Asbarez: Cavusoglu Says Turkey is Awaiting Opening of ‘Zangezur Corridor’

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu


Despite insistences from Yerevan that a so-called land corridor through Armenia connecting mainland Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan is out of the question, authorities in Baku have insisted that the opening of such a link, known as the ‘Zangezur Corridor’ is imminent.

Adding his voice of support for the scheme, conceived by Azerbaijan’s president Ilham Aliyev, was Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who said that Turkey was awaiting the opening of the so-called “Zangezur Corridor,” as soon as possible.

He said that the corridor is key to the newly conceived Middle Transport Corridor between the East and West, which was discussed by him and his counterpart from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan during a meeting on Monday in Baku, the Anadolou news agency reported.

“Cargo deliveries across the Caspian Sea are of great importance. We are ready to continue taking steps to increase the significance of this corridor. The growth of investments in the field of transport and logistics will improve the level of well-being in the entire region,” said Cavusoglu.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Monday said that Ankara’s push for the so-called “Zangezur Corridor” is a hinderance to the process of normalizing relations between Armenia and Turkey.

“The constant chants about the ‘Zangezur Corridor’ from Turkey hinder the process and create a negative landscape. Statements are being made that are not very useful for the process,” Pashinyan said during a virtual press conference that was boycotted by the press because of its format.

He vowed, however, that Armenia sees an opportunity to normalize relations—“with sincerity”—and is willing to do everything to that end.

“We work with the logic that there is an opportunity, we must honestly do everything. Otherwise, the dialogue would be senseless. We think there is an opportunity, and we are willing to do everything to use that opportunity,” Pashinyan explained.

Yerevan and Ankara began talks to normalize relations between the countries “without preconditions.” Special envoys appointed to advance those discussion have met twice. Armenia’s foreign minister, Ararat Mirzoyan attended a diplomatic conference in Antalya, Turkey in March hosted by the Turkish foreign ministry.

Despite this, Turkish leaders have not ceased to signal that they are coordinating all facets of the talks with Azerbaijan, and like Cavusoglu’s announcement on Monday, are making public statements that go counter to the logic of negotiations “without preconditions.”

Pashinyan said that time will tell how deep and strong this evidenced coordination between Ankara and Baku will be.

Syria’s Ambassador to Armenia Meets with Catholicos Karekin II

Syria’s Ambassador to Armenia Dr. Nora Arisian (left) meets with Catholicos Karekin II


Karekin II, the Catholicos of All Armenians, met with the newly appointed Ambassador of Syria to Armenia Dr. Nora Arisian at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin on Monday.

According to the Etchmiadzin press service, the Catholicos congratulated Arisian on her appointment and expressed hope that her tenure will further strengthen the “centuries-old” relations between the Syrian and Armenian people.

The pontiff also emphasized the important role the Armenian community in Syria plays in strengthening ties between the two countries.

During the meeting, the Catholicos of All Armenians referred to the tragic losses and devastation caused by terrorist attacks in Syria and the 44-day war in Artsakh, expressing confidence that “the two friendly nations will overcome the challenges they face with a spirit of optimism and strong faith.”

Arisian briefed the Catholicos about the difficulties facing the Armenian community due to the conflict in Syria, confirming that the Syrian authorities are making every effort to improve the situation of the Armenian community. The Ambassador also emphasized the role of the Syrian-Armenian community in overcoming the current challenges in Syria, which has always been highly appreciated in the country.

Asbarez: Menendez, Schiff Alarmed that Biden Again Approves U.S. Military Aid to Azerbaijan

Sen. Menendez: “It simply makes no sense to say that U.S. assistance and training has not impacted its [Azerbaijan’s] military balance with Armenia.”

Rep. Schiff: “Under no circumstances should the U.S. be providing military support to such a regime […] President Biden should not have waived Section 907.”

WASHINGTON—Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Chair Adam Schiff (D-CA) reacted sharply to President Biden’s decision to once again waive Section 907 restrictions on U.S. aid to Azerbaijan, greenlighting new U.S. military aid to the Aliyev regime despite its ethnic cleansing of the indigenous Armenian population of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), reported the Armenian National Committee of America.

In a statement released on Friday, Chairman Menendez noted, “I am deeply disappointed to see the Department of State once again make an exception to bypass Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act to provide what has become annual assistance to the regime in Baku. Adding insult to injury, the administration chose to move forward with this most recent waiver despite the recent publication of a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report which confirmed the Department of State and Department of Defense have failed to meet statutory reporting requirements to Congress on the impact of U.S. assistance on the military balance between Armenia and Azerbaijan.”

Chairman Menendez continued, “As Azerbaijan continues to further occupy territory from its violent assault on Nagorno-Karabakh, during which more than 6,500 people died and more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians were displaced in 2020, it simply makes no sense to say that U.S. assistance and training has not impacted its military balance with Armenia. I will continue to conduct rigorous oversight of any and all assistance to Azerbaijan and expect the Department of State to operate with complete transparency and provide all necessary details for Congress to assess any assistance provided to Baku.”

In commentary released to the ANCA, Chairman Schiff pledged to work with Congressional allies and the Armenian American community to “remove a president’s power to waive Section 907 and to urge the Biden administration to reinvigorate the peace process.”  Chairman Schiff explained, “Azerbaijan is responsible for provoking a horrific war and humanitarian disaster in Armenia and Artsakh, killing thousands of Armenians over 44 days in September 2020 and forcing thousands more to flee their ancestral homelands. To this day, Azerbaijan continues to illegally detain Armenian soldiers who have been subject to torture, and to threaten thousands of innocent civilians in Nagorno-Karabakh who live in fear of another attack and invasion.  

Chairman Schiff continued, “Under no circumstances should the United States be providing military support to such a regime – it not only runs counter to our nation’s core democratic values, but could empower the Aliyev regime to continue or escalate its provocative actions against Armenians. President Biden should not have waived Section 907.”

ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian thanked Chairman Menendez and Chairman Schiff for calling out the Biden Administration’s reckless decision – demanding stronger Congressional oversight and a stop to U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan. “Not a single penny in U.S. tax-payer money should go to the overtly racist and openly aggressive Aliyev regime.  We look forward to working with Chairman Menendez and Chairman Schiff and their colleagues on key committees in both the Senate and the House to oppose U.S. subsidies for Azerbaijan’s genocidal violence against Artsakh and Armenia.”

The ANCA has been running an online campaign – https://anca.org/907 – condemning President Biden’s decision and urging Congress to use every legislative vehicle possible to zero-out military aid to Azerbaijan.

On June 23rd, the Biden Administration reportedly notified Congress of their decision to waive Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act. The measure, adopted in 1992, establishes statutory restrictions on U.S. assistance to the Government of Azerbaijan “until the President determines, and so reports to the Congress, that the Government of Azerbaijan is taking demonstrable steps to cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.” Congress included a Section 907 waiver in the FY2002 Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act. U.S. presidents – Republican and Democrat – have waived Section 907 annually ever since.

During his run for office, on October 14th, 2020, then-candidate Biden stated that the United States must “fully implement and not waive requirements under Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act to stop the flow of military equipment to Azerbaijan.” As President, he first reversed his position on the issue on April 23, 2021 – on the eve of his historic announcement properly recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

A U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, issued earlier this year, revealed that the State Department consistently failed to inform Congress of the impact of over $164 million in assistance to Baku on the military balance between Azerbaijan and Armenia.  According to the GAO, the U.S. has provided about $808 million in overall US aid to Azerbaijan in fiscal years 2002 through 2020.

RFE/RL – 06/27/2022

                                        Monday, 
Authorities Accused Of Obstructing Probe Into Deadly Crash
        • Narine Ghalechian
Armenia - Citizens pay their respects to a pregnant woman who was hit and killed 
by a police car that was part of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian's motorcade, 
Yerevan, April 27, 2022.
The family of a pregnant woman who died after being run over by a police car 
escorting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s motorcade accused the Armenian 
authorities on Monday of obstructing the criminal investigation into the 
accident.
The woman’s father also held Pashinian responsible for her death, saying that 
his motorcade drove through Yerevan too fast.
“Where did the prime minister rush?” said Mnatsakan Mnatsakanian. “Was he 
running away from someone?”
Mnatsakanian’s 29-year-old daughter Sona was struck by a police SUV while 
crossing a street in the city center on April 26. The vehicle did not stop after 
the collision that sparked more opposition calls for Pashinian’s resignation. 
Its driver, police Major Aram Navasardian, was arrested hours later.
Armenia’s Investigative Committee charged Navasardian with violating traffic 
rules but released him shortly afterwards. The law-enforcement agency arrested 
the policeman again a few days later after a prosecutor ordered it to also 
charge him with fleeing the scene and not helping the victim.
A Yerevan court of first instance refused to sanction the arrest, however, 
forcing the Investigative Committee to free Navasardian. A higher court rejected 
last Friday the investigators’ appeal against that decision.
The victim’s father deplored the court orders, saying that the police officer 
may be influencing eyewitnesses of the accident. “Since the prime minister 
personally called me and offered his condolences I hoped that there will be a 
fair investigation,” he said.
“It’s possible that were was an order from the [country’s] supreme leadership 
not to arrest the driver,” Mnatsakan Mnatsakanian added at a joint news 
conference with Raffi Aslanian, a lawyer representing his family.
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian inspects new Patrol Police vehicles in 
Gyumri, April 16, 2022.
Aslanian claimed, for his part, that a state security agency has destroyed 
“important pieces of evidence” in the case. He refused to name the agency or 
shed light on that evidence, citing the secrecy of the investigation.
Navasardian, the indicted policeman, denies the accusations leveled against him. 
His lawyer cited in April a government directive allowing government motorcades 
to move at up to 100 kilometers/hour (62 miles/hour) in Yerevan.
According to Mnatsakanian Sr., forensic tests conducted by investigators found 
that the police car raced through the city at almost 109 kilometers/hour (68 
miles/hour).
“Had he not exceeded the [speed] limit my daughter or my unborn grandchild may 
have stayed alive,” said the grief-stricken father.
Pashinian’s limousine and the six other cars making up his motorcade also drove 
past the dying woman and did not help her either. The prime minister has still 
not publicly commented on her death.
The deputy chief of Pashinian’s staff, Taron Chakhoyan, claimed on April 27 that 
the motorcade would have caused a traffic jam and made it harder for an 
ambulance to reach the victim had it stopped right after the crash. Opposition 
figures and other government critics brushed aside that explanation, blaming 
Pashinian for the woman’s death.
Armenian Mine Workers On Strike For Better Pay
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - The Kapan Mining and Processing Company, September 5, 2018.
Hundreds of workers of a mining company in southeastern Armenia have gone on 
strike to demand better pay and working conditions.
The strike action began on Saturday and continued on Monday, reportedly 
involving about one-third of the Chaarat Kapan company’s 1,000-strong workforce.
The protesting workers are demanding increases in their wages and monthly 
financial compensation paid for their exposure to dust and toxic waste. They 
also want the company management to provide them with health insurance.
Four of those workers began a hunger strike on Sunday. One of them, Spartak 
Sargsian, said on Monday they will refuse food until their demands are met.
“My monthly wage is 173,000 drams ($420),” Sargsian told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service. “On top of that, there is health compensation worth 50 percent [of the 
wage.]”
Armenia - Workers of Chaarat Kapan company on strike, .
Negotiations held between the workers and the company management have yielded no 
results so far.
One of the workers who asked not to be identified said the management has 
expressed readiness to finance health insurance for its personnel but rejected 
the pay rises. Company executives have threatened to shut down the underground 
mines and their ore-processing facility, added the worker.
Chaarat Kapan said in a statement that it cannot afford pay rises because of 
unfavorable global economic developments and recent months’ significant 
appreciation of the Armenian currency, the dram, which has hit the 
export-oriented company hard.
Chaarat Kapan mines gold, copper, silver and zinc near the southeastern Armenian 
town of Kapan. Its parent company, Chaarat Gold, is registered in the British 
Virgin Islands and headquartered in London.
The underground mines were previously owned by a Russian metals group. Chaarat 
bought them for $55 million in 2019.
Pashinian’s ‘News Conference’ Boycotted By Media
        • Naira Nalbandian
ARMENIA -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks during his online news 
conference in Yerevan, November 16, 2020
Several dozen media outlets boycotted or objected to Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s latest virtual press conference on Monday, calling it a charade that 
will help him dodge tough questions.
Pashinian has not held in-person news conferences in Armenia since the outbreak 
of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, giving instead interviews to a limited 
number of domestic news organizations, virtually all of them controlled by or 
loyal to his administration.
In November and December 2021 and January this year, he also organized three 
virtual briefings supposedly open to all mass media. Journalists as well as 
bloggers and civic activists had to submit their questions in advance and hope 
that they will be answered.
They were invited to do so again late last week, with the Armenian government’s 
press office saying that Pashinian will answer their questions on Monday evening.
In an ensuing joint statement, several media outlets, including RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service, urged the prime minister to revert to in-person news 
conferences, arguing that Pashinian’s government lifted practically all 
coronavirus-related restrictions earlier this year. They also said that many of 
their questions sent ahead of the previous virtual briefings were ignored by the 
47-year-old former journalist or “distorted” by his staff.
“As a result, the public’s ability to receive proper information [from the 
government] was effectively restricted,” said the statement.
Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian holds a news conference in Yerevan, 
27 April 2018.
More than two dozen other Yerevan-based newspapers, news websites and TV 
channels mostly critical of Pashinian’s government went farther, boycotting the 
news conference altogether.
“Experience shows that such ‘online contacts’ are held under a pre-planned 
scenario and mainly feature questions by pro-government media outlets, Telegram 
channels and bloggers that are apparently agreed with the organizers of the 
events,” read a separate statement issued by them.
Pashinian and his office did not publicly respond to the criticism. His declared 
news conference went ahead as planned.
Boris Navasardian, the chairman of the Yerevan Press Club, agreed that Pashinian 
has used the virtual format of the briefings to skirt unpleasant questions 
preoccupying the public.
“The overall impression is that the prime minister mostly concentrates on topics 
and messages that he needs,” said Navasardian.
“A stage-managed news conference doesn’t allow a journalist to directly ask a 
question and, if necessary, follow-up questions,” argued Hakob Karapetian, the 
editor of the fact-checking website fip.am.
Karapetian pointed out that Pashinian, who used to edit a newspaper, has 
increasingly limited his contacts with the media since coming to power in 2018. 
According to his calculations, the prime minister gave only five interviews last 
year, sharply down from 34 interviews in 2020.
Families Of Armenian Shooting Victims Fear Cover-Up
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia - Relatives of a deadly shooting demonstrate in Aparan, June 25, 2022.
Dozens of relatives of several men killed and wounded in a small community in 
central Armenia rallied at the weekend to demand an objective investigation into 
the shooting which they blame on local government-linked individuals.
The shooting, which occurred on June 18 in a village just outside Aparan, a town 
55 kilometers north of Yerevan, left two local residents dead and five others 
wounded. Law-enforcement authorities said it was sparked a road rage incident 
that escalated into a violent clash between two groups of young men.
The presumed shooter, a 32-year-old resident of Yerevan, was arrested on June 
20. Investigators have made no other arrests so far.
They have denied media reports claiming that the Aparan men were attacked 
because of publicly swearing at Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
The angry relatives of the shooting victims also denied any political reasons 
for the deadly dispute as they demonstrated in Aparan on Saturday.
But they confirmed reports that the attackers included close relatives of Edgar 
Parvanian, a deputy governor of surrounding Aragatsotn province, and Matevos 
Asatrian, a member of the Armenian parliament representing Pashinian’s Civil 
Contract party.
The protesters said that both officials based in Aparan must leave the rural 
community because they are responsible for the fatal shooting.
“The brother of that parliament deputy and two cousins of Edgar Parvanian were 
present there [at the scene of the shooting,]” said Gevorg Harutiunian, the 
father of one of the two murdered men.
Parvanian did not deny his relatives’ involvement while insisting that he 
personally is not to blame for what happened. He said he hopes investigators 
will ascertain all causes and circumstances of the crime.
The protesting relatives said they fear that the ongoing investigation will be a 
cover-up because of the local officials linked to Armenia’s political 
leadership. They demanded that Pashinian meet with them and hear their concerns.
“Six days have passed and those people have still not been arrested,” said 
Abraham Mikaelian whose 27-year-old nephew Hmayak was also shot dead on June 18. 
“This gives us reason to suspect that the case is not investigated properly.”
The Investigative Committee did not comment on the course of the probe and the 
protesters’ demands.
The chief of the police department of Aparan and surrounding villages was sacked 
three days after the shooting.
Opposition leaders in Yerevan have blamed Pashinian for the shooting, saying 
that he has encouraged violent reprisals against his detractors. Representatives 
of the ruling party have rejected the accusations.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

The California Courier Online, June 30, 2022

1-         After a Century, Bankrupt Turkey Wasting

            Huge Sums to Deny the Armenian Genocide

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Irvine mayor’s efforts to repair relations with Armenian community

            could lead to memorial, school curriculum

3-         Despite threats, Armenian activist won’t stop fight for trans rights

4-         Haig Adomian (January 29, 1958 – May 29, 2022)

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

************************************************************************************************************************************************

1-         After a Century, Bankrupt Turkey Wasting

            Huge Sums to Deny the Armenian Genocide

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

The Turkish government’s denial of the Armenian Genocide is as futile
as a man who repeatedly hits his head against a wall, hoping the wall
would give way.

For more than a century, successive Turkish governments have done
everything in their power to cover up the heinous crime of the
Armenian Genocide committed by their predecessors. No Turkish leader
has had the courage and honesty to admit the truth. Instead, Turkey
has wasted huge sums of money to deny the undeniable. It has bribed
questionable scholars and crooked politicians around the world to
distort the historical facts. Ankara has published hundreds of
deceptive books and made several trashy movies to cover up its crimes.
Over several decades, Turkey has spent tens of millions of dollars to
hire American lobbying firms to pressure the U.S. Congress not to
acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. All of these efforts failed
miserably. The U.S. House of Representatives recognized the Armenian
Genocide in 1975, 1984 and 2019. The U.S. Senate unanimously
recognized it in 2019. Moreover, two U.S. Presidents acknowledged it:
Pres. Ronald Reagan in a Presidential Proclamation in 1981 and Pres.
Joe Biden in his commemorative statements on April 24, 2021 and 2022.
The most authoritative American acknowledgment of the Armenian
Genocide took place on May 28, 1951, when the U.S. government
submitted an official report to the World Court, stating that the
Armenian Genocide was one of the “outstanding examples of the crime of
genocide.”

Despite all Turkish pressures, threats and bribes, over 30 countries
have formally acknowledged the Armenian Genocide. This is in addition
to acknowledgments by the United Nations War Crimes Commission in
1948, the UN Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and
Protection of Minorities in 1985 and the European Parliament
repeatedly since 1987.

Most of these acknowledgments took place at a time when the Republic
of Armenia did not exist as an independent state. The Armenian
Diaspora, in a David vs. Goliath battle, was able to counter the
denials of the powerful Turkish government, supported by its NATO
allies and scores of Islamic states.

All of these denialist efforts are based on the simple misconception
that should the Turkish government acknowledge the Armenian Genocide,
it would then be obligated to pay restitution to surviving Armenians.
Regrettably, many Armenians have the same misconception. The fact is
that the Turkish government is liable to pay reparations and return
confiscated Armenian properties and territories, regardless of whether
Turkish leaders acknowledge their guilt or not. Political statements
by government leaders are of no value in a court of law. Courts deal
with facts and documents. No matter how many times Turkey denies the
genocide, the Republic of Armenia has the right to take its demands
for restitution and return of territories to the International Court
of Justice (World Court), where only governments have such
jurisdiction.

After an entire century of denial, the Turkish government announced
last week its latest desperate attempt to counter the facts of the
Armenian Genocide by forming the TEKAR Foundation (Turkish Armenian
Issue Research Foundation). This is a coalition of three Turkish
groups: Educational Friends Foundation, Baskent (Capital City)
Strategic Research Center, and Center for Countering Fanatic Armenian
Lies. The new Foundation held its inaugural assembly on June 25.

TEKAR plans to republish a Turkish denialist book written by Esat Uras
(1882-1957), titled: “The Armenians in history and the Armenian
question.” As a member of the Committee of Union and Progress (Young
Turks), Uras played a key role in planning and executing the Armenian
Genocide. His book is replete with gross misrepresentations.

The Turkish Foundation also stated that it will “print Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk’s views, thoughts and statements on Armenians, Armenian
activities and Armenian relations.” I hope the Foundation will not
forget to quote from Ataturk’s interview published by the Los Angeles
Examiner on August 1, 1926, in which he said: “These leftovers from
the former Young Turk Party, who should have been made to account for
the lives of millions of our Christian subjects, who were ruthlessly
driven en masse from their homes and massacred…. They have hitherto
lived on plunder, robbery and bribery.”

The TEKAR Foundation has 23 members on its board of trustees. The
chairman of the board is Mehmet Arif Demirer, a chemical engineer, not
a historian! Incomprehensibly, the board is composed of six military
officers, three engineers, two economists, one gastronomist, one
student, and several others of miscellaneous backgrounds. It looks
like the real purpose of the TEKAR Foundation is to provide jobs to
Pres. Erdogan’s circle of friends. While it is a good thing that these
Turks want to study the Armenian Genocide, their intention is not
seeking the truth!

Turkish denialists have never understood that the more they deny the
Armenian Genocide and the longer they talk about it, the more the
world becomes aware of the Armenian Genocide. In other words, Turkey
foolishly keeps publicizing the Armenian Genocide to new generations
while trying to deny it.

The second thing that the Turkish leaders never understood is that the
sooner they acknowledge the crimes of their predecessors, the sooner
they will gain the respect of the international public opinion. When a
Turkish leader eventually acknowledges the truth, he will be praised
worldwide and may even be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. By
their denials, Turkish leaders are doing a major disservice to their
own reputations, not to mention the huge sums of money they are
wasting at a time when the Turkish economy is bankrupt!

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         Irvine mayor’s efforts to repair relations with Armenian community

            could lead to memorial, school curriculum

By Tess Sheets

(Orange County Register)—When a video surfaced in March of Irvine
Mayor Farrah Khan joking and laughing during a meeting in 2020 with
representatives of local Turkish groups, it sparked a furor among some
community members who noted among the party a man who has been
outspoken in denying the Armenian Genocide.

Residents penned letters and turned up at City Council meetings to
voice their outrage. An Armenian group denounced the county Democratic
Party for its early endorsement in Khan’s 2022 mayoral race.

In demand letters penned to the public and Khan, an immediate apology
from the mayor was requested, along with a pledge to distance herself
from anyone who has denied the genocide and for her support for
teaching public school students about the history of the carnage.

Khan and Armenian community members have since met and it could mean
an Armenian Genocide memorial is constructed in Irvine – Khan said she
will support finding a place in the city. She’s also agreed to
approach the Irvine Unified school board about coordinating training
for educators on teaching about the genocide. And, at an April City
Council meeting, she said she donated $1,500 to the Genocide Education
Project.

Khan was quick to post recorded statements to social media
apologizing, but has also said the video wasn’t an accurate
representation of what was discussed during that meeting – she’s
having a company look into its editing.

The video’s captions had an “incorrect translation” of the
conversation between her and Turkish community members, she said,
suspecting its out-of-context release now was “politically intended,”
timed for two weeks before the Democratic Party of Orange County
planned to announced its early endorsements.

The mayor remains steadfast that discussions at the meeting, which she
said was one of many held with community members after her 2020
mayoral win, did not touch on the Armenian Genocide, as some have
said.

She promised to cut ties with anyone critical that the genocide occurred.

“I think it’s a little disheartening,” Khan said of the response to
the video. “I think I’ve been in the middle of conflicts before—from
India and Pakistan, from Palestine and Israel—and I’ve never had the
community react this way to me. I have never had this type of
experience. It’s always been like, ‘We’re upset, let’s have a meeting.
Let’s talk. Let’s have an understanding.’”

In the released video, Khan is accepting congratulations for her
mayoral win, she said. When she is presented a box of Turkish
Delights, captions appear depicting the conversation between Khan and
a community member identified later as Ergun Kirlikovali. They read
that he says on “Armenians’ occasions,” Khan could eat the candies and
they would “disappear.”  Khan responds, “I’ll make sure I eat it in
front of them.”

Some said they believe Khan and Kirlikovali were referring to
Armenians disappearing. But the mayor said there was “no mention of
Armenian Genocide.”

“As a person of faith, as a person who has worked in interfaith for so
many years, has 17 years of community building behind me, I would
never make fun of anybody,” Khan said in an interview. “That’s not who
I am. That’s not what I would do.”

She said she has a company looking into the authenticity of the video
with captions, and “preliminary findings from them is that this is a
chopped up, kind-of sliced up video. It’s not what I said. It’s not
what I was discussing at the time.”

Khan said the company, which she declined to name or provide further
details on, is preparing a final report on its review, which she will
present publicly when it’s completed.

“I’m really hoping for that professional report to come out to kind of
put to rest the idea that people are calling me a racist and that I’m
denying the genocide or saying that Armenians should disappear,” Khan
said.

Violet Bulujian, chair of the Orange County chapter of the Armenian
National Committee of America, said seeing the video was a gut-punch.

“To say that we were outraged is an understatement,” said Bulujian.

“If you imagine the Democratic mayor attending a meeting that was
hosted by Holocaust deniers, and that mayor says, ‘I pledged to stand
with you no matter what,’ and then laughs along with them, that would
not be tolerated, under no circumstances,” Bulujian said.

Led by UCI professor of Physics and Astronomy Kev Abazajian, the
Southern California Armenian Democrats wrote that Khan’s response to
the community “has been as reprehensible as the original hate speech,”
and the Democratic Party’s endorsement should be taken back “until
which point she properly acknowledges the extent of the harm of her
actions and takes concrete steps to reconcile with the Armenian
community.”

The Democrats of Greater Irvine, a group also chaired by Abazajian, a
2018 City Council contender who lost out to Khan and Councilman
Anthony Kuo, voted to censure the mayor at a meeting in April for “her
participation in hate speech, supporting and promoting Armenian
Genocide denialists and continued denial of the years-long
relationship with Armenian Genocide denialists.”

Abazajian said the issue is “way bigger than Irvine,” recalling that
he and others were outraged in 2021 when Khan lauded the country of
Azerbaijan as a “secular democracy” during an Azerbaijani Consulate
event celebrating its Republic Day. The ANCA Western Region, which
represents all of California, in a letter to the Central Committee
asking the group not to award Khan its annual “Truth Award,” calling
Azerbaijan “one of the most authoritarian regimes on earth, ranking
amongst the worst offenders when it comes to democratic rights, press
freedom and fundamental human rights.”

Khan said at the time she “did not realize there is a conflict going
on,” between Azerbaijan and Armenia and she later sat down with the
ANCA group to apologize, but she felt singled out because the
criticism came as she was being considered for the Central Committee
award. Other elected officials who were part of that Azerbaijani event
didn’t receive the same pushback, she said.

Bulujian’s organization, the ANCA, has also noted that Kirlikovali was
among a group that Khan announced in 2021 as her mayoral advisory
committee. Khan said the residents weren’t appointed as part of an
official committee, instead the group was formed out of an “open call
to community members that I should be interacting with, to come on and
share with me what they’d like to see more of in the city,” she said.

Kirlikovali also said the conversation during the meeting with Khan in
2020 was about Turkish desserts and not about Armenians disappearing.

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3-         Despite threats, Armenian activist won’t stop fight for trans rights

There has been no legislation passed for LGBTIQ rights in Armenia
since leading trans activist Lilit Martirosyan’s historic speech to
the National Assembly in 2019—but, she argues, at least she has
brought some visibility to the country’s transgender and gay
communities.

“After my speech, Nikol Pashinyan’s government started to speak more
about LGBTIQ issues,” said Martirosyan. “[Former] governments never
spoke about LGBTIQ people.”

Martirosyan is the founder of the Right Side, a non-governmental
transgender and sex workers’ rights group in Yerevan. On April 5,
2019, she became the first out trans woman to speak in the Armenian
parliament, calling for for an end to violence and discrimination
towards trans people.

In response, she was met with online death threats, doxxing, and calls
by parliamentarians to have her burned alive. When Martirosyan tried
to report the threats to the police, they laughed at her, she said.
Most health centers also turned her away when she sought treatment for
the panic attacks she’d developed.

“After my speech at the National Assembly, everybody started
recognizing my face,” Martirosyan told openDemocracy in a video call
from her apartment in Yerevan. “I started receiving hate messages not
only on my social media platforms, but on the streets, in shops, and
other places.”

Nowadays, to avoid public harassment, she wears a mask whenever she
steps foot outside her home, even though COVID-19 restrictions have
been lifted in Yerevan.

Though awareness about transgender people in Armenia has increased
thanks to her speech, living openly as a trans activist remains
extremely hard in this conservative country. Nevertheless, Martirosyan
refuses to leave.

“Of course, I can take my passport and go to different European
countries or to the US, but my community is here,” she said.
“Transgender people, especially transgender women, are in a bad
situation here.”

Martirosyan stresses the urgent need for a hate crime law, legal
gender recognition and access to trans health care in Armenia.

There is no legal definition of ‘hate crime’ in Armenian law. As a
result, law enforcement agencies don’t collect data about such crimes.
Out of 113 incidents of harassment against LGBTIQ people in the last
two years, only 27 cases were reported to the police, but none of them
was considered a hate crime, according to a survey by the Right Side.

Acknowledging the potential for human rights violations, the Council
of Europe’s Committee of Equality and Non-Discrimination last year
recommended that Armenia adopt effective legislation and “policies to
strengthen action against discrimination based on sexual orientation,
gender identity, gender _expression_ and sexual characteristics”.

The lack of protection against discrimination and harassment in the
workplace makes earning a living difficult for transgender people in
the country. Many, Martirosyan included, get into sex work to provide
an income.

Martirosyan is also taking a case to the European Court of Human
Rights in which an Armenian trans man’s application to correct his
gender marker on his birth certificate from ‘female’ to ‘male’ was
denied by Armenian courts. Currently, the Ministry of Justice requires
paperwork proving a trans person’s sex-reassignment surgery—a medical
intervention that’s outlawed in Armenia and costly to do abroad, and
which not everyone wants to go through.

“It’s a big problem, because there are transgender people who don’t
want sex reassignment surgery,” Martirosyan explained. She was the
first trans woman in Armenia to legally change her name on her
passport in 2015. She changed the gender marker to ‘F’ in 2021.

For Martirosyan, the hardest part of her job as an activist is raising
awareness and changing societal attitudes about trans people in
Armenia.

Her activism was rewarded in The Netherlands last year by the Red
Umbrella Fund, a global fund for sex workers, and by the Human Rights
Tulip, with a prize of 100,000 euros. Martirosyan says she used the
money to buy bigger office space for the Right Side in Yerevan.

“Maybe after ten or more years things will change,” she said. “We will
continue to work even though it’s dangerous for us.”

**********************************************************************************************************************************************
4-         Haig Adomian (January 29, 1958 – May 29, 2022)

Haig Antranig Adomian was born in Los Angeles, California to George
and Corinne Adomian.

An inspiring and beloved personality, Haig was an adventurer, world
traveler, athlete, visionary dealmaker and businessman, real estate
agent, writer, researcher, and print and broadcast journalist, always
as a lifelong supporter of Armenian causes. He served as a news anchor
at Horizon TV, worked as a writer/producer/director, and wrote and
worked for Armenian newspapers including Asbarez as well as
co-publishing at Armenian Life.

