France Honors Memory Of Armenian Officer Gurgen Margaryan Killed By

FRANCE HONORS MEMORY OF ARMENIAN OFFICER GURGEN MARGARYAN KILLED BY AZERBAIJANI RAMIL SAFAROV

17:12 19/02/2014 >> SOCIETY

In the Armenian Church of St. John the Baptist (St. Hovhannes Mkrtich)
in Paris service for the peace of soul of Gurgen Margaryan, killed
by Azerbaijani Ramil Safarov, was held.

At the service, held on February 16, the employees of the Armenian
Embassy in France, the NKR representatives, members of Armenian
Organizations in France and local Armenian community were present.

Upon completion of the church-event those gathered there marched to
Yerevan Park in Paris, where, on behalf of the Armenians of Armenian
Republic, NKR and France laid wreaths and flowers at the monument
to Komitas. The procession was headed by the RA Ambassador to France
Vigen Chitechyan.

In 2004, Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan was taking part in
a three-month English course of NATO “Partnership for Peace” in
Budapest. Early in the morning of February 19 he was murdered. The
murderer – Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov – delivered 16 blows
of ax to the face of the sleeping Armenian officer. As a result, the
Hungarian court found him sane and sentenced him to life imprisonment
without a right of pardon for 30 years. The news about the extradition
of Ramil Safarov to his homeland and pardon by the Azerbaijani
president Ilham Aliyev broke out on August 31.

The pardoned murderer Ramil Safarov was greeted as a hero in
Azerbaijan; he was given an apartment and was paid an officer salary
for 8 years spent in detention. Moreover, Safarov was breveted
Major by the Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan, who also wished him
“every success.”

Because of Safarov’s extradition to Azerbaijan the president of Armenia
Serzh Sargsyan announced the suspension of diplomatic relations
with Hungary. Safarov’s extradition, pardon, and glorification in
Azerbaijan was condemned by the US president Barack Obama, US State
Department, Ministries of Foreign Affairs of Russia and France,
Secretary General of Council of Europe, Secretary General of CSTO,
NATO, and international human rights organizations. In addition to
that, European Parliament adopted a condemning resolution on September
13, 2012.

Today, February 19, the 10th anniversary of commemoration of Armenian
officer’s death. To the 10th anniversary of Gurgen Margaryan’s murder
in the frameworks of the “Ordinary Genocide” project a video-footage
has been prepared called “Azerbaijan: Racism without borders.” The
video footage is in English and Russian. It concisely presents
the history of the murder that had stunned the world, as well as
the programs following the incident and Safarov’s glorification in
Azerbaijan.It is significant that the authors chose Symphony number 7
(“Leningrad”) by Dmitri Shostakovich known as “the invasion of the
Nazis” as a soundtrack for the footage.

The “Ordinary Genocide” project is being implemented by the Information
and Public Relations Center under the RA President’s administration.

Source: Panorama.am

From: Baghdasarian

Revue De Presse N1 – 19/02/14 – Collectif VAN

REVUE DE PRESSE N°1 – 19/02/14 – COLLECTIF VAN

Publié le : 19-02-2014

Info Collectif VAN – – Le Collectif VAN [Vigilance
Arménienne contre le Négationnisme] vous propose une revue de presse
des informations parues dans la presse francophone, sur les thèmes
concernant la Turquie, le génocide arménien, la Shoah, le génocide
des Tutsi, le Darfour, le négationnisme, l’Union européenne, Chypre,
etc… Nous vous suggérons également de prendre le temps de lire ou
de relire les informations et traductions mises en ligne dans notre
rubrique Par
ailleurs, certains articles en anglais, allemand, turc, etc, ne
sont disponibles que dans la newsletter Word que nous générons
chaque jour.

Pour la recevoir, abonnez-vous a la Veille-Média : c’est gratuit !

Vous recevrez le document du lundi au vendredi dans votre boîte email.

Bonne lecture.

Réponse des Arméniens de Turquie a Ocalan Info Collectif VAN –
– Lorsque Bese Hozat, co-présidente du KCK (Union
des Communautés du Kurdistan), a récemment analysé dans le média
kurde Fırat News, l’assassinat des trois militantes du PKK a Paris en
janvier 2013, elle s’est exprimée ainsi : ” En Turquie, en dehors de
l’Etat officiel, il existe aussi des Etats parallèles. Par exemple,
la confrérie Gulen est un Etat parallèle. Le lobby d’IsraÔl, ainsi
que les lobbies nationalistes arménien et grec sont chacun un Etat
parallèle ”*. Sebahat Tuncel et Ertugrul Kurkcu, co-présidents
du HDP (Parti démocratique du peuple), ainsi que les journalistes
du journal arménien AGOS, ont vivement réagi a cette déclaration
gravissime. Alors que les débats autour des propos de Bese Hozat
continuaient, le leader du PKK, Abdullah Ocalan, a adressé une lettre
a la communauté arménienne de Turquie pour les appaiser. Elle a été
publiée le 30 janvier 2014 dans le journal AGOS. Les journalistes du
journal AGOS et ceux du journal Taraf ont analysé cette lettre. Le
Collectif VAN vous propose la traduction d’un extrait d’un article
paru en turc, dans le journal Radikal, le 31 janvier 2014.

“Espaces et temps de la nation turque” Info Collectif VAN –
– “Le manuel scolaire est une forme de discours
historique bien particulière. Il est a l’extrémité d’une chaîne,
a l’autre bout de laquelle se trouvent des ouvrages universitaires
spécialisés ou de première vulgarisation.

Aussi, après un temps de latence variable selon les époques et
les lieux, reflète-t-il généralement les tendances dominantes
de l’historiographie. Néanmoins, une interprétation du passé,
parmi d’autres, peut être imposée par l’Etat, un parti au pouvoir,
ou une forme quelconque de mainmise idéologique ou religieuse”. Le
Collectif VAN vous propose cet article d’Etienne Copeaux publié sur
son blog susam-sokak.fr.

Corée du Nord : une commission de l’ONU réclame la saisine de la
Cour pénale internationale Info Collectif VAN –
– “De multiples crimes contre l’humanité, découlant de politiques
établies au plus haut sommet de l’Etat, ont été commis et continuent
d’être commis en République populaire démocratique de Corée (RPDC),
selon un rapport d’une commission d’enquête de l’ONU publié lundi. Ce
rapport réclame une action urgente de la part de la communauté
internationale pour faire face a la situation des droits de l’homme
dans le pays, y compris la saisine de la Cour pénale internationale
(CPI)”. Le Collectif VAN vous invite a lire cette information publiée
sur le site de l’ONU le 17 février 2014.

Article du journal franco-turc Zaman – 19/02/2014 – 1 Le Collectif
VAN relaye ici les articles du journal franco-turc Zaman (équivalent
du Today’s Zaman en langue anglaise, diffusé en Turquie).

Attention : ces articles ne sont pas commentés de notre part. Il
s’agit pour l’essentiel de traductions des versions turque et anglaise
du Zaman, journal proche du parti au pouvoir (AKP). “Actuellement en
visite en Hongrie, Gul s’est exprimé sur les deux textes de loi qui
lui ont été récemment soumis”.

Les présidents turc et hongrois conviennent de renforcer les échanges
commerciaux Le président turc en visite Abdullah Gul et son homologue
hongrois Janos Ader ont annoncé lundi qu’ils aimeraient voir les
échanges commerciaux plus que doubler entre leurs pays d’ici les
cinq prochaines années.

L’info vue par la TRT (1) Le Collectif VAN vous propose cet article
publié sur la TRT (Télévision & Radio de Turquie). Les articles
de ce site ne sont pas commentés de notre part. Ils peuvent contenir
des propos négationnistes envers le génocide arménien ou d’autres
informations a prendre sous toute réserve. “La Turquie assumera la
présidence tournante du G-20 a partir du 1er décembre 2014″.

Une délégation interparlementaire britannique honore les victimes
du génocide des Arméniens Une délégation d’une union d’un
groupe interparlementaire britannique a honoré la mémoire des
victimes innocentes du génocide arménien aujourd’hui au Mémorial
Tsiternakaberd et a examiné les archives de presse britanniques de
la collection de l’AGMI.

Génocide au Rwanda : sourde bagarre mémorielle au procès Simbikangwa
Deux semaines après le début du premier procès en France d’un
ex-capitaine de l’armée rwandaise accusé de complicité de génocide,
la cour d’assises de Paris, présidée par Olivier Leurent, affronte,
bien au-dela de la personnalité de Pascal Simbikangwa, un ” passé
qui ne passe pas ”, y compris dans l’ancienne Europe coloniale.

Dépêche de l’APA [ 18 Février 2014 16:29 ] – Agence de Presse
d’Azerbaïdjan Le Collectif VAN vous propose un article de l’APA
(Agence de presse azérie) daté du 18 février 2014. Les articles
de ce site (écrits généralement dans un francais rudimentaire)
ne sont pas commentés de notre part. Ils peuvent contenir des propos
négationnistes envers le génocide arménien ou d’autres informations
a prendre sous toute réserve. “” Le conflit du Karabakh est une
menace pour la sécurité des pays de la région et du monde ” a
annoncé le Président du parlement azerbaïdjanais Ogtay Assadov,
lors de la 9ème session de la Conférence de l’Union Parlementaire
des Etats membres de l’OCI (UPCI) débutée mardi a Téhéran”.

Condamnation en Allemagne d’un Rwandais pour le génocide de 1994
La justice allemande a condamné a quatorze ans de prison, mardi
18 février, un Rwandais, reconnu coupable de complicité dans le
génocide au Rwanda en 1994. Agé de 56 ans et réfugié depuis 2002
sur le sol allemand, Onesphore Rwabukombe était jugé depuis janvier
2011 par la haute cour régionale de Francfort. Le parquet fédéral
avait requis la réclusion a perpétuité, tandis que la défense
avait demandé l’acquittement.

Retour a la rubrique

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=78609
http://www.collectifvan.org/rubrique.php?r=0&page=1.
www.collectifvan.org
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www.collectifvan.org

ANKARA: Turkish Government Catches Same Old Illness

TURKISH GOVERNMENT CATCHES SAME OLD ILLNESS

Today’s Zaman (Turkey)
February 17, 2014 Monday

by LALE KEMAL

The Turkish state’s ideology is based on preventing its citizens
from discussing matters freely in a democratic manner, despite some
attempts in the past decade to reverse this course of state mentality.

Starting in primary school, Turkish pupils are discouraged
from challenging differing ideas and are encouraged to learn by
memorization. The Turkish establishment, backed by a militaristic
mindset, has succeeded in maintaining its power at the expense of its
citizens’ freedom by making them obedient to its repressive ideology.

Those challenging the state’s repressive ideology were frequently
silenced through different means, including extrajudicial killings.

Retired Col. Cemal Temizoz and five others are finally facing criminal
charges for being responsible for the extrajudicial killings of more
than 20,000 Turkish Kurds between 1993 and 1995 in the southeastern
township of Cizre.

Thousands of others, be they leftists, Kurds, or conservatives —
irrespective of their different ideologies — were tortured at various
jails or hanged during and after the 1980 military coup. Hundreds of
others were sacked from the fiercely secularist Turkish Armed Forces
(TSK) during the Feb. 28, 1997 postmodern coup on the grounds that
they were practicing their Muslim religion, and they were denied jobs
afterwards in private and government institutions.

A state-imposed repressive ideology resulted, among other things,
in a poverty of ideas in Turkey.

If Turks from every walk of life, i.e., politicians and intellectuals,
as well as ordinary people, frequently accuse each other of treason,
this is inherited from the repressive state ideology.

“We immediately label the opposition with having committed an act
of treason. Our language in debating issues is very harsh; this
language does not deal with understanding, debating and compromise. We
immediately jump on this ‘magical concept’ of treason,” says historian
Ahmet Demirel in his article published in the Taraf daily on Feb. 16.

Inciting hatred among those with different ideologies or religions
is also common in Turkey, where the majority Sunni Muslim population
lives with a sizeable number of Alevis, Turkish Kurds and a small
number of Greeks and Armenians.

Sowing the seeds of hatred among differing sects or religions has
served to keep the repressive state ideology intact.

Take, for example, the Sunni majority ideology of denigrating the
Alevis or the deep state link to the murder of Turkish Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink in 2007, who was branded an enemy of Turkey
for his claims that the Ottoman Turks committed genocide against the
Armenians in 1915.

Dink was also known for his efforts to achieve reconciliation between
Turks and Armenians and his advocacy of human and minority rights in
Turkey, but he was prosecuted for violating the infamous Article 301
of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK) and “denigrating Turkishness.”

A teenager was put in prison for Dink’s murder, but others accused of
having a role in the plot that culminated in Dink’s assassination,
including a colonel and a senior police officer, have been brought
under state protection and have escaped investigation.

The recent controversy surrounding an attack on a headscarved woman
in Istanbul and her testimony stands as a typical example of how
governments can abuse the sentiments of Turkey’s practicing Muslims
to create support for their propaganda on a specific issue. Despite
government claims that a headscarved woman was attacked in front of
Istanbul’s Kabatas pier by Gezi Park protesters at the height of the
anti-government protests last June, it was recently revealed that
apparently she was not, in fact, attacked.

Many months after the incident, private television station Kanal D
aired security camera footage last week that suggests that there was
no physical attack on the woman who claimed at the time that she and
her baby were attacked by up to 100 protesters for wearing a headscarf.

This event reminded me of similar psychological propaganda warfare that
the Turkish military used to resort to in order to justify its claims
prior to its Feb. 28 postmodern coup that, for instance, the government
at the time intended to change the nation’s secular character.

Professor Umit Cizre from Istanbul-based Sehir University makes
an accurate diagnosis of what I describe as the ruling Justice and
Development Party (AK Party) catching the same old illness, in her
article published on Feb. 13 on the Open Democracy website:

“Secondly, not unlike the Kemalist, non-Kemalist or centrist politics
since the very beginning (of the republic), the troubling features of
Erdogan’s [Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan] AKP [AK Party]
are rooted not in ‘Islamism,’ but in some fundamental structural and
cultural flaws and deep-seated undemocratic habits and traditions of
the regime entrenched in the decades since independence.”

Referring to several reforms initiated by the AK Party, such as curbing
the military’s power in politics, she, adds, “To be fair, however,
there are some novel sources of the AKP’s anti-statist reforms that
we have not really experienced before.”

But Cizre also underlines the state of Turkish politics: “Coupled
with a political tradition which allows for few true meeting points
and consensus-seeking mechanisms between the opposing parties,
all political actors are boxed into a ‘white or black’ demagoguery,
resulting in an authoritarian stance, a kind of ‘pragmatism’ as a
disguise for a distinct poverty of ideas together with an isolation
from reality.”

From: Baghdasarian

"It’s Dreadful Not That There Are Turks…"

“IT’S DREADFUL NOT THAT THERE ARE TURKS…”

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Feb 18 2014

18 February 2014 – 10:17am

By New Time

Vestnik Kavkaza continues following cultural life in republics of the
North Caucasus and countries of the South Caucasus. Today we publish
an interview by the Armenian periodical New Time with the art director
of Yerevan Puppet Theater, Ruben Babayan.

– Why does TV promote rubbish?

– To be honest, I don’t watch our TV. However, any person from time
to time sits in front of a TV-set and flips through the channels,
including myself. And I watch this or that show.

… I think language regress should be considered through a perspective
of our routine problems. The “language” reflects our life, our level
of thinking and existing. A language cannot exist separately from
everyday life. So, speaking about the problem, roots should be found
in the conscience, the system of values of our society.

– “People eat this” is a motto of our time. But there are people
who don’t like “the food.” However, they keep silence. You say you
don’t watch Armenian TV, isn’t it conscious choice? You don’t like
it – you don’t watch it. But the problem cannot be solved by ignoring
it. Is it a problem of our time?

– We don’t choose time, we live and die in it. There was a lot of
dirt in times of Khachaturian, Aivazovsky and Rafael. Dirt is not
remembered, unlike great minds who stay in history for centuries.

The other thing is orienting points. However, they shouldn’t be
connected with time as well. The principle of rating is working on TV;
and it requires wide audience, i.e. absence of a high cultural level.

But the same principle of rating could work in times of Aram
Khachaturian, when all Yerevan turned on Baku Radio at 5 a.m. and
listened to songs by Zeinab Khanlarova. And Zeinab concerts were
as popular as Aram Khachaturian’s performances. However, there was
a system of values which was developed in details and directed
preferences and priorities of the society into a right way. The
current problem is that people who impose their doubtful taste on the
society have no the system of values and refer to false democracy,
as if people want it. It is interesting that the public opinion is
considered exclusively in questions of “culture,” in other spheres
nobody is interested in the public opinion…

… In Armenian “culture” is “mshaluit”, from “mshakel” which means
“to cultivate.” You cannot grow culture in a tube; values should be
constantly cultivated and promoted. All our current troubles are a
result of an irresponsible attitude to our culture. When practical
usage of our culture will be realized – either at the dinner table
or in the sphere of food for thought – there will be progress. At
the moment we eat unnatural food and pollute both our bodies and minds.

… I have recently visited the UAE – I have never felt more
discomfort than there. It is a fake country based on surrogates. They
have everything, but everything is fake. And it is awful that for
the majority of our people the UAE is an ideal model of a society,
paradise where they want to live. How can a generation with national
priorities be raised with such a spiritual level?

– What would you do, if you had an opportunity to correct our
TV? What can make a viewer like you watch national TV channels again?

– … Previously I never watched the First Channel, but today
I’m glad to see scientific and educational shows which my children
like. There are things that I don’t like, but I understand that a
channel cannot satisfy all my preferences. It is public television,
i.e. it should satisfy demands of the whole society.

As for KVN (a Russian humour TV show and competition where teams
compete by giving funny answers to questions and performing sketches),
it doesn’t matter who and how started it, but it is important what
were results. The KVN school has both negative and positive moments.

For example, an ability to improvise, feel time, show off interestingly
and brightly – these are advantages of KVN. For me it is not so
important whether a person graduated from circus school or came from
KVN, but it is important what conclusions he made, what values he has.

… Rating cannot be a concept; it is one of its components at
most. And it is wonderful that the First Channel realizes it.

Regarding the language, today it is being spoiled in series,
sitcoms and various talk shows. Audience complains that there is no
censorship, mechanisms which would direct and sometimes forbid certain
matters. Is it good or bad? There is a successfully approved system
in the world – Public Management Councils. We have them as well,
but only formally. They don’t decide anything, nothing depends on them.

… Any normal owner of TV understands clearly that he has no
sufficient knowledge and taste to define policy of its company
alone. I mean not only culture, but any sphere. In the whole world
huge concerns and holdings have Public Management Councils which help
to develop policy and avoid unnecessary things. I think problems of
our TV could be solved by such organizations, rather than censorship.

…TV-slang causes disguise because of its criminal character. A
language is a living organism, and it reflects our society. Why
is thieves’ slang popular in our society? Because our society is
criminalized. When we eliminate criminality as an ideal model of our
society, dismiss our illegal president, the language will change. A
language is a factor of production, rather than a factor of producing.

At the same time, criminality can be shown on TV, but the point
is in a system of values. I don’t think that America of the 1930th
was more criminalized than Armenia. But criminality wasn’t a goal,
a striving, a living standard there. I think we should establish
value TV, a system of values as an example for future generations.

– Hzhde said: “It’s dreadful not that there are Turks, but that
there are Turk-like Armenians…”

– I don’t see anything bad in propaganda of any national culture. The
UK spends huge resources on promotion of its art; France holds
Francophonie Days in Yerevan from time to time… Is it bad? We should
learn about it, but not take it and sell it as our own product.

Yes, we have Turkish genome and can’t do anything with this. What
should be done? Should we forbid it simply? No way! They will listen
to them even harder. We should promote our national culture and fill
all gaps for there would be no space for foreign cultures. It is
interesting that those who shout that they are true Armenians and
hate the Turks and the Azerbaijanis promote foreign culture. Let’s
not forbid their culture and cultivate ultranationalist statements,
but influence our internal nature. If a person has Armenian nature,
there will be no necessity to shout about his or her origin. A person
will realize that he or she is an Armenian, and it will be enough! And
today an Armenian lacks the conscience. Turkisation, criminal slang,
Russian popular music – it is a gum which we are chewing and don’t
want to deal seriously with our own culture. Give me Armenian nature,
and I will understand everything else…

From: Baghdasarian

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/culture/51436.html

The Crumbling Ruins Of The City Of Ani

THE CRUMBLING RUINS OF THE CITY OF ANI (PHOTOS)

The Weather Channel
feb 18 2014

By Lorraine Boissoneault

The crumbling ruins speckle the Turkish border with Armenia in a
hodgepodge fashion; a half-standing wall here, an empty church there.

Standing in defiance to the elements and to the geopolitical turmoil
that has ravaged the region of generations, the ancient ruins of Ani
are a reminder of both mankind’s ability to build magnificent cities
and our willingness to allow these monuments to succumb to decay.

The various structures of Ani have stood for hundreds of years, with
historians first mentioning the city in the 5th century, according to
Armenian History. Known as the “City of a Thousand and ONe Churches,”
Ani rose to prominence in the Middle Ages. The city included a citadel,
an inner city, suburbs and an underground city of caves.

Around the 11th century, Ani had around 100,000 residents, despite
the surrounding area being repeatedly destroyed and conquered by
Ottoman Turks, Byzantine emperors, nomadic Kurds and Russians, wrote
The Atlantic.

But the city wasn’t destined to survey until the modern era. After
being conquered and ransacked several times, Ani went into decline
and was finally abandoned in the 1700s. But the city’s tragic destiny
didn’t end when its citizens left. The buildings were raided by vandals
and looters and the remaining structures were neglected. In 2010 the
Global Heritage Fund listed Ani as being in danger of disappearing
entirely due to insufficient management, neglect and looting and
vandalism by Turks trying to eliminate Armenian history, the Global
Heritage Fund wrote.

Since that time, further efforts have been made to safeguard the
city’s future. The most recent archaeological excavations took place
in 2011 and it has become a popular destination for tourists straying
off the beaten path and visiting the eastern border of Turkey.

“When we speak of Ani, we call it an iceberg,” said the Kars Culture
and Tourism Director to the Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News.

“The visible surface is one-tenth of the invisible face of Ani.”

View slide show of photos at

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.weather.com/travel/crumbling-ruins-city-ani-photos-20140217

Baghdad: Maliki Receives Foreign Minister Of Armenia.

MALIKI RECEIVES FOREIGN MINISTER OF ARMENIA.

National Iraqi News Agency (NINA)
February 17, 2014 Monday

BAGHDAD / Nina /– Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki received in his
office Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalban Diane today.

According to a familiar source NINA reporter said : “The two sides
discussed during the meeting ways to strengthen bilateral relations
and developing them.

The Armenian minister arrived to Baghdad yesterday for a visit of
several days. / End

From: Baghdasarian

‘Some Perspectives On Genocide’

“SOME PERSPECTIVES ON GENOCIDE”

eKurd.net
Feb 18 2014

18.2.2014
By Desmond Fernandes – Peace in Kurdistan Campaign

Armenian genocide. Photo: AFP/Getty â~@¢ See Related Articles February
18, 2014

Presented at the ‘Holocaust Commemoration and Genocide Awareness’
meeting, the House of Commons, Committee Room 16, Westminster, 4th
February 2014. Organised by the Universal Peace Federation (UPF)
and hosted by Mr Virendra Sharma, MP.

Desmond Fernandes, in his presentation, highlighted some of the key
perspectives of Raphael Lemkin (who coined the neologism genocide),
Khatchatur Pilikian, Gregory Stanton and John Docker on genocide.

Pilikian, on the occasion of Hrant Dink Day on 19th January 2010,
had observed that:

Our turbulent times … will soon teach us new lessons, granted we
are willing to learn and act upon it. As the Preamble of the Verdict
of the prestigious Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal of April 16th 1984
concludes: ‘Indeed, acknowledging genocide itself is a fundamental
means of struggling against genocide. The acknowledgement is itself
an affirmation of the right of a people under international law to
a safeguarded existence’.

As President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars
and President of Genocide Watch, Gregory Stanton had noted that:
“In 1997, The International Association of Genocide Scholars declared
unanimously that the Turkish massacres of over one million Armenians
was a crime of genocide … Denial … is actually a continuation of
the genocide, because it is a continuing attempt to destroy the victim
group psychologically and culturally, to deny its members even the
memory of the murders of their relatives … That is what the Turkish
government today is doing to Armenians around the world … [In terms
of evidence, there are] thousands of pages of eye-witness reports
from Armenian survivors, American consular officers, missionaries,
and most tellingly, in the archives of the Ottoman Empire’s allies,
Germany and Austria-Hungary, as well as by the records of the Ottoman
Courts-Martial of 1918-1920”. Other sources, Fernandes noted, abound.

Raphael Lemkin had also explained part of his reasoning behind creating
the term and concept of genocide: “I understood that the function of
memory” – in reflecting upon these substantive issues – “is not only
to register past events, but to stimulate human conscience” to act
to confront and address these terrible actions, and to be mindful of
the repercussions they have on individuals and collectives of people,
on women, children, relatives of the disappeared, widows, so, so many
people. For Lemkin, genocide did:

not necessarily involve mass killing; [genocidal actions] can be
incremental, involving aspects that are cultural, political, social,
legal, intellectual, spiritual, economic, biological, physiological,
religious and moral. Such actions involve issues of health, food
and nourishment, of family life and care of children and of birth as
well as death. Such actions involve considerations of the honour and
dignity of peoples [as opposed to their debasement] and the future
of humanity as a world community …

He points to recurring features in historical genocides: mass
mutilations; deportations under harsh conditions often involving
forced marches; attacks on family life, with separation of men and
women and the taking away of the opportunity for procreation; removal
and transfer of children; destruction of political leadership; death
from illness, hunger and disease through overcrowding on reserves
and in concentration camps (Docker, 2010).

Lemkin also wished to clarify that political and cultural genocide
were terms he considered all too relevant. Unfortunately, Cold War
posturing by both the USSR and the US effectively gutted the Genocide
Convention of key aspects pertaining to these phenomena. More recently,
Fernandes reported that there had been a number of initiatives to
more fully integrate culturally genocidal actions into the framework
of the Convention, as well as political genocide.

He stressed the importance of holding genocidal perpetrators to
account in a court of law, following due process, but noted, in the
full text of his presentation,[ii] the questionable manner in which
the International Criminal Court (ICC) functioned to secure ‘justice’
(whether relating to genocidal or other crimes). In the full text of
his presentation, he made reference to Edward Herman’s 2013 findings
regarding “features of the ICC that reveal its structured bias. For
one thing, its charter does not make aggression a punishable crime, in
this regard following the plan of the ICTY [the Yugoslavia tribunal].

This is convenient for the United States and its principal allies as
they engage in aggression often, so it is excluded although it is the
most basic and important criminal act and is a fundamental element of
the UN Charter. Furthermore, the ICC’s reach is limited to states that
sign on to it, or when the Security Council requests that it act. The
United States signed the original Rome statute in December 2000, but
it has never ratified that statute, so while denying ICC jurisdiction
over its own acts, it feels free to bring cases for the ICC to enforce
against others. Given its power in the Security Council, Darfur and
selected other African states can be subjected to an ICC indictment,
but not the United States, Israel, or Kagame’s Rwanda”.

In his presentation, Fernandes also felt that John Docker’s (2010)
reflections on the nature and concept of genocide were relevant:

The definition of genocide … always has a double character: both
discursive and legal. In my view, we should not base the historical
study of genocide [sorely] on a legal definition alone [important
as that is]; indeed, we should not base the historical study of any
phenomena on a legal definition alone.

Desmond Fernandes dedicated his presentation to all the people
struggling against, and being subjected to, genocide worldwide and
also dedicated it to the late Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink. Hrant
was assassinated in Turkey just over 7 years ago, significantly for
raising the issue of the Armenian genocide and its wider repercussions
on society in Turkey. Fernandes drew attention to Hrant Dink’s wife’s
recent pronouncement about the failure of the political and judicial
system in Turkey to investigate his murder or to hold those responsible
to account:

“As the Dink Family, we will no longer be a tool in the game of state
structures that insults us … Since the slaying of Hrant Dink on
January 19, 2007, the system in Turkey – with its judiciary, security
forces, military and civilian bureaucracy, and political institutions
– has all but mocked us. While pretending to pursue justice, the
criminal alliance called the state re-committed the murder day by
day, hearing by hearing, over and over again. This alliance is the
very crime syndicate that planned the murder and then covered it up
… No effective investigation was conducted at any stage of this
case. The biggest insult, however, came from the court when it ruled
that no organisation was involved in the murder … In this case,
political will was the only thing necessary to uncover the state’s
murder mechanisms and the criminal alliance. [But] despite all its
public statements and pledges, the government persistently [has]
refrained from displaying political will.

The Friends of Hrant Dink organization, Fernandes emphasised,
“claims that almost all of the civil servants who were involved
in the death of the journalist were promoted by the government”
(Hurriyet Daily News, 18th January 2014).

Apart from being actively engaged in genocide denialism (not only
relating to the genocide of Armenians, but ‘Others’, including
Assyrians, Arameans, Greeks and Kurds), Fernandes argued that the
Turkish government, like so many governments across the world,
from the US to the Sri Lankan, Indian, Pakistan and our own British
government, continues to not only be complicit in, but also directly
responsible for perpetrating the crime of genocide. Bodies such as
the United Nations and the European Union, Fernandes added, are also
responsible for facilitating genocide. The United States and her
‘allies’ have made a mockery of the UN ‘Responsibility to Protect’
initiative. As Chomsky has concluded over the US position in this
hardly inconsequential matter: “If it weren’t so tragic, it would
be farcical”.

The US government and its ‘allies’ (including the Turkish government)
have continued to support extremist forces that are creating
havoc – often even genocidal havoc – in the Near and Middle East,
Asia, Africa, the Americas and elsewhere. In the full text of his
presentation, he noted the manner in which the co-president of the
Kurdistan Communities’ Union (KCK) Executive Council criticised the
Turkish state’s ongoing support for al-Qaeda affiliated groups that
were attacking Kurds as well as “Others” in Rojava [the
autonomous region in Syria]: “We didn’t start the peace process [in
Turkey] so that Turkey could move the war to Rojava by supporting the
al-Nusra Front, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, and al-Qaeda
affiliated groups … It’s the cause of much instability and conflict.

If you want stability and non-conflict, then you need to solve this
problem”.

The US government’s record in directly perpetrating or being complicit
in the crime of genocide in many regions of the world – even at the
present time, as much as in the recent past – was deeply unsettling,
and needed to be recognised and confronted, Fernandes argued. In the
full text of his presentation, he cited Rick Rozoff (2010):

The US has rightly been accused of practicing double standards in
relation to genocide charges, condemning mass killings (alleged as well
as real) in nations whose governments are not viewed favourably by
Washington and its allies while ignoring, minimizing and justifying
it when perpetrated by an approved government. But it is not, as
defenders of American foreign policy often state, a question of not
being able to respond to every crisis or of responding to the most
egregious situation first …

As [Edward Herman and David Peterson] explain: “When we ourselves
commit mass-atrocity crimes, the atrocities are Constructive, our
victims are unworthy of our attention and indignation, and never suffer
‘genocide’ at our hands – like the Iraqi Untermenschen who have died
in such grotesque numbers over the past two decades. But when the
perpetrator of mass-atrocity crimes is our enemy or a state targeted
by us for destabilization and attack, the converse is true. Then
the atrocities are Nefarious and their victims worthy of our focus,
sympathy, public displays of solidarity, and calls for inquiry and
punishment …

To reiterate their point: When the killing, maiming, poisoning and
displacement of millions of civilians are perpetrated by the US
directly and in collusion with a client regime it assists, arms and
advises – Indochina in the 1960â~@²s and early 1970â~@²s, Central
America in the 1980â~@²s, the deaths of as many as a million Iraqis
resulting from sanctions and the deliberate and systematic destruction
of civilian infrastructure in the 1990â~@²s – that form of indisputable
genocide is never referred to as such and, instead, presented by the
government-media-obedient academia triad as not abhorrent and criminal,
but as legitimate actions in pursuit of praiseworthy policies …

Similar systematic and large-scale atrocities carried out by US
clients armed by Washington – Indonesia against its own people from
1965-1966 and in East Timor from 1975-1999, Israel in the Palestinian
Gaza Strip and West Bank from 1967 to the present day, Rwanda and
Uganda in Congo (where over five and a half million people have
perished over the last twelve years), Croatia and its Operation Storm
onslaught in 1995 which caused the worst permanent ethnic cleansing
in Europe since World War II and its immediate aftermath – are not
condemned and not even deemed regrettable, but in fact are viewed by
the US political establishment as Benign.

Fernandes, in the full text of his presentation, further noted that
Abdullah Ocalan, reflecting upon the manner in which Kurds had suffered
over the years, had arrived at the conclusion, from his prison cell
at Imrali, that: “For 60 years the USA’s politics have been dependent
on the cultural genocide policy against Kurds. To gain the support of
Turkey and Israel in the region, the Middle East and Caucasus, the USA
has supported the policy of cultural genocide that has been implemented
against the Kurds”. Edward Herman and David Peterson, in analysing
“the differential approach of the US in the contexts of both space
and time”, had equally significantly documented the manner in which
“the suppression of the Kurdish movement has been treated in relation
to Iraq as opposed to Turkey, and in Iraq from one decade to the next,
depending on whether the same head of state (Saddam Hussein) was a US
ally or adversary at the time.Not a matter of what is right or wrong,
not even of who does what to whom, but solely one of what advances
America’s narrow and cynical geopolitical agenda” (Rozoff, 2010).

Huge, sophisticated genocide denialism industries and structures,
Fernandes emphasised, are in place. ‘Developmental’ genocides are
also taking place across the world (he cited India and Balochistan as
examples at the meeting). Corporations work with governments and/or
‘private military companies’ (PMC’s) and terror groups to exploit
resources, irrespective of the human and environmental costs involved.

In the full text of his prepared speech, he also made reference to
the eastern Congo and to John Pilger’s (2013) observation that the
eastern Congo possesses “a treasure trove of strategic minerals,
controlled by an atrocious rebel group known as the M23, which in
turn is run by Uganda and Rwanda, the proxies of Washington”.

Genocide here, Fernandes noted, is not being halted by the the US
and its ‘allies’, nor is the International Criminal Court (ICC)
acting as it should to hold those responsible to account. Why? As
Edward Herman (2013) reveals: The ICC has a “record as an annex of
white imperial power … In Africa itself, the work of the ICC is
extremely selective, with its choices frequently traceable to great
power interests and influence. The most massive killings there have
taken place in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), but as
the major outside invaders and killers in the DRC, Rwanda and Uganda,
are clients of the United States and its allies, the leaders of those
states have been entirely exempt from any threat of ICC prosecution”.

In his presentation, Fernandes drew attention to the ongoing genocide
of Tamils in Sri Lanka and the recent 22nd January 2014 judgement
by the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal on Sri Lanka (Bremen Session):
“The Tribunal finds that genocide against the Eelam Tamil group
is a continuing process … The Tribunal believes that the UK,
the USA and India are guilty of complicity in genocide. Further, the
Tribunal judges that the UK and the USA are clearly accomplices in the
genocidal process … The United Nations … had a decisive role in
the failure to prevent as well as in the enactment of the genocidal
process against the Eelam Tamils … The European Union [also] …

contributed to the implementation of the genocidal process”.

He also drew attention to what is happening in Balochistan. A 3000 km
Voice for Baloch Missing Persons (VBMP) long march from Quetta to the
UN offices in Islamabad is taking place, involving relatives of the
disappeared. This march, unreported largely in the British mainstream
press, is seeking justice and accountability for the genocide being
perpetrated there. He quoted Qadeer Baloch:

“We are marching against human rights violations in Balochistan
which include on-going military operations, enforced-disappearances,
torture and the kill and dump policy of the Pakistani state in
Balochistan. We do not expect justice from Pakistan because it
continues its brutalities in Balochistan. People are still being
abducted and killed. We are pinning our hopes to the international
community, international media and human rights organisations to
raise their voice against state atrocities against Baloch people”.

In the full text of his presentation, he had also documented the
fact that, just 2 days earlier, in Quetta, the Baloch Gohar (Sisters)
Movement and the World Baloch Women’s Forum had organised a protest
demonstration over the latest discovery of mass graves in Balochistan
(On 25th January 2014, a shepherd discovered 3 mass graves and locals
were able to find 103 missing bodies there). They held placards outside
the Press Club, with messages such as “UN stop the Baloch genocide,
Play your role for the safe release of our loved ones” and “Baloch
Mass Graves is equal to Genocide”.

Even as the Pakistan government continued with its genocidal
‘Kill and Dump’ policy in Balochistan, what was equally clear,
Fernandes noted, was that the genocide of the Hazaras, Ahmadis and
“Others” also continues in Pakistan. The Chinese government, he
also recognised in the full text of his prepared speech, was also
complicit in the genocide of the Baloch. In a 2013 study of the
situation in Balochistan, Faiz Baluch had concluded that: “Selig
Harrison describes what goes on in Balochistan as a ‘slow motion
genocide’ of Baloch people but, presently, the genocide is in full
swing by Pakistan and Iran”.

Hrybyair Marri, he noted in the full text of his presentation, had
clearly exposed the manner in which, “in Balochistan, the Pakistani
security forces are using the jihadist groups as proxy death squads to
kidnap and kill Baloch political activists. These death squads have
the full backing of federal and provincial governments”. Meanwhile,
asylum seekers fleeing genocides such as these, Fernandes reported,
continue to face innumerable obstacles from British and other
governmental authorities when they seek sanctuary.

The US government and its ‘allies’ (including the Turkish government),
despite formal claims to the contrary, Fernandes argued, have covertly
aided, abetted and facilitated many of the crimes and massacres by
proxy forces in Syria. In the full text of his presentation, Fernandes
made reference to Ajamu Baraka’s (2014) conclusion that “US strategists
care little about the fact that, in their quest to oust the Syrian
President, they have created an unholy alliance between the US and its
Wahhabi allies from Saudi Arabia and al-Qaeda as their ‘boots on the
ground'”. To Taner Akcam, “Syrian Christians listening to Mr. Erdogan
[the Prime Minister of Turkey] and his denialist rhetoric are reminded
of 1915, and that makes Turkey look very much like a security threat
to them”.

Salih Muslim, the co-chair of the Democratic Union Party (PYD) in
Rojava (Syria), in September 2013, asserted that what the Turkish
“government is doing is no secret. They are still sending Syrian gangs
against us. Look, east of Serekaniye, they removed barbed wires and
cleared paths through minefields for these gangs to move easily …

Roads are opened for the Ahrar al-Sham brigade, Jabat al-Nusra
and al-Qaeda to fight us … Turkey is using these gangs to fight
us. They give them artillery and ammunition. We have documented all
this. They do it in broad daylight. Turkey is helping these gangs who
chop off the heads of people, eat the hearts of their opposition and
rape our women. The world is watching silently … Their objective
is obvious. To weaken and eliminate the Kurds … They are giving
guns to gangs … When we visited Turkey, we provided them with a
file on the dirty war these gangs were staging through Turkey. We
exposed those who were helping these gangs in Turkey under the guise
of humanitarian agencies or civil society organizations”.

In Turkey, meanwhile, Fernandes reported that the Kurdish Peace and
Democracy Party (BDP) Vice Co-President – alongside other political
and cultural, human rights analysts, politicians and organisations
(including the Kurdistan National Congress/KNK, the Alliance for
Kurdish Rights, the Kurdish Women’s Office for Peace/CENÃ~N and the
Democratic Society Congress/DTK Co-Chair Ahmet Turk) – has referred
to “political genocide operations” being undertaken against the party
and Kurdish communities. Thousands of civilians (including academics,
lawyers, publishers, journalists, teachers, students, members and key
politicians of the BDP) have been unjustly targeted and imprisoned in
so called ‘anti-KCK (Kurdistan Communities Union) operations’. This
is even as ‘Other’ perceived leftist groups (such as the DHKP-C)
and civil organisations have been subjected to state-linked terror
operations. Political prisoners continue to be subjected to isolation,
torture, ill-treatment, trumped-up charges and show trials. Lawyers
defending political prisoners have found themselves being detained
and subjected to criminalisation.

As the European Association of Lawyers for Democracy and World Human
Rights (ELDH) Silivri Trial Observation Report of September 2013
confirmed (as noted in the full text of Fernandes’ speech): “Today,
Turkey’s prisons hold around 10,000 political prisoners, who include
politicians, mayors, academics, journalists, trade unionists, human
rights activists. These detentions and these patently unfair political
trials not only discredit the AKP government internationally and
regionally, but also render questionable its real intentions regarding
the current peace negotiations … Lawyers throughout Turkey, Turkish
as well as Kurdish, now feel intimidated by these trials where there
is no presumption of innocence, and where lawyers can be identified
with the alleged crimes of their client”.

A recent UK lawyers trial observation delegation had reported at a
‘Hostages of the Peace Process’ meeting in London in October 2013 that:
“Kurdish lawyers have been made to face a justice system which is
‘quite incapable of delivering justice according to international
standards’, said human rights barrister Margaret Owen … In another
trial, over 200 politicians and elected officials of the pro-Kurdish
party, the BDP, are being tried together in a lengthy and arduous
case that has been going on for over two years. Trade unionists,
journalists, students, human rights defenders and members of Kurdish
civil society have been arrested and tried in their hundreds. All of
this has resulted in Turkey having a third of the world’s prisoners
classified as ‘terrorist'”.

Displaying no meaningful commitment to a peace process, and in
light of human rights violations documented on the ground, Fernandes
reported that the Co-Presidency of the KCK Executive Council had,
hardly surprisingly to many, concluded that “the colonialist mind-set
for cultural genocide still continues” in Turkey. For the Kurdish
political movements and communities in Rojava and Turkey that are
actively confronting forces that target ‘Others’, the US governmental
objective remains to cynically not recognise, and to derail/frustrate
and criminalise wherever possible, any democratic autonomy initiatives
and ‘realities’ that clash with its own geopolitical agendas.

Consequently, as the investigative journalist Cengiz Candar has
revealed (as noted in Fernandes’ prepared text), he was “rebuked by a
very high-level State Department official when I asked why the United
States withheld a visa from the Syrian Kurdish leader Salih Muslim,
who was to participate at a [November 2013] panel in Washington titled
‘The Kurdish Role in the New Middle East’ … Obviously the US”,
Candar concluded, “was careful to appease Turkey. It wasn’t all that
hard to detect this from my dialogue with the senior State Department
official”.

In many, many other areas of the world, too, Fernandes noted that
public mobilisation and opposition against repressive and often
also genocidal policies is often termed ‘terrorist opposition’ by
governments in power (particularly post-9/11). ‘Terrorism lists’ and
proscription regimes have been questionably drawn up by national and
supra-national bodies. Political movements, diasporic communities and
individuals resisting repression and genocide have been criminalised
through these ‘lists’ and regimes. In such criminalised contexts are
many public struggles against genocide and oppression taking place.

Desmond ended his presentation by emphasising the need to reflect upon
these matters and act upon these concerns and engage in solidarity
with targeted ‘Others’, wherever they may be.

[i] Desmond Fernandes is a member of the Peace in Kurdistan Campaign
and a former Senior Lecturer in Human Geography and ‘The Geography
of Genocide’ at De Montfort University, UK. He is the author of
The Kurdish and Armenian Genocides: from Censorship and Denial to
Recognition? (Apec, 2007; Peri, 2013), co-author of The Targeting of
‘Minority Others’ in Pakistan (BPCA, 2013) and has written numerous
articles on genocide and the targeting of the ‘Other’. His works have
been translated into a number of languages including English, French,
German, Dutch, Greek, Turkish and Kurdish.

[ii] Not all of which could be presented before the audience due to a
sudden but understandable decision by the organisers to cut short the
meeting by 30 minutes, to allow attendees to travel back home before
a London underground strike took effect. This meant that speakers
had to shorten their oral presentations accordingly.

From: Baghdasarian

www.Ekurd.net

OSCE Media Freedom Representative Concerned Of Police Use Of Violenc

OSCE MEDIA FREEDOM REPRESENTATIVE CONCERNED OF POLICE USE OF VIOLENCE AGAINST JOURNALISTS

02.17.2014 22:23 epress.am

Dunja Mijatovic, the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media
expressed concern about police obstruction of journalists’ activities
while covering a public demonstration in Yerevan on Feb. 12, reports
EaP Media Freedom Watch.

“Violence against journalists is unacceptable. It is especially
alarming that police officers responsible to assist and protect
journalists used force against them,” MijatoviÄ~G wrote in a letter
to Armenian authorities.

Dunja Mijatovic urged the authorities to conduct a thorough and
transparent investigation of the incident, and do everything possible
to prevent inappropriate conduct of police towards representatives
of the media in the future.

The incident took place when activists from the opposition party
Armenian National Congress were handing out leaflets in the Yerevan
downtown, announcing the upcoming rally on March 1. A group of young
men tried to stop activists, which turned into a clash, followed
by detention of the activists. Police also detained the journalists
filming what was happening. The police officers abused them and took
away video equipment.

Journalistic and human rights organizations released a statement
on the incident as well. Karen Andreasyan, Ombudsman of Armenia,
condemned police obstruction of journalists’ work as well. He posted
on his Facebook page that “the use of force against journalists leads
to criminal liability, especially if those crimes were committed by
public officials.” According to Andreasyan, the only way to prevent
such crimes is getting a clear and bold response of law enforcement
agencies. The Ombudsman stated that he expected “a proper and
comprehensive investigation to be conducted, as well as informing
the public about the results in thenearest future.”

According to the official information, the chief of Armenian police
ordered to launch an official investigation in connection with
the statement of Ani Gevorgyan on application of illegal actions
towards her.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.epress.am/en/2014/02/17/osce-media-freedom-representative-concerned-of-police-use-of-violence-against-journalists.html

Roundtable On Elaboration Of Private International Law In Armenia

ROUNDTABLE ON ELABORATION OF PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW IN ARMENIA

Legal Monitor Worldwide
February 15, 2014 Saturday

On 15 February 2014, the EU Advisory Group (EUAG), in close cooperation
with the Ministry of Justice, organised a roundtable discussion on
elaboration of Private International Law in Armenia. The roundtable was
welcomed and moderated by Mr Yeghishe Kirakosyan, Deputy Minister of
Justice. Other notable presenters included Mr Marco Roccia from the
University of Kent, Mr Charles Ehrlich, Advisor on Justice Reforms
from the EUAG, Dr. Mushegh Manukyan from the American University of
Armenia and Dr Armen Haykyants from Yerevan State University.

The discussion was aimed at providing insight on fundamental
questions that could assist Armenia in amending legislation on private
international law, highlighting problems in collision norms, conflict
of law institutions, international uniform laws, and improvement of
the climate for Armenian foreign trade.

The revision and elaboration of private international law in Armenia
remains crucial for developing a good legal environment for foreign
direct investment, as well as opening Armenia to trade. This revision
can support the development of the legal regulatory framework for
arbitration in Armenia. It is also crucial to harmonize the Armenian
private law framework with international standards and institutions
on a broad range of issues, including family, labour and intellectual
property law.

The roundtable was attended by the key stakeholders, legal experts
and representatives of international organizations

From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Authorities Will Do Everything Not To Have Economic Problem

ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES WILL DO EVERYTHING NOT TO HAVE ECONOMIC PROBLEMS WITH GEORGIA – MP

February 17, 2014 | 16:11

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s ruling majority has stated joining Customs Union
will not affect economic relations with Georgia, MP Varday Ayvazyan
told reporters.

The ruling party MP said Armenia must maneuver not to have problems
with Georgia.

Armenia will host hearings to discuss possible problems with the
country’s joining Customs Union, and international experts will help
to organize the discussions, Ayvazyan added.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan announced country’s intention to join
Customs Union that prevented from initialing Association Agreement
with EU. In contrast, Georgia initialed Association Agreement with
EU during the summit in Vilnius.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

From: Baghdasarian