Turkish Press: Lena Chamamyan reflects her culture with latest song ‘I am Syrian’

Daily Sabah, Turkey
Jan 4 2019
ANADOLU AGENCY
ISTANBUL

Syrian artist of Armenian origin Lena Chamamyan is considered one of the best singers of her generation. Chamamyan, who blends traditional songs of the Middle East with Western instruments and interprets them in a unique style, started her music career with a concert that she gave at the age of 5. The artist, whose father is from Kahramanmaraş province while her mother is from Mardin province, told Anadolu Agency (AA) that Istanbul has a very special place for her, and she is always pleased to come to the city.

Explaining that many of her works that remind people of Damascus and Aleppo take place in Istanbul, Chamamyan added, "Istanbul has a special color and taste. This taste reflects on Turks and Syrians who live in Istanbul. Besides, people listen to music so much here. They have a fine ear for music. Wherever I go in Istanbul, the music played in streets and cafes are so quality."

The young artist remarked that she is planning to give a concert in Istanbul again soon, after the tickets of her latest concert in the city were sold out very quickly.

Performing mostly in Arabic and Armenian, Lena Chamamyan has also worked on French and English songs recently. 

"I was so surprised when I saw the attention of the people in Istanbul in my first concert here in 2013. Although I perform only Arabic and Armenian songs, the interest was great. When I look at social media, I see that my songs are shared most from Istanbul. Mostly Turks share them not Arabs or Syrians living here," she continued.

'Music is a reflection of each person's soul'

Lena Chamamyan emphasized that the works that she prepared with jazz, folk, oriental, fado, Sufi, African and Latin melodies carry traces of the Armenian culture, in which she was born and raised, underlining that she is always in search of innovation in music.

Adding that music is a reflection of each person's own soul, the young singer stressed, "In my works, I can never leave aside the paintings in my mind and the sounds in my ear because of the culture I have. For me, these become an integral part of Eastern and Western music. If I have to explain, I try to reflect what is happening in my mind to my music." When the young artist was trained in classical Eastern music and began to sing her works for the first time, she was criticized by classical music artists. She stated, "As time passed, I could understand better why they had criticized me. They thought that adding a new note into Arabic music destroy its sacredness. In the beginning, my family objected me to become a musician. When they see I am successful, they gave me support."

Highlighting that she was trained by European and Russian musicians, Chamamyan mentioned that she provides education in order to transfer her own culture's music to future generations.

'I tried to go beyond the usual in everything I did'

The artist, who released her first album "Hal Asmar Ellon" in 2006, said, "After the 2000s, concerts were held in historical places in Syria. I was a student at that time. As a student, I took the stage in these concerts with various bands. After the concerts, many listeners started to ask me whether I have an album or not. This request helped me release my first album. If something is born in the heart and produced sincerely, it really reaches out to the hearts of listeners. I could not only do with Eastern music or only Western music in my life. I have always tried to go beyond the usual in everything I do."

Noting that she is working on French and English songs, Chamamyan said, "I will reflect the Eastern music in these works as well. I will release my new projects as not albums but singles because they are of many different types. I do not want to collect them into one album. I will be in the studio for my latest song 'I am Syrian.'"

'We need to protect our identity'

The artist, who lives in Paris, also touched upon the issue of the civil war in Syria.

"Life is very difficult for those who are in Syria and migrate from Syria to other countries because nothing is the same as before. Nothing is left. However, I realized that our identity would be lost, and if this identity was destroyed, then there would be no country called Syria. Therefore, we need to protect our identity."

Chamamyan asserted that she understood better during the time she spent in Europe that Eastern culture contains a great richness.

"I saw that in the West that everyone has respect for each other even though they have a different point of view. They continue to live together but the situation is not the same in the East now. We need to learn about living together first. Everyone should do whatever they can do to realize this aim. Music is always constructive. But this situation cannot be fed by only art or music. They cannot save or support alone. "

 

Il genocidio degli armeni è nato nella testa e nelle idee malsane dei teorici tedeschi

Il Foglio– Italia
1 gen 2019


Il libro di Siobhan Nash-Marshall racconta per la prima volta le origini europee del massacro. La prefazione di Antonia Arslan

1 Gennaio 2019 alle 14:26

Foto via Facebook

Pubblichiamo la prefazione della scrittrice Antonia Arslan al libro “I peccati dei padri” (Guerini Associati) dell’americana Siobhan Nash-Marshall.

 

Ci sono dei punti fermi, delle ben visibili pietre miliari, in questa straordinaria e tenace tessitura di idee che si va lentamente ma inesorabilmente intrecciando a proposito del genocidio armeno, modello e primo tragico esempio di una prassi di distruzione di massa che avrà tanti imitatori nel corso del Novecento. Si tratta di un percorso di conoscenza che prosegue ormai da una trentina d’anni: ed è già incredibile il fatto stesso che ogni indagine critica, ogni acquisizione di dati (siano essi i racconti dei sopravvissuti e di persone a vario titolo presenti nell’Impero ottomano in quegli anni cruciali, o le scoperte di documenti finora più o meno colpevolmente ignorati, o gli archivi finalmente aperti, come quelli tedeschi o vaticani) non contraddice le informazioni già acquisite, ma le completa, le amplia, le convalida.

 

Gli storici e studiosi più importanti che se ne sono occupati (armeni e no) sono riusciti a costruire un vero grande archivio di informazioni, dopo decenni in cui – a livello di conoscenza generale – dell’esistenza stessa degli armeni come popolo si era quasi perduta la memoria: penso a Vahakn Dadrian, Taner Akçam, Richard Hovannisian, Yair Auron, Robert Jay Lifton, Raymond Kévorkian, Marcello Flores e i tanti altri che hanno descritto con ricchezza di documenti la tragedia armena, ne hanno definito le caratteristiche genocidarie, controllato meticolosamente le perdite umane e le modalità di sterminio, regione per regione dell’Anatolia. Le numerosissime testimonianze dei sopravvissuti, trascritte o registrate a partire dal 1916, sono state poi raccolte e collazionate, e oggi costituiscono un insieme imponente, in cui le flebili voci dei superstiti si potenziano l’una con l’altra in un coro ripetuto e straziante. Ma, come ben scrive Taner Akçam, lo storico turco che si batte da tanti anni contro il negazionismo di stato del suo paese, il libro di Siobhan Nash-Marshall è qualcosa che ancora mancava in un panorama pur così ricco.

 

È la voce della filosofia, della riflessione che scava ad ampio raggio e trova le oscure e lontane radici di quelle ideologie e di quei comportamenti che a posteriori appaiono aberranti (come si è tante volte osservato a proposito delle persecuzioni antiebraiche e dei campi di sterminio nazisti), ma di cui spesso non riusciamo a comprendere la ragione profonda, il vero perché. Particolarmente interessante è l’analisi di quello che l’autrice chiama “il principio greco”. È infatti dalla pace di Adrianopoli del 1829, che sancisce il diritto del popolo greco ad avere come sua patria indipendente quella parte dell’Impero ottomano dove vivevano gli antichi greci (e tutta l’Europa, in pieno risveglio romantico, si mosse per sostenere questo diritto), che il diritto di nascita sostituisce, nel sentire comune, il “diritto di conquista”.

 

L’Impero romano – giusto per fare un esempio – considerava suoi i territori che conquistava, al punto da imporre ai popoli soggetti l’uso della lingua latina. Ma questo fu un disastro per l’Impero ottomano. Si giustificavano così le lotte irredentistiche di tutti i popoli sottomessi, ognuno dei quali rivendicava la sua terra, mentre ai turchi, che governavano lo stato, ma erano venuti dalle steppe d’oriente, una “patria”, un vatan, mancava. Lo cercarono, e lo trovarono, in Anatolia: e tuttavia, per ottenerlo, bisognava allontanare – o meglio, eliminare – gli abitanti autoctoni di quella regione.

 

È con la sensazione di assistere alla costruzione di una trappola inesorabile che il lettore segue, capitolo dopo capitolo, i tasselli di questo progetto di morte mentre si incastrano lucidamente l’uno nell’altro. Tutto si tiene, e ogni affermazione poggia su riscontri e citazioni precise, tracciando un disegno chiarissimo che va dalla cultura tedesca dell’Ottocento, fra teorie filosofiche e articoli divulgativi sugli armeni “che sono gli ebrei del medio oriente”, fino ai testi degli ideologi dei Giovani Turchi che di quella cultura si sono nutriti. Ed è a partire da queste basi che Siobhan Nash-Marshall, in questo libro affascinante e coraggioso, affronta con ampia documentazione anche il problema dell’accanito negazionismo di stato come “parte integrante del processo genocidario” (rav Giuseppe Laras). Ancor oggi infatti, dopo più di cent’anni, ogni diniego dei fatti, ogni capzioso distinguo rinnova nei cuori e nelle menti dei discendenti delle vittime l’orrore di quella tragedia infinita, la rende attuale e presente, allontana perdono e oblio.

https://www.ilfoglio.it/un-foglio-internazionale/2019/01/01/news/il-genocidio-degli-armeni-e-nato-nella-testa-e-nelle-idee-malsane-dei-teorici-tedeschi-231052/





Book Review: How Calouste Gulbenkian became the richest man in the world

Spectator.co.uk
Jan 3 2019


Philip Hensher
Mr Five Per Cent: The Many Lives of Calouste Gulbenkian, the World’s Richest Man
Jonathan Conlin
Profile Books, pp.402, £25

Whenever I find myself visiting some great historic house, I always like to break off from gawping at tapestries to ask the tour guide: ‘How did the family make its money in the first place?’ For some reason, this almost always astonishes and bewilders. It’s as if the devotion of capital to bricks and mortar, acres of commemorative canvas and fresco, marble and landscaping, covers up any roots in the slave trade or the amassing of bribes from Indian nawabs. Money is made, and then it sets about dignifying itself.

The Gulbenkian Foundation is a solid organisation based in Lisbon. It dispenses money in improving ways and possesses a very handsome art gallery, full of treasures. It is a blameless thing. But why is it in Lisbon? Why does it have so much money? And how was that money made?

No doubt in a couple of centuries hardly anyone will pose these questions, and the Gulbenkian Foundation will appear as innocuous as Kedleston Hall. Jonathan Conlin’s riveting life of its founder, Calouste Gulbenkian, lays bare the savage origins of this expensive tranquillity. Yeats said it best: ‘Some violent bitter man, some powerful man/Called architect and artist in, that they,/Bitter and violent men, might rear in stone/ The sweetness that all longed for night and day.’

Like many obscenely rich men, Calouste was from an already very wealthy family. His origins were in the close-knit Armenian community in Constantinople. A favourite anecdote has his father, Sarkis, complaining that his coffee-servant had fallen asleep on the job; the other servants, over-zealously, beat him to death. His father’s angry complaint, ‘I told you to beat him, not to kill him,’ forms the punchline. When Sarkis died, he left the equivalent of £80 million. Calouste, who had been educated abroad, a rootless commander of money, set about transforming this to an inconceivable extent.
 

Left: Calouste Gulbenkian. Centre: ‘The Break-up of the Ice’ by Claude Monet. Right: ‘Boy Blowing Bubbles’ by Edouard Manet, from the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon

 
The source of the vast fortune was oil. Gulbenkian took a close interest in it, even at a time when its main commercial use was as kerosene for lighting. Before the first world war, he had acquired a 5 per cent share of oil throughout the territories of the Ottoman empire. The value of this was not universally apparent until the 1920s.

At 3 a.m. on 14 October 1927, drilling near Kirkuk in Iraq hit oil under such pressure that it exploded with 90,000 barrels a day. The flow could not be brought under control for more than a week; five workers were asphyxiated by the gas cloud that formed. Against all advice, Gulbenkian hung on to his share for decades. He had written a report on the exploitation of Mesopotamian oil in 1894; the first crude from Kirkuk reached the Mediterranean in 1934. Only once in his life, at the age of 19, did he actually visit an oil field.

The unflagging efforts Gulbenkian made to consolidate his position are described in fascinating detail by Conlin. When it came to it, Gulbenkian was extremely reluctant to invest any of his 5 per cent in the necessary infrastructure — in, for instance, contributing towards the costs of constructing pipelines. But the main interest of this clear-sighted biography is in its exploration of what this level of wealth does to a man, and the people around him.

‘I am the master — it is I who have the money — I will flatten everything in my path,’ Gulbenkian once told his wife. If he was not entirely detached from the idea of morality, he seems to have permitted himself an idiosyncratic notion of conduct. Among his stated ‘fixed moral principles’ was an open disapproval of friends keeping ‘profitable deals to themselves, without allowing Gulbenkian to “taste a slice of it”.’ An Ottoman doctor called Kemhadjian usefully advised his wealthy patient that it was necessary for him ‘to have sex regularly with young women, as a rejuvenating tonic’. Gulbenkian stuck carefully to this programme.

On the other hand, he maintained no particular principles about who he was prepared to trade with. The Armenian massacres made no impact on his dealings with Turks. He had no objection to doing business with the Third Reich, and the Russian revolution presented him with a huge opportunity, both in terms of oil concessions and acquiring art from the imperial collections. Others at the time had moral objections to the Soviet commissars, one oilman stating firmly that ‘such money is used to promote revolution and murder. The Soviet regime is an anti-Christ regime’. It was not so much that these views were different to Gulbenkian’s; more that he considered such questions beneath him.