After attending the University of Georgia from age 11, he graduated in
1978 with a degree in History from Princeton University, where he
played rugby and rowed crew. He was an Eagle Scout and a black belt in
karate.

Haig loved learning and teaching, hiking, music and songwriting,
scriptwriting, film and broadcasting, acting and directing, family
history and collecting and telling stories, among many passions. His
limitless creativity, and his talent for deal-making, benefited many,
and promised great things to come from projects he was endlessly
envisioning. For Haig, survival of the people was a priority and
bringing happiness was his nature. His remarkable brilliance, humor,
energy and integrity warmed many hearts and will live there forever.

Haig is survived by his mother Corinne, his sisters Diane and Laura,
his four sons James, David, Daniel, and Garrison, and godfather and
uncle Dr. Gerald (Jerry) Adomian, along with his beloved companion
Sara Medina and family, and his worldwide network of family and
friends. His untimely passing followed a sudden illness while
overseas.

Haig will be remembered at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills (6300 Forest
Lawn Dr, Los Angeles, CA 90068), with a visitation on Thursday, July 7
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The funeral service will be held Friday, July 8 at 2:30 p.m. in the
Old North Church, Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills, with a graveside burial
immediately following. Memorial dinner will be held after the funeral
services at a location to be announced at the church.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to The American Armenian
National Security Institute – AANSI. Checks may be made out to AANSI
and mailed to: 330 N. Brand Blvd., Ste. 1250, Glendale, CA 91203.

***********************************************************************************************************************************************

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

More than 2.2 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine have been
administered in Armenia since commencing the vaccination program a
year ago, authorities said on Monday, June 27. For the third week, no
new deaths were reported. Armenia has recorded 423,243 coronavirus
cases. Armenia has recorded 8,629 deaths; 412,661 have recovered.

***************************************************************************************************************************

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California Courier Online provides readers of the Armenian News News Service
with a few of the articles in this week’s issue of The California
Courier. Letters to the editor are encouraged through our e-mail
address, . Letters are published with
the author’s name and location; authors are required to disclose their
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numbers for verification purposes).
California Courier subscribers can change or modify mailing addresses
by emailing .

Reality undermines Biden’s virtue-signaling on genocide

Just two months ago, President Joe Biden commemorated the Armenian Genocide with a pledge “to remain vigilant against the corrosive influence of hate in all its forms.” He added, “We recommit ourselves to speaking out and stopping atrocities that leave lasting scars on the world.”

Unfortunately, the president’s words were empty.

Azerbaijan unabashedly promises to finish the job against Armenia as the U.S. ambassador signals to the Azeri government that it should not worry about cuts to military aid. Biden threw a generation of Afghanistan’s women to the Taliban wolves. John Kerry, who plays an outsize role in Biden’s administration as climate envoy, has dismissed prioritizing action against China’s wholesale eradication of the Uyghur people if it means obstructing climate cooperation. “Life is always full of tough choices in the relationship between nations,” Kerry said . For Kerry, “never again” only matters if it does subordinate to his agenda.

Ethnic cleansing continues wholesale in Ethiopia. While Biden initially talked tough, his administration has done little to affect change, with perhaps 500,000 dead on the Biden team’s watch solely because of their Tigrayan ethnicity. They were slain by a Nobel laureate . Biden might plead helplessness in Ethiopia, but the same cannot be said for Nigeria, where the State Department took Nigeria off the religious freedom watch list in order to ensure greater comity when Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited the country. Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari interpreted the move as a green light to accelerate anti-Christian pogroms .

Nor was Nigeria the only country in which the Biden administration green-lighted genocide. A decade ago, Turkey demanded many Kurds relocate to Syria as part of a peace process. Today, Turkey cites their presence as a reason to attack. As war looms, Biden endorsed the sale of F-16 jets to Turkey, the main weapon with which the Turkish state kills Kurds. After hearing the White House’s position, Turkey no longer believes the warnings against further encroachment into Syria. As for the Kurds now living in Syria? They have no place else to go. The ethnic cleansing that occurred under the Trump administration now appears a dry run for something far more sinister: Turkey appears intent on forcing the Kurds into the desert to die, just as they did the Armenians more than a century ago.

Neglect also matters.

Just as Biden bashed Saudi Arabia before reality forced an about-face, so too has his administration never missed an opportunity to trash Rwanda, perhaps the most successful country in Africa’s Great Lakes region. Rwanda is not only a symbol of rebirth from genocide, but it is also the world’s primary example of triumph over dysfunctional corruption. In recent weeks, though, the Biden team has subordinated Rwanda’s counterterrorism fight to Hollywood myth-making . For Rwanda, the crisis is real as the United Nations never disarmed the Genocidaires who escaped to refugee camps in the Congo. Now, those same forces are on the rampage in Congo’s South Kivu region, in a situation eerily reminiscent of the 1994 anti-Tutsi genocide across the border.

Because the electorate saw Biden as less noxious than former President Donald Trump and any alternative among the progressive Left in the primaries, he found himself as the leader of the free world.

What a betrayal it has been, however, to see Biden embrace the trappings of office but not its spirit and to engage in rhetoric but not deal with reality. It is the perfect storm for those from Ankara to Addis Ababa and from Beijing to Baku who would normalize genocide in the face of American weakness.

