Turkish press: Turkiye restores 2 historical churches damaged by PKK terrorists

Ahmet Kaplan   |30.04.2022


DIYARBAKIR, Turkiye

Restoration of two historical churches in southeastern Turkiye, which were damaged by the PKK terror group in 2015, has been completed.

According to official figures, nearly 32 million Turkish liras ($2.15 million) were spent on the restoration of Surp Giragos Armenian church, and Mar Petyun Chaldean church in the province of Diyarbakir.

Turkiye’s Environment, Urbanization and Climate Change Ministry provided the funds for the restoration, which started in 2019.

Both the churches, built during the rule of the Ottoman Empire, will reopen their doors to worship on May 7.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Ergun Ayik, head of the Surp Giragos Armenian Church Foundation, said the restoration was in line with the original structure.

Rather than cement, “old mortars and basalt stone of the region were used and everything was done perfectly,” Ayik said, adding that he was glad the churches will reopen soon.

Built in the 16th century, Surp Giragos is the largest Armenian church in the Middle East and is spread over 3,000 square meters.

Mar Petyun Chaldean church was built in the 17th century, and was used by the local Chaldean community.

In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkiye, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkiye, the US, and EU – has been responsible for the deaths of over 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants.

Artur Vanetsyan: Decisive fight is still ahead

Panorama
Armenia –

The protests being held by the Armenian opposition groups to topple Nikol Pashinyan and his cabinet have not yet reached their peak, Artur Vanetsyan, the leader of the opposition Homeland Party and the With Honor parliamentary faction, told reporters on Wednesday.

Vanetsyan, who formerly headed Armenia’s National Security Service, started an open-ended sit-in in Yerevan’s Liberty Square along with a group of opposition activists on April 17.

The opposition announced the start of the “second phase” of its “decentralized” campaign on April 25, holding small-scale protests and marches in Yerevan every day.

“We have not yet reached the decisive stage, everything is still ahead,” Vanetsyan said, adding the movement is attracting more public attention with each passing day.

“At first, there was an atmosphere of fear, as people were afraid to be targeted on social media or at work. But people have already made their decision and it remains for us to correctly wrap it up and bring it to an end,” the opposition leader said.

He says that many people coming to Liberty Square call attention to social issues.

“The incumbent authorities have failed in all spheres. They say that Nikol Pashinyan came to power promising a better life for the people. Instead, he handed over Artsakh and undermined the security system of Armenia. People realize that they cannot live well without long-term security guarantees in place,” the opposition politician said.

Official SUV ran over pregnant woman in Yerevan

ARMINFO
Armenia –
Alina Hovhannisyan

ArmInfo.At 6.24pm, an accident took place at the intersection of Leo-Paronyan streets..  According to the preliminary data of the Operative Management Center  of the RA Police, a Toyota traffic police car, which was currently  used for official purposes, ran over a woman.

According to the source, the woman was taken to the “Nairi” medical  center. The investigation clarifies the circumstances of the  incident.

It should be noted that several media outlets had spread information  that the car was part of the escort of the Prime Minister of Armenia.  They report that after the accident, none of the motorcade cars  stopped to provide assistance to the victim. At the same time, the  media refer to the testimony of eyewitnesses of the incident.  According to eyewitnesses, the woman was pregnant.

Armenian Genocide: The Mass Murder of Christians in Turkey

ByTasos Kokkinidis

The Armenian Genocide, the systematic mass murder, and expulsion of 1.5 million ethnic Armenians carried out in Turkey and adjoining regions by the Ottoman government between 1914 and 1923, is commemorated on April 24th every year.

The Armenian Genocide was an atrocity that occurred within the context of a wider religious cleansing across Asia Minor that lasted 10 years and included Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians. They were all Christians who were also subjects of the Ottoman Empire.

The religious cleansing was actually the first in modern times, and it fit the pattern of genocides that would follow in the century ahead.

It is worth noting that the Nazis in the following decades were transfixed by the events that occurred in Turkey in those nightmarish years of mass killings and deadly deportations—and saw in them a pattern that they could emulate for their own twisted ends.

The Armenians, in many ways, bore the brunt of the slaughter, but ethnic Greeks and Assyrians were also massacred in similar ways—and for the same reason: They were scapegoats in a crumbling empire that saw Christians as a dangerous and potentially treasonous population inside the country.

There was a strong nationalistic impulse to create a “Turkey for the Turks,” and that meant a homogeneous population based on “Turkishness” and the Muslim faith.

Initially, it was just a campaign of boycotting Armenian businesses and shops. But within months, it culminated in acts of violence and the murder of key Armenian politicians and persons of importance. By April 15, 1915, almost 25,000 Armenians were slain in the province of Van.

On April 24, 1915, the Ottomans arrested 250 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople and sent them to Chankri and Ayash, where they were later murdered.

On the same day, the editors and staff of Azadamart, the leading Armenian newspaper of Constantinople, were arrested, to be executed on June 15th in Diyarbekir, where they had been taken and imprisoned.

The Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople and Zohrab, an Armenian deputy in the Ottoman Parliament, petitioned the Turkish authorities on behalf of the arrested Armenians of Constantinople. The answer was that the government was dissolving the Armenian political organizations.

Within nine months, more than 600,000 Armenians were massacred. Of those who were  deported during that time, more than 400,000 died of the brutalities and privations of the southward march into Mesopotamia, raising the number of victims to one million. This became known to the rest of the world outside Turkey as the Armenian Genocide.

In addition, 200,000 Armenians were forcibly converted to Islam to give Armenia a new Turkish sense of identity and strip Armenians of their historical past as the first Christian state in the world.

On August 30, 1922, Armenians who were living in Smyrna were victims of yet more Turkish atrocities. The “Smyrna Disaster” of 1922, which was aimed at Christian Greeks who were living in the seaside city, involved thousands of Armenians, as well. Turkish soldiers and civilians set all the Greek and Armenian neighborhoods on fire, forcing the fleeing of Greeks and Armenians to the harbor, where thousands were killed or drowned.

On April 24, 1919, prominent figures of the Armenian community who had survived the atrocities held a commemoration ceremony at the St. Trinity Armenian church in Istanbul. Following its initial commemoration in 1919, the date became the annual day of remembrance for the Armenian Genocide.

Yet, somehow, ever since the horrific events of 1915, Turkey has methodically denied the fact that the Armenian genocide occurred. Despite Turkish denials, the genocide has been unanimously verified by the International Association of Genocide Scholars and become internationally recognized with the intention of upholding moral responsibility above political purposes.

The Armenian Genocide was officially recognized by US President Biden on April 24, 2021 in an official declaration. It ended a consistent policy of non-recognition that guided Biden’s predecessors.

“Each year on this day, we remember the lives of all those who died in the Ottoman-era Armenian genocide and recommit ourselves to preventing such an atrocity from ever again occurring,” the American President said.

 

PM Pashinyan congratulates Yazidi community of Armenia on New Year – Melek Taûs

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 10:49,

YEREVAN, APRIL 20, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory letter to the representatives of the Yazidi community of Armenia on the occasion of the Yazidi New Year, Melek Taûs, the PM’s Office said.

The letter says: “Dear representatives of the Yazidi community of Armenia,

I warmly congratulate you on the occasion of the New Year – Melek Taûs.

I wish the New Year for the Yazidis of our country to be a year of success, happiness and abundance, and that our Yazidi compatriots preserve and develop their national language and cultural traditions.

We have common pain and happiness. Today we share your happiness, and be sure that we are ready to share your troubles as brothers, that your community’s issues are in our focus.

Melek Taûs brings with it a new hope and dream, so I wish our region to be peaceful, secure in the new year and that the severe trials remain in the past.

All the best to you, dear compatriots”.

Australian-Armenian philanthropist Heros Dilanchian awarded with Prime Minister’s Medal

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 16:15,

YEREVAN, APRIL 20, ARMENPRESS. Chief of Staff at the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia Arayik Harutyunyan received Australian-Armenian philanthropist Heros Dilanchian, the government’s press service said.

According to the decision of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Heros Dilanchian has been awarded with the Armenian PM’s Medal for his contributions to the development of economy and for long-term charitable activity.

Arayik Harutyunyan handed over the medial to Heros Dilanchian, highly valued his charitable activity for the benefit of the development of the homeland.

