MFA: 17 Years Later: Remembering and Condemning the Armenian Pogroms

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Seventeen Years Later:
Remembering and Condemning the Armenian Pogroms in Azerbaijan

CONDEMNING SUMGAIT

On July 7, 1988, the European Parliament adopted the following resolution:
Considering, that Nagorno Karabagh was historically a part of Armenia, that
currently over 80% of its population are Armenians, that this region was
annexed by Azerbaijan in 1923 and that in February 1988 Armenians suffered
from a massacre in the Azeri city of Sumgait,
– Considering that aggravation of political situation, having caused
mass killings of Armenians in Sumgait and atrocities in Baku, is dangerous
for Armenians living in Azerbaijan,
– Condemns brutality and pressure used against Armenian protesters in
Azerbaijan.

WHAT WAS SUMGAIT?

The pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait in February 1988 have the dubious honor
of being the first — the first time that ethnic cleansing was utilized in
what was still Soviet space – even before this scourge of modern humanity
reared its head in the Balkans.

The Nagorno Karabakh problem, which still festers in the South Caucasus,
began 17 years ago as a series of peaceful demonstrations by Armenians who
wished to determine their own lives, their own futures, NOT under the
jurisdiction of Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijani government responded to these
calls with violence and repression. The most violent and obviously political
instance of this response were the massacres which took place on three days
in February 1988 in the industrial town of Sumgait, Azerbaijan, miles away
from the territory of Nagorno Karabakh and the peaceful calls for
self-determination. The violence against Armenians in Sumgait changed the
nature of the Karabakh conflict.

George Soros spoke about this in Moscow Znamya Journal (Issue #6, 1989). He
actually confirmed that the first Armenian pogroms in Azerbaijan were
instigated by local bands, managed by the then First Secretary of the
Central Committee of the Communist Party, future President of Azerbaijan,
Heidar Aliev – father of the current President.

THE HORRORS OF SUMGAIT – February 1988

Massacres of Armenians in Sumgait (a city located a half an hour drive away
from the Azerbaijani capital, Baku) took place in broad daylight, witnessed
by numerous gapers and passers by. The peak of the atrocities committed by
Azeri perpetrators occurred on 27 – 29 February 1988. The events were preceded
by a wave of anti-Armenian statements and rallies that swept over Azerbaijan
in February 1988.

Izvestia Daily (20 August 1988) quoted Soviet deputy chief prosecutor
Katusev who said that almost the entire area of Sumgait, a city with a
population of 250,000 had become the site of unhindered mass pogroms. The
perpetrators who broke into Armenian homes used lists identifying Armenian
residents. They were also assured impunity. They were armed with iron rods,
stones, axes, knives, bottles and canisters full of benzene.

NOT JUST SUMGAIT

This was not an isolated incident. The assault of a sovereign government
against its citizens continued.

In May 1988 in Shushi, the local authorities initiated the deportation of
Armenians living in that hilltop city from which Karabakh¹s largest city,
Stepanakert, was to be so easily shelled for the next several years.

In the same year, Armenians were killed and wounded in the village of
Khojali.

In November and December 1988, a wave of Armenian pogroms swept Azerbaijan.
The worst took place in Baku, Kirovabad (Ganja), Shemakh, Shamkhor,
Mingechaur and Nakhichevan.

The Soviet press described how, in Kirovabad, perpetrators broke in a
hospice for the elderly, captured and subsequently killed 12 helpless old
Armenian men and women, including several disabled ones.

The 40,000 Armenians of Azerbaijan¹s third largest city, Ganja, were also
forcibly removed from their homes.

Throughout 1989, sporadic attacks, beatings, looting and massacres in Baku
reduced that number to 30,000 – mostly the elderly who could not leave Baku.
By early January 1990, Armenian pogroms in Baku intensified and became more
organized. When it was over, there were less than 50,000 Armenians left in
Baku, out of a total population of 215,000.

The Soviet press had daily reports of indescribable horror – dissecting
bodies, ripping open the abdomens of pregnant women, burning people alive –
with a daily tally of murders in full view of the authorities. Russia¹s
Soyuz magazine reported that one man was literally torn apart, and his
remains thrown in a garbage container.

The active role of the authorities was evident throughout.

THE CONSEQUENCES OF SUMGAIT

The Azeri leadership, then and now, never expressed remorse over the ethnic
cleansing and massacres of the Armenians of Azerbaijan, or the Armenians of
Karabakh. According to Ilias Izmailov, Azerbaijan¹s Prosecutor General
during the Sumgait pogroms, ³Perpetrators of the pogroms now carry mandates
and sit in the Parliament,² (Zerkalo, 21 February 2003).

As a result of the atrocities and the events which followed in the same
spirit, Azerbaijan has lost the moral right to expect that the people of NK
would consider being under Azerbaijani jurisdiction. We expect that the
Azerbaijani leadership will honor the principles of individual and human
rights and will come to terms with the fact that the people of Nagorno
Karabakh will determine their own future, in peace and security with their
neighbors.

http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am

His Holiness Aram I wishes the quick recovery of Pope John Paul II

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V. Rev. Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I WISHES

THE QUICK RECOVERY OF POPE JOHN PAUL II

His Holiness Aram I contacted Vatican officials from the headquarters of the
World Council of Churches in Geneva and expressed his wishes for the quick
recovery of His Holiness Pope John Paul II. The Pope had been hospitalized
because of health problems. His Holiness wished full recovery to the Pope in
the name of the Catholicosate of Cilicia as well as personally.

During his stay in Geneva the Catholicos held a meeting with Vatican
representatives and discussed inter church affairs with them. The two sides
talked about the theological dialogue between the Oriental Orthodox churches
and the Roman Catholic Church. The first session of this dialogue had been
held in the Vatican last month. His Holiness and the Vatican representatives
discussed the phases of this dialogue’s development and the agenda of future
meetings.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Ephemeride du lundi 28 fevrier

Agence France Presse
25 février 2005 vendredi 9:57 AM GMT

Ephéméride du lundi 28 février

LUNDI 28 FEVRIER 2005
———————

59ème jour de l’année

SAINT-ROMAIN

Mort en 463. A partir de l’ge de 35 ans, il vécut plusieurs années
en ermite puis de nombreux disciples l’ayant rejoint, il btit deux
monastères: Condat qui a donné naissance à la ville de Saint-Claude
(Jura) et Leucone

Les Romain ont de l’authenticité et de la fantaisie

Couleur : le rouge, chiffre : le 7

QUELQUES 28 FEVRIER

——————-

1895 : naissance de l’écrivain et cinéaste Marcel Pagnol (mort le 18
avril 1974)

1916 : mort de l’écrivain américain Henry James

1922 : fin du protectorat britannique sur l’Egypte

1974 : inauguration du Palais des Congrès à Paris

1986 : assassinat du premier ministre suédois Olof Palme

1987 : la Cour d’assises spéciale de Paris, condamne Georges Ibrahim
Abdallah, chef présumé des Fractions Armées Révolutionnaires
Libanaises (FARL), à la réclusion criminelle à perpétuité

1988 : à Soumgaït (Azerbaïdjan) : début des affrontements entre
Arméniens et Azéris: 32 morts

1989 : mort de Konrad Lorenz, fondateur de l’éthologie moderne

1991 : Golfe, fin des combats après l’offensive terrestre alliée
contre l’Irak

1991 : annonce par le ministère de l’Agriculture de la première
apparition en France d’un cas d’encéphalite spongiforme bovine

Le soleil se lève deux minutes plus tôt à 7H36 et se couche une
minute plus tard à 18H31

Le dicton : “beau ciel à la Saint-Romain, il y aura des denrées et du
bon vin”

Crimes contre l’humanite: proposition de loi UMP

Les Echos , France
25 février 2005

Crimes contre l’humanité: proposition de loi UMP

par B. T.

Le député UMP Thierry Mariani a annoncé hier avoir déposé à
l’Assemblée une proposition de loi visant à sanctionner la
contestation de tous les crimes contre l’humanité. «Il est
aujourd’hui possible en France de contester en toute impunité
l’existence du génocide arménien, comme de tous les crimes contre
l’humanité commis en dehors de la Seconde Guerre mondiale», a-t-il
justifié.

Contestation de crimes contre l’humanite: proposition de loi UMP

Agence France Presse
24 février 2005 jeudi 5:12 PM GMT

Contestation de crimes contre l’humanité: proposition de loi UMP

PARIS 24 fév 2005

Le député UMP du Vaucluse, Thierry Mariani, a déposé à l’Assemblée
Nationale une proposition de loi visant à sanctionner la contestation
de tous les crimes contre l’humanité, a-t-il annoncé jeudi.

“Il est aujourd’hui possible en France de contester en toute impunité
l’existence du génocide arménien, comme de tous les crimes contre
l’humanité commis en dehors de la Seconde Guerre mondiale”, a indiqué
M. Mariani dans un communiqué.

Expliquant vouloir, grce à cette proposition de loi, “achever le
travail des législateurs français”, M. Mariani indique que si elle
est adoptée, pourront être punis de cinq ans d’emprisonnement et de
45.000 euros d’amende “tous ceux qui auront contesté l’existence d’un
ou plusieurs crimes contre l’humanité reconnus par une loi française
ou commis par une personne reconnue coupable de tels crimes par une
juridiction française ou internationale”.

Paris hosts concert with star singer Charles Aznavour

Paris hosts concert for reporters missing in Iraq

PARIS, Feb 14 (Reuters) – Around 30 singers put on a free concert in
Paris on Monday in a show of support for a French female journalist
and her Iraqi translator, missing in Iraq and believed to have been
kidnapped.

Florence Aubenas of France’s Liberation daily newspaper has not been
seen since leaving a Baghdad hotel on Jan. 5 in the company of her
translator, Hussein Hanoun Al Saidi. Iraqi President Ghazi al-Yawar
said last month she had been kidnapped.

Liberation, which organised the concert with Paris-based media rights
watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF), said the event was also in
support of Italian journalist Guiliana Sgrena, who was kidnapped in
Baghdad on Feb. 4.

Star singer Charles Aznavour, who topped the concert’s billing, said
he hoped Aubenas could be freed.

“We must talk about this, and bit by bit we’ll make those people
holding her feel ashamed and perhaps we’ll give them some humanity to
give us back what they have taken,” said Aznavour.

Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said last Tuesday that France was
doing everything possible to secure Aubenas’ release.

He gave no details on what measures France was taking on behalf of
Aubenas and Saidi but said their case was different from that of two
French journalists kidnapped last August and released on Dec. 21.

France strongly opposed the U.S.-led war on Iraq in 2003.

Since Aubenas’ disappearance, President Jacques Chirac has asked
French journalists not to travel to Iraq. French journalists’
organisations have attempted to keep Aubenas’ name in the public eye
with a series of events.

More than 120 foreigners have been kidnapped in Iraq since last
April. Many have been freed but about a third have been killed. The
snatching of Sgrena outside a Baghdad mosque was the first kidnapping
of a foreigner since elections on Jan. 30.

02/14/05 16:25 ET

Charity for `forgotten’ sufferers

Evangelical Times, UK
Feb 25 2005

News in Brief

Charity for `forgotten’ sufferers

Baroness Cox of Queensbury, a leading human rights activist and
upholder of moral causes in Parliament, has launched a new
humanitarian aid charity in the UK. The `Humanitarian Aid Relief
Trust’ will provide aid to those who are, or who have recently been,
suffering persecution and oppression in the `forgotten’ countries of
the world – such as Sudan, East Timor, Burma and Nagorno Karabakh.

NATO Watches Closely Settlement Process of Nagorny Karabakh Conflict

NATO WATCHES CLOSELY SETTLEMENT PROCESS OF NAGORNY KARABAKH CONFLICT

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 24. ARMINFO. NATO watches closely the settlement
process of the Karabakh conflict, Secretary General’s Special
Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia Robert F Simmons
stated at today press-conference in Yerevan.

He reminded that NATO is not engaged directly in negotiations and
stressed that the OSCE Minsk Group is occupied with the conflict
settlement. Simmons considers untimely the discussion of an issue on
NATO’s possible peacemaking mission in Nagorny Karabakh. -r-

CA Ins. Commish Garamendi & Mark Geragos help distribute settlement

PRESS RELEASE

February 25, 2005
Gary Gartner (415) 533-2003 cell
Norman Williams (916) 492-3566

Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi and attorney Mark Geragos help
distribute settlement MONEY TO ARMENIAN ORGANIZATIONS FROM $20 MILLION
CLASS ACTION SUit

Monday morning in pasadena

Nine Armenian charitable organizations receive $3 million on behalf of
descendants of the 1915 Armenian Genocide

WHO: California State Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi

Martin Marootian, 89 year old lead plaintiff in
the class action suit against New York Life

Attorneys Mark J. Geragos, Brian S. Kabateck,
Vartkes Yeghiayan and William Shernoff

Bill Werfelman, New York Life Insurance

Representatives from Armenian charity
organizations

WHAT: Ceremony in which three California Armenian charities
will receive $333,000 each from a $20 million class action settlement
between New York Life and descendants of the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

WHEN: Monday, February 28, 2005

10:00 a.m.

WHERE: Brian Kabateck Residence

215 South Grand Avenue

Pasadena

Directions: 134 Freeway North, Exit and turn Right on Orange Grove
Blvd.; Right on West Green Street; Left on South Grand Ave.

BACKGROUND:

Before 1915, New York Life sold life insurance policies to thousands of
Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire. New York Life policyholders were
among the 1.5 million Armenians massacred during the Armenian Genocide
at that time.

California State Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi helped negotiate
the final agreement for the distribution of the $20 million settlement.
“During the late 1800s and early 1900s New York Life sold thousands of
life insurance policies to ethnic Armenians in the Turkish Ottoman
Empire. Many of those who bought the policies were killed during a
deliberate, systematic and government-controlled genocide that began in
April 1915.

Many of the survivors of these policyholders live in California and I am
gratified that due to the parties’ hard work in this matter, justice
will finally be served,” Garamendi said.

In the ensuing chaos, many of the rightful policy heirs were unable to
obtain insurance proceeds while others were unaware that they were
entitled to benefits. During litigation, New York Life acknowledged its
records indicated an estimated 2,400 policies sold to Armenians before
the Genocide may remain unpaid. The class includes Armenians living in
the United States and abroad who are descendants and heirs of
policyholders. They will share the bulk of the settlement.

Legal Significance:

The class action is the oldest resolved case in U.S. history-90 years
have passed between the original events and the settlement. It is also
the first recorded case addressing issues involving the Armenian
Genocide. The United States and Turkish governments have never
officially acknowledged the Armenian Genocide despite overwhelming
evidence and eyewitness accounts. In direct contrast, a private company
(New York Life) acknowledged the tragedy and fulfilled its obligation to
the victims.

The class action was originally filed in November 1999 in Federal
District Court in Los Angeles (Martin Marootian, et al. v. New York Life
Insurance Company). Class co-counsel includes California attorneys Brian
S. Kabateck, Kabateck Brown Kellner LLP, Vartkes Yeghiayan, Yeghiayan &
Associates, Mark J. Geragos, Geragos & Geragos and William Shernoff,
Shernoff, Bidart & Darras.

During the course of litigation, New York Life acknowledged its records
indicated an estimated 2,400 policies sold to Armenians before the
Genocide may remain unpaid. The class includes Armenians living in the
United States and abroad who are descendants and heirs of policyholders.
They will share the bulk of the multi-million dollar settlement.

Three Armenian organizations in California will receive $333,333
including the Armenian Church of North America Western Diocese
(Burbank), Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church (Los
Angeles), Armenian Educational Foundation (Glendale). The Armenian
Relief Society, United States Chapter of Watertown, Massachusetts will
also receive an equal portion of the proceeds at the ceremony on Monday.

In a ceremony in New York City on January 26, 2005 five additional
organizations received $333,333 each. They include the Armenian Church
of North America Eastern Diocese (New York), Prelacy of the Armenian
Apostolic Church Eastern U.S. and Canada (New York), Armenian Apostolic
Catholic Exarchate for Armenian Catholics in the U.S. and Canada (New
York), Armenian Missionary Association of America, Inc. (Paramus, New
Jersey) and the Armenian General Benevolent Union (New York).

Descendants have until March 15 to make a claim for a portion of the
settlement.

Details of the settlement and the New York Life policies involved are
available at
<file:///GLOBALFP01GLOBAL_DOISACCOMMUNICATIONS2004%20Press2004%20
Media%20Advisories6-2004;

###

www.ArmenianInsuranceSettlement.com
www.ArmenianInsuranceSettlement.com&gt

Commander Andranik As An Eternal Example of Patriotism

COMMANDER ANDRANIK AS AN ETERNAL EXAMPLE OF PATRIOTISM

A1Plus
6:45:55 | 25-02-2005 | Culture |

“Some years ago the book “Armenians in Turkey” by Tsatour Aghayan was
published where the author told about his meetings in Turkey. There is an
event in this book about Hakob Martayan, chief editor of the Turkish
encyclopedia, whom Ataturk had called “dilachar”, that is – “key of to
tongue”, while he himself had called Ataturk “Father if Turks”.
In a party where Greeks, Germans, Hakob Martayan and Turkish military
leaders were present, Ataturk suggests that each of the present must sing
his national song. The Greek refuses to sing in Greek saying that Turkish
has become his mother tongue, he German sing in German, and when it comes to
Hakob Martayan, he sings the song “Like an eagle you fly.” devoted to
Andranik. The people gathered were looking at Ataturk waiting for one word
to kill the Armenian, but Ataturk simply silences them saying, “I would like
to see if you, Turks, would sing a song devoted to Ataturk while surrounded
by Armenians”. This example was brought today by David Sargsyan, head of the
National Library, in the celebration of the 140th birthday of Andranik.
According to him, the Commander is a symbol of patriotism for our nation.
An exhibition devoted to the 140th birthday of Andranik was organized in the
National Library today, where books, articles and photos about him were
represented.