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Armenpress: Part of Turkish civil society ready to recognize Armenian Genocide but is silenced, says journalist Simone Zoppellaro

Part of Turkish civil society ready to recognize Armenian Genocide but is silenced, says journalist Simone Zoppellaro

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YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS. For a century, little or no pressure was put on Turkey by Europe and the US to recognise the genocide and achieve reconciliation, and this was a tragic mistake, just as the current approach to Turkey, which privileges business at the expense of human rights, is wrong and counterproductive, Italian journalist, writer Simone Zoppellaro told ARMENPRESS when asked whether actions other than calls and resolutions are needed given that Turkey continues its policy of denial 107 years since the Armenian Genocide.

“Since I studied at the University of Bologna, twenty years ago, I have seen the attention paid to this subject grow year by year. A topic that, also due to the Cold War, was still little known and studied outside the Armenian communities in the last century. Today much has changed. The denialist theses are now very little accepted in the academic and political world, and even ordinary people, thanks also to successful films and books, have at least a general idea of the issue. A not insignificant fact, moreover, is that the awareness of the Metz Yeghern has contributed to the popularization of the concept of genocide, as elaborated by Raphael Lemkin.

For a century, little or no pressure was put on Turkey by Europe and the US to recognise the genocide and achieve reconciliation. This was a tragic mistake, just as the current approach to Turkey, which privileges business at the expense of human rights, is wrong and counterproductive. Now, it is crucial to work on different levels. Culture undoubtedly plays an important role in this. Turkish writers and directors, together with many activists, took important steps in this direction years ago. All this ended up being stifled by Erdogan’s new dictatorial drift. Many Armenians have also made important contributions. I am thinking of Pietro Kuciukian, who collected dozens and dozens of stories of the Turkish Righteous who opposed the genocide. But, once again, how can these figures be promoted in an authoritarian context such as the current one? Europe must get rid of all its autocrats, including Erdogan. A part of Turkish civil society, I say this also from personal experience, is ready to recognize the genocide. But this will never happen as long as their voice is silenced by the state,” Zoppellaro said.

Asked on his opinion on when and under what circumstances Turkey would recognize the Armenian Genocide, as well as the current process of normalization between Armenia and Turkey, the Italian journalist said: “The recognition and acknowledgement of genocide by a state that is heir to its perpetrators is always a long process. The philosopher Günther Anders told us how, even at the end of the 1970s, the majority of Germans did not want to face the Shoah. Now, Erdogan’s Turkey is not the Federal Republic of Germany, and it would be crucial for the state to commit to a path not yet taken. The circumstances you ask about, I am afraid, are not the present ones, but a possibility may soon open up, although I doubt very much that there is the will to go all the way through what the Germans call Schuldfrage, the question of guilt.

Now, a new Turkey that acknowledges the Armenian genocide and the crimes of the Ottomans would undoubtedly be able to dialogue with its minorities, starting with the Kurds, and have a more constructive approach to its neighbours. And it would be able to live in peace and prosperity, as has rarely happened in Turkey in the last century.

A rapprochement would be essential, but I well understand the fears of many Armenians. Today’s Turkey is authoritarian and violent, Erdogan unreliable, and his role in the aggression in Karabakh is unquestionable. If such a rapprochement were to become a reality, it would be an important step towards a possible common memory and peace. But beware, let us take the case of Italy and Slovenia, two democracies that are part of the European Union, and the crimes committed during the Second World War: a common memory is still lacking in many respects, and tensions have not been absent, even recently. So we should not spread false optimism in this regard. Whatever happens, it will be a long road and not without obstacles.

As Gabriele Nissim writes, it is necessary to translate the ‘never again’ into a here and now, recalling the example of Raphel Lemkin. What is the point of commemorating if, even today, we remain indifferent to crimes against humanity and genocide? The new millennium has already seen at least one genocide, the one against the Yazidis, and it will certainly not be the last if we do not activate prevention mechanisms in our parliaments and international institutions. The Milan-based foundation I work with, Gariwo, made some important proposals to our parliament last year: Appoint an Italian genocide advisor in Parliament to work in collaboration with the UN Special Advisor on Genocide Prevention and EU institutions; to commit the Foreign Affairs Committee of Parliament to draw up an annual report presenting to public opinion the dangers of new genocides in the world and the possible measures to be taken to prevent them; the creation in Italy of an autonomous and independent human rights agency, as proposed by the European Union, which, in collaboration with the International Criminal Court, would permanently investigate the state of rights in the world and crimes against humanity. We need a commitment that links past and present, and that goes from education to culture and politics. We cannot know our future, but we must go deep into our past, especially the most terrible pages, to ensure that they do not recur. Unfortunately, the events of recent months suggest the worst for our future. That is why it is more important than ever to remember and act.”

 

Interview by Anna Gziryan

Part of Turkish civil society ready to recognize Armenian Genocide but is silenced, says journalist Simone Zoppellaro

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 08:30,

YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS. For a century, little or no pressure was put on Turkey by Europe and the US to recognise the genocide and achieve reconciliation, and this was a tragic mistake, just as the current approach to Turkey, which privileges business at the expense of human rights, is wrong and counterproductive, Italian journalist, writer Simone Zoppellaro told ARMENPRESS when asked whether actions other than calls and resolutions are needed given that Turkey continues its policy of denial 107 years since the Armenian Genocide.

“Since I studied at the University of Bologna, twenty years ago, I have seen the attention paid to this subject grow year by year. A topic that, also due to the Cold War, was still little known and studied outside the Armenian communities in the last century. Today much has changed. The denialist theses are now very little accepted in the academic and political world, and even ordinary people, thanks also to successful films and books, have at least a general idea of the issue. A not insignificant fact, moreover, is that the awareness of the Metz Yeghern has contributed to the popularization of the concept of genocide, as elaborated by Raphael Lemkin.

For a century, little or no pressure was put on Turkey by Europe and the US to recognise the genocide and achieve reconciliation. This was a tragic mistake, just as the current approach to Turkey, which privileges business at the expense of human rights, is wrong and counterproductive. Now, it is crucial to work on different levels. Culture undoubtedly plays an important role in this. Turkish writers and directors, together with many activists, took important steps in this direction years ago. All this ended up being stifled by Erdogan’s new dictatorial drift. Many Armenians have also made important contributions. I am thinking of Pietro Kuciukian, who collected dozens and dozens of stories of the Turkish Righteous who opposed the genocide. But, once again, how can these figures be promoted in an authoritarian context such as the current one? Europe must get rid of all its autocrats, including Erdogan. A part of Turkish civil society, I say this also from personal experience, is ready to recognize the genocide. But this will never happen as long as their voice is silenced by the state,” Zoppellaro said.

Asked on his opinion on when and under what circumstances Turkey would recognize the Armenian Genocide, as well as the current process of normalization between Armenia and Turkey, the Italian journalist said: “The recognition and acknowledgement of genocide by a state that is heir to its perpetrators is always a long process. The philosopher Günther Anders told us how, even at the end of the 1970s, the majority of Germans did not want to face the Shoah. Now, Erdogan’s Turkey is not the Federal Republic of Germany, and it would be crucial for the state to commit to a path not yet taken. The circumstances you ask about, I am afraid, are not the present ones, but a possibility may soon open up, although I doubt very much that there is the will to go all the way through what the Germans call Schuldfrage, the question of guilt.

Now, a new Turkey that acknowledges the Armenian genocide and the crimes of the Ottomans would undoubtedly be able to dialogue with its minorities, starting with the Kurds, and have a more constructive approach to its neighbours. And it would be able to live in peace and prosperity, as has rarely happened in Turkey in the last century.

A rapprochement would be essential, but I well understand the fears of many Armenians. Today’s Turkey is authoritarian and violent, Erdogan unreliable, and his role in the aggression in Karabakh is unquestionable. If such a rapprochement were to become a reality, it would be an important step towards a possible common memory and peace. But beware, let us take the case of Italy and Slovenia, two democracies that are part of the European Union, and the crimes committed during the Second World War: a common memory is still lacking in many respects, and tensions have not been absent, even recently. So we should not spread false optimism in this regard. Whatever happens, it will be a long road and not without obstacles.

As Gabriele Nissim writes, it is necessary to translate the ‘never again’ into a here and now, recalling the example of Raphel Lemkin. What is the point of commemorating if, even today, we remain indifferent to crimes against humanity and genocide? The new millennium has already seen at least one genocide, the one against the Yazidis, and it will certainly not be the last if we do not activate prevention mechanisms in our parliaments and international institutions. The Milan-based foundation I work with, Gariwo, made some important proposals to our parliament last year: Appoint an Italian genocide advisor in Parliament to work in collaboration with the UN Special Advisor on Genocide Prevention and EU institutions; to commit the Foreign Affairs Committee of Parliament to draw up an annual report presenting to public opinion the dangers of new genocides in the world and the possible measures to be taken to prevent them; the creation in Italy of an autonomous and independent human rights agency, as proposed by the European Union, which, in collaboration with the International Criminal Court, would permanently investigate the state of rights in the world and crimes against humanity. We need a commitment that links past and present, and that goes from education to culture and politics. We cannot know our future, but we must go deep into our past, especially the most terrible pages, to ensure that they do not recur. Unfortunately, the events of recent months suggest the worst for our future. That is why it is more important than ever to remember and act.”

 

Interview by Anna Gziryan

Asbarez: Glendale Armenian Community Shows Appreciation For Past and Present Mayors

Glendale Mayor Ardashess “Ardy” Kassakhian is welcomed to the stage

Following a long tradition of expressing gratitude each year to the outgoing Mayor of the City of Glendale and support for the incoming Mayor, the city’s Armenian community hosted a meet and greet event at St. Mary’s Church Hall on Wednesday, attended by over 120 individuals and elected officials who enjoyed the evening mingling with good food and good company.

Former Mayor Ara Najarian Outgoing Mayor Paula Devine Former Mayor Vrej Aghajanian

For the past two years, the social distancing mandates imposed by the pandemic prevented this annual gathering from occurring, but in light of the recent relaxation of such mandates and the election this month of Mayor Ardashes “Ardy” Kassakhian, a son of the Armenian community, a successful event was held.

Mayor Ardy Kassakhian with former Consul General Ambassador Armen Baibourtian and his wife, Yvette Glendale City Councilmember Dan Brotman Ronnie Gharibian with Glendale Police Chief Carl Povilaitis

During the program, Master of Ceremonies Ronnie Gharibian invited Very Reverend Father Zareh Sarkissian, the newly appointed Dean of St. Mary’s Church, to bless the event and its participants. In his remarks, Fr. Sarkissian conveyed his welcoming message emphasizing that he is looking forward to working with city officials and getting to know the local community.

Gharibian proceeded to acknowledge the service of former Mayors, Vrej Aghajanian and Ara Najarian, who helped navigate the City through the Covid crisis, gifting each of them with an Armenian alphabet pendant as a token of the community’s appreciation.

To thank the most recent outgoing mayor, Paula Divine, Gharibian invited Christine Hovnanian, a long-time community activist representing the Armenian Relief Society, for her introductory remarks. Hovnanian expressed gratitude to former Mayor Devine for her leadership and support for the Armenian community and gifted her with the Armenian alphabet pendant as a token of the community’s appreciation. Councilmember Devine gave moving remarks, proclaiming that she feels she is Armenian in her heart and reaffirming her love and support for Armenia and Armenians.

Gharibian further thanked all city officials who were present, including Glendale City Manager Roubik Golanian, Glendale Police Chief Carl Povilaitis, City commissioners and department heads, as well as special guests, former Armenian Consul General Ambassador and Mrs. Armen Baibourtian, newly appointed President of the Glendale School Board Nayiri Nahabedian, Glendale Community College Board of Trustees President Dr. Armine Hacopian, La Crescenta Town Council President Harry Leon, Glendale-based business and sponsor of the evening Golden State Bank, and many more.

In addition, representatives from numerous Armenian community organizations including the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, the Armenian Cultural Foundation, Homenetmen, Armenian Relief Society, Hamazkayin, ANCA Western Region, St. Mary’s Armenian Church Board of Trustees and Glendale Youth Center, as well as the Editor of the Asbarez Newspaper, Ara Khachatourian and ARTN TV President Robert Oglakhchyan.

Glendale Civil Service Commissioner Garo Ghazarian was then invited to introduce newly-elected Mayor Kassakhian, providing a detailed background of his biography and successful path toward assuming his new position, wishing him well for the next year in office and expressing the community’s commitment toward progress and prosperity for all residents of Glendale.

Mayor Kassakhian took the podium to a rousing round of applause and addressed the crowd both in English and Armenian, pledging to innovate many new projects and ideas for the success of the City of Glendale in the coming year and continuing his support of the Armenian community and its priorities.

Gharibian reminded everyone of the upcoming April 24th Armenian Genocide 107th remembrance and emphasized that the Genocide is not only 107 years old, but rather only days, weeks and months old as the onslaught against the Armenian People continues today in Artsakh and requires action by every Armenian who is concerned with the threats being faced by Armenia and Artsakh today.

‘Gharib’: Armenian Pavilion Opens at 2022 Venice Biennale

A scene from the opening of the Armenian Pavilion at this year’s Venice Biennale

The Armenian pavilion officially opened within the framework of the 2022 Venice Biennale on April 21, the Armenian Embassy in Italy reported.

This year, Armenia presents an exhibition titled “Gharib,” by Lithuanian-Armenian artist Andrius Arutiunian.

Embassy Counselor Christina Mehrabekyan offered opening remarks at the event, noting that the Armenian people, deprived of their homeland and cut off from their own roots, are more than familiar with the meaning of “gharib,” which translates to pilgrim.

“Today, the Armenians of Artsakh again live under the threat of ethnic cleansing and intimidation,” said Mehrabekyan, noting that one of the most important missions of culture is to exclude indifference, to pay special attention to problems and seek solutions.

RA Deputy Minister of Culture Arayik Khzmalyan was also in attendance at the event.

Asbarez: Gov. Newsom Proclaims Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide

Gavin Newsom speaks at the 2017 March for Justice in front of the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles when he was Lieutenant Governor

SACRAMENTO–Governor Gavin Newsom on Friday issued a proclamation declaring  as “A Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide” in the State of California.

“On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Empire began its systematic genocide of Armenian people, a minority group that had long been treated as second­ class citizens. The Armenian Genocide began with the forced deportation and murder of hundreds of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders and ended with the deaths of 1.5 million men, women and children. It was the first genocide of the 20th Century,” said Newsom’s proclamation.

“As we remember the victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide, we also honor the strength and resilience of the Armenian people. Forced to build new lives in all corners of the globe, Armenians bravely forged ahead in the face of unimaginable tragedy. Thousands made their homes in California, and we are greater for their contributions,” added the proclamation.

“Today and every day, let us recommit ourselves to making certain that we never forget the Armenian Genocide, and that we always speak out against hatred and atrocities anywhere they occur,” said Newsom.

ANN/Armenian News – TLG – Twenty Twenty-Two, Between You Two – 04/24/2022

The Literary Armenian News

Twenty Twenty-Two, Between You Two
 
 
April of my life. April of my years.
April in the sun, April in ashes gone
 
She rode into moonlight, ghost of a village lost
Her hair black and silky, tainted, torn, scalped
 
Her flurry, her glory, humble obedient family
Girl with a future. A whiff of freedom, esprit
 
A new century, domestic skills a tyranny
A slight hope, cracked hint, salvation, glee.
 
In the evening, fires burn, dire screams
In the day, rape, sport, bets, bellies torn
 
Tis a boy, no, a girl, tis dead, is all
Gyavur, pollute and soil no more.
 
A Kafir, a sip of coffee while cleaning the dagger’s tip
A smile, a dance, a fire, a scream is this the Turk of 2015?
 
The Azeri of 2021? Bayrakdar as Viagra, prowess indeed?
Is this Russia dealing lies, promises, empty words and deeds?
 
Armenians lost again in a sea of ambitions twirling around them
Israel, Georgia, Pakistan, as allies, to the nose of Baku oil Billions
 
Spilling into the black sea.
Our blood as windshield wiper fluid, debris.

Bedros Afeyan
3-30-2022

Beverly Hills, CA

 The homepage for The Literary Armenian News is at: Armenian News.org/tlg/


Dr. Bedros Afeyan ([email protected]) is the editor of The Literary Armenian News (TLG), and will consider works not only of poetry, but also in the area of short fiction. Quality of language, excellence of translation, quality of song and images are all crucial to the aesthetic value of any work up for consideration.
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Rep. Clark Statement on 107th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Watertown –

Assistant Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Katherine Clark (MA-5) released the following statement to mark the 107th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, which is Sunday, April 24, 2022. Last year, President Joe Biden declared that the Ottoman Empire’s killing of 1.5 million Armenians was an act of genocide, an official recognition that Clark has supported throughout her career in Congress. Watertown, in Massachusetts’ Fifth Congressional district, is home to the third largest Armenian community in the United States.

“As we mark the 107th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, we recognize this dark chapter in our world’s history and renew our commitment to preventing atrocities of this magnitude from ever happening again. The Armenian Genocide is not an opinion – its facts are undisputed, and the legacy of this trauma cannot be erased. These crimes against humanity must be remembered and spoken about truthfully if we are to heal and learn from history.

“My own Congressional district is home to Watertown, Massachusetts, a hub of Armenian life and culture. I have had the privilege of getting to know many members of the Armenian community, and their strength and resilience is an example to us all. I will continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Armenian people to fight for truth, justice, and a recommitment to peace.”

Clark is an original cosponsor of the Armenian Genocide Education Act, new legislation to give teachers across the United States the resources they need to educate students on the atrocities of the Armenian Genocide and the consequences of intolerance and hate.

The Russian resisters: Nearly 142,000 who are against the war have fled to Armenia since January

MSN via The National Post


Special to National Post 

Yerevan, Armenia  — For Evgeniy Sergeev, a 30-year-old Russian lawyer who abruptly left his Moscow apartment a few weeks ago, his country’s invasion of Ukraine felt like a betrayal.

© Provided by National PostEvgeniy Sergeev, a 30-year-old Russian lawyer who fled Russia.

“We have a common history and culture. What Russia is doing is a crime and the authorities should be held accountable,” he said, speaking haltingly in English.

He was detained twice while protesting against Putin’s regime and had to pay fines. Then fearing Russia’s new infamous law imposing a jail term of up to 15 years for spreading “fake” information about the war, he and his younger brother fled their homeland for Armenia at the beginning of April.

Sergeev is just one of tens of thousands of Russians who fled their country. Between Jan. 1 and April 1, nearly 142,000 of them crossed the border into Armenia, compared to just over 43,000 last year, according to Armenia’s Migration Service.

The former member of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) is a popular destination for defectors because they can enter the country without a visa, and Russian is a common second language for many Armenians. Armenia’s recent transition to a parliamentary system also makes many feel safer.

Sergeev says he had to leave Russia because he is “a traitor to the authorities’ eyes” and risks jail for showing support toward Ukraine and helping friends trapped in the country.

“I thought it would be more pragmatic to leave the country and help from abroad,” he says.

His suitcases filled with clothes, tobacco and a few books, he landed in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital.

Most of the Russian newcomers are in their 20s and 30s. Speaking Russian while walking, they are easily recognizable in Yerevan’s streets. They established their quarters in coffee shops, bars and restaurants. They are also flooding dating apps and they post stories on Instagram, posing in abandoned locations and in front of concrete walls smeared with graffiti. The price of rent skyrocketed in the city, and landlords are increasingly evicting Armenian tenants to attract wealthier Russians who can pay top dollar for rent.

National Post met Sergeev for the first time in a café popular with Russian newcomers, located in a small garage in an unassuming alley behind Saryan Street, a trendy downtown thoroughfare teeming with wine bars, restaurants and bakeries. He just had a meeting with two other Russians and a Ukrainian, to organize help for Ukrainian refugees.

“It’s important to create a community where everybody can speak their mind and develop ways to help,” says one of the organizers, Marika Semenenko, a 35-year-old entrepreneur who left Moscow recently after campaigning for years against Putin’s regime. They are now renting a small warehouse for their activities.

But why not continue to fight from within Russia?

“The war was my limit,” she replies.

Her father is from Ukraine, and she could not justify to her Ukrainian friends — and to herself — why she was staying. “I cannot live in a country which kills Ukrainians. They are killing my identity,” she says.

Many in Yerevan have stories about friends — or themselves — who got detained over nothing, or were paid a visit by the police or the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB). The gap between them and some of their Ukrainian friends nonetheless grew wider with time. Some are advocates of banning Russian nationals from international competitions and gatherings like cultural events, and think defectors should take more risk and protest more forcefully in Russia.

“Maybe the Ukrainian government will let me in when the war is over, and give me citizenship, because my country betrayed me,” hopes Sergeev. But he concedes that not all Ukrainians may welcome him.

Russians’ family ties are also strained thanks to clashes with their parents and grandparents, who only watch official Russian propaganda channels.

Sergey, a 23-year-old who does not wish to be identified, is now in Yerevan after the U.S.-based IT company he is working for asked its employees to relocate. While some of his colleagues are indifferent to the invasion of Ukraine, he is critical of Vladimir Putin.

“My family calls me the ‘national traitor’. Half-jokingly, but I know they mean it in part,” he says.

He reads independent websites, unlike his family. “I try to show my mom what’s really going on in Ukraine, but the sites are blocked by Russia and she won’t install a VPN,” he says. She thinks he is a victim of “Western propaganda.”

But the tensions could be worse, and his parents were sad when he left. “I’m still a member of the family,” he says. “But for me, emotionally, it would be easier if they didn’t love me and rejected me.”

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Going green in Armenia

By Nick Thompson

Founded in 2016, OHM Energy is a technical company with green credentials, helping its customers find quality renewable energy solutions across Armenia. With support from the EBRD and the EU, the business recently underwent a rebrand, with the implementation of a new website and marketing strategy to help it grow.

OHM Energy’s co-founders, Sevak Gevorgyan (CEO), Hrant Gnuni (CFO) and Gevorg Hakhverdyan (CCO), met in their student years in 2004 when they were just becoming acquainted with the nuances of the energy sector and beginning to realise how much work there was to do in the sphere.

As post-graduates, confronted with the realities of climate change, they continued conducting laboratory research and writing scientific articles, mainly focusing on the renewable energy sector, and became specialists in the field. Fast-forward to 2016 and it was time to bring their practical scientific experience to the world of business through the establishment of OHM Energy.

Among other things, the company implements solar power station installations, energy efficiency measurements and other electrical projects throughout the country. During a challenging 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic took hold, the company nevertheless managed to build the largest solar power plant in Armenia, with a capacity of 6 MW.

Identity, influence and messaging

In its bid to become a leader in the local energy market and persuade prospective customers of the merits of renewables, OHM Energy’s co-founders reached out to the EBRD for support. Having identified what was required to reach those goals, we facilitated a tailored marketing plan and sales strategy to solidify the company’s commitment to Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) principles.

The cornerstone of the project was to increase the accessibility of relatable and succinct information about solar energy and energy saving for the general population through the new website. This was an unmitigated success and, in Gevorg’s words, led to “a big increase in customer engagement, and consequently the growth and development of our business”.

Building on the newly developed marketing strategy, the company also invested in digital technologies including implementing automated systems for customer service and improving the company’s workflow.

The company name refers to the German physicist Georg Ohm, who discovered the fundamental law later named after him, where the ‘ohm’ is the standard unit of electrical resistance. The logo uses the omega symbol ‘Ω’, which often denotes the end of something –­ in this case, of old energy systems. Visually, although unintentionally, it also looks like a depiction of the sun meeting a solar panel. The branding reflects the company’s commitment to solar energy and communicates the virtues of solar over conventional energy systems.

Green growth

Armenia now allows excess electricity generated from solar panels to be sold to its electricity grid, and along with the EBRD’s Green Economy Financing Facility, which helps Armenian businesses invest in high-performing technologies, there is plenty of potential to scale up the renewable energy programme in the country.

Since the EBRD’s intervention, OHM Energy has become one of the top five companies in its field. It has seen a dramatic increase in sales and turnover and its operations have profited greatly from tax and other benefits promoted by government energy efficiency measures, resulting in higher demand for its products locally.

The company also acquired exclusive rights to represent the leading German solar panel manufacturer AE SOLAR in Armenia, which will help it stay competitive and achieve its green energy goals in Armenia and beyond.

“We have a number of developing programmes and envisage becoming an international Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) contractor,” says Gevorg. “We already have several agreements in Georgia and are starting to cooperate with a number of international companies.”

And that is not all: the company also wants to expand into the distribution of solar pumps in Armenia, to popularise the use of electric cars, and to move into the construction of smart houses.

OHM Energy’s overarching vision is “to ensure progress that will guarantee the sustainable development of present and future generations by harmonising and balancing environmental issues”.

In an increasingly crowded market, with government incentives and competition fuelling innovation and decreasing the costs to become more sustainable, there has been a sea change in people’s attitudes towards green technologies, and companies which are driving our shift to renewables, like OHM Energy, are essential in ensuring that a brighter future starts with today.

  

‘Forgotten Genocide’ in Armenia must never be repeated anywhere | Opinion

Tennessean.
David Minier
Guest columnist


“Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”  Adolf Hitler, in planning the 1939 invasion of Poland.

Yerevan, Armenia

We walked in silence, among thousands. As the procession moved uphill, I pondered what thoughts filled the minds of those around us. Perhaps of great-grandparents slaughtered in their ancestral villages by Ottoman Turks. Or of family members marched into the Syrian desert to die.

Reaching the hilltop, my wife and I passed into the memorial and laid our flowers atop a mass of others. Around us, others spoke in hushed voices the names of family victims of the Genocide, which began April 24, 1915. At least 1.5 million Armenians were massacred in the government-sponsored ethnic cleansing.

I first became aware of the Forgotten Genocide when presented an opportunity to prove it happened.

In 1973, Gourgen Yanikian, a 78-year-old Armenian, lured two Turkish diplomats to a Santa Barbara, California, hotel, then shot them to death. Yanikian’s victims were career diplomats with families, no more to blame for the Genocide than a German today would be for the Holocaust.

But Yanikian, once respected and wealthy, now old, alone and impoverished, was seeking a final glory. His plan was to stage an “American Nuremberg,” a show trial like those held after World War II, to call world attention to the Forgotten Genocide.   Yanikian was charged with murder, and as district attorney of Santa Barbara County, it was my duty to prosecute him.

A trial was scheduled, and defense counsel announced they would call as witnesses elderly Armenians who had survived the genocide. They sat silently in the courtroom, ready to recount unspeakable horrors.

Yanikian’s attorneys urged me to allow the testimony, which was legally inadmissible. One gave me a book about the Genocide. On the flyleaf he had written: “The tragedy in Santa Barbara has brought destiny and God to your doorstep,” and he urged me to “bring forth an indictment against genocide.” He added, “You stand to become an immortal symbol of justice around the world.”

This was heady stuff, and I faced a dilemma: To allow a parade of eyewitnesses testify to the horrors of the Genocide, risking an acquittal, or to block the evidence and obtain a conviction. I knew such evidence could lead to “jury nullification,” where a jury disregards the law and acquits for what they deem a greater justice.

I took the safer path and objected to the historic testimony. The judge sustained my objection, and the jury returned murder verdicts. Yanikian was denied his Armenian Nuremberg, and the Forgotten Genocide was never proven by survivor testimony in an American courtroom. The historical evidence is so abundant, however, that at least 32 nations have officially recognized and condemned it. Tennessee’s House of Representatives recognized it in 2015.

Armenian families everywhere bear the memory. I asked Father Abraham Ohanesian, who conducts services at Nashville’s Armenian Church, how many local Armenians might have lost relatives to the Genocide. He replied, “Every single family.” Ohanesian told me how his father, as a boy, witnessed the ax murder of his grandmother by a Turkish soldier and the death of his mother on a forced march into the desert. How his father’s sister was abducted by Turks and never seen again by her family. And how his father had witnessed a river “red with blood” of massacred countrymen.

The Armenian Genocide must not be forgotten. History’s darkest chapters, its genocides, should be fully exposed. By revealing the ultimate depravity of man, we can hope to ensure that such atrocities never reoccur.

David Minier of Spring Hill, Tennessee, is a former district attorney of California’s Santa Barbara and Madera counties and a retired judge of Madera County. 

 

President Aliyev : "We intend to negotiate with Armenia on the basis of five principles"




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Aliyev’s remarks on peace negotiations with Armenia

The fifth Congress of World Azerbaijanis took place in Shusha. This time it was entitled the Congress of Victory. Speaking to the participants of the congress, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stated that if Yerevan does not accept the five principles proposed by Baku to start peace negotiations, the territorial integrity of Armenia will not be recognized.


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The city of Shusha, declared the cultural capital of Azerbaijan, hosted the fifth Congress of World Azerbaijanis. More than 400 representatives of the diaspora and guests from 65 countries took part in its work.

The first congress of world Azerbaijanis was held on the initiative of Heydar Aliyev in 2001. Later it was held every five years. Due to the second Karabakh war, the fifth congress was postponed from 2021 to 2022.

Addressing the congress participants, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev commented on the issue of future peace talks with Armenia and the role of international organizations in this process.

“As for the mediators, unfortunately, even today, high-ranking officials in Armenia are still talking about the Minsk Group. I think this is futile and completely pointless.

The Minsk Group was actually paralyzed in 2019. The group, mandated in 1992 to deal with this issue, has actually achieved no results.

If we now look at the history and actions of this group, the proposals it made, we can once again be convinced that this group was not created to resolve the issue. We were just a little naive at the time. This group was not created to resolve the issue, but to perpetuate the occupation. In the co-chairing countries of the Minsk Group, Armenian lobby groups are very influential. That is why in 28 years this group has not achieved any results.

And in 2019, the activities of the group, one might say, ceased. The reason for this was the very strange behavior of the new leadership of Armenia. Because when the new leadership of Armenia came to power in 2018, and the Minsk Group, and – I must say openly – we had certain hopes that after the overthrow of the regime of the criminal junta, the politicians of the new generation who came to power would be in touch with the reality, that they would understand their inability to fight, to wage war with Azerbaijan.

Active negotiations over the course of almost a year further reinforced this view. However, in 2019, the leadership of Armenia began to demonstrate a completely different position. The absurd thoughts expressed by the Armenian leadership actually put an end to the negotiation process. The words “Karabakh is Armenia, period” put an end to the negotiation process, and the Minsk Group, which met with me after this statement, held a very uncertain position, because after this statement it was impossible to conduct any negotiations, because the essence of the negotiations was that the lands under occupation would be liberated.

After that, the Minsk Group could not actually carry out any activity, even for the sake of appearances”, Aliyev said.

According to the President of Azerbaijan, leading international organizations have accepted post-war realities:

“The UN held an international event in Shusha. The European Union is currently very actively involved in the normalization process between Azerbaijan and Armenia. The OSCE is well aware that the Minsk Group is gone.

A few months ago, even before the Russian-Ukrainian war, when I was asked what the Minsk Group would do, I answered that in 2022 it would be the 30th anniversary of its creation, the anniversary would be celebrated, and then they would retire. However, after the start of the Russian-Ukrainian war, they did not even have the opportunity to celebrate the anniversary”.

The second meeting of the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia in Brussels became the number one topic for discussion in both South Caucasian countries

Azerbaijan intends to conduct peace talks with Armenia on the basis of the five principles proposed to Yerevan by Baku.

Five principles for starting peace negotiations proposed by Azerbaijan:

  • mutual recognition by states of each other’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, inviolability of state borders and political independence;
  • mutual confirmation by states of the absence of territorial claims against each other and their acceptance of a legal obligation not to make such claims in the future;
  • refraining from threatening each other’s security in international relations, using threats and force against political independence and territorial integrity, as well as other circumstances that do not correspond to the purposes of the UN Charter;
  • delimitation and demarcation of the state border, establishment of diplomatic relations;
  • opening transport links and communications, establishing other relevant communications and cooperation in other areas of mutual interest.

“After that, the issue of normalizing relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia is on the agenda. We put forward this agenda again. Despite all the painful moments, the occupation, the committed vandalism, we believe that there is a need for this in the name of the future of the region. We presented the peace agenda, but there was no response from Armenia. International organizations also, one might say, did not show much interest in this. Therefore, we specifically submitted a proposal consisting of five principles, and Armenia accepted them.

Thus, the leadership of Armenia has officially declared that it recognizes the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, there are no territorial claims against Azerbaijan and there will not be any in the future. I believe that this is an important moment for the post-conflict period, and we intend to negotiate on the basis of precisely these five principles.

At present, the ministers and ministries of foreign affairs of the two countries are forming working groups, I believe that in the near future it is necessary to start specific negotiations and not to drag them out too much, because the peace treaty will be signed precisely on the basis of five principles.

Therefore, the text of the treaty can be prepared and signed soon, and thus relations can be established between Armenia and Azerbaijan, including diplomatic relations. By putting forward this proposal, we once again demonstrate goodwill and, I repeat, show far-sightedness.

The revanchist forces periodically raising their heads in Armenia should know that this is the only way out, and perhaps the last chance for Armenia. If they refuse this, then we will not recognize the territorial integrity of Armenia and will officially declare this. Considering the results of the Second Karabakh War, the Armenian side should be well aware of what this step will lead to”, Aliyev said.