Juvenile Convicts In Armenia Offered To Kept Separately From Adults

JUVENILE CONVICTS IN ARMENIA OFFERED TO KEPT SEPARATELY FROM ADULTS

ARMENPRESS
FEBRUARY 27, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 27, ARMENPRESS: On February 27 a sitting of the NA
Standing Committee on State and Legal Affairs was held presided over by
Davit Harutyunyan, where a group of bills were debated and endorsed. NA
press service told Armenpress the Committee debated in the first
reading the RA draft law “On Amending the RA Criminal-Executive Code.”

The bill will be included with the endorsement in the drafts of the
NA Spring Session and upcoming four-day sittings.

Minister of Justice Hrayr Tovmasyan said according to the changes
the 14-18 years old juvenile convicted will be kept separately from
the adults which will exclude the dangerous impact of the latter on
the juveniles.

The package of bills “On Legal Regime of the State of Emergency” and
“On Amending the RA Code on Administrative Infringements” submitted
by the RA Government was debated in the first reading and endorsed,
the debates in the second and third readings is also designed to
implement during these four-day sittings.

The Committee debated in the second reading the bill “On Amending
the RA Law ‘Rules of Procedure of the National Assembly” with the
enclosed legislative package and the Committee endorsed it.

The debate of the draft law “On Amending the RA Civil Procedure Code”
submitted by the RA Government was postponed up to 15 days.

Mass Requiem Held In Antelias In Memory Of Victims Of Sumgait Pogrom

MASS REQUIEM HELD IN ANTELIAS IN MEMORY OF VICTIMS OF SUMGAIT POGROM

ARMENPRESS
FEBRUARY 27, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 27, ARMENPRESS: A mass requiem was held February
26 in St. Gregory the Illuminator Church, Antelias, in memory of
the victims of the Sumgait Pogrom. Catholicos of the Great House of
Cilicia Aram I attached importance to the fighting of Karabakh people
for defense of the own rights and freedom, Catholicosate of the Great
House of Cilicia in Antelias told Armenpress. “All Armenian people
must be claimant in this issue,” the Catholicos said.

Armenian Ambassador to Lebanon Ashot Kocharyan presented a historical
review on the Sumgait Pogrom, noting that even after experiencing
atrocities and cruel days Nagorno Karabakh people confront all
challenges choosing the path of development, developing their spiritual
and cultural values.

Nagorno-Karabakh President Meets With Armenian National TV & Radio C

NAGORNO-KARABAKH PRESIDENT MEETS WITH ARMENIAN NATIONAL TV & RADIO COMMISSION CHAIRMAN

Tert.am
27.02.12

President of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) Bako Sahakyan held
a meeting on Monday with Chairman of the National Commission on TV
and Radio of Armenia Grigory Amalyan.

The sides discussed issues of Armenia-NKR cooperation in
telecommunication.

The NKR leader pointed out the importance of developing this
cooperation and exchanging experience.

Hakob Ghahramanyan, Chairman of the NKR State Public Services and
Economic Cooperation Regulatory Commission participated in the meeting.

"Our Country Should Have A Special Attitude To The Book"

“OUR COUNTRY SHOULD HAVE A SPECIAL ATTITUDE TO THE BOOK”

28.02.12, 17:39

Today at “Heyeli” (“Mirror”) press-club head of the “Antares”
holding Armen Martirosyan, head of the “Bureaucrat” book-store Hayk
Hovhannisyan and writer Aram Pachyan spoke about the attitude towards
book in Armenia and also referred to the law changes which have caused
the book praise to be raised with 20%.

Head of the “Bureaucrat” noted that the expensive praises damages
the state budget more. “This 20 % has already had its influence on
book trade. People started to use e-books more. We are not against
it but the use of the books is a culture and there are such books
which must be certainly held by the hand”, H. Hovhannisyan said.

The speaker also underlined that the book must be free from the value
added tax and the educational books and books for children are free.

Head of the “Antares” publishing house A. Martirosyan said that there
are already such books in “Noyyan Tapan” book-store which is bought
by 3000 AMD from the author and is sold by 6000 AMD. “Today our users
have financial problems and are not able to buy books by such praises”,
he said.

Writer A. Pachyan informed that the writers created a group named
“We are against the books praises to be increased” in Facebook social
network. “We will present a letter to the Armenian Prime Minister and
we will wait for the answer. After it our further steps will be clear.

We have decided some interesting actions and we want our word to reach
its aim. We are promised that discussion in the NA will be held during
the coming week”, A. Pachyan said.

According to the writer the law accepters also do not have a concrete
explanation why it was accepted. “This year intended to be devoted to
the book, as this year Yerevan is announced to be Book World Capital
and this year we celebrate the 500th anniversary of Armenian printing,
but this tax prevents it”, A. Pachyan said.

Head of the “Antares” holding informed that they have met the workers
if the Ministry of Finances who promised to present an explanation
during coming 15 days.

“The book is a spiritual and cultural value and it must have privileges
in the taxes sphere Why must we be equal to Azerbaijan and pay high
taxes? Why we shouldn’t follow the example of the serious countries
and not pay lower taxes? If the country does not treat the book well,
society will also not treat well. Our country should have a special
attitude to the book”, A. Martirosyan underlined.

http://times.am/?l=en&p=5228

ANCA Chair Calls For Justice At Beirut Conference

ANCA CHAIR CALLS FOR JUSTICE AT BEIRUT CONFERENCE

Armenian Weekly
February 28, 2012

ANTELIAS, Lebanon–Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
Chairman Ken Hachikian offered a broad vision of how the “Return of
Churches” movement reflects and also materially reinforces the broader
international movement to hold the Republic of Turkey responsible for a
truthful, just, and comprehensive resolution of the Armenian Genocide.

Hachikian during one of his two presentations in Beirut.

Hackikian offered his remarks at the recently concluded three-day
international conference in Beirut titled “The Armenian Genocide:
>From Recognition to Reparation,” hosted by His Holiness, Vehapar
Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, and organized
by the Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia. The conference featured
presentations by dozens of leading academics and thought-leaders from
across the globe, all addressing the topic of securing reparations
owed by Turkey to the Armenian nation for the Armenian Genocide.

Hachikian’s speech offered first-hand insights into the ANCA’s pivotal
role in the passage of the Return of Churches Resolution, H.Res.306,
and outlined, in broader terms, how this effort fits into the cause
of justice for the Armenian Genocide and the future viability of the
Armenian nation.

In a speech that addressed the moral and material aspects of the
justice owed the Armenian nation, Hachikian stressed that “[a]s we
approach the end of a century in which all the moral and material
costs of the Armenian Genocide have fallen upon the victims of this
crime, we seek, for ourselves and all humanity, a new era, a better
century–guided by the ethic that the burdens of this genocide and
all genocides will, as they rightly must, be borne by its perpetrator.”

Aram I, who, in his opening statement powerfully asserted the
Catholicosate of Cilicia’s legal claims to Armenian Church properties,
closed the conference by reporting that, based on the emerging
conclusions of the conference, the Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia,
in collaboration with the Armenian Catholic and Evangelic churches and
Armenian political parties, community leadership, and major players
of Armenian communities:

1) will explore with organized efforts the concrete possibilities of
moving forward, taking into consideration the provisions provided by
the international law;

2) will seek an advisory opinion from the International Court of
Justice through the UN on the legal consequences of the Armenian
Genocide; and

3) will explore the possibilities of raising the Armenian case before
the European Court of Human Rights, based on human rights violation
related to genocide and confiscation of properties.

“This is not an easy process, taking into consideration the present
political landscape and geopolitical interests. However, we are
determined to embark on this critical process with renewed faith and
firm determination,” Aram I concluded. “The role of the Republic
of Armenia is pivotal in this respect. We are seeking justice:
recognition of the Armenian Genocide and reparation. This is a
challenge before us. The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is ready
to respond to this challenge with strong commitment and a profound
sense of responsibility.”

During his presentation, Hachikian explained that Armenians are “not
seeking truth simply for the sake of truth, but for all the world;
and certainly we as Armenians know all too well the reality of the
Armenian Genocide and the ongoing consequences of this crime. We are
in no need of further affirmation. Nor of vengeance or vindication.

No. We seek truth in the name of justice. And justice in the interest
of survival. That is why we struggle so mightily against Ankara’s
denial of truth and obstruction of justice.”

Hachikian also gave a public lecture on this topic, hosted by the
ANC of the Middle East, at the Shaghzoyan Center in the Bourj Hammoud
neighborhood of Beirut. The talk was titled, “The Question of Return of
Church Properties in the U.S. Congress: What is the role of Armenian
activists? What are the implications for Turkey? Is this a precursor
to a meaningful discussion of reparations?”

Below is the full text of Hachikian’s speech.

***

I want to start my remarks today by thanking Vehapar Aram I for his
vision in hosting this gathering and bringing us all together under
the leadership of the Great House of Cilicia and also to express my
appreciation to the organizers of this conference for inviting me
to participate from across the Atlantic in this important academic
undertaking.

I will share with you today the Armenian National Committee of
America’s contribution to the great cause of securing for our nation
the restitution and reparations owed to our people for Turkey’s crime
of genocide.

My perspective here today, born of my experience and shaped on the
front lines of our common cause, is a political one. My views, and
those of my colleagues, have, nonetheless, been meaningfully informed,
greatly enriched, and consistently energized by the far-reaching
body of academic inquiry on this subject, but our struggle is waged
in the civic arena.

Scholars, as they should, shed light; politicians, as we must, deliver
heat. We need both now more than ever. To prevail, our struggles must
be won both on the intellectual battlefield and on the field of public
and political discourse.

My comments today about our community’s effort in the United States
to press Turkey to return churches will, I hope, help inform you
about the urgency of such efforts and also inspire our friends and
allies around the world to join in this noble undertaking. We must
continue our efforts to prevail intellectually, but we also must not
forget that there is an essential battle to be joined in the halls
of our governments.

For what we seek is nothing less than a turning of the tide.

As we approach the end of a century in which all the moral and material
costs of the Armenian Genocide have fallen upon the victims of this
crime, we seek, for ourselves and all humanity, a new era, a better
century–guided by the ethic that the burdens of this genocide and
all genocides will, as they rightly must, be borne by its perpetrator.

The return of churches, Turkey’s surrender–voluntary or otherwise–of
the thousands of church properties it stole from Armenians, Assyrians,
Greeks, Syriacs, and other Christians prior to, during, and after the
Armenian Genocide era, would represent a meaningful first step by the
Turkish government toward accepting its responsibility for a truthful
and just resolution of this still unpunished crime against humanity.

It would, as well, mark a major blow for the cause of international
religious freedom in a corner of the world sadly known not for its
pluralism, but rather for the depths of its intolerance.

Our advocacy in Washington, D.C. on this issue has, over the past year,
taken its place alongside our Armenian Genocide recognition efforts,
our struggle against Ankara’s denials, and our other work on issues
of concern to Armenian Americans. Of course, this initiative, like
all of our community’s advocacy investments is, at its heart, aimed
at promoting Armenia’s viability.

Our North Star–the light that guides us as we navigate the political
waters–is the survival of the Armenian people, the security of the
Armenian homeland, and the strengthening of the Armenian nation.

That is why we seek a truthful and just resolution of the Armenian
Genocide.

We are not seeking truth simply for the sake of truth, but for all the
world, and certainly we as Armenians, know all too well the reality
of the Armenian Genocide and the ongoing consequences of this crime.

We are in no need of further affirmation. Nor of vengeance or
vindication. No. We seek truth in the name of justice. And justice
in the interest of survival.

That is why we struggle so mightily against Ankara’s denial of truth
and obstruction of justice.

Reasons of morality, of course, compel us to demand respect for
human life and to stand up–in the name of our ancient faith and in
the spirit of the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
Genocide–against mass murder.

The cause of genocide prevention, a core moral imperative of our age,
requires that we–as witnesses to the depths of man’s inhumanity to
man–bring the full measure of our devotion to ending forever the
cycle of genocide.

Turkey’s denial of truth and obstruction of justice for the Armenian
Genocide sets a dangerous precedent, an unacceptable precedent,
emboldening potential perpetrators that their crimes can be committed
with impunity. Nowhere is this more urgent for us than in deterring
Turkey from committing renewed aggression against the Armenian people,
for Armenia cannot be safe as long as it is has on its border an
over-armed and unrepentant perpetrator of genocide.

We seek, as well, for the citizens of Turkey, a transformation of
Turkish society. A Turkey that fully accepts responsibility for the
Armenian Genocide would very likely be one that is on the road to
rehabilitation into a more just and tolerant society.

We have seen few signs of progress on this front. In fact, in recent
years, all we’ve heard are alarm bells. In today’s Turkey, Hrant
Dink’s killer is treated like a hero and most of those guilty of his
assassination are let free.

Armenians are regularly threatened with renewed deportations while
the remaining Christian heritage of Anatolia is being systematically
erased. The country’s most popular films and books are about
scapegoating and striking down treasonous minorities.

Turkey today is not simply an unrepentant post-genocidal state, but
a pre-genocidal society, lashing out at imagined enemies and seeking
out its next targets.

What is needed is not simply a change in Turkey’s policies, but
rather a profound, long-term movement, driven by both international
and domestic pressure, to rehabilitate Turkey into a modern, tolerant,
and pluralist society that–as proof of its reform–willingly forfeits
the fruits of its genocidal crimes.

For justice is vital for Armenia’s survival.

Consider the vast and devastating demographic, material, geographic,
and cultural and legacy of the Armenian Genocide. The core elements
of Armenian viability were nearly destroyed forever.

This concern is very clearly not just about our past. For upon a
just resolution of this crime rests the very ability of Armenians to
restore the elements of viability that have long sustained our nation
and to finally close the wounds of genocide that so crippled–and,
because they are so deep, may yet kill–our poor and orphaned nation.

These are the stakes. At risk is our very survival.

Not our dignity, or simply our pride, but our very place at the table
of nations.

That is why we see seek the truth. That is why we demand justice. And
part of justice, perhaps among the first measures that can
realistically be secured, is the return of our sacred sites.

A first front–but not a final one–in a long struggle for our
survival.

Our Church, as always, at the fore, fighting for justice, and truth,
and an enduring peace among men.

Our efforts on this front, as have been widely reported, began with
the introduction, on June 15 of last year, of H.Res.306, the “Return
of Churches” Resolution, by two of the most senior members of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee, Ed Royce and Howard Berman. This
religious freedom measure was launched in parallel with the Armenian
Genocide Resolution, the genocide-prevention measure that we have
traditionally advanced through Congress.

Congressman Royce launched H.Res.306 by stating that “conditions in
Turkey have deteriorated with violent hate crimes increasingly linked
to religion. My resolution urges Turkey to protect its vulnerable
religious minorities.”

His Democratic colleague, the Ranking Member of the panel, Howard
Berman, sharing his concerns, stated: “By expropriating church
properties, harassing worshippers, and refusing to grant full legal
status to some Christian groups, Turkey has failed to fulfill its
obligation as a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
which requires ‘freedom of thought, conscience, and religion.'”

We were gratified by the broad, bipartisan support this resolution
garnered. It was launched with numerous original co-sponsors, including
the co-chairs of the Human Rights, Hellenic, and Armenian Caucuses.

The resolution’s text showed that it called upon the government of
Turkey to honor its international obligations to return confiscated
Christian church properties and to fully respect the rights of all
Christians, among them the Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Pontians,
and Arameans (Syriacs), who have lived for thousands of years on what
is present-day Turkey.

The resolution called on the U.S. secretary of state, in all official
bilateral contacts, to press the Turkish government to:

1) end all forms of religious discrimination;

2) allow the rightful church and lay owners of Christian church
properties, without hindrance or restriction, to organize and
administer prayer services, religious education, clerical training,
appointments, and succession, religious gatherings, social services,
including ministry to the needs of the poor and infirm, and other
religious activities;

3) return to their rightful owners all Christian churches and
other places of worship, monasteries, schools, hospitals, monuments,
relics, holy sites, and other religious properties, including movable
properties, such as artwork, manuscripts, vestments, vessels, and
other artifacts; and

4) allow the rightful Christian church and lay owners of Christian
church properties, without hindrance or restriction, to preserve,
reconstruct, and repair, as they see fit, all Christian churches and
other places of worship, monasteries, schools, hospitals, monuments,
relics, holy sites, and other religious properties within Turkey.

This legislation was crafted to speak powerfully to Americans, who are
fundamentally committed to the principle of religious liberty. It has,
as you know, long been a priority for American citizens to seek for
others around the world the same right to worship in freedom that
they enjoy in the United States.

It also spoke meaningfully to Armenians and our allies, who share a
devotion to a truthful and just resolution of the Armenian Genocide,
which morally and materially makes whole the victims of this horrific
crime.

Its immediate purpose was to directly challenge and then to eventually
reverse the vast destruction visited upon religious sites and the
theft of church properties during the Armenian Genocide, as well as
Turkey’s official and ongoing post-genocide destruction and desecration
of holy sites and its discrimination against Christian communities.

Through its adoption, its sponsors sought to add the powerful voice
of the U.S. Congress–and the full moral authority of the American
people–to the international defense of religious freedom for the
Christian nations residing within the borders of present-day Turkey.

Part of building support for this measure was educating legislators
about the history of Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Pontians, and
Arameans (Syriacs) who have long lived on what is present-day Turkey.

Another key element was reaching out to new allies among traditional
American faith-based groups, including evangelicals and others
sometimes known as Christian conservatives.

Many Representatives were surprised to learn that these nations, many
thousands of years before the establishment of the Ottoman Empire,
gave birth to great civilizations, each with their own rich civic,
religious, and cultural heritage. These nations were, upon these
Biblical lands, among the first Christians, dating back to the time of
the travels through Anatolia by the Apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew.

It held great meaning for Members of the U.S. Congress that the
territory of present-day Turkey is today home to many of the most
important centers of early Christianity, most notably Nicaea, Ephesus,
Chalcedon, and Constantinople, but also that the Turkish government has
systematically sought to erase this remarkably rich Christian legacy,
including through the destruction of thousands of religious sites.

The destruction of these holy places accelerated during the 1890â~@²s
and through the Armenian Genocide era. The Armenian Genocide and,
more broadly, Ottoman Turkey’s genocidal drive to eliminate its entire
Christian population, marked a terrible watershed in the histories
of the Christians of these lands, as the Turkish leadership shifted
from a policy of violence and oppression to one of an outright,
systematic, intentional, and state-implemented campaign of ethnic
and cultural extermination.

The Republic of Turkey, legal heir to the Ottomans, continued these
genocidal policies against the remaining Christian population through
ethnic-cleansing, organized massacres, destruction of churches and
religious sites, illegal expropriation of properties, discriminatory
policies, restrictions on worship, and other means.

Estimates are that of the well over 2,000 Armenian churches that
existed in the early 1900â~@²s, far fewer than 50 are functioning
today.

Perhaps as few as 200 even remain standing today. The rest have been
ground into dust. And, only a small fraction of the historic Christian
population that once populated Anatolia remains today in modern Turkey
to care for their cultural heritage.

Let me pause for a moment to impress upon you just how very sensitive
a matter religious rights–and in particular Christian issues–are
in modern-day American civic life.

Last year, President Obama’s nominee to serve as U.S. ambassador to
Turkey, Francis Ricciardone, was asked at his confirmation hearing,
at our direct urging, how many of the pre-1915 Christian churches in
Turkey were still operating.

When he answered that a majority still were–a patently inaccurate
response that echoed Ankara’s false narrative of tolerance and
pluralism–his confirmation process froze in its tracks.

It only went forward after he responded to Senate protests and Armenian
American community outrage by publicly withdrawing his response and
officially correcting his answer.

We must, as we did in this instance, publically and forcefully confront
those who deny the truth about the genocide and its ongoing impact;
for our failure to do so would allow these hateful denials to gain
credibility.

Returning to the plight of Christians in Turkey, it’s clear that the
endangered Christian communities within Turkey’s present-day borders
continue, to this day, to endure oppressive restrictions imposed by
the government of Turkey on their right to practice their faith in
their historic places of worship. These endangered sites–at least
those that remain–are, nearly all, still today in Turkish hands as
a direct result of genocide. Many other properties–thousands now
emptied of even ruins–are also illegally in Turkey’s possession.

The remaining Christians in Turkey are, all too often, prevented
from praying in their historic churches, which have been desecrated,
sometimes used as storage sheds, and in some cases even turned
into barns.

In very rare instances, such as the Akhtamar Church, Turkey has
undertaken repairs for transparently cynical public relations reasons,
but refused to return religious properties to their rightful church
owners, instead converting them into museums, where prayer, as a rule,
is prohibited.

And, by the restoration of these properties to their rightful Armenian
owners, we mean the Holy See of Etchmiadzin, the Holy See of Cilicia,
the Armenian Catholic Church, the Armenian Evangelical Church, and
the Patriarchates of Jerusalem and Constantinople.

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, established by
Congress, recently designated Turkey as one of a handful of countries
on its watch list for a third consecutive year. It has concluded: “Over
the previous five decades, the [Turkish] state has, using convoluted
regulations and undemocratic laws, confiscated hundreds of religious
minority properties, primarily those belonging to the Greek Orthodox
community, as well as Armenian Orthodox, Catholics, and Jews…

The state also has closed seminaries, denying these communities the
right to train clergy.”

In 2009, Bartholomew I, the Ecumenical Christian Orthodox Patriarch
of Constantinople, appeared on CBS’s “60 Minutes” and reported that
Turkey’s Christians were second-class citizens and that he personally
felt “crucified by a state that wanted to see his church die out.”

Now, as you might expect, addressing this matter in the United States
presents both challenges and opportunities.

In January 2011, President Obama noted–generically–the importance of
“bear[ing] witness to those who are persecuted or attacked because of
their faith.” And President Bush declared in 2009, “No human freedom
is more fundamental than the right to worship in accordance with
one’s conscience.” But neither did anything to protect or promote
the rights of Armenians and other Christians in Turkey.

The U.S. State Department, which often goes to great and frequently
unreasonable and even irrational lengths to excuse and apologize
for Turkey’s conduct, has actually criticized the persecution of
Christians in Turkey, including the improper confiscation of their
properties. This position is a testament to the high priority American
citizens give to religious liberty.

The United States, as a nation that was, quite literally, founded
upon a belief in religious liberty, has a long and proud tradition
of actively promoting and defending freedom of faith around the world.

Our own Bill of Rights safeguards religious freedom for Americans and
our longstanding leadership in championing the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights and other international covenants has helped protect
freedom of faith across the globe. America’s enduring commitment
to religious freedom was reaffirmed in the International Religious
Freedom Act of 1998, and has been underscored in countless pieces of
specific legislation.

We carefully studied the American precedents. Here are a few examples:

– Just last year, the U.S. House passed H.Res.1631, which called
for the protection of minority religious communities and places of
worship in the illegally occupied portion of Cyprus.

– H.Res.562, passed by the House during the 105th Congress, cited
the confiscation of property by foreign governments as a means of
victimizing minority populations, and, specifically, urged foreign
governments to return wrongfully expropriated properties to religious
communities.

– H.Con.Res.371, passed by the House during the 110th Congress, called
on foreign governments to return looted and confiscated properties
to their rightful owners or, where restitution was not possible,
to pay equitable compensation.

What we found is what we always expected: that the U.S. Congress is a
champion for religious liberty, but had yet to direct its attention
in this regard to the challenges presented by Turkey’s violence and
wholesale intolerance toward its Christian minorities.

The Turkish government stridently opposed this effort to end
faith-based discrimination, promote religious tolerance, and secure
the rightful return of Christian churches, not just because they
reject responsibility for past sins–for they know their guilt better
than anyone–but for their naked fear of the implications for future
demands for reparations.

The State Department–from Ankara to Washington, D.C. –pressed
hard on Congress to block even the consideration of H.Res.306. Not,
it must be stressed, because they believed it did not reflect the
American view on the religious rights of Christians in Turkey, but
precisely because they knew that it did. This reasoning reflects the
fundamental disconnect of a failed foreign policy that prioritizes
the sensitivities of the most extremely intolerant elements of Turkish
society over the core moral values of the American people.

This bipartisan measure attacked, head-on, the core Ottoman
and Kemalist myths about Turkey as a model of tolerance and
pluralism. It revealed Turkey’s token steps and half-measures as
political stunts–like its conversion of the church at Akhtamar into a
museum–setting a real and reasonable bar for the Turkish government
to meet, namely, full freedom of faith and a total return of stolen
religious properties.

We saw Turkey go after H.Res.306 in every way possible. Soft attacks,
saying it was unnecessary. Harsher attacks saying it would be
counter-productive given the great strides the Turkish government
is supposedly making. Diplomatic attacks saying its adoption would
somehow upset the fragile Turkey-Armenia protocols process. And,
finally, angry attacks, seeking to bully and intimidate U.S.

legislators.

These assaults did result in the shameful opposition of the Obama
Administration to H.Res.306, but they failed to sway even one vote. On
July 20, the Foreign Affairs Committee voted 43 to 1 to pass this
measure, with the sole dissenting voice coming from a libertarian who
opposes nearly every human rights measure brought before this panel.

Soon after this Committee vote, and in the wake of a series of
judgments on religious property issues in European courts, Turkey’s
prime minister issued an announcement–very limited in scope, to be
sure, but meaningful nonetheless–regarding the rights of churches and
others to seek the return of certain confiscated religious properties
under a 1936 law, which sadly only applied to 2-3 percent of the
church properties confiscated by Turkey.

The fact that the prime minister felt the need to respond to this
issue is very telling. Even this token defensive step, meant to
minimize Turkey’s obligations, was not an act of charity by Mr.

Erdogan, but rather a choice forced upon him.

This initial step was followed by an unprecedented letter to
the ANCA by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, reiterating the
State Department’s support for religious freedom in Turkey and the
restoration, by the Turkish government, of confiscated religious
properties to their rightful owners. These are small but momentous
steps of progress.

We welcomed the secretary’s support, urged her to stand firm on this
matter, and offered our help in delivering concrete results toward
a policy that, taken to its logical fruition, would help bring about
a new era of American-Turkish relations–based on the principles of
fairness, tolerance, and mutual respect–while also facilitating
meaningful progress toward a truthful, just, and comprehensive
resolution of the Armenian Genocide. Vehapar Aram I also wrote to
Secretary Clinton expressing a similar perspective.

A few months later, as a result of our advocacy efforts, on Dec. 13
of last year, the full House of Representatives passed H.Res.306 by
an overwhelming voice vote.

We welcomed this vote as a powerful victory for religious freedom and
as a reflection of the growing consensus that Turkey must–starting
with the return of thousands of stolen Christian churches properties
and holy sites–accept its responsibilities for the full moral
and material implications of a truthful and just resolution of
the Armenian Genocide. So did Members of Congress, from across the
political spectrum:

Rep. Ed Royce (R-Calif.): “Religious tolerance has long been a problem
for Turkey. Turkey has yet to remedy the desecration of the religious
properties of over two million Armenians and Greeks and Assyrians and
Syriacs over the last 100 years. Until these obligations are fulfilled,
religious freedom will remain elusive and, frankly, relations with the
United States will suffer. Prime Minister Erdogan recently issued a
decree to return confiscated church properties that were taken after
1936, but the majority of confiscated religious properties, of course,
were taken prior to 1936… We are sending a signal today that Turkey
should reassess the cutoff date.”

Rep. Howard Berman (D-Calif.): “We want Turkey to follow through on
its commitment to return confiscated property of Christian communities
and to provide compensation for properties that can’t be recovered. We
want Christian communities in Turkey to enjoy the same rights and
privileges that religious minorities enjoy in this country. We want
Turkey to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide.”

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.): “But the physical near-annihilation of
the Armenian people was not enough to satisfy the Turks’ desire to
wreak vengeance on Armenia, which was the first nation in the world to
adopt Christianity as its official religion in AD 301. Their campaign
against the Armenians was broader and was aimed at destroying not
only the Armenian people but also their history, their culture,
and their faith.”

Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.): “The adoption of H.Res.306 would add
the powerful voice of the United States Congress to the defense of
religious freedom for Christians in present-day Turkey and reinforce
the traditional leadership of Congress in defending freedom of faith
around the world.”

Rep. Robert Dold (R-Ill.): “In the United States we enjoy the freedom
to worship, but throughout the world billions of people do not have
the liberty to practice this fundamental human right. For generations,
Armenian, Greek, Catholic, and Jewish minorities were punished for
practicing their faith in the Ottoman Empire and modern-day Turkey.”

The adoption of H.Res.306 helped challenge many myths that Turkey has
long propagated in the United States and throughout the world. First
among these is that Turkey, far from being tolerant or pluralistic,
was literally founded upon the violent, wholesale destruction and
exile of many ancient Christian nations. The territory of Turkey,
once a vital center of Christianity, now has a Christian population
of less than 0.1 percent.

Turkey has a history of resolving issues of faith and identity through
violence, not tolerance. Examples include its state-sponsored murder
and persecution of Greeks, Armenians, Kurds, Cypriots, and Assyrians.

We busted the myth that tokenism can be a substitute for the wholesale
change that Turkey must undertake. Ankara seeks credit for renovating
a handful of religious sites and converting them into museums, while
seeking to escape criticism for its expropriation of thousands of
Christian sites from their rightful owners.

We took on Turkey’s use of the ugly euphemism “disused religious
sites,” by making it clear that the overwhelming majority of
the Christian parishioners of these churches were brutally and
systematically massacred and exiled.

Building upon this foundation and the growing Congressional and
American civil society consensus behind the return of churches,
we will press our cause forward with courage and confidence.

We invite you–and friends of Armenia and champions of religious
liberty from all over the world–to join in this noble effort.

I call upon each and every one of you to bring to bear your ideas and
your energy to this struggle, starting with the return of religious
properties and extending to the full moral and material restitution and
reparations owed by Turkey to the Armenian nation for our lost lives,
our stolen territories, our confiscated properties, our desecrated
holy sites, and for all the costs and unfulfilled opportunities of
a post-genocidal century of struggling to survive.

This is truly a global undertaking, the success of which will rely
upon our friendship and faith, our strength, and our solidarity.

In solemn memory of our forbearers and for the righteousness of our
Cause, I know we will persevere.

A Change Of Heart: Ruben Hayrapetyan Wants To Stay In Parliament

A CHANGE OF HEART: RUBEN HAYRAPETYAN WANTS TO STAY IN PARLIAMENT

epress.am
02.28.2012

Parliamentarian, Football Federation of Armenia President Ruben
Hayrapetyan, speaking to reporters at the National Assembly on Monday,
said he will put forth his candidacy for the (majority) party-list
ballot in the upcoming parliamentary elections. He, however, refused to
say in which electoral district he will be nominated. Recall, in 2007,
Hayrapetyan was elected in the Yerevan administrative district of Avan.

It’s important to note that on at least two occasions at press
conferences last year, Hayrapetyan had said he isn’t preparing to
run in the elections, explaining that the National Assembly is “not
his place”.

THE BLOODY TRACES OF ‘SUMGAIT’

THE BLOODY TRACES OF ‘SUMGAIT’
Leonid Martirossian

Monday, 27 February 2012 16:06

Editor-in-chief of Azat Artsakh newspaper

“Times New Roman”,”serif”;} These days, the 24th anniversary of the
Sumgait pogroms will be commemorated. Three days â~@~S from February
27 to February 29 of the leap year of 1988, fierce and unpunished
massacre of innocent people was carried out in this Azerbaijani
city. An Armenian massacre took place there. The people were killed
just for being Armenians… The last days of this February, the leap
year of 2012, our people will also pay tribute to the memory of the
innocent victims of that terrible tragedy, which took the lives of
dozens and dozens of our compatriots. A week ago, on February 20,
we marked another event – the 24th anniversary of the resolution of
the session of the Nagorno Karabakh Oblast Soviet of People’s Deputies
on soliciting before the Supreme Soviet of the Azerbaijani SSR and the
Supreme Soviet of the Armenian SSR on the transfer of Nagorno-Karabakh
from the structure of Azerbaijan to that of Armenia. It is important
to note that this decision was made by purely constitutional means,
basing on the free will of the people of Nagorno Karabakh. An outside
observer can consider strange the reference to these two seemingly
unrelated events, consequently, failing to catch the connection between
them. But, they are related to each other quite directly, and it may
seem strange only to those unfamiliar with the criminal essence of the
Azerbaijani authorities, both in the Soviet period and nowadays. Years
and even centuries will pass, but these two events will go together
and live in the history in a weekly distance from each other.

The Armenian pogroms of the late February of 1988 were the result
of the targeted state anti-Armenian policy of Azerbaijan, and the
monstrous ATROCITIES of “sumgait” were the response of the Azerbaijani
authorities to the PEACEFUL demand of the Karabakh people put forward
within the democratic processes in the then USSR. Azerbaijan had
a single goal – to make the Armenian population of Artsakh abandon
the idea of â~@~Kâ~@~Kreunification with Armenia, at the same time
preventing a political solution to the issue via this bloody blackmail
of the Soviet Center. However, it is worth mentioning that Azerbaijan’s
concerns about the possible ‘pro-Karabakh’ actions of the Kremlin were
in vain, as the Soviet leadership in President Gorbachev, in fact,
was consolidated with the nationalist leadership of Azerbaijan.

Numerous eyewitness accounts, photos and videos, investigation and
trial materials conclusively confirm that the events in Sumgait were
an act of genocide that was planned and carried out by the authorities
of Azerbaijan with the criminal connivance of Gorbachev’s regime. To
fulfill the Kremlin’s state order, the single criminal case was split
up into individual episodes and qualified as acts of hooligan elements,
though even then some of the USSR Prosecutor’s Office investigators
directly called the Sumgait events genocide.

Since then, nearly a quarter of a century has passed. Soviet Moscow
does not exist; however, the criminal nationalist Baku regime is
preserved â~@~S it committed bloody crimes against the Armenian people:
the pogroms in Baku, Gandzak, Shamkhor, Mingechaur accompanied by
the killing and deportation of civilians, the brutal war against the
independent NKR … All this convincingly proves that Sumgait was part
of Azerbaijan’s state policy on eliminating the Armenian ethnic group.

This policy is still underway.

We have not heard yet any repentance for Sumgait and other crimes
committed by Azerbaijan. Moreover, in this country, in strict
accordance with the same anti-Armenian state policy, glorification of
the executioners and criminals takes place. Sumgait, where murderers
were proclaimed heroes, echoed in Budapest exactly 16 years later,
in the February of 2004. It was here that Azeri officer Ramil Safarov,
taking training courses within the NATO program Partnership for Peace
(!!!), committed brutal murder of his classmate, Armenian officer
Gurgen Margaryan.

Acquaintance with the materials of the case, as well as with the
reaction to this crime in Azerbaijan itself clearly demonstrates the
genetic link between the â~@~Xsumgait and the â~@~Xbudapestâ~@~Y. Their
â~@~Xrelationshipâ~@~Y is simply amazing, although it is, frankly
speaking, quite natural. “The murder was planned and was notable
for its brutality”, read the verdict of the Budapest Court. This
formulation fully characterizes the atrocities committed in
Sumgait. Next, like with the ‘sumgait’, the action of murderer Safarov
was considered in the Azerbaijani society as a sacrifice for the sake
of Azerbaijan; moreover, some officials, including representatives
of the presidential administration, as well as MPs and politicians
have repeatedly urged to award the murderer the title of ‘Hero of
Azerbaijan’. And finally, “During the judicial investigation Safarov
did not show any signs of remorse for his deeds” – this is another
quotation from the noted verdict. In fact, nothing else could be
expected, because he had the example of his own country, which did
not repent of Sumgait. So, we can speak of a deep crisis that has
struck Azerbaijan, where a new generation of racists is growing –
the crisis of public conscience poisoned with the toxin of hatred
towards Armenians, which is in a step from the hatred towards humanity
in general.

Fortunately, there is a difference between the ‘sumgait’ and the
‘budapest’ – in the second case, the criminal was deservedly punished
and sentenced to life imprisonment. Will the â~@~Xsumgaitâ~@~Y get
its deserved punishment? And who will the judge be?

http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=564:the-bloody-traces-of-sumgait&catid=3:all&Itemid=4

Sumgait Is Unpunished Evil Based On 24 Years Of Lie

SUMGAIT IS UNPUNISHED EVIL BASED ON 24 YEARS OF LIE

arminfo
Tuesday, February 28, 12:56

24 years ago, on 27-29 Feb 1988, the events that happened in the
industrial town of Sumgait (at 25 km from Baku), part of the Soviet
Union at that time, led to the death of hundreds of peaceful and
innocent Armenians. Today, many people in the world qualify those
horrible events as genocide, and many people, for instance, in Baku
think that Armenians were killing themselves. However, like in many
other cases, the truth is one and it is not subject to interpretation.

In the case of Sumgait, it is reflected by the murders of hundreds
of people, and the murders became possible due to some people’s big
hunger for power amid the unjustified weakness and indifference of
the people who had the power at that time.

The Sumgait massacre of Armenians was committed in response to the
Karabakh people’s legitimate expression of will for reunification
with the Armenian SSR. The mass pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait
were accompanied by mass violence against the Armenian population,
robberies, murders, rapes, arsons and destruction of property.

Actually, the Sumgait massacre led to aggravation of the first conflict
between the nations of the Transcaucasus and caused the first flows
of Armenian refugees from Sumgait to Stepanakert and Armenia.

According to official data, 26 Armenians were killed and more than 100
were wounded, though experts estimated that the death toll was about
200. All this medieval vandalism took place amid full paralyzation of
the local authorities in Sumgait and Baku and the central authorities
in Moscow.

The Communist Party of Azerbaijan represented by Kyamran Bagirov and
the Communist Party of the USSR in the person of Mikhail Gorbachyov
only called for calmness and did not even consider the reasons of
what was going on. The law-enforcers did not take any actions, and
only the delayed deployment of internal troops was able to stop the
extermination of people and to save the few alive Armenians.

At the session of the Political Bureau of the Central Committee
of the Communist Party of the USSR in Moscow on 29 Feb 1988, the
supreme legislative body of the country officially stated that the
killings in Sumgait were on ethnic grounds. Afterwards, dozens of
organizers of this tragedy appeared before Soviet courts, but only
one of them was sentenced to life imprisonment. Later, however,
he was released. In the meantime, the real organizers and murderers
of hundreds of peaceful Armenians, particularly, the leadership of
the People’s Front of Azerbaijan and personally Abulfaz Elchibey not
only evaded punishment, but further came to power with chauvinism and
continued to heat up anti-Armenian moods in the Azerbaijani society.

Later, it was this impunity that led to reoccurrence of genocidal
actions in Baku, Maragha, and in dozens of peaceful villages and towns
populated with Armenians. Twenty-four years have passed since the
tragic days in Sumgait. The system of values of the wild bandits, who
were killing and burning Armenians those days, is currently striking
roots in the state policy of Azerbaijan with every passing day…

What The Azeris Don’T Want To Admit About Khojalu

WHAT THE AZERIS DON’T WANT TO ADMIT ABOUT KHOJALU

Asbarez

LOCAL News :: Human Rights

Deconstructing the Azeri Propaganda War Against the Indigenous Armenian
Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabagh) YEREVAN and NEW YORK-A new
documentary – “Between Hunger and Fire: Power at the Expense of Lives,”
about the events taking place between November 1991 and February 1992
in Karabakh – was screened on Friday, Feb. 25, 2012.

This two-part documentary recounts the shattering of the Azerbaijani
blockade of Stepanakert (capital city of Artsakh/the Armenian Republic
of Nagorno Karabakh), and presents compelling evidence about the
criminal activities of the political elite of Baku – which led to the
tragic deaths of civilians in Khojalu, including the victimization
of women, children and the elderly.

“Between Hunger and Fire” will counter and shed light on a range of
misinformation presented globally by Azerbaijan, the prime motivation
being to shift blame from those accountable (in this case, the Azeri
government itself) for Azeri civilian deaths.

Using a vast trove of materials, “Between Hunger and Fire” will be of
interest not only for wide audience, but also for research and the
academic community. The archive, assembled during the investigation
of tragic death of civilians in Armenian-populated Stepanakert
and Azerbaijani-controlled Aghdam region, entails grounds for a
wider-scale film.

Meanwhile in the United States, a group calling itself the Azerbaijan
America Alliance has launched a massive propaganda campaign of
misinformation on the Azeri version of the Khojalu issue. Full-page
advertisements headlined “Khojaly: A Human Tragedy Against Azerbaijan”
appeared in the national editions of the New York Times on Friday,
Feb. 24 and the Washington Post on Saturday Feb. 25.

Advertisements have also been placed in Washington Metro stations,
buses, bus shelters and other transportation venues in Washington
and New York.

Following is the official trailer for “Between Hunger
and Fire: Power at the Expense of Lives” (7 mins):

The premiere of the entire film will occur in Yerevan the week of
Feb. 27 – March 3, 2012, followed by additional screenings around the
world. The research group initiating the film/investigation reports
that the documentary will for now be screening the film in Russian and
English, after which it will be translated into seven more languages.

To learn more about Azeri pogroms against indigenous Armenians,
the independent republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), the Kojalu
incident and more, visit the following links:

Office of the Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) Republic in Washington,
DC (nkrusa.org/ ) and their fact sheets about Khojalu:

Khojalu Documentation Site: xocali.net/

About the deliberate Azerbaijani destruction of historic Armenian
Monuments in Djulfa, Nakhichevan:

Upcoming conference about Artsakh, and the Azeri
Misinformation Campaign (March 3, 2012 in Glendale,
CA):!/photo.php?fbid=1015133228
2820113&set=o.388859461131313&type=1&theater

News coverage of a recent protest: “Armenians Mark Sumgait,
Kirovabad and Baku Massacres” (Feb. 24, 2012, Washington, DC):
asbarez.com/101187/dc-area-armenians-mark-sumgait-kirovabad-and-baku-massacr
es/

Recommended books and pamphlets:

“Ethnic Cleansing in Progress,” a report by Baroness Caroline Cox
and John Aijbner with an introduction by Elena Bonner Sakharov,
published by the Institute for Religious Minorities in the Islamic
World:

“The Invention of History: Azerbaijan, Armenia and the Showcasing of
Imagination,” by Rouben Galichian keghart.com/Chorbajian_Galichian

The Making of Nagorno-Karabagh from
Secession to Republic, Edited by Levon Chorbajian

n.pdf

“Kha-ra-bagh! The Emergence of the National
Democratic Movement in Armenia,” by Mark Malkhasian

048/ref=sr_1_sc_3

# # #

Related

*

t-khojaly/

Other Links in the USA 25 Feb 2012 :: Washington, DC Indymedia
San Francisco
Indymedia
Philadelphia Indymedia

New York Boston
Indymedia
LA
Chicago Indymedia
Atlanta Independent Media Center website

u Indymedia of Austin, Texas

bout-khojalu Independent Media Center newswire of Madison, Wisconsin

New Orleans Indymedia

Indymedia of Portland, Oregon

Milwaukee, Wisconsin Indymedia

National newswire:
Hudson/Mohawk New York Independent Media Center

Rogue Valley/Southern Oregon Independent Media Center

http://nyc.indymedia.org/en/2012/02/117962.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ef3f5Ngkck&feature=player_embedded
https://www.facebook.com/events/388859461131313/#
http://asbarez.com/101197/watch-what-azeris-don%e2%80%99t-want-to-admit-abou
http://dc.indymedia.org/newswire/display/152792/index.php
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/02/25/18708187.php
http://www.phillyimc.org/en/what-azeris-dont-want-admit-about-khojalu
http://nyc.indymedia.org/en/2012/02/117962.html
http://boston.indymedia.org/newswire/display/214487/index.php
http://la.indymedia.org/news/2012/02/251704.php
http://chicago.indymedia.org/node/231
http://atlanta.indymedia.org/global/what-azeris-dont-want-admit-about-khojal
http://austin.indymedia.org/article/2012/02/25/what-azeris-dont-want-admit-a
http://madison.indymedia.org/newswire/display/120825/index.php
http://neworleans.indymedia.org/news/2012/02/16605.php
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2012/02/414072.shtml
http://milwaukee.indymedia.org/en/2012/02/212283.shtml
http://indymedia.us/en/index.shtml
http://hm.indymedia.org/newswire/display/17637/index.php
http://rogueimc.org/en/2012/02/17943.shtml
www.nkrusa.org/nk_conflict/khojaly.shtml
www.djulfa.com/
www.maragha.nk.am/documentseng4.html
www.hayq.org/upload/files/The_Making_of_Nagorno-Karabagh_ed._Levon_Chorbajia
www.amazon.com/Gha-Ra-Bagh-Emergence-National-Democratic-Movement/dp/0814326

ICG: Beyond Some Possible Confidence-Building Measures, There Is Lit

ICG: BEYOND SOME POSSIBLE CONFIDENCE-BUILDING MEASURES, THERE IS LITTLE LIKELIHOOD OF PROGRESS

Panorama.am
28/02/2012

Beyond some possible confidence-building measures, there is little
likelihood of progress [in Karabakh issue] for the coming year,
with Armenia, Azerbaijan and the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair countries
(France, Russia, U.S.) all entering electoral cycles, the International
Crisis Group report says, dwelling on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Earlier Crisis Group reports have explored the threat of resumed
fighting and suggested ways to move toward resolution of the conflict.

According to the report, the international community, in particular
the co-chairs of the Minsk Group (France, Russia, U.S.) facilitating
efforts to reach a comprehensive peace, should facilitate the creation
of an incident investigation mechanism, including the operation of a
hotline between the sides to discuss ceasefire breaches, and otherwise
protect the civilian population living near the LoC.