NKR Parliament Speaker expresses gratitude to Chile for condemning Azeri aggression

May 23, President of the National Assembly of the Republic of Artsakh Ashot Ghoulyan sent thank-you letters to the President of the Chamber of Deputies of Chile, Osvaldo Andrade and Issa Kort, Gustavo Hasbun, Denise Pascal, Aldo Cornejo and Jorge Sabag, the authors of resolution No. 565 condemning Azerbaijani aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. The message reads:

“For us the attention and particular attitude that Chilean Chamber of Deputies showed through respect for international law and the right of the peoples to self-determination in the issue of the Azerbaijan-Karabakh conflict resolution is extremely valuable and appreciative.

Without exaggeration, your statement is a bold step in breaking the international indifference that should be a model for all the role players interested in international security issues.

Your strong support inspires us to be hopeful, that the international community will respect the right of self-determination of the people of Artsakh, which will be an additional guarantee for ensuring the security of our people.

Since 1991 exercising the right self-determination, the people of Nagorno Karabakh have declared independence and for about a quarter of a century have been to building and developing a state based on democracy and will contribute to the regional peace and stability”, was underlined in the thank-you letters of the NA President. “

Armenian FM to visit Brussels

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian will leave for Brussels on May 23 to participate in the meeting of the Foreign Ministers of EU member states and Eastern Partnership Countries, Press Service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs reports.

Russian conductor Valery Gergiev to hold Palmyra concert

A renowned Russian conductor will perform in the ruins of Palmyra in Syria on Thursday, Russian media say.

Valery Gergiev will perform at Palmyra’s Roman Theatre, Rossiya 24 reported.

Syrian forces, backed by Russian air strikes, took back Palmyra from the so-called Islamic State (IS) in March.

Last July, IS posted footage online showing some of its fighters carrying out killings in the ancient theatre.

Rossiya 24 said the concert would be broadcast on Russian television later on Thursday.

Mr Gergiev travelled to Syria with the Symphony Orchestra of St Petersburg’s Mariinsky Theatre, where he is artistic director.

Turkish denialist helps publicize truth about the Armenian Genocide

By Harut Sassounian
The California Courier

Ergun Kirlikovali, a resident of Orange County, California, and former president of the Assembly of Turkish American Associations, has carried out a life-long Don Quixotic battle against recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Unfortunately for him, the more he denies the Genocide, the more he helps publicize it.

Here is the latest episode of Kirli’s ‘heroic’ actions which once again backfired on him and his obsessive denialism.

On April 24, as 60,000 protesters gathered in front of the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles, Kirli showed up with a handful of his denialist compatriots trying to cover up the tarnished image of their homeland! The Turks’ presence at the protest attracted the attention of the local news media, generating more publicity for the 101st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

To take credit for his anti-Armenian protest, Kirli had a cohort videotape his interview with KABC-TV, during which he once again denied the Armenian Genocide. Shockingly, in the midst of the interview, the KABC cameraman made derogatory remarks about Armenians, calling them “thug-like idiots.”

In its news coverage of the April 24 protest, KABC used a sound bite from Kirli’s 8-minute rant. However, no one would have known about the cameraman’s prejudicial comments, if it were not for Kirli posting the raw footage of his interview on Facebook, which got the anti-Armenian cameraman in hot water.

In response to complaints from the public, KABC promptly issued a statement apologizing for its freelance cameraman’s remarks and announcing the termination of his services with the TV station. However, KABC insisted that its story was “fair and accurate.” Many viewers disagreed, citing the inclusion of Kirli’s denialist views in the broadcast. In a phone conversation with KABC’s General Manager last week, I discussed the pitfalls of providing airtime to a denialist and the positive steps the TV station could initiate to educate viewers about the Armenian Genocide. Upset by the station’s conciliatory statement, Kirli posted on Facebook his “disappointment” with KABC’s apology and dismissal of the cameraman after complaints from “Armenian pressure groups.”

The Armenian National Committee of America — Western Region (ANCA) and Armenian Youth Federation — Western US (AYF) issued a joint statement contesting KABC’s decision to provide a platform to a notorious genocide denier and asked for a meeting with the TV station’s management. They justifiably contended that KABC would never interview a neo-Nazi while covering a Holocaust commemorative event.

Subsequently, KABC’s management agreed to meet with representatives of ANCA, AYF, and the Armenian Bar Association, and removed from the TV station’s website Kirli’s offensive words along with the questionable news story! After the meeting, Cheryl Kunin Fair, President and General Manager of KABC-TV, issued the following highly principled statement on May 2:

“ABC7 regrets what happened and apologizes for the pain this incident caused the Armenian community, especially on Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day. The actions of the cameraman in question, who no longer works for the station, and the resulting story that aired that day, were not an accurate reflection of ABC7′ s commitment to the Armenian community. While the cameraman’s comments did not air, we regret the inclusion in our story of a short bite from the interview denying the existence of the Genocide on historical grounds, which is counter to the position of a majority of historians today who do call it a Genocide, and see the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians as a premeditated and systematic campaign to exterminate an entire people. Efforts are underway in partnership with the ANCA, AYF, Armenian Bar Association and others to provide opportunities for public dialogue, internal education, and meaningful stories about and for the Armenian community and their efforts for Genocide recognition and education. We are committed to moving forward with these initiatives and we thank the ANCA and its partner organizations for their leadership in this dialogue and willingness to listen.”

KABC-TV should be commended for issuing such a reassuring statement, apologizing for the offense caused to the Armenian community, promising not to use the services of the bigoted cameraman, expressing regret for interviewing a genocide denialist, reaffirming the truth of the Armenian Genocide, and pledging to work with community organizations to educate the public on this critical issue. Without Kirli’s persistent denialist endeavors, none of these constructive steps would have been possible!

The philosophy of negotiations should change: Ara Papyan

 

 

 

The recent military actions unleashed by Azerbaijan showed that there is no negotiated solution to the Karabakh conflict, first of all because Azerbaijan’s extremely harsh and uncompromising position, Head of Modus Vivendi center Ara Papyan told a press conference today. According to him, Azerbaijan pursues the aim of destroying Armenian statehood.

“We must implement a similar policy, using all domestic problems inside Azerbaijan, e.g. the ethnic and religious controversies,” he said.

“Ceasefire does not yet mean peace, therefore, the rules of war are working,” Papyan said. According to him, it’s necessary to think about creation of new security opportunities both in political and military respects, at the same time deepening the relations with the West.

“We can at least anticipate targeted statements and condemnations instead of the blurred, indefinite ones,” he said.

Papyan noted that “at this point most Armenians and the NKR authorities strongly oppose the principle of “territories for peace or status” formula that lies in the basis of talks.” Therefore, he said, the whole philosophy of the negotiations needs to change.

As for the status of Karabakh, Ara Papyan believes Artsakh’s joining Armenia is more correct and more acceptable to the world than independence.

Turkey visa deal only once ‘all criteria met’: EU

The EU’s top diplomat Federica Mogherini said Tuesday that Turkey would only get visa-free travel to the bloc once it has met all the required criteria, AFP reports.

Turkey has demanded its citizens be allowed to enter the European Union’s passport free Schengen zone without a visa by June, in exchange for it taking back migrants from Europe.

But the EU insists that Turkey must meet 72 conditions before allowing visa-free travel, of which it is believed to have fulfilled about half.

“On free travel, this will be done only once all the criteria are respected, as for all countries with which we negotiate free travel for a limited period,” EU foreign policy chief Mogherini said on France Inter radio.

“It was the case with Georgia, it was the case with Ukraine, it is a discussion we are having with Kosovo. There are very strict, technical criteria that must be put in place, a very severe verification must be carried out to apply this measure.”

The EU struck the deal with Turkey to send back all “irregular” migrants which arrive in Greece after March 20 in a bid to halt mass migration which has created enormous strain in Europe.

 

Mogherini said resuming talks on Turkey’s accession was “the only way we can help Turkey modernise its state (and) respect fundamental rights including press freedom … and also hold a larger conversation for example on relaunching peace talks with the Kurds.”

 

If Ankara meets its side of the agreement, the European Commission has promised to recommend next month that EU states approve visa-free travel for Turks.

Armenian Genocide commemorated in Istanbul

The Armenian Genocide was commemorated today at Istanbul’s Hayderpasha train station, the reports.

Participants held banners and photographs of the intellectuals arrested and killed in 1915, and posters demanding recognition and reparations for the Armenian Genocide.

In 1915, members of the Istanbul Armenian community, including intellectual and cultural leaders, were arrested in their homes, detained at the city’s central prison (now the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts in Sultanahmet Square), and then sent off to the Haydarpasha train station from where they were sent to the interior to their deaths.

The following statement by the Human Rights Association of Turkey Istanbul branch was read in Turkish, Armenian, and English at today’s commemoration.

***

The Genocide that Lasts

When a crime goes unpunished, it continues to be committed. Denial perpetuates genocide.

The Armenian Genocide is a crime against humanity that continues to be committed because it is denied and its perpetrators have gone unpunished.

One-hundred-and-one years ago today, people from all walks of life from the Armenian community, but especially leading intellectuals, poets, writers, and journalists, were shipped here to Haydarpasha from Sarayburnu before they were sent to their deaths in Anatolia. Very few survived; most were killed.

These arrests represent the beginning of the genocidal process realized by way of clear orders by the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), the central government of the Ottoman Empire, as well as the effective organization of the provinces for the execution of these orders and the participation of the local inhabitants.

Before 1915, according to the census of the Istanbul Patriarchate, the Armenian population of the Empire was 2 million, and Armenians lived in 2,925 settlements comprising cities, districts, and villages. These communities had 1,996 schools, 173,000 male and female students, and 2,538 churches and monasteries. The Armenian social existence, which had been strikingly vibrant, was destroyed not only by outright massacres and exile, but also through the demolition of social infrastructure such as schools, libraries, churches, etc., as well as material dispossession. Their institutions, culture, history, and civilization, even the vestiges of their existence were subject to destruction.

The genocide of 1915 was also “SEYFO,” the mass massacre and exile of the Assyrian people. It was also the genocide of the Greeks of Asia Minor and Pontus.

If we have declared that genocide denial perpetuates genocide, it is because denial becomes institutionalized, and in fact socialized and internalized by generations of perpetrators. Denial continually reproduces hatred against the identity of the victims.

By going unpunished, this crime against humanity was perpetuated in Turkey through coups, the bloody suppression of the Kurdish insurrection, the Dersim genocide, the incineration and evisceration of villages in the 90’s, and the reduction of millions of people to refugees in their own country. The 1915 genocide and its denial—the assumption that the state can act outside the law and commit crimes whenever it wants—became entrenched in the system and in minds; it was naturalized, and normalized. It is by and large for this reason that coups, torture, forced disappearances, murders by unknown assailants came to be seen not as crimes but as necessary and mandatory executions of the state. Those who were responsible were protected by the mantle of impunity.

Today, this internalized state mentality has resulted in the war that the state has been waging  since August 2015 against the Kurds with its army, with tanks and cannons; it is also at the root of the absence of strong mass resistance from the Turkish people to this war.

As we have said, genocide denial perpetuates genocide. Denial is the exculpation of the perpetrator and the criminalization of the victim. From course books to special publications, from newspapers to television programs, Armenians have been represented as those who deserve genocide. Since the foundation of the Republic, the Armenians of Turkey have been living to this day in a society that remains hostile to them and in close quarters with the grandchildren of perpetrators who think exactly the way their predecessors did.

Whenever the state feels threatened, the usual hostility against Armenians spikes up to horrific levels. Armenians are all the more threatened today under the circumstances of a thoroughly racist war perpetrated by the state against its own citizens, the Kurds, against the grain of all universal laws of war.

Genocide denial leads to the indoctrination of anti-Armenian nationalist generations, to a never-ending offense against the memory of the victims, and to the laceration of their descendants’ wounds. As descendants of perpetrators, we too are responsible for denial; we live with this profound shame.

There has been no end to blood, tears, and laments in Turkey since the genocide and its denial. This is because the crime has gone unpunished and in fact continued with new crimes whose perpetrators too have gone unpunished—because justice has not been established. The graveless dead of the genocide continue to suffer their torment.

We have always said and hereby repeat:

– As long as the genocide remains unrecognized,

– As long as an apology is not offered to the Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks who have dispersed all over the world,

– As long as the confiscated cash and property remains uncompensated,

– As long as the war against the Kurds continues and the Kurds’ right to self-determination remains unrecognized,

– As long as an order in keeping with democracy, the rule of law, and human rights is not established,

justice will not be established. The curse of the genocide will not be lifted, and these regions will never see the light of day. This is not a prediction, but a statement of fact.

RECOGNIZE THE GENOCIDE WITH ALL ITS LEGAL IMPLICATIONS! ESTABLISH JUSTICE!

EBU Members mark Shakespeare anniversary with new musical co-production

EBU Members in six different countries pay an eclectic musical tribute to William Shakespeare on the 400th anniversary of his death (23 April 2016). The Public Radio of Armenia joins EBU to mark the anniversary. 

The New Shakespeare Songbook project brings together Members in Austria, France, Norway, Slovenia, Switzerland and the UK to celebrate the renowned English poet and playwright in seven new short films.

Some of Europe’s best known musicians responded to the challenge to set Shakespeare’s texts to music. These include French rapper Oxmo Puccino, Norwegian singer-songwriter Ane Brun and UK electronic musician Matthew Herbert.

Austria’s Eva Jantschitsch aka Gustav, singer Gregor Volk, piano trio Trio Rêverie, tuba player Goran Krmac and accordionist Janez Dovč from Slovenia and Swiss actress Anahì Traversi together with cellist Zeno Gabaglio are also taking part.

ORF, France Televisions, NRK, RTVSLO, SRG SSR and the BBC commissioned song settings from musicians in their respective countries, while viewers will be challenged to produce their own contributions and share them using the hashtag #newshakespearesongbook.

EBU Media Director Jean Philip De Tender said “Shakespeare is one of the pillars of European culture and the richness of his texts is reflected in the wonderful creative responses from EBU Members working with some of today’s most imaginative artists.”

UK

Switzerland

Slovenia

Norway

France

Austria

EBU project Shakespeare Songbook

Canadian PM issues statement on Armenian Genocide anniversary

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has issued the following statement on the 101st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide;

On this day, we mark the 101st commemoration of the tragic loss of life of the Armenian population during the waning days of the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

Both the Senate of Canada and the House of Commons have adopted resolutions referring to these events as genocide.

We preserve the memory of those who lost their lives, and those who suffered during this genocide and pay our deepest respects to their descendants, including those who now call Canada home.

In solemnly acknowledging this event, let us use this moment as an opportunity to look forward and strengthen our collective resolve to ensure such acts are never again repeated.

While we must never forget the lessons of history, we must also be reminded that past injustices do not serve our communities if they divide us. Canadians of all backgrounds and faiths stand together in reaffirming our collective commitment to the values of pluralism, human rights, and diversity.

On this anniversary, please join me in my hope for a peaceful future based on tolerance, respect, and reconciliation.

Armenia denounces conduct of UN Alliance of Civilizations Forum in Azerbaijan

“The conduct of the Seventh Forum of the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations in a country, where xenophobia, Armenophobia, intolerance are flourishing, raises a number of questions,” Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian told a joint press conference with visiting Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

“The Alliance of Civilizations is called to support high civilizational universal values. Holding the forum in a country, where those values are violated, disrespected and ignored is unacceptable,” he said.

He said, Armenia has not only refused to attend the forum, but has also vetoed the Declaration of the Seventh Forum of the UN Alliance of Civilizations.