Pasadena: Armenian Genocide Commemoration: ‘The Scars Are Not Healed

PASADENA ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION: ‘THE SCARS ARE NOT HEALED’

Pasadena Sun, CA
April 24 2013

Hundreds gathered under cloudy skies on Wednesday morning in Pasadena
for a pair of solemn outdoor ceremonies commemorating the Armenian
genocide and calling for official recognition of the tragedy around
the world.

A crowd of about 400 at Pasadena City Hall assembled for the event
organized by the local chapter of the Armenian National Committee of
America, where Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca was among those
officials who spoke at the event.

At the same time, nearly 200 others convened at Memorial Park for a
ceremony sponsored by the Pasadena Armenian Community Coalition.

At Memorial Park, participants laid white carnations at the proposed
site of a genocide memorial and offered song and prayer in Armenian
after performances the Marshall Fundamental School orchestra and choir.

“We all know the story of this crime against humanity,” said Kevork
Halladjian, an adjunct Armenian language and culture professor at
Pasadena City College, “but we must also work to stop others from
committing genocide.”

Both groups are proposing designs for a city Armenian genocide memorial
to be erected in 2015. The occasion will mark the 100th anniversary of
massacres that claimed the lives of some 1.5 million people between
1915 and 1918 at the hands of the Ottoman government in what is now
modern-day Turkey.

“The scars are not healed,” former Pasadena Mayor Bill Paparian said
during the event at City Hall. “We are still haunted by the emptiness
that comes from losing entire families. When a loved one disappears,
the disappearance lasts forever.”

Paparian was critical that the Armenian and American governments have
failed to press the Turkish government for official recognition of
the genocide, saying “the struggle for justice falls on the shoulders
of Armenians in the [post-genocide] Diaspora – us.”

He also called for solidarity with all victims of terrorism, genocide
and intolerance.

“If [Armenians] ever, even for a moment, close our eyes to the
suffering and persecution of any minority anywhere on this globe,
we dishonor our own martyred families,” Paparian said.

Sandra Siraganian, a real estate agent who attended the ceremony,
recalled speaking with her grandparents and great grandmother about
how they witnessed family members being slaughtered during the genocide
before arriving in Pasadena in the 1930s.

“This was always a very difficult day for my grandparents,” Siraganian
said. “I’m a very American Armenian. I don’t speak the language,
but it’s in my heart.”

,0,1263796.story

http://www.pasadenasun.com/the626now/tn-626-0424-pasadena-armenian-genocide-commemoration-the-scars-are-not-healed

Is Ankara Ready For April 24, 2015?

TURKEY: IS ANKARA READY FOR APRIL 24, 2015?

EurasiaNet.org, NY
April 24 2013

April 24, 2013 – 11:26am, by Yigal Schleifer

Compared to previous years, this April 24 — the day that commemorates
the 1915 destruction of the Ottoman Armenians — has arrived with few
diplomatic problems for Turkey. There were no resolutions in other
countries’ legislative bodies recognizing the 1915 events as a genocide
to fight off and no foreign governments to spar with over the issue.

But could this merely be the calm before the storm? In two years,
which will mark the centennial of the 1915 events, Ankara will likely
be facing a very different picture, with preparations already being
made to use the occasion to, as one Armenian website put it, “take
Genocide recognition to a new dimension.”

Turkey’s policymakers are not unaware of the preparations being made
for 2015. In fact, as the Hurriyet Daily News’s Barcin Yinanc suggests,
they have a careful plan for how to deal with what’s coming.

>>From her report:

No one, of course, should expect the Turkish government to remain
idle regarding these activities.

No doubt Turkey does have a strategy and it will be very important how
this strategy is read and analyzed by Yerevan. First of all, Yerevan
should not see Turkey’s action plan just as a “counterstrategy” to
neutralize Armenians’ efforts for the recognition of the 1915 killings
as genocide. Obviously Turkish officials will spare no effort to
provide their counterarguments against Armenians’ thesis. But Turkey’s
strategy will go beyond mere counteroffensive efforts. It would most
probably seek and even force a window of opportunity that would lead
to normalized relations with Armenia, in parallel to mending ties
between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

And that’s where Armenia should not fall in the same trap as the Greek
Cypriots. The Greek Cypriot administration thought and still believes
that it could impose a peace deal on its own terms as Turkey would
bow to pressure for the sake of entering to the EU. While Turkish-EU
relations have stalled seemingly due to the Cyprus question, we all
know that accession talks are not going forward not because of Cyprus
but because of the big European powers. And so far Turkey has not
changed its Cyprus policy.

By the same token, Armenians should not expect Turkey to change
its policy of making normalization of its relations with Yerevan
conditional on the solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. The
last time Ankara tried a slight disengagement between the two, we
know how it ended.

While it’s comforting to hear that Ankara has a strategy in mind,
the triple-track approach Yinanc lays out — fight Armenian genocide
recognition efforts while at the same time pushing Yerevan towards
normalized relations with Turkey and resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh
issue — seems like one that will likely bear little but bitter fruit.

Meanwhile, while Ankara’s official policy regarding the 1915 events
remain unchanged and will likely only harden as we approach 2015, more
positive signs can be seen on the domestic front in Turkey. As Today’s
Zaman reports, this year will mark the first time that international
organizations will join the increasingly growing commemoration event
that now take place inside Turkey. Writing for the Al-Monitor website,
human rights lawyer Orhan Kemal Cengiz, who has been very active on
the Armenian issue, takes a look at some of the other ways in which
the “taboo” over the issue has been breaking down in Turkey.

Ultimately, what we are left with is something of schizophrenic Turkish
approach regarding the Armenian issue. On the domestic front there
is progress, while on the international front there will likely be a
more concerted effort to fight the Armenian claims. Writing in Today’s
Zaman, columnist Yavuz Baydar — who suggests Turkey has had a kind of
“glasnost” when it comes to confronting some of the difficult issues
of that past — offers his take on this dynamic:

Turkey’s glasnost has been instrumental to defeat the taboo of the last
century in Turkey. Today, on April 24, people will gather in Adana,
İzmir, Ankara, Batman, Bodrum, Dersim, Diyarbekir and İstanbul.

Every year, the number of participants has increased: from 700 in
2010 to 3,000 last year.

But the question is whether Turkish glasnost, if successful in sorting
out the Kurdish peace process, will also help lead to a proper apology
from Ankara in 2015.

No one is sure. The rapprochement with Armenia being frozen, the
pressures of a rich Azerbaijan and its lobbies having increased and
the lack of a culture of “institutionalized repentance” are all reasons
for pessimism. They are also backed by behind-the-scenes preparations
for watering down the memory of the tragedy, by focusing all attention
in 2015 on World War I and Ottoman suffering.

It is, of course, on the wrong track. The real virtue is in the double
apology: first on the tragedy, second on the denial.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66872

Sofia: Bulgaria PM: Killing Of Armenians In Ottoman Empire Is One Of

BULGARIA PM: KILLING OF ARMENIANS IN OTTOMAN EMPIRE IS ONE OF THE MOST SHAMEFUL PAGES IN MODERN HISTORY

Focus News, Bulgaria
April 24 2013

Bulgaria

Sofia. “Mass killing of the Armenians in the former Ottoman Empire is
one of the most shameful pages in the modern history,” said Bulgarian
interim Prime Minister Marin Raykov on the occasion of the Day of
Remembrance for the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923, April 24, FOCUS
News Agency reporter informed.

“We know that the Ottoman Empire bears the stigma of this very
heavy responsibility over the brutal atrocity with the killing of
the Armenians over ethnic principle in this period of time. From now
on, as far as whether this could be described as a manifestation of
genocide from juridical point of view is concerned, I am convinced
that since this term is legally codified in the recent decades, i.e.

in a much later period, the term itself could be definitely the most
proper one,” Raykov remarked.

“It is another matter of concern that what has been done cannot be
questions, since if it is questioned, then it would be a case of
negationism,” the Bulgarian interim prime minister said.

“I do not share such a vision [on the issue]. I bow down before the
victims. I believe that both from Armenian and Turkish side, there is
a need to make a common reading of the history,” Raykov said further.

http://www.focus-fen.net/index.php?id=n304971

The Forgotten Genocide — And Why It Matters Today

THE FORGOTTEN GENOCIDE — AND WHY IT MATTERS TODAY

Assyrian International News Agency AINA
April 24 2013

Today, April 24, marks the “Great Crime,” that is, the Armenian
genocide that took place under Turkey’s Islamic Ottoman Empire,
during and after WWI. Out of an approximate population of two million,
some 1.5 million Armenians died. If early 20th century Turkey had
the apparatuses and technology to execute in mass–such as 1940s
Germany’s gas chambers–the entire Armenian population may well have
been decimated.

Most objective American historians who have studied the question
unequivocally agree that it was a deliberate, calculated genocide:

More than one million Armenians perished as the result of execution,
starvation, disease, the harsh environment, and physical abuse. A
people who lived in eastern Turkey for nearly 3,000 years [more than
double the amount of time the invading Islamic Turks had occupied
Anatolia, now known as “Turkey”] lost its homeland and was profoundly
decimated in the first large-scale genocide of the twentieth century.

At the beginning of 1915 there were some two million Armenians within
Turkey; today there are fewer than 60,000…. Despite the vast amount
of evidence that points to the historical reality of the Armenian
Genocide, eyewitness accounts, official archives, photographic
evidence, the reports of diplomats, and the testimony of survivors,
denial of the Armenian Genocide by successive regimes in Turkey has
gone on from 1915 to the present.

Indeed, evidence has been overwhelming. U.S. Senate Resolution 359
from 1920 heard testimony that included evidence of “[m]utilation,
violation, torture, and death [which] have left their haunting memories
in a hundred beautiful Armenian valleys, and the traveler in that
region is seldom free from the evidence of this most colossal crime
of all the ages.” In her memoir, Ravished Armenia, Aurora Mardiganian
described being raped and thrown into a harem (which agrees with
Islam’s rules of war). Unlike thousands of other Armenian girls who
were discarded after being defiled, she survived. In the city of
Malatia, she saw 16 Christian girls crucified: “Each girl had been
nailed alive upon her cross, spikes through her feet and hands,”
she wrote. “Only their hair blown by the wind covered their bodies.”

What do Americans know of the Armenian Genocide? To be sure, some
American high school textbooks acknowledge it. However, one of the
primary causes for it–perhaps the fundamental cause–is completely
unacknowledged: religion. The genocide is always articulated through a
singularly secular paradigm, one that deems valid only those factors
that are intelligible from a modern, secular, Western point of view,
such as identity politics, nationalism, and territorial disputes. As
can be imagined, such an approach does little more than project Western
perspectives onto vastly different civilizations of different eras,
thus anachronizing history.

War, of course, is another factor that clouds the true face of the
Armenian genocide. Because these atrocities occurred during WWI,
so the argument goes, they are ultimately a reflection of just
that–war, in all its chaos and destruction, and nothing more. Yet
Winston Churchill, who described the massacres as an “administrative
holocaust,” correctly observed that “The opportunity [WWI] presented
itself for clearing Turkish soil of a Christian race.” Even Adolf
Hitler had pointed out that “Turkey is taking advantage of the war in
order to thoroughly liquidate its internal foes, i.e., the indigenous
Christians, without being thereby disturbed by foreign intervention.”

It is the same today throughout the Muslim world, wherever there
is war: after the U.S. toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, the
nation’s Christian minority were first to be targeted for systematic
persecution resulting in more than half of Iraq’s indigenous Christian
population fleeing their homeland. Now that war has come to Syria–with
the U.S. supporting the jihadis and terrorists–the Christians there
are on the run for their lives.

There is no denying that religion–or in this context, the age-old
specter of Muslim persecution of Christian minorities–was fundamental
to the Armenian Genocide. Even the most cited factor, ethnic identity
conflict, while legitimate, must be understood in light of the fact
that, historically, religion–creed–accounted more for a person’s
identity than language or heritage. This is daily demonstrated
throughout the Islamic world today, where Muslim governments and
Muslim mobs persecute Christian minorities–minorities who share the
same ethnicity, language, and culture, who are indistinguishable from
the majority, except, of course, for being non-Muslims.

If Christians are thus being singled out today–in our modern,
globalized, “humanitarian” age–are we to suppose that they weren’t
singled out a century ago by Turks?

Similarly, often forgotten is the fact that non-Armenians under Turkish
hegemony, Assyrians and Greeks for example, were also targeted for
cleansing. The only thing that distinguished Armenians, Assyrians, and
Greeks from Turks was that they were all Christian. As one Armenian
studies professor asks, “If it [the Armenian Genocide] was a feud
between Turks and Armenians, what explains the genocide carried out
by Turkey against the Christian Assyrians at the same time?”

Today, as Turkey continues moving back to reclaiming its Islamic
heritage, so too has Christian persecution returned. If Turks taunted
their crucified Armenian victims by saying things like “Now let your
Christ come and help you,” just last January, an 85-year-old Christian
Armenian woman was repeatedly stabbed to death in her apartment, and a
crucifix carved onto her naked corpse. Another elderly Armenian woman
was punched in the head and, after collapsing to the floor, repeatedly
kicked by a masked man. According to the report, “the attack marks
the fifth in the past two months against elderly Armenian women,” one
of whom lost an eye. Elsewhere, pastors of church congregations with
as little as 20 people are targeted for killing and spat upon in the
streets. A 12-year-old Christian boy was beaten by his teacher and
harassed by students for wearing a cross around his neck, and three
Christians were “satanically tortured” before having their throats
slit for publishing Bibles.

Outside of Turkey, what is happening to the Christians of today from
one end of the Muslim world to the other is a reflection of what
happened to the Armenian Christians of yesterday. We can learn about
the past by looking at the present. From Indonesia in the east to
Morocco in the west, from Central Asia in the north, to sub-Sahara
Africa–that is, throughout the entire Islamic world–Muslims
are, to varying degrees, persecuting, killing, raping, enslaving,
torturing and dislocating Christians. See my new book, Crucified
Again: Exposing Islam’s New War on Christians for a comprehensive
account of one of the greatest–yet, like the Armenian Genocide,
little known–atrocities of our times.

Here is one relevant example to help appreciate the patterns and
parallels: in Muslim-majority northern Nigeria, Muslims, led by the
Islamic organization, Boko Haram (“Western Education is Forbidden”)
are waging a bloody jihad on the Christian minorities in their midst.

These two groups–black Nigerian Muslims and black Nigerian
Christians–are identical in all ways except, of course, for being
Muslims and Christians. And what is Boko Haram’s objective in all this
carnage? To cleanse northern Nigeria of all Christians–a goal rather
reminiscent of Ottoman policies of cleansing Turkey of all Christians,
whether Armenian, Assyrian, or Greek.

How does one explain this similar pattern of Christian
persecution–this desire to be cleansed of Christians–in lands so
different from one another as Nigeria and Turkey, lands which share
neither race, language, nor culture, which share only Islam?

Meanwhile, the modern Islamic world’s response to the persecution of
Christians is identical to Turkey’s response to the Armenian Genocide:
Denial.

Finally, to understand how the historic Armenian Genocide is
representative of the modern day plight of Christians under Islam,
one need only read the following words written in 1918 by President
Theodore Roosevelt–but read “Armenian” as “Christian” and “Turkish”
as “Islamic”:

the Armenian [Christian] massacre was the greatest crime of the war,
and the failure to act against Turkey [the Islamic world] is to condone
it… the failure to deal radically with the Turkish [Islamic] horror
means that all talk of guaranteeing the future peace of the world is
mischievous nonsense.

Indeed, if we “fail to deal radically” with the “horror” currently
being visited upon millions of Christians around the Islamic
world–which in some areas has reached genocidal proportions–we
“condone it” and had better cease talking “mischievous nonsense”
of a utopian world of peace and tolerance.

Put differently, silence is always the ally of those who would commit
genocide. In 1915, Adolf Hitler rationalized his genocidal plans,
which he implemented some three decades later, when rhetorically asked:
“Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”

And who speaks today of the annihilation of Christians under Islam?

By Raymond Ibrahim Human Events

Raymond Ibrahim is author of Crucified Again: Exposing Islam’s New
War on Christians. He is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz
Freedom Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

http://www.aina.org/news/20130424124614.htm

Armenian Genocide Commemoration Day

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION DAY

First Things
April 24 2013

Wednesday, April 24, 2013, 10:22 AM

Mark Movsesian

Today is the 98th anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide,
an ethnic cleansing campaign in the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

Although the Genocide had many causes-political, economic, social-law
and religion were major factors.

As Christians, Armenians had a precarious position in Ottoman society.

They could exist, even thrive, but only if they accepted the
second-class status that classical Islamic law allowed them. In the
19th Century, under pressure from European governments, the Empire had
adopted a reform program, known as the Tanzimat, that granted legal
equality for the first time to Armenians and other Christians.

Conservative Muslim opinion could not accept this, and the Tanzimat
led to a violent backlash against Christians in the 1890s,
particularly in the Anatolian provinces, in which hundreds of
thousands of Christians, mostly Armenians, died. A pattern of
resistance and oppression ensued, until finally, under the cover of
World War I, the Ottoman government decided to remove the Armenian
population of Anatolia. Historians estimate that between 600,000 and
1.5 million Armenians, as well as tens of thousands of Syriac
Christians, died during the death marches into the Syrian desert.

The story of the Genocide, and how it led to the first international
human rights campaign in American history, is told well by Colgate
Professor Peter Balakian in his book, The Burning Tigris. For my own
reflections on how the failure of Ottoman reform contributed to the
Genocide, please see here.

http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2013/04/24/armenian-genocide-commemoration-day/

Armenian Genocide Commemorated In Diyarbakir For First Time

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATED IN DIYARBAKIR FOR FIRST TIME

13:25 24.04.2013
Armenian Genocide, Diyarbakir

A large crowd gathered at the Diyarbakir Metropolitan Municipality
Theater on April 23 to commemorate the Armenian Genocide.

The event, commemorating the 98thanniversary of the destruction of
the Armenian community in the city, was organized by the Diyarbakir
Bar Association (DBA) and the Diyarbakir Municipality, and featured a
panel discussion with historian Ara Sarafian and the head of the DBA,
Tahir Elci, the Armenian Weekly reported.

In his opening remarks, Elci noted that as Armenian intellectuals
and community leaders were being rounded up in Istanbul on April 24,
1915 and during the weeks that followed, a similar process unfolded
in Diyarbakir.

Stressing Kurdish participation in the genocide in Diyarbakir, Elci
said that confronting the reality of the genocide by Kurds today is
inevitable. Moreover, he argued that Kurds should support Armenians
in the struggle against the state’s ideology and denialism.

“We grew up with the stories of our grandparents about the massacres
of the Armenians. Denialist discourse does not withstand legal and
historic scrutiny,” he said.

“Today, we commemorate the genocide in Diyarbakir for the first time.

This is a very important day for us. We bow respectfully before the
memory of our Armenian brothers who were murdered in 1915, and condemn
the genocide,” Elci concluded.

Sarafian focused on the process of the destruction of the Armenians in
Diyarbakir in 1915. He noted that he had come to Diyarbakir to conduct
research on the genocide, and that locals had been very helpful.

After the meeting, members of the audience headed to the banks of
the Tigris River and threw flowers in the water in memory of the
Armenians killed there during the genocide.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/04/24/armenian-genocide-commemorated-in-diyarbakir-for-first-time/

Aznavour : " Ils Sont Tombes " – Verneuil : " Mayrig "

AZNAVOUR : ” ILS SONT TOMBES ” – VERNEUIL : ” MAYRIG ”

A deux ans de la centième commemoration du genocide qui a frappe le
peuple armenien sur ses propres terres, la planète armenienne se
souvient et se souviendra jusqu’au jour où la Turquie, en tant
qu’Etat, reconnaîtra le crime imprescriptible planifie par le
gouvernement ottoman.

mercredi 24 avril 2013,
Jean Eckian ©armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=89088

En Israel, La Coalition Et L’opposition Appellent Au Souvenir Du Gen

EN ISRAEL, LA COALITION ET L’OPPOSITION APPELLENT AU SOUVENIR DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN

Des membres de la coalition et de l’opposition ont mardi 23 avril
2013 commemore le genocide armenien par les Turcs ottomans, malgre
les efforts d’Israël pour arranger les choses avec la Turquie sur le
raid sur la flottille de Gaza il y a trois ans au cours duquel huit
ressortissants turcs sont morts.

Pendant et après la Première Guerre mondiale, entre 1 million et
1,5 million d’Armeniens sont morts ; l’anniversaire de la tuerie est
marquee cette semaine. En raison des relations etroites de Jerusalem
avec Ankara, le gouvernement n’a jamais reconnu officiellement les
evenements comme genocide.

“Combien d’entre nous sont vraiment familiers avec l’holocauste
armenien ? Pourquoi sommes-nous indifferents lorsque la Turquie ne
prend pas sa responsabilite ? “, A declare le depute Ayelet Shaked
(Habayit Hayehoudi). ” Nous devons faire face a notre silence et
celui du monde face a ces horreurs. Aucun pays ne s’est tenue a côte
des Armeniens. Personne ne se souciait du genocide au Rwanda “.

Le depute Israël Hasson (Kadima) a appele ses collègues a soutenir
le peuple armenien. ” Nous avons forme une association d’amitie
israelo-armenienne, et je demande a tous les deputes qui veulent
exprimer leur solidarite a se joindre a elle, meme si le gouvernement
a du mal a formuler une declaration.”

Le depute Reuven Rivlin (Likoud), ancien president de la Knesset, a
declare : ” La Turquie est et sera un allie d’Israël. Les negociations
avec la Turquie sont comprehensibles et meme necessaire dans une
perspective strategique et diplomatique. Mais ces circonstances ne
peuvent justifier que la Knesset ignore la tragedie d’un autre peuple
“.

La deputee Zahava Gal-On (Meretz) a evoque les pourparlers de
reconciliation avec la Turquie comme ” un processus important et
strategique que je soutiens de tout c~ur, mais il ne doit pas influer
sur la reconnaissance du massacre du peuple armenien. Ce n’est pas que
soit nous devons reconnaître le genocide ou soit avoir des relations
avec la Turquie, nous pouvons faire les deux”.

Ofir Akunis, un sous-ministre du Bureau du Premier ministre, a declare
que ” en tant que Juifs et Israeliens, nous avons une obligation
morale de se souvenir des tragedies humaines. L’une d’elle etait
le massacre du peuple armenien. L’Etat d’Israël n’a jamais nie ces
evenements terribles “.

Selon Akunis ” une enquete sur ces evenements doit etre fait a travers
un debat ouvert, pas par des declarations politiques.”

En fin de compte, la Knesset a decide que le Comite de la Chambre
de la Knesset choisirait quel comite procedera a un debat plus large
sur la question.

traduction Armenews

mercredi 24 avril 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=89082
http://www.haaretz.com

Ankara: Israeli Parliament To Discuss Armenian ‘Genocide’ Amid Warmi

ISRAELI PARLIAMENT TO DISCUSS ARMENIAN ‘GENOCIDE’ AMID WARMING TIES

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 23 2013

Israeli parliamentary body the Knesset is set to hold a session to
discuss mass killings of Armenians in 1915 at the hands of Ottomans,
a day after an Israeli delegation arrived in Ankara to discuss
compensation for victims of a 2010 Israeli raid on a Turkish ship.

The Israeli Haaretz daily reported on Monday that the Knesset is
scheduled to hold a special session to discuss the “Armenian genocide
at this sensitive time,” while the Israeli delegation is in Ankara
trying to hammer out a deal over compensation to families of the Mavi
Marmara victims.

Eight Turks and one Turkish American were killed and several other
pro-Palestinian activists were wounded when Israeli commandos stormed
the Mavi Marmara while stopping an international flotilla trying to
breach a blockade of the Gaza Strip. The incident increased tensions
between the once close allies and led to a break in relations.

Last month, US President Barack Obama brokered a rapprochement between
the two countries, both of which Washington regards as strategic
partners in the turbulent Middle East. Israel offered an apology and
compensation for the May 31, 2010 raid, and the Turkish and Israeli
leaders agreed to try to normalize their relationship.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has since warned, however,
that the restoration of full-fledged diplomatic ties would come only
after compensation is paid to the surviving victims of the flotilla
raids and the relatives of the dead, and would be dependent on Israel
ending all commercial restrictions on the Palestinians.

A group led by the Israeli prime minister’s national security adviser,
Yaakov Amidror, and by Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun
Sinirlioglu met in the Turkish capital, Ankara, for talks that could
lead to an exchange of ambassadors between the two countries and
other diplomatic moves.

However, while efforts to restore ties between the two former allies
have accelerated, the Israeli parliament is moving to discuss the
Armenian “genocide,” a day before the so-called Armenian Genocide
Remembrance Day.

“Members of Knesset will have to decide between the benefits of
the strategic relationship with Turkey and the moral duty not to
ignore the Armenian genocide that occurred in the last century,”
deputy Reuven Rivlin, a former Knesset speaker, told a delegation
from Turkey at the Knesset on Monday, Haaretz reported.

“I think that as human beings and as Jews we must not ignore the
tragedies of other nations and must continue making this point,
regardless of our friendly relationship with Turkey,” he added.

Armenia, backed by many historians and parliaments in several
countries, says about 1.5 million Armenians were killed in what is now
eastern Turkey during World War I in a deliberate policy of genocide
ordered by the Ottoman government. The Ottoman Empire dissolved after
the end of the war, but successive Turkish governments and the vast
majority of Turks take the charge of genocide as a direct insult to
national pride. Ankara argues there was a heavy loss of life on both
sides during fighting in the area.

Rivlin said apologizing to Turkey on the Mavi Marmara incident was
understandable because of the need for strategic and diplomatic
relations, but it was unconscionable that the Knesset would ignore
the Armenian genocide for these reasons.

“This isn’t an accusation aimed at Turkey today, or at the current
Turkish government. It is precisely because we are Israelis and
have heard denials of the atrocities that befell us that I think
the Knesset couldn’t possibly ignore this tragedy, which has solid,
established historical facts,” Rivlin said, according to Haaretz.

“We find it hard to forgive when other nations ignore our tragedy,
and we must not ignore the tragedy of another nation. This is our
moral duty as human beings and as Jews,” he concluded.

;jsessionid=7EEFCB2FB27963901E991A3C3816B052?newsId=313446&columnistId=0

http://www.todayszaman.com/newsDetail_getNewsById.action

Armenian FM To Make First Foreign Trip To Russian April 25-26

ARMENIAN FM TO MAKE FIRST FOREIGN TRIP TO RUSSIAN APRIL 25-26

ITAR-TASS, Russia
April 22, 2013 Monday 07:17 PM GMT+4

– Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan will pay an official
visit to Russia on April 25-26 at the invitation of Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov.

The ministers will discuss further development of bilateral relations
and exchange views on pressing regional and international issues,
the Foreign Ministry said on Monday, April 22.

Nalbandyan is scheduled to meet with the leaders of the Russian
parliament. He will also give a lecture for faculty members and
attendees of the Russian Diplomatic Academy.

This will be Nalbandyan’s first foreign trip after his reappointment
to this post on April 19.

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, who was reappointed on the same day,
said earlier that Armenia and Russia cooperate most actively in all
areas of interstate relations without exception. Over the past years,
Russian-Armenian cooperation has developed into a rather complex and
multifaceted structure.

He stressed that Russia plays a key role in ensuring Armenia’s security
and has a leading position in its economy.

“Today Russia plays a key role in Armenia’s security system and it
occupies a leading position in our economy,” he said. “Russia is the
main investor in the Armenian economy, one of its main creditors and
one of the major foreign trade partners.”

“We are interested to improve these relations further, which is fully
consistent with our national interests,” the prime minister said.

“Over the past 20-odd years we have not only preserved the
centuries-old friendship between our peoples but we have also enriched
it with new content and raised it to a qualitatively new level,”
Sargsyan said, adding, “Strategic partnership between Armenia and
Russia has crowned this friendship.”

“We give priority among others to diversification of economic
cooperation between our countries. We are convinced that intensive
interaction in sectors that build up innovation potential will give
a boost to our economic cooperation. This will also allow us to fill
our strategic partnership and allied relations between Russia and
Armenia with new substance,” he said.

Trade turnover between Russia and Armenia in 2011 had reached one
billion U.S. dollars.

The two countries have good prospects in many sectors of the economy,
primarily in the energy sector, the power industry, atomic energy,
and many other serious projects.

There is also a big potential in joint development of the
agro-industrial sector in Armenia.