Only Russia ought to exercise control over Lachin Corridor, says MP

 12:19,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is in direct contact with Russia over the latest Azerbaijani provocation on Hakari Bridge, ruling Civil Contract faction secretary Artur Hovhaninsyan told reporters.

The situation since the latest Azeri attempt to advance has been the same.

“Our foreign ministry colleagues maintain constant contact with our Russian colleagues, we’ve numerously said that there is a problem in the Lachin Corridor, it is the area of responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers. What happened there is a problem which we have discussed and we are in direct contact with our colleagues,” Hovhannisyan said.

“We once again note that only the Russian peacekeeping contingent ought to have control in Lachin Corridor. What happened there is a major problem. And naturally we are talking about this with our Russian colleagues. As to which context and with what results, the foreign ministry will speak,” the lawmaker said.

The MP said Armenia views Azerbaijan’s actions on the Hakari Bridge as yet another provocation to derail the processes, but Armenia will proceed with its policy and will do everything to suppress all escalation risks, also through international pressure.

Armenia opposition MP: We need to bring people out to fight

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Armenia –

We must see to it that this document is not signed; for this, we must bring the people out to fight. Opposition MP Ishkhan Saghatelyan, a representative of the Supreme Body of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Dashnaktsutyun Party of Armenia, told this to a press conference Tuesday, referring to the prospects for the signing of a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“If the [incumbent Armenian] authorities realize that there is no resistance, it will sign and digest, it will sign the peace treaty. It is obvious that there is an arrangement between [Armenian PM] Pashinyan and [Azerbaijani president] Aliyev to sign the document this year.

“We have our ideas of moves. But since this is not a matter of one political force, we will discuss the matter with all healthy forces and go out to fight. I can’t say a specific time, day, place, but we will fully engage in the fight. Every Armenian must stand up for his homeland. If we can fully explain the risks to people, we will push people to fight; moreover, the citizens who are indifferent. What Nikol Pashinyan announced is not a peace treaty; it is a new capitulation, the signing of which will have disastrous consequences for the Armenian people. The only way to prevent this is popular resistance. One person cannot decide the fate of our 5000-year-old nation,” Saghatelyan said.

According to him, the Armenian political forces should present three very accessible things to the Armenian public: a plan to get Armenia out of the current situation, an implementing team, and a roadmap for change of power in the country.

“Instead of ensuring the territorial integrity of our country, the preservation of Artsakh’s [(Nagorno-Karabakh)] right to self-determination, the security of the Armenian people, the [incumbent Armenian] authorities say to surrender for the sake of salvation; that is the road self-destruction. The Armenian people have that resource to fight for their homeland,” Saghatelyan said.

“We are not ready to give new territories to the enemy; there is no alternative. Their proposed road has absolutely nothing to do with peace.(…). The main thing is to prevent the signing of the document. And to completely neutralize the danger, it is necessary to remove the [incumbent Armenian] authorities [from power] because we are condemned by these authorities,” the opposition MP said.

PM Pashinyan congratulates President Putin and PM Mishustin on Russia Day

 13:47,

YEREVAN, JUNE 12, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has congratulated Russian President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin on Russia Day.

“I cordially congratulate you and all Russians on the occasion of this meaningful day, Russia Day, which emphasizes the deep devotion of the Russian people to the origins of statehood,” Pashinyan said in a letter to Putin. “The historically rich and time-tested allied relations of Armenia and Russia have reached a new qualitative level over the course of the last thirty years. The active and effective partnership of our countries over regional and international agenda issues emphasizes our common intention to deepen the mutually beneficial relations between our peoples, based on mutual respect and taking into account each other’s interests. I am sure that Armenia and Russia, by consistently developing constructive ties, will continue to progressively develop cooperation in various sectors, including with the purpose of ensuring security and stability in South Caucasus,” the Armenian Premier said in the letter, wishing robust health and vigor to President Putin, and peace, success and all the best to the brotherly people of Russia.

In a separate letter to PM Mishustin, the Armenian Prime Minister congratulated on Russia Day, the meaningful holiday which “emphasizes the determination of the Russian people to build a sovereign and strong state.”

“The relations between Armenia and Russia come from the depths of history. It is our unshakable duty to preserve the inherited strong friendship and brotherhood, in order to continue ensuring the progressive development of the Armenian-Russian allied relations, including through implementing mutually beneficial, promising projects for the benefit of our peoples,” PM Pashinyan said in the letter to PM Mishustin, wishing him robust health and successes, and happiness and prosperity to the Russian people.

Erdoğan pulls out of European summit

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | Adem Altan/AFP via Getty Images

CHISINAU — A massive gathering of European leaders on Thursday has suffered its first high-profile casualty, with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan pulling out at the last minute.

The Turkish leader, who won five more years at the helm of his country in second-round elections on Sunday, will not travel to Moldova for the one-day summit, according to three officials involved in the preparations. 

The so-called European Political Community (EPC) — a new collective launched in the wake of Russia’s war in Ukraine — is meant to draw together European leaders beyond the EU. More than 40 European leaders will be present Thursday, including those from all 27 EU countries plus non-EU countries like Britain and Turkey, as well as the Western Balkan nations.  

The gathering, set to take place outside Chișinău, Moldova’s capital, is the second summit held under the EPC banner, following an inaugural meeting in Prague last October. 

Erdoğan attended that summit in the Czech capital but clashed with his Greek counterpart Kyriakos Mitsotakis during an end-of-summit dinner. 

Erdoğan, who has dominated Turkey’s politics for two decades, won the country’s election on Sunday, despite a strong showing by a coalition of opposition parties. 

The 69-year-old leader is expected to announce his new Cabinet on Friday with an inauguration scheduled for the following day. 

European leaders started arriving in the Moldovan capital of Chișinău Wednesday ahead of the summit, which is taking place in a castle and winery 35 kilometers outside the city.

Nagorno Karabakh farmer comes under Azerbaijani gunfire

 10:25, 9 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 9, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani forces have again violated the ceasefire in Nagorno Karabakh and again targeted civilians, the Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) authorities said Friday.

At 17:35-20:30, on June 8, the Azerbaijani military opened small arms fire in the eastern and northern directions of the line of contact, the Defense Army of Artsakh said in a statement.  Around 18:20, the Azerbaijani military fired at a farmer operating a tractor while carrying out agricultural work in Karvin.

The farmer was unharmed. 

The incident was reported to the Russian peacekeeping command by the Artsakh authorities.

As of 09:00, June 9 the situation in the line of contact was relatively stable, the Defense Army added.

Statement of the Armenian Bar Association on Armenia-Azerbaijan Negotiations

The Board of Governors of the Armenian Bar Association continues to monitor public announcements related to negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan in connection with the resolution of disputes between the countries. The Armenian Bar Association is a non-profit non-political organization and we are not, and would not be, privy to any non-public details about those negotiations as they evolve. 

We are deeply concerned about statements suggesting that, as part of a potential peace treaty with Azerbaijan, Armenia may recognize Azeri sovereignty over Artsakh and its people, making them subject to stated Azeri genocidal intentions. We have monitored and extensively documented over the last three years the genocidal and hate filled policies of the Azerbaijan government against Artsakh and Armenia and their populations, from acts of torture against civilians and POWs to extrajudicial and summary executions, from racial discrimination to destruction of cultural heritage and religious persecution, culminating with a cruel blockade violating the basic human rights of the people of Artsakh and creating humanitarian crises with severe shortages of food, water, fuel, electricity and internet communication. These are realities that make even the suggestion of Armenians of Artsakh being at the mercy of the Azeri regime unconscionable. There can be no assurance that Azerbaijan would respect any of its obligations under a treaty with Armenia, including one where Armenia has agreed to Azeri sovereignty over Artsakh. In fact, observed Azeri actions to date suggest that it would almost certainly abrogate its obligations. 

As an organization, our mission is always to protect, advocate for and defend, first and foremost, persons and their inalienable rights to live freely, without fear of oppression or persecution and with respect for their human rights and dignity, whether they are in Armenia, Artsakh or elsewhere around the world. We can only offer our own guiding principles on the means to achieve peace:

Agreements made under duress are void. Article 52 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties states that “a treaty is void if its conclusion has been procured by threat or use of force in violation of the principles of international law embodied in the Charter of the United Nations.” No one would argue that peace is preferable to war. True lasting peace comes from respect for human rights and dignity. A peace agreement obtained under threats of aggression and ethnic cleansing, peace obtained under the chokehold of an illegal 170-day siege, peace obtained by sacrificing human rights is not true peace, and is unlikely to actually result in any meaningful reduction in aggression and human rights abuses. It would be only a reward incentivizing further violations of law and human rights. 

Human Rights Cannot be Bargained Away in Peace Treaties. The human rights of the people of Artsakh cannot be negotiated away. Article 53 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties states that “a treaty is void, if at the time of its conclusion, it conflicts with a peremptory norm of general international law,” a “norm accepted and recognized by the international community of States as a whole as a norm from with no derogation is permitted.” 

The People of Artsakh Have Their Independent Voice and Need a Seat at the Table. It is impossible to conclude peace negotiations without the involvement of the people directly affected by the negotiations, the people of Artsakh. 

We will always stand with the people of Artsakh and advocate for their human rights, including their right to self-determination. We will continue to raise our voices until Armenians everywhere can live without fear of persecution and violence.

May 30, 2023




Armenia considers offers from several countries on building new nuclear power plant

 16:52, 5 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Government has set up a commission on nuclear energy which studies the global market to find the most appropriate offers, the Director of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) Movses Vardanyan said at a June 5 panel discussion on Armenia’s nuclear energy.

He said that Armenia should begin considering the construction of a new power plant today.

“In this regard Armenia is a specific country and has several demands,” Vardanyan said at the Nuclear Energy as One of the Mechanisms Ensuring Armenia’s Energy Security and Independence discussion. “First of all, the issues related to safety and seismic resistance are important to us, we also consider financial and logistic issues and many other aspects. As you know, in February 2023 our partners at the Rosatom Energy Projects submitted the preliminary technical-economic substantiation of building two 1200 MW reactors in Armenia. They take into consideration all our demands and issues, and we already have that project on hand. We are also working with our South Korean partners who have offered 1000 and 1400MW reactors, as well as modular nuclear reactors. We are also studying the French variant. We are also studying American modular reactors. I once again emphasize that we will prioritize safety, financial expediency and logistics,” Vardanyan said.

Asbarez: Baroness Cox Urges Artsakh to Endure and Not Accept ‘False Promise of Peace’

Baroness Cox was one of the first people to visit Artsakh after the 2020 war


Caroline Cox, a member of the British House of Lords, has addressed a letter to the people of Artsakh offering them her support for their endurance and urging them continue to fight, rather than accept the “false promise of peace.”

Below is the text of Baroness Cox’s letter: 

To the people of the Republic of Artsakh, for whom I have profound  affection and deep respect.  I write to you today because 120,000 innocent civilians face an existential crisis. 

Conditions are now present for genocide against the Armenian Christians of  Artsakh.  

Your people have suffered, and continue to suffer, the most serious international  crimes. I have personally witnessed the results of massacres, atrocities and forced  displacement. Yet the world has chosen to turn a deaf ear to your suffering. Even  your closest international allies have either not paid attention to, or ignored, the  warning signs of genocide.  

During this darkest hour, I stand in solidarity with the Armenians of Artsakh. I  have great confidence in your ability to overcome this crisis with courage,  fortitude, sacrifice and love – not only will you survive but you will create beauty  from the ashes of destruction.  I am told that I have visited the Republic of Artsakh 88 times since 1990. I have  been privileged to experience the love of your history and your rich culture of  music, dance and art – all within the context of the breathtaking beauty of your  land’s rugged mountains, thick forests, fertile valleys and crystal rivers. I have  been blessed to meet a host of wonderful people, many the direct descendants of  victims of the Great Genocide in Anatolia, or themselves victims of anti  Armenian pogroms in Sumgait and Baku, and ethnic-religious cleansing in  Artsakh. I am struck by the unanimity with which they share a simple common  goal: it is to live in peace, dignity and security in their own historic land. This longing continues to fill my heart. 
 
I always carry with me the memory of a young woman I met in a hospital in  Martakert in 1992, after I had visited the village of Maragha, which had just been  subjected to a massacre inflicted by Azerbaijan. Whilst in the remains of the  village, I saw corpses of civilians decapitated by Azerbaijani militants; vertebrae  still on the ground; people’s blood still smeared on walls; homes that had been  set alight were still smoldering. The day I met this woman, she was in agony over  the deaths of her son and fourteen of her relatives who had been killed in the  1  massacre in Maragha. I wept with her. There are no words for a time like that.  But when she stopped weeping, I asked her if she had a message she would like  to share with the world. She replied, “All I want to say is thank you to those  people who have not forgotten us in these terrible days.” 

I do not think “thank you” are the words that would have come to my mind on  the day I had seen so many of my family killed in such horrific circumstances.  That is the dignity of the Armenian people. If I could speak to this woman today,  I would tell her: “We love you and we have not forgotten you, even as the dark  cloud of the Armenian Genocide, once again, looms over the mountains of your  land.” 

During the previous war, I met an Armenian man who had seen the body of a  five-year-old Armenian girl, cut in two, hanging from the branch of a tree. He  wept with horror and vowed revenge. Later, when his section of the Karabakh  army captured villages, he could not bring himself to harm an Azerbaijani child.  When this story was told at a dinner – in the Armenian style of making speeches  – a journalist commended the man for his humanity and dignity. To which he  replied: “Dignity is a crown of thorns.” The people of Artsakh have been wearing  your crown of thorns with inspirational courage and dignity.  I have never been as concerned about Artsakh’s future as I am today. Azerbaijan’s  conquest and ethnic-religious cleansing of two thirds of Artsakh in 2020, with the  direct assistance of Turkey and its allied jihadist militias; its detention, torture  and killing of Armenian hostages; its subsequent military incursions and  occupation of territory belonging to the Republic of Armenia; its current blockade  of Artsakh; and its territorial claims on the whole of Armenia all bear witness to  this grim reality. 

Conditions are present for genocide against the Armenian Christians of Artsakh. 

However, signatories to the Genocide Convention – including the United States,  France and my own Government in the United Kingdom – have refused their legal obligation to prevent the worst from happening, to provide protection to  those who need it, and to punish those who are responsible for atrocities. Not one  nation appears willing to prevent, provide or protect.  I am deeply disturbed by reports that the Republic of Armenia is being pressured  by international powers to contemplate sacrificing your homeland of Artsakh to  the Republic of Azerbaijan in return for a so-called peace treaty. If reports are to  be believed, those involved in the negotiation process say that the treaty will  secure the borders of the Republic of Armenia and allow trade to open up with  the Turkish world.  2  My dear friends, as you are aware, these promises of peace and prosperity come  at a price. If the treaty is signed in its current form, you would be expected to  surrender your international right of self-determination. You would be expected  to concede control over your lives, liberty and land. To use a recent phrase from  the Armenian Supreme Spiritual Council: By “recognizing the Republic of  Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan, the Armenian authorities will inevitably confront  our brothers and sisters in Artsakh with a new genocide and depatriation.” 

If a peace treaty is signed and later broken by Azerbaijan, history has shown that international powers would not be willing to respond. During the Russian brokered ceasefire in November 2020, Azerbaijan promised to ‘stop at their  current positions’ yet its armed forces have since advanced into new positions with impunity. Azerbaijan promised ‘the exchange of prisoners of war’, yet  dozens of Armenian military and civilian personnel remain in Azerbaijani  custody, many of whom have undergone speedy criminal trials. Azerbaijan has  not been held to account for breaking the 2020 ceasefire. One can only suspect  that an agreement that results from present-day negotiations, in their current form, will not guarantee peace for the Armenians of Artsakh.  

One of my great fears is the annihilation of all Armenian churches, monuments  and other cultural and spiritual treasures, which would fall under Azerbaijan’s  control. Many Armenian sites have already been targeted and badly damaged  since 2020, including the world-famous Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shushi, an  archaeological camp near Tigranakert, and a memorial dedicated to the victims  of the previous war. We must not forget the systematic erasure of centuries-old  Armenian religious sites in Nakhchivan, including the attack on the Armenian  Djulfa cemetery, where Azerbaijani soldiers, armed with sledgehammers and  cranes, destroyed hundreds of hand-carved cross-stones. Under Azerbaijan’s  control, there are strong grounds for belief that another ‘Nakhichevan’ would be  imposed in Artsakh – a priceless part of humanity’s common cultural heritage  will be destroyed.   I keep in mind a lesson from the Bible. In the last days of the kingdom of Judah,  the Prophet Jeremiah lamented that his countrymen were saying, “‘Peace, peace,’  when there is no peace.” In that case, the consequence of the nation accepting a  false sense of peace was the loss of its homeland and exile in a foreign country. 
 
When I was a young child, my own country was isolated and facing its darkest  hour. Great Britain was existentially threatened by an ultra-nationalistic,  genocidal dictatorship. Our then Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, promised  the nation “peace in our time”, but there was no peace. His successor, Winston  Churchill assumed the post of Prime Minister promising the nation nothing more  3  than “blood, toil, sweat and tears”. But the indescribable price of ‘blood, toil,  sweat and tears’ resulted in the privilege we now enjoy of living in freedom.  

It is my hope and prayer that the long-suffering Armenian nation will continue to  strive for the opportunity to live in peace and dignity in your own land. This is  the blessing that my family and I, along with all Britons, enjoy. For that great  privilege I am deeply indebted to those in my nation who, over eighty years ago,  chose to endure a great sacrifice, rather than accepting a false promise of peace.  Please be assured of my continued daily prayers, and of my continued advocacy  on your behalf. Every one of you means much to me and to many others around  the world.  I pray for God’s blessing on you all and that you will long live in a free Armenia  and free Artsakh.

Vengeance Was Theirs: Armenia Honors Christian Assassins, Complicates Path to Peace

May 30 2023
Pastors and professors reflect on the ethical dilemma of extrajudicial justice against Ottoman officials responsible for genocide, and on commemorating their killers today.
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Image: Courtesy of Visit Yerevan
Operation Nemesis monument in Yerevan, Armenia

Surveying the scene on a rainy day in Berlin, the Protestant gunman recognized his target. Living hidden under an assumed name in the Weimar Republic, the once-famous official exited his apartment, was shot in the neck, and fell in a pool of blood.

For many, the 1921 killing vindicated the blood of thousands.

Neither were Germans. Both would eventually be immortalized.

But the cloak-and-dagger story took another twist when a Berlin court ruled the assassin “not guilty.” The trial captivated the local press, brought a nation’s tragedy to the public eye, and set off a philosophical chain of events that eventually coined a new term and established an international convention meant to render unnecessary any similar future acts.

It was already too late.

Two decades after the trial, the Nazis murdered six million Jews. Hitler, preparing the Holocaust, is said to have justified it in reference to the already forgotten history of 1.5 million people killed by Germany’s then-ally in the fallout from World War I.

The gunman, Soghomon Tehlirian, was an Armenian. The official, Mehmed Talaat, was an Ottoman Turk. And the term created by Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin—genocide—continues to haunt the world today.

But the chain of events has not concluded.

Nazi Germany, seeking Axis partners in World War II, repatriated Talaat’s remains to Turkey in 1943, where dozens of memorials and streets are named in his honor. Once the grand vizier of the Ottoman sultan, he is celebrated today as one of the leading “Young Turks” who forged the creation of the modern-day secular nationalist republic.

The descendants of his victims, scattered around the world, consider Talaat—known commonly as Talaat Pasha with his honorific title—the architect of the Armenian Genocide.

Tehlirian, who in prison pending trial was given a Bible by a local Protestant pastor, eventually settled in the United States. He is buried in Fresno, California, where his obelisk-shaped grave marker is adorned with a gold-plated eagle, slaying a snake.

And last month, more than a century after the trial, the city council of Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, erected a memorial to honor 16 heroes of Operation Nemesis. Conducted between 1920–22, the campaign secretly authorized by the ruling party of the newly independent nation assassinated eight Turkish and Azerbaijani officials.

It was named after the Greek goddess of divine retribution.

Incorporating a fountain of flowing water, the memorial’s towering structure was built based on a petition from the Descendants of the Avengers of the Armenian Genocide. Tehlirian is at the center, beneath an empty space in the shape of a cross, directing one’s gaze upward to heaven.

Does heaven approve—now or then?

“If I was at the planning meeting, I couldn’t do it because of my faith,” said Craig Simonian, an Armenian pastor. “But people reap what they sow.”

Also the Caucasus Region coordinator for the World Evangelical Alliance’s (WEA) Peace and Reconciliation Network, Simonian said he would struggle with calling the operation morally wrong. The sultan whom Talaat served was a “butcher,” he said, and the pastor’s own relatives were driven from the region of Diyarbakir.

“You can’t understand how it feels that so many of those guys got away with it,” Simonian said. “But even so, ‘Thou shalt not murder’ does not come with 30 footnotes.”

Tehlirian exempted himself from the label.

“I do not consider myself guilty because my conscience is clear,” he said to the court a century ago. “I have killed a man. But I am not a murderer.”

Instructed not to flee the scene, Armenian plotters desired the trial and turned it into a referendum on the genocide. The defense strategy portrayed Tehlirian as traumatized by loss, and called witnesses to describe the rape, killing, and death marches suffered at the direct order of Talaat and others.

The court was convinced, as Khatchig Mouradian is today.

“As there was no international legal framework to hold them accountable, the survivors took justice into their own hands,” said the Columbia University historian. “Lemkin felt that Tehlirian ‘upheld the moral order of mankind,’ so I’ll side with him on this one.”

In the chaotic aftermath of World War I, new Ottoman leadership brought 63 court-martial cases against 200 officials, handing out 16 death penalties—most in absentia. Talaat and others were found guilty, but escaped. Others were captured by the British, but were traded for compatriot prisoners. And when Young Turk sympathizers returned the movement to power, the local judicial process was abandoned.

But it gave birth to the global cause.

That “fateful encounter on the streets of Berlin,” said Mouradian, led directly to the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention. But though Operation Nemesis—which in Greek means “to give what is due”—commands the widespread respect of the Armenian people, the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox church was a bit uncomfortable. Tehlirian approached the Constantinople patriarch for funds, but only received a blessing.

“I cannot take part in such endeavors, my son,” said Zaven Der Yeghiayan, as recounted in the assassin’s memoirs.

The church today is similar.

“From the point of view of Christian ethics, any murder is considered a sin,” said Shahe Ananyan, dean of Armenia’s Gavorkian theological seminary, relating the official church position on the operation. “But it should also be seen in the context of resistance and self-protection.”

Calling the Ottoman plans “demonic,” the Apostolic priest said that Armenian efforts to defend their people—even when using violence—qualified as legitimate just-war measures to protect the innocent. But in contrasting this with Turkish denial and the contemporary movement to honor the Young Turks, Ananyan fears the rise of new “genocidal tendencies.”

In protest to the new monument, Turkey closed its airspace to Armenia.

But Operation Nemesis, said Ananyan, is similar to Jewish acts of revenge against the Nazis, and simply reflected a longing for the restoration of justice.

One contemporary Turk agrees.

“Unfinished justice pushes individuals to take justice into their own hands—this is the testimony of history,” said Taner Akcam, author of Killing Orders: Talat Pasha’s Telegrams and the Armenian Genocide. “Alongside revenge, the cry for justice runs very deep in the human species.”

A third instinct—recognition of suffering—is reflected in Yerevan’s monument.

Widely recognized as one of the first Turkish scholars to study this period, Akcam directs the Armenian Genocide Research Program at UCLA. But even more valuable than the Tehlirian court proceedings, he said, would be the evidence collected by the Ottoman military tribunals—including hundreds of telegrams and the testimonies of bureaucrats.

Today, he said, Turkey buries it.

While the official archives are open, Akcam said that when asking about the “Special Operation” which oversaw the deportation of Armenians, “no one knows” where the records are.

And when the government decided in 2006 to open the deed office to researchers, national security quickly shut it down. It would have revealed the pre-genocide property ownership of thousands of Armenians. In 1926, the government assigned such property to the relatives of Talaat and other assassinated officials.

“Without an honest accounting of history,” Akcam said, “Turkey isolates itself more and more from the civilized world.”

The scholar, however, is not the only Turk unsettled in spirit. When Simonian visited a mosque in Adana on Turkey’s southeastern Mediterranean coastline, local guides told him it was built with the gold seized from deported Armenians.

And later when interacting with a young Turkish woman who thought he was a simple tourist, Simonian told her his visit was a pilgrimage to discover the land of his forefathers. Startled, she tearfully replied: I don’t know how our grandparents did this, to yours.

She accepted his prayers, then told him that God had removed a great weight.

“Our ancestors bring us either blessing or curse,” Simonian said. “But it is hard to go deeper into the past, when we have real issues to discuss right now.”

Among them is the ongoing blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The mountainous Caucasus enclave is home to over 100,000 ethnic Armenians, who call their historic homeland Artsakh. But the international community recognizes the land as Azerbaijani territory—recaptured from independence-seeking Armenian control in 2020 after a 44-day war. Only one road connects it to Armenia, and since December Azerbaijani activists have sealed off the area from all but humanitarian deliveries, ignoring an International Court of Justice ruling.

Like Turkey, Baku leaders have denounced the memorial.

Azerbaijan insists upon Armenian recognition of its sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh. Last week, Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan signaled readiness to accept, if local rights are guaranteed. Many Armenians, however, dismiss Azerbaijani statements about accepting Armenians as citizens, and focus instead on Baku’s expanding territorial claims that reach even to Yerevan.

But peace is needed also toward Armenia’s west.

On-and-off again negotiations resumed following Yerevan’s delivery of humanitarian aid to victims of the earthquake in Turkey, and appeared to be making progress. But with the closure of airspace, Turkish officials said further retaliatory measures would be taken if Armenia did not remove the monument.

The speaker of Armenia’s parliament said it was not meant as an “unfriendly act,” and did not represent official foreign policy. Pashinyan called installation of the memorial a “wrong decision” taken by the local council, not the national government.

“But by being always guided by the logic of … not being called traitors,” the prime minister stated, “we actually keep betraying the state and national interests of our country.”

Vazgen Zohrabyan agrees, beyond his training as a political analyst.

“Anything that suggests revenge worries me as a pastor,” said the leader of Abovyan City Church, northeast of Yerevan. “Such approaches will not bring any benefit in terms of the reconciliation of nations, or the reconciliation of peoples.”

Proud of Nemesis as an operation, Zohrabyan said that Tehlirian is a symbol of justice and that Protestants have always been active in the national cause. He cited the 1915 defense of Musa Dagh as an example, with significant leadership provided by evangelical pastors. And the retribution against Ottoman officials addressed the deep wound caused by the Armenian people’s uprooting from a historic homeland.

Artyom Yerkanyan has similar reflections.

His father, Aram, is enshrined on the monument for the assassination of an Azerbaijani official responsible for the killing of 30,000 Armenians in Baku.

“Can you imagine what would have happened if Operation Nemesis hadn’t happened? We would be a sick nation, suffering from psychological complications,” he stated at the public ceremony.

“I often compare them to psychiatrists. They made us feel worthy.”

But the unfortunate result today, said Zohrabyan, is that the memorial serves to cement animosity. It is understandable, as hostile rhetoric has increased from Azerbaijan, backed by the historic Turkish enemy. The task, however, is to work with both neighbors toward peace—and avoid needless antagonism.

“We are obliged to take steps so that the Turks consciously apologize for what was done,” said Zohrabyan, “and that the Armenians can find the strength to forgive.”

Such ruminations about the memorial, said Eric Hacopian, an Armenian political analyst, put the pastor in a distinct minority. Few ordinary citizens even noticed its installation, let alone felt a moral dilemma.

“The whole issue is a nothingburger,” he said, with national sentiment worried about cross-border attacks and a possible new genocide in Artsakh. “I don’t expect much soul searching about it.”

Should Americans, he asked, be disturbed by the killing of Osama bin Laden? And while there is little popular sentiment aligned with the Yerevan government about the timing of the monument, almost no one in Armenia would oppose it in principle.

Neither does Simonian.

Unlike Zohrabyan, he does not equate the memorial with commemorating vengeance, which is prohibited to the believer. Instead, like statues in America of slaveholding national heroes, it reflects the reality of history and prompts further conversation.

Yet despite his WEA mandate, amid Turkish “hypocrisy” he believes there is little reconciliation on the horizon.

“You can’t reconcile with someone who is still hurting you,” Simonian said. “What the monument says is that we need this to end.”

As for Operation Nemesis itself, it forced the world to recognize the genocide. He hopes the current controversy will bring attention to the crisis in Artsakh. But while the recognition of missing justice can be a salve to a suffering people, no one should think—as he once felt himself—that they got away with it.

And this truth, more than any memorial, facilitates genunine healing.

“Nothing Tehlirian did can compare with God’s justice on an unrepentant heart,” said Simonian. “This truth allows us to forgive, if we can submit our desire for revenge to the sovereignty of God.”

https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2023/may/armenian-genocide-operation-nemesis-monument-yerevan-talaat.html

President of Armenia extends condolences to India on train crash

 15:51, 3 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 3, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan has offered condolences to India on the tragic train crash.

“I express my most deepest and sincerest condolences to the friendly People and Leadership of India over the horrific train accident in Odisha, which claimed hundreds of innocent lives.  Sympathies to the bereaved families and wishes of speedy recovery to all injured,” President Khachaturyan tweeted.