Turquie : L’assassin De Dink Entraine Dans Le Crime Par L’Etat

TURQUIE : L’ASSASSIN DE DINK ENTRAINE DANS LE CRIME PAR L’ETAT

Publié le : 27-03-2015

Info Collectif VAN – – Condamné a verser
une indemnité a la famille Dink pour le meurtre de Hrant Dink, le
ministère turc de l’Intérieur a ouvert un procès en révocation pour
récupérer 1 million 659 mille lires des auteurs [de l’assassinat]. Le
père de l’assassin Ogun Samast demande l’abandon des charges en
accusant l’Ã~Itat qui a entraîné son enfant dans le crime. Le
Collectif VAN vous propose la traduction de cet article en anglais
publié sur le site d’Agos le 19 mars 2015.

Agos

19 mars 2015

Le père d’Ogun Samast: L’Ã~Itat a entraîné mon enfant dans le crime

Condamné a verser une indemnité a la famille Dink pour le meurtre
de Hrant Dink, le Ministère de l’Intérieur a ouvert un procès en
révocation pour récupérer 1 million 659 mille lires des auteurs
[de l’assassinat].

Selon le rapport de Hayati Arıgan de Haberturk, dans sa requête,
le père de Samast, Ahmet Samast, a expliqué que ‘l’Ã~Itat profond’
avait incité son fils a assassiner Hrant Dink et avait volé sa vie
en le faisant glisser dans la criminalité. Samast a aussi estimé
que son fils a subi les plus grands dommages [financiers] concernant
Hrant Dink et sa famille.

Demandant l’abandon des charges, le père, Ahmet Samast, a dit:
” De la même manière qu’elle a failli a protéger la vie de la
victime, l’administration n’a pas pris non plus les précautions
nécessaires pour empêcher un enfant de 16 ans d’être entraîné
dans la criminalité.

”

Ahmet Samast a souligné que l’Etat a manqué a son devoir fondamental
et il a demandé l’abandon des charges.

En 2008, la famille Dink avait intenté un procès contre le Ministère
de l’Intérieur devant le 6ème Tribunal Administratif d’Istanbul.

Dans le procès qui a pris fin en 2012, le tribunal avait condamné
le ministère a payer 1 million 659 000 LT (livre turque) de
dédommagement.

Le ministère a ensuite déposé un procès en révocation devant le
tribunal civil de première instance d’Istanbul pour récupérer
auprès des auteurs de l’assassinat de Dink la somme qu’il a
payée. Affirmant que ” les actions des assassins de Hrant Dink
représentent un acte délictueux commis contre l’Ã~Itat, le Ministère
a exigé la somme qu’il a payée, avec les intérêts, a Yasin Hayal,
Ersin Yolcu, Ahmet Iskender et Ogun Samast.

©Traduction de l’anglais Collectif VAN – 25 mars 2015 –

Lire aussi:

Dossier du Collectif VAN : Meurtres et agressions anti-arméniennes
en Turquie

Source/Lien : Agos

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=86968
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org

ANKARA: The Turkish-Speaking Armenians Who Never Visited Turkey

THE TURKISH-SPEAKING ARMENIANS WHO NEVER VISITED TURKEY

Journal of Turkish Weekly
March 26 2015

Anadolu Agency
26 March 2015

Lives and languages entwine as AA traces the Avagyan family’s journey
from Anatolia via Greece and Lebanon to Armenia.

Many assume history between Turks and Armenians is black-and-white,
but the story of one family in Yerevan reveals that lives and language
in this part of the world can be intertwined.

Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink — assassinated by a Turkish
teenager in 2007 — once described Turkey and Armenia as: “Two close
nations, two distant neighbors.”

One such “distant neighbor” is Hovhannes Avagyan. Born in Athens in
1920, this was the same year that the multiethnic Ottoman Empire was
collapsing and Armenia become part of the Soviet Union.

Now living in Armenia, Hovhannes has never been to Turkey but his
family, including his two granddaughters, speaks fluent Turkish.

The Avagyans’ story begins as Anatolian Armenians during the Ottoman
era even before Hovhannes was born. His grandfather was from Ankara
and his grandmother was from Turkey’s western province of Afyon.

His grandfather, Agop, was in the Ottoman army as a baker during the
Gallipoli (Gelibolu) Campaign in 1915.

Meanwhile Agop’s sons — Melkon, 12, and Rupen, 14 — lived in Ankara
until the family was split up after they lost their mother to illness.

During the turmoil of WWI, the two brothers stayed in Istanbul for
a time and then sheltered in a U.S.-funded orphanage in Greece.

When Hovhannes’ grandfather was discharged from the Ottoman army,
Agop started to look for his children and found them by sending
letters to churches and orphanages.

Agop eventually found them in Athens working as shoeshine boys.

By the time they met again Melkon was 17 and Ruben was 19. The
re-united family started to live in a tent city in Athens with
thousands of other ethnic Armenians.

Ruben married an Armenian girl from Turkey’s Aegean province of Usak
and eventually moved to France.

Melkon also met his future partner in the form of an Armenian girl
who was staying in another tent city in the Greek city of Thessaloniki
and was in Athens for a visit.

When the family bought a small piece of land from a wealthy Armenian
family in Athens, Hovhannes’s parents and grandfather built a simple
house made of adobe brick.

They lived together in Athens, working in their own grocery store
and bakery, until 1945 when an official from the Soviet Union came
to talk about moving to Armenia.

At the beginning they did not want to go. The Avagyans’ eschewed
the first two ships which carried away thousands of hopeful Armenian
immigrants seeking a new life in their ancestral homeland.

But eventually the number of Armenians in Athens decreased so much
that the Avagyans found themselves running out of customers.

The loss of their regular customers hit the business hard because
some local Greeks refused to shop at an Armenian store.

“As it [our name] was written on the shop sign — Agop Avagyan —
local Greeks did not deal with us Armenians,” says Hovhannes, sitting
in his Yerevan home.

In the end this led them to board a ship with around 2,700 passengers
in 1947. Including the Avagyan family, this third group passed through
Istanbul’s Bosphorus Strait en route to a new life and an uncertain
future in Armenia.

Hovhannes recalls that time: “Armenians living in Istanbul were waving
white sheets to salute them.”

The family arrived in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, where they still
live today; Hovhannes’ father re-established his bakery while Hovhannes
worked as a bus driver.

Looking at his wife Hovhannes recalls living under communism: “I can
speak with you openly now but under Stalin’s rule I would not even
speak freely with my wife.”

Hovhannes married Pertshuhi Krepekyan — now 83 — in 1955.

Pertshuhi, who also speaks Turkish and whose parents were from Turkey’s
southern province of Adana, came to Armenia via Lebanon.

Coming “home” was not the happy ending the Avagyan family had dreamed
of: “My father always wanted to see where he was born,” Hovhannes
says, musing.

“But it was Soviet times and it was very difficult.”

They kept speaking Turkish at home. That is why even today both
Hovhannes and Pertshuhi speak fluent Turkish with an Anatolian accent.

Their first years in Armenia were not easy; they were the newcomers
and they were called “ahpar” which means literally “brother” which
Hovhannes’ Yerevan-born granddaughter Pertshuhi Avagyan, 24, says had a
“marginalizing” meaning.

Coming from Anatolia meant a different cuisine as well as culture.

“Even eating olives was strange for the locals as they did not have
it here in Armenia,” says granddaughter Pertshuhi, who is a linguist
and translator.

Hovhannes still misses traditional tahini halva, a dessert which is
quite common in western Anatolia and Greece.

Although he and his family have never lived in Turkey, their
granddaughters learned how to speak Turkish just by listening to her
grandparents and watching Turkish TV.

“I was watching Turkish TV programs and cartoons since I do not even
remember, maybe from when I was six years old,” Pertshuhi says.

Pertshuhi — named after her Lebanon-born grandmother — says:
“It is very difficult to comment about Turkish people without going
there even once but I can say this; the people there are very warm
and hospitable, just like Armenians.”

Pertshuhi hopes to live together with Turks and peacefully with
“doors open,” a reference to the Turkish-Armenian border, which has
been closed since 1993.

It is true that no member of the Avagyan family lived in Turkey at any
time. But from their way of speaking to their cuisine and Hovhannes’
attitude to his granddaughter — disapproving when she was a little
late home that night — they are Anatolian.

As Hovhannes puts it: “We are from Turkey, I never forgot this.”

26 March 2015

http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/182408/the-turkish-speaking-armenians-who-never-visited-turkey.html

October 1915 Issue Of The National Geographic Magazine Was Dedicated

OCTOBER 1915 ISSUE OF THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE WAS DEDICATEDTO ARMENIA

18:24, 27 Mar 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

October 1915 edition of the well-known American “National Geographic
Magazine” was almost entirely dedicated to Armenia and the history
of the Armenian people.

The edition thoroughly covered the Armenian Church, Armenian
family and system of values. Massacres of Armenians are broadly
presented in the edition. Full version of the Journal is available
at

http://mfa.am/…/National_Geographic_Magazine_October_1915.p…
http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/03/27/october-1915-issue-of-the-national-geographic-magazine-was-dedicated-to-armenia/
http://mfa.am/u_files/file/National_Geographic_Magazine_October_1915.pdf

Armenia’s Parliament To Hold Exhibition Of Documents And Photos Show

ARMENIA’S PARLIAMENT TO HOLD EXHIBITION OF DOCUMENTS AND PHOTOS SHOWING VIOLATIONS COMMITTED TOWARDS YEZIDIS

14:00, 27 March, 2015

YEREVAN, MARCH 27, ARMENPRESS: On March 27 at the invitation of the
Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia
Eduard Sharmazanov the Yezidi community representatives in Armenia
Aziz Tamoyan, Boris Tamoyan, Hamlet Smoyan, Zuzan Khuboyan, Rustam
Bakoyan, Mame Amiryan, Garnik Asatryan, Rzgan Shamoyan, Amo Sharoyan,
Khdr Tamoyan and Rashid Shamoyan visited the National Assembly,
Armenpress reports, citing the press service of the National Assembly
of the Republic of Armenia.

The theme of the meeting was the issue of the condemnation of crimes
committed towards different nations.

The NA Deputy Speaker once again condemned the violations committed
towards the Yezidis in the Northern Iraq several months ago and
reminded the attendees that the RA President Serzh Sargsyan in his
speech from the UN high tribune spoke about the occurred violations
and condemned them.

At the meeting, particularly, an agreement was reached to organize an
exhibition of documents, articles and photos showing the violations
committed towards the Yezidis in the Northern Iraq at the RA National
Assembly in the near future. At the same time a book presentation,
the printing of which was done thanks to the RA President’s grant,
will be held. Let us note that the book with facts presents the
violations occurred several months ago in the Northern Iraq.

The issue of violations committed towards the Yezidis in Ottoman
Turkey was also debated. The NA Deputy Speaker has informed that the
meeting of the International Association of Genocide Scholars will
be held in Yerevan in July. He proposed the members of the Yezidi
community to submit the facts for the debate of that structure.

One of the guests, Boris Tamoyan, has thanked the Deputy Speaker for
the invitation and has informed that today many documentary materials
are already collected, which present the violations committed towards
the Yezidi people in the Ottoman Empire.

The NA Deputy Speaker proposed the attendees to create a group
which will continue to collect materials and present them to the
International Association of Genocide Scholars.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/799444/armenia%E2%80%99s-parliament-to-hold-exhibition-of-documents-and-photos-showing-violations-committed-towards.html

$4,110 Dinner: Armenia’s Honorary Consul To Estonia Is Also In The C

$4,110 DINNER: ARMENIA’S HONORARY CONSUL TO ESTONIA IS ALSO IN THE CATERING BIZ

Marine Martirosyan

16:15, March 27, 2015

Last October 3, the Yerevan Municipality spent 1.938 million AMD
(US$4,110) on a reception to mark Teacher’s Day.

A contract was signed with Aries Catering for the 400 person reception.

On December 25, Aires also catered a New Year’s gala for the
municipality at a cost of 1.722 million AMD ($3,650). This was a
somewhat smaller affair for 350 guests.

Aires Catering was established in 2003 by Aires Ltd., a company now
non-operational according to Armenia’s State Corporate Registry.

This company is owned by Avetik Ghukasyan, Armenia’s honorary consul
to Estonia since 2002. The address of the consul is the same as that
of Aires Catering.

Ghukasyan also owns Aires Liber (a company which organizes conferences
and related services), andAires Lunch (a restaurant network).

Many government offices are clients of Ghukasyan’s catering and lunch
services. They include the Yerevan Municipality, the Prosecutor
General’s Office, the RA Police, the Holy See of Etchmiadzin, the
Central Bank of Armenia, the Republican Party, as well as various
international organizations and companies, and foreign embassies.

The company organizes receptions and buffet dinners at a number of
locations throughout Armenia. One favorite site is the Garni pagan
temple. Aires Catering organized an open-air reception and dinner at
the temple on April 26, 2012.

Armenia’s Central Bank seems to be in love with Garni for it has held
receptions at the site in 2011, 2012 and 2014.

Readers will remember the public uproar over a corporate party held
at the 7th century ruins of Zvartnots, a UNESCO World Heritage Site
last June.

Armenia’s Ministry of Culture periodically rents out Zvartnots and
other historical/cultural sites for a variety of corporate events
and receptions, including wedding parties.

$4110-dinner-armenias-honorary-consul-to-estonia-is-also-in-the-catering-biz.html

http://hetq.am/eng/news/59297/

Expert In Iran Studies: Iranians Feel Safer In Armenia (Video)

EXPERT IN IRAN STUDIES: IRANIANS FEEL SAFER IN ARMENIA (VIDEO)

17:18 | March 27,2015 | Politics

Vardan Voskanyan, an expert in Iran studies, says there is nothing
strange in the fact that Iranians come to Armenia to celebrate Nowruz
(Iranian New year) here as in the last 30-40 years Iranians have been
celebrating the holiday in other countries

“They come to Armenia as Iran has a land border with us and everything
[in Armenia] is more affordable and cheaper for them,” says the expert.

“Iranians do not pay much attention to the living conditions, but
they pay attention to entertainment and food, which is much better
in our country,” he added.

Besides, Iranians feel safer in Armenia. “They feel safer in Armenia
and no one will steal their wallet on the street, which cannot be
said about the neighboring countries -Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia,
” Mr Voskanyan said.

http://en.a1plus.am/1208579.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLGFAyH3zEs

The Conflict Between A Businessman And Northern Avenue Residents To

THE CONFLICT BETWEEN A BUSINESSMAN AND NORTHERN AVENUE RESIDENTS TO RESOLVE IN COURT OF APPEALS

03.27.2015 13:34 epress.am

Arayik Asatryan, another resident of the buildings at 23, 25 Teryan
Str. and 37 Lalayants Str., the area of which has been announced an
eminent domain, has faced court. “Local Developers” company, owned by
businessman Samvel Mayrapetyan, filed a suit demanding that a court
decision evict Asatryan from his appartment by means of the Compulsory
Enforcement Service. Yesterday, however, the Court of General
Jurisdiction of Kentron and Nork-Marash Administrative Districts
delayed the proceedings for nearly 3 months, until June 29. Teryan
23 resident and “Mer Kaghake” (“Our City”) civil initiative member
Vardan Geravetyan (pictured) told Epress.am about the court decision,
connecting the latter with other similar developments in the case.

Earlier, the company had filed suits against 3 other residents,
while the latter entered court with counter suits demanding that
their right to private property be respected and the harassment
against their estate stopped.

“Basically, the court neither wanted to present in a bad light in
front of us, nor in front of Mayrapetyan. They left the decision to
the Court of Appeals. We assume that today’s hearing being delayed for
so long is due to the fact that the court is waiting for the other
3 cases’ verdicts by the Court of Appeals. It is more than obvious,
that Arayik Asatryan would have also submitted a counter suit, had
the hearing proceeded,” Geravetyan said when speaking to Epress.am.

During yesterday’s court hearing, the residents of the three buildings
organized a rally in support of Asatryan. They moved toward the
government building then to the Kentron and Nork Marash Court of
First Instance.

All the resident of the buildings at 23, 25 Teryan Str. and 37
Lalayants Str. have been faced with similar issues. They have received
letters saying that they could not sell their apartments to anyone
other than to the “Local Developers” company. The company claims that
they are offering a price set by the law- the market value plus 10%.

However, the residents claim that they have been offered 2 1/2 times
lower than the market value. The alternative to offering money would
be an appartment in another building. The residents, however, are not
pleased with the latter option either, saying that the conditions in
the proposed building are not satisfactory.

http://www.epress.am/en/2015/03/27/the-conflict-between-a-businessman-and-northern-avenue-residents-to-resolve-in-court-of-appeals.html

Tuscany Recognizes Armenian Genocide

TUSCANY RECOGNIZES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

March 26, 2015

On the occasion of the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, the
Armenian Community Council of Rome had addressed a letter to all major
regional councils of Italy, with a request for adopting resolutions
on the Armenian Genocide.

The Tuscany region adopted a resolution at Wednesday’s regional
parliament session, where it expressed support to the Armenian people.

The resolution states that it shall be sent to the Secretariat of
the Armenian Community Council of Rome, so it may be transferred
to the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in Armenia’s capital city
of Yerevan.

Tuscany is a region in central Italy with an area of about 23,000
square kilometres (8,900 square miles) and a population of about 3.8
million inhabitants. The regional capital is Florence (Firenze).

http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/64543

Chicago Artist Marks Centennial Of Armenian Killings With Guernica-S

CHICAGO ARTIST MARKS CENTENNIAL OF ARMENIAN KILLINGS WITH GUERNICA-SIZE WORK

Reuters
March 23 2015

Mon Mar 23, 2015 9:17pm EDT

By Tracy Rucinski

CHICAGO (Reuters) – One hundred years after the mass killing of
Armenians, a Chicago artist has created a monumental painting to
honor the victims and celebrate a culture that nearly vanished.

The 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman troops became a defining
element of Armenian national identity.

Seeking to promote awareness of the tragedy and Armenian culture,
Chicago-based artist Jackie Kazarian embarked on a painting of enormous
scale in an endeavor called Project 1915.

The painting, which Kazarian has titled Armenia (Hayastan), will be
displayed for the first time in Chicago’s Mana Contemporary gallery
from April 17 to May 29.

The work is a semi-abstract landscape splashed with bold images and
text from ancient Armenian maps and church architecture, united by
a pattern of needle lace by Kazarian’s Armenian-born grandmother and
with colors and symbols from illuminated manuscripts.

Kazarian, who has Armenian roots, drew on Pablo Picasso’s epic painting
Guernica, which depicts the horror of a northern Spanish village’s
bombing during Spain’s civil war, for her painting.

It is the same size as Guernica at 11.5 feet by 26 feet.

“No one would have known what happened in Guernica if it wasn’t for
that painting,” Kazarian said.

The nature and scale of the killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces
during World War One remain highly contentious.

While a number of countries define the massacres as genocide and
while Turkey accepts that many Armenians died in partisan fighting,
the Turkish government denies that up to 1.5 million were killed and
that it was an act of genocide.

Last year, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan made unprecedented
condolences to the grandchildren of Armenians killed at the time, but
the legacy remains an obstacle to reviving frozen relations between
Turkey and neighboring Armenia, a small former Soviet territory.

In Kazarian’s painting, two open hands span the bottom corners, as if
holding up the work and an entire culture. It is a gesture Kazarian
said she remembered her grandmother often using.

“This is a very visceral, emotional project. But like any art that
references a painful past, it is about remembering, healing and
educating ourselves to make a better world,” Kazarian said.

After its Chicago exhibition, the painting will be displayed at
universities and galleries across the United States and the world.

(Editing by Fiona Ortiz, Richard Chang and Peter Cooney)

http://ca.reuters.com/article/entertainmentNews/idCAKBN0MJ27O20150324?sp=true

Armenian Government Recognizes Turkish Genocide Of Assyrians And Gre

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT RECOGNIZES TURKISH GENOCIDE OF ASSYRIANS AND GREEKS

Assyrian International News Agency AINA
March 24 2015

Posted 2015-03-24 09:20 GMT

The Armenian National Assembly recognized the Assyrian and Greek
genocide perpetrated by Turks in World War One.Yerevan (AINA) —
The Armenian National Assembly voted today to recognize the genocide
of Assyrians and Greeks that was committed by Ottoman Turks during
World War One, between 1915 and 1923. The genocide claimed the lives
of 750,000 Assyrians (75%), 500,000 Greeks and 1.5 million Armenians.

The genocide recognition bill, sponsored by the Republican Party,
received 117 yay votes and 14 abstentions. There were no nay votes.

The formal title of the bill is “On the Genocide of the Greeks and
Assyrians Perpetrated by Ottoman Turkey between 1915 and 1923.” The
bill was authored by Eduard Sharmazanov, Armen Rustamyan, Hovhannes
Sahakyan, Edmon Marukyan, Arpine Hovhannisyan, Tevan Poghosyan,
Gurgen Arsenyan, Heghine Bisharyan, Alexander Arzumanyan, Vahram
Baghdasaryan, Hermine Naghdalyan, Margarit Yesayan, Lyudmila Sargsyan.

Eduard Sharmazanov, the Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly, said:

We have chosen to adopt a declaration because the National Assembly
of Armenia adopts declarations in very important cases. In this case,
we proposed, discussed and came to the conclusion that the adoption of
a declaration would be more appropriate because it’s not every day that
the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia adopts a declaration.

In this sense, by submitting the draft as a declaration on
condemnation, we want to show society and our Greek and Assyrian
brothers and sisters and the international community that the
National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia and all the political
forces attach importance to condemnation of the genocide perpetrated
against the Greeks and Assyrians.

In 2007 the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS)
recognized the Assyrian and Greek genocides (AINA 2007-12-15). In
2010 Sweden recognized the Assyrian, Greek and Armenian Genocide
(AINA 2010-03-12).

Sabri Atman, director of the Assyrian Genocide Research Center, said:

The systematic genocide the Ottoman State and its Kurdish allies
committed against Assyrians, Armenians and Greeks during World War
1 is no longer a gain for Turkey and we will never allow it to be as
such. We salute the Republic of Armenia for its decision to recognize
the Assyrian and Greek Genocide. This encourages us and gives us
strength to be recognized internationally.

Turkey cannot take its place among the civilized nations of the world
if it does not take full responsibility for the horrific crime of
the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek Genocide.

Turkey should stop its denial mentality and should stop its support
to criminal and barbaric organization, such as ISIS, that are now
continuing to commit genocide against our people in Iraq and Syria.

Turkey should know that the descendants of the survivors of the
“forgotten Genocide” will never stop demanding recognition.

While the Armenian genocide is widely known and recognized, the
Assyrian and Greek genocides are lesser known. But these genocides
cannot be separated from the Armenian genocide, as they were
perpetrated at the same time and by the same policy. The genocide
of the Assyrians, Greeks and Armenians is one and the same. It was
a genocide against Christians.

Assyrians have worked with Greeks and Armenians to pressure Turkey
to recognize the genocide of World War One.

To date, Assyrians have erected genocide monuments in 9 cities around
the world (story).

http://www.aina.org/news/20150324052004.htm