOS) Armenia family detained near Ukraine-Slovakia border (PHOTOS)

17:55, 27.01.2018
                  

The Ukrainian border service has detained four persons, and the man who was engaged in organizing their illegal crossing of the Ukraine-Slovakia border, according to Ua-Reporter.com.

A 29- and a 31-year-old man, a 27-year-old woman, and a 9-year-old girl were stopped 800 meters from the Ukrainian state border.

Even though they had no documents, they said they were Armenian citizens. 

They were taken to the temporary detention hall of the local border guard detachment.

Border guards will determine their identities, whereupon they will be charged with attempt to illegally cross the Ukrainian state border.

The person who organized this border trespassing attempt has been found.

The foreigners had attempted to cross the border into Slovakia with the help of this citizen of their country of origin.

The said 50-year-old man was detained at a hotel in Uzhhorod.

Money, bank cards, and other documents were confiscated from him.

The suspect is arrested and taken to an investigative detention hall.

Criminal proceedings have been instituted on charges of making people illegally cross the Ukrainian state border.

Festive march in Yerevan on the occasion of Feast of St. Sarkis the Captain

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 27 2018

Festive march started in Armenia’s capital Yerevan on the occasion of Feast of St. Sarkis the Captain.  By the order of His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, the Feast of St. Sarkis the Captain and his soldiers-companions is proclaimed day of blessing of the youth.

In Armenia, it is accepted to celebrate the Feast of St. Sarkis not only according to church rites and prayer, but also according to various folk traditions. St. Sarkis the Captain is considered the patron of youth. Many miracles happen thanks to his intercession. On the day of the feast, young people pray the saint asking him to make their prayers audible to God. St. Sarkis is the realizer of the love longings.

People in love present each other cards, flowers or sweets on the occasion of the feast.

On the day of the feast, a Divine Liturgy is celebrated in all churches named after St. Sarkis.
Following the Liturgy, a special ceremony of blessing of young people is offered.

Diamond and jewelry production grows in Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 27 2018

Diamond and jewelry production grows in Armenia

The volumes of diamond and jewelry production have grown in Armenia, according to the data release by the country’s National Statistical Service (NSS).

The newly released data suggest, 179, 285 carats diamonds were produced in January-November 2017, which is 58,6% increase over the volumes produced during the indicated period last year. The total production amounts for the first nine months of the ongoing year amounted to 113, 2 thousand karats.

It is noted that the raw materials for diamond processing in Armenia are imported mainly from Russia, Belgium, and Israel.

According to NSS data, 1 824.2kg of jewelry were produced in Armenia in January-November 2017, which is 2.6 times more to compare with the last year’s volumes.

Armenia smokers to protest proposed smoking ban

Pan Armenian, Armenia
Jan 27 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Smokers in Armenia will gather at the Republic Square in downtown Yerevan to protest a draft law prohibiting tobacco smoking in public spaces on February 1.

The government has recently presented the proposal for public discussions.

“We respect the rights of non-smokers, no fines beget respect,” the We Must Smoke movement said in a Facebook event.

The bill unveiled just recently imposes major fines for smoking in public catering facilities, hotels, cars, medical, cultural, entertainment centers and other spaces prohibited by law.

A great number of social media users have taken to Facebook to express their discontent with the decision.