Calouste’s family life was a sorry affair. He acquired a palace in Paris, but kept it more or less as a museum. He would retire each night to sleep at the Ritz, after being hosed down in a silver-lined Lalique bathroom niche by an unenvied valet. His wife, Nevarte, led a sad life. Gulbenkian was an avid collector of jewellery, but she was never permitted to wear any of it. His son, Nubar, was kept on a tight leash by either the promise of more money or the periodic, wilful withdrawal of all funds. At one point, absurdly, he sued his father in open court, claiming 5 per cent of the 5 per cent.

Calouste’s idea of a loving offer of reconciliation after one of these periodic ruptures was a note inviting Nubar ‘to return with heart and love to your father’s work and receive and enjoy your usual allowance’. In later years, Nubar became a favourite of the British media for his startling, pantomime-villain appearance and his way with jocular bons mots. He famously drove around in a converted London cab, remarking: ‘I like to travel in a gold-plated taxi. It can turn on a sixpence, whatever that is.’

The collections are magnificent, of course, and it is they that ensure that Gulbenkian’s name is remembered when other immensely rich men of the time — his associate Henri Deterding, for instance — are forgotten. Much of the art was amassed in disgraceful circumstances, inluding Rembrandts from the Hermitage after the Russian revolution. After acquiring what he wanted, Gulbenkian had the gall to write to the commissar in charge:

I have always been of the opinion that those things which have been held in your museums for many years should not be sold. If word of their sale were to get out it would harm your government’s credit.

In other words, he didn’t want anyone else to be allowed to go shopping at the Hermitage.

Some of the most important pieces were immediately loaned to institutions and never actually seen by Gulbenkian himself. Still, the art remains in Lisbon — which was the one place in Europe he could go on living in five magnificent hotel suites throughout the second world war and afterwards, until his death in 1955.

This is an excellent book, guiding us with a sure hand and a lucid talent for exposition through the very different worlds of connoisseurship, family trauma and the making of millions. Conlin frankly admits when one of Gulbenkian’s business dealings, intended to be obscure, remains impenetrable. He compels unwilling admiration for the sheer tenacity of his hero over decades, while leaving us in no doubt of the hellish narrowness of Calouste’s focus.

The tycoon is beautifully summed up in many passing details, but perhaps particularly the list in his pocketbook of

all the things he needed to have with him when he travelled: passports, stationery,
telegraph code books, wines and champagnes, medicines, coffee, honey (a special kind), sunglasses and binoculars (for birdwatching).

But no books.

This biography reminds me of Anthony Powell’s devastating portrait of Sir Magnus Donners, another rich patron whose

interest leant towards painting rather than literature. He existed in my mind as one of those figures, dominating, no doubt, in their own remote sphere, but slightly ridiculous when seen casually at close quarters.

Armenia’s PM sends condolences to Putin over Magnitogorsk tragedy

ITAR-TASS, Russia
Thursday 4:46 PM GMT
Armenia’s PM sends condolences to Putin over Magnitogorsk tragedy
 
YEREVAN January 3
 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has sent a telegram to Russian President Vladimir Putin expressing condolences over the tragic events in Magnitogorsk, the Armenian government’s press service informed on Thursday.
  
YEREVAN, January 3. /TASS/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has sent a telegram to Russian President Vladimir Putin expressing condolences over the tragic events in Magnitogorsk, the Armenian government’s press service informed on Thursday.
 
"Dear Vladimir Vladimirovich, I have received the news of the tragedy that took place in Magnitogorsk with the deepest sorrow. From the name of the Armenian people, I would like you to pass on the genuine condolences to the families and loved ones of those injured," the telegram said.
 
Pashinyan also wished the soonest recovery to the injured.
 
A section of a ten-story apartment block collapsed in Magnitogorsk on December 31. According to the latest data, the accident claimed the lives of 39 people. Six people were injured, five of them, including two children, are in hospitals. A woman was discharged from a hospital in Magnitogorsk on January 2.
 
The Russian Investigative Committee views a household gas explosion as the main cause of the accident. On Tuesday, a Russian Investigative Committee spokesperson stated that no traces of explosives had been discovered at the collapse site. On Thursday, Magnitogorsk Mayor Sergei Berdnikov stated that there is no connection between the December 31 gas explosion and the January 1 car blast in Magnitogorsk, despite several publications’ reports to the contrary.

Dall’Anatolia ai Lepini la storia armena di Zerunian

H24 Notizie– Italia
27 dic 2018

Terza e ultima puntata della rassegna “Storia, memoria e territorio. La società pontina attraverso i libri” promossa da Atlantide editore con il patrocinio del Comune di Latina. L’appuntamento è per venerdì 28 dicembre alle ore 17:00 presso il Museo Cambellotti in piazza San Marco. Protagonista il libro di Sergio Zerunian “Dolcissimo amore dagli occhi grandi”, vincitore del Premio Fiuggi Storia sez. Lazio meridionale. Nel volume si narra l’avvincente vicenda di una famiglia armena in fuga dal genocidio perpetrato dal governo turco, che nei primi del ‘900 si sottrae ad un tragico destino lasciando la regione dell’Anatolia e rifugiandosi nel paesino di Maenza sui Monti Lepini, dove metterà nuove radici. Si tratta di una storia vera, quella delle origini familiari dell’autore narrata in forma di romanzo.

Autorevole l’introduzione al volume, ne è autrice infatti Antonia Arslan, archeologa, docente universitaria di letteratura italiana a Padova, ma soprattutto la maggiore scrittrice in Italia di vicende armene, da cui lei stessa discende. Finalista nel 2004 al premio Campiello con il libro “La masseria delle allodole” che ha ispirato l’omonimo film dei fratelli Taviani sul genocidio armeno. Scrive la Arslan sul volume di Zerunian:

“Questo libro mette a confronto i due mondi su un piano temporale parallelo, in capitoli che si alternano, e dà uguale dignità all’avventurosa fuga da Malatya della famigliola armena e all’altrettanto affascinante descrizione della povera – ma serena nella sua umile condizione – famiglia di contadini del paese di Maenza sui Monti Lepini. Sentendosi legato profondamente a entrambe le sue radici, quella armena e quella italiana, l’autore sente il bisogno di dare loro eguale importanza: ottiene così un effetto singolare – e interessante – di allargamento dei confini della narrazione, come se, per un effetto sottile di rifrazione, ogni capitolo descrivesse parte di un mondo che si specchia in un altro molto lontano. Il figlio della famiglia armena, allontanato dalla natia Malatya per salvargli la vita, si inserisce operosamente nella società italiana e il destino lo porta a Maenza; là accoglierà la sorella vedova in fuga, coi suoi bambini.

Il figlio della famiglia di Maenza, irrequieto e desideroso di vedere il mondo, emigra in America, poi fa il soldato sul Carso, lavora nella bonifica delle Paludi Pontine, fa il volontario durante la conquista dell’Etiopia; ma infine ritornerà al paese. Là le due vicende si intrecciano con un matrimonio, dal quale discende l’autore Sergio Zerunian. Una tipica storia italiana, in cui lo straniero è accolto, e trattato su un piano di parità, come è stato sempre tipico di un popolo che sa di essere l’esito di molte successive mescolanze di genti. Ma la parità esige un leale confronto, un reale radicamento e il rispetto delle leggi da parte dello straniero: la speciale armonia emerge da ogni pagina di questo bel libro quietamente realistico”.

Sergio Zerunian, libero professionista nel campo della Biologia ambientale, già ufficiale del Corpo Forestale dello Stato è attualmente docente a contratto di Ecologia presso “La Sapienza” Università di Roma – sede di Latina. Ha svolto attività di ricerca in vari campi della Zoologia e dell’Ecologia animale, pubblicando decine di articoli scientifici e alcuni saggi. È stato inoltre curatore del volume di memorie di sua madre Angelica Belli, “Ricordi di quand’ero bambina. La vita a Maenza negli anni Trenta del Novecento” sempre per Atlantide editore. Ad affiancare l’autore saranno l’assessore alla cultura del comune di Latina Silvio Di Francia, l’editore Dario Petti e la professoressa Adriana Marucco, docente di storia e italiano presso l’Itis Galilei-Sani di Latina nonché autrice di alcuni apprezzati libri quali “Le ali tarpate” e “C’era una volta la Casba” sulla storia del quartiere Nicolosi e dei suoi abitanti, entrambi pubblicati con la Herald.


Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը ցավակցական հեռագիր է հղել Վլադիմիր Պուտինին

  • 04.01.2019
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  • Հայաստան
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1
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Վարչապետի պաշտոնակատար Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը ցավակցական հեռագիր է հղել Ռուսաստանի Դաշնության նախագահ Վլադիմիր Պուտինին Մագնիտոգորսկում տեղի ունեցած ողբերգական դեպքի կապակցությամբ։


Ինչպես տեղեկացրին ՀՀ վարչապետի աշխատակազմի տեղեկատվության և հասարակայնության հետ կապերի վարչությունից, Նիկոլ Փաշինյանի հեռագրում, մասնավորապես, ասված է.


«Հարգելի Վլադիմիր Վլադիմիրի, Խոր ցավով ընդունեցի Մագնիտոգորսկում տեղի ունեցած ողբերգության մասին լուրը։ 

Խնդրում եմ Ձեզ Հայաստանի ժողովրդի անունից զոհերի հարազատներին և բարեկամներին փոխանցել անկեղծ ցավակցություններ, իսկ բոլոր տուժածներին՝ արագ վերականգնում»։


Հիշեցնենք, Մագնիտոգորսկի բնակելի շենքերից մեկի փլուզման հետևանքով 39 մարդ է զոհվել:

Asbarez: Senate Confirms New Envoys to Armenia and Azerbaijan

The senate confirmed the nomination of Lynne Tracy (left) and Earle Litzenberger as the US ambassadors to Armenia and Azerbaijan respectively

Tracy and Litzenberger to Take On South Caucasus U.S. Ambassadorial Posts in 2019

WASHINGTON—Armenia and Azerbaijan will be starting 2019 with two new United States ambassadors after the senate on Wednesday confirmed Lynne Tracy and Earle Litzenberger to the postings – a vote taken following sustained Senate Foreign Relations Committee scrutiny of U.S. policy on the Armenian Genocide, Azerbaijan’s regional aggression and domestic crackdowns, and other key priorities, reported the Armenian National Committee of America.

“Following a year of peaceful political transition and democratic progress in Armenia, the Armenian National Committee of America looks forward to working with Ambassador Tracey in the New Year to upgrade U.S.-Armenia strategic relations,” stated ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We look to our new ambassador in Baku to forcefully challenge Aliyev’s anti-Armenian violence and openly confront his regime’s worsening crackdown on domestic dissent.”

Wednesday’s senate confirmation vote comes after bi-cameral praise for Armenia’s Parliamentary elections held December 9th, and a call by the Congressional Armenian Caucus leadership to Secretary of State Pompeo for the elevation of U.S.-Armenia strategic bilateral ties through the U.S.-Armenia Joint Economic Task Force.

The December 18 Armenian Caucus letter stressed that “support for a comprehensive democratic transition will secure needed progress in the economic realm, where we encourage you to prioritize a long overdue Tax Treaty, Social Security Agreement, expanding duty-free products, Debt-for-Forestation swaps, non-stop LAX to EVN flights, trade missions, and other related initiatives.”

Tracy’s approval comes in the wake of intense questioning by Senators Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and Ed Markey (D-MA) regarding the U.S. policy of complicity in Turkey’s obstruction of justice for the Armenian Genocide. Ms. Tracy, while stating that “The Trump Administration and I personally acknowledge the historical facts of what took place at the end of the Ottoman Empire – of the mass killings, the forced deportations and marches that ended 1.5 million lives and a lot of suffering,” stopped short of properly characterizing the crime as genocide.

During the October 4 confirmation hearing, Senator Menendez grilled Litzenberger about President Aliyev’s “bellicose rhetoric and sporadic outbursts of violence,” securing from the nominee a commitment that he would urge the Azerbaijani government to step back from any threatening behavior that disrupts the line of contact.

168: Marking the 70th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Right: What’s Next?

Categories
Politics
World

I was having a nightmare, so I woke up and discovered that reality is worse than a bad dream.(Bergman – The Egg of the Serpent).

December 10 marked the 70th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. As a result of the intense job and campaign enforced by Eleanor Roosevelt (USA), René Cassin (France), Peng-Chan Chung (China), John P. Humphrey (Canada) and Hernán Santa Cruz (Chile), the Universal Declaration of Human Rights established universal that serves a ground for the world to recognize a common and universal platform for dialogue, reflected by 30 human rights and, at least theoretically, could avoid new tragedies such as the two world wars (1914-1918 and 1939-1945).

Although the Declaration was not characterized as a binding international legal instrument, it is known that it presents “jus cogens” and international customary law fundamental principles. Fortunately, its list of rights has expanded significantly to such an extent that, one might say, the classic image of Eleanor Roosevelt reading the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on a large print page would now certainly require a larger one.

Even though 70 years have passed since the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, it yet has not succeeded in becoming a major important established achievement of the world civilization after the Nazi rule period and the Holocaust, the Armenian Genocide and the colonization and indigenous massacres in the Americas, Africa and Asia. There is no doubt about that. The central question debated around the declaration and the elephant in the room remains its effectiveness: besides its validity, does it really work? Does it recognize past atrocities and prevent new ones from happening?

Cataclysms such as the Korean war, ones in Vietnam, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Sudan and, more recently, Myanmar; ones such as terrorism and poverty, lack of literacy, medicines, access to education, child soldiers, modern slavery, violence against women, against children and teenagers, racism and human trafficking, lack of access to clean water and destruction of the ecosystem, forced migration and refugees, among other humanitarian issues, highlight the fact that more could have been prevented if more was recognized and educated.

A mere document by itself does not have the capacity to make a big change against human oppression and despair. The application of the Universal Declaration depends on spheres of politics of states, their commitment to those values, which in their turn would produce education and training prioritizing human values for the formation of a mentality to make such positive changes. From the point of view of international relations, usually the minimum common platform established by the Declaration is not a priority when it comes to geopolitical interests. This phenomenon occurred in relation to the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (1948), which also marked its 70th anniversary on December 9th, when economic, geopolitical and local political interests in Rwanda not only allowed the commitment of one of the most terrible genocides in the history of humanity, but also allowed many leading perpetrators to escape unpunished.

The International Criminal Court has been subjected to multiple attacks in the form of criticism by countries that suffered by the rulings and of the mentioned court and the way cases were handled, as a form of protest against the efficiency of that court. The universal model, which marks the essence of the septuagenarian declaration, used to work in the postwar period, however, nowadays it seems not to be working as it was supposed to do – the entire structure that was more or less stable was shattered by certain cases of resurgence of nationalist and fascist political movements and parties in certain countries, Brexit and Russia’s exit from the International Criminal Court, as well as by the rise of populistic political powers that oppose to human rights, putting democratic systems at risk. All these changes affect the vision and undermine the values of the Universal Declaration.

Notwithstanding agendas of political powers and populistic support, human rights compose a civilizational agenda that can not be held hostage by ambitions of authoritarian and dictatorial political parties that oppress the rights of women and minorities. The practice of elimination of the “other” in certain political systems of the world these days is not acceptable, and this is the line between debate and barbarism that should not be crossed. Thus, acts that are against the rights of religious minorities, indigenous people and sexual minorities that are not putting at par with the rest of their societies should be fought all over the world, if we want to respect human rights in complex but not selectively. Educational processes should educate children and young people around the world about the danger of the feeling of superiority of human groups over others, which also include discrimination of minorities. The “serpent will always seek to get out of the egg”.

For new tragedies not to happen again, chanting “never again” will not help; it takes more than that – it takes real commitment to all human rights values, with no exception, established the Human Rights Charter of 1948.

Destruction of democracy, and eventually its consequences for human beings are silent and devastating. The human rights that arise from the Universal Declaration must be carried out in each street and district of all countries to make the world a better place, if we don’t want to awake from a nightmare and find ourselves in a worse reality.

2018 marked historical change and transition in Armenia that resulted in a new political system in the country after a revolution and change of government. This is an opportunity, which, if used wisely, can become a golden opportunity for Armenia, or, if not, consequences may be disappointing, resulting in even more emigration from the country. As the Armenian people embraced democratic values and bid for democratic change by bringing a new government to power through revolution, now it is time for the Armenian people to reform its society and walk through the path of development. For Armenia to develop through the path of democracy, its society should embrace the democratic and human rights values that allow everyone to be free and happy under the protection umbrella of its state, notwithstanding people’s gender, sexual orientation and ethnic background – ultimately, human rights cannot be applied selectively, and inclusiveness is the key to a happy society.

Flávio de Leão Bastos Pereira & Kamo Mayilyan

Flávio de Leão Bastos Pereira (PhD)

Professor of Human Rights and Constitutional Law – Mackenzie Presbyterian University, São Paulo (Brazil).

Member of the Roster of Experts of the International Nuremberg Principles Academy.

Egress of the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies – IIHRGS (University of Toronto / Zoryan Institute – Canada).

Associated to the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS).

Visiting Professor at the Department of History of the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil.

Asbarez: Another Azeri Scandal: Aliyev’s Daughters Try to Buy $76 Million London Home

Harut Sassounian

BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

The British Guardian newspaper exposed in its Dec. 21 issue the latest financial scandal involving the daughters of Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev.

Leyla and Arzu Aliyeva sought to purchase two luxury Knightsbridge apartments in London for $76 million using a secret offshore company. The price included $4 million to convert the properties into a single home. The apartments are located near the garden of Buckingham Palace, according to The Guardian’s reporter Luke Harding.

In a 2016 article, The Guardian reported that Aliyev’s daughters had set up in 2015 a secret offshore company in the British Virgin Islands to manage their multi-million dollar property portfolio in Britain.

The two daughters are shareholders in Exaltation Limited, incorporated in 2015 with the purpose of “holding UK property.” The offshore company was set up by the London law firm of Child & Child which claimed falsely that the Aliyev women “had no political connections.” This information was exposed when the Panama Papers, the secret database of the offshore law firm Mossack Fonseca, were leaked to the international media.

Leyla (left) and Arzu Aliyeva are embroiled in scandal

Aliyev’s daughters, according to The Guardian, have “amassed vast personal business empires. They own luxury apartments in the UAE, as well as interests in telecoms and gold mining. It was already known that Leyla Aliyeva owned a $22 million mansion on Hampstead Lane in north London.” In addition, the Aliyev family has luxury apartments around the globe worth over $140 million and these are just the known properties, according to the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project. The Aliyevs also own an apartment valued up to $8 million overlooking the Speakers’ Corner of Hyde Park (London), nine waterfront mansions in Dubai valued at $44 million, a dacha near Moscow worth at least $37 million, and a $1.1 million villa in an exclusive neighborhood in the Czech spa town of Karlovy Vary.

Under British rules, the Aliyev daughters are classified as “PEP’s” — politically exposed persons, making them subject to greater scrutiny and due diligence checks by banks. The Guardian reported that the law firm of Child & Child did not declare the two women’s high-profile status to the British government. On the official form asking if they are PEP’s, the law firm checked the “no” box instead of “yes.”

Another British lawyer, Derrick French, “set up a second clandestine Panamanian trust called UF Universe Foundation, “which controlled a majority stake in Ata Holding, one of Azerbaijan’s biggest conglomerates,” according to The Guardian. Ata Holding, established in 2003, was owned by “Azerbaijan’s minister of taxes, Fazil Mammadov, with a secret controlling stake in the $600 million conglomerate. Ata Holding owned “two major banks, construction firms and Baku’s five-star Excelsior hotel, with Pres. Aliyev’s three children.”

In 2005, the control of UF Universe Foundation changed hands. Pres. Aliyev’s three children, Leyla, Arzu and their brother Heydar, who at the time was just seven, had a combined 50% interest in the trust. Their mother Mehriban was the “protector,” an anonymous role giving her control over the Foundation. The other “protector” was Mammadov with a 30% share. Ata’s chairman, Ahmet Erentok, received only 15%. In 2007, UF Universe Foundation was closed down, but Leyla and Arzu Aliyeva were listed as the majority owners of Ata, via another Panamanian firm, Hughson Management, Inc. Javad Marandi, a close associate of Pres. Aliyev, had introduced the Aliyeva sisters to the law firm Child & Child, the British tribunal was told. Attorney Khalid Sharif, senior partner of Child & Child, then set up on behalf of the two sisters, Exaltation Limited, a British Virgin Islands firm.

In the case of the attempt by Pres. Aliyev’s daughters to purchase the $76 million property in London, a British disciplinary tribunal fined Sharif $57,000 and $51,000 in costs for failing to carry out money-laundering checks and breaching his professional code.

After the contract was signed, the Aliyeva sisters began to pay the purchase price of the two London apartments in installments, transferring $13 million. However, “the deal ‘unraveled’ in 2016 after their ownership was exposed,” according to The Guardian.

Not surprisingly, The Guardian newspaper revealed that “Leaked US diplomatic cables suggest President Aliyev is Azerbaijan’s richest person”!

Երևանի գլխավոր տոնածառը ԱՊՀ երկրների ամենաբարձր տոնածառների եռյակում

  • 03.01.2019
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Ռուսաստանի և ԱՊՀ երկրների զբոսաշրջային ոլորտներում ուսումնասիրություններ կատարող «ՏուրՍտատ» կենտրոնի մասնագետները կազմել են Անկախ պետությունների համագործակցության երկրների ամանորյա տոնածառերի առաջատար տասնյակը՝ ըստ բարձրության:


Ինչպես փոխանցում է ՌԻԱ Նովոստին, ԱՊՀ քաղաքների տասնյակը, որում ընդգրկվել են ամենաբարձր տոնածառը զարդարածները, գլխավորել է Աշխաբադը (38 մետր): Առաջատար եռյակում տեղ են գտել նաև Բաքուն և Երևանը (37-ական մետր):


Տոնածառերի բարձրությամբ առաջատար մայրաքաղաքներն են Տաշքենդը (35 մետր), Մինսկը (30 մետր), Դուշանբեն (28 մետր), Մոսկվան (27 մետր), Աստանան, Բիշկեկը և Թբիլիսին (25 մետր):


Մոսկվան, իր հերթին, գլխավորել է ԱՊՀ մայրաքաղաքների տասնյակը՝ ըստ բնական եղևնու բարձրության: