President Sarkissian issues message on Victory and Peace Day

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 11:19, 9 May, 2021

YEREVAN, MAY 9, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian issued a message on the Victory and Pecae Day. As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the President, the message runs as follows,

‘’Dear compatriots,

Today is the Victory and Peace Day.

Let us remember all those who fought with the confidence to win and determination not to lose.

Let us remember all those who fell for victory and peace.

Let us bow before to memory and heroism.

They won, liberating Shushi about thirty years ago.

They won, capturing Berlin more than seventy-five years ago.

They were all convinced that freedom and victory were never given as a gift, but were obtained through will and efforts, often at the cost of life and health.

During the Second World and Great Patriotic Wars, the Armenian people, along with other peoples of the Soviet Union and Europe, heroically participated in the struggle against fascism.

At the end of the 20th century, our people again faced the fact of planned hatred of Armenians; this time, they had to fight against the Azerbaijani aggression.

In the 21st century, we have once again faced the threat of hatred and ethnic cleansing in the form of a joint Azerbaijani-Turkish war against Artsakh.

These days, when it is another anniversary of the world’s victory over fascism, the world is facing new challenges. We need to rethink the ideas of victory and peace, realizing their high value and importance.

Our grandfathers died for these ideas in the Second World and Great Patriotic Wars. I bow to their memory and send my best wishes to our veterans, who are a living textbook of life and work.

Their present-day generations sacrificed themselves for those ideas in the first Artsakh war. Let light come down to their graves.

Our today’s heroes in Artsakh sacrificed their lives for those ideas. I pray for the peace of their souls, bow to their memory, and address my words of gratitude and consolation to their families and relatives.

I pray for the recovery of our injured soldiers, for the speedy return of the captives, for the quick finding of the missing, serving my efforts and opportunities to that cause.

I wish good health and trouble-free service to the servicemen and volunteers who guard our borders, protect our peace and security.

 Dear compatriots,

This year marks the 30th anniversary of Armenia’s declaration of independence. To attain independence was also the victory of freedom and will. Today, at a distance of years, it reminds us that any attainment, especially a victory, must develop and transform into a strong state and organized society, dignified peace, and sustainable progress. We must win. The guarantee of that is our unity and will, our determination and organization, our purposefulness and discipline.

Let’s live, and work so that to be worthy of victory.

Glory to the heroes of Victory!

Long live Armenia and Artsakh!

Long live our people!’’.


Armenia MFA issues statement over construction works being carried out by Azerbaijan in Shushi’s Ghazanchetsots Church

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 13:23, 4 May, 2021

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s foreign ministry has released a statement regarding the construction works being carried out by Azerbaijan in Shushi’s Ghazanchetsots Cathedral.

Armenpress presents the MFA’s statement:

“The actions being carried out by Azerbaijan at the Ghazanchetsots Cathedral of the Holy Savior in Shushi are deplorable, as there are already many precedents for the destruction of Armenian places of worship, monuments, as well as for justification of such actions.

Among the many war crimes committed by the Azerbaijani armed forces during the aggression against Artsakh is the deliberate targeting of the Shushi Ghazanchetsots Cathedral with high precision weapons twice within a day, followed by the act of vandalism after the ceasefire was established. 

It’s noteworthy that Azerbaijan carries out actions at the Shushi Cathedral without consulting with the Armenian Apostolic Church, which clearly violates the right of the Armenian believers to freedom of religion. It is equally concerning that Azerbaijan has started to change the architectural appearance of the church before the launch of work by the UNESCO expert assessment mission. It is obvious that Azerbaijan is deliberately blocking the entry of UNESCO experts to the endangered Armenian cultural heritage sites, on the one hand to cover the war crimes it has committed, and on the other hand to change the historical-architectural integrity of the monument.

In this situation, all the concerns of the Armenian side that these actions of Azerbaijan are manifestations of vandalism, aimed at depriving the Shushi Mother Cathedral of its Armenian identity are more than substantiated.

No action can be carried out at the Ghazanchetsots Cathedral, the numerous Armenian historical and cultural monuments and places of worship in the territories of Artsakh under the Azerbaijani occupation, without documentation of the current situation by international, first of all, UNESCO experts and their active involvement in restoration works. Shushi Cathedral is one of the important centers of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Artsakh, it should serve as a place of worship”.

All Jews have a moral duty to recognise Armenian genocide

The Jewish Chronicle
April 30 2021

President Biden has become the first president to use the word — but it is to some Israeli leaders’ shame that they have not

    Last Shabbat, 24 April, was the annual day of remembrance of the Meds Yeghern — the “great evil crime” of the 1915 Armenian Genocide. While it often merits a throwaway comment in speeches during Holocaust Memorial Day, it is doubtful whether it earned a mention during the many services in Jewish houses of worship last week.

    In contrast, President Biden used the occasion to become the first US president to describe the events of 1915 as genocide, something George Bush and Barack Obama never dared to do. In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Netanyahu remained silent while the Foreign Ministry put out a respectful statement, but one which happened to omit the crucial word — genocide.

    Yet Israel’s President Rivlin has been continually outspoken in drawing attention to “the first mass murder of the twentieth century”. Ten years ago, as the Speaker of the Knesset, he told his largely silent parliamentary colleagues that, “it is my duty as a Jew and Israeli to recognise the tragedies of other peoples”.

    The International Association of Genocide Scholars estimates that well over a million people perished. While the Turks put the figure at 500,000 and say that there was no systematic attempt to kill Armenians, two leading Israeli academics, Benny Morris and Dror Ze’evi, have demonstrated that there was an intentional effort to eliminate Anatolia’s Christian population — Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians — over a 30-year period between 1894 and 1924. They wrote: “While the Nazis used guns and gas, many of the murdered Christians were killed with knives, bayonets, axes and stones; thousands were burned alive (the Nazis burned corpses); tens of thousands of women and girls were gang-raped and murdered; clerics were crucified; and thousands of Christian dignitaries were tortured — eyes gouged out, noses and ears cut off…”

    This long, harrowing passage from Morris and Ze’evi’s book, The Thirty Year Genocide, shockingly concludes: “In terms of the behaviour of the perpetrators, on the level of individual actions, the Turkish massacre of Christians was far more sadistic than the Nazi murder of the Jews.”

    Jews and Armenians — as dispersed peoples — found that their paths often crossed. It was during World War I that the Armenian James Malcolm worked with Chaim Weizmann to abort a clandestine attempt by the Americans to remove the Ottoman Turks from the war through negotiation.

    Malcolm was friendly with the JC editor of the time, Leopold Greenberg, who introduced him first to Weizmann and Sokolov, which led to a meeting with the politician and diplomat Sir Mark Sykes.

    Sykes, who was deeply involved in Middle East politics, believed that an “Armenia for the Armenians, Arabia for the Arabs and Judaea for the Jews” would prevent German penetration in the area. This was part of the political process which manifested itself in the Balfour Declaration of November 1917.

    While it is well known that the British allowed Vladimir Jabotinsky to create a Jewish Legion to fight on the side of the allies, they also permitted the formation of an Armenian Legion under French command. The Armenians fought in Palestine under General Allenby at the battle of Megiddo (Armageddon) in September 1918.

    While President Rivlin has proved to be that rare exception on the Israeli Right to promote the memory of the Armenian genocide, other Likud politicians such as Yitzhak Shamir regarded it as “not our business”. There was also an element of Menahem Begin’s general disdain — “goyim kill goyim and the Jews are blamed!” It was significant that those who had served in Yitzhak Rabin’s administration and those from the left wing Zionist Meretz party were the most vociferous in their demand for Israeli recognition for the Armenians.

    In the 1950s, Ben-Gurion’s government instituted “the doctrine of the periphery”. This meant strategic alliances with the non-Arab states of the Middle East, including Ethiopia, Iran — and Turkey.

    Haile Selassie was deposed in Ethiopia while Khomeini’s Islamic Revolution took root in Iran, leaving only Turkey. In 2003, Recep Erdoğan of the Islamic AKP party took power in Ankara. Regarded at first as a conservative — to the extent that he received a ‘Profile of Courage’ award from the American Jewish Congress in 2004 — Erdoğan emerged as an authoritarian figure, imprisoning his opponents and bent on resurrecting Ottoman imperialism.

    Erdoğan saved his animus for Israel. He made a key error when he accused the Jewish state of acts of genocide in 2014 during Operation Protective Edge. This faux pas emanated from the lips of a man who had devoted considerable resources towards preventing any international recognition of the Armenian catastrophe.

    Marc David Baer’s book, Sultanic Saviours and Tolerant Turks, was published last year. Baer, an American Jewish professor at LSE whose expertise is Turkish studies, forensically deconstructed the mythical relationship between Turks and Jews that had been propagated. The chapter titles, Grateful Jews and Anti-Semitic Greeks and Armenians, 500 Years of Friendship and Whitewashing the Armenian Genocide with Holocaust Heroism testify to years of misleading Turkish propaganda.

    Baer was particularly critical of the old guard leadership of the Jewish community in Turkey, whose role was to lobby US Jewish organisations in order to prevent any mention of the fate of the Armenians.

    Baer quotes an aide to President Carter, Stuart Eizenstat, who reported that the Turkish ambassador to the US, Şükrü Elekdağ, warned that if the then-newly established Holocaust Museum in Washington mentioned the Armenians, Turkey might not be able “to guarantee the safety of its Jews”.

    As evidenced by the silence in Jerusalem today, Western governments and Israel found themselves in a moral dilemma, in that Turkey was a member of NATO and the first line of defence against hostile forces. Militant Armenian organisations made a bad situation worse by systematic assassinations of Turkish diplomats.

    In 2007, the then-Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert intervened on the advice of his Foreign Ministry to block a discussion about the Armenians in the Knesset. A year later, President Peres persuaded the Anti-Defamation League in the US to reverse its support for a congressional initiative to debate the fate of the Armenians.

    Since then, the voices of dissent in Israel have grown louder because of the deteriorating relationship between Israel and Turkey.

    In October 2019, President Trump suddenly withdrew US troops from the Turkish-Syrian border and left the Kurds open to annihilation by Turkish forces. Many were outraged by this move, since the Kurds had been valiant fighters against ISIS and good friends of Israel. Even Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader in Congress and a serial apologist for Trump, was publicly critical of the move.

    A few weeks later, Erdoğan visited the White House and Trump declared himself “a big fan” of the Turkish president. For Congress, enough was enough — it then unanimously recognised the mass murder of the Armenians as an instance of genocide.

    During World War I, the Nili espionage team of early Zionist pioneers in Zikhron Ya’akov supplied information about the Turks in Palestine to the British. Their great fear was that the Turks would do to the Jews what they had done to the Armenians.

    Avshalom Feinberg, a Nili member, sent an intelligence report to his British handler. In the depths of the Armenian tragedy, he asked himself if he was living instead in the brutal time of Titus and Nebuchadnezzer: “And I, a Jew, forgot that I am a Jew. I asked myself whether I have the right to weep ‘over the tragedy of the daughter of my people’ only — and whether Jeremiah did not shed tears of blood for the Armenians as well.”

    Feinberg did not live to either bear witness to the Shoah nor see the rise of a state of the Jews.

    He was murdered aged 27 by Bedouins, but his question has come down to us across the decades. It is a pertinent question which goes beyond national interests.

    We ignore the universalism within Jewish tradition at our peril. 

Genocide finally called by its name

On Sunday night, June 13, 1915, Clara Childs Richmond, an American missionary in Talas, Turkey, could not sleep. As she lay awake in her hilltop bedroom—which had a sweeping view of the town below—she suddenly saw lanterns flashing and heard the loud voices of Ottoman provincial police. 

They had come to arrest the prominent Armenian men of Talas—37 of them in that sweep.

Childs Richmond in a testimonial recalled the lanterns going house to house, the women and children screaming as their husbands and fathers were taken.

E.C. Salibian/Photo: Kate Kressmann-Kehoe

One of the men arrested that night was Boghos Haroutounian, steward of the American missionary hospital of Talas. Also arrested around that time was Haig Haroutounian, the hospital pharmacist. 

Haig was my grandfather. Boghos was his brother. Their crime was being Armenian.

If I weave together the testimonies of American witnesses like Childs Richmond and the family stories I heard growing up, I can piece together what happened. 

Boghos and Haig were taken to a prison in Cesarea, now called Kayseri. There, they promised each other that, if either of them got out alive, he would take care of the family. Their mother was an elderly widow. Boghos was married and had six children. Haig, the younger brother, was engaged to my future grandmother, Sima.

Within days, Boghos was taken out and shot. His clothes turned up later for sale in a nearby town. Haig was tortured but eventually released, thanks to the intervention of American and Turkish friends. 

E.C. Salibian’s grandfather, Haig; Haig’s brother Boghos; Boghos’ wife Maritza; Haig and Boghos’s mother, Kayane; seated in her lap, Haroutoune, a son of Boghos and Maritza. Standing on the right, Vahan, brother of Haig and Boghos.

My grandfather kept his promise. He took care of the family and eventually managed to resettle them in Beirut, Lebanon. 

But an estimated 1.5 million Armenians did not survive that time. They died by massacre and starvation, fire and disease. When Raphael Lemkin coined the word “genocide” during World War II, he recalled the destruction of Ottoman Armenians. Lemkin was a Jewish lawyer from Poland who lost most of his family in the Holocaust. He wanted a way to identify and prevent a recurring crime with no name.  

Today, the organization Genocide Watch identifies Ten Stages of Genocide. The 10th stage is denial. For more than a century, Turkey has denied the Armenian genocide. The United States for years inched toward recognition through congressional resolutions. President Ronald Reagan in 1981 referred to the “Armenian genocide” in a statement about the Holocaust. But, concerned about NATO bases—and cowed by Turkish threats of non-cooperation—no American president has dared to officially apply the “G” word to the destruction of my people.  

Until Joe Biden did on April 24.   

“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,” Biden’s White House Statement reads. “We honor their story. We see that pain. We affirm the history.”

Finally, truth acknowledged. I feel such relief. 

I know a geopolitical calculus impacted the words and their timing, but I also believe Biden followed a moral imperative. The statement matters to me. It contradicts my invisibility, the world’s indifference to my family’s trauma. 

But why should it matter to you?

You live in a world where genocide continues. The Rohingya of Myanmar, Yazidis in Syria, the Uyghur of China, and many others remain under assault. The Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh in the Caucasus very recently have lost life and home. Perhaps you are a member of a group that has been or currently is targeted.

Consider again the 10 stages of genocide. They are not linear; they can occur simultaneously. They are not a spontaneous combustion of mass killing, but rather can develop when the human tendency to divide people as “us” and “them” turns ugly. When circumstances align in particular ways, genocide can arise. 

Anywhere.

Here’s part of Genocide Watch’s description of Stage 3: Discrimination: “A dominant group uses law, custom, and political power to deny the rights of other groups. The powerless group may not be accorded full civil rights, voting rights, or even citizenship.”

Sound familiar? What about voting rights in Georgia? 

Or how about Stage 6: Polarization: “Extremists drive the groups apart. Hate groups broadcast polarizing propaganda.”

Stage 8: “Children are forcibly taken from their parents.”

Genocide develops along a continuum. You have to be aware of the signs a society is moving in that direction. I was frankly worried about the United States under President Donald Trump. Less so under Biden. But this remains a nation that has never officially acknowledged the genocide of Native Americans. And what does it say about us that the statement “Black Lives Matter” is controversial? 

Long ago, I decided that I could not allow my power or well-being to be held hostage to whether Turkey or anyone acknowledged the Armenian genocide. I wanted instead to inherit my history by making my own promise to watch out for the family, the vulnerable people of this world. 

It’s not yesterday’s genocide we can stop. It’s tomorrow’s. 

E.C. Salibian is Rochester Beacon senior editor.


Armenian President sends letters to CoE and OSCE secretaries general over POW issue

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 12:52,

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has sent letters to Secretary General of the Council of Europe Marija Pejčinović Burić and Secretary General of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Helga Maria Schmid, over the urgent issue of Armenian prisoners of war and civilians who are held captive in Azerbaijan. Mr. Sarkissian noted that Armenia is expecting support from the international partners over the quick return of all POWs and detained civilians from Azerbaijan, the Armenian President’s Office told Armenpress.

In the letters the President emphasized that 2020 was a challenging year for Armenia not only due to the coronavirus pandemic, but also the war unleashed by Azerbaijan with the support and direct participation of Turkey against Artsakh on September 27.

“Despite the international community’s regular calls to immediately stop the war, Azerbaijan’s military-political leadership was massively and deliberately targeting the civilian population and infrastructure, with gross violations of human rights and the norms of the international humanitarian law.

This led to the loss of thousands of young lives, made thousands disabled, led to the displacement of the population and destruction of the Armenian historical and cultural heritage.

During and after the war Armenian servicemen and civilians have been captured, they are subject to tortures and inhuman treatment by Azerbaijan”, President Sarkissian said.

Emphasizing that today addressing the humanitarian situation in Artsakh is a key matter, and that the international community must show an urgent attention to it, the Armenian President said it’s highly important to conduct the exchange of all prisoners of war and detained civilians by the “all for all” principle, which is ignored by Azerbaijan.

Currently, Azerbaijan continues rejecting and obstructing the return of hostage-taken civilians and POWs with gross violations of human rights and international humanitarian law.

In this context President Sarkissian highlighted the activity of the Ombudsman of Armenia, his fact-finding works, who always raises the concerns and problems of the Armenian side at the international arena.

In the end of his letters the Armenian President called on the CoE, the OSCE, their Secretary Generals to take all necessary measures in accordance with the international humanitarian law to ensure the immediate release and safe return of the prisoners of war and civilians.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian Genocide Warning by Far-Right Turkish Lawmaker Prompts Criminal Complaint

Newsweek

A criminal complaint has been filed against a far-right Turkish politician for tweets about the mass killings of Armenians, amid a heated debate over the topic in the days since President Joe Biden recognized the deaths as genocide.

The Human Rights Association in Turkey has filed the complaint against the independent lawmaker Ümit Özdağ, who engaged in a Twitter spat with Garo Paylan, a Turkish politician of Armenian descent.

On April 24, Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, Biden said: “Each year on this day, we remember the lives of all those who died in the Ottoman-era Armenian genocide.”

The government in Yerevan celebrated the president’s comments, but they sparked a rebuke from Ankara. On the same day, Paylan wrote on Twitter about his unhappiness that streets and schools in Turkey were still named after Talaat Pasha.

Pasha was an Ottoman politician and one of the leaders who ordered the exile of Ottoman Armenians in 1915. Armenia says around 1.5 million people died in a planned operation that constitutes genocide.

“After 106 years, we walk on streets named after Talaat Pasha, the architect of the Genocide,” Paylan tweeted, according to a translation from Turkish. Germany, he pointed out, did not have streets or schools named after Adolf Hitler.

Özdağ replied, telling Paylan to “go to hell.” He tweeted: “Talaat Pasha didn’t expel patriotic Armenians but those who stabbed us in the back like you. When the time comes, you’ll also have a Talaat Pasha experience and you should have it.”

The pair then exchanged a flurry of tweets, with Paylan calling Özdağ a “fascist” and adding: “Those left behind never give up the struggle for justice.”

Paylan, a member of parliament from the Peoples’ Democratic Party—the only Turkish political party to recognize the killings as genocide—told the magazine Duvar: “Our country is in an atmosphere of hate and the political scene ignores these hate speeches.”

Read more
  • Turkey’s Erdogan Calls for History Panel After Biden ‘Genocide’ Statement
  • Armenians Hail Biden Genocide Declaration as Turkey Summons US Ambassador
  • Turkish Official Slams Biden for Statement on Armenian ‘Genocide’

The Human Rights Association’s criminal complaint requests that a lawsuit be filed against Özdağ under Articles 106 and 216 of the Turkish Penal Code, which cover threats and provoking public hatred.

The organisation is also seeking a discrimination charge under the European Convention on Human Rights, Turkish press agency Bianet reported.

Özdağ, who is described by Turkish news outlets as a far-right lawmaker, now sits as an independent member of parliament. He was previously removed from senior posts in the Nationalist Movement Party and the IYI Party.

Newsweek has contacted Özdağ and the Human Rights Association for comment.

Yerevan celebrated Biden’s decision to go further than his predecessors in describing the massacre of Armenians in 1915 and 1916 as genocide.

Ankara acknowledges that deaths occurred, but rejects the idea that there was any systemic or organised effort—and the use of the term genocide. Biden’s statement has strained U.S. ties with its NATO partner. Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Turkey’s foreign minister, said: “We will not be given lessons on our history from anyone.”