Iraqi Kurdistan: Festival Planned to Increase Genocide Awareness

UNPO: Unrepresented Nations & Peoples Oragnization
Aug 13 2012

Iraqi Kurdistan: Festival Planned to Increase Genocide Awareness

Preparations for a Kurdish culture festival are underway in Georgia in
a bid to raise awareness on the Kurdish genocide and to draw links
between it and the Armenian genocide.

Below is an article published by AKnews:

Badrkhan Publishers is organizing a Kurdish culture festival in
Georgia for the end of this month to raise awareness of the Kurdish
and Armenian genocides.

Director of the publishers Hamid Badrkhan said: “In order to build a
bridge between Kurds and world, we decided to hold a culture festival
in Georgia on August 28 [2012].”

Badrkhan said a collection of activities will be carried out under the
name “Kurdistan towards a bright future”, such as seminars, an art
exhibition and parties.

The director added: “Children and women are also participating in the
event to show their work.”

Preparations for the festival are now complete. Forty Kurdish artists
and intellectuals from the UK have confirmed their participation in
the event.

On June 14, 1988 the former Iraqi regime carried out a series of
genocides under the name Anfal against the Kurdish people.

http://www.unpo.org/article/14695

Armenian-Syrian Musician: Craziness to Support the Assad Regime!

Qantara.de, Germany
Aug 13 2012

The Armenian-Syrian Musician Hrach Macoushian: ”It is Craziness to
Support the Assad Regime!”

Hrach Macoushian is a musician from Aleppo in Syria. The Armenian
with Syrian citizenship came to Yerevan two years ago to escape
military service in Syria. Lennart Lehmann talked to him about the
prospects for the Armenian minority in Syria and about his experiences
under the Assad regime
.
What does the Armenian minority in Syria think about the Assad regime?

Hrach Macoushian: The Armenians in Syria live outside the combat zone.
Many of them support Assad.

Why?

Macoushian: Because they are stupid (laughs). They think that Assad
protects minorities, though everybody should know that it is a lie to
say that this regime protects minorities. There has never been a
problem there. Anyway, the Armenians have a Muslim Brotherhood complex
` they think that the Muslim Brotherhood is going to turn on the
Armenians and the Christians after the regime has gone. The Armenians
believe the regime’s propaganda. But the Muslim Brotherhood has never
murdered Armenians in the past. They have always just fought against
the nationalists.

Besides, all members of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood have either been
murdered by the government or they have gone into exile. The negative
image of the Muslim Brotherhood was created later by the regime in
order to discredit them. This party that people are so afraid of
doesn’t exist any longer. That is the difference to the Egyptian
Muslim Brotherhood.

What do the Armenians in Syria think about the civil war?

Macoushian: The Armenians are very detached from what is happening in
Syria. They are very blinkered. They tend to keep themselves to
themselves; stay within their own communities. Most Armenians don’t
have Arab friends. And that means more paranoia!

“Critics say the opposition is disorganised, but I say it is
decentralised.” Hrach Macoushian during the interview in Yerevan They
find out about what is happening outside their neighbourhood from the
President and from the state media. They are told that there are
terrorists out there, and if they get into power they will kill all
Armenians, Christians and other minorities.

What made you turn your back on the Baath regime?

Macoushian: I have always been impressed by articulate people with
persuasive ideas. I started playing concerts when I was 17 and spent a
lot of time in the company of musicians. One evening, when I was 18,
the security forces came to our house and they lied to my father. They
said there had been burglary somewhere near his shop and asked him to
accompany them to the Political Security Directorate. They said he
should take me along as well. When we got there, they told my father
to go. I was forced to stay; they abducted me.

They began to interrogate me. There were seven or eight of them,
asking me questions and threatening me. They wanted to know the names
of all my friends. The people I know. It went on for seven hours.
Finally, I had to sign a piece of paper that said that I promised to
stand by my country. After that, they took me home.

That interrogation led to one of my friends going to prison and being
tortured. And sometimes I think that it was my fault that that
happened. They wanted to know about my friend’s opinions. During the
interrogation, I told them what my friend’s opinions were, and they
tortured him for having opinions. That was probably the moment when I
began to hate the regime.

Why does the regime not trust you?

Macoushian: We played Western music. Metallica, Led Zeppelin. We would
meet in houses. There are generally very few reasons for people to
gather together in Syria, apart from family celebrations or religious
ceremonies. The security forces saw that a group of young people were
meeting and they saw it as a threat. They wanted to know what we were
thinking, what we were talking about.

Armenian Genocide Martyrs’ Memorial in Deir ez-Zor, Syria, a complex
dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide.
According to estimates there are 150,000 Armenians in Syria Sometimes
we also met in the street, five people only, no more, and the police
would ask us what we were doing there. I mean, people getting together
is the most natural thing in the world ` and they wanted to know why!

Your friends were tortured, you say?

Macoushian: Yes. And I have seen the torture devices. These things
don’t have proper names, only nicknames. One of them was called the
“Flying Carpet”, for example. It slowly bends your back until you
can’t breathe. I also met someone once who had been beaten on the
soles of his feet with electric cables. The wounds were terrible.
Another friend of mine lost an important document during his military
service. They threw him into a small, dark cell, with no light at all,
for three months. They call it the “Polish Prison”.

He could hear the screams of people being tortured. He was only
allowed out for a couple of minutes, once a day. For a long time
afterwards, he wasn’t able to walk. He hadn’t committed any crime, you
know. He hadn’t killed anybody, but they stuck him in a black box.

I met a Kurdish girl whose brother had been abducted, just like I was.
They tortured him and pulled out his fingernails. At least he came
home. Others were not so lucky. Everybody in Syria knows stories like
this. Everybody knows what is going on. If you are a dissident living
in a rented apartment in a high-rise block ` then they will come and
just shoot up the whole building. It is craziness to support Assad.
You support this regime? You support these procedures? Of course not!
That’s why I say the Armenians are stupid.

Some political groups in the world are reluctant to openly oppose the
Assad regime. At the beginning many people were pinning their hopes on
the young President Bashar al-Assad…

Macoushian: The Baath Party was founded by nationalist Muslims and
Christians. Then one of them grabbed all of the power for himself. If
you talk about the Baath Part today, then I don’t see any socialism,
unity or freedom anymore. I see only one greedy, power-hungry man and
his family who have ruled Syria for 60 years. When Hafiz al-Assad had
50,000 people killed in Hama back in the 1980s it was more an
ideological thing. But what is going on in Syria now is very
different. Bashar al-Assad is only fighting for power.

If you grow up like Bashar, as son of a dictator, then you live in a
phoney reality. Everyone lies to you; no one is honest with you. I
think Bashar has problems recognising the truth. And I doubt whether
there is anyone in the world who would want to be governed by someone
who has problems recognising reality. And the system will go on. When
some journalists asked Bashar how he explains what is happening in the
country to his children, he replied that he tells them that the people
he is fighting against are all terrorists. So he is passing on his own
distorted picture of reality to the children who are supposed to one
day govern Syria.

How do you assess the situation of the Syrian opposition?

Macoushian: The opposition is trying to organise. Many activists are
involved in fighting the regime. What makes me optimistic is the fact
that the Syrian opposition is not centralised, as it is in Armenia.
The Syrian opposition is united in its struggle against the regime,
but there is a very broad spectrum of people involved. The Syrian
opposition is very open and very broadly based. Anyone who sees that
as a weakness doesn’t really appreciate what is happening. Critics say
the opposition is disorganised, but I say it is decentralised. I don’t
think of it as a weakness. It is just less easy to get the measure of.

How do the Armenians in Syria see the conflict going?

Macoushian: They believe that the regime will crush the rebellion and
that everything will go back to the way it was before. But Syria will
never return to the way it was before. Syria is going to be different.
You have a common goal, and that is to fight oppression. Afterwards
life will be different. Now it is time for the Syrians to make their
voices heard, to say what they think. They have not been able to do
that for many years. It is very possible that everything will not be
as we might hope after the Assad regime falls. But it cannot be any
worse than it is now.

Interview conducted by Lennart Lehmann

Translated from the German by Ron Walker

http://en.qantara.de/It-is-Craziness-to-Support-the-Assad-Regime/19632c20882i1p497/

Defence Army denies: Armenian side did not violate ceasefire regime

Defence Army denies: Armenian side did not violate ceasefire regime

17:20, 13 August, 2012

YEREVAN, AUGUST 13, ARMENPRESS: Armenian side did not violate the
ceasefire regime. Armenpress was informed from press secretary of
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Defence Army Seno Hasratyan that the
information spread by Azerbaijani media does not correspond to
reality.

