Media expert: Azerbaijani hackers leaking more data of Armenians for three days

Panorama, Armenia
July 8 2020

Azerbaijani hackers have been leaking more data of Armenians to the Internet for three days already, information security and media expert Samvel Martirosyan said on Facebook.

“Azerbaijanis seem to be making fun of us for three days, leaking all sorts of data of Armenians on the internet, including a huge amount of passport data and bank documents. When is this internal mess going to end?”  Martirosyan wrote.

Earlier in June Azerbaijani hackers twice leaked data of thousands of Armenian coronavirus patients. The leaked data included the citizen’s names and surnames, addresses, mobile phone numbers, as well as the names of those medical facilities where they had been registered or had undergone treatment.

Film: Edgar Baghdasaryan’s ‘Lengthy Night’ wins Best Feature Film award at int’l festival

Panorama, Armenia
July 8 2020

Culture 11:07 08/07/2020Armenia

“Lengthy Night” (Erken Kisher), a movie by Armenian director Edgar Baghdasaryan, has won the award for the Best Feature Film at the 3rd edition of The Indie For You Film Festival, the Armenian National Film Academy reports.

The historical drama produced by Yerevan’s Sharm Holding pivots around three stories set across a thousand years of Armenian history, where an unusual and attractive stone is the common thread.

Beginning in the 21st century, with a story about a couple whose relationship is under stress, the film goes back in time to the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and far into the country’s distant past in the early 11th century to create three self-contained stories of human strife.

Opening with the contemporary story of a couple driving aimlessly around Yerevan at night, venting their frustrations with a scene that includes the husband picking up a prostitute, while his wife sits furiously in the car, “Lengthy Night” touches upon the tragedies of Armenia’s past, the memory of which continue to hold the country together as a nation to this day.

The film starring Shant Hovhannisyan, Samvel Grigoryan, Luiza Nersisyan and Babken Chobanyan, won best film honors and five other awards, including for best script, cinematography and director, at Armenia’s Anahit National Awards Ceremony in 2019. 

ANCA Summer Interns Explore New Virtual Opportunities to Advance Community PrioritiesAsbarez:

July 8 2020

The ANCA Summer Internship Class of 2020 includes: Angelika Avagian, Aram Harumi, Emylia Ellaryan, Michael Clayton-Jolly, Tatevik Khachatryan and Nicholas Krikorian.

United Kingdom Participants Add New Trans-Atlantic Component As Program Marks 35th Year

WASHINGTON—Boasting a dedicated crew of student advocates from California to Rhode Island, and expanding, for the first time to the United Kingdom, the Armenian National Committee of America Leo Sarkisian Summer Internship (LSI) and Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Fellowship (Maral Fellowship) went virtual this summer, exploring new opportunities to advance Artsakh freedom, strengthen U.S.-Armenia ties, and secure justice for the Armenian Genocide.

“The ANCA, building on years of on-line engagement, has taken our summer internship fully virtual this year, keeping our students safe while also developing best-practices for the future of Armenian American activism,” said ANCA Program Director Sipan Ohannesian. “While we look forward to returning to hosting our internships and career services programs here in Washington, we are excited by the power of new technology to take our signature youth-targeted initiatives to a worldwide audience like never before.”

The initial focus for Leo Sarkisian Internship and Maral Melkonian Fellowship participants has been to encourage broad-based civic outreach to Senators and Representatives in support of continued U.S. funding for life-saving de-mining and rehabilitation services to the people of Artsakh.  The Artsakh de-mining program, carried out by The HALO Trust, has cleared over 60,000 mines and pieces of unexploded ordnance.  The ANCA interns have been contacting Armenian Americans whose U.S. Representatives are on the Appropriations Committee, which is scheduled to make its recommendations for FY2021 foreign assistance as early as July 9.  The ANCA has initiated a call alert – anca.org/call – asking U.S. advocates to phone their elected officials in support of Artsakh de-mining.

The Leo Sarkisian Internship – named after the late ANCA Eastern U.S. community leader and Hai Tahd advocate – empowers dedicated Armenians in their efforts to achieve justice for the Armenian Genocide, freedom for Artsakh, and a secure and prosperous Armenian homeland. The LSI was established in 1986 and now has hundreds of alumni across the world.  For the second year, LSI is running concurrently with the Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Fellowship, named after the devoted youth advocate whose dedicated her life to helping the Armenian homeland.

LSI interns and Maral Melkonian fellows are selected through a highly competitive application process with acceptance based on academic excellence and demonstrated capacity for community leadership. When not participating in a virtual program, summer interns stay at The Aramian House, an eight bedroom former bed and breakfast located in Washington DC’s historic Dupont Circle neighborhood, just a short walk from the ANCA headquarters.

The 2020 Leo Sarkisian interns are Angelika Avagian, Michael Clayton-Jolly, Emylia Ellaryan, and Aram Harumi.  Joining them are ANCA Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Summer Fellow Tatevik Khachatryan and Capital Gateway Program High School intern Nicholas Krikorian.

Meet the 2020 ANCA Leo Sarkisian Interns
Angelika Avagian is a graduating senior at the University of California, Los Angeles majoring in Political Science with honors and a concentration in International Relations. She recently completed a congressional internship with Congresswoman Nanette Barragan (D-CA) in Washington D.C., while conducting an independent research study on domestic terrorism. She plans to attend law school next fall and aspires to help renovate the legal and regulatory framework in the Armenian court system.

“With both the desire to uphold and develop my political breadth in Armenian issues, I am looking forward to enhancing my experience in government affairs through the ANCA Leo Sarkisian Internship  and further advance the Armenian Cause,” stated Avagian.

Michael Clayton-Jolly is a British-Armenian student about to start studying Russian and German at University College London in September 2020. While at school, Michael was involved in running a Politics Society, organizing lecture programs for pupils on the Armenian Genocide from prominent figures, including Baroness Caroline Cox, and sang with the Armenian ‘Komitas Choir’ of London.

“I am very excited to take part in the Leo Sarkisian Internship this year as it will allow me to build a stronger knowledge base on Armenian issues, arm myself with the necessary skills to fight for the Armenian Cause in the UK and meet like-minded Armenians and future leaders. I look forward to taking this knowledge and applying it to achieve Genocide Recognition and further the Armenian Cause here in the UK,” stated Clayton-Jolly.

Emylia Ellaryan is a second-year student studying International Relations and Development at the University of Westminster located at the heart of London.

“As a former student of the Saturday Armenian School I would love to share my knowledge and experience obtained from this program with the youth in the Armenian community of London. I want to tackle injustice and humanitarian matters, and further explore how public policies are influenced and shaped. I am honored to be an ANCA Leo-Sarkisian intern this year and hope that the program will provide me with the necessary tools and knowledge to advance my advocacy for the Armenian Cause in London, as well as help me in my pursuit of securing a career in diplomacy and foreign affairs in the near future,” stated Ellaryan.

Aram Harumi is a Junior at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, studying Political Science and Finance.

“I am grateful the ANCA gave me this opportunity to be a Leo Sarkisian intern.  Throughout my life I have engaged in many political debates, which has led to my interest in political activism.  Being Armenian, Japanese and American, I feel that I bring a different viewpoint than most, which I hope will help with my future with policy work on Capitol Hill.  Even in these tough times with COVID-19, I want to make a lasting impact on behalf Armenian community through this internship.  And along with my fellow interns I believe we can,” stated Harumi.

Meet the 2020 ANCA Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Summer Fellow
Tatevik Khachatryan is a senior at Roger Williams University double majoring in International Relations and Philosophy, with a core concentration in Public Health. Tatevik has been a member of the Armenian Community in Providence 16 years since she relocated to the United States with her family. Beginning with attending Armenian Saturday School to learn how to read and write, to Hamazkayin dance, along with currently continuing being an active member in Homenetmen with Scouts and athletics and being a Providence “Varantian” AYF member.

“With my experience in leadership and communication being the VP of the student body at RWU and the President of the Model United National and Model Arab League teams, I am eager to put my skills of communication, diplomacy, and negotiations to the test within this internship. I yearn to help the people of my country, my home. Having taken 2nd place in the Rhode Island National History Day competition and going onto Nationals in Washington D.C for my presentation on the Armenian Genocide, portraying a first hand victim, is merely an example of the love I have for my country and furthering the Armenian Cause. I am beyond thrilled to be working with the ANCA to gain first hand experience with working in foreign affairs. The opportunities that the Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Fellowship will give me, will allow me to fulfill my aspirations. Furthermore, allowing me to bring back what I learn to my community in Providence, to continue furthering the Hai Tahd goals,” stated Khachatryan.

Meet the 2020 ANCA Capital Gateway Program Summer High School Intern
Nicholas Krikorian is a senior from Alexandria, Virginia currently attending Thomas A. Edison High School and pursuing the rigorous International Baccalaureate program. He has been a part of the Armenian community his entire life, graduating from Hamasdegh Armenian School in 2017 and educating those outside of the community on Armenian issues. He hopes this experience will give him the tools he needs to further advocate for the Armenian community and give him an insight into firsthand activism, a field he may pursue when he later attends college.

“I feel honored to have been chosen to be an ANCA Capital Gateway Summer High School Intern for 2020. This opportunity will provide me with a unique experience in the field of political science and activism as well as educate me further on the issues people in my community face, both here, throughout the diaspora, and in Armenia and Artsakh themselves. I hope this gained perspective will aid in my coming decision on where to further my education as well as what field to enter in. I am eager and excited to see what the next two months of this internship bring,” stated Krikorian.

Follow the team’s journey on our official ANCA Facebook Page.

CivilNet: Armenian Factory Begins Production of Kalashnikov Rifles

CIVILNET.AM

July 8, 2020 10:13 p.m

✓An Armenian factory begins producing Kalashnikov rifles. 

✓The PM’s spokeswoman has responded to Aliyev’s comments on the Karabakh conflict. 

✓Greece has ratified the EU-Armenia CEPA agreement. 

✓Half a billion drams worth of financial support will be provided to families with children. 

✓Greece has ratified the EU-Armenia CEPA agreement. 

✓535 new cases of Covid-19 have been confirmed. 

Memorandum of Understanding between the Armenian Red Cross Society and the Armenian General Benevolent Union

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Website: 
 
  
PRESS RELEASE
  
Thursday, July 9, 2020
Memorandum of Understanding between the Armenian Red Cross Society and the 
Armenian General Benevolent Union
On June 22, the Armenian Red Cross Society (ARCS) and the Armenian General 
Benevolent Union (AGBU) signed a memorandum of understanding on the joint 
implementation of the healthcare component of the Syrian Armenian Relief program.
The program aims to provide humanitarian aid to the most vulnerable Syrian 
Armenians, particularly financial support to families that need urgent, 
expensive medical services.
Within the scope of the Memorandum, the ARCS will provide 25,000 USD in support 
to organize these healthcare services, while AGBU will arrange for beneficiaries 
to receive primary medical care and a follow-up healthcare needs assessment at 
the AGBU Claudia Nazarian Medical Center.
"The Armenian Red Cross Society responded to the humanitarian needs of Syrian 
Armenians from the very first day of their arrival here in 2012. This support 
has been multifaceted, from legal counseling and the provision of humanitarian 
aid to creating opportunities for them to establish and develop their own 
businesses. I'm happy that this program has allowed us to support Syrian 
Armenians in receiving healthcare services as well, because there is a great 
need for this," said ARCS Secretary General Anna Yeghiazaryan. 
The Syrian Armenian Relief program, which was launched on November 1, 2019, will 
continue until October 31, 2020. Its objective is to improve the wellbeing of 
Syrian refugees in Armenia, providing the most vulnerable families with 
humanitarian aid and making education accessible to them.
"From the very first day of the Syrian crisis, AGBU has provided support to 
Syrian Armenians in the form of broad humanitarian, social, educational, and 
healthcare programs in Syria, other countries, as well as Armenia. Hundreds of 
Syrian-Armenian young people that are enrolled in universities in Armenia have 
benefitted from our tuition reimbursement program. Vulnerable Syrian-Armenian 
families have been offered a range of social and healthcare support. Thousands 
of Syrian Armenians have received medical services at the AGBU Claudia Nazarian 
medical center and, in case of urgent surgical procedures or serious conditions, 
the costs of their treatment have been partially reimbursed. During the process 
of implementing this program, we have prioritized the expansion of partnerships 
with international organizations and structures in cases where our experience 
allows the effective fulfilment of the needs of those people that are in crisis 
situations. From this point of view, we consider this partnership with ARCS a 
very important one," said President of AGBU Armenia Vasken Yacoubian.
Within the scope of this program,
* 60 highly vulnerable families will receive food packages four times a year,
* 170 highly vulnerable families will receive vouchers to buy clothes two times 
a year,
* 30 highly vulnerable families with members that require urgent healthcare 
services will receive the necessary financial support for this treatment,
* 40 students from highly vulnerable families will receive partial reimbursement 
of tuition fees.
The total amount of support allocated through this program is 100,000 dollars.
The Armenian Red Cross Society (ARCS) is a full member of the International Red 
Cross and Red Crescent Movement, guided by the Fundamental Principles of the 
Movement: Humanity, Impartiality, Neutrality, Independence, Voluntary service, 
Unity, and Universality.
As an auxiliary organization to the public authorities in the humanitarian 
field, the ARCS has been operating throughout the country for the past 100 years 
in the following strategic areas: Disaster Management, Population Movement, 
Social Support and Health Care, First Aid, Tracing, Youth, Dissemination of 
Humanitarian Values, etc.
The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) is the world's largest non-profit 
organization devoted to upholding the Armenian heritage through educational, 
cultural and humanitarian programs. Each year, AGBU is committed to making a 
difference in the lives of 500,000 people across Armenia, Artsakh and the 
Armenian diaspora.  Since 1906, AGBU has remained true to one overarching goal: 
to create a foundation for the prosperity of all Armenians. To learn more visit 
 .

Complaints of torture on rise in Turkey’s Kurdish southeast

AL-Monitor
The Turkish government no longer sees the need to conceal torture,
especially of Kurdish women in the southeast of the country.
By Pinar Tremblay
July 8, 2020
Picture this: A woman is home alone in Diyarbakir province in Turkey's
Kurdish-majority southeast. At 5 a.m., 100 policemen from
counterterrorism and special forces units storm the apartment,
instructing the neighbors to stay inside and not communicate with
anyone. Then they sledgehammer the door and unleash two police dogs to
attack Sevil Rojbin Cetin. But that is only the beginning.
Cetin is an activist in women’s movements and a former Peoples'
Democratic Party (HDP) mayor, elected in 2014 and replaced by a
government appointee in 2016.
Cetin was interrogated for 3½ hours in her apartment while her legs
were bleeding from multiple dog bites. The apartment was turned upside
down, while she was blindfolded and beaten.
She was stripped half naked with her hands tied, while photos were
taken of her. The physical and sexual torture was coupled with verbal
abuses; a gun was held to her head. “At one point she was taken to the
balcony and the officer told her, ‘If your apartment was on the 5th
floor, you would have jumped by now and we would not have to deal with
you,” said Meral Danis Bestas, a pro-Kurdish HDP lawmaker.
Cetin’s Attorney Gulistan Ates, who took photos of her injuries after
the ordeal and shared them with the press, was called to the police
station and an investigation has been launched against him.
The 2019 US State Department human rights report emphasized that
violations affect Turkey's Kurdish citizens disproportionally. Kurdish
women or women who refuse to be model citizens in the eyes of the
Turkish state are increasingly becoming targets of arbitrary arrests,
strip searches, sexual violence in detention, insults and threats of
rape.
Remziye Tosun, HDP lawmaker who has been targeted for wearing white
scarves in the parliament, told Al-Monitor, “During the siege of Sur
[in 2016], I stayed at home with my young children. Then they
[security forces] took us outside; I had my two daughters with me —
one was 18 months and the other nine years old. The security forces
were determined to send my children to social services despite my
pleas to call my family. But they sent my 9-year-old to an orphanage;
my nursing child was allowed to stay in prison with me.”
Tosun said that since 2015 state forces have increased gradually the
intensity of torture and abuse of women. “We have gone back in time —
back to the days of Esat Oktay Yildiran. That is the mentality of the
AKP [Justice and Development Party] right now; torture has come back
with a vengeance.” (Yildiran was a military officer who was notorious
for his gruesome torture techniques at the Diyarbakir prison in the
1980s.)
Tosun’s house in Sur was demolished, and she was imprisoned for 15
months with her youngest child. Despite all that has happened, she
keeps her kind and compassionate spirit. “The thing that hurt the most
was not the physical hardship but the humiliation. One day we were
cleaning the newly built prison in Elazig, but we had little access to
cleaning products. We saw a group of female guards staring at us, so
one of the inmates asked why the guards laughed nervously among
themselves. One replied, 'Look they speak, they are human.' This I
cannot forget, but I understand.”
Tosun said that she has forgiven those guards, adding, “The prejudice
against the Kurds, the sayings about the Kurds having tails and not
being civilized is still happening because of the official education
system. And that mindset helps justify cruel treatment and
discrimination.”
The Kurds in Turkey are perceived as pseudo-citizens, and therefore as
potential terrorists. The Kurds are accepted to some degree, and as
long as they assimilate diligently they are viewed as prospective
Turks.
Ayse Acar Basaran, HDP lawmaker and spokeswoman for the HDP’s Women’s
Council, told Al Monitor, “Since July 2015, we have had over 16,000
members of our party detained by the security forces. About 4,000 are
in prison.”
Basaran noted that all women’s organizations have been shut down since
the July 15, 2016, coup attempt. Violence against women has spiked
even further as men are given a blank check and women are left more
vulnerable in their homes and on the streets. “When the government
ended the peace process and intensified its aggressive security
policies women became the biggest victims. Now they are arresting
members of the two remaining women’s associations — Rosa Women's
Association and TJA-Free Women’s Movement. The charges against the
members include attending International Women's Day on March 8,
promoting peace, searching for missing women and seeking justice for
female victims of domestic violence. Women — particularly those in the
Kurdish women’s movement — pose a direct challenge to the AKP’s wish
to monopolize power, because they are so organized,” she added.
Eren Keskin, vice-president of Turkey’s Human Rights Association and a
prominent attorney, told Al-Monitor that torture of women both “in
detention and while being taken into detention is becoming routine.
Torture is clearly defined as illegal in both the Turkish Constitution
and several international treaties that Turkey has signed.”
In the 1980s, torture was hidden and frequently denied by government
officials. Today, senior bureaucrats welcome and even encourage it.
For example, Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said in April, “I told
[the security forces] when you catch them [terrorists] tear them
apart.” Soylu also said that photos of the bodies would be made
public. Some of those commenting on these images on social media
suggest further gruesome acts on the alleged terrorists. In what seems
to have become the normalization of torture and violence, the display
of the mutated body parts of Kurdish women have become an event to
celebrate.
Sebnem Korur Fincanci, president of the Human Rights Foundation of
Turkey, announced that according to the foundation's records one in
every 500 people in Turkey has been tortured.
HDP lawmakers are now asking who is responsible for torturing Cetin
for 3½ hours, and who gave the order for this torture. The images of
the torture did not cause an uproar among social media users. So far,
no police investigation has been launched about any torture claims.
The problem of impunity of government officials in Turkey has reached
levels never seen before. Instead, we can expect more investigations
for human rights lawyers, HDP lawmakers and journalists who dare to
report cases of torture or abuse.
There are several loopholes in the law to protect torturers. Although
torture is to receive severe punishment, the prosecution can easily
turn the case into “an act of brutality,” which would not even cost
the officer his job. These acts are becoming routine because they are
condoned by the government and justified under the argument of
“combatting terrorism” — with little to no room left to ask how
torturing these women helps combat terror.
Turkey is regressing fast to the days when police officers marched
chanting, “Damn human rights” — starting in 1992 at a funeral of four
officers.
 

Turkey: Rising religious intolerance

Ahram Online, Egypt
July 9 2020
 
 
A US State Department report on religious freedom and a warning early this week left Turkey unhappy. But not wrongly accused, say many
 
Nora Koloyan-Keuhnelian , Thursday 9 Jul 2020
 
Hagia Sophia (photo: Reuters)
 
In our modern world, most of the peoples and nations living on Earth seek to live in harmony and peace. But seemingly not Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
 
Last week, a Turkish court heard a petition seeking to convert the Hagia Sophia museum back into a mosque, over which the US State Department issued a statement urging Turkey not to do so. Considered a symbol of religious tolerance and cultural diversity, being a mix of Christian Byzantine and Ottoman Empire architecture and historical richness, the Haiga Sophia museum was chosen a world heritage site by the UNESCO in 1985.
 
Earlier last month, the US State Department issued its 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom. “It is written in a language far from objectivity,” was the Turkish Foreign Ministry’s curt description of the report’s contents on Turkey. In a statement 1 July, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urged Turkey “to continue to maintain the Hagia Sophia as a museum, as an exemplar of its commitment to respect the faith traditions and diverse history that contributed to the Republic of Turkey, and to ensure it remains accessible to all.”
 
The US State Department sees any change in the status of the museum as diminishing the legacy of this remarkable building and its ability to serve humanity as a much-needed bridge between those of different faiths and cultures. “It is a testament to religious _expression_ and to artistic and technical genius, reflected in its rich and complex 1,500-year history,” Pompeo’s statement read.
 
“It is not surprising that Turkey ignores or denies the findings in the US religious freedom report, because what the civilised world sees as a violation, abuse or crime, Turkey sees as a normal and even a glorified action. We see the usurpation of churches and their conversion into mosques or other types of facilities as an insult to human rights and religious freedom. But NATO, UN and Council of Europe member Turkey has turned the violation of human rights into a proud tradition,” Greek genocide scholar Vassilios Meichanetsidis told Al-Ahram Weekly.
 
In 1935, the founder of the Republic of Turkey, its first president Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, ordered the building to be transformed into museum. While many consider it to be a “good” decision, Meichanetsidis thinks that it was actually another desecration of a historic non-Muslim place of worship. “Churches are built as churches and not as mosques or museums,” he said. On Tuesday, while speaking to a congregation at a church in Istanbul, the leader of the Greek Orthodox Church, His Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, warned that if Turkey persists with plans to reconvert Hagia Sophia into a mosque, it risks turning Christians against Muslims.
 
 
 
RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT ON TURKEY’S MINORITIES: Let’s not forget that Turkey and its predecessor, the Ottoman Empire, have a century old history of genocide against Greeks, Assyrians and Armenians, who constitute minorities in the country today.
 
According to the US State Department’s report, the Turkish government continues to limit the rights of non-Muslim religious minorities, especially those not recognised under the government’s interpretation of the 1923 Lausanne Treaty, which includes only Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Christians, Jews and Greek Orthodox Christians.
 
The Armenian Apostolic Orthodox community elected a new patriarch in December. “Members of the community and rights organisations criticised [Turkish] government interference in the election process. Minority communities continued to object to the prevention of governing board elections for religious foundations,” states the US report.
 
Another violation towards the Armenian minority mentioned in the report is the incident of forced conversion of a 13-year-old Armenian Orthodox child to Islam on a programme broadcast live by a televangelist on Turkish TV, during the Holy month of Ramadan last year, without his parents’ permission. “Members of the Armenian community and members of parliament (MPs) denounced the action,” states the US report.
 
Professor Anahit Khosroeva, senior researcher at the Institute of History of the National Academy of Sciences in Armenia, thinks that this is not the only case. “It mainly takes place among the citizens who left Armenia and got married to Turks or Kurds, according to statistics. I know several other cases of converted Armenian women over recent years. However, although all these cases have been widely publicised in the Turkish media, conversion is not a normal phenomenon among Armenians,” she said.
 
Khosroeva holds the community’s officials partly responsible. “The role of the Armenian Patriarchate in Constantinople should be significant here. Because it is known that Armenians are not so welcomed by the government of Turkey, especially the refugees, and their children cannot attend public schools. In addition, Armenians are isolated from the traditional community. It’s here that the Patriarchate must show its role by integrating these people into community life,” she told the Weekly.
 
The US report also states that “according to media reports, isolated acts of vandalism of places of worship continued to occur,” noting a February incident when an unidentified person or persons sprayed graffiti on the Surp Hreshdagabed Armenian Church in the Balat district of Istanbul with derogatory messages on the door and walls. “Police had opened an investigation and received security camera footage of the incident. HDP MP Garo Paylan condemned the attack. According to the community, the perpetrators had not been found by year’s end,” states the US report.
 
Khosroeva thinks this, too, is not new. “Vandalism against the Christian sanctuaries and culture, in addition to a continuous disrespectful attitude towards the feelings of [Christian] believers existed before the Ottoman genocide of Christians, between 1914 and 1923, and unfortunately it still exists. It’s very offensive for citizens of the same state or country to see notes on the walls of their churches full of hatred, or emptied garbage cans at the entrance of an Armenian church in Erzurum, where also unknown people left a note saying ‘Erzurum residents, this is our homeland,’” Khosroeva told the Weekly.
 
In March, President Erdogan raised the possibility, during a televised interview, that the status of Hagia Sophia in Istanbul could be changed from a museum to a mosque, adding that the name could change to Ayasofya Mosque. The government took no action following the president’s comments.
 
The US report also mentions that in November last year, the Council of State (the highest administrative court) ruled a former church and mosque now serving as Chora Museum should be returned to its status as a mosque. The museum, famed for its mosaics and frescos depicting Christian imagery, was originally constructed and repeatedly renovated as the Greek Orthodox Church of the Holy Saviour in the fifth century, and then converted into the Kariye Mosque in 1511 before becoming a museum in 1945.
 
“Hagia Sophia and Chora are the property of the Republic of Turkey and all means of authority [over museums] are a matter of Turkey’s internal affairs,” Turkey’s Foreign Ministry spokesman stated in response to the US report on religious freedoms, who called on the US to focus on its own domestic problems, like Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, racism and xenophobia, and not to draw the world’s attention away from US protests.
 
Why do Turkish authorities take pleasure in converting churches into mosques in 2020?
 
“Istanbul has dozens of mosques. Just next to Hagia Sophia there is the Blue Mosque and there are many other mosques across the city. I am afraid that the conversion of Hagia Sophia and Chora again into mosques represent Turkish Islamist triumphalism over Christianity and seemingly brings votes and support to the ruling party from Islamists and nationalists. In their imagination, this is what conversion represents,” Meichanetsidis told the Weekly.
 
Episodes of massacres and cultural attacks were the precursors to the great genocide of the 20th century. “Assyrians in Turkey, also known as Chaldean and Syriac, faced ethnic and religious persecution beginning in the mid-1800s. We have not been able to secure our own state, therefore our persecution is perpetual. The fact that the Turkish government has been denying the 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom should not come as a surprise, for the state has repeatedly denied its crimes against Christians. And let us not forget the direct involvement of the Kurds, a group which also denies their actions against all Christians, especially the Assyrians. Unless the Western countries and their allies in the region do not pressure Turkey to start honouring religious freedom and start protecting its own citizens, regardless of their faith, we will continue to witness the disappearance of the Christian community, an event which is a tragedy for all of humanity,” founder and President of Iraqi Christian Relief Council Juliana Taimoorazy of Assyrian origin, based in the US, told the Weekly.
 
“This is not a mentality of our times, but of some dark ages of the past, where fanaticism, destruction and barbarism prevailed. Islam is a religion of peace, respect and civilisation. Greeks and Arabs have been the initiators and bearers of religious and spiritual traditions with a universal impact,” Meichanetsidis said.
 
The US government estimates the total population of Turkey at 81.6 million (midyear 2019 estimate). According to the Turkish government, 99 per cent of the population is Muslim, approximately 77.5 per cent of which is Hanafi Sunni. Non-Muslim religious groups are mostly concentrated in Istanbul and other large cities, as well as in the southeast. Exact figures are not available, however these groups self-report approximately 90,000 Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Christians (including migrants from Armenia); 25,000 Roman Catholics (including migrants from Africa and the Philippines) and 16,000 Jews. There are also approximately 25,000 Syrian Orthodox Christians (also known as Syriacs); 15,000 Russian Orthodox Christians (mostly immigrants from Russia who hold residence permits) and 10,000 Bahais.
 
According to the US State Department report, estimates of other groups include fewer than 1,000 Yezidis; 5,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses; 7,000-10,000 members of Protestant denominations; fewer than 3,000 Chaldean Christians and up to 2,500 Greek Orthodox Christians.
 
Although the Jewish community in the country is diminishing, the US report states that Jewish citizens have expressed concern about anti-Semitism and threats. According to members of the community, the government continues to coordinate with them and is responsive to requests for assistance. But not all agree. “Anti-Semitism has been widespread in Turkey since the early years of the Turkish Republic. Jews in Turkey were exposed to a pogrom, their freedom of movement was restricted several times, the public use of their Ladino language  — alongside other non-Turkish languages — was banned and the media targeted them extensively in the 1920s and 1930s.
 
Today, making hostile statements against Jews and Israel is a popular trend in Turkey and it is the government that is leading and fuelling this hostility,” Turkish journalist and political analyst Uzay Bulut, who often writes about Jewish-related issues, told the Weekly.
 
According to the US report, the government of Turkey has continued to permit Greek Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox and Jewish religious community foundations to operate schools under the supervision of the Ministry of National Education.
 
“Children of undocumented Armenian migrants and Armenian refugees from Syria could also attend but they were not permitted to receive diplomas, as the government classify legal migrant and refugee children as ‘visitors,’” the report states.
 
The government has continued to provide funding for public, private and religious schools teaching Islam. “It did not do so for minority schools recognised under the Lausanne Treaty, except to pay the salaries for courses taught in Turkish, such as Turkish literature. The minority religious communities funded all their other expenses through donations, including from church foundations and alumni,” states the report.
 
*A version of this article appears in print in the 9 July, 2020 edition of Al-Ahram Weekly
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Pashinyan hopes Armenia will become more attractive to UAE business circles

Panorama, Armenia
July 9 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan received Mohamed AlZaabi, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United Arab Emirates to the Republic of Armenia, who is completing his diplomatic mission in our country.

According to the press department at the government, the Prime Minister said the Ambassador’s tenure was marked by effective cooperation between Armenia and the UAE. Nikol Pashinyan stressed that the Armenian government is interested in UAE’s reform experience. “We hope that in the near future Armenia will become even more attractive to your country’s business circles, which in turn will help us implement various investment projects,” the Prime Minister said, highlighting the contribution made by the Intergovernmental Economic Commission, which held its first meeting last spring in Yerevan.

The Premier highlighted the fact of high-level bilateral political relations and thanked the UAE side for its balanced position on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The Prime Minister also thanked the UAE government for supporting Armenia in the fight against COVID-19 and expressed confidence that the pandemic would be overcome through close cooperation.

In turn, Mohamed AlZaabi thanked Prime Minister Pashinyan and the Armenian government for effective cooperation, noting that he would continue to maintain close ties with Armenia and the Armenian people. According to Mohamed AlZaabi, bilateral trade and economic relations, as well as tourism saw tangible growth last year. Mr. Zaabi stressed that the UAE government, too, is keen to develop multifaceted cooperation with Armenia in agriculture, healthcare, food security, tourism, air communications and other spheres of mutual interest.

The parties expressed confidence that the two governments will be able to bolster the ongoing interaction through joint efforts after the global pandemic, the source said.

Armenian Environmental Front: Turkey citizens interested in exploitation of Amulsar gold mine

News.am, Armenia
July 9 2020

23:12, 09.07.2020
                  

U.S. House panel implicitly backs Artsakh aid

Public Radio of Armenia
July 9 2020