CivilNet: The Last Remaining Resident of a Village on Armenia-Turkey Border

CIVILNET.AM

7 August, 2020 21:40

Vahandukht Vardanyan is the last remaining  resident in Kharkov village, officially called Norshen in Armenia. The 84 year old woman has been living in the village for the past 60 years. Norshen is situated on the Armenian-Turkish border, and been deserted because  of its location. 

Today, Armenia’s border with Turkey is guarded by Russian troops and lined with barbed wire fences, raked sand, and guard towers. For anyone to be able to enter the village, including its residents,  it is necessary to obtain permission from Russian border guards. 

Only a gorge separates the village from the ruins of Ani, a medieval Armenian capital now located within Turkey.

ANN/Armenian News Week in Review – 08/09/2020

Armenian News Network / Armenian News

Armenian News: Week in Review

ANN/Armenian News

August 9, 2020

Table of Contents

Introduction

Listen to us on…

Your Hosts

Special Guest

Resident Panelists

Topics This Week

The Massive Explosion in Beirut

Overview

Sources

Lightning Round from our Headlines

Turkey-Azerbaijan Military Exercises

Mashtots Park

Cyber Security Intrusion

Law on Media Regulation

Sources

The Beirut Explosion

Headlines in the News

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

People in the News

Gregory E. Areshian

Nazar Najarian

Wrap-up

Hello, and welcome to Armenian News Network, Armenian News.

This Week in Review we will focus on the catastrophic explosion in the Port of Beirut. The unprecedented destruction centered at the port, which is especially close to many Armenian community neighborhoods, has deeply affected the Lebanese Armenian community, leaving over a dozen of its members dead, hundreds injured and tens of thousands without means or shelter. The damage to Lebanon and its people is incalculable. For this story we turn to Asbed Bedrossian.

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  • Hovik Manucharyan

  • Asbed Bedrossian

  • Yeghia Tashjian

  • Asbed Kotchikian

  • Emil Sanamyan

  • Alen Zamanyan

On August 4th a massive explosion hit Beirut’s harbor, completely obliterating the port and creating a disaster area with a 20-mile radius. While the investigation into the causes of the explosion is still underway, one thing is certain that Lebanon now needs major foreign assistance. With over a year of economic and health issues compounded, Lebanese society is on the brink of collapse. As part of the country’s socio-economic and political fabric, the Armenian community in Lebanon has also found itself on a crossroad regarding its future.

In this segment we explore the challenges and opportunities that Lebanon in general, and the Lebanese Armenian community, is facing amidst these turbulent times.

We have with us today:

Asbed Kotchikian who is a senior lecturer of political science and international relations at Bentley University in Massachusetts where he teaches courses on the Middle East and former Soviet space. Prof. Kotchikian is also a consultant for international organizations on issues of judicial reform, ways to combat radicalization and on ethnic and religious minorities. 

and

Yeghia Tashjian, who is a regional analyst and researcher based in Beirut, with expertise in China’s geopolitical and energy security interests in Iran and the Persian Gulf. He is the Regional Officer of Women in War, a gender-based think tank and a contributor to various media outlets. Tashjian is the presenter of “Turkey Today,” a weekly program on Radio Voice of Van in Lebanon.

  • See the links in the daily Headlines below.

The Turkey-Azerbaijan military exercises, named the TurAz Eagle Exercises, which started on July 29th and are planned to end on August 10 have had a very wide geographic scope: from Baku, to Nakhichevan, to Ganja, Kurdamir, Yevlakh. That’s basically all over Azerbaijan. There have been videos released on Twitter from the Azerbaijan Ministry of Defense about these exercises which Armenia says it is following extremely closely.

What’s the message Turkey and Azerbaijan are sending, and what’s the message that Armenia and Russia are receiving?

This week Baku accused Serbia of selling to Armenia; then Serbia’s president replied that since Armenia was not under any sanctions, Serbia had sold arms to them, and then ten times as much more to Azerbaijan as well, in order to keep Serbia’s military industry alive. Since we’re talking about just a few million dollars’ worth of armaments. Is this something or is it Much Ado About Nothing?

This week the Mashtots Park came back into the headlines as mayor Marutian authorized the building of a new café. To me this incident was interesting because it is sometimes seen as one of the precursors or prototypes to 2018.

Alen, can you tell us more about what happened?

This week Cyber security specialist Samvel Martirosyan announced that Azerbaijani hackers had penetrated into government servers, getting access to 55 terabytes of information. The NSS investigation continues. What do we know about this intrusion? What should be our main concerns? And what steps can be taken towards securing the government cyber infrastructure?

On Wednesday president Armen Sarkissian’s office said that he had signed a new law governing media in the “public digital multiplex”. Among other things, the law restricts operation of foreign channels in public multiplex, and requires bilateral agreement between countries; it limits the number of channels that can be part of the multiplex, which raised concern from opposition media that the intention is to deprive pro-opposition media from license; it defines penalties for violating hate speech; and more.

Meanwhile, the chairman of the National Commission on TV and Radio stated that the dominance of foreign broadcasters in cable networks threatens the country’s information and language security, but the commission does not take an anti-Russian position.

What issues arise with such laws?

Meanwhile, Turkey’s parliament passed a law regulating social media, that critics said will increase censorship and help authorities silence dissent. The law requires foreign social media sites to appoint Turkish-based representatives to address authorities’ concerns over content and includes deadlines for removal of material.

Is media censorship on the rise globally?

  • THE LAW OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA – ON TELEVISION MEDIA

  • Media Advocate: Under new law TV and Radio Commission becomes a censor and a judge – Panorama.am

  • Armenia Adopts Law Limiting Broadcast of Foreign Media – SputnikNews.com

  • Turkish parliament passes social media law to regulate content – Cyprus-Mail.com

A personal as well as regional reflection on the situation in Beirut post-explosion, and we touch upon Armenia’s strategy and response to the tragic situation there.

  • In July Azerbaijan complained that Serbia sold arms to Armenia. Now the president of Serbia has informed that Serbia sold Azerbaijan ten times as much Arms as it did to Armenia.

  • The Armenian Ministry of Defense has denied a press report that Turkish F-16’s were at one point “within striking distance” of Yerevan, “56 Km”, during their transit to Baku.

  • Last week Armen Papikyan, Armenian Ambassador to the IAEA, gave an interview to Energy Intel. Ambassador Papikyan notes that he has briefed the IAEA Director General about threat from Baku to the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant, and that the IAEA has not done enough to provide a nuclear threat-free environment, particularly when the threat Metsamor is coming from a member state of the IAEA.

  • Famous archaeologist Gregory Areshian, who co-led discovery of world’s oldest winery, died at 71

  • The Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats, the second largest group in the Euro Parliament, has called to impose sanctions on Azerbaijani officials, as a sanction against Aliyev using the pandemic and war as an excuse to destroy his opposition.

  • PM Pashinyan and Speaker Mirzoyan have proclaimed solidarity with Yezidis on the 4th anniversary of the Sinjar massacre in northern Iraq.

  • The Justice Ministry has unveiled a bill on amending the Judicial Code and the Rules of Procedure of Parliament that envisage the creation of an Anti-Corruption Court.

  • Armenian Ambassador to Latvia Tigran Mkrtchyan’s article “Armenia and Armenians worldwide will not tolerate another genocide!”

  • The government is developing a legislative package to preempt the need to extend the coronavirus-related and currently active State of Emergency but still be able to implement required anti-pandemic restrictions when needed by declaring an “emergency situation”.

  • DM Tonoyan told Lebanese PM Zeina Akar that Armenia will continue its military participation in UNIFIL.

  • German Armenians rallied over the weekend in Berlin  in front of the German Chancellor’s Office on Saturday to demand that Germany stop arms delivery to Turkey and Azerbaijan.

  • Armenian Bar Member Lucy Boyadjian Solimon was appointed as Judge of the Second Judicial District Court, serving Bernalillo County by New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham.

  • A court in Yerevan denied law-enforcement to arrest Yerevan’s former deputy mayor Vahe Nikoyan, who is indicted in an ongoing criminal investigation into Ruben Hayrapetian, a wealthy businessman linked to Armenia’s former leadership.

  • The AGBU says it is closely following the process of making qualitative changes in the Armenian education system initiated by the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports and has made a set of proposals.

  • Romanos Petrosyan (formerly governor of Kotayk province) appointed as minister of Environment and Nature Protection.

  • A major explosion rocked Beirut, killing over 100 people and injuring 4000. It appears to have been negligent storage of 2750 metric tons of Ammonium Nitrate for over 6 years that exploded upon a fire that broke out in a nearby hangar. The Secretary General of the Kataebs, Nazareth Najarian was killed in the blast. A young Armenian nurse was also killed. Antelias sustained was damaged. There is more damage in the community which HH Aram I visited later in the day. PM Pashinyan, and Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan both declared solidarity with Lebanon, and readiness to help. LHK/Bright Armenia party’s Anna Kostanyan is urging the government to help repatriate any Lebanese Armenians who wish to move to Armenia. Beirut has been declared a disaster zone.

  • Ruben Hayrapetian, an influential businessman linked to the former leadership has been a Russian citizen since 2003, prosecutors in Yerevan said on Tuesday. As a result Russian may not be extraditing him to Armenia where he would face a string of charges.

  • President Armen Sarkissian nominated Artur Vagharshian, chair of jurisprudence at YSU, to the Constitutional Court. 

  • Mashtots Park came back into the headlines as mayor Marutian authorized the building of a new café.

  • Joe Biden’s Ethnic Engagement Director Has Ties Turkey and Erdogan.

  • Dilijan Medical Center’s coronavirus unit was decommissioned as active cases have dropped in Armenia.

  • The head of the Military-Industrial Committee of the Ministry of High-Tech Industry Artak Davtyan met with CEOs of the drone industry in Armenia. The recent experiences were discussed.

  • Armenia appointed Anna Aghajanyan to replace Tatul Margarian as the new Ambassador to Belgium, EU.

  • NASA JPL granted license to Armenian company to make VITAL ventilators used for COVID-19 treatment.

  • In the aftermath of the explosion in Beirut: H.H. Aram I visited the Armenian community in Bourj Hammoud, There is widespread community damage. The death toll is at 11, the injury toll is 250 in the Armenian community. Armenia assessing scenarios of potential humanitarian aid to Lebanon. Artsakh Republic has offered to repatriate 100-150 families from Lebanon immediately, and the Office of High Commissioner for Diaspora starts needs assessment of Lebanese-Armenian community. Meanwhile French President Emmanuel Macron is heading to Beirut. According to nuclear scientist Areg Danagoulian the explosion amounted in strength to 10% of the Hiroshima bomb

  • Since August 1, there have been problems with the broadcasting of H1 in Los Angeles by PanArmenian TV. People have complained all the way to PM Pashinyan, and suspect political motives.

  • Cyber security specialist Samvel Martirosyan announced that Azerbaijani hackers have penetrated into government servers, getting access to 55 terabytes of information. The NSS investigation continues.

  • PM Pashinyan has submitted to President Armen Sarkissian to dismiss Deputy Chief of Police Hayk Mhryan and Deputy Chief of Police, Tigran Yesayan.

  • President Sarkissian signed a law limiting the broadcast of foreign media in Armenia.

  • Deputy PM Tigran Avinyan said Armenia will extend the state of emergency for another month, but will lift certain of the limitations.

  • In the aftermath of the explosion in Beirut: Many more Armenian politicians have expressed solidarity and support with the people of Lebanon, e.g. Yerevan Mayor Marutyan. Armenia’s High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs, Zareh Sinanyan, will visit Beirut. The Hayastan All Armenian Fund launched a fundraiser for Lebanon. An Armenian emergency aid flight to Lebanon to take place Saturday, August 8. A third Russian plane carrying aid arrived in Beirut, with emergency doctors, rescuers and mobile hospitals. The European Commission has allocated over €33 million for Lebanon.

  • BHK leader Edmon Marukyan has asked the government to address the issue of security of “huge amounts” of chemicals stored at the premises of the currently defunct Vanadzor Chemical Combine.

  • Italy’s Chamber of Deputies ratified the Armenia-EU CEPA.

  • The Armenian Government has allocated 278 million drams to rebuild Tavush towns after Azerbaijani shelling.

  • The former head of the Public Services Regulatory Commission Robert Nazarian has been arrested on charges of having fraudulently issued privileges to a business operator which resulted in significant damages. Nazarian is also a former Mayor of Yerevan.

  • Deputy Chief of Police Hayk Mhryan was dismissed.

  • Ashot Zakaryan was appointed the new Chief of the Military Police of the Defense Ministry.

  • New developments continued to be leaked surrounding the scandal around Hayk Sargsyan’s participation in a party at the White Shorja resort on the shore of lake Sevan. Romanos Petrosyan, newly appointed minister of Environment and Nature Protection indicated that the resort was illegal and all structures on it will be dismantled. He also said that there are hundreds of such illegal constructions that will also receive similar treatment. 

  • Anna Hakobyan, the prime-minister’s wife gave an interview to Azatutyun addressing questions from Facebook users. 

  • Former president Serge Sargsyan released a series of short videos addressing criticism of his handling of the 2016 war. He has promised a more comprehensive press conference after the state of emergency is lifted.

  • The Prosperous Armenia, ARF, and Hayrenik troika of opposition parties held a press conference indicating that they will file a complaint in the courts against Armenian government and parliamentary majority My Step faction on several counts, including toppling of constitutional order. They also promised further legal action to defend citizens who have been fined for not wearing masks. Their argument is that if the government is mandating masks then they should be responsible for providing them free of charge to citizens. 

  • For the fourth day, protests against the development of the Amulsar gold mine continued; Earlier in the week Restructured Lydian, which is essentially the former Lydian Armenia, brought in cranes and removed the wagons installed by Jermuk residents and Ecofront activists and installed its own wagons, in an effort to begin the mining process. Protesters have now undone company installations while the standoff continues.The fact that the government is a no-show and avoids clarifying its position is complicating matters

  • Add something about education reform (even if we’ll cover it in a separate segment).

  • Last week, the SIS launched a criminal case against Arthur Danielyan  for hooliganism as a result of the fistfight between him and Alen Simonyan. This week Simonyan gave an interview to Azatutyun, answering questions on the matter repeating the claim that he was provoked. Shortly after this, a video was leaked showing camera footage of the actual incident showing Simonyan clearly approaching Danielyan and physically attacking him. The video also contained audio of Simonyan’s 911 call where he claimed that he was attacked. 

  • Ministry of Health commented on the  resignation of Mher Davidyants, head of the Yerevan infectious disease hospital, who resigned as part of the restructuring of Republican Center for the Prevention of AIDS and the Nork Infection Clinical Hospital into a single entity. Reportedly Mr. Davidyants first accepted, but later declined a deputy general director position in the restructured organization.

  • On Friday, Covid-19 cases in Armenia topped 40,000.

  • Today, August 8,  The Promise becomes available on Netflix. You can Google for its reviewsCher, Kim Kardashian have called on their followers to watch the film.

  • Director of Armenian Forests NGO, Nazeli Vardanyan strongly condemned the recent tree felling in Mashtots Park in downtown Yerevan. Vardanyan notes that under Armenian code land in these parks cannot be privately owned and this is the position of the current authorities. And if they’re unwilling to enforce this, then the authorities must be making backroom deals like the former regimes.

  • The first humanitarian flight carrying emergency assistance to Lebanon was loaded and took off from Yerevan’s Zvartnots Airport Saturday night. Zareh Sinanyan is accompanying the aid to be given to the Lebanese government, with second and third plane loads to follow in the next 3 days. Sinanyan will tour the Armenian community, and meet with HH Aram I.

  • Former Police Chief Vladimir Gasparian threatened two RFE/RL Azatutyun journalists and obstructed their work on a report about government plans to dismantle private houses illegally constructed near Lake Sevan.

Dr. Areshian passed away on August 1. He was the inaugural Director of the UCLA Research Program in Armenian Archaeology and Ethnography, who co-led the excavations that in 2007 unearthed the world’s oldest winery, Areni 1, in the village of Areni in Vayots Dzor. Areni 1 is estimated to be 6100 years old.

Sources

  • Remembering Gregory E. Areshian – Asbarez.com

  • Gregory Areshian, archaeologist who co-led discovery of world’s oldest winery, dead at 71 – Armenpress.am

Mr. Najarian was the Secretary General of the Kataeb (Phalangist) party of Lebanon, and was killed by the Beirut explosion.

Sources

  • Lebanese Kataeb Party’s Secretary-General Nazar Najarian killed in Beirut blast ArmRadio.am

  • Montreal businessman among victims of Beirut explosion – Montreal.CTVNews.CA

 

That concludes our program. We hope it has helped your understanding of some of the issues from the previous week. We look forward to your feedback, and even your suggestions for issues to cover in greater depth. Contact us on our website, at Armenian News.org, or on our Facebook Page “ANN – Armenian News”, or in our Facebook Group “Armenian News – Armenian News Network”

Please subscribe, like and share our content on your favorite social media platform to help us reach a wider audience. We’re available on most popular platforms, including YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcast, and Spotify.

I’m Hovik Manucharyan, and on behalf of everyone in this episode, I wish you a good week. Thank you for listening and talk to you next week.

EU’s Charles Michel visits Armenian Karagheuzian Medical Center in Beirut

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 9 2020

Georgia opposition slams authorities over deadly incident in densely-Armenian populated town

News.am, Armenia
Aug 9 2020

19:06, 09.08.2020
                  

Sports: Champions League qualifiers: Ararat-Armenia’s opponent is announced

News.am, Armenia
Aug 9 2020

The draw of the first qualifying round of the European Champions League was held.

Accordingly, the champions of Armenia, Ararat-Armenia of Yerevan, will host Omonia of Cyprus.

All matches of the first qualification round will take place on August 18 or 19.

One match will be played in each pairing.

The losing football clubs will continue their campaign in the second qualifying round of the Europa League.

Azerbaijani Press: US Company To Supply Azerbaijan With 15 Cutting-Edge Naval Crafts

Caspian News, Azerbaijan
Aug 9 2020

By Mushvig Mehdiyev August 9, 2020

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  • 9-meter Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Multi-Use EOD Response Craft / United States Marine Inc.

    Azerbaijan will beef up its marine fleet after purchasing ultra-modern Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) response crafts from a leading US-based marine company, worth more than $7 million.

    The United States Marine Inc., a company that designs, builds and tests boats for military, patrol and special warfare, among other uses, announced this week that it will supply 15 EOD response craft boats to Azerbaijan, in a deal worth $7,572,364.

    “Work will be performed in Gulfport, Mississippi and is expected to be completed by April 2022,” according to Navy Recognition. “Foreign Military Sales funding in the amount of $7,572,364 will be obligated at time of award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, DC, is the contracting activity.”

    The nine-meter-long cutting-edge crafts are made out of composite materials through a process called resin infusion lamination. The United States Marine Inc. offers the boats in Open Center Console and Cabin variants, both equipped with Twin Mercury Verado 250 horsepower 4 Stroke Outboard Gasoline engines. The EOD response crafts can reach sprint speeds of up to 39+ knots, with cruising speeds of up to 30+ knots. They can be used for harbor patrol, passenger transport, diving operations, evacuations and unmanned system operations. The boats are equipped with a 50-caliber machine gun forward and aft.

    Alexander Tikhanski, a military expert based in Belarus, says military-technical cooperation with the world’s leading arms companies allows Azerbaijan to actively modernize its Armed Forces.

    “Azerbaijan has spent $3.7 billion on its army at the peak of equipment purchases. At present, the Azerbaijani army is the strongest in the region after Russia and Turkey,” Tikhanski said.

    The government of Azerbaijan allocated $2.27 billion for military and national security purposes in the 2020 state budget. The amount is six times higher than military spending in Georgia and three times higher than Armenia. It is ranked 64th among the 138 countries of the world and is the strongest in the South Caucasus region, according to data compiled by independent military data tracker Global Firepower. Azerbaijan’s naval force includes one frigate, four submarines, seven mine warfare and 13 patrol boats, among other assets.

    The United States Marine Inc. is not the first American defense company to secure a procurement deal with Azerbaijan. In September 2019, the Virginia-based VSE Corporation was awarded a $10 million contract to supply the Caspian country’s military with counterterrorism and intelligence equipment.

    Azerbaijan is a strategically important US partner in the South Caucasus and the Caspian Sea region due to its strategic location in Eurasia and has proven to be a reliable energy exporter to Washington’s allies in Europe, as well as a loyal NATO partner. 

    Additionally, Azerbaijan was one of the first countries to provide assistance to the US in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks. Azerbaijani troops have been part of NATO peacekeeping forces in Afghanistan since 2002 and even opened its airspace to US-led coalition troops fighting there.

    When the NATO-led Resolute Support Mission was launched in January 2015, Baku increased its contribution from 94 soldiers to 120. Azerbaijan is the only country out of the five Caspian Sea nations to contribute to this mission and 40 percent of the non-military supplies to US and coalition forces in Afghanistan passes through Azerbaijani territory.

    Washington provides US security assistance and military contact programs in Azerbaijan, including the Foreign Military Sales (FMS), through the Office of Defense Cooperation Azerbaijan. Under the FMS program, Washington provides defense equipment, services and training to Azerbaijan.

    Between 2018 and 2019, Azerbaijan’s State Border Service and State Customs Committee received security and defense assistance worth $101.5 million from the US through the Department of Defense’s Section 333 program, according to Security Assistance Monitor, a Washington DC watchdog.

    The assistance package included 59 high-speed boats and other maritime equipment, 60 ATV motorcycles and other vehicles, 401 surveillance radar and other electronic equipment and 450,516 tactical vests and other individual equipment.

    Strengthening its defense capabilities is a key priority for the Azerbaijani government, given its ongoing conflict with Armenia in Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized Nagorno-Karabakh region. Following a full-scale war between the two countries from 1991-1994, Armenia occupied the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven adjacent districts which comprise 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized territory. The bloody war claimed the lives of 30,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis, while one million were displaced forcibly from their homes amidst occupation and mass ethnic cleansing campaigns by Armenia’s forces.

    Since then, Armenia has repeatedly ignored international calls and UN Security Council Resolutions calling for the withdrawal of its occupying forces from Azerbaijani lands. Armenia’s army also regularly targets Azerbaijani positions and civilian areas, in a direct violation of the 1994 ceasefire agreement between the two countries.

    Opposition Prosperous Armenia Party leader’s lawyers to file appeal with court

    News.am, Armenia
    Aug 9 2020

    14:45, 09.08.2020
                      

    Situation is calm at Armenian-populated village of Georgia, says mayor

    News.am, Armenia
    Aug 9 2020

    01:10, 09.08.2020
                      

    Trans-ocean tanker named after Armenian composer Arno Babajanyan

    Public Radio of Armenia
    Aug 9 2020

    Film: Is The Promise Really Based on Armenian Genocide?

    The Cinemaholic
    Aug 8 2020

    Set in 1914, ‘The Promise’ follows a love triangle between an aspiring medical student, a dance instructor, and a journalist. Oscar Isaac and Christian Bale star as Mikael and Chris, who become rivals for the love of Charlotte Le Bon’s Ana. While the film focuses on the complications in the romance between these three people, it carries a completely different purpose altogether. Under the cover of a love story, it tells a horrific tale of a systematic massacre. It terrifies us to think that something like that could happen in real-life, but with other similar examples of genocides in front of us, we wonder if it all really happened. Is ‘The Promise’ based on a true story? Let’s find out.

    ‘The Promise’ is not based on a true story, but it is centered around real events. The main plot of the film follows a love triangle, which forms the fictional shell of the story with imaginary characters. However, its setting in the Ottoman government and the beginning of the Armenian genocide is all real.

    The reason the filmmakers chose a love story as the plot device was because Kirk Kerkorian, the late billionaire businessman who provided the entire budget of the film so it could be made without political constraints, didn’t want the film to become a history lesson. It had been a passion project of his for a long time, and during his time at MGM, he had tried to get movies made about the Armenian genocide. But the producers didn’t want to broach the controversial subject.

    Eric Esrailian, the producer of ‘The Promise’, told THR about the thought-process behind the filmmaking. “The actual truth is so much worse than what we show onscreen, but he [Kerkorian] didn’t want it to be a preachy history lesson or a gory blood bath. He wanted a love story, an epic in the same vein as some of the films that he remembered as great films from his era — Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago, Casablanca. […] It became clear that the government of Turkey was going to have an influence on this movie. One of the most insidious realities of our existence in the United States is that foreign governments can control art. I would say at the highest levels from different studios, we were just basically told that no matter how good the film would be, it was never going be released by certain companies. I think that that’s truly shameful, but it’s just a reality that we had to deal with.”

    Director Terry George added: “The Armenians were killed by their own government, not by the enemy, and they were killed in this systematic way that became the legal definition of the word ‘genocide. But this story says that a man or a woman, as small as they are in the scope of the world, can confront and overcome evil and survive and lead a better life for others to follow. I want this to be used as an educational tool as well as a piece of entertainment. It should be shown in schools.”

    Picture Credit: Armin Wegner, SYBIL STEVENS/ARMENIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE

    The Armenian Genocide, considered the first mass genocide of the 20th century, was the murder and expulsion of 1.5 million ethnic Armenians in Turkey, under the Ottoman government between 1914 and 1923. It is believed to have started on April 24, 1915, when hundreds of Armenian intellectuals were rounded up and were deported, eventually killed, by the authorities. Several methods were used to implement the massacre, one of them being the death march of people into the Syrian Desert where they were deprived of food and water, while also having to suffer more mental and physical atrocities from their oppressors.

    What makes the event so controversial is that Turkey continues to ignore its status as a genocide. At best, it acknowledges it as mass killings, rather than a systematic eradication of ethnic Armenians. As of 2020, 32 countries around the world, including US, Russia, Canada, France, Germany, and Italy, officially recoginse it as genocide. However, the relations with Turkey and the influence of the government has often kept Hollywood and other film industries from giving the same treatment to it as has been given to the Holocaust, the World Wars, or any other significant historical event.

    ‘The Promise’ uses a fictional premise with made-up characters, but also adds real-life events into the mix to educate the audience about what really happened. In one scene, the protagonist ends up with a group of refugees who fight the Turkish forces, while trying to escape the side of a mountain to the coast from where the French Navy comes to their rescue. A similar event took place in 1915, where for 53 days, thousands of Armenian civilians fought for their lives at the town of Musa Dagh. Eventually, they had to run away from the other side of the mountain and were helped by the French.

    Another scene that reenacts a real event is the one that takes place between US Ambassador Henry Morgenthau and Turkish Interior Minister Talaat Pasha. It is taken from Morgenthau’s memoirs, where he mentions that Pasha sought the insurance money of the Armenians who were killed by his government from the American life insurance companies who might have had them as policy holders.

    The director also added the character of Christian Bale’s Chris Meyers to emphasise the importance of journalistic integrity and independent reporting which shows the true picture of what really happens on the ground. He looked towards the likes of Armin T. Wegner to make Meyers more realistic.