Armenian Genocide Commemorated 98 Years Later

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATED 98 YEARS LATER

New Haven Register
April 23 2013

Published: Tuesday, April 23, 2013
By Dana Bartholemew, Los Angeles Daily News

The terror lingers through the generations.

An Armenian boy endures a 40-day siege by Turkish troops before being
evacuated by a passing French ship. A woman and two children march
at gunpoint from Turkey into Syria after the men of her village are
killed by Ottoman Turks. A future priest joins refugees bearing crosses
of his burned church. And a boy carries his cousin into the forest,
the only survivors of an extended family of 32.

An estimated 500,000 Armenian descendants across the greater Los
Angeles area on Wednesday will commemorate what they believe to be
the first genocide of the 20th century – up to 1.5 million Armenians
killed nearly a century ago by the Ottoman Turks. Ethnic Turks across
the U.S., meanwhile, deny there was genocide, or that the violence
was one-sided. They allege similar atrocities – even genocide –
were committed by Armenians against Muslims.

Armenians are overwhelmingly Christian.

“Ninety-eight years later, where are we now?” asked Harut Sassounian,
62, of Glendale, Calif., publisher and columnist of the California
Courier, an Armenian newspaper, who wrote a history of the Armenian
Genocide, who said his family was nearly destroyed in the violence.

“There’s only one issue on the table: there was a tremendous injustice
done to a great number of people – they were wiped off the face of
the Earth.

“We need justice: There’s no closure to this crime. It’s like a
festering wound. We want an apology (by the Republic of Turkey). And
making amends for the losses. ”

Across the region, home of the largest diaspora of Armenians outside
Armenia, residents will mark the controversial calamity that scattered
their countrymen throughout the world.

They will gather for Armenian requiem services. They will flock to
Armenian genocide tributes. And they may don official “recognition and
reparations” T-shirts during a scheduled protest before the Turkish
Consulate in Los Angeles.

The violence began on April 24, 1915, when 200 intellectuals were
rounded up in Istanbul, and what happened long ago echoes through
each generation.

They tell of the systematic removing of Christians from their homes.

Of men rounded up, then murdered. Of women and children terrorized
as they were marched from their homes in present-day Turkey into the
sands of the Middle East. Rape. And thousands of churches destroyed,
their priests beheaded.

“I was born in Lebanon, my daughter was born here, and I ask why? I’m
asking why?” said Hratch Sepetjian, 44, of Granada Hills, whose
grandparents endured the siege of Musa Dagh, in which Armenian
defenders held off Turkish regulars for 40 days until they were
evacuated by a French ship. “Because of the genocide.”

The Turkish government maintains the deaths occurred during World War
I as a consequence of Armenian betrayal and revolt in what then was
a tottering Ottoman Empire. The alleged genocide has since become
politicized, with the U.S., the United Nations and Turkey refusing
to officially call it such.

Many of the 500,000 ethnic Turks across the U.S. recognize massacres
took place within a civil war within a world war surrounding a
collapsing empire where Armenians joined 45 ethnic groups in vying
for independence. They say they feel for those who suffered, but have
their own tales of Armenian destruction.

The Ottoman Empire blamed a major World War I battle loss on Armenian
volunteers serving the Russians, historians say. The Turks say what
followed – the deaths of 300,000 to 600,000 Armenians, with others
relocated within the empire, was not genocide,

“We characterize it as a tragedy,” said Gunay Evinch, a board member
of the Assembly of Turk

ish American Associations, and a Rhodes Scholar who studied wartime
atrocities in Anatolia, Turkey. “We Turkish-Americans and even the
Turkish government in Turkey do not deny massacres occurred.

“We are seriously interested in whether the massacres connotate
genocide. This is a historical debate. The great majority say it’s
not genocide. ”

While legislators in Sacramento and Washington have joined some 20
nations in recognizing the bloodbath as genocide, critics say the
United States has refrained so it won’t hurt relations with Turkey,
a NATO ally.

Now supporters of both Armenians and Turks hope President Barack
Obama on Wednesday will declare whether what happened was genocide.

“I urge you to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide in your statement this
year, to call genocide, genocide, and to stand with the ever-dwindling
number of survivors, as well as the descendants of those who were
lost, and who must otherwise continue to suffer the indignity, injury
and pain of denial,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif, whose district
encompasses thousands of ethnic Armenians.

At the same time, the ATAA posted a petition on its website urging
Obama to recognize “Soykirim – the Muslim Genocide,” in which they
say Armenian nationalists exterminated 518,000 Turks, Azerbaijanis
and Kurds between 1914-22.

Turkish native Ergun Kirlikovali said when his dad was a year old,
Bulgarians, Greeks and Armenian marauders wiped out 10,000 people
in his village. He survived with a note pinned to him that had his
birthday and father’s first name. Kirlikovali, the sole survivor,
was later named after his village.

“This is ignored in the West,” said Kirlikovali, 62, now president of
the ATAA, as well as an aerospace scientist in Irvine. “If you ignore
one side’s pain and suffering, the other side looks like genocide. ”

At St. Peter Armenian Apostolic Church in Van Nuys, Calif., many
images of those killed on April 24, 1915 hang on a wall of its
Saturday school classroom. This is where Fr. Shnork Demirjian and
a half dozen parishioners recall the suffering of their parents and
grandparents. Demirjian said his grandfather’s village was rounded
up by Turkish soldiers, then locked inside the parish church. Before
it was torched, however, a local imam was able to set them free.

His grandfather, then 13 and a would-be priest, disguised himself as
a girl and accompanied surviving church crosses to Syria.

“The Turkish soldiers used to check your Adam’s apple,” said Demirjian,
who still possesses the silver crosses and a bloody prayer book. “If
it was hard, like a man, they cut your throat. ”

Margeret Keishian Lulejian said that his father’s brothers were each
conscripted into the Turkish army, then murdered one week later. Her
grandmother and two parents, forced on the long march into Syria,
could only whisper of the atrocities, she said.

“I’m very sad,” said Lulejian, 72, of Northridge, verging on tears.

“Angry about man’s inhumanity to other men. ”

Mary Derderian Zoryan’s father and younger cousin were the only
survivors within a family of 32, she said. Her father, then 11,
saw his sister killed.

“To this day, I will go to the grave regretting not knowing the full
details of what happened,” said Zoryan, 71, of Tarzana.

“I feel a very deep resentment towards the Turks. I’ll admit that to
my dying day. ”

http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2013/04/23/news/40aeff52-9fb0-4c57-bf99-058bd37e9b9b.txt?viewmode=fullstory

South Caucasus In State Of Denial On US Human Rights Report

SOUTH CAUCASUS IN STATE OF DENIAL ON US HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT

EurasiaNet.org, NY
April 23 2013

April 23, 2013 – 8:31am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

The adjectives biased, spurious and slanderous provide the essence
of Baku’s response to the US State Department’s latest report on
the global state of human rights, including alleged malpractices in
Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia.

Once again, Azerbaijan, the region’s energy giant, led the pack with
diagnoses of chronic cases of intolerance for freedom of expression,
corruption in the judiciary system and abuse of detainees by police.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s senior political advisor,
Ali Hasanov, did temper his response with elaborations about the
importance of Baku’s strategic partnership with the US, but he could
not help noticing an alleged double-standard in the American criticism.

A country that, as he sees it, had no qualms about folding the Occupy
Wall Street movement in New York City is in no position to lecture a
country that does not want to allow similarly impromptu demonstrations
in the heart of its capital, he implied.

“The unfair comments about Azerbaijan, coming from those who turn
a blind eye to restrictions of freedom of assembly in the US and
Europe, cannot be regarded as sincere,” objected Hasanov in a lengthy,
point-by-point rebuttal of the annual report.

The 77 non-combat deaths in Azerbaijan’s army in 2012 — another black
mark in the report — are a matter of concern for the Azerbaijani
government, Hasanov said, but added that the topic is being hyped by
the Armenian lobby and their political clients. (Just as Hasanov was
busy playing down the army problem, APA news service reported that
another Azerbaijani soldier had hanged himself.)

The report, though, indicates that violence in the army is one thing
that enemies Armenia and Azerbaijan have in common. Both countries
have seen an outpouring of public anger over the killings and abuse
of conscripts.

In Armenia, the establishment also shrugged at their share of
Washington’s criticism. A senior member of the ruling Republican Party
of Armenia described as “groundless and unsubstantiated” accusations
about pervasive corruption, a lack of transparency in government
and citizens’ inability to change said government, RFE/RL’s Armenia
service reported.

Of the South Caucasus trio, only Georgia does not seem to have the
army-violence problem and only Tbilisi has not responded to the State
Department’s criticisms. Most of the faults found centered on the
torture and abuse of prisoners, a lack of judicial independence and
obstacles to political participation. The cited violations, however,
concerned cases that happened prior to the political changeover in last
October’s parliamentary election. Little criticism was directly pointed
at officials under the current prime minister, Bidzina Ivanishvili.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66862

TelAviv: Don’t Forget Armenian Genocide Due To Politics

DON’T FORGET ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DUE TO POLITICS

Arutz Sheva, Israel
April 23 2013

The Knesset will mark, Tuesday, the 98th anniversary of the killing
and deportation of up to 1.8 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire.

Against the backdrop of negotiations between Israel and Turkey
to restore relations, former Knesset speaker Reuven Rivlin said,
ahead of the observance, “As human beings and as Jews, we must not
ignore the disaster of another people, and not because of diplomatic
considerations, important as they are. We will continue to mark the
anniversary of the massacre of the Armenian people, regardless of
relations with today’s Turkey as an ally.”

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/266880

Clean Energy NGO And SolArt Intend To Launch Joint Projects Aimed At

CLEAN ENERGY NGO AND SOLART INTEND TO LAUNCH JOINT PROJECTS AIMED AT DEVELOPING SOLAR ENERGY

Tuesday, April 23, 21:31

Clean Energy NGO and SolArt are going to launch joint projects aimed
at developing solar energy.

Clean Energy NGO’s press release sent to ArmInfo says that the
parties have signed a Memorandum on Cooperation to contribute to
humanization and democratization of the energy sector. Vahe Davtyan,
President of Clean Energy NGO, said that Clean Energy sets a goal to
join the efforts of various players of the Armenian energy market in
order to attract potential donors and investors to development of
the alternative energy that has an immense potential. “Armenia has
significant advantages of development, including the solar energy
development given that the average annual amount of solar energy in
Armenia is 1,720 KWh per 1 sq m, while in Europe it is only 1,000 KWh”,
Davtyan stressed.

Artin Melikyan, Head of SolArt, pointed out that the active cooperation
of Armenian companies operating in the alternative energy field
plays an important role in implementation of important, promising and
multipurpose projects. Therefore, he said that one should consider
the alternative energy market players as links of a single chain. In
this context, he welcomed Clean Energy’s initiative to consolidate
the potential for development of the given sphere.

To note, SolArt specializes in development of hybrid technologies in
the field of energy conservation and heating systems. Clean Energy
NGO was founded in December 2012. Its goal is to provide extensive
support to establishment and development of Armenia’s energy security.

The organization supports projects on development of alternative
energy in the republic.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=BA4EA3A0-AC3B-11E2-9D38F6327207157C

Turkish Flag Burned In Yerevan On Eve Of 98th Anniversary Of Genocid

TURKISH FLAG BURNED IN YEREVAN ON EVE OF 98TH ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE

Tuesday,April 23

The flag of Turkey was burned in Liberty Square of Yerevan today –
on the eve of the 98th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide committed
in the Ottoman Empire in 1915. With this symbolic action, the annual
traditional torch-light procession in memory of the Genocide victims
began. Every year the procession participants go to Tsitsernakaberd
Memorial Complex on April 23 – the eve of the Armenian Genocide
Remembrance Day. The torch-light procession is organized by
ARF-Dashnaktsutyun Party.

A huge crowd gathered in Liberty Square today. Activists carried flags
of Armenia and ARFD, torches, candles, and placards denouncing Turkey.

Patriotic songs were sung.

TODAY, 21:03

Aysor.am

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2013/04/23/genoside-april/

Congressman Sherman: Last Act Of Any Genocide Is Denial

CONGRESSMAN SHERMAN: LAST ACT OF ANY GENOCIDE IS DENIAL

PanARMENIAN.Net – U.S. Congressman Brad Sherman sent a letter to
President Barack Obama on the eve of the 98th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide.

“During World War I and its aftermath, the Ottoman Empire attempted
to destroy the Armenian population of Eastern Anatolia.

Unfortunately, there are many who deny that the first genocide of the
20th Century actually took place, despite the acknowledgement of the
events as such by historians from across the globe, including Turkish
historians. As the 98th anniversary of this tragic event approaches,
I urge you to proclaim that the Armenian Genocide is a fact and refer
to these atrocities as “genocide” in your annual statement,” Rep.
Sherman said.

“As a Senator, you strongly supported passage of the Armenian
Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106 and S.Res.106). American should never
be associated with genocide denial. The victims of the Armenian
Genocide deserve our recognition. It is in our national interest
to recognize and remember the past. We must learn from these crimes
against humanity to ensure that they are never repeated,” he reminded.

“The last act of any genocide is genocide denial, and the first
act of preventing the next genocide is acknowledging past acts of
genocide. It is long overdue that the United States be on the right
side of this issue and affirm what history has shown to be true.

Dozens of state and local governments in the Unites States, in addition
to foreign governments, have declared the systematic killing of
Armenians perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th Century
to be genocide. I urge you, Mr. President, to recognize the Armenian
Genocide and put an end to the denial,” Rep. Sherman concluded.

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/155551/

Civilized Mankind Must Finally Hear Our Voice And Condemn The Terrib

CIVILIZED MANKIND MUST FINALLY HEAR OUR VOICE AND CONDEMN THE TERRIBLE CRIME COMMITTED BY OTTOMAN TURKEY. ARTSAKH PRESIDENT

20:39, 23 April, 2013

YEREVAN, APRIL 23, ARMENPRESS: President of Artsakh Republic Bako
Sahakyan issued an address on the occasion of Armenian Genocide
anniversary. As Armenpress was informed from NKR presidential press
service the letter mainly reads:

“Dear compatriots,

Every year on this very day the entire Armenian people in all quarters
of the world pay homage to the memory of 1,5 million innocent victims
of the 1915 Genocide. We once again raise our voice against violence
and massacres, evil and crime, for the victory of historic justice
and exclusion of further genocides.

The civilized mankind must finally hear our voice that calls for
protecting and developing national and human values must condemn the
terrible crime carried out by the Ottoman Turkey.

The Armenian nation has many friends who have helped us both at that
critical moment, giving harbor to our barely-survived compatriots and
today standing beside us supporting our demands. We remember everyone
and are profoundly grateful to all of you.

Strengthening day by day the independent Armenian statehood and
cementing the Armenia-Artsakh-Diaspora unshakable trinity, we move
with firm and steady steps towards secure and safe future, building
a strong and developed homeland for the generations to come. This
is our response to all the hardship; this is the only way of keeping
alive the memory of all the victims”.

New Building Of Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute To Be Ready In 20

NEW BUILDING OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM-INSTITUTE TO BE READY IN 2015

16:02 ~U 23.04.13

Construction works are under way near the Armenian Genocide
Museum-Institute as a result of which the territory of the museum will
be extended twice.

The new building of the museum will be ready in 2015, director of the
museum-institute Hayk Demoyan told the reporters today at a news
conference on Monday.

He said the territory of exhibition room will be extended 2.5 times.

“All this intends lasting, hard work as we are preparing the
exposition on the basis of absolutely new concept and a new museum
culture will be introduced in Armenia,” he said.

Demoyan said the world practice shows that at least 8-10 years are
necessary for creating new museum while here the works have already
kicked off and are intended to be accomplished in 3-4 years.

He convinced that by 2015 the museum will be ready.

He stressed that new materials will be presented which will completely
change the ideas, perceptions and knowledge about the Armenian
Genocide.

“It will become a serious tool in our mission of international
recognition of the Armenian genocide,” he said.

Armenian News – Tert.am

The PACE Has Prepared A Report Criticizing The Presidential Election

THE PACE HAS PREPARED A REPORT CRITICIZING THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA

April 22 2013

Today, on the first day of the PACE spring session, the report on the
presidential election that took place in the Republic of Armenia on
February 18 authored by Karin Woldseth, the head of the Norwegian
delegation and a member of the Committee on Political Affairs and
Human Rights, will be discussed. The report points out the results of
the PACE monitoring mission. The document describes the presidential
election held on February 18 “as generally well-administered,”
but it also points out a series of shortcomings. The section called
“Conclusions,” in particular, reads: “A number of shortcomings were
observed during the February 18, 2013, presidential election, in
particular the abuse of administrative resources and the interference
in the election process by candidate proxies and supporters that
run counter to European standards for democratic elections and that
negatively affect the public trust in the electoral process. We urge
the authorities to address these serious shortcomings, investigate
all allegations of electoral fraud and misconduct and punish any
perpetrators in line with the law.” The report expresses concern at
the fact that voters’ choice was narrowed down by the decision of
main political forces not to nominate candidates for the election.

Regarding the election campaign, the report reads: “Contestants were
able to campaign freely. Media fulfilled their legal obligation to
provide balanced coverage. At the same time, a lack of impartiality
of the public administration, misuse of administrative resources,
and cases of pressure on voters were of concern. While election day
was calm and orderly, some serious violations were observed.” The
PACE report presents the February 18 presidential election in the
context of the events of March 1, 2008, and it is stated that this
was the first election organized after those tragic events. As an
important feature of the 2013 presidential election, it is mentioned:
“Three main political forces didn’t participate in the election,
the opposition forces failed to agree on a common candidate; this
affected the dynamics of competition and scope of choice in this
election.” The document prepared by the PACE states that candidate
Raffi Hovhannisyan’s campaign was the most visible and notes regarding
Serzh Sargsyan’s election campaign: “Incumbent President Serzh Sargsyan
had an extensive network of campaign and Republican Party offices
throughout the country (1 186 outside Yerevan alone) at his disposal.

The other candidates had only a limited number of offices in the larger
cities.” Deeming this election a step forward as compared to the 2008
election, the report reads: “The campaign regulations did not provide
sufficient protection against the misuse of administrative resources,
nor against the blurring of the distinction between the State and the
ruling party. OSCE/ODIHR long-term observers verified instances of
misuse of administrative resources in favor of the incumbent, both
in Yerevan and in the regions, such as pressure on public workers
by superiors to attend campaign events, campaign offices located
in buildings occupied by State and local government bodies. A large
number of public and civil servants took leave to participate in the
campaign activities of the incumbent president, not distinguishing
between State and political party as well as between official and
campaign functions.” The PACE report also points out a number of
cases of electoral fraud, including ballot boxes not properly sealed,
seemingly identical signatures on the voters’ lists, double voting,
proxy voting, multiple voting. The report states that there were many
cases when voters were turned away because their names were not on
the voters’ lists. Tatev HARUTYUNYAN

Read more at:

© 1998 – 2013 Aravot – News from Armenia

http://en.aravot.am/2013/04/22/153815/

Al-Monitor: The Israeli Politics Behind The Armenian Genocide

AL-MONITOR: THE ISRAELI POLITICS BEHIND THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

14:07 23.04.2013

“On Wednesday, April 24, the world will mark the 98th anniversary of
the genocide carried out against the Armenians by the Ottoman Empire.

As it does every year, this year, too, Israel will be silent. The
Jewish state, which just two weeks ago honored the 6 million Jews who
perished in the Holocaust, will abstain from marking the genocide in
which 1 million to 1.5 million Armenians perished. President Shimon
Peres, who spoke at the central memorial ceremony at Yad Vashem and
pointed a finger at “those who forget and deny the Holocaust,” will
continue, as he does every year, to ignore the cruel genocide carried
out a quarter of a century before World War II,” reads an article
published by the Al-Monitor.

When Adolf Hitler was asked how the world would respond to his “Final
Solution” plan – the extermination of the Jewish people in Europe – he
replied, without compunction: “Who, after all, speaks today of the
annihilation of the Armenians?”

“Germany speaks today of the annihilation of the Jews, assumes
responsibility for the Holocaust, memorializes the victims and
compensates the survivors. Turkey not only refuses to recognize the
Armenian genocide – its government conducts all-out wars against
states that mention the event and punishes governments that grant it
official recognition. Only a year and a half ago, Turkey recalled its
ambassador from Paris to protest the French parliament’s approval of
legislation that criminalizes the denial of the Armenian genocide,”
author Akiva Eldar reminds.

The man who coined the term genocide and fought for adoption of the
treaty was the Jewish-Polish jurist Raphael Lemkin, whose entire
family was annihilated in the Holocaust. He himself managed to flee to
the United States. Lemkin referred specifically to the Armenian
annihilation as an act of genocide. This position was never adopted by
Israeli governments. The official Israeli position was summed up in
2001 in an interview by then-Foreign Minister Shimon Peres with the
Turkish Daily News: “The Armenians suffered a tragedy,” he said, “but
not genocide.”

In advance of the Armenian memorial day someone should point out to
the president a compilation of testimony provided by members of Nili
(a Jewish spy ring that operated in Palestine during World War I in an
effort to help the British army wrest it from the Turks) about what
befell the Armenians. He might just change his mind.

This is the testimony of Eitan Belkind, a Nili man who infiltrated the
Turkish military:

“I was amazed to see the river colored red with the blood and bodies
of decapitated children floating on the water. The sight was
horrendous – and we are powerless to help.” Belkind later described
how Circassian soldiers ordered the Armenians to gather thorns and
thistles and form them into a large pyramid, tied some 5,000 people to
each other hand to hand in a ring around the thorn pile and set it on
fire. “The fire rose to the sky along with the screams of the wretched
people charred to death in the bonfire,” he wrote. “I fled from the
place because I could not watch that horrible scene. I urged my horse
to gallop with all his might and after a wild two-hour ride I could
still hear their miserable cries until their voices died out. Two days
later I went back to the place and saw the charred bodies of thousands
of human beings.”

In a memorandum submitted to the British Ministry of Defense in 1916,
Nili leader Aaron Aaronsohn wrote: “The massacre of the Armenians is a
well-planned Turkish action and the Germans were partners in this
shameful act.”

These harsh words were echoed at a seminar held on April 11 of this
year on the subject of “The Nakba in Israel’s National Memory” (by The
Walter Lebach Institute for Jewish-Arab Coexistence through Education
and the Tami Steinmetz Center for Peace Research at Tel Aviv
University). During the discussion, Professor Yair Auron of the Open
University, who for years has been leading a determined struggle for
recognition of the Armenian genocide, was sharply critical of the
indifference of Israel’s political and academic elite to the tragedies
of other nations. Later, in an interview with Al-Monitor, Auron
contended that through their indifference, “they are defiling the
memory of the Holocaust.”

“And, in fact, other than a handful of right- and left-wing
politicians, none of the leaders of mainstream Israeli politics showed
up. For them, any attempt to hint that other peoples were also
persecuted and massacred for racist reasons is considered “disrespect
for the Holocaust” (they themselves, on the other hand, often use the
term “Holocaust,” especially to scare the Israeli public with the
Iranian threat). They do not define the Armenian genocide as a
human-Jewish-ethical issue. Israeli universities make do with teaching
the Jewish Holocaust and evince no interest in the disasters of other
peoples. Nonetheless, at Auron’s instigation, the Open University has
for several years been teaching a course on the Armenian genocide,
which is much in demand by students,” Akiva Eldar writes.

According to the author, “The recognition of the Armenian genocide by
Israeli decision-makers is a question of politics, of the relationship
between Israel, Turkey and the United States. “Who cares about
relations with little Armenia (3 million citizens)? In fact, Israel
even earned several million dollars recently, benefiting from the
Turkish government’s decision to cancel a weapons deal with France in
retaliation for the above-mentioned legislation against denial of the
Armenian genocide. ”

In 2007, the Knesset decided to remove from its daily agenda a
proposal by Knesset Member Haim Oron of the Meretz Party to debate the
Armenian genocide in the Education and Culture Committee. The decision
resulted from orders by then Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Foreign
Minister Tzipi Livni, who feared that further discussion of the issue
would lead to a diplomatic crisis between Israel and Turkey.

In a debate that took place in the Knesset five years later (June 12,
2012), over the objections of the diplomatic echelon, the government’s
representative, then Minister of Environmental Protection Gilad Erdan,
confessed that “this whole debate is taking place against the backdrop
of relations between Israel and Turkey.” Nothing has changed.

At the low point of relations with Turkey, following the failed May
2010 Israeli takeover of the flotilla to Gaza which gave birth to the
“Marmara Crisis,” some right-wing politicians suggested “punishing”
the Turks by recognizing the Armenian genocide. And what would we have
done now? Would Prime Minister Netanyahu have repealed the recognition
of the Armenian genocide to complement his apology to Turkey over the
Marmara? Hearing of that idea, Auron reacts with anger: “As a human
being and as a Jew, I am deeply ashamed that an issue of such basic
principle and ethics has been turned into a pawn.”

The office of President Peres did not respond to a query by
Al-Monitor, asking whether he had changed his mind regarding the
genocide of the Armenian people.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/04/23/al-monitor-the-israeli-politics-behind-the-armenian-genocide/