`The frontline divisions of Defence Army keep and respect the
ceasefire regime all along the contact line. Azerbaijani side has
spread another disinformation’ mentioned Hasratyan.

Azerbaijani media have spread information that agedly Azerbaijani
soldier 19 years old Faik Mirzamagomed oglu Rishanov had been wounded
in head in Aghdam region than he died in hospital in result of
violation of ceasefire regime.

Earlier Armenpress had informed that according to the operative data
of Nagorno Karabakh Defense Army media and propaganda department, 1000
shots have been fired from various caliber weapons towards Armenian
positions during the last week.

The opponent has violated the cease fire regime at the Line of Contact
between Nagorno Karabakh andAzerbaijanover 200 times from July 5to
August 11.

L’Arménie également secouée par le séisme meurtrier de la région de

SEISME
L’Arménie également secouée par le séisme meurtrier de la région de
Tabriz au nord-ouest de l’Iran

Le séisme qui a frappé le nord-ouest de l’Iran hier à 16h53
principalement la région de l’Azerbaïdjan oriental a fait probablement
plusieurs centaines de morts et d’énormes dégts matériels. C’est la
région de Tabriz, ville de 1,5 million d’habitants qui a été touchée.
L’Institut d’études géologiques américain a estimé à 6,4 la première
secousse et la deuxième à 6,3 selon l’échelle utilisée pour les
tremblements de terre. L’épicentre du séisme se trouvant à 64 km à
l’est de Tabriz. Plusieurs répliques ont été ressenties dans la
région.

La secousse a également été ressentie en Arménie. A Erévan, mais
surtout la région du Siynik, au sud de l’Arménie. Le téléphérique du
monastère de Datev a arrêté son fonctionnement par sécurité. De
nombreuses routes dont celle reliant Meghri à Erévan sont
partiellement dangereuses par notamment des éboulements de roches
intervenues lors des secousses. En Arménie, la secousse était de 4,5
degrés dans les villes d’Akarag, Meghri, Katcharan, Ghapan et Goris.
Dans cette région du Siyunik en Arménie, de nombreux habitants
d’immeubles de plusieurs étages vont par précaution des répliques,
passer la nuit dehors.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 12 août 2012,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Turquie : croissez et multipliez-vous !

Turquie : croissez et multipliez-vous !

Publié le : 10-08-2012

Info Collectif VAN – – « Les minorités reconnues
de Turquie devraient faire en sorte d’augmenter leur taux de natalité
afin que leurs populations s’accroissent », a déclaré le 7 août le
vice-premier ministre Bülent Arinç, au cours d’un repas de rupture du
jeûne (iftar), avec des représentants non-musulmans à Ankara. « Vos
taux de natalités sont bas. Le Premier ministre a donné un chiffre, je
ne veux pas le répéter, mais j’aimerais que votre population augmente
», a-t-il dit aux communautés des minorités, faisant référence Ã
l’appel du Premier ministre Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an aux familles turques,
leur demandant d’avoir trois enfants chacune. » Et d’ajouter plus loin
que la Turquie se préoccupe de ses minorités, qu’elle souhaite le
retour de leur membres partis à l’étranger et que « Tant que les gens
exprimeront leurs demandes d’une façon civilisée, légale et
démocratique, sans recourir à la violence ou à la terreur comme une
voie vers une solution, il n’y aura pas de problèmes. » Il suffit donc
de faire des réclamations poliment¦ Le Collectif VAN vous livre la
traduction d’un article en anglais paru sur le site turc Hurriyet
Daily News le 9 août 2012.

Légende photo : Le vice-président de l’AKP Hüseyin Çelik (2e à gauche)
et le vice-premier ministre Bülent Arinç (au milieu) réunis avec les
représentants des fondations des minorités. Photo AA.

Hurriyet Daily News

Multipliez-vous, déclare Arinç aux minorités

ANKARA – Anatolia News Agency

Les minorités reconnues de Turquie devraient faire en sorte
d’augmenter leur taux de natalité afin que leurs populations
s’accroissent, a déclaré le 7 août le vice-premier ministre Bülent
Arinç, au cours d’un repas de rupture du jeûne (iftar), avec des
représentants non-musulmans à Ankara.

« Vos taux de natalités sont bas. Le Premier ministre a donné un
chiffre, je ne veux pas le répéter, mais j’aimerais que votre
population augmente », a-t-il dit aux communautés des minorités,
faisant référence à l’appel du Premier ministre Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an
aux familles turques, leur demandant d’avoir trois enfants chacune.

Arinç a également parlé du nombre des non-musulmans partis Ã
l’étranger en raison d’expériences douloureuses. « Si seulement ils
revenaient pour que nous puissions vivre de nouveau ensemble. Je crois
que cela se réalisera à l’avenir », a ditArinç.

Évoquant la restitution en cours des propriétés appartenant aux
fondations des minorités, le vice-premier ministre a dit que la
question la plus urgente était le retour des biens immobiliers pris
aux fondations. Environ 165 fondations des minorités tombent dans
cette catégorie, mais le nombre pourrait augmenter, a-t-il dit.

Arinç a également dit que 42 fondations des minorités avaient réclamé
218 biens immobiliers et que 43 d’entre eux avaient été reconnus,
tandis que 25 ne l’avaient pas été. Une compensation a été versée dans
un cas, tandis que des réparations sur d’autres propriétés sont en
cours, a-t-il ajouté.

Progrès lent et régulier sur les minorités

S’exprimant lors du dîner, le vice-président du Parti pour la justice
et le développement (AKP), Hüseyin Çelik, s’en est pris au Parti
illégal des travailleurs du Kurdistan (PKK) pour ses tactiques
violentes.

« Ã chaque fois nous prenons des mesures démocratiques et effectuons
des améliorations concernant des demandes raisonnables, légales et
rationnelles de citoyens kurdes, le PKK et ses partisans disent : ‘
Est-ce que tout cela se passe tout seul ? Nous répandons du sang, en
tuant et étant tué ; en retour, nous obtenons des compromis petit Ã
petit ‘ », a dit Çelik.

« Et nous leur disons, ‘ Vous avez répandu le plus de sang dans les
années 1990. Mais alors, la volonté politique de montrer la mentalité
de l’AKP n’était pas présente. Seuls les aspects militaires de la
question ont été discutés. Nous faisons des améliorations en ce qui
concerne nos citoyens non-musulmans et les fondations des minorités.
Nous ne le faisons pas, parce que nous avons peur d’eux lorsqu’ils
prennent les armes et se dirigent vers les montagnes [pour combattre].
Tant que les gens exprimeront leurs demandes d’une façon civilisée,
légale et démocratique, sans recourir à la violence ou à la terreur
comme une voie vers une solution, il n’y aura pas de problème », a
déclaré le vice-président du parti.

Çelik a également relaté une histoire d’un ami syriaque, qui disait
que la communauté avait ouvert un jardin d’enfants, mais était
incapable d’offrir un enseignement dans la langue syriaque.

« Je l’ai pris comme un déshonneur. Ils ouvrent une école, la langue
d’enseignement est le turc, mais vous ne leur permettez pas d’avoir
l’option d’un enseignement dans la langue maternelle », a dit Çelik. «
Bien sûr, vous ne pouvez pas faire ça. Tout n’est pas rose. Il y a
toujours tant de choses à faire. Nous surmonterons de tels obstacles
grce au dialogue. »

9 août 2012

©Traduction de l’anglais C.Gardon pour le Collectif VAN ` 9 août 2012
` 07:00 –

Retour à la rubrique

Source/Lien : Hurriyet Daily News

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=66287
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org

Strong Earthquakes Hit North Iran, Felt In Armenia

Payvand, Iran
Aug 11 2012

Strong Earthquakes Hit North Iran, Felt In Armenia

Two strong earthquakes have hit northwestern Iran, sparking panic
among some of the 1.5 million residents of the city of Tabriz and
across the border in Armenia.

Tehran University’s Seismological Center said the first earthquake had
a magnitude of 6.2 with its epicenter some 60 kilometers from Tabriz.

That was followed by a second earthquake with a magnitude of 6.0.

The U.S. Geological Survey, which monitors earthquakes worldwide, said
the first quake measured 6.2 and the second 6.3.

Further from the epicenter, the earthquake was still sufficiently
powerful to shake residents in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, and send
people running from their homes into the streets.

Armenian officials said preliminary reports indicted no major damage
or casualties were caused by the earthquakes.

Based on reporting by AFP and Interfax

http://www.payvand.com/news/12/aug/1091.html

The Kids Named the Lodge `Parev-Doon’

The Kids Named the Lodge `Parev-Doon’

asbarez
Friday, August 10th, 2012

BY CATHERINE YESAYAN

It was around 8:30 p.m. when I arrived at `Parev-Doon,’ a hostel-type
lodging in Yerevan. The aromas of homemade lasagna and pizza filled
the air. Zabelle Berberian, the proprietor of the `huranotz’
(hostel), was serving dinner to a group of Armenian students from
Toronto, Canada, who were staying there.

I was there to meet Yetvart Balian, the principle of the St Sahag & St
Mesrob Armenian Saturday School in Toronto. It was easy to spot him
among the noisy teenagers. I wanted to talk with Balian to learn about
the Armenian community in Toronto and the group of students that he
was accompanying.

This is Balian’s second year as principle. The school has been in
existence since 1956, and operates under the auspices of the Holy
Trinity Armenian Apostolic church. It is named after two saints, Sourp
Sahak and Sourp Mesrop.

The school has 220 students and operates only on Saturdays, holding
classes from nursery school age (three-year-olds) through 8th grade.
The curriculum is in Western Armenian, but they hold one class in
Eastern Armenian. The school uses the AGBU’s (Armenian General
Benevolent Union) school compound for its classrooms.

The main goal of the school is to promote Armenian identity, and
preserve heritage and culture. For the last 11 years, it has
organized annual tours to Armenia for graduating 8th graders. This
year they had 20 graduates, 17 of which participated in the tour.

‘Parev Doon’ participants

Andranik Chilingarian, the teacher of graduating class, has
accompanied each group of 8th graders since the inception of the tour
in 2001. Another teacher/chaperon is Nairi Ghazarian, who herself
once was a student at ARS Armenian school.

With 25,000 Armenians, Toronto has a very active Armenian community
and a full calendar of cultural events. The ARS (Armenian Relief
Society) has a regular day school, with 500 students from preschool to
12th grade. The Armenian Catholic Church of St. Gregory the
Illuminator conducts another Saturday school from kindergarten through
8th grade. Unfortunately, this year, AGBU had to close the doors of
their school.

The evening I met the group, they had just arrived from visiting Lake
Sevan. They had also enjoyed swimming in the lake. The day before they
had gotten a kick out of being doused during the water-feast of
Vartavar. As I talked to a few of the students, they told me that it
was fun when a car stopped and someone from inside of the car doused
them with a water-gun. They’ve celebrated the water-feast of Vartavar
in Toronto, but not to the extent they experienced in the streets of
Yerevan where buckets of water are thrown.

The group arrived July 10 and was scheduled to leave July 25, giving
them two weeks in Noah’s Land to marvel about our ancestral past. The
first day of the trip was spent visiting the `Dzidzernakabert’
(genocide museum), where they were exposed to the dark pages of our
history.

I asked Balian which of the places on their tour the students enjoyed
most. He said, `Their most favorite and memorable sight was
Khor-Virab. They also enjoyed the singing fountains of the Republic
Square in Yerevan. They were really charmed by the synchronized
movement of the colorful fountains dancing to the songs of Charles
Aznavour.’

Being the school’s principal is a volunteer job for Balian. He puts in
a tremendous amount of time, and he enjoys it a lot. He says, `it is
gratifying to pass the torch to the next generation.’

Balian was born and raised in Bolis (Istanbul). Growing up in Bolis,
Balian felt oppression from the Turkish government towards Armenians.
His grandfather was from Sebastia, Turkey, and had witnessed the mass
deportation of Armenians and the atrocities toward his people, however
he never talked about it.

After graduating the Armenian Mkhitarian high school, in 1980 Balian
moved from Bolis to Montreal. He is married with two children and has
been living in Toronto since 1988.

After talking to Balian I asked Berberian to tell me a little bit
about the kids staying at the lodge. `Parev Doon’ the lodge has
hosted the group of the students for their summer stay. Berberian
herself is a Canadian-Armenian and she enjoys having the group, that
has stayed there for the last seven years.

She said, usually when the group arrives, at the beginning there are
a few kids who are homesick, but by the end everybody is happy to have
spent two weeks in Armenia. She thinks it is a great endeavor from
the part of the school to bring the kids to Armenia and to connect
them with their roots.

She also mentioned that it was this group that seven years ago at
their first stay, gave the lodge, the name of `Parev Doon’ – `Hello
Home.’ She and her husband had started the business a few years
earlier but they had not finalized a name.

I left Parev Doon with a heart full of joy and wondered about all the
efforts that everybody is putting to rebound Armenia.

Catherine Yesayan is a contributor to Asbarez. You may reach her at
[email protected] or read her stories on her blog

Armenia’s political field open for new opposition – newspaper

Armenia’s political field open for new opposition – newspaper

news.am
August 11, 2012 | 06:50

YEREVAN.- In parallel with mass migration Armenia is facing shortage
of qualified personnel in all fields, Hraparak daily writes.

`This refers to politicians as well. It seems there are many
politicians in Armenia. But in fact the political field is extremely
`poor’. No one doubts there is lack of strong, courageous opposition.
Strong suspicion on the one hand, and double game as well as vague
position on the other weakened the political field. It is open for new
strong consolidated opposition force.

A small group of new people can play an important role and lead masses
if they make the right moves and avoid cheating,’ the newspaper
writes.

Conference on Armenian, Jewish, and Tutsi Genocides Held in Rwanda

Conference on Armenian, Jewish, and Tutsi Genocides Held in Rwanda

>From l to r. row 1: Donald Miller, (unknown),John Bosco Siboyintore, Wendy
Lower, Peter Balakian, Bianca Bagatourian, Deborah Lipstadt, Hadley Rose;
row 2: unknown, Tom Nhadiro, Jean-Pierre Karegeye, Glen Ford, Solange
Umulisa, Jose Kagabo

KIGALI, Rwanda – `Genocide and Denial: The Armenian, Jewish, and Tutsi
Genocide’ was hosted by and held at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Centre in
conjunction with CNLG (National Commission for the Fight Against Genocide)
in Kigali, Rwanda from July 17 to 18.

The Memorial Cenre houses a museum that includes exhibits on the Armenian
genocide, the Holocaust, the Cambodian genocide, the Bosnian genocide, and
genocide in Darfur. The two-day conference featured papers by distinguished
scholars from the United States, Europe, and Rwanda. Its primary focus was
the analysis of denial as a facet of genocide’s aftermath. The Rwandan
media including Rwanda TV covered the conference and The Rwandan New Times
ran a feature article `Scholars Discuss Impact of Genocide Denial.’

The Master of Ceremonies and conference co-organizer, playwright Bianca
Bagatourian, called the conference to order on Tuesday morning July 17,
noting that many things, including `the legacies of denial perpetrated by
the Turkish state, anti-Semitic groups, and Hutu nationalists, connect the
three unambiguous cases of genocide in the twentieth century.’ Because
denial is always an issue following genocide, Jean-Pierre Karegeye, Tom
Ndahiro, Jose Kagabo, and Hadley Rose all discussed various dimensions of
the denial issue in Rwanda today, and Rose discussed the problems that
arise in drafting genocide ideology laws.

Noted Holocaust scholar and conference participant, Deborah Lipstadt
emphasized that: `Denial of genocide whether that of the Turks against the
Armenians, or the Nazis against the Jews, or the Hutu against the Tutsi is
not an act of historical reinterpretation. Rather, the deniers sow
confusion by appearing to be engaged in a genuine scholarly effort. The
abundance of documents and testimonies that confirm the genocide are
dismissed as contrived, coerced, or forgeries and falsehoods. . . . Denial
of genocide strives to reshape history in order to demonize the victims and
rehabilitate the perpetrators.’

Conference co-organizer Peter Balakian later stated that `denialism is the
final stage of genocide, as it attempts to falsify history and create a
counterfeit universe for the survivors and their legacies, and it must be
studied and analyzed in order to be exposed for the ethical problems it
creates.’

The conference included a dynamic combination of lectures and presentations
that dealt with facets of genocide and dimensions of denial: Dr. Peter
Balakian, Colgate University, US: The Armenian Genocide and Modernity; and
A Fetishized Foreign Policy: Turkish State Denial of the Armenian Genocide.
Dr. José Kagabo, Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales, France:
On
Genocide Against the Tutsi in Rwanda: Different Forms of Denial; Dr.
Jean-Pierre Karegeye, Macalester College, US: Denying the Tutsi Genocide:
An African Paradigm? Dr. Deborah Lipstadt, Emory University, US: To Debate
or Not To Debate: Strategies for Addressing Genocide Denial – Like Trying
To Nail a Blob of Jelly to the Wall; Dr. Wendy Lower, Claremont McKenna
College, US: Landscapes of Destruction and Refuge – Topography of Genocide
in
Killing Fields of Eastern Europe; Tom Ndahiro, Researcher, IGSC, Rwanda:
When Racial Hatred is Fashionable, and Bigotry Eulogized; Dr. Donald
Miller, University of Southern California: The Role of Survivor Testimony
in Countering Genocide Denial: Comparing Oral History Testimony of Armenian
and Tutsi Genocide Survivors; Hadley Rose, Esq.: Re-Drafting Rwanda’s
Genocide Ideology Law; Dr. Gregory Stanton, George Mason University, US:
Tactics of Denial: A Comparison of Denial of the Armenian Genocide by the
Turkish State and Denial of the Tutsi Genocide in Rwanda by Hutu Power
Genocidaires.

During both days, audiences that included Rwandans, Europeans, and
Americans showed great interest in the presentations at the Kigali Genocide
Memorial Centre, which is now central to the cultural life of the city and
is also visited by thousands of tourists annually. The Kigali Memorial
Centre was established by the Aegis Trust, founded by Dr. James Smith, who
also created the Holocaust Memorial and Education Centre in the UK. The
staff of the Centre, led by Ms. Solange Umulisa, Deputy Director, did a
superb job of making the conference a groundbreaking international event.
`Having a scholarly symposium on Armenian, Jewish, and Tutsi genocides and
their aftermaths,’ Balakian noted, `in an important sub Saharan African
country like Rwanda opens up new pathways for intellectual work.’

http://asbarez.com/104699/conference-on-armenian-jewish-and-tutsi-genocides-held-in-rwanda/

Serzh Sargsyan cuts short vacation for talks with Vladimir Putin

Nezavisimaya Gazeta , Russia
Aug 8 2012

Iranian problem of Russia and Armenia. Serzh Sargsyan cuts short
vacation for talks with Vladimir Putin

by Yuriy Roks

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan begins his working visit today. As
the Kremlin press service announced, in the course of a meeting with
Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin, questions of bilateral
cooperation, the level of cooperation “within the scope of integration
processes, and specifically in such structures as the CIS and the
CSTO,” as well as the current pace of international life, including
the situation in the Transcaucasus, will be discussed.

Commenting on Sargsyan’s trip to Moscow, the Yerevan publication
Zhamanak (Vremya), expresses the suspicion that “something
extraordinary is happening.” In substantiation of its version, it is
saying that Putin is planning a visit to Armenia in September, when
the CSTO exercises will take place in the republic, and that, if
everything is good in Moscow-Yerevan relations, then why did Sargsyan
need to cut short his vacation and go to Belokamennaya? Zhamanak hints
that Russian high-level leaders are supposedly interested in a return
of Armenian ex-President Robert Kocharyan to politics, and are not
very happy that their plans on this question run counter to the
opinion of the Armenian authorities.

A source in Yerevan suggested that “conspiracy theories” should not be
taken seriously, if only because the Armenian president’s schedule
-and it was publicized by his staff not on the eve of the visit, but
much earlier – pointed out that “Sargsyan would cut short his vacation
to visit Moscow.” There is nothing urgent about the visit. It was
planned long ago, our Nezavisimaya Gazeta source assured us.

However, Sargsyan’s talks with Putin will not be easy. Of course, the
leaders of the strategic partner countries will discuss questions of
bilateral cooperation. They will also probably not overlook Armenia’s
request to allocate a loan (according to certain information, 1
billion dollars -Nezavisimaya Gazeta), which, we might say, was
overlooked some time ago during the work of the intergovernmental
commission. But the main topics of the negotiations will evidently be
regional. These are the events in Syria, which have caused an exodus
of Armenians, Abkhazians, Cherkess, and representatives of the Turkic
peoples to their historic homelands, but mainly – the scenario that is
forming around Iran and into which Azerbaijan is being drawn.

Baku’s attempts to be in the front ranks of the anti-Iranian coalition
have begun to bear fruit. In recent days, there have been several
indicative statements in the US by leading representatives of the
American political establishment, directly concerning Azerbaijan.

Former Congressman Michael McMahon called upon the White House to take
measures to protect Azerbaijan against the Iran’s threats. The
politician sees the reason for the threat – which still does not go
beyond the bounds of propaganda for the purpose of destabilizing the
situation within Azerbaijan – in the fact that Baku is a partner of
Washington and Tel-Aviv, who are enemies of Tehran. Meanwhile, Tehran
itself is friendly with Yerevan, which is at odds with Baku. The
logic, whose roots go back somewhere to the system of hierarchical
relations of feudal Europe, is unconvincing, especially if we recall
the relations within the triangle of Baku-Ankara-Tel-Aviv, in which
the last two cannot be said to have warm feelings towards each other.
However, American politicians have managed to teach them to take a
“non-standard” view of various situations and proposals which are
usually followed by actions. In the context of Azerbaijan, we would
like to hope that the matter will not go so far as the final stage –
that is, the country will not be drawn into the “heavyweight
proceedings.”

Not long before McMahon, incumbent Congressman Dana Rohrabacher called
upon the White House to focus attention on the sad fate of the
Azerbaijani people, who are living divided, and called for support of
the struggle of South Azerbaijan – a region in Iran – for
self-determination. We may recall that, in February of this year,
there were appeals in the Milli Majlis of Azerbaijan to rename the
country by means of adding the word, “Northern,” to its current name.
At that time, representatives of Baku had proposed to view the idea of
several deputies as an individual initiative, which did not presuppose
any global plans for annexation of the territories. But now we may say
that a trial balloon was launched in the Azerbaijani parliament in the
winter – such coincidences do not happen “just like that.”

Washington’s scenario is clear. The more countries there are that are
unhappy with Iran, the easier it is to depict it as the centre of
evil, whose “healing” is possible by means of a surgical operation.
Azerbaijan’s goal in the possible commotion is to be closer to the
leaders of the future coalition and, by providing services to them to
the extent of its capacities, to get a place under the sum. This is
evidenced by the exposed plots, and by the suppression of activity of
the Iranian secret agent network, and by the reciprocal propaganda,
which is no less fierce than that of Tehran, and by the decision to
exclude the Naftiran Intertrade Co (NICO) from the project for
building the Trans-Anatolian gas pipeline (TANAR), and by the
transparent hints that it would also be excluded from the Shakh Deniz
consortium, in which NICO owns a 10 per cent share, and also by a
series of diplomatic scandals. In positioning itself as an enemy of
Iran and an ally of the US and Company, it is unlikely that Baku’s
first priority goal is to “reunite” North and South Azerbaijan in a
convenient arrangement. Its present-day task is evidently more modest:
To get assistance from the West in regulating the Karabakh problem
according to its own scenario. It is no accident that a number of Baku
officials responded to the statements heard in the US about
Azerbaijani-Iranian relations with a reminder of Baku’s readiness to
ensure “the high autonomous status of Karabakh within the complement
of Azerbaijan.”

Yerevan is “interested” in what is going on, because it touches upon
its national interests. Moscow too is “interested,” as it considers
the South Caucasus to be not only a zone of its geopolitical
interests, but also its responsibility. Armenia – which borders
Western Iran (on which sights have been set), Azerbaijan and Turkey,
as well as Georgia, whose relations with Russia are generally known –
cannot help but be concerned about the question and mechanism of
receiving aid from its strategic partner and from the CSTO, if it
should suddenly be needed. It is natural that Russia also has
something to think about in case of extraordinary events. For example,
at the very least, about supplying a military base located in the
Armenian city of Gyumri.

[translated from Russian]