Michael Rubin ( @mrubin1971 ) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential. He is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

 

Tehran: Raymond Kévorkian’s book on history of Armenian Genocide published in Persian

TEHRAN TIMES
Iran –
  1. Culture
– 18:33

TEHRAN – “The Armenian Genocide: A Complete History” by French historian Raymond Kévorkian has been published in Persian by the Afkar publishing house in Tehran.

Saeid Karimpur is the translator of the book originally published in 2006.

The Armenian Genocide was one of the greatest atrocities of the twentieth century, an episode in which up to 1.5 million Armenians lost their lives. 

In this major new history, Kévorkian provides a long-awaited authoritative account of the origins, events and consequences of the years 1915 and 1916. 

He explains and analyses the debates that occurred within the elite circles of the Young Turks, and traces the roots of the violence that would be raged upon the Ottoman Armenians. 

Uniquely, this is also a geographical account of the Armenian genocide, documenting its course region by region, including a complete account of the deportations, massacres and resistance that occurred.

Kévorkian considers the role that the Armenian Genocide played in the construction of the Turkish nation-state and Turkish identity, as well as exploring the ideologies of power, rule and state violence, presenting an important contribution to the understanding of how such destruction could have occurred. 

Thus, Kévorkian examines the history of the Young Turks and the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as they came into conflict with one another, taking into consideration the institutional, political, social and even psychological mechanisms that culminated in the destruction of the Ottoman Armenians. 

Beginning with an exploration of the origins of the Young Turk Revolution in 1908, Kévorkian analyses the decision-making process which led to the terrible fate of those who were deported to the concentration camps of Aleppo and along the Euphrates.

Crucially, “The Armenian Genocide” also examines the consequences of the violence against the Armenians, the implications of the expropriation of property and assets and deportations, as well as the attempts to bring those who committed atrocities to justice. 

This covers the documents from the Mazhar Governmental Commission of Inquiry and the formation of courts martial by the Ottoman authorities, and the findings of the March 1920 Committee for the Protection of the Minorities in Turkey, created by the League of Nations.

Kévorkian offers a detailed and meticulous account of the Armenian Genocide, providing an authoritative analysis of the events and their impact upon the Armenian community itself, as well as the development of the Turkish state. 

This important book will serve as an indispensable resource to historians of the period, as well as those wishing to understand the history of genocidal violence more generally.

Photo: Front cover of the Persian edition of Raymond Kévorkian’s book “The Armenian Genocide”.

MMS/YAW

Iran B Basketball Loses to Armenia at SADA CUP

Tasnim News Agency
Iran –

The four-team tournament is being held at Karen Demirchyan Sport and Concert Complex in Yerevan, Armenia from June 24 to 26.

The Iranian team started the competition with a 77-61 win over Syria on Friday.

Iran B will play a team from the US on Sunday.

They flee to Georgia, Turkey and Armenia: a third of IT people left Russia (poll)

The Saxon

Most of the refugees from the Russian Federation are under 35 years old. About 70% are sure that they will never return, despite financial difficulties abroad.

After the outbreak of a full-scale war, about 300 thousand people left Russia. This is stated in the investigation of the non-profit organization OK Russians, which helps Russians who oppose the war in Ukraine and who have suffered from the actions of the authorities.

The most popular moving destinations are Georgia, Turkey and Armenia. A third of those who left the Russian Federation are IT specialists. Next come managers, representatives of office and creative professions (lawyers, psychologists, designers, bloggers, employees of non-profit organizations, journalists, consultants, and others).

The majority of those who left are under 35 years old (57%), another 68% say they left the Russian Federation for a long time or forever.

“For people, this is more of a forced and urgent evacuation than a thoughtful decision. for them, the “last straw”. The decision to move is an emotional one, the choice of a country to move is more like “where you can go right now.” Many visas have expired during the pandemic,” the authors say.

Investigators identified 6 main groups of reasons for the departure of Russians:

  • Disagreement with the war in Ukraine. Young people do not want to live in an aggressor country and become “accomplices in crime.” Many are horrified that Russia attacked Ukraine.
  • Fear of reprisals. People are afraid of layoffs, expulsions from universities and persecution for political reasons. Some respondents already have administrative and criminal cases.
  • Difficulties at work. Russians are losing jobs as employers leave the Russian market. It becomes almost impossible to cooperate with foreign clients and receive money from them.
  • The standard of living is rapidly falling. We have to “tighten our belts” and think about survival instead of comfort life.
  • Lack of prospects and fear for the future of children. There is no hope that normal life will be restored in the next 20 years.
  • Alienation. Feeling superfluous among supporters of the ruling regime.

Only 1/4 of those who left feel confident in their new place. Russians are haunted by financial problems – access to savings and salaries on accounts in the Russian Federation, the search for a new job and a high standard of living in other countries.

“Many were not ready to move either financially or morally. if the source of income suddenly disappears. One in five faces difficulties in obtaining or renewing legal status in the host country,” the organization said.

2,067 people who left Russia after the outbreak of war participated in the OK Russians survey . The link to the survey was distributed in thematic chats and groups in social networks. The survey was conducted on March 16th.

Note that the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology previously found out that due to the war, more than 57% of Ukrainian children will grow up abroad if the fighting lasts a long time. Most of those who left for their children to stay in Ukraine.

The editor-in-chief of the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, Dmitry Muratov, sold his Nobel Peace Prize 2021 medal for $103.5 million and sent the money to help Ukrainian refugee children.