L’ARMENIE DEPASSE L’AZERBAIDJAN DANS LA GUERRE DE L’INFORMATION

L’ARMENIE DEPASSE L’AZERBAIDJAN DANS LA GUERRE DE L’INFORMATION
Krikor Amirzayan

armenews.com
vendredi 20 avril 2012

Selon le politologue armenien Hrant Melik-Chahnazarian, l’Armenie
devance l’Azerbaïdjan en matière de ” guerre d’information “. Il
repond ainsi aux propos du president azeri Ilham Aliev qui a appele
a la lutte contre ” le lobby armenien de la diaspora “. Selon H.
Melik-Chahnazarian, l’Armenie et la diaspora sont mieux prepares que
l’Azerbaïdjan en matière de technologies de l’information. ” Les Azeris
n’ont que très peu d’influence sur les Armeniens dans le domaine de
ces technologies ” dit le politologue qui ajoute ” Les informations
emises par l’Armenie trouvent en revanche leurs echos au sein des
peuples qui vivent en Azerbaïdjan et qui considèrent ce pays comme
une prison, grâce aux medias armeniens “. Hrant Melik-Chahnazarian
pense que la meilleure information est l’information libre. Il ajoute
que les sources d’informations azeries etant muselees par le regime
dictatorial de Bakou, ces dernières n’ont que très peu d’influence
sur les peuples du fait du manque de fiabilite de ces informations.

Turkey’s EU Minister, Judge Giovanni Bonello and the Armenian Genoci

TURKEY’S EU MINISTER, JUDGE GIOVANNI BONELLO AND THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE – ‘CLAIM ABOUT MALTA TRIALS IS NONSENSE’
by Keith Micallef

Malta Independent Online

April 19 2012

Article published on 19 April 2012

Judge Giovanni Bonello rubbished the claim made by Turkey’s EU
Affairs Minister, Egemen Bagis, that his country was acquitted of
the responsibility of the Armenian Genocide in 1915, because no such
trial ever took place in Malta.

Though the Turkish Minister was right saying that over 100 Turks were
deported to Malta by the British in 1919 to be charged with war crimes,
including the Armenian genocide, the lack of concrete evidence and an
appropriate legal framework with supranational jurisdiction resulted
in the Turkish detainees being repatriated and freed in exchange for
22 British prisoners held by Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk)..

This important but seemingly forgotten chapter of modern colonial
history was treated by Judge Bonello in one of his volumes in the
Histories of Malta series published by Fondazzjoni Patrimonju Malti.

Following a story carried yesterday by this newspaper quoting the
remarks made by the Turkish EU Minister regarding the Armenian Genocide
which he referred to as an ‘incident’, Dr Bonello alerted The Malta
Independent to clarify that these remarks are simply “nonsense”.

He referred us to volume nine of the Histories of Malta series which
dedicates a particular chapter titled ‘The “Malta Trials” and the
Turkish-Armenian Question’ to this controversial issue.

Dr Bonello explains that following World War I no international norms
for regulating war crimes existed. He claims that it was only through
a series of engineered coincidences that WWI did not end in the
“Malta Trials” the way WWII led to the Nuremberg Trials. He defined
the legal vacuum encountered in 1919 as “a legal nightmare, a terra
incognita that for a first time challenged legal minds to figure out
solutions to phenomena unfamiliar before in the history of warfare
and its aftermath.” Although events that took place in Malta at the
time feature quite prominently in Turkish histories, according to
the author they remain completely unknown or ignored in Malta.

The first steps in dealing with the Armenian question

According to the Turkish Foreign Policy Institute following the
armistice imposed by the Allies on October 30, 1918 Britain appointed
Admiral Sir Somerset Arthur Gouch Calthorpe and Rear-Admiral Richard
Webb as High Commissioner and assistant High Commissioner of the
defeated Ottoman power. On January 2, 1919, Calthorpe requested from
the Foreign Office authority to obtain the arrest and handing over
of all those responsible for the incessant breaches of the terms of
the armistice and the continued ill-treatment of Armenians.

Calthorpe got together a staff of dedicated assistants, including a
notable anti-Turkish Irishman, Andrew Ryan, later Sir, who in 1951
published his memoirs. In his new role as the chief Dragoman of
the British High Commission and Second Political Officer, he found
himself in charge of the Armenian question. He proved instrumental
in the arrest of a large number of the Malta deportees.

These fell broadly into three categories: Those still breaching the
terms of the armistice, those who had allegedly ill-treated Allied
prisoners-of-war and those responsible for excesses against Armenians,
in Turkey itself and the Caucasus.

Calthorpe asked for a personal interview with Reshid Pasha, Minister
for Foreign Affairs, to impress on him how Britain viewed the Armenian
affair and the ill-treatment of POWs as “most important” deserving
“the utmost attention”.

Two days later Calthorpe formally requested the arrest of seven leaders
of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP). While between 160 and
200 people were arrested, another 60 suspected of participating in
the Armenian massacre remained at large.

Calthorpe had already set in motion the transfer of the prisoners,
or at least some 50 to 60 of them, to Malta. He informed Lord Plumer,
Governor of the island, of the need to use Malta for their safe custody
outside Turkey. By then, some 40 of the more important suspects rested
safely in the hands of the authorities, but five more ‘black lists’
had been drawn up by the Armenian and Greek Section of the British
High Commission.

It is significant to note also that the French government at the time
had various objections, including to the extradition to Malta of the
Turkish detainees.

These steps, France insisted “far from having the appearance of
justice” risked leaving the impression of vengeance by the victors.

First detainees arrive in Malta

Meanwhile political developments in Turkey mainly with the rise of
Mustafa Kemal (later the charismatic Ataturk) forced the British to a
hurried change of plans. Admiral Webb took the decision to transfer the
prisoners somewhere beyond the reach of popular uprisings in Istanbul,
as an attack by rioting crowds on Seriaskeriat and Bekir Aga prisons,
where the political detainees were in custody, could not be ruled
out. Webb assumed responsibility not to inform the Turkish government
of his intentions till after they had been carried out, relying on some
undocumented wish of Ferid Pasha that the detainees be sent to Malta.

67 detainees were placed on board SS Princess Ena, of whom 12 leading
politicians and ex-Ministers were to be landed at Mudros, and 55 in
Malta. An additional 11 joined the deportees heading for Malta. These
had been arrested following rioting in Kars, and had no connection
with war crimes. The exiles ended in Salvatore, Polverista and Verdala
Barracks, vacated a year previously by the prisoners of war of the
Central Powers. The Princess Ena sailed at night on May 28, 1919.

Those destined to stay in Malta included 41 politicians, half of
whom had been considered responsible for the Armenian atrocities and
the other half “as a precautionary war measure”. Another 14 officers
suspected of improper treatment of British prisoners-of-war joined
them too.

Legal complexities start to arise

The author explains that it was at this stage that legal complexities
started to surface. No law existed to regulate the matter. British
military courts could try three of the seven offences (breach of
armistice terms, hindering its execution, and ill-treatment of British
POWs), but only in the occupied territories, not in Malta. All the
other offences, including Armenian excesses, loomed large as legal
no man’s land and had best be left for determination in accordance
with a future peace treaty.

At the Paris Peace Conference a legal basis, vague and quite flimsy,
had anyway been established. Compared to the Nuremburg Charter,
a ghost of a legal basis.

Meanwhile more Turkish detainees were deported to Malta raising
the number living here to over 100. At that stage it was already
clear that no one knew what to do exactly with them and awareness
was growing that “it might be very difficult to sustain definitive
charges against many of these persons before an allied tribunal”.

A new wave of arrests followed the storming of the Turkish Chamber
of Deputies by the British troops, and 30 important political figures
were deported to Malta on HMS Benbow, where they arrived on 21 March,
1920. More Turkish deportees trickled to Malta and by November 1920
there was a total of 144. This prompted Mustafa Kemal to order the
arrest of 20 British officers in Anatolia, which would later play a
major role in deciding the faith of the Turkish detainees in Malta.

Among them was Colonel Rawlinson, a relative of Lord Curzon and
brother of Lord Rawlinson

Following a secret memo circulated by Winston Churchill, secretary
of State for War, the British cabinet decided on a revision of the
list of detainees by the Attorney General. Those against whom no
criminal prosecutions appeared possible “were to be released at the
first convenient opportunity”.

In these circumstances Lord Plumer in Malta found himself at a complete
loss as to what line to pursue. He mentioned the 115 Turkish prisoners
(the others were not technically Turkish or had been released)
who belonged to the highest social classes. They had all invoked
loudly the basic British constitutional principle that they should be
considered and treated as innocent until found guilty. They all denied
the charges, attributing them to malicious misinformation by their
political enemies, Greeks, Armenians and to mistaken identities. All
their petitions, Plumer added, had

remained unanswered, and they had never been given any opportunity
to defend themselves against whatever accusations. They requested a
list of the charges to be

brought against them, together with a summary of the evidence. Plumer
supported all their requests.

Rumbold, on the other hand, argued against telling the prisoners
anything – only that they would eventually be charged with massacre
and deportations, or cruelty to POWs.

Crown contemplates the exchange of POWs

By march 1921 Lord Curzon informed Rumbold that the crown contemplated
an exchange of POWs as there was no point in keeping those against whom
no criminal charges would be pressed. Initially Rumbold maintained
that at least some of the Malta deportees should be retained and
prosecuted. On March 16, 1921, the Turkish Foreign Minister and the
British Foreign Office signed an agreement in London.

In exchange for the 22 British prisoners in Turkey, Britain would
set free 64 Turkish prisoners from Malta. These excluded those it
was intended to prosecute for alleged offences in violation of the
laws and customs of war or for massacres committed in any part of
the Turkish Empire after war had broken out.

The level of proof available against those detained in Malta remained
crucial. No evidence relating to them was held in either London or
Malta, and all hopes relied

on what the High Commissioner in Constantinople could produce.

Rumbold forwarded what evidence he had about each of the 56 deportees
he believed could be prosecuted. It became obvious that this was
mostly based on a ‘presumption of guilt’ theorem: high government
officials had to be presumed to have known about, and acquiesced to,
the massacres. The British authorities were well aware that what they
had available would fail the test of any criminal court.

The Attorney General clearly showed his reluctance to be drawn into
any political wrangle and that, as far as he was concerned, only the
eight prisoners accused

of ill-treating allied POWs had any legal relevance

For reasons never explained, the British authorities do not seem to
have ever

considered using in Malta any of the – mostly documentary – evidence
on Armenian

atrocities of which Turkish prisoners had been accused and convicted by

Turkish military courts shortly after the armistice – substantial
and disturbing

documents.

Quite likely the British found the continental inquisitorial system of
penal procedure used in Turkey repugnant to its own paths to criminal
justice and doubted the propriety of relying on it. Or, possibly,
the Turkish government never came round to

hand over the incriminating documents used by the military courts.

Whatever the reason, with the advent of power of Ataturk, all the
documents on which the

Turkish military courts had based their trials and convictions, were
‘lost’. Conveniently, add Armenian historians.

Faced by this concerted dearth of hard evidence, the politicians
again resorted to the Attorney General who also washed his hands. The
government took the hint. “From

this letter (the Attorney General’s) it appears that the chances of
obtaining convictions are almost nil”.

Exchange at Inebolu on the Black Sea on October 31, 1921

As the obstacles to trial by an international court became more
obviously insurmountable, Sir Lindsay Smith, judge of the supreme
court minuted: “the only

alternative therefore is to retain them as hostages only, and to
release them against British prisoners”.

The negotiators, however, received secret instructions to include
‘the eight’ too if this were to ensure the release of all the British
prisoners held by Mustafa Kemal. The Turkish government delegated
Hamid Bey, of the Ottoman Red Crescent, to bargain with the British.

He made it clear that Turkey only supported an all-for-all deal that
included ‘the eight’.

Rumbold reserved to give an answer by October 1. The envoys further
discussed the mechanics of the exchange in an Anatolian port. The
lot fell on Inebolu on the Black

Sea. Prisoners from both sides would reach the port on the same day.

The British at this stage agreed to let go ‘the eight’ unconditionally.

Lord Plumer in Malta arranged for the release of the 59 remaining
prisoners and they sailed in two batches, 17 on the RFA Montenol and
42 on HMS Chrysanthemum. They reached Inebolu on October 31, 1921.

One final note worth mentioning is the statement made by Lord Curzon in
Parliament which Dr Bonello unearthed from the Foreign Office Archive.

Deeply embarrassed by the exchange of the hostages Lord Curzon minuted
: “The less we say about these people (the Turks released for exchange)
the better … I had to explain (to Parliament) why we released the
Turkish deportees from Malta, skating over thin ice as quickly as I
could … The staunch belief among Members (of Parliament) is that
one British prisoner is worth a shipload of Turks, and so the exchange
was excused”.

Dr Bonello concludes this particular chapter highlighting the fact
that the Armenian Genocide controversy lingers on after almost 100
years with the prospects of a solution very meagre.
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Subject: =?windows-1252?Q?MALTA=3A_Turkey=92s_EU_Minister=2C_Judge_Giovanni_Bonell?=
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Malta Independent Online
April 19 2012

Turkey?s EU Minister, Judge Giovanni Bonello and the Armenian Genocide
– ?Claim about Malta Trials is nonsense?
by Keith Micallef

Article published on 19 April 2012

Judge Giovanni Bonello rubbished the claim made by Turkey?s EU Affairs
Minister, Egemen Bagis, that his country was acquitted of the
responsibility of the Armenian Genocide in 1915, because no such trial
ever took place in Malta.

Though the Turkish Minister was right saying that over 100 Turks were
deported to Malta by the British in 1919 to be charged with war
crimes, including the Armenian genocide, the lack of concrete evidence
and an appropriate legal framework with supranational jurisdiction
resulted in the Turkish detainees being repatriated and freed in
exchange for 22 British prisoners held by Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk)..

This important but seemingly forgotten chapter of modern colonial
history was treated by Judge Bonello in one of his volumes in the
Histories of Malta series published by Fondazzjoni Patrimonju Malti.

Following a story carried yesterday by this newspaper quoting the
remarks made by the Turkish EU Minister regarding the Armenian
Genocide which he referred to as an ?incident?, Dr Bonello alerted The
Malta Independent to clarify that these remarks are simply ?nonsense?.
He referred us to volume nine of the Histories of Malta series which
dedicates a particular chapter titled ?The ?Malta Trials? and the
Turkish-Armenian Question? to this controversial issue.

Dr Bonello explains that following World War I no international norms
for regulating war crimes existed. He claims that it was only through
a series of engineered coincidences that WWI did not end in the ?Malta
Trials? the way WWII led to the Nuremberg Trials. He defined the legal
vacuum encountered in 1919 as ?a legal nightmare, a terra incognita
that for a first time challenged legal minds to figure out solutions
to phenomena unfamiliar before in the history of warfare and its
aftermath.? Although events that took place in Malta at the time
feature quite prominently in Turkish histories, according to the
author they remain completely unknown or ignored in Malta.

The first steps in dealing with the Armenian question

According to the Turkish Foreign Policy Institute following the
armistice imposed by the Allies on October 30, 1918 Britain appointed
Admiral Sir Somerset Arthur Gouch Calthorpe and Rear-Admiral Richard
Webb as High Commissioner and assistant High Commissioner of the
defeated Ottoman power. On January 2, 1919, Calthorpe requested from
the Foreign Office authority to obtain the arrest and handing over of
all those responsible for the incessant breaches of the terms of the
armistice and the continued ill-treatment of Armenians.

Calthorpe got together a staff of dedicated assistants, including a
notable anti-Turkish Irishman, Andrew Ryan, later Sir, who in 1951
published his memoirs. In his new role as the chief Dragoman of the
British High Commission and Second Political Officer, he found himself
in charge of the Armenian question. He proved instrumental in the
arrest of a large number of the Malta deportees.

These fell broadly into three categories: Those still breaching the
terms of the armistice, those who had allegedly ill-treated Allied
prisoners-of-war and those responsible for excesses against Armenians,
in Turkey itself and the Caucasus.

Calthorpe asked for a personal interview with Reshid Pasha, Minister
for Foreign Affairs, to impress on him how Britain viewed the Armenian
affair and the ill-treatment of POWs as ?most important? deserving
?the utmost attention?.

Two days later Calthorpe formally requested the arrest of seven
leaders of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP). While between
160 and 200 people were arrested, another 60 suspected of
participating in the Armenian massacre remained at large.

Calthorpe had already set in motion the transfer of the prisoners, or
at least some 50 to 60 of them, to Malta. He informed Lord Plumer,
Governor of the island, of the need to use Malta for their safe
custody outside Turkey. By then, some 40 of the more important
suspects rested safely in the hands of the authorities, but five more
?black lists? had been drawn up by the Armenian and Greek Section of
the British High Commission.

It is significant to note also that the French government at the time
had various objections, including to the extradition to Malta of the
Turkish detainees.

These steps, France insisted ?far from having the appearance of
justice? risked leaving the impression of vengeance by the victors.

First detainees arrive in Malta

Meanwhile political developments in Turkey mainly with the rise of
Mustafa Kemal (later the charismatic Ataturk) forced the British to a
hurried change of plans. Admiral Webb took the decision to transfer
the prisoners somewhere beyond the reach of popular uprisings in
Istanbul, as an attack by rioting crowds on Seriaskeriat and Bekir Aga
prisons, where the political detainees were in custody, could not be
ruled out. Webb assumed responsibility not to inform the Turkish
government of his intentions till after they had been carried out,
relying on some undocumented wish of Ferid Pasha that the detainees be
sent to Malta.

67 detainees were placed on board SS Princess Ena, of whom 12 leading
politicians and ex-Ministers were to be landed at Mudros, and 55 in
Malta. An additional 11 joined the deportees heading for Malta. These
had been arrested following rioting in Kars, and had no connection
with war crimes. The exiles ended in Salvatore, Polverista and Verdala
Barracks, vacated a year previously by the prisoners of war of the
Central Powers. The Princess Ena sailed at night on May 28, 1919.
Those destined to stay in Malta included 41 politicians, half of whom
had been considered responsible for the Armenian atrocities and the
other half ?as a precautionary war measure?. Another 14 officers
suspected of improper treatment of British prisoners-of-war joined
them too.

Legal complexities start to arise

The author explains that it was at this stage that legal complexities
started to surface. No law existed to regulate the matter. British
military courts could try three of the seven offences (breach of
armistice terms, hindering its execution, and ill-treatment of British
POWs), but only in the occupied territories, not in Malta. All the
other offences, including Armenian excesses, loomed large as legal no
man?s land and had best be left for determination in accordance with a
future peace treaty.

At the Paris Peace Conference a legal basis, vague and quite flimsy,
had anyway been established. Compared to the Nuremburg Charter, a
ghost of a legal basis.

Meanwhile more Turkish detainees were deported to Malta raising the
number living here to over 100. At that stage it was already clear
that no one knew what to do exactly with them and awareness was
growing that ?it might be very difficult to sustain definitive charges
against many of these persons before an allied tribunal?.

A new wave of arrests followed the storming of the Turkish Chamber of
Deputies by the British troops, and 30 important political figures
were deported to Malta on HMS Benbow, where they arrived on 21 March,
1920. More Turkish deportees trickled to Malta and by November 1920
there was a total of 144. This prompted Mustafa Kemal to order the
arrest of 20 British officers in Anatolia, which would later play a
major role in deciding the faith of the Turkish detainees in Malta.
Among them was Colonel Rawlinson, a relative of Lord Curzon and
brother of Lord Rawlinson

Following a secret memo circulated by Winston Churchill, secretary of
State for War, the British cabinet decided on a revision of the list
of detainees by the Attorney General. Those against whom no criminal
prosecutions appeared possible ?were to be released at the first
convenient opportunity?.

In these circumstances Lord Plumer in Malta found himself at a
complete loss as to what line to pursue. He mentioned the 115 Turkish
prisoners (the others were not technically Turkish or had been
released) who belonged to the highest social classes. They had all
invoked loudly the basic British constitutional principle that they
should be considered and treated as innocent until found guilty. They
all denied the charges, attributing them to malicious misinformation
by their political enemies, Greeks, Armenians and to mistaken
identities. All their petitions, Plumer added, had

remained unanswered, and they had never been given any opportunity to
defend themselves against whatever accusations. They requested a list
of the charges to be

brought against them, together with a summary of the evidence. Plumer
supported all their requests.

Rumbold, on the other hand, argued against telling the prisoners
anything ? only that they would eventually be charged with massacre
and deportations, or cruelty to POWs.

Crown contemplates the exchange of POWs

By march 1921 Lord Curzon informed Rumbold that the crown contemplated
an exchange of POWs as there was no point in keeping those against
whom no criminal charges would be pressed. Initially Rumbold
maintained that at least some of the Malta deportees should be
retained and prosecuted. On March 16, 1921, the Turkish Foreign
Minister and the British Foreign Office signed an agreement in London.

In exchange for the 22 British prisoners in Turkey, Britain would set
free 64 Turkish prisoners from Malta. These excluded those it was
intended to prosecute for alleged offences in violation of the laws
and customs of war or for massacres committed in any part of the
Turkish Empire after war had broken out.

The level of proof available against those detained in Malta remained
crucial. No evidence relating to them was held in either London or
Malta, and all hopes relied

on what the High Commissioner in Constantinople could produce.

Rumbold forwarded what evidence he had about each of the 56 deportees
he believed could be prosecuted. It became obvious that this was
mostly based on a ?presumption of guilt? theorem: high government
officials had to be presumed to have known about, and acquiesced to,
the massacres. The British authorities were well aware that what they
had available would fail the test of any criminal court.

The Attorney General clearly showed his reluctance to be drawn into
any political wrangle and that, as far as he was concerned, only the
eight prisoners accused

of ill-treating allied POWs had any legal relevance

For reasons never explained, the British authorities do not seem to have ever

considered using in Malta any of the ? mostly documentary ? evidence on Armenian

atrocities of which Turkish prisoners had been accused and convicted by

Turkish military courts shortly after the armistice ? substantial and disturbing

documents.

Quite likely the British found the continental inquisitorial system of
penal procedure used in Turkey repugnant to its own paths to criminal
justice and doubted the propriety of relying on it. Or, possibly, the
Turkish government never came round to

hand over the incriminating documents used by the military courts.
Whatever the reason, with the advent of power of Ataturk, all the
documents on which the

Turkish military courts had based their trials and convictions, were
?lost?. Conveniently, add Armenian historians.

Faced by this concerted dearth of hard evidence, the politicians again
resorted to the Attorney General who also washed his hands. The
government took the hint. ?From

this letter (the Attorney General?s) it appears that the chances of
obtaining convictions are almost nil?.

Exchange at Inebolu on the Black Sea on October 31, 1921

As the obstacles to trial by an international court became more
obviously insurmountable, Sir Lindsay Smith, judge of the supreme
court minuted: ?the only

alternative therefore is to retain them as hostages only, and to
release them against British prisoners?.

The negotiators, however, received secret instructions to include ?the
eight? too if this were to ensure the release of all the British
prisoners held by Mustafa Kemal. The Turkish government delegated
Hamid Bey, of the Ottoman Red Crescent, to bargain with the British.
He made it clear that Turkey only supported an all-for-all deal that
included ?the eight?.

Rumbold reserved to give an answer by October 1. The envoys further
discussed the mechanics of the exchange in an Anatolian port. The lot
fell on Inebolu on the Black

Sea. Prisoners from both sides would reach the port on the same day.
The British at this stage agreed to let go ?the eight?
unconditionally.

Lord Plumer in Malta arranged for the release of the 59 remaining
prisoners and they sailed in two batches, 17 on the RFA Montenol and
42 on HMS Chrysanthemum. They reached Inebolu on October 31, 1921.

One final note worth mentioning is the statement made by Lord Curzon
in Parliament which Dr Bonello unearthed from the Foreign Office
Archive.

Deeply embarrassed by the exchange of the hostages Lord Curzon minuted
: ?The less we say about these people (the Turks released for
exchange) the better ? I had to explain (to Parliament) why we
released the Turkish deportees from Malta, skating over thin ice as
quickly as I could ? The staunch belief among Members (of Parliament)
is that one British prisoner is worth a shipload of Turks, and so the
exchange was excused?.

Dr Bonello concludes this particular chapter highlighting the fact
that the Armenian Genocide controversy lingers on after almost 100
years with the prospects of a solution very meagre.

http://www.independent.com.mt/news.asp?newsitemid=143007
http://www.independent.com.mt/news.asp?newsitemid=143007

Armenia To Auschwitz: Artists Still Remember

ARMENIA TO AUSCHWITZ: ARTISTS STILL REMEMBER

WND.com

April 18 2012

Exclusive: Marisa Martin devotes column to Yom HaShoah 2012

George Santayana and David Ben-Gurion shared a common concern –
can humans remember?

Santayana’s now cliched concern with “those who cannot remember the
past … ” impelled Gurion to sign on for first Holocaust Remembrance
Day (Yom HaShoah) in 1953. His efforts to avoid being fodder for
the last half of the quote, “condemned to repeat [history],” proved
lamentably necessary.

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service Outstanding quality, Best value www.hotelmeg.comInto the
midst of the fray artists wade in, offering employment for either good
or evil (let’s assign deliberate forgetting to “evil” – a spiritual
form of Alzheimer’s). Some of their creations will be used for 2012
Yom HaShoah services on April 19 to remember things that we’d like
to collectively forget – but shouldn’t.

Polish photographer and Auschwitz survivor Wilhelm Brasse is the
best starting point. Forced by Nazis to chronicle prisoners (many
of them children) before their awful fates at Auschwitz, he risked
his life to keep the huge collection of photographs from destruction
(including the one above).

Brasse is still alive but hasn’t been able to make himself take a
photograph since 1945. At 94 he travels to Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum
giving testimony and speaking to visitors there. His legacy of 40,000
condemned faces powerfully personalized a number of deaths that is
otherwise simply inconceivable to a sane person.

Last December Israeli-born artist Yael Bartana won a spot in the
2011 Polish Pavilion of the Venice Biennial with her imaginative film
project “And Europe will be Stunned.” Her film-trilogy observes the
imaginary activities of a “Jewish Renaissance Movement” in Poland,
ushering millions of Jews back to their former homes there.

Bartana used complex sets and architecture for the effort, such as
a full-size Kibbutz built in the former Jewish ghetto in Warsaw,
a Jewish-version Stade and other anomalies. She also prepared a
400-page book on the issues, “A Cookbook for Political Imagination,”
on the occasion of her exhibition.

Beginning with a trip to Poland, Bartana was struck by the absence
of Jewish culture and entire villages and neighborhoods wiped off
the earth. She began imagining an entirely different scenario, a
“happy ending” for Polish Jews, although she doesn’t seem to believe
it herself.

>From “And Europe will be Stunned,” Yael Bartana In an introduction
to the first of the trilogy films “Mary Koszmary (Nightmare),” she
claims, “This is a universal presentation of the impossibility of
living together.”

Bartana deals with the loaded themes of nationalism, propaganda,
Zionism, borders and “constructing a modernist idea of a new world.”

The Art Gallery of Ontario first showed her films in North America
in a recently ended show there.

Far from offending most Poles, Bartana’s work was the first time a
non-Polish artist represented Poland for the Biennial. The showing
stirred some controversy with several officials, however, resulting in
some absences and complaints. Critical reception was good but varied,
with Jens Hoffmann of Frieze commenting on the “deeply troubling,
provocative and ambiguous” film, which stuck with her “since first
viewing.”

On the other side of the barbed-wire fence dwells WWII Holocaust denier
David Dees. A Louisville, Ky., based graphic artist, his views meander
all over the place from generic conservative to 9/11 and Aspartame.

By David Dees Dees’ work is either luridly realistic or full of
tunneling eyes and eerie glows with computer-game and movie-set
references. His emotive work isn’t technically bad, but the crude
propagandizing and hate shrivels any good effect. Dees graphically
spells out (literally) all his opinions, in case we missed one. Chief
among them are a searing distaste of Jews, Israel and a fictionalized
Holocaust account.

The Anti-Defamation League honored Dees with his own (quite extensive)
page where they post his blatantly anti-Semitic images, which question
the Holocaust and suggest that Jews control the world – or trees or
anti-matter or whatever.

Still Dees insists he is “Pro-Jewish, but extremely Anti-Zionist.”

Dees labels himself a “freelance artist and illustrator” and claims to
have over 20 years of experience as an artist – such as the artistic
freedom he takes with the Holocaust.

On another front, anti-Israeli, anti-American artist Carlos Latuff
is currently engaged with Occupy AIPAC. At the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, conference last month, Latuff
contributed his stock Marxist cartoons, lambasting the group with a
wave of vitriol in the guise of art.

This is no shock coming from the proud possessor of a second-place
prize in the Iranian-financed “International Holocaust Cartoon”
competition. Could it get any weirder than that?

Latuff ‘s work oozes with antipathy to Jews and attributes Nazi-like
behavior and war crimes to Israel. His prolific output is commonplace
on the web, spreading the hate around.

Occupy Wall Street has been the backdrop of several nasty attacks on
yarmulke-wearing Jews, somehow attributing all the woes of capitalism
to them personally. These sages also offer helpful advice for Russians,
warning them “not to let the Jews take over Russia, too.”

Perhaps there’ll be a diplomatic mission coming soon, but that’s not
necessary when the U.N. is doing such a good job already.

But Latuff and Dees are small potatoes; entire nations reject the
reality of Holocausts. Turkey can’t remember a thing about slaughtering
approximately 1.5 million Armenian Christians there in 1915, not even
the official edict from Minister Mehmed Talaat. Perhaps they don’t
want Nazi Holocaust deniers to be left out. Armenians commemorate
this tragedy on April 24 each year, the date in 1915 of a particularly
egregious mass-arrest and execution of hundreds of Armenian community
leaders.

Poster for “Ravished Armenia” from The Armenian Genocide Museum
Armenian survivors have an old film of their own based on “Ravished
Armenia,” the memoirs of an eyewitness of Armenian Genocide.

Arshaluys, a young, Armenian girl gave a detailed account of her
torture and enslavement in a Turkish harem during the genocide. She
eventually escaped with help from American missionaries in Turkey.

This Armenian Janna d’Ark (Joan of Arc), as she was called in America,
resisted the conversion of her faith, somehow survived and ended up
in New York in 1917.

The teen’s mission was to tell the world about atrocities in Turkey.

>From her highly successful book, Metro Goldwin Mayer studios created
“Auction of Souls” in 1919, the first genocide documentary movie.

Enlisting over 10,000 Armenian residents of Southern California,
including 200 deported children, Hollywood and the political world
heavily invested time and funds, checking accuracy and authenticity.

Arshaluys was allowed to play the leading role in the story of
her life.

Gruesome graphics in the movie brought a ban in some places; England
screened it only after scenes of naked, crucified women were edited
out. Director Oscar Apfel hoped that “Auction of Souls” would appeal to
all humanity, but the solemnity surrounding the film stands in stark
contrast to current flippant dismissals of the Armenian Holocaust by
Turkish leaders.

Recently an uprising of indignation from Armenian protestors over
Turkey’s century of genocide denial stirred the creation of songs,
plays and other forms of art. A series of commemorative posters by
Ruben Malayan and Var Amayakyan and others visually ask “when and why”
from the Turks.

So far no one has answered.

http://www.wnd.com/2012/04/armenia-to-auschwitz-artists-still-remember/

Woman Axed To Death By Grandson

WOMAN AXED TO DEATH BY GRANDSON

tert.am
19.04.12

A men in Yerevan’s Malatia-Sebastia district has brutally killed his
grandmother by hitting her with an ax about an hour ago.

The woman died in hospital.

The Public Relations Department of the Police has confirmed the report
to Tert.am.

No further details are available for now as a special police task
for has departed to the scene just minutes ago.

Observers Of International Expert Center For Electoral Systems To Fo

OBSERVERS OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERT CENTER FOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMS TO FOLLOW PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS IN ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
APRIL 19, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, APRIL 19, ARMENPRESS: International expert Center for
Electoral Systems (ICES) will implement an observation mission during
the May 6 parliamentary elections of Armenia. Experts from the European
Union, US and Israel comprise the mission, an official from the center
told Armenpress.

MPs of different European countries and European Parliament,
scientists, lawyers and journalists, who have a vast experience
of elections, are also involved in the mission. Alexander Tsinker,
President of ICES, director of East European States & CIS Institute,
will head the mission.

On the day of the elections the representatives of the center will
be in Yerevan, Gyumri, Vanadzor and in a number of other province
centers. “We are studying the Electoral Code of Armenia and have been
implementing a monitoring of the Armenian mass media since April 8,”
said Tsinker. The delegation will present the results of the monitoring
during a press conference to be held May 7 in Yerevan.

The International expert Center for Electoral Systems is a nonprofit
non-governmental public organization set up by a group of highly
qualified experts in the fields of law, political science, diplomacy
and sociology, coming from the USA, Great Britain, Netherlands,
Germany and Israel.

S. Sargsyan: "Atomic Energy Holds Vital Significance For Armenia"

S. SARGSYAN: “ATOMIC ENERGY HOLDS VITAL SIGNIFICANCE FOR ARMENIA”

19.04.12, 18:03

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan received today the Director General
of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Yukiya Amano.Press
service of Armenian President informs about this.

Welcoming the guest, the President of Armenia underscored that atomic
energy holds vital significance for Armenia and our country attaches
the utmost importance to the cooperation with the IAEA, viewing it
as an important component of Armenia’s energy and nuclear security.

The Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency noted
that the IAEA and Armenia have one common goal – to continuously
enforce measures aimed at the safety of the operating nuclear power
station as well as to cooperate closely in the construction of a new
power station.

http://times.am/?l=en&p=6859

Intellectual Suggests Constructing, At Mountain Base, Temple Honorin

INTELLECTUAL SUGGESTS CONSTRUCTING, AT MOUNTAIN BASE, TEMPLE HONORING FOUNDER OF ARMENIAN NATION (VIDEO)

April 19, 2012 | 11:56

YEREVAN. – Writers’ Union of Armenia member Vahan Ter-Ghazaryan
proposes to build, at the foot of Mount Ara, a temple in honor of Hayk,
the legendary patriarch and founder of the Armenian nation.

The writer is of the view that the main cause of all the tragedies
that befell upon the Armenian people is the “slave ethics” imposed
upon them, and the salvation is getting rid of this ethics.

As per Ter-Ghazaryan, Armenians need to return to their true origins
and values, which are called “national.”

“If we consider our father’s or grandfather’s grave as a temple, the
entire Armenian people must have a temple of their first father. This
is the only way for our national unity and organization,” Ter-Ghazaryan
maintains.

http://news.am/eng/news/101908.html

Authorities’ Violent Behavior Infuriate People – Armenian Opposition

AUTHORITIES’ VIOLENT BEHAVIOR INFURIATE PEOPLE – ARMENIAN OPPOSITION BLOC

news.am
April 19, 2012 | 12:31

YEREVAN. – The opposition bloc Armenian National Congress (ANC) already
has been to five regions, within the framework of the campaigning
for the forthcoming parliamentary elections, and, in general,
the electoral campaign is going well, despite those crude methods
which the authorities are using against the ANC. Board Chairman Aram
Manukyan of the Armenian National Movement Party-which is a part of
the ANC-stated this during a press conference on Thursday.

Manukyan also noted that the people were not being allowed to attend
the ANC’s public meetings, the electricity was being cut off, and
the people were being recorded on cameras to instill fear.

He added, however, that the reaction to such steps is greater than
their effect.

Vote 2012: ANC Calls To Give ~Sno Vote To The Gangster-State~T In Sp

VOTE 2012: ANC CALLS TO GIVE “NO VOTE TO THE GANGSTER-STATE” IN SPARSE ECHMIADZIN RALLY
By Gayane Lazarian

ArmeniaNow
19.04.12 | 13:25

NAZIK ARMENAKYAN

Only about 40 residents of Echmiadzin dared attend an oppositional
Armenian National Congress (ANC) rally in the city heavily dominated
by Republican Party of Armenia authorities.

“Be it ten people, a hundred or a thousand, we will meet and say what
we have to say. It’s all right that you are being video recorded now;
it’s all right that tomorrow you might be in trouble.

Enlarge Photo This is our country. We are ready for any difficulties,
any bans, and we will continue our campaign,” declared ANC member Aram
Manukyan, heading the board of All-Armenian National Movement party.

ANC leader Levon Ter-Petrosyan in his speech referred to migration as
the current authorities’ biggest crime, stating that the population
has decreased by a million during the rule of the “criminal regime”.

“The army has been cut down considerably. During our tenure it was
made of 78,000 soldiers, with 26,000 conscripts annually; today that
number has dropped to 50,000 with only 16,000 conscripts per year,”
said the first president in charge of ANC, adding that for the first
time in history it was this government that fired at its own people
on March 1, 2008, leaving ten people dead.

Manukyan said he believes Armenia’s political field is impotent,
and no ideology works. According to him, the authorities will use
boorish methods to force people go and vote for them.

“Under such circumstances the opposition is not presenting any
ideological plans. We cannot introduce any legal projects that can
be implemented without a change of power. Naturally we have plans
for raising pensions, but they are directly connected with change
of power. If “Lfik, Tokhmakh, Alyur” [nicknames of oligarchs] rob
the country and evade taxes, any pension project becomes pointless,”
he continued.

Manukyan reaffirmed the ANC priority objective, should they enter the
parliament – to push for the impeachment of President Serzh Sargsyan.

“One can implement any plan and project given if the pyramid of this
gangster-state is toppled,” he said.

Another member of ANC Hrant Bagratyan, former prime-minister, in turn
criticized the country’s economic policy, saying that the president
has divided the market among a few oligarchs; as a consequence there
is no competition, he said, which would have led to drop of prices.

“Why should one person import sugar, vegetable oil, butter? Only
the sugar-importer’s unpaid taxes (he referred to Republican Samvel
Alexanyan) are enough to triple the pensions. The guy (Alexanyan)
doesn’t pay his due 110 billion drams ($280 million) annual taxes,
and we are happy that he throws 10 billion (around $26 million)
to the state budget as ‘paltry dole’?” said Bagratyan.

ANC representatives stressed that they are often blamed for the faults
and shortcomings of today’s authorities, saying that they were the
ones who started it all.

“Show us anyone to whom we gave economic power or posts. We were in
office, made thousands of mistakes, but we weren’t either criminals
or thieves. If we were thieves we wouldn’t have come to you now,”
said Bagratyan.

The ANC leader assured that even in the atmosphere of fear people would
go and vote for them, and by that they’d vote against the authorities;
and those who would vote for the Republicans or the Rule of Law would
become “criminals” too.

“So they rob you day and night, take your children to the army and
kill them in non-combat conditions, deprive you of your land, your
house, and still come and ask you to vote for them? That’s why we say:
no vote to these criminal authorities,” said Ter-Petrosyan.

LA County Board Of Supervisors Commemorates Genocide

LA COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS COMMEMORATES GENOCIDE

ARMENPRESS
APRIL 19, 2012
YEREVAN

Through an invitation of LA County Supervisor Michael Antonovich, on
Tuesday, April 17, Western Prelate Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian
participated in the weekly meeting of the Los Angeles County Board of
Supervisors, during which a special presentation took place proclaiming
April 24, 2012 as the “Day of Remembrance for the Armenian Genocide
of 1915-1923”, reports Armenpress citing Asbarez.

The Prelate was accompanied by Archpriest Fr. Vicken Vassilian,
Archpriest Fr. Nareg Pehlivanian, and Rev. Fr. Ghevont Kirazian.

Community members were also in attendance.

The Prelate thanked Supervisor Antonovich and Board members for one
again inviting the Armenian community to collectively commemorate the
97th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and honor the memory of our
martyrs with this proclamation. “We are strengthened and reassured
in our cause knowing that we have the staunch support of dear friends
such as you, and for that we are ever grateful. We hope the day will
come when justice will be served by the recognition of the Armenian
Genocide by the United States”, concluded the Prelate.

Remarks were also delivered by Archbishop Vatche Hovsepian and Consul
General of Armenia Grigor Hovhannissian.