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Azerbaijan’s Destruction of Armenian Monuments Exceeds ISIS Crimes

February 26, 2019 By administrator

Illustration by gagrule.net

By Harut Sassounian

“A groundbreaking forensic report tracks Azerbaijan’s destruction of 89 medieval churches, 5,480 intricate cross-stones, and 22,700 tombstones,” is the subtitle of an incredible article by Simon Maghakyan and Sarah Pickman, published in the Hyperallergic Newsletter last week. The article is titled: “A Regime Conceals its Erasure of Indigenous Armenian Culture.”

In April 2011, when the US Ambassador to Azerbaijan wanted to visit Nakhichevan, an Armenian territory classified by the Soviets as an “autonomous republic” of Azerbaijan, to verify the destruction of thousands of historical medieval Armenian khachkars (cross-stones), he was blocked by Azeri officials who told him that reports of their destruction was fake news.

Under Azeri oppression, the longstanding Armenian community of Nakhichevan had dwindled to zero! Not content with ethnic-cleansing, the Azeris proceeded to eliminate all traces of Armenian monuments, claiming that no Armenians had ever lived in Nakhichevan.

“In December 2005, an Iranian border patrol alerted the Prelate of Northern Iran’s Armenian Church that the vast Djulfa cemetery, visible across the border in Azerbaijan, was under military attack. Bishop Nshan Topouzian and his driver rushed to videotape over 100 Azerbaijani soldiers, armed with sledgehammers, dump trucks and cranes destroying the cemetery’s remaining 2,000 khachkars; over 1,000 had already been purged in 1998 and 2002,” reported Maghakyan and Pickman.

The flattened land, where the khachkars stood for centuries, is now a military rifle range. The “demolition was the ‘grand finale’ of Azerbaijan’s eradication of Nakhichevan’s Armenian past,” wrote the two authors.

Maghakyan and Pickman reported that “the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) employed remote sensing technologies in its pioneer investigation into cultural destruction. Their 2010 geospatial study concluded that ‘satellite evidence is consistent with reports by observers on the ground who have reported the destruction of Armenian artifacts in the Djulfa cemetery.’”

“Absolutely false and slanderous information … [fabricated by] the Armenian lobby,” proclaimed Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, who makes frequent threats against Armenia and distorts its history.

The authors also quote from public decree No.5-03/S on December 6, 2005, by Nakhichevan’s “local autocrat” Vasif Talibov, a relative of Pres. Aliyev, “ordering a detailed inventory of Nakhichevan’s monuments. Three years later, the investigation was summed up in the bilingual English and Azerbaijani ‘Encyclopedia of Nakhchivan Monuments,’ co-edited by Talibov himself. Missing from the 522-page ‘Encyclopedia’ are the 89 medieval churches, 5,840 intricate khachkars, and 22,000 tombstones that [Armenian researcher Argam] Ayvazyan had meticulously documented. There is not so much as a footnote on the now-defunct Christian Armenian communities in the area — Apostolic and Catholic alike. Nevertheless, the official Azerbaijani publication’s foreword explicitly reveals ‘Armenians’ as the reason for No. 5-03/S: ‘Thereafter the decision issued on 6 December 2005 … a passport was issued for each monument … Armenians demonstrating hostility against us not only have an injustice [sic] land claim from Nakhchivan, but also our historical monuments by giving biassed [sic] information to the international community. The held investigations once again prove that the land of Nakhchivan belonged to the Azerbaijan turks [sic]….’” 

Any Azerbaijani who dares to speak out in defense of Armenians is also attacked as an enemy of Azerbaijan. A courageous Azerbaijani writer, Akram Aylisli, paid a hefty price for telling the truth about the destruction of Armenian monuments in his hometown of Agulis (known today as Aylis). The well-known novelist was furious that the Azeri government was destroying Armenian churches. In his novel, “Stone Dreams,” the protagonist, an intellectual from Agulis, refers to memories of the town’s eight of the 12 medieval churches that had survived until the 1990’s, and protects a victim of anti-Armenian pogroms in Azerbaijan’s capital Baku. Pres. Aliyev revoked Aylisli’s pension and title of “People’s Writer.” His writings were removed from school curricula, his books were publicly burned, and his family members were fired from their jobs. He has been under de facto house arrest since the release of his novel. Aylisli protested the destruction of the Armenian churches in Agulis and resigned from his position as Member of Azerbaijan’s Parliament. He fearlessly sent a telegram to Pres. Heydar Aliyev in 1997, calling the destruction of the Armenian churches in Aylis an “act of vandalism being perpetrated through the involvement of armed forces and employment of anti-tank mines.”

The two authors spoke with Russian journalist Shura Burtin who after interviewing Aylisli in 2013 traveled to Nakhichevan and reported that he didn’t see “a trace of the area’s glorious past.” Burtin concluded: “Not even ISIS could commit such an epic crime against humanity.”

The authors reported that Aylisli’s 2018 non-fiction essay in Farewell, claimed “that a mosque built five years ago on the site of one of the destroyed churches has been boycotted by locals because ‘everyone in Aylis knows that prayers offered in a mosque built in the place of a church don’t reach the ears of Allah.’”

Argam Ayvazyan, a native of Nakhichevan who spent decades photographing the local Armenian monuments before their destruction, was quoted by Maghakyan and Pickman as decrying the world’s silence: “Oil-rich Azerbaijan’s annihilation of Nakhichevan’s Armenian past make it worse than ISIS, yet UNESCO and most Westerners have looked away.” ISIS-demolished sites like Palmyra can be renovated, Ayvazyan argued, but “all that remain of Nakhichevan’s Armenian churches and cross-stones that survived earthquakes, caliphs, Tamerlane, and Stalin are my photographs.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide

US seek firm foothold in Azerbaijan ‘for anti-Iranian policies’ – Armenian analyst

February 26, 2019 By administrator

The United States currently need Azerbaijan as a firm foothold in our region to push ahead with their policies against the Islamic Republic, according to Avetik Chalabyan, a Yerevan-based political analyst.

”The United States are currently pursuing a very specific task. They need Azerbaijan as a foothoold against Iran. And to do that, they need, so to speak, a political gift to offer to Azerbaijan, which they will logically try to achieve at our expense. That’s about the ‘big deal’ of the age – allowing the United States to extort concessions not absolutely acceptable to us to later offer them to Azerbaijan in exchange for other, very important concessions to make the country an ally of the anti-Iranian coalition,” he told Tert.am on Monday, commenting on a recent interview with Richard Hoagland, a former US co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group (in which the US diplomat spoke of the so-called Lavrov plan proposed as an alternative to the 2007 Madrid Principles).

Chalabyan said he thinks it somewhat strange that the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group did not issue an official statement after their recent regional trip to sum up the meetings with Armenian and Azerbaijani top officials. Another concern, he said, was the failure to visit Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) against the backdrop of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s persistent calls for returning the country to the peace process.

”What raises concerns is, by and large, the fact that it isn’t clear at all what is going on in the negotiation process. Meetings and negotiations are being conducted without any publicity or transparency,” Chlabyan added.

Filed Under: Articles

Iranian FM announces his resignation

February 26, 2019 By administrator

Foreign minister of Iran Mohammad Javad Zarif has announced his resignation on his Instagram page,

“Many thanks for the generosity of the dear and brave people of Iran and its authorities over the past 67 months. I sincerely apologize for the inability to continue the service and for all the shortcomings during the service. Be happy and worthy”, Zarif wrote in his Instagram blog as quoted by Sputnik News.

According to Reuters, citing Tasnim news agency, some local sources familiar with the matter have confirmed Zarif’s resignation, however, it was not immediately clear whether Iranian President Hassan Rouhani would accept it.

Filed Under: Articles

Proceeds from world-famous soprano Hasmik Papian’s Yerevan concert to go to April War hero fund

February 26, 2019 By administrator

Armenian opera singer, world-famous soprano Hasmik Papian sang at the 10th jubilee festival of the Armenian Music which is dedicated to the 90th anniversary of Armenian composer Avet Terteryan. The concert took place at Aram Khachaturyan concert hall on February 20.

As Papian had informed earlier, all proceeds of the charity concert will be donated to Armenak Urfanyan Fund, who heroically died in the Four-Day Artsakh War in April 2016, destroying a tank and more than10 enemy soldiers.

“I want to inform that 3.346.200 AMD were collected from the sale of the tickets thanks to your dedicated efforts. The proceeds will be transferred to Armenak Urfanyan Fund. I am extremely grateful to all those who contributed to this initiative,” Papian wrote on her Facebook page.

Papian next informed that she met Hamest Urfanyan, Director at Armenak Urfanyan Fund during the concert at the stage.

“I had incredible feelings. My performance on February 20 was perhaps the most exciting and memorable concert in my career,” the world-known opera singer wrote.

To note, the Fund named after Armenak Urfanyan was earlier launched by his mother in memory of all fallen heroes of the April war.

Filed Under: Articles

Anzhela Elibekova: February 26 appears to be a good occasion to test Azerbaijanis readiness for peace

February 26, 2019 By administrator

February 26 marks the anniversary of Khojaly events and the date is a good occasion to test the readiness of the Azerbaijani public for peace, Anzhela Elibekova, expert in the South Caucasus told Panorama.am during an interview. Over the past few days Elibekova has explored Azerbaijani media reports and has come to conclusion that an active anti-Armenian propaganda is conducted despite commitments to prepare the people for peace.

“They announce about readiness to get prepared for peace, yet at the same time continue ramping up anti-Armenian sentiments among the public. The peace agenda thus appears to be fake,” Elibekova said. The expert pointed to the intensity of anti-Armenian events happening both in Azerbaijan and abroad that has been the case with previous years as well. The hatred is reinforced by statements from officials and experts of various caliber that often-spread disinformation, hatred and insults.

During the time of working at the Public Relations and Information Centre SNC, Elibekova along with number of experts initiated the “Xocali.net” project that documents the real events in the beginning of the 90s and exposes Azerbaijani falsification and distortion of facts.

«A database of facts was created with documentaries and a special website “Xocali.net” that should be presented to the Armenian and Azerbaijani public as well as the international community. This should be done first of all through diplomatic channels in order to prevent Azerbaijani propaganda activities in different countries – be those protests, or adoption of various resolutions,” Elibekova said.

“Xocali.net” website discloses Azerbaijani side’s mass falsifications concerning the tragedy, in which peaceful inhabitants of the village of Khojaly were killed. The website features many materials, including photo and video, exposing the activities of Azerbaijani Propaganda Machine that had been misleading the international community over the death of peaceful citizens for many years.

This year a small group of experts have created a new publication titled “What happened in Khojaly” available in three languages that provides information about Khojaly in Q/A format and discloses Azerbaijani side’s mass falsifications concerning the tragic events.
“The tragic events definitely took place on the night of February 25-26 claiming human lives. The tragic cannot go unpunished and the real perpetrators should be held responsible instead of those who were blamed or wanted to be seen as the assailants,” the authors of the publication say.

Some inconsistencies about the Khojaly event disseminated by the Azerbaijani propaganda can be found here. http://xocali.net/en/11-q.html. 

Filed Under: Articles

France national mugged in Yerevan, suspects are Georgia citizens

February 26, 2019 By administrator

A masked mugging with the use of a gun-like object was committed on February 23 in Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia.

At around 1am, Narine M., 28, a resident of Ararat province, came to a Yerevan police station and informed that the day before, at around 10:40pm, two masked persons had stolen a large amount of money (euro, and Armenian dram) from her in a blind alley in Yerevan, and under gunpoint, and then fled the scene.

According to shamshyan.com, this women is a French national.

Subsequently, police officers detained Georgian citizens Tatul P., 19, and Yerjanik Ts., