Despite Denial, Turks And Kurds Remember Armenian Genocide, Says Rep

DESPITE DENIAL, TURKS AND KURDS REMEMBER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, SAYS REPARATIONS SCHOLAR – VIDEO

MAY 5, 2013 in HUMANITIES, PUBLIC LECTURE, UNIVERSITY

YEREVAN-The Turkish Government is denying a genocide its own population
remembers, according to Dr. Ugur Umit Ungör, who spoke via simulcast
from the Netherlands on May 2, 2013 during the American University
of Armenia’s (AUA) annual commemorative talk on the Armenian Genocide.

Dr. Ungör’s colloquium, titled “Lost in Commemoration: The Armenian
Genocide in Memory and Identity,” explored the dichotomy between
Turkey’s official state history and popular social memory.

“Yes it is true that Turkey is denying the genocide, but it is the
Turkish state that is denying the genocide,” said Dr. Ungör, speaking
from the Netherlands, where he works as the director of graduate
studies at Amsterdam’s Institute for War, Holocaust, and Genocide
Studies. “I think that Turkish society knows about the Genocide,
that they acknowledge the Genocide, and finally that a lot of people
have memories about the Genocide. It should be a task of researchers
to unearth and expose these memories.”

In his remarks, Dr. Ungör deconstructed the phenomenon of Turkish
denial, from its Young Turk origins to its evolution into an official
state policy, seeking to reconstruct a new national memory, minus
the crime and its victims.

Dr. Ungör peeled away at Turkey’s complex social fabric, revealing
multiple conflicting national narratives about the Armenian Genocide.

He examined the unofficial policies implemented by the Young Turk
regime during World War I and the subsequent development of an
official state policy by successive Turkish governments. He then
compared the narrative taught in schools, promoted in academia,
and projected through foreign policy to a very different reality on
the ground in eastern Turkey, where many Turks and Kurds hold vivid
memories about the crime.

In his conclusion, Dr. Ungör underscored the Turkish government’s
failure to completely eradicate the memory of the Genocide from the
lands and people it administers.

In remarks introducing Dr. Ungör, AUA President Dr. Bruce Boghosian
discussed the continuing evolution of discourse about the Armenian
Genocide, explaining that it is moving away from being regarding
as an isolated historical event, and toward being understood as an
ongoing historical process.

“A genocide can not properly be considered over until it is no
longer denied,” said Dr. Boghosian. “The Armenian Genocide has the
dubious distinction of being one of the longest denied, and hence,
longest continuing genocidal episodes in modern human history. From
this perspective it should not be considered the Armenian Genocide of
1915-1923, it should be considered the Armenian Genocide of 1915-2013
and counting.”

Dr. Ungör is the author of Confiscation and Destruction: The Young
Turk Seizure of Armenian Property, which is a detailed accounting of
all the property seized from Armenians during the Genocide to create
the modern state of Turkey. He is also the author of the award-winning
book The Making of Modern Turkey: Nation and State in Eastern Anatolia,
1913-1950, which examines the process of social engineering, mass
violence and genocide the Young Turks and their Republican successors
utilized as they tried to create a homogeneous Turkey. He is currently
working on a book on paramilitaries in comparative perspective.

Founded in 1991, the American University of Armenia (AUA) is a
private, independent university located in Yerevan, Armenia and
affiliated with the University of California. AUA provides a global
education in Armenia and the region, offering high-quality, graduate
and undergraduate studies, encouraging civic engagement, and promoting
public service and democratic values.

From: A. Papazian

http://newsroom.aua.am/2013/05/05/reparations-expert-to-explore-armenian-genocide-in-turkish-memory-and-identity/?utm_source=AUA%20Insider%20Newsletter&utm_campaign=65927e428d-AUA_Insider_May_20135_7_2013&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_6c3c4333d4-65927e428d-60502357

Manifestation Programmee D’opposants Azeris Au Regime D’aliev a Stoc

MANIFESTATION PROGRAMMEE D’OPPOSANTS AZERIS AU REGIME D’ALIEV A STOCKHOLM (SUIDE)

Certaines communautes azeries d’Europe preparent des manifestations
publiques contre la politique du president Aliev selon le site
d’information haqqin.az. Notamment l’organisation ” Au nom de la
Defense de la democratie en Azerbaïdjan ” a Stockholm (Suède) qui
prepare une manifestation contre le regime du dictateur Aliev. Au
sein de cette organisation, on trouve de nombreux refugies politiques
Azeris ayant fui le regime de Bakou, des intellectuels, des leaders
de mouvements de jeunesse, des artistes. Nombre de partis politiques
de Suède ont apporte leur soutien a cette mobilisation appelant
a une marche pour democratie en Azerbaïdjan. La manifestation se
deroulera le 24 mai, Journee de l’Independance de l’Azerbaïdjan,
devant l’Ambassade d’Azerbaïdjan a Stockholm. Les organisateurs qui
denoncent la dictature, la corruption au sein de l’Etat, affirment
qu’Ilham Aliev a ” detruit la volonte du peuple le placant devant
le danger de disparition complète “. Ils affirment egalement que ”
la patrie est malade, elle a besoin de soins qu’elle trouvera au sein
d’une alliance democratique “.

Krikor Amirzayan

mercredi 8 mai 2013, Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=89518

Cinq Soldats Condamnes Entre Trois Et Dix Ans De Prison

CINQ SOLDATS CONDAMNES ENTRE TROIS ET DIX ANS DE PRISON

Cinq soldats ont ete condamnes entre trois et dix ans de prison,
mardi, a la suite du decès en 2010 de leur collègue militaire au sein
de l’armee armenienne.

Artak Nazarian, un lieutenant de 30 ans, a ete retrouve mort près
de la frontière de l’Armenie avec l’Azerbaïdjan en juillet 2010. Les
procureurs militaires affirment qu’il s’est suicide après avoir ete
maltraite par un commandant adjoint de son bataillon et trois autres
soldats. Ils ont ete arretes plus tard en 2010 et ont ete juges
en 2011.

Les proches de Nazarian estiment cependant qu’il a ete assassine
par des officiers qui n’ont pas ete poursuivis. Ils ont accuse les
procureurs militaires de dissimuler le crime.

Le tribunal a condamne l’un des suspects, le capitaine Hakob Manoukian,
a dix ans de prison. Trois autres personnes, le lieutenant Vahagn
Hayrapetian et les soldats Mkhitar Mkhitarian et Adibek Hovannisian,
ont ete emprisonnes pendant quatre ans. Le cinquième accuse, Harutik
Kirakosian, a recu une peine de trois ans de prison, mais a ete libere
en raison d’une amnistie generale en 2011.

Les proches des accuses presents dans la salle d’audience ont reagi
avec colère au verdict, le jugeant injuste et trop sevère. ” Honte
a vous “, a lance l’un d’eux.

L’avocat de Hayrapetian, Levon Poghosian, a declare qu’il ferait
appel a Erevan. ” Mon client n’est pas coupable du tout. Il est un
bouc emissaire “, a-t-il dit.

La s~ur de Nazarian, qui a suivi de près l’affaire, a egalement
denonce la decision du tribunal et dit que sa famille va faire appel.

” Le juge a avalise la thèse du suicide avancee par les procureurs
militaires. Nous restons profondement convaincus qu’il s’agit d’un
assassinat et on fera tout pour que justice soit faite “, a-t-elle
ajoute.

La mort de Nazarian est encore une fois un coup de projecteur sur les
decès chroniques et hors combat dans les forces armees de l’Armenie.

Le ministre de la Defense Seyran Ohanian a promis une repression plus
sevère sur le bizutage.

Des dizaines de militaires ont ete arretes, licencies ou retrogrades
depuis que le gouvernement a pris certaines mesures. Les autorites
militaires ont egalement signale une diminution importante du nombre
de decès (non lies au combat) de soldats armeniens. Cependant, les
activistes civiques insistent sur le fait que les autorites ne font
toujours pas assez pour lutter contre ce problème.

mercredi 8 mai 2013, Laetitia ©armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

Bohjalian Electrifies Audience At Columbia University

BOHJALIAN ELECTRIFIES AUDIENCE AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
By Taleen Babayan

May 7, 2013

Critically acclaimed author Chris Bohjalian led a spirited and
engaging book discussion about his New York Times best-selling novel
The Sandcastle Girls on Thurs., April 19 at Columbia University’s
Cowin Conference Center at an event hosted by the Armenian Center at
Columbia University.

Bohjalian speaking to the audience at Columbia about his book ‘The
Sandcastle Girls’ (Photo by Robert V. Kinoian)

On tour for the paperback release of The Sandcastle Girls, a love story
that takes place during the Armenian Genocide, Bohjalian impressed
the audience with his deep historical knowledge of the genocide and
the powerful rippling effect the book has had in educating people
about the atrocities.

In her introduction of Bohjalian, Dr. Nicole Vartanian, vice-chair
of the Armenian Center at Columbia, noted the author’s “boundless
intellectual curiosity” and his ability to pull in his audience from
the very beginning.

“His skilled narrative is seamless and captivating all at once,”
she said. “Bohjalian’s pen and prose merge to create an epic story
of love, loss, betrayal, survival, hope, fear, and fortitude.”

For the audience to gain a better understanding of the significance
of The Sandcastle Girls and how it came into being, Bohjalian began
his presentation by sharing photos of his family dating back to
19th-century Constantinople.

One was of his grandfather as a youngster sitting on his father’s
lap at the turn of the 20th century in the Ottoman Empire. “My
grandparents, Leo and Haigouhi Bohjalian, were survivors of the
Armenian Genocide,” he said. “Like most survivors, they took their
stories to their graves.”

Flashing a black and white photo of his parents’ wedding day, Bohjalian
revealed that his mother was not Armenian, but Swedish. “My mother was
never the outsider because she adored her Armenian family,” he said,
showing a touching photo of a bronze charm of Armenia that was on
his mother’s keychain.

Shedding some light on his family’s history, Bohjalian said his
great-grandfather provided cavalry horsemen to the Turks. But with
the start of the genocide, they confiscated his horses, home, and
property in Constantinople, and killed him. The surviving members of
the family made their way to Egypt, and his grandparents eventually
met and wed in Paris.

Growing up in Westchester, N.Y., Bohjalian was close with his
grandparents, and would accompany them to the Holy Cross Armenian
Church in Washington Heights on Sundays. The memory of his grandparents
and the impact they had on his life remained with him, as when he first
attempted, 17 years ago, to write a novel about the genocide. After
completing the manuscript, however, he was not happy with the result;
almost two decades later, he decided it was time to try again. But
this time, he wanted to do it right, because “in my heart, I knew
The Sandcastle Girls was the most important novel I was ever going
to write.”

Members of the Executive Board of the Armenian Center at Columbia
(Photo by Robert V. Kinoian)

The book focuses on the story of an American nurse who brings aid
to Armenians in Aleppo, Syria, where she meets Armen Petrosyan, an
engineer who lost his wife and infant daughter to the genocide. In
the present, their granddaughter Laura is drawn back by a photo she
sees at the Armenian Library Museum of America (ALMA) in Watertown,
Mass., of a woman who, based on the caption, is related to her. This
picture links the present and the past. As Bohjalian noted, there is an
“enormous amount of my childhood in this book.”

When he completed his manuscript, Bohjaian was warned that the book
would be a commercial disaster because “no one has heard about the
Armenian Genocide and no one wants to read about the death of 1.5
million people.” He maintained his belief in the novel, however,
and of getting this story out to the world.

He thanked the support of many Armenian organizations, such as the
AGBU and ANCA, which hosted “remarkable events in three time zones
in the first three days the book was published.” Word of mouth spread
quickly and soon Bohjalian was giving book talks to non-Armenians who
were interested in hearing the truth about the genocide, a chapter
of history they had never known. Bohjalian showed pictures of book
groups who sent him photos expressing how much the book meant to them,
as well as photos posted by those who were reading The Sandcastle
Girls all over the world, from Norway to Afghanistan. Within weeks,
he had sold the foreign rights to such countries as the United Kingdom,
Brazil, Russia, France, and Israel.

A highlight of Bohjalian’s presentation was a photo journey that
included the Catholicosate of Cilicia in Antelias, Lebanon, where
there is an Armenian Genocide Museum, and Der Zor in Syria, where
“to this day you can run your fingers through the sand and come away
with fragments of skull and bone of our ancestors.”

Bohjalian also made a trip to the Jebel orphanage in Lebanon, founded
by a Danish missionary, which housed more than 3,000 Armenian orphans,
and the Musa Dagh memorial in Anjar, where he saw canisters that were
once filled with ashes of genocide martyrs.

His journey concluded with a trip to Yerevan, where he “went to
the Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan and placed flowers at the
eternal flame in memory of our ancestors.”

“It was important for me to see the geography of the Armenian soul
from the Armenian ground, to see Mount Ararat,” he said. “Ararat
and Musa Dagh are two mountains that comprise the geography of the
Armenian soul.”

Mark Momjian, the chair of the Armenian Center at Columbia University,
thanked Bohjalian for a gripping and emotional discussion. He presented
Bohjalian with a gift of an inscribed copy of the novel Mayfair by
the Armenian writer Michael Arlen, and invited guests to a reception,
where Bohjalian signed copies of his books.

Bohjalian’s story behind The Sandcastle Girls and his ties to his
Armenian heritage inspired attendees. Nora Arkelian traveled all the
way from Eerie, Pa., so she and her children could hear Bohjalian’s
talk. “I wanted my children to make this trip with me so that they
understand their heritage, and how special it is to be Armenian,”
said Arkelian, whose children never met their great-grandmother, a
genocide survivor. “Chris’ characters in the book reminded me of how
strong a people we are. As Chris reminds us, ‘We are the mountain.'”

Columbia University Teacher’s College student Anna Abalyan was
impressed with Bohjalian’s discussion and was “glad to see the book
is helping raise awareness about the Armenian Genocide.” Historian Dr.

Vartan Matossian appreciated Bohjalian’s ability to convey the story
of how the book was written.

“I was particularly interested to hear his reflections about
being the son of an ‘assimilated’ Armenian-American and how he had
been, predictably, attracted to trying his hand at the literary
representation of the genocide, if such a thing is really feasible,
over the past 20 years,” Matossian said.

The Armenian Center at Columbia University was proud to host such an
impassioned and remarkable writer like Bohjalian. “The timing of Chris
Bohjalian’s inspirational talk at Columbia University, marking the
98th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, is critical,” said Momjian.

“With the centennial two years away, our hearts and minds are moved
by this great writer and his dedication not only to preserving the
memory of this terrible crime, but the miraculous survival of the
Armenian people.”

“Chris’ presentation not only offered a fascinating perspective on
the novel’s, and his own, evolution through the stories it tells, but
also demonstrated why he is such a celebrated and beloved novelist,”
said Vartanian. “Interweaving personal anecdotes with the challenges
of authoring a novel that requires such historical precision, he
humbly exposed his writing and editing processes to the audience
in a way that will linger with us as we return to the pages of this
extraordinary novel again and again.”

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/05/07/bohjalian-electrifies-audience-at-columbia-university/

Richard Morningstar: Appointment Of U.S. OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair I

RICHARD MORNINGSTAR: APPOINTMENT OF U.S. OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIR IS IN GOVERNMENT’S FOCUS

Trend
May 7 2013
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, 7 May / Trend M. Aliyev / The appointment by the
United States of a permanent co-chair to the OSCE Minsk Group is in
the focus of the government, the U.S.

Ambassador to Azerbaijan Richard Morningstar told reporters.

The Ambassador said the U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is very
much interested in the Nagorno-Karabakh situation. He expressed hope
for progress to be made on this issue.

Morningstar also touched on the matter with the National Democratic
Institute. He said the issue is under consideration and the process
is ongoing, adding that the hope is for a successful resolution.

From: A. Papazian

Baku: Zatlers: "New Initiatives Must Be Urgently Put Forward On The

VALDIS ZATLERS: “NEW INITIATIVES MUST BE URGENTLY PUT FORWARD ON THE SETTLEMENT OF THE CONFLICT”

APA, Azerbaijan
May 7 2013

Baku. Mubariz Aslanov – APA. “It is high time to solve the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict and it should not be protracted,” former Latvian
President Valdis Zatlers told journalists, APA reports. He said
that the entire Caucasus suffers from this conflict: “This conflict
should be resolved urgently, because the continuation of the conflict
creates serious economic and political problems for all the people
in the Caucasus.”

The former president considers that new initiatives must be urgently
put forward on the settlement of the conflict, because the previous
initiatives have not produced results.

From: A. Papazian

Tsarnaevs’ Story Reveals Web Of Ethnic Ties And Tensions In CIS

TSARNAEVS’ STORY REVEALS WEB OF ETHNIC TIES AND TENSIONS IN CIS

The Moscow Times, Russia
May 7 2013

07 May 2013 | Issue 5123
By Ivan Nechepurenko

When the parents of “Misha,” the enigmatic Ukrainian-Armenian
convert to Islam who allegedly helped radicalize Boston bombing
suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, moved to the United States in the 1990s,
they likely could not have imagined that their son would eventually
be accused of coaching a Muslim terrorist.

Yury Allakhverdov, a Christian Armenian, and his Ukrainian wife
Lidia moved with their son Mikhail, or Misha, to the U.S. from Baku,
escaping the persecution of Armenian Christians in the capital of
the newly independent and predominantly Muslim republic of Azerbaijan.

Being half-Armenian but a convert to Islam, Mikhail Allakhverdov has
drawn close scrutiny from observers familiar with the long-standing
hostilities between Christian Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan. The
fact that Allakhverdov would become a Muslim is particularly striking
given that his family fled persecution in Baku.

With Allakhverdov now suspected of having mentored the ethnic Chechen
Tsarnaev, the complexity of the inter-ethnic ties and tensions
in the Caucasus and across the former Soviet Union have come into
renewed focus.

The stories of those brothers, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev,
and others in their saga serve as a reminder of how the collapse of
the Soviet Union in 1991 unleashed a deluge of bottled-up tensions,
many of which endure to this day.

At the same time, their stories show that certain ties fostered by
the Soviet Union still bind. Dzhokhar, whose parents moved him and
his siblings from Russia to Kyrgyzstan, then back to Russia, before
emigrating to the U.S., had two close Russian-speaking friends at
university in Boston who hailed from Kazakhstan. The array of countries
involved has also reminded Western audiences of the complex geography
of the Caucasus and the former Soviet Union.

Ruslan Tsarni, the Chechen uncle of the Tsarnaev brothers, was
apparently the first person to mention Misha, referring to him as
an Armenian who “somehow … just took [the] brain” of his nephew
Tamerlan, allegedly leading him toward a strict version of Islam. Other
relatives of the Tsarnaev brothers have made similar statements about
the influence of “Misha.”

In an interview with the New York Review of Books, Allakhverdov
denied preaching radical Islam to Tamerlan, saying: “If I had been
his teacher, I would have made sure he never did anything like this,”
referring to the bombings at the Boston Marathon that killed three
people and wounded more than 200.

Whatever Allakhverdov’s true role, the fact that he is half-Armenian
and suspected of radicalizing a bombing suspect has set off verbal
battles steeped in the historical tensions of the Caucasus.

Tsarni clearly recognized the potential for such disputes, calling
the U.S.-based Armenian Mirror-Spectator newspaper last month to
apologize to the Armenian community for his remarks about “Misha.”

“Armenia has a very strong culture, therefore, I want to stress
that his [Misha’s] ethnicity has nothing to do with it,” Tsarni told
the newspaper.

Animosity between Armenians and Chechens spans centuries, with Russian
poet Alexander Pushkin saying in a poem that “Armenian” was one of
the strongest curses a Chechen could make against a compatriot. In
addition, a Chechen contingent led by Shamil Basayev fought against
Armenians during the Nagorno-Karabakh war.

That six-year war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which began in
1988, led to a stalemate that continues to this day, with almost
daily exchanges of gunfire along the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh border.

Verjline Svazlian, the leading ethnographer at Armenia’s National
Academy and the daughter of a survivor of the Turkish genocide of
Armenians in 1915-1923 that claimed the lives of at least 600,000
people, still shares many of the ethnically charged sentiments common
to countries in the region.

“The fact that there is a Chechen and an Armenian in this story
means that the U.S. and Britain just want to declare all Caucasians
terrorists and separate the Caucasus from Russia,” she said by phone
from Yerevan. “We have suffered from these plots before and thus we
recognize them easily.”

Just as stress in U.S.-Russian relations has hindered cooperation in
the investigation into the Boston bombing case, historical ethnic
tensions can be a stumbling block in countries’ fight against
terrorism, according to Alexander Krylov, a Caucasus expert at the
Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of the World Economy and
International Relations.

“Islamic terrorism is international in its nature, so it’s not very
important whether terrorists are Chechen, Avar, or Armenian,” he said.

The Tsarnaev brothers’ mother is Avar, one of the largest ethnic groups
in the North Caucasus republic of Dagestan. “Ethnic rifts only hinder
attempts to unite international efforts against this global threat.”

According to Krylov, different countries have used the media attention
related to the Boston bombings to exploit their own ancient grievances.

“Azerbaijan would point out that the terrorists were brainwashed by
an Armenian, while Armenians will talk about a plot against Russia,”
he said. Armenia is one of Russia’s closest regional allies, and both
are predominantly Christian.

The increased tensions and physical conflicts that followed the
breakup of the Soviet Union led many people to lose their identity as
“New Soviet Man,” fostered by Soviet ideologists as a concept that
would unite the country regardless of citizens’ diverse origins.

But as with the Communist International, the organization created
by the Soviets that sought the “overthrow of the international
bourgeoisie,” global jihad gives people a sense of meaning in life that
is not directly tied to their ethnic, religious, or social background,
Krylov added.

As a result, ethnicity may not have been a key consideration for
Tamerlan Tsarnaev himself, despite apparent leanings toward Chechen
nationalism. If he was tied to Misha primarily through religion,
Tsarnev might not have been concerned with the fact that his mentor
was Armenian.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/tsarnaevs-story-reveals-web-of-ethnic-ties-and-tensions-in-cis/479716.html

Montenegro Will Continue Establishing Flexible Visa Regime For The A

MONTENEGRO WILL CONTINUE ESTABLISHING FLEXIBLE VISA REGIME FOR THE ARMENIAN CITIZENS.

Balkans.com Business News
May 7 2013

Balkans.com Business News Correspondent – 07.05.2013

Armenia and Montenegro have wide opportunities to expand their
friendly relations. This was stated by the Deputy Prime Minister, the
Minister of Foreign Affairs and European Integration of Montenegro
Igor LukÅ¡iÄ~M at the press conference held on May 7. “Armenia and
Montenegro are in good relations, but we have agreed to get involved
in closer political negotiations to develop our cooperation in the
forthcoming future”, – stated the Minister of Foreign Affairs and
European Integration of Montenegro, as reported by Armenpress.

Igor LukÅ¡iÄ~M noted that he and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of
the Republic of Armenia Eduard Nalbandyan mainly discussed the issues
related to the economic cooperation and investments protection, as
well as the development of the bilateral tourism relations. “In this
case it is quite important to encourage the ministries, tour agents and
air companies to organize charter flights between the two countries”,
– said the Minister of Foreign Affairs and European Integration of
Montenegro. In summer Montenegro will continue establishing flexible
visa regime for the Armenian citizens.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.balkans.com/open-news.php?uniquenumber=174105

Turkey’s Armenian Community On Alert After Attacks

TURKEY’S ARMENIAN COMMUNITY ON ALERT AFTER ATTACKS

NaharNet, Lebanon
May 6 2013

by Naharnet Newsdesk

Turkish Armenians are on edge after weekend attacks against members of
the community during Orthodox Easter raised fears about their security.

An unidentified assailant fired seven blank rounds outside an Armenian
church in Istanbul’s Kumkapi neighborhood on Sunday, causing panic
among people celebrating Easter there, the Hurriyet newspaper reported.

A young Armenian was also beaten the same day by a gang outside
a church in the nearby neighborhood of Samatya, Archbishop Aram
Atesyan of the Armenian Orthodox patriarchate, was quoted as saying
by the newspaper.

“These attacks are designed to intimidate members of our community
and other minority groups,” he said, appealing for greater security.

Last month, a group of about 30 to 40 people attacked an evangelical
church shortly after it was inaugurated, the Association of Protestant
Churches in Turkey said.

“The attackers smashed the windows of the church by throwing stones
and eggs and tried to enter it,” the association said in a statement.

Several attacks in recent years have targeted members of the Christian
community, including priests, in predominantly Muslim but staunchly
secular Turkey.

Turkey’s Armenian minority numbers around 70,000 people, most of
them living in Istanbul. They often complain of being considered
second-class citizens in the country.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their forebears were killed in a
1915-16 genocide by Turkey’s former Ottoman Empire. Turkey says 500,000
died of fighting and starvation during World War I and categorically
rejects the term genocide.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/82154-turkey-s-armenian-community-on-alert-after-attacks

Yerevan Elections Marred By Fraud

Yerevan Elections Marred by Fraud

Monday, May 6th, 2013

Voters at a Yerevan polling station on Sunday

YEREVAN-Amid allegations of massive voter intimidation and fraud,
the Yerevan municipal elections concluded Sunday night when polls
closed at 8 p.m.

The Central Election Commission issued preliminary results Monday,
announcing that Serzh Sarkisian’s ruling Republican Party of Armenia
came ahead with 55.86 percent of the voter. Trailing in second place
was the Prosperous  Armenia Party with 23.05 percent. Opposition
presidential candidate Raffi Hovannisian’s Barev Yerevan bloc garnered
8.47 percent of the votes.

The Armenian National Congress party, the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation, the Rule of Law Party and the Mission Party received
4.39, 3.79, 3.73 and 0.64 percent of the votes respectively. The
aforementioned four parties did not garner the six percent of the
votes needed to be part of the City Council.

The CEC also announced that of the  816,478 registered voters in the
city 437,212 participated in Sunday’s election.

The CEC will issue final results on May 12.

ARF Reaction The ARF Supreme Council of Armenia issued a statement
Monday saying that it participated in the elections in order to change
the moral climate of the country and to inspire the citizens to have
hope and confidence in the future.

However, the ARF added, the ruling regime, once again used infinite
state resources and bribes to force their victory upon the electorate.

“The monopoly of the authorities has gotten even stronger,” warned
the ARF adding that the ruling regime can now govern both the country
and the capital.

The ARF said that it will not retreat from its principled position
and will continue to work to implement radical change for the sake
of the country, freedoms and the well-being of Armenian citizens.

From: A. Papazian

http://asbarez.com/109824/yerevan-elections-marred-by-fraud/