Queen Elisabeth To Visit Turkey On April 24, Reports Say

QUEEN ELISABETH TO VISIT TURKEY ON APRIL 24, REPORTS SAY

15:25, 11 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Queen Elisabeth II will visit Turkey on April 24 to participate in
the events marking the 100th anniversary of the battle of Gallipoli,
ermenihaber.am reports, quoting dunya.com. Seven destroyer warships
will ensure her security.

The source notes that about 14,000 tourists from New Zealand and
Australia will visit Turkey to commemorate the Australian soldiers
killed in the battle.

Only 13,000 spectators will be allowed to participate in the official
ceremonies on April 24 and 25. Most Turkish citizens will be deprived
of the opportunity to attend the events.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/11/queen-elisabeth-to-visit-turkey-on-april-24-reports-say/

Liverpool Reportedly Open Talks For Henrikh Mkhitaryan

LIVERPOOL REPORTEDLY OPEN TALKS FOR HENRIKH MKHITARYAN

12:42, 11 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Liverpool FC have opened talks with Borussia Dortmund as they look
to sign midfielder Henrik Mkhitaryan,according to reports.

The Armenian attacking midfielder was a summer transfer target for
Brendan Rodgers back in 2013, but with Dortmund one of Europe’s most
exciting clubs at that time the then Shakhtar Donesk man chose to
move to Germany.

Jurgen Klopp’s men find themselves embroiled in a relegation battle
this season and Rodgers is said to be ready to take advantage as he
looks for a replacement for the departing Steven Gerrard.

Mkhitaryan’s agent Mino Raiola has previously hinted that he expects
the midfielder to leave at the end of the season.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/11/liverpool-reportedly-open-talks-for-henrikh-mkhitaryan/

Turkish State Afraid Of Armenian Genocide Recognition Because Of Day

TURKISH STATE AFRAID OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION BECAUSE OF DAY OF RECKONING

09:49, 11 February, 2015

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 11, ARMENPRESS. Turkey’s decision to declare the
day of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide as the day of
commemoration of the Battle of Gallipoli, which aims to change the
topic of international discussion, is nothing else, but a tool of
denialist policy. Turkish young historian Mehmet Polatel stated this
in a conversation with “Armenpress”. Also, the young historian noted
that this policy of the Turkish government is “unacceptable for him
and other Turkish intellectuals”.

The Turkish scientist arrived in Armenia to deliver a lecture titled
“The Confiscation of the Armenians’ Property during the Genocide and
after It”.

Among other things, Mehmet Polatel underscored: “One of the reasons
of the Genocide denial is the issue of returning the confiscated
properties. It’s characteristic not only for the state thinking, but
the common people, who possess the Armenians’ properties, also think
that if the state recognizes the Armenian Genocide, the Armenians
will come and take their belongings away. That’s why the Turkish
society is also against the recognition.”

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/793575/turkish-state-afraid-of-armenian-genocide-recognition-because-of-day-of-reckoning.html

KOV: Ani Lodge Begins Three-Part Lecture Series Marking the 100th An

PRESS RELEASE
Date: February 10, 2015

KNIGHTS OF VARTAN
Contact: Taniel Koushakjian
Email: [email protected]
Web:

KNIGHTS OF VARTAN ANI LODGE BEGINS THREE-PART LECTURE SERIES MARKING THE
100th ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Next Lecture to take place at George Mason University on February 26, 2015

WASHINGTON, DC – As previously reported, the Knights of Vartan-Ani Lodge
in Washington, DC has begun a three-part academic series of lectures
touching upon different aspects of the Armenian Genocide. The first
lecture, `Oil, Politics, and the Genocide in Armenia: The First World War
Retrospect,’ featured Professor Christopher Simpson, a professor of
Journalism from the School of Communications at American University, and
was held on January 29, 2015 at American University in Washington, DC.

The second lecture will feature Professor Simpson on the same topic on
Thursday, February 26, 2015 at George Mason University, 10423 Rivanna River
Way, Fairfax, Virginia 22030 from 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM.

The third and final lecture will feature Dr. Gregory Stanton, Research
Professor in Genocide Studies and Prevention, George Mason University, for
a presentation on `Why Denial Violates the Genocide Convention: The
Genocides of Armenians, Native Americans, and Tutsis in Rwanda.’ The final
lecture will take place on Thursday, March 19, 2015 at The George
Washington University Law School, Michael K Young Faculty Conference
Center, 2000 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20052 from 4:00 PM – 6:00
PM.

`The Knights of Vartan and the entire Washington, DC Armenian American
community is grateful to Professor Simpson, Dr. Stanton and these esteemed
universities for advancing genocide and holocaust education in our nation’s
capital,’ stated Ani Lodge Commander Jake Bournazian. `Engaging the
American public is a critical part of genocide education efforts. The
Armenian community is intrinsically interested in the genocide and it is up
to us to show the relevancy of studying the Armenian Genocide to issues
that are important to the American public today,’ Bournazian said.

Professor Simpson is internationally recognized for his expertise in
democracy, and media theory and practice. He has authored five books and
won national awards for investigative reporting, historical writing, and
literature. These first two lectures discuss the lucrative concessions that
US oil companies received from the Ottoman Turks and the subsequent
aggressive congressional lobbying by American oil companies for the U.S.
government’s silence on the Armenian Genocide.

Professor Stanton served as a Foreign Service Officer in the State
Department from 1992 to 1999, where he drafted the UN Security Council
Resolutions (955 and 978) that created the International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda. In 1992, he also drafted the UN Peacekeeping Resolutions that
helped end the Mozambique civil war from 1977 to 1992. In 1999, Stanton
founded Genocide Watch, the International Campaign to End Genocide, the
first international anti-genocide coalition. Stanton served as the
President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars from 2007
to 2009 and Vice President from 2005 to 2007.

All three lectures are produced by the Knights of Vartan Ani Lodge with the
support of our cosponsors, the Armenian Bar Association, the National
Association for Armenian Studies and Research, and Genocide Watch.
Historical and archival material provided by the Armenian National
Institute.

Space is limited and RSVP is required. For media inquiries or to RSVP,
please contact Knights of Vartan Ani Lodge at [email protected].

###

PR#: 2015-02

www.kofv.org

Mediacenter: Outcome of Armenia’s UN Universal Periodic Review 2015

PRESS RELEASE
MEDIA CENTER in YEREVAN
30 Saryan str.
Tel: +37460 505 898
+37499 755 898
Email: [email protected]
Web:

10/02/2015

Outcome of Armenia’s UN Universal Periodic Review 2015

February 11, 12:00: The Media Center (30 Saryan str., 2^nd floor) will
host a press conference featuring the outcome of Armenia’s UN
Universal Periodic Review 2015.

The speakers include:

Avetik Ishkhanyan, Head of the Helsinki Committee of Armenia;

Artur Sakunts, Chairman at HCA Vanadzor;

Larisa Minasyan, Executive Director at the Open Society Foundations
=80` Armenia;

Vincent Ploton, Head of External Relations of the Centre for Civil and
Political Rights

Anna Innocenti, International Advocacy Officer at Human Rights House
Foundation.

The Press Conference will be broadcast live on MC YouTube Channel.
()

http://www.media-center.am/
http://media-center.us7.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2f605f11d08e38c0517a84db6&id=02a98982bb&e=c97f32558f

BAKU: Military And Peaceful Variations By The President Aliyev On Th

MILITARY AND PEACEFUL VARIATIONS BY THE PRESIDENT ALIYEV ON THE KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijan
February 9, 2015 Monday

Saturday, 7 February has become an extraordinary working weekend on the
agenda of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. First the three co-chairs
of the OSCE Minsk Group on the settlement of the Karabakh conflict,
and then the OSCE leadership in the face of the OSCE Chairman Ivica
Dacic and the OSCE Secretary General, Lamberto Zannier, made statements
calling Azerbaijan and Armenia to abandon the escalation of violence.

“We all agree that the military situation along the frontline and on
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border is deteriorating, posing a threat to
regional stability and endangers the lives of civilians. The Monitoring
Report of the Personal Representative of the Chairman Andrei Kasprzyk
for the first month of 2015 indicated 12 victims and 18 wounded. This
is the highest confirmation of the death tolls since the 1994 on the
ceasefire agreement. After 2014, when approximately 60 people died,
we are concerned that the alarming trend of violence continues,
” reads the joint statement.

Just on the same day, sometime later, President of Azerbaijan Ilham
Aliyev announced that the condition to promote the peace process is
de-occupation of Azerbaijani territories captured by Armenia. Speaking
on 7 February at the panel session “Besides Ukraine – unresolved
conflicts in Europe” in the frames of the 51th Munich Security
Conference Aliyev made it clear that the Armenian soldiers must leave
Adam, Fizuli, and generally seven districts of Azerbaijan.

However, the threat of the President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan against
Azerbaijan last month leaves no illusions about some calmness on
the line of contact. “Azerbaijan will pay dearly for the life of the
Armenian soldiers who died as a result of sabotage, Sargsyan said at
the board of the Ministry of Defense of Armenia on 26 January.

Over the last statistical year, mentioned by the OSCE, a lot of
mediation efforts have been made to bring peace to the parties at the
level of the presidents of France, Russia, the US secretary of state,
as well as calls for prudence EU, CoE, OSCE. The mediation of Russian
President in August 2014 which usually calmed the presidents of the
warring presidents, even for a small period of time, did not lead
cause the cessation of military escalation.

It is noteworthy that Aliyev, unlike to verbal statements about the
first years of the use of force as a political tool to address the
issue during the third term, is increasingly confirming his words by
concrete military actions – from large-scale military exercises to
individual local military skirmishes. These practical steps become
consistent under the increasingly economic isolation of Armenia
due to the deep economic crisis of suzerain in the face of Russia,
Ukrainian crisis, the growing opposition between the West and Russia,
and as a result, the isolation of the latter.

However, it should be noted that all these foreign conflicts to the
north of Azerbaijan, are temporary by nature, and cannot serve as a
platform for long-term military pressure on Armenia. From Aliyev’s
speech in Munich it becomes clear that he understands it. His second
promise: peace and cooperation in exchange for de-occupation becomes
relevant under a long-term Armenian crisis, mitigation of which
largely depends on constructive regional relations.

Azerbaijan has also entered a period of prolonged economic downturn
caused by the problems of institutional and unnecessarily protracted
labor diversification. Yet, even reduced oil and gas revenues, allow
holding the position, which may dictate the military and civilian
variations of the Karabakh settlement.

Armenian Parliament Speaker Due In Iran Soon

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SPEAKER DUE IN IRAN SOON

Tasnim News Agency, Iran
Feb 10 2015

February 10, 2015 – 17:11

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Speaker of the National Assembly of the Republic
of Armenia Galust Sahakyan plans to pay an official visit to Iran
later this month.

Heading a high-ranking parliamentary delegation, Sahakyan will visit
Tehran at the invitation of Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani.

During his visit to Iran, the Armenian speaker is scheduled to hold
talks with Larijani and a number of senior officials on a whole
host of issues, particularly ways to promote bilateral relations in
diverse areas.

Late in January, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif had
paid an official visit to Yerevan to discuss issues of mutual interest.

Zarif noted that Armenia’s membership to the Eurasian Economic Union
(EEU) provides good opportunity for enhancement of cooperation between
Tehran and Yerevan.

On January 2, Armenia officially joined EEU, a Moscow-led union
including Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus, seemingly formed to
counterbalance the European Union.

http://www.tasnimnews.com/English/Home/Single/650264

Recognize Armenian Genocide In International Community

RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY

The Justice: Brandeis University Independent Student Newspaper, Waltham, MA
February 9, 2015 Monday

by: Jessica Goldstein

In 1939, during the siege of Poland, Adolph Hitler gave a speech
expressing his right to exterminate the Polish. He justified
mass murder thusly: “I have placed my death-head formations in
readiness-for the present only in the East-with orders to send to
death mercilessly and without compassion, men, women and children of
Polish derivation and language. Only thus shall we gain the living
space which we need. Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation
of the Armenians?”

Grievously, we are nearly reaching the 100th anniversary of the
genocide against the Armenians, and this still remains the case. The
international community fails to recognize this event as, in fact, a
“genocide.” Although this genocide occurred during the First World
War-meaning that it predates the actual word “genocide”-the term
very much applies to this case. In fact, it inspired Raphael Lemkin
to invent the word “genocide” in the first place.

According to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court,
genocide means “any of the following acts committed with the intent to
destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious
group, as such: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily
or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the
group conditions calculated to bring about its physical destruction
in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births
within the group; forcibly transferring children of the group to
another group.” The distinction between genocide and other atrocities
is that genocide is always perpetrated with the “intent to destroy.”

According to the Armenian National Institute, the genocide was
perpetrated by the Turkish government during World War I (between
1915 and 1918) against the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire-the
largest Christian minority in the Anatolian portion of the empire. In
addition to the mass killings, victims were subjected to deportation,
expropriation, abduction, torture and starvation in an attempt to
further the genocide and ethnic cleansing. Many would fall victim in
rather ordinary ways from hunger, thirst and disease.

Two weeks ago, Amal Clooney, a human rights lawyer, took the case
of the Armenian genocide to the European Court of Human Rights,
defending the honor of some 1.5 million slaughtered by Turkish
officials a century ago. This case is long overdue.

Clooney is joining a movement that was established nearly a century
ago. Before the genocide even occurred, the international community
took notice of the mass atrocities committed against the Armenians,
and, surprisingly, successful activist movements arose in the United
States. This is recounted in Peter Balakian’s The Burning Tigris:
The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response.

In fact, beginning in the 1890s, the response to the “Hamidian
Massacres”-and, later, genocide-marked the first international human
rights movement in American history, according to Balakian, helping
to establish our place as a global power, accompanying European powers.

And on Nov. 26, 1894, individuals gathered in the historic FaneuiI
Hall to solidify this movement and began addressing the grievous
atrocities being committed in the Ottoman Empire by the Sultan Abdul
Hamid II. News of the massacres splayed across the pages of papers like
the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Boston Globe-just to
name a few. In 1915, the New York Times published some 145 articles
on the massacres in that year alone. Influential figures like John D.

Rockefeller helped to establish the National Armenian Relief Committee
to raise significant amounts of money for relief and later encouraged
Clara Barton to take her Red Cross relief team internationally for
the first time to further their cause.

Yet, oddly enough, we now seem to have forgotten about the genocide
against the Armenians. The Sultan’s attempt to solve “the Armenian
question” falls deafly on our ears. Perhaps Hitler was right in his
assumption that the world had forgotten about the Armenian genocide.

In fact, according to the Armenian National Institute, only twenty-one
countries-or 11 percent of countries in the world today-officially
recognize the genocide. Rest assured, the United States is one of them.

However, Turkish officials still to this day deny the existence of
the genocide, expressing that whenever Armenian scholars write about
the genocide, it is the “Armenian point of view.” At the same time,
the Association of Genocide Scholars and the community of Holocaust
scholars assert that this intentional extermination of the Armenians
is a genocide-one which claimed the lives of nearly two-thirds of
that population. Elie Wiesel writes that the Armenian genocide is a
“double killing” because it kills the memory of the event.

However, denial of a genocide is more than an altered historical view.

Professor Deborah Lipstadt, a noteworthy scholar of genocide denial at
Emory University, takes it a step further, stating that denial is in
fact “the final stage of genocide,” as it “strives to reshape history
in order to demonize the victims and rehabilitate the perpetrators.”

We must do better.

Not addressing and recognizing a genocide nearly a century after
the fact is setting a frightening precedent. Although the United
States does not categorically deny that the genocide occurred, this
doesn’t give us a Get-out-of-Jail-Free card. As a global power, we
must ensure that our government holds others in the international
community accountable for their human rights atrocities. Otherwise,
we are forgetting the precedent we set all those years ago when we
gathered in Faneuil Hall to protest an unjust act. We are forgetting
the precedent that ensured the world that we would soon be great.

http://issuu.com/justice/docs/march_13

Artak Khachatryan Still In Intensive Care Unit

ARTAK KHACHATRYAN STILL IN INTENSIVE CARE UNIT

Artak Khachatryan – a civil activist, member of the political council
of Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) – is still in the intensive care
unit of Yerevan’s Malatia Medical Center after he was kidnapped and
brutally beaten up by some unknown men two days ago.

Deputy of BHK faction of the Armenian parliament Vahan Babayan
told Aysor.am that doctors cannot tell when A. Khachatryan will be
transferred to a ward.

The parliamentary deputy said Artak Khachatryan’s condition is stable,
and positive dynamics have been observed.

Yet it is still unclear when he will be transferred from ICU to a ward.

As was reported, on February 7 Artak Khachatryan was kidnapped and
beaten up by a group of men wearing masks. On the same day he was
taken home.

Artak Khachatryan was an active participant in recent protests against
the amendments to the Armenian law on turnover tax.

Armenia’s Investigative Committee has opened a criminal case under
Article 131 part 2 point 1 of the Criminal Code – a kidnapping
committed by a group of people by previous concert.

10.02.15, 16:30

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2015/02/10/Artak-Khachatryan-still-in-intensive-care-unit/904569

Azerbaijan Is Trying To Assign Famous "Carpet Of Armenian Orphans"

AZERBAIJAN IS TRYING TO ASSIGN FAMOUS “CARPET OF ARMENIAN ORPHANS”

18:42 10/02/2015 >> POLITICS

On February 26 in Glendale Central Library presentation of “Carpet
of Armenian orphans” by Maurice Misaka-Kelechyana, dedicated to
the unique carpet “Gasir” Weaved by hands of the Armenian women who
survived the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire, will be held,
reports the Glendale Arts website.

The Azerbaijani side didn’t lose the chance of provocation, and stated
that allegedly the carpet and its ornaments are “of Azerbaijani
origin.” Thus, according to the Azerbaijani news website “Pia.az”
the carpet “Gazir” belongs to “the Azerbaijani school of Tabriz”
and supposedly the eight-pointed star placed in the center of the
carpet proves it.

It should be noted that this is the only “argument” Azerbaijani side
brings, which cannot stand any criticism. In the center of the Armenian
carpet there is no eight-pointed star. Even with the naked eye it is
obvious that the central ornament besides the eight pointed corners has
also four tabs with rounded ends, forming a Christ, which is the symbol
of Christianity, and the pattern as a whole is the so-called “sprouted
or Flowering Cross” which is common for the medieval Armenian culture.

However, even if we assume that this pattern is an eight-pointed star,
this fact would not speaks in favor of the Azerbaijani side either,
as this symbol was often used by artists also in the early Christian
period and was called the “Star of David”, and in its turn had more
ancient roots. In this context, the phrase “Azerbaijani ornament”
is not acceptable, given the fact that the above mentioned Tabriz
carpet school is of Iranian origin.

Note that the carpet contains more than 4 million nodes and is
decorated with traceries of blossoming Garden of Eden, patterns of
plants and animals. Ornamental carpet system gives reason to believe
that the scenes depicted on it are from the Biblical story about Adam
and Eva.

The “Carpet of Armenian orphans” was woven in an orphanage for girls
in the Lebanese city of Gazir by the hands of orphans who survived
through by selling the carpets and contributions from the American
Near East Relief Committee. On December 4, 1925 the carpet was given
to the US President Calvin Coolidge as a gift as a sign of gratitude
for the help provided to the Armenians during the Genocide. President
George. C. Coolidge, when leaving the White House, took the carpet
with him, and kept it in his family until 1980. Family Coolidge
returned the carpet to the White House in 1982, where he was placed
in storage. Despite pressure from Turkey, on 18-23 November 2014 the
famous carpet “Gasi” was exhibited in the visitors’ hall of the White
House at the exhibition on the theme of “Thank you, United States:
three gift to presidents in gratitude for the generosity of the United
States abroad.” The world’s media wrote about the exhibition, noting
also about the carpet’s story.

http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/02/10/azerbaijan-armenian-carpet/