Armenian churches under attack by Azerbaijanis and Turkey

Weekly Blitz
Jan 3 2021
 
 
 
Armenian churches under attack by Azerbaijanians and Turkey
 
 
Published on January 4, 2021
 
Uzay Bulut
 
While many historic churches across Turkey are systematically used for sacrilegious purposes, churches in the Azerbaijani occupied-Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh in the South Caucuses) are bombed. Their statues, bell towers and other symbols are destroyed, bulldozed or vandalized by Azerbaijani forces.
 
Churches and other elements of Armenian cultural heritage in the parts of Artsakh that are now occupied by Azerbaijan have been attacked by Muslim Azeris. The Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shushi, also known as Holy Savior Cathedral, for instance, was severely damaged from two air raids conducted by the Azerbaijani military on October 8. Videos of the destruction reveal extensive external and internal ruin. This includes broken pews, scattered rubble and a partially collapsed ceiling, reported the Armenian Weekly.
 
From September 27 to November 10, Azerbaijan targeted Armenians in the Armenian Republic of Artsakh throughout its invasion campaign of the region with the support of Turkey and Al-Qaeda-affiliated fighters imported from Syria.
 
Through a deal brokered by Russia and imposed on Armenia on November 9, parts of Artsakh were granted to Azerbaijan. War crimes committed by the Azerbaijani government during that period – such as indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas, beheadings of civilians and prisoners of war, and the destruction of Armenian graves – are widely documented.
 
For instance, some of the crimes committed against churches by Azeri forces from November 12 to 19 included:
 
One of the angel statues at Ghazanchetsots was destroyed and Ghazanchetsots was desecrated with graffiti. Garegin Njdeh statue and the cross on Mekhavan’s St. Zoravor Astvatsatsin church were also destroyed by Azerbaijani soldiers. The Statue of Vazgen Sargsyan was vandalized. Another statue in Artsakh was bulldozed and bell towers of Kanach Zham bell was destroyed.
 
Yet the international community has remained deaf and blind in the face of these blatant crimes and Azerbaijan remains a proud perpetrator. On December 23, the Armenian media reported:
 
All previous attempts to involve UNESCO in preservation of cultural heritage within the context of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have been thwarted by Azerbaijan, Spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Anna Naghdalyan said.
 
The comments come after the UNESCO Secretariat publicly announced that only Azerbaijan has not responded on sending an expert mission of UNESCO to the Nagorno-Karabakh and the adjacent areas, in fact, clearly highlighting Azerbaijan’s destructive approach.
 
“Let me remind that upon the request of the Armenian side regarding the barbaric destruction of the cross-stones (khachkars) in Old Jugha, UNESCO expressed readiness to visit the region, but it was rejected by Azerbaijan,” the Spokesperson added.
 
Meanwhile, violations against historic churches across Turkey are ongoing. The Surp Yerrortutyun Church in the Aksehir district of the province of Konya in Turkey has been converted into a “cultural center,” the weekly Armenian newspaper Agos reported on December 28. The church is known as one of the once largest Armenian churches in Anatolia.
 
The former church will be used as the “The Art House of Humor Masters of the World.” The official date of the opening has not yet been announced.
 
The Aksehir district no longer has an Armenian Christian population because of the 1914-23 Christian genocide by Ottoman Turkey, in which around 1,5 million Armenians perished. Around 1 million Greeks and Assyrians also lost their lives during the same genocide.
 
According to professor Raymond Kevorkian’s book Armenians in the Ottoman Empire Before 1915, an approximately 4, 950 Armenians lived in Akşehir, Konya before the genocide. In addition to the Surp Yerortutyun Church (built in 1859) there were also four Armenian educational institutions in the district. Among these schools, the Surp Istepannos School was famous in all provinces for its “superior education quality.”
 
Despite being a small and oppressed community today, Armenians are among the most ancient peoples of Asia Minor. What is now Turkey was colonized by the Turkic peoples originally from Central Asia during the eleventh century after the Seljuk Turks arrived in Asia Minor and vanquished the Greek-speaking Byzantine Empire at the Battle of Manzikert. Historian Raymond Ibrahim refers to the invasion of Manzikert as “the first genocide of Christian Armenians at the hands of Muslim Turks.”
 
Yet despite severe persecution and the second class “dhimmi” status, the presence of Armenians and other Christian peoples remained in the region during the Seljuk and later the Ottoman rule.
 
This situation dramatically changed when Armenians were targeted in massacres by Ottoman Turks and Kurds between 1894–96 and during the genocide of 1914-23. During these attacks, Armenian cultural heritage was also systematically violated. Author Raffi Bedrosyan writes in his 2011 article “Searching for Lost Armenian Churches and Schools in Turkey”:
 
Considering that every Armenian community invariably strove to build a school beside its church, how many Armenian schools were there in Turkey before 1915, and how many are there now? How many Armenian churches and schools are left standing now in Turkey is the easier part of the issue: There are only 34 churches and 18 schools left in Turkey today, mostly in Istanbul, with about less than 3,000 students in these schools. The challenging and frustrating issue is how many were there in the past.
 
Recent research pegs the number of Armenian churches in Turkey before 1915 at around 2,300. The number of schools before 1915 is estimated at nearly 700, with 82,000 students. These numbers are only for churches and schools under the jurisdiction of the Istanbul Armenian Patriarchate and the Apostolic Church, and therefore do not include the numerous churches and schools belonging to the Protestant and Catholic Armenian parishes. The American colleges and missionary schools, mostly attended by Armenian youth, are also excluded from these numbers. The number of Armenian students attending Turkish schools or small schools at homes in the villages are unknown and not included. Finally, these numbers do not include the churches and schools in Kars and Ardahan provinces, which were not part of Turkey until 1920, and were part of Russia since 1878.
 
As researchers are striving to determine the exact number of lost or stolen Armenian schools and churches in their ancient lands in Turkey, Armenian lives and their churches are currently being targeted and destroyed in Artsakh.
 
Turkey and Azerbaijan, two historic perpetrators of crimes against Christians, are once again brutalizing Armenians in the indigenous Armenian lands before the eyes of the entire world.
 
What are the Christians in the West and the global human rights community doing today to stop these crimes and demand security and basic human rights for the Armenian people?
 
Uzay Bulut is a Turkish journalist and political analyst formerly based in Ankara.
 
 
 
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Armenia to import 2,250 goods from Iran instead of Turkey

Daily Times, Pakistan
Jan 3 2021
 
 
 
January 4, 2021
 
An official from the Iranian Trade Promotion Organisation has announced that Armenia has announced that it is to replace 2,250 Turkish products with Iranian goods.
 
“Due to Turkish sanctions, Armenia intends to replace Iranian goods with 2,250 items imported from Turkey,” the Iranian official said. He added that this will be a good opportunity for Iranian producers. As he added, in the next step, the country will supply its required raw materials from Iran, too.
 
The Yerevan government suspended the import of Turkish–made goods to Armenia for six months in response to Turkish military support for the Republic of Azerbaijan. This ban was adopted on October 20, 2020, and came into force on January 1, 2021. This prohibition shall not include goods and materials required for the manufacture of goods produced by Armenia itself.
 
Armenian Ministry of Economy has said that the ban will not increase the price of goods in the country because it believes that the consumption of Turkish goods is not dominant in this country and Yerevan is able to compensate for the shortage of Turkish goods from countries such as Iran, Belarus, Russia, and China.
 
Earlier this week, Iranian Foreign Minister Zarfi and Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian discussed issues of bilateral cooperation and regional agenda in a phone talk. As the Armenian foreign ministry said in a news release, Aivazian and Zarif also talked about regional security and stability, Armen Press reported. “In this context, the prospects of cooperation in the direction of addressing the new regional challenges were outlined.
 
 
 

Armenia’s Aronian comes second at Airthings Masters, pledges to win next time

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 3 2021

Armenia’sn GM Levon Aronian came second in the Airthings Masters online chess tournament after losing to Teimour Radjabov in the final.

Aronian took home $40,000 from a $200,000 prize pot.

Aronian started the day in desperate need of an early win to put pressure on Radjabov who was ahead after winning Saturday’s first set. The Armenian had to win today’s four-game set to take the match to tiebreaks,

“I have some mixed feelings because I am upset with the way I played in the final but generally I played well in the tournament,” the Armenian said.

He added: “I knew I had to take risks, but probably I was making some strange decisions.”

In the third-place play-off match, Frenchman Maxime Vachier-Lagrave beat Russia’s Daniil Dubov 2.5-1.5 to secure the match after the pair played out a fiery 2-2 draw on Saturday.

Levon Aronian took to social media after the final to thank everyone for support and pledge to win next time.

Sports: Texas Longhorns name Steve Sarkisian head football coach

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 3 2021
Texas Longhorns name Steve Sarkisian head football coach

The University of Texas at Austin has named Steve Sarkisian, currently offensive coordinator for the Alabama Crimson Tide, head coach of the Longhorn football team. He replaces Tom Herman, who was released on Saturday, Texas Sports reports.

Sarkisian has a strong track record as both an offensive coordinator and head coach in both Division I college football and the NFL. He also brings to the Longhorn football program extensive experience coaching in conference and national championship games and developing top talent, including three Heisman Trophy finalists.

“On Jan. 4, 2006, I was the USC quarterback coach when we played Texas in that famed national championship game. There has always been something special about Longhorn football, its history and traditions – not just on that day – and I could never have imagined that 15 years later, I would join the Longhorns as their head coach,” Sarkisian commented. “This is a unique and compelling opportunity to lead this storied program to the next level, competing once again amongst the best in college football.”

Sarkisian was just this week named the Broyles Award winner, awarded to the top college football assistant coach, as he has helped lead the Crimson Tide to compete for the 2020 national championship.

“We are excited to have Steve Sarkisian join us and lead the next chapter of our football program,” said Kevin Eltife, chairman of the UT System Board of Regents. “University of Texas football has a long and proud history of competing at the highest levels within our conference and nationally, and he brings with him the coaching caliber and championship experience needed to restore this kind of excellence to our program.” 

President Jay Hartzell said: “Hiring Steve Sarkisian represents a critical investment in our football program’s future, not just for our student-athletes, but for all of Longhorn Nation. Our entire community benefits from a healthy and successful athletics program, and naming Steve as our coach infuses our football program with the necessary guidance and expertise to drive further success.”

Prior to joining Alabama in 2019, Sarkisian spent two years as offensive coordinator with the Atlanta Falcons, four years as an assistant and two as head coach at the University of Southern California, and five years as head coach at the University of Washington. His head coaching record is 46-35 overall and 2-2 in bowl games.

“Steve Sarkisian is one of the top offensive minds in the game of football, which he has proved over and over during his time with USC, Atlanta, and most recently, Alabama,” said Chris Del Conte, vice president and athletics director of The University of Texas at Austin. “We are confident our players and coaches will thrive under his leadership and in response to his energy and passion for the game.”  

Armenian PM, Russian Deputy PM discuss Nagorno-Karabakh

Public Radio of Armenia

Jan 3 2021

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan received today Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Alexei Overchuk.

PM Pashinyan congratulated the Russian Deputy Prime Minister on the occasion of the New Year and attached importance to his visit in the context of Armenian-Russian cooperation and discussion of the situation in Artsakh.

The Prime Minister once again emphasized the great role that the Russian Federation played in the cessation of hostilities in Nagorno Karabakh and the establishment of a ceasefire, noting that the presence of Russian peacekeeping troops in Nagorno Karabakh is an important factor and security guarantee. Nikol Pashinyan praised the personal efforts of Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russia’s constructive role in stabilizing the situation in Artsakh.

The Russian Deputy Prime Minister conveyed warm greetings from Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin. He noted that Russia reaffirms its support for the friendly Armenian people in this difficult period, and is interested in continuing the programs aimed at the development of Armenian-Russian strategic cooperation.

Nikol Pashinyan and Alexei Overchuk discussed issues related to the situation in Nagorno Karabakh, humanitarian aid to Artsakh, exchange of bodies and prisoners of war, as well as a wide range of issues on the agenda of Armenian-Russian relations. The importance of consistency in the work of exchanging prisoners was emphasized.

The Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and the Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation referred to the cooperation between Armenia and Russia in various spheres, including economic, energy, transport infrastructure development, and the fight against the coronavirus.

https://en.armradio.am/2021/01/03/armenian-pm-russian-deputy-pm-discuss-nagorno-karabakh/

Armenia announces 6 month ban on Turkish goods in protest of Erdogan’s support of Azerbaijan

AMN – Al-Masdar News
Jan 3 2021

BEIRUT, LEBANON (9:30 A.M.) – The Armenian government announced a six-month ban on importing Turkish goods, in protest against Turkey’s support for Azerbaijan in the Karabakh region.

The Armenian Ministry of Economy said, “The import ban will not lead to an increase in prices in the country, because Turkish goods are not dominant, as imports from Russia, Belarus, Iran and China can replace them.”

The ban does not include the intermediate elements required to produce Armenian goods.

It is noteworthy to mention that Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed on November 10, with Russian mediation, to stop the war in Karabakh and exchange prisoners and dead bodies.

The Second Karabakh War began on September 27th and ended on November 10th, following the Moscow Agreement between Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia.


Armenian Christian Community Caught Between Israelis & Palestinians

Word & Way
Jan 2 2021

author: Daoud Kuttab, RNS

(RNS) — Jerusalem’s Armenian Christian quarter dates back to the fourth century, when a small band of pilgrims and monks from the newly Christianized Armenia — 800 miles away on the far side of Turkey — settled in the neighborhood around the Upper Room, the building thought to be the site of the Last Supper. Today, Armenians still occupy a large part of the Old City where the Armenian Apostolic Church, under the independent Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, maintain its own chapels and a school.

Simon Azazian, a communications director at the Palestinian Bible Society whose father is Armenian and mother Palestinian Arab, says that positive relations between Armenians and their Palestinian neighbors, like much in Jerusalem, have a long history.

“Armenians helped with the ceramics of Al-Aqsa Mosque,” he notes, referring to the eighth-century house of worship, the third-holiest site in Islam.

Armenian clergymen with face masks and gloves walk towards the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, traditionally believed by many Christians to be the site of the crucifixion and burial of Jesus Christ, in Jerusalem’s old city on April 18, 2020, after the traditional Holy Fire ceremony was called off amid coronavirus. (Ariel Schalit/Associated Press)

But recently a disused, rubble-filled piece of land has caused friction between the ancient Christian community and the local Palestinian community, which is in administrative control of East Jerusalem despite Israel’s longtime military occupation and effective annexation of the area.

The Armenians say they asked the Palestinian government and others for help in restoring the land — estimates for removing the rubble alone run to $2 million — but none came through. Eventually the Armenians turned to the Israeli Jerusalem municipality, which, along with the Jewish nationalist Jerusalem Development Co., agreed to help remove the mounds of dirt and prepare a parking lot, on the condition that at least 90 spots would be reserved for residents of the Jewish quarter and visitors to the nearby Western Wall.

The 10-year contract for the parking lot, which will take effect Jan. 1, has sparked anger among Palestinians, including Palestinian Christians who worry the agreement will further entrench Jewish control over occupied East Jerusalem.

“Once the Israelis get a further foothold in the old city no power on earth will remove them,” said a senior Palestinian official who asked not to be named because of his sensitive position dealing with Christian religious issues.

But in a 10-point statement, the Armenian Patriarchate, which owns the land, said it has no choice.

“This is a financial obligation that the Patriarchate by itself, doesn’t have the capacity to undertake,” it said. The parking lot, the statement added, “will remain private and that the management, ownership of the parking lot will remain in the hands of the Patriarchate.”

The controversy has taken on added significance because of a recent rise in anti-Christian sentiment among Palestinians. A late December memo from the Hamas-run Islamic Guidance Office that called on Islamic clergy to reject “Christmas culture” was leaked to the press. Making matters worse, the memo, which has since been retracted, used the English word for Christmas, an indirect signal that Christianity is a foreign religion.

On Dec. 26, two large Christmas trees in a public display in the Galilee town of Sakhnin were torched by unknown arsonist. The same day, a Palestinian man from Hebron was caught on video making fun of the Church of the Nativity and the Christmas tree in Bethlehem. Though both events were roundly condemned, some observers say they reflect underlying political and socioeconomic tensions between Palestinian Muslims and Christians that are being expressed in religious terms because of the season.

Azazian noted that the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan, in which Turkey sided with Azerbaijani Muslims against Armenians, has poisoned the atmosphere of late. But others point to dying hopes of a peace agreement that would end Israeli pressure on the Palestinian territories.

“As long as we live without a viable solution, radicalism increases since many also believe that the West, which is mainly Christians, isn’t taking viable steps to end the current political reality of the occupation,” Vera Baboun, a former mayor of Bethlehem, told Religion News Service.

Indeed, the discussions over the Armenians’ parking lot are being conducted along the lines of an international negotiation. The Higher Presidential Committee of Church Affairs in Palestine wrote to Armenian Patriarch Nourhan Manoogian to remind him that the Armenian quarter is part of occupied Palestinian territories under U.N. resolutions, including the 2017 UNSC Resolution 2334.

A letter signed by Ramzi Khoury, the director of the church affairs committee, called on the Armenian patriarch “to abide by international law” and noted that Israel has “expansionist ambitions” in the Old City.

Khoury told RNS that Palestinians have always considered the Armenian quarter as part of the future Palestinian capital in Jerusalem. During the 2000 Camp David talks, Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat refused to concede the Armenian quarter to the Israelis, jokingly calling himself “Arafatian” — Armenian last names commonly end with ‘ian.’ Armenians have also consistently held that the Palestinian Christian and Armenian quarters are “inseparable.”

And the patriarchate’s statement makes clear that despite their collaboration on the parking lot, the Armenians are hardly warming to Israel. In March, the Israeli police fined a young Jewish man for spitting at an Armenian bishop a year earlier — an act Armenian clergy say is no rarity. The patriarchate’s statement also explained that “within the next ten years, once the patriarchate has finalized and received all construction permits, the patriarchate will begin a new construction that will benefit the Armenian community.”

Armenian Ombudsman says Azerbaijan violating provisions of trilateral statement

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 2 2021

Armenia’s Human Rights Definer Arman Tatoyan has called for immediate release of Armenian citizens held in Azerbaijani captivity.

The statement comes in the wake of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s speech, in which he stated that the Armenian servicemen held in captivity are not prisoners of war and described them as “terrorists.”

“As the Human Rights Defender of Armenia, I specifically declare that the mentioned statement and other similar statements are in gross violation of the post-war humanitarian process and the international human rights protection standards,” Ombudsman Arman Tatoyan said.

he added that the statement by the President of Azerbaijan also directly contradicts the requirement reflected in point 8 of the trilateral statement signed on November 9, 2020 which refers to the exchange of prisoners of war or persons who are in other way deprived of liberty.

“The Armenian servicemen captured by Azerbaijani soldiers should be immediately released and returned to Armenia. This must be done immediately and without any precondition since they have the status of prisoners of war,” Tatoyan said.

“During and after the war, the Azerbaijani authorities have constantly violated international human rights standards and humanitarian commitments by artificially delaying the return of prisoners of war and captives and not reporting the real number of prisoners of war and captives,” the Human Rights Defender said, adding that during this whole process Azerbaijani authorities have continued torture and inhuman treatment, have been publishing videos on torture and inhuman treatment in a targeted way, obstructing exchange of bodies, etc.

The studies and reports of the Office of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia confirm that the aim of all these is to cause mental suffering to the families of the prisoners of war, to play with emotions of the Armenian society and generate tension in Armenia, he said.

“The monitoring clearly confirms that, in the case of the Azerbaijani authorities, it is necessary to always act with specific guarantees that will ensure full implementation of their humanitarian commitments and inviolability of international human rights standards,” Arman Tatoyan said.

He drew the attention of international community and particularly international bodies with human rights protection mandate to the mentioned statement of the President of Azerbaijan to exclude any violation of the humanitarian process and ensure strict compliance of the process with international human rights standards.


Increased tensions around Nagorno-Karabakh to be on OSCE agenda: Sweden takes over OSCE Chair

Public Radio of Armenia

Jan 2 2021

Sweden took over the OSCE Chair on January 1, and will in the coming year focus on defending the European security order, addressing protracted conflicts and enhancing democracy and gender equality.

“Sweden is honoured to take over the Chair of the OSCE at a time when our region needs to come together to focus on our common security, based on the principles and commitments we all have made,” said Ann Linde, Sweden’s Foreign Minister and the new OSCE Chairperson-in-Office.

“While conflicts and political crises continue to challenge security, international law, democratic principles and sustainable development, the OSCE can serve as a crucial multilateral platform to tackle these challenges and build stronger societies together,” she added.

“Our priorities as Chair will be to emphasize the fundamental tasks of the OSCE; defending the European security order, upholding the OSCE concept of comprehensive security and to contribute to resolving the conflicts in our region. On 14 January, I will present our programme in detail to the OSCE Permanent Council,” Linde added.

”The ongoing conflicts and crises in the OSCE area, such as the situations we see in Belarus, in and around Ukraine and the increased tensions around Nagorno-Karabakh require the continued, common attention of our organization. This will naturally be on our agenda at the beginning of the year.”

The OSCE Chairperson-in-Office noted that enhancing gender equality would be a key priority of the Swedish Chair.

“In line with the organization’s concept of comprehensive security we will stress the inclusion and meaningful participation of women in all phases of the conflict cycle, and move forward the Women, Peace and Security agenda. This is crucial for the prevention and mitigation of conflicts, as well as to consolidate peace.”

Civil society will also be assured their place in discussions, Linde added.

“The participation and inclusion of civil society in relevant OSCE meetings and formats is a unique component of the OSCE as a security organization. To continue to promote the broad participation of civil society representatives in security discussions will be a priority for our time as Chair. Our support for strengthening democratic processes and the right to freedom of opinion and _expression_ will remain steadfast in 2021.”

Linde concluded by adding that the Swedish Chair will work closely with, and support, the newly appointed OSCE Secretary General and the three Heads of Institutions (the Director of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities, and the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media) in their first year in office.

https://en.armradio.am/2021/01/02/increased-tensions-around-nagorno-karabakh-to-be-on-osce-agenda-sweden-takes-over-osce-chair/

Russia helps reconstruct over 250 buildings in Nagorno-Karabakh – Emergencies Ministry

TASS, Russia
Jan 1 2021
Over 2,600 buildings in Nagorno-Karabakh need reconstruction
© Valery Sharifulin/TASS, archive

MOSCOW, January 1. /TASS/. Russian rescue workers have reconstructed more than 250 buildings in Nagorno-Karabakh, working together with the regional Ministry of Urban Construction and the Interior Ministry, the Russian Emergencies Ministry said in a statement on Friday.

"As many as 251 buildings have been reconstructed so far, including an apartment building, 245 private houses, two government buildings, an infrastructure facility and two social facilities," the statement reads.

According to the ministry, over 2,600 buildings in Nagorno-Karabakh need reconstruction. Work is underway to reconstruct 15 apartment buildings, 183 private houses, two government buildings and two social facilities.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. The conflict over the disputed territory, primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1992-1994, tensions boiled over and exploded into large-scale military action for control over the enclave and seven adjacent territories after Azerbaijan lost control of them.

On November 9, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh starting from November 10. The Russian leader said that Azerbaijan and Armenia would maintain the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers would be deployed to the region.