[Cypriot] Armenian MP slams ‘hypocrisy’ of world powers

Financial Mirror, Cyprus



 

 

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The Armenian Representative in the Cypriot parliament criticised the hypocrisy of world powers in the face of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and apathy towards victims of other aggressions, including Cyprus.

“The international community must finally stop pretending to act based on economic and geostrategic interests and should take on the role of defender of world justice, putting words into practice,” said Vartkes Mahdessian in his annual address to the House marking the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide on April 24.

“Having suffered from the same enemy, Armenians and Cypriots, we are fighting for justice, and we are sailing in the same boat with Ukraine and other countries that face great powers in front of them.

“Unfortunately, the powerful nations have always been content with making simple statements of condemnation, leaving the weak a pawn of the invader’s appetites and eternal victims of their interests.

“The world’s mobilisation with the recent Russian invasion of Ukraine causes a strange notion.

“Public opinion has remained apathetic to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974, the bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 and more recently, the breaches of the Green Line in Cyprus and the violation of the status quo in Famagusta by the Turks, the war in Artsakh and the continuing violation of the borders of Armenia by the Azeris.”

Mahdessian said like every year, the tragic events of the Armenian Genocide, the first great genocide of the turbulent 20th century, are recalled again.

“We honour the memory of the more than 1,500,000 innocent Armenian martyrs who were massacred, murdered or deported between 1915 and 1923 and forced to die in the inhospitable desert of Der Zor in present-day Syria.

“In addition, at least 95,000 Armenians converted to Islam, leaving their descendants unaware of their origins today,” while a cultural genocide was widespread throughout Asia Minor, removing any indication of an Armenian presence over the millennia.

The Armenian MP said that of the 800,000 survivors who fled or were displaced, some 9,000 refugees ended up in Cyprus.

“Among them was my own family. But, with effort and hard work, the 1,300 who finally remained managed to stand on their own feet and maintain the good name the Armenians have always enjoyed on our island.

“Cyprus has always been a steadfast supporter of Armenians and Armenia.

“In 1975, it became the second country in the world and the first in Europe to recognise the Armenian Genocide, with Resolution 36 passed by the House of Representatives from this podium. In 2015, it criminalised its denial.

“The practical and moral support it offers us is continuous and uninterrupted, while at the state level, the two countries cooperate perfectly in trade and geostrategic sectors.

“Once again, I feel the need to thank all the governments of the Republic of Cyprus for the above.”

Taking the floor before calling for a moment of silence in respect to the victims, House Speaker Annita Demetriou said the Armenian Genocide at the hands of the Young Turks was “one of the greatest crimes in the modern history of mankind, which began in 1915.”

“It has left a traumatic mark on the collective memory of the Armenian people, but also of all the peoples who have faced the atrocities of Turkey, which, with the tolerance of the international community, has committed genocides against other peoples, without to this day having acknowledged the Armenian Genocide or apologised for the policies of ethnic cleansing and expansion that it unrepentantly continues.

“As the House of Representatives, we condemn for the umpteenth time this heinous act and express our support to our friends, the Armenian people, while appealing to the international community for universal recognition of the Armenian genocide.”


 

Serzh Sargsyan: History cannot be distorted

Panorama
Armenia –

The office of Armenia’s third President Serzh Sargsyan has published the first three paragraphs of the proposal package submitted by the OSCE Minsk Group to the parties negotiating over a peaceful solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in August 2016.

“Does it look like a step-by-step solution? The question is in black and white, it is clear and distinct (italics added) and is addressed to those who read and understand, and not to those who are aware of all this, but intentionally distort the NK negotiation process, who failed the negotiations,” the office said in a statement.

“History cannot be distorted,” it added.

Earlier, the Armenian authorities accused Serzh Sargsyan of negotiating a step-by-step settlement of the Karabakh conflict during his presidency.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 11-04-22

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 18:17,

YEREVAN, 11 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 11 April, USD exchange rate is down by 0.85 drams to 474.84 drams. EUR exchange rate is up by 0.36 drams to 518.15 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate is down by 0.31 drams to 6.06 drams. GBP exchange rate is down by 0.96 drams to 619.43 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price is up by 84.59 drams to 29638.30 drams. Silver price is up by 3.08 drams to 375.94 drams. Platinum price stood at 16414.1 drams.