BAKU: Syrian Armenians reject to settle on the occupied territories

APA, Azerbaijan
Aug 20 2012

Syrian Armenians reject to settle on the occupied territories of Azerbaijan

[ 20 Aug 2012 10:38 ]

Baku. Anakhanim Hidoyatova – APA. Syrian Armenians have rejected to
settle on the occupied territories of Azerbaijan, APA reports citing
Eurasia.net.

Recently, in connection with the refugees from the ongoing violence in
Syria, Armenia has proposed to settle them in the Nagorno Karabakh,
but that proposal was protested by the Azerbaijani side.

Despite the proposal of Armenia, `official representative’ of
separatist Nagorno Karabakh regime David Babayan had not confirmed the
reality of such appeal.

`Nevertheless, we are ready to help our compatriots in any case’, noted Babayn.

Sarkan, the guardian

Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso, Italy
Aug 20 2012

Sarkan, the guardian

by Paolo Martino

When a State is founded on a myth, that myth is to be defended at all
costs. These words by an Armenian university professor come to Paolo’s
mind while walking through the cold rooms of the Turkish Genocide
Museum, in Igdir. Here, history becomes myth and the past is turned
upside down. The seventh episode of the story `From the Caucasus to
Beirut’

Five spears of marble and steel pierce the plateau’s sky, fading into
the dense blanket of clouds. The swords are raised over Igdir, a
Turkish-border outpost, invading the field of vision of those who look
South, from the North, from Armenia, towards the bulk of the Ararat
rock filling the horizon. At the foot of the monoliths a sign welcomes
visitors to the Turkish Genocide Museum, inaugurated in 1997 in memory
of the genocide perpetrated against the Turks by the Armenians. Even
before entering, it becomes clear that, in this remote corner of
Turkey – hanging onto the last strip of Anatolia-, memory, myth and
history fully collide.

`Starting in 1870, Turkey was the focus of international imperialistic
ambitions. The Western States and the Russian Tsardom spread
nationalistic ideas among the Armenians of Turkey, aimed at
establishing an independent Armenian State in Anatolia and abolishing
Turkey, both as a State and a Nation’.

The inscription is didactic, the rhythm assertive, the punctuation
syncopated. `The genocide perpetrated by the Armenians against the
Turks between 1870 and 1920 is compatible with the definition of
`deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to
bring about its physical destruction’, contained in the 1948 Genocide
Convention’. Abandoned at the extreme periphery of the plateau, the
rooms of the Museum are cold and deserted.

In Igdir, at the crossroads between Turkey, Iran, Armenia and
Azerbaijan, languages do not matter: they disappear in the universal
language peculiar to border lands. Like Kars, in the North, and Van,
in the South, until 1917 Igdir was part of the Russian Western
periphery, attracting flows of Armenians from the regions of Anatolia
subjected to the Ottoman Empire. Annexed to the Armenian Democratic
Republic, after three years the city came under the rule of Kemalist
Turkey, intent on expanding its dominions up to the right bank of the
river Arax. On November 13th 1920, the withdrawing Armenians set fire
to the Margara bridge, the only link left between Armenia and
Anatolia. At the time, Igdir had a mixed population of over 10,000
inhabitants and was cutting the umbilical cord with its Armenian past.

`Turkish soldiers whose stomach was burned and whose eyes were
removed. Olba, province of Igdir, 1915′. A picture of two disfigured
bodies opens the Museum’s first, gruesome photo exhibition. Men tied
up by their legs, mutilated bodies, shapeless faces. The captions
comment facts and report circumstances with absolute precision.
`Ottoman soldiers murdered by Armenian armed groups on July 23rd,
1915, while they were on sick leave in the village of Koom’. Some
pictures quote international witnesses: `Mr. Vays, German reporter,
Mr. Estryan, Austrian, and Mr. Ahmet Rayf examine the bodies of
massacred Turks’. The pictures, though, are a lot less precise than
the captions: deciphering the shapes of the weather-beaten massed
bodies is hardly possible through the black and white. The soldiers
are not wearing uniforms. There are no external clues to identify the
places: not a mosque, not a church, not a bridge, not a railway
station that can be recognised. The foreign witnesses are just
wondering shapes, with their backs to the camera, among dead people
piled under the sun.
From my journal. 9th november
Tazegol, Subata, Ilica ,Sarikamis, Hasankale, Erzinkan, Hakmehmet. I
write down the places of the massacres, the dates, the estimate of the
600,000 Turkish victims of Armenian violence. Disoriented, I try to
stay focused on the absolute and irrefutable evidence, the mass
killings documented by the pictures. By going deeper and deeper in
these silent halls, though, I am overwhelmed by the background noise
that has been with me since coming in: what story would these dead
tell? The same story this Museum wishes to document? In the room
shaped by the monolithic bases of the five swords – the heart of the
Museum – a sign shows the anthropometric measurements of eight skulls
found in the mass grave of Cavusoglu Samanligi. Cephalic indexes,
cranial morphologies and `prominent studies on race’ show that `the
history related to Armenians is to be rewritten, as the people
massacred were Turks, not Armenians. Signed, Professor Dr. Metin
Özbek’.

In one room there are publications by Turkish research centres, signed
by university professors of history and anthropology. Using the
language of propaganda, books such as `The Eastern Question:
Imperialism and the Armenian Community’ or `Armenian Church and
Terrorism’ tell the stories of Armenian terrorists, arsenals
sequestered from Armenian bandits, of agreements between foreign
powers and Armenian traitors. Suddenly, the words of Hayk Demoyan, the
Director of the Armenian Genocide Memorial interviewed a few days
earlier in Yerevan, come to mind. `The Turkish State is not founded on
a social pact, but on a myth. And myths are to be defended at all
costs, even if it implies rewriting the past’.

The door to the room opens while I take pictures of the book covers,
even though I know it is forbidden. A young boy in a uniform raises
his voice while observing the scene. “Türkçe bilmiyorum!’. As soon as
he sees I do not speak his language, the soldier changes his
expression. Enthusiastic because a foreigner is in the Museum he is
the guardian of, he hurries to prepare tea and a meal with yoghurt. No
words are spoken, but the curiosity his eyes express is immense. When
he understands my journey started in Armenia, he grabs a bunch of
keys, closes the door to the Museum and gets on the motorcycle parked
outside. His right hand gestures to climb on.
From my journal
While the motorcycle slides into the cold air, I turn around to look
at the monument towering over the plateau. Sarkan, the guardian, rides
through fields set-aside for winter, along canals covered in ice,
crossing shepherds sitting on the curb: Armenia, indiscernible on the
horizon, unravels in perfect continuity with the surroundings. Sarkan
speaks, gesticulates, mimes, praises his new motorcycle and invites me
to ride it until I forget about the place of our encounter. At least
for a moment, States’ monumental obsession for the past succumbs faced
with the simplicity of a man. And Turkey and Armenia seem to be
shifting from rivals into mere neighbours.

The Igdir night suddenly muffles every activity, laying down the human
rhythms of a place that lives according to ancient beats. On the
border, the meta-territory where identities blend and novelty is
created, all blatantly precarious, fragile, hypocrisy-free. Muddy
roads are ploughed by solitary elders on bicycles. Reinforced concrete
mosques raise their minarets over unfinished houses. Off-road vehicles
without plates shield themselves with the dark and the silence. In the
alleys, where the banks of snow will only melt in spring, Azerbaijani,
Iranian, Turkish and Georgian travellers meet to gamble on the same
tables, get drunk from the same bottles, spend the night in the same
brothels. Outside, winter cools down all noise.

The bus to Van is ready in the otogar parking lot, in the suburbs.
There is nothing more to seek, in Igdir: here, Armenian history has
left no traces, vanishing along with the Margara bridge. The driver
suddenly switches the engine off, while the only passenger who speaks
English translates what he is saying: `This bus is too big, I can’t
drive through the ruins. The minibuses leave from the lots nearby, you
can use the same ticket’. Crowding under the bus shelter, the
passengers raise their eyes to a television. On the lower side of the
monitor, confused among incomprehensible words, two terms flow which
say it all: Magnitude 5.8, h21:23. For half-hour an hour now, Van no
longer exists.

http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Dossiers/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/Sarkan-the-guardian-121232

Stray bullet kills man after Eid prayers in NW Turkey

Xinhua General News Service, China
August 19, 2012 Sunday 8:55 AM EST

Stray bullet kills man after Eid prayers in NW Turkey

ANKARA Aug. 19

A 32-year-old man died after being hit by a stray bullet fired at the
courtyard of a mosque after Eid prayers on Sunday in the province of
Tekirdag in northwestern Turkey, local newspaper Today’s Zaman
reported on its website.

Murat Serdar was hit in the head when he was exchanging Eid greetings
with the conglomerate after performing Eid prayers in the Karadeniz
Mosque, according to the report.

The bullet was reportedly fired by 40-year-old Turhan Samast, who
surrendered to the police hours after the incident, the report said,
adding that he told the police that it was an accident and he was
regretful.

Samast is allegedly the cousin of Ogun Samast, the convicted killer of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink who was shot dead in 2009.

Youth & Mentors Strengthen Their Bonds on AGBU Gen Next Camping Trip

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Monday, August 20, 2012

Youth and Mentors Strengthen Their Bonds on AGBU Generation Next
Camping Trip

Every adolescent can benefit from a positive role model, and the AGBU
Generation Next (GenNext) Mentorship Program of Southern California is
ensuring that Armenian teens have not only one mentor but an extensive
support network – one that was made even stronger on a recent camping
retreat. On Friday, June 22, 2012, over 40 mentees, mentors, and
GenNext staffers packed their bags and headed to The Oaks Camp in Lake
Hughes, in Southern California, for a two-day trip that brought all
the participants closer and advanced the program’s mission to
positively influence youth and introduce them to new experiences and
alternatives that will enable them to become responsible,
self-sufficient, and independent adults.

Together, mentors and mentees made their cabins their home for the
weekend and took full advantage of the Oaks’ vast grounds and
facilities. Throughout the day, they played various sports, including
archery, basketball, and soccer, and cooled off in the swimming pool,
enjoying being out in the fresh air and surrounded by mountains. When
the evenings arrived, everyone gathered around the campfire, as old
friends reminisced and new friendships were initiated. Seventeen-year
old Arthur, a young man who has benefitted from GenNext for years,
gushed with excitement over the trip, declaring, “Camp was great! It
was a weekend to remember for life. The AGBU GenNext program has
helped me a lot over the past five years – it’s an amazing program,
and these were an amazing two days. I’ll never forget how reluctant we
were to go to sleep those two nights, the nicknames we gave each
other, and the time we spent together. I’m already looking forward to
our next camping trip!”

A range of team-building exercises, ice-breakers and open discussions
gave mentors the opportunity to do what they do best: direct the youth
toward a promising future. In particular, the mentors impressed upon
the teens the importance of maintaining healthy relationships that are
based on mutual respect. As always, mentors drew from the extensive
training they’ve received through GenNext, which has been key to the
program’s success since its pilot year in 1998. Seminars and joint
meetings with parents and case managers give the mentors the resources
they need to help build the youths’ confidence and
self-esteem. Reflecting on the trip, AGBU GenNext Program Manager
Abraham Chaparian commented, “It was nice to be able to be in a
beautiful, relaxing environment and to talk to the teens and learn
more about them… I love helping my community and hope others will
join us in touching the lives of our youth. We welcome more volunteer
mentors who will serve as role models, and I encourage anyone who is
willing to make a positive difference to contact us, so that we may
work hand in hand in order to – as our slogan states – reach new
heights together.”

Though everyone was disappointed when the weekend came to an end,
GenNext has planned a number of activities to keep the students and
mentors busy through the summer and upcoming fall. In July, mentors
and mentees came together for their monthly group activity in
Huntington Beach, and in August for a trip to the Gene Autry Museum of
Western Heritage. This September, they will have another outdoor
excursion, hiking the trails of the Eaton Canyon Park in Pasadena.

To learn more about the AGBU Generation Next Program, find them on
Facebook at: or email Generation Next Program
Manager Abraham Chaparian: [email protected]

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
educational, cultural and humanitarian programs, annually touching the
lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please
visit

www.agbu.org
www.facebook.com/gennext
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org.

Professor RG Hovannisian to speak on Smyrna at Chapman University

The Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education
Chapman University
Wilkinson College of Humanities and Social Sciences
One University Drive
Orange, CA 92866-7126
Tel: 714-628-7377
Web:

Richard Hovannisian on Smyrna at Chapman University on September 5

Professor Richard Hovannisian will lead off the Fall Lecture Series at
Chapman University on Wednesday, September 5, at 7 p.m., with an
illustrated presentation titled “War and Ethnic Cleansing: Smyrna
1922-2012.” The program coincides with the 90th anniversary of Great
Fire and the end of its thriving Greek and Armenian communities in
Western Asia Minor in September 1922.

The event is sponsored by Chapman University’s Rodgers Center for
Holocaust Education; Stern Chair in Holocaust Education; and Sala and
Aron Samueli Holocaust Memorial Library, under the Direction of
Dr. Marilyn Harran. The lecture will be held in Beckman Hall, Room
404, of the Bush Conference Center. Parking is available in the Fred
L. Barrera Structure (P7) on Sycamore Street and the Lastinger
Structure (P4) on Walnut Avenue on the Chapman campus in Orange,
California.

Professor Hovannisian has been invited to serve as the first
distinguished Chancellor’s Fellow in the Department of History for the
Fall Semester, during which he will offer a 15-week course for history
majors on the Armenian Genocide and its historiography.

http://www.chapman.edu/holocausteducation/

408,109 Armenian tourists visited Georgia this year

408,109 Armenian tourists visited Georgia this year

news.am
August 20, 2012 | 20:33

Armenia occupies the third place on the number of visitors to Georgia
over the last seven months of this year. A total of 408,109 people
visited Georgia this year, as compared to the same period last year,
which is by 22 percent more.

Turkey occupies the first place with 810,698 visitors, which is by 107
percent more as compared to the same period last year, while
Azerbaijan is the second with 483,317 visitors, which is by 29 percent
more. At the same time a total of 237,950 Russians visited Georgia, by
81 percent more as compared to the same period last year.

Overall, the foreign visits to Georgia increased by 54 percent making
2,211,000 over the last seven months, as opposed to the same period
last year, Novosti Gruziya reports quoting the Georgian National
Tourism Agency.

ABA Petitions the US Supreme Court in Genocide Recovery Lawsuit

Armenian Bar Association Petitions the United States Supreme Court in
Genocide Recovery Lawsuit

hetq
21:13, August 20, 2012

The Armenian Bar Association has prepared and filed written legal
arguments with the United States Supreme Court in an effort to reverse
an appellate court decision in Movsesian v. Versicherung AG, which
nullified a California statute allowing for the pursuit of
Genocide-related life insurance recoveries. Earlier this year in the
Movsesian case, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down a
California law which extended the statute of limitations for
Genocide-era life insurance claims on the grounds that the United
States’ alleged position of non-recognition trumped California’s
efforts to allow for the legal redress of these insurance claims. The
Armenian Bar Association urged the Supreme Court to reconsider the
errant appellate decision and to allow for the enforcement of the
California insurance-oriented law which pertains to an area of
fundamental state sovereignty.

Joining the Armenian Bar Association on its amicus brief, which was
written and assembled on a pro bono basis by a team of lawyers from
the law firm of Bingham McCutchen and helmed by the Armenian Bar’s
founding Chairman–the renowned David Balabanian–are the esteemed
Attorneys General of the States of California, Michigan, Nevada, Rhode
Island and several federal and state legislators.

Edvin Minassian, the two-term immediate past Chairman of the Armenian
Bar Association, is owed a huge debt of gratitude for his wise counsel
and active participation in the joint effortS to serve and protect the
legal interests of the Armenian community, this time all the way to
the steps and through the doors of the country’s ultimate and final
tribunal. With Mr. Minassian’s sharp focus and commitment and with the
compelling advocacy of Mr. Balabanian, the Armenian Bar Association
has, for the first time, weighed in with the Supreme Court asking that
it uphold the rights of the Armenian Genocide’s victims and their
heirs.

Due to the leadership of our former Chairmen Edvin Minassian and David
Balabanian, our resolve is clearly at an all time high. Claims for
unpaid life insurance policies dating back to the Armenian Genocide
were first brought by plaintiffs’ attorney Vartkes Yeghiayan, a
Lifetime Honorary Member of the Armenian Bar Association. Attorneys
who have also been representing plaintiffs include Armenian Bar
members Mark Geragos and Brian Kabateck, and Lee Crawford Boyd. Igor
Timofeyev of the law firm of Paul Hastings filed the original appeal
on behalf of plaintiffs, urging the high court to overturn the Ninth
Circuit’s en banc ruling.

Also lending support to the Supreme Court petition are our partners,
the ANCA, the Zoryan Institute for Contemporary Armenian Research and
Documentation, Inc., Genocide Education Project, Jewish Alliance for
Law & Social Action, the Center for the Study of Law & Genocide, and
the International Human Rights Clinic of the University of Southern
California Gould School of Law. The ANCA, through the crucial efforts
of its Legislative Director Kate Nahabetian, also an ArmenBar member,
played a
critical role in securing the on-the-record support of the
aforementioned States Attorneys General.

Armenian Bar Association

Turkish-Cypriot tycoon Asil Nadir found guilty of theft

Turkish-Cypriot tycoon Asil Nadir found guilty of theft

August 20, 2012 – 18:17 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Turkish-Cypriot tycoon Asil Nadir, formerly one of
Britain’s most notorious fugitives, was found guilty of three counts
of theft on Monday, August 20.

According to AFP, the jury at the Old Bailey in London was still
considering a further nine counts of theft after Nadir, one of the
highest-profile businessmen in Britain in the 1980s, denied stealing
£150 million ($235 million, 188 million euros) from his business
empire.

He was cleared of one count of theft.

Nadir was arrested in 1990 after his company Polly Peck International
went into administration with debts of £550 million, and he was
charged with more than 60 counts of theft.

Three years later, he fled for Turkish-controlled northern Cyprus,
which does not have an extradition treaty with Britain.

He returned to Britain two years ago in a dramatic bid to clear his name.

Armenian Government builds houses for homeless people of Lori region

Armenian Government builds houses for homeless people of Lori region

16:57, 20 August, 2012

YEREVAN, AUGUST 20, ARMENPRESS: 1720 families from 24 village
communities of Lori region who are in turn to receive flats 1400 are
candidates for receiving houses in the framework of flat construction
program which is implemented in governmental support. Armenpress was
informed from Ministry of Urban Development that 980 families have
been recognized participants of the program and houses of 552 of them
are already built. Around 380 houses are in process of construction
and 170 of them are planned to finish in September.

On August 18 in Vanadzor took place the session of the committee which
is involved in construction and allocation process of newly built
houses under the presidency of the Minister of Urban Development
Samvel Tadevosyan. During the session of the committee the document
packages of 70 homeless families was discussed. Taking into
consideration the problems raised by the heads of villages connected
with construction process Minister Tadevosyan gave orders to organize
meeting during the coming week with the heads of communities and heads
of construction companies.

Armenian-Turkish protocols have introduced discrepancies in ruling p

Orientalist: Armenian-Turkish protocols have introduced discrepancies
in ruling party of Turkey

arminfo
Monday, August 20, 16:13

The Armenian-Turkish protocols have introduced discrepancies in the
ruling Justice and Development Party of Turkey, Orientalist Vahram
Ter-Matevosyan said at today’s press conference in Yerevan.

He said that some members of the Party understand that the
Armenian-Turkish protocols should be ratified and the border should be
opened, as the process has been launched and the international
community is waiting for the results; the others refuse to take any
measures for progress. The expert added that serious changes will take
place in Turkey, as the incumbent authorities of Turkey are planning
to switch from the parliamentary system of governing to the
presidential one.

“The changes in Turkey may seriously influence the foreign policy of
the country, including the Armenian- Turkish relations. So, artificial
problems may be created for the Armenian Foreign Ministry”, he said.
The expert pointed out at the same time that no changes in the
political field of Turkey will cause any problems for the Armenians
living in Turkey.

To note, the Armenian-Turkish protocols were signed in Zurich on 10
October 2009. However, the protocols have not been ratified by the
Parliaments of Armenia and Turkey, as Ankara was constantly laying
down preconditions. On April 22 the process of ratification of the
protocols in the Armenian Parliament was frozen by the decree of
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan.