HH Aram I Receives the Newly Appointed Ambassador of Iran to Lebanon

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

His Holiness Aram I Receives the Newly Appointed Ambassador of the
Islamic Republic of Iran to Lebanon

Antelias – 3 October 2014. On Tuesday morning, Ambassador Mohammad
Fateh Ali visited His Holiness Aram I. His Holiness introduced
Ambassador Fateh Ali to the Catholicosate and explained its regional and
international mission. The two then discussed the presence of the
Armenian community in Iran, and the Ambassador praised the contribution
of Armenians to Iranian society.

During their discussion of the Middle East, His Holiness condemned the
destruction of the Church complex in Der Zor and emphasized the urgency
for Christians and Muslims to work together. Together they condemned
extremism and its negative consequences for the people of the region.

# #

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://armenianorthodoxchurch.org/gallery-2

ANTELIAS: HH Aram I Honors the Choir Master of the St. Vartanantz Ch

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

His Holiness Aram I
Honors the Choir Master of the St. Vartanantz Church in Istanbul

Antelias – Upon the invitation of the Hamazkayin Educational and
Cultural Association, the Choir of St. Vartanantz Church came to Lebanon
to give a number of concerts. On Sunday 5 October 2014, they sang the
Holy Liturgy at the St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral in Antelias.

After the Liturgy, the choir attended the opening ceremony of the 85th
Scholastic Year of the Seminary, after which His Holiness Aram I honored
Deacon Adroushan Haladjian with the insignia of St. Mesrob Mashdotz for
his long service to the Church and valuable contribution to Armenian
music.

At the end of the ceremony, His Holiness Aram I hosted the choir and its
President, V. Rev. Tatoul Anoushian, for lunch.

His Holiness Aram I Receives Rare Archival Photos of Bird’s Nest
Orphanage from Former Orphan Vartan Melkonian

Antelias – On Monday 6 October 2014, Mr Vartan Melkonian, a former
orphan of Bird’s Nest and currently living in London, visited
Catholicos Aram I. Mr Melkonian presented the Catholicos with a rare
collection of photos, taken of the orphans during the time of the
Genocide, which he had collected from Denmark and other countries. The
photos will be placed in the new Genocide Museum at the Bird’s Nest in
Byblos (Lebanon).

Mr Melkonian, a renowned composer and musician, who has conducted the
London Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, always speaks of himself as an
orphan from Bird’s Nest. He will commemorate the 100th anniversary of
the Genocide and the memory of his parents, who were victims of the
Genocide, by taking a walking tour in Cilicia with his daughter.

Before leaving, Mr Melkonian conveyed to His Holiness greetings from
Prince William, Duke of Cambridge.

His Holiness Aram I receives the representative of H.H. Baselius Mar
Thoma Dydmos I, Syrian Orthodox Church of India

Antelias – On Friday 3 October in the morning, His Holiness Aram I
received at the St. Mary’s Monastery in Bikfaya, Rev. Abraham Thomas,
the Ecumenical Officer of the Malabar Syrian Orthodox Church of India.

Rev. Thomas carried a personal letter from Catholicos Baselius Mar Thoma
Dydmos I to His Holiness, in which, he expressed his brotherly love, and
thanked the Catholicos for his contribution to peace building in the
region. H.H, and then asked Catholicos Aram I to mediate and help them
resolve the conflict between their two churches, the Malabar Syrian
Orthodox Church and the Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch in
Syria.

After the meeting with His Holiness Aram I, Rev. Abraham met with V.
Rev. Housig Mardirossian, the Ecumenical Officer and they discuss the
following two issues: First, organizing exchange programmes for
students, teachers and clergy between their two church, second, the
Oriental-Roman Catholic and Oriental-Anglican dialogues and pending
issues to be followed up.

# #

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://armenianorthodoxchurch.org/gallery-2

Young People Must Be Involved In Discussing Constitutional Reforms –

YOUNG PEOPLE MUST BE INVOLVED IN DISCUSSING CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS – GRIGOR MINASYAN

14:03 * 08.10.14

Grigor Minasyan, Managing Shareholder of the AM law firm, told
reporters on Wednesday that they announced the “Transforming the
Constitution” national competition a month ago.

The competition was supposed to make law students’ voice heard during
discussions on constitutional reforms in Armenia.

Young people must be actively involved in the discussions as well.

“To our joy, dozens of students from different higher schools
participated in the competition and made rather interesting proposals.

And at this professional discussion they can freely present their
proposals to the Commission on Constitutional Amendments thereby
contributing to our state development,” Mr Minasyan said.

This is the first such initiative.

“I think professionals’ involvement in such an important process is
highly important, and a most substantial discussion is ahead, and
we are ready to listen to all the opinions regardless of political
views,” Mr Minasyan said.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Malaise Armenien Face A L’arrivee D’une Universite Russe

MALAISE ARMENIEN FACE A L’ARRIVEE D’UNE UNIVERSITE RUSSE

ARMENIE

Les politiciens de l’opposition en Armenie ont denonce l’ouverture
d’une succursale de l’Universite d’Etat de Moscou a Erevan. Ils
considèrent comme faisant partie des efforts deployes par le Kremlin
pour etendre encore sa portee dans le pays.

Les membres du gouvernement ont salue la decision d’ouvrir une
branche locale de l’universite, l’une des institutions universitaires
de premier plan dans le monde. Le ministre de l’education et des
sciences Armen Ashotyan lors d’une conference de presse le 25 août a
affirme qu’il etait heureux qu’après quatre annees de negociations,
l’universite allait ouvrir en Armenie alors qu’il etait encore en
fonction.

L’Universite d’Etat de Moscou a deja des branches en Azerbaïdjan
et au Kazakhstan. Comme dans ces cas, le gouvernement du pays hôte
couvrira les coûts de fonctionnement.

>. Zarouhi Postanjyan,
une depute de l’opposition membre du parti Heritage a objecte au
gouvernement d’avoir a financer la branche universitaire russe,
de payer les salaires et meme la couverture des billets d’avion du
personnel en provenance et a destination de Moscou.

>.

Margaret Essayan, membre du Parlement avec le Parti republicain
au pouvoir, dit qu’elle personnellement etait plus une europhile,
mais la nouvelle universite ne doit pas etre consideree comme une
extension de la politique russe. >, dit-elle. Ashotyan a riposte aux critiques de
la nouvelle institution, soulignant qu’il n’y avait pas eu de tolle
lorsque le gouvernement a decide de soutenir les etudes en langue
anglaise a l’Universite americaine.

>, a declare le ministre.

Gayane Lazarian est un journaliste pour ArmeniaNow.com.

Institute for War & Peace Reporting

mardi 7 octobre 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

L’ordre D’Aliyev D’armer Les Civils Pres De La Frontiere Vu Comme De

L’ORDRE D’ALIYEV D’ARMER LES CIVILS PRÈS DE LA FRONTIERE VU COMME DE LA PROPAGANDE

ARMENIE

L’initiative de l’Azerbaïdjan d’armer les civils vivant a la frontière
avec l’Armenie et le long de la ligne de contact avec le Haut-Karabagh,
selon un expert militaire armenienne, vise a laisser les gens dans les
communautes frontalières se sentir plus en securite et a elargir les
possibilites de combat de l’armee, mais dans la realite cela n’aura
qu’un effet negligeable, tout en refutant le mythe de la propagande
par Bakou pendant des annees sur la >.

La semaine dernière, les medias azerbaïdjanais ont publie le texte de
l’ordre par le president Ilham Aliev de mesures visant a >. Selon l’ordre, des mesures
doivent etre prises , a declare Elibegova.

En Juillet, dans le contexte des operations de sabotage en augmentation
de la part de l’Azerbaïdjan le long de la ligne de contact, il y avait
aussi des avis en Armenie que les habitants des villages frontaliers
devraient etre armes. Cette opinion etait, en particulier, exprime
par le President du Conseil public armenien Vazgen Manoukian. Mais le
president Serge Sarkissian, le commandant en chef des forces armees
armeniennes, n’a pas ete d’accord avec cette opinion, en disant qu’il
ne voyait pas l’interet de le faire, que les forces armees armeniennes
sont en mesure d’assurer la securite de la population dans les zones
frontalières. Il a dit que ceux qui peuvent manipuler une arme a feu
devrait etre plutôt dans l’armee.

Et bien que de nombreux habitants des villages frontaliers de la
province du Tavush dans les conversations avec ArmeniaNow se soient
egalement prononces en faveur d’etre autorises a porter des armes a feu
afin d’etre en mesure de recourir a la legitime defense, si necessaire,
certains ont reconnu aussi que des armes dans les mains des civils,
parfois peuvent devenir un casse-tete supplementaire et conduire a
des fusillades entre eux.

Neanmoins, debut août des quartiers generaux ont ete mis en place
dans la plupart des villages frontaliers. Meme aujourd’hui, les
civils locaux se relaient pour etre en service dans ces locaux afin
de fournir un soutien aux forces armees, le cas echeant.

Selon Jamalyan, il n’est pas necessaire d’armer des civils armeniens
vivant près de la frontière avec l’Azerbaïdjan aujourd’hui. Cette
etape, a explique le fonctionnaire, ne peut etre prise que si l’appui
de benevoles est necessaire pour l’armee dans le cas d’une guerre a
grande echelle. Selon lui, rien n’indique aujourd’hui que l’Azerbaïdjan
va commencer les hostilites dans un proche avenir.

>,
a declare l’expert.

GOHAR ABRAHAMYAN

ArmeniaNow

mardi 7 octobre 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Big Armenian Diaspora Bears Witness To 1915 Genocide – German Inter-

BIG ARMENIAN DIASPORA BEARS WITNESS TO 1915 GENOCIDE – GERMAN INTER-CHURCH COUNCIL

11:51 * 07.10.14

In the run-up to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
the German Inter-Church Council has called upon the churches across
the country to commemorate the victims of the tragic massacres.

In an official statement adopted after its annual assembly in
Magdeburg, it has stressed the importance of respecting the memory
of the 1.5 million Armenians, noting that the heinous crime against
humanity has to date left its heavy imprint on the world history.

“In 2015, we are commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. From 1915 until 1922, one and a half
million Armenians were killed, and hundreds were displaced from home
(the present-day Turkey) and exiled. The 6 million Armenian Diaspora
scattered around the globe is the visible testimony of that Genocide.

“One centennial has passed, but what happened has left its heavy
imprint not only on the Armenian people but also the international
community. Even if there are no survivors today, the recognition of
that grief and injustice continues to remain actual.

“We respect the memory of the Armenians, as well as the around 600,000
Arameans and Greek Christians (including Catholics and Protestants)
who were killed along with their Armenians brothers and sisters.

“The Armenian Church appreciates the World Council of Churches’ efforts
towards ‘giving Armenian churches an opportunity to raise their protest
and struggle for the recognition of the 20th century’s first Genocide’.

“The Armenian Apostolic Church in Germany is a member of the
Inter-Church Council, and in solidarity with it, we are commemorating
the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in 2015. In 2005,
the German Bundestag highlighted Germany’s historical and moral
responsibility for it. As functioning churches in Germany, we jointly
bear that responsibility and consider it necessary to refer to it
every time.

“Hence, the 2014 Inter-Church Council Assembly in Magdeburg encourages
and calls upon its member churches and communities to commemorate it
with prayers and memorial events,” reads the statement.

The participants also considered a 2012 proposal for organizing joint
prayers with the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek churches.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/10/07/germany-interchurch-council/

The Alliance For Genocide Awareness And Remembrance Condemns The Des

THE ALLIANCE FOR GENOCIDE AWARENESS AND REMEMBRANCE CONDEMNS THE DESTRUCTION OF THE ARMENIAN CHURCH IN DER ZOR

10:10, 07 Oct 2014

The Alliance for Genocide Awareness and Remembrance (AGAR) vigorously
condemns the destruction of a historical memorial church commemorating
the Armenian Genocide in Der Zor, by the terrorist forces of the
Islamic State for Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

The Der Zor Armenian Genocide Memorial Church, located in present-day
Syria, was built at the site where there were the remains of countless
Armenian Genocide victims who arrived in the area as the last stop
of the mass deportation of Armenians, orchestrated by Ottoman Turkey
in 1915. Armenians who survived the deportation and reached Der Zor
were executed by the Turks. Several years later, an Armenian Genocide
Memorial Church was erected on the site, to serve as a reminder to
future generations of this black page of Ottoman Turkish history. We
are concerned that the destruction of this site of great significance,
which serves as a beacon to prevent crimes against humanity and
genocide received little media coverage and is not known by the
general public.

‘This horrendous act aimed at the Armenian people, many of whom
have the remains of their ancestors buried under the memorial, is
something that we vigorously condemn,’ said Mr. Mheir Karakachian,
representing the board of AGAR. ‘This site is the Armenian equivalent
to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial, where many Jews died during the
Shoah,’ Mr Karakachian continued.

Despite the international recognition of the mass deportations of
Armenians from 1915-1923 that led to the death of 1.5 million Armenians
as genocide, today’s Turkey still denies this historical fact.

AGAR additionally calls on The Right Honorable Prime Minister
Stephen Harper to denounce this act of genocide denial and this
shocking disregard for the victims of the Armenian genocide and their
descendants. Such memorials must serve as places of commemoration
and education for all citizens of the world.

AGAR is composed of communities marked by the scars of genocide and
crimes against humanity. The objectives include working together,
survivor communities and their descendants to raise awareness about
genocide, to foster education, and to effectively and vigorously
combat denial. The Alliance members are: The Armenian Genocide
Centennial Committee of Canada; The Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre;
PAGE-Rwanda; Centre Khemara; Ukrainian Information & Anti-Defamation
Committee.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/10/07/the-alliance-for-genocide-awareness-and-remembrance-condemns-the-destruction-of-the-armenian-church-in-der-zor/

Christian Presence In The Middle East Threatened Ahead Of Centenary

CHRISTIAN PRESENCE IN THE MIDDLE EAST THREATENED AHEAD OF CENTENARY OF ARMENIAN AND ASSYRIAN GENOCIDES

12:41, 07 Oct 2014

“Now, just as in 1914, Yazidis, Christian Armenians and especially
indigenous Christian Assyrians are being targeted in the name
of Islam,” The Conversation writes in an article titled “History
repeating: from the Battle of Broken Hill to the sands of Syria.”

Just as it was in 1914, the 2000-year-old Christian presence in the
Middle East is threatened with extinction, even as we approach the
eve of the centenary of the 1915 Armenian and Assyrian genocides.

The author reminds that a century ago, the ideological forebears of IS
targeted Christian Hellenes, Armenians and Assyrians. Once the people
were largely gone, their physical heritage was targeted: churches,
monasteries, schools, hospitals, community centers, homes. Thousands
of Christian holy sites were systematically destroyed across Turkey,
Iraq and Syria.

Just as before, religion is being abused for political purposes
by groups of extremists. Late last month, IS destroyed the Armenian
Church of the Holy Martyrs at Deir-ez-Zor in north-eastern Syria, part
of their campaign to “cleanse” their “caliphate” of the presence of
“unbelievers”.

In a sea of inhumanity unleashed by IS, this was a particularly
barbaric act, as the Church of the Holy Martyrs and its associated
museum are dedicated to the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

The church served as a massive reliquary containing the bones of
Christian Armenians deported by the Ottoman Turkish Empire to the
desert wastes around Deir-ez-Zor to die of hunger, dehydration
or worse.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/10/07/christian-presence-in-the-middle-east-threatened-ahead-of-centenary-of-armenian-and-assyrian-genocides/

Cultural heritage and violence in the Middle East

Open Democracy
Oct 4 2014

Cultural heritage and violence in the Middle East

Fiona Rose-Greenland 4 October 2014

When people are dying in their thousands, why should we care about the
destruction of artefacts? Cultural violence has long been a component
in the obliteration of communities; it legitimates the denial of
diversity and makes them much harder to rebuild.

Theatres of erasure: Syria and Iraq

The violence in Iraq has killed nearly 6,000 civilians since the start
of 2014, according to the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq. In Syria,
over 100,000 lives have been claimed and some two million persons
displaced since the start of the civil war in March 2011.

Media coverage has rightly focused on the human dimension of
suffering. With this essay, however, we want to reflect upon another
important aspect of the violence: the systematic destruction of
cultural sites and objects.

According to reports of the activist Facebook group Le patrimoine
archéologique syrien en danger, all six UNESCO World Heritage sites in
Syria have been damaged, major museum collections at Homs and Hama
have been looted, and dozens of ancient tells have been obliterated by
shelling.

In Iraq, recent media stories recount ISIS fighters’ use of
antiquities to raise revenues. So-called blood antiquities function as
cash-cows, fetching high prices from unscrupulous collectors and
netting a handsome cut for ISIS.

As devastating as this news is, Syria and Iraq are simply additional
chapters in the long-running story wherein conflict is characterised
by a two-fold assault on humanity: human bodies themselves as well as
the objects and sites that people create and infuse with cultural
meaning.

Cultural violence is not a practice exclusive to Islamic groups or
areas; rather, it is the nature of all radical ideologies, religious
and national alike. They proceed with a predictable agenda: first to
paint the world in black and white, and then to erase all shades of
cultural practice from non-white to black.

Before asking ourselves what steps should be taken to save artefacts,
monuments, and antiquities in the Middle East, we need to understand
why doing so matters. This requires an understanding of the broader
historical pattern of organised cultural violence.

Cultural violence and genocide: a 20th-century hate story

The destruction of human communities is incomplete without cultural
violence. This was the conclusion of lawyer and human rights advocate
Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-born jurist who coined the term “genocide”
and fought successfully for its recognition by international legal
bodies as a crime. In Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (1944), he argued:

By ‘genocide’ we mean the destruction of a nation or of an ethnic
group…[It signifies] a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at
the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national
groups, with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves. (Lemkin
1944: 80)

Among the “essential foundations” of the life of human societies,
Lemkin argued, were cultural sites, objects, and practices. The
Holocaust galvanised his human rights work, but it was the tragic case
of Turkish Armenians during the beginning decades of the twentieth
century that served as the basis for Lemkin’s theory of genocide.

Turkish Armenians were subject to organised murder and deportation
under the Ottoman government, an event now widely acknowledged despite
continued denials by Turkish officials. Current scholarly discussion
on the Armenian genocide, however, focuses almost exclusively on the
human destruction, not taking into consideration the systematic
annihilation of Armenian sites and monuments that has taken place
since then.

Yet, the cultural destruction has been so extensive that few people in
Turkey today even know that eastern Asia Minor was once the ancestral
lands of Armenians; they do not because the Turkish state and its
governments have systematically removed all markers of the Armenians’
civilisation.

Such cultural destruction occurred in stages. First, the potential of
inherent threat was raised publicly to legitimate the forced removal
of Armenian women, men, and children of the Ottoman Empire, plundering
what they left behind and settling Muslim refugees in their houses.
Then, all Armenian churches, schools and monasteries were confiscated
and settled by either state officers or officials, or local Muslim
notables.

Since Asia Minor had been the ancestral lands of the Armenians for
thousands of years, the churches and monasteries as well as their
cemeteries were especially significant in documenting the course of
human history. Those Armenian buildings not converted to mosques were
torn down, used to store grain or shelter animals, or employed by the
military for target practice.

Also significant in this context was the systematic replacement of
Armenian place names (on streets, buildings, neighbourhoods, towns,
and villages) with Turkish names. The erasure of Armenians from
collective memory was completed during the Turkish Republic; in their
history textbooks, Turkish children hear nothing about Armenian
culture or learn simply that they were enemies of the Turks.

In sum, all cultural meaning that had emerged in the past and present
was eliminated systematically blow by blow, leaving behind patterns of
discrimination cut through with deep silences. This is cultural death,
and it is especially dangerous because it legitimates the denial of
diversity by authoritarian states and their societies.

Cultural violence was not an Ottoman innovation. Historical records
document previous erasures of peoples and their culture: the Native
Americans and First Nations of north America; the Mayas and Aztecs of
Mesoamerica; and the Roman destruction of Carthage (north Africa),
which some scholars point to as the earliest recorded organised
genocide.

So what’s new about the current spate of cultural violence in the
Middle East? The Internet and new media are bringing new complexity to
the pursuit of and resistance to cultural violence. We will wrap up
our essay by turning our thoughts to new media’s Janus-like ability to
silence and amplify the experience of cultural violence.

The perils and possibilities of new media

The Facebook site we referred to in the opening of this essay is one
of many new media efforts to draw attention to the destruction of
historic sites, structures, and monuments in Syria.

Complementary projects are underway in Egypt, where archaeologist Dr.
Monica Hanna posts regular Tweets and Facebook posts about damage to
Egyptian historic culture; and in Cambodia, where the Facebook page
Heritage Watch–Cambodia is documenting in words and pictures looters’
ransacking of ancient temples and illicit sales of Cambodian cultural
artefacts.

Are these efforts effective? If their primary objective is to make
publicly available evidence of cultural violence, then yes – they have
succeeded. Whether such efforts have actually curbed rates of cultural
violence we cannot yet say. What we do know is that amplification
threatens ruling powers.

A case in point is the harrowing plight of Syrian journalist Ali
Mahmoud Othman, co-founder of Le patrimoine archéologique syrien en
danger. Othman was arrested by government forces in March 2012 and has
not been heard of since his televised “confession” in May 2012. As of
this writing, his supporters and loved ones continue to fear for his
life.

If you are an educated but non-specialist reader, the chances are that
you know nothing of the Othman case but have heard a lot about James
Foley, the American journalist murdered by ISIS last month. The flip
side of new media, then, is that it has the power to direct our
attention to particular cases or issues while ignoring others.

Recurring Internet images of ISIS fighters beheading western men
obscure the equally outrageous and horrific acts of sexual violence
against women, torture of children, and destruction of homes, markets,
churches, Shi’a mosques, and ancient monuments. All of this
constitutes the challenging environment in which cultural activists
must do their work.

Moving ahead by preserving the past

What should we make of it all? Human beings are suffering death,
trauma, and displacement everyday in Syria and Iraq, but there remains
a thorny question: Surely human suffering should be prioritised before
cultural objects?

The simple answer is yes; people come first, and the basic operational
strategies of aid organisations and foreign governments – providing
tents, food, medicine, and psychological support – should fill the
convoys.

However, ranking aid priorities from most to least urgent is
complicated and short-sighted. Lemkin’s teachings still have something
to say to us today: without monuments and cultural objects, social
groups are atomised into disaffected, soulless individuals.

For this reason, the cultural environment deserves simultaneous close
attention by policymakers and foreign governments and NGOs. When
cultural violence is allowed to flourish the process of re-building
human communities is difficult if not impossible.

https://www.opendemocracy.net/arab-awakening/fiona-rosegreenland/cultural-heritage-and-violence-in-middle-east

BAKU: Armenian captive’s arrival to Yerevan show of special forces

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Oct 4 2014

Armenian captive’s arrival to Yerevan show of special forces

3 October 2014, 17:35 (GMT+05:00)
By Sara Rajabova

Azerbaijani Defense Ministry has said the Armenian media has spread
surprising and regrettable information with distorting the facts, as
well as leading to bewilderment in the Armenian community about the
handover of the Armenian captive.

Azerbaijan transferred Armenian serviceman Akop Injigulyan, who
illegally crossed the Armenian-Azerbaijani contact line, to a third
country in late August.

On October 3 that Injigulyan has repeatedly said he consciously and on
his own will left his fighting post with his weapon and after
surrounding by the Azerbaijani servicemen no pressure was made on him,
adding that he will never return back to Armenia and wants to leave in
a third country.

Injigulyan was kept in the manner and place according to the
requirements of the Geneva Convention and no actions in violation of
international and humanitarian laws have been applied to him, the
ministry said.

“Injigulyan was surrounded by the care of relevant international
organization and all the events that included him were held under
control of these organizations,” the source added.

The ministry stressed that despite Azerbaijan’s call on returning
Injigulyan and other five Armenian citizens, who are the members of
one family, to Armenia, each time military-political regime in Yerevan
demonstrated indifference to the fate of its citizens.

The ministry stressed that its well seen from his pictures published
on the Armenian media that he is healthy and such things should be
regarded as the next fiction of the Armenians.

The ministry also noted that despite the place of residence of the
Armenian captive was to be confidential and secret, the transfer of
this information to the Armenian side raises doubts.

The Armenian side, using the services of the Armenian diaspora, which
was in close connection with the criminal gangs, and putting pressure
on family members and people to Injigulyan, forced him to say that he
allegedly voluntarily returned to Yerevan, the defense ministry
stressed.

The ministry went on to emphasize that solemn ceremony held to meet
Injigulyan in the Armenian airport, his interview filled with hatred
towards Azerbaijan and love to Armenia, coverage of these processes in
the Armenian media and his will to return to the army and desire to
serve his term are the show prepared on the scenario of Armenian
special services.

http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/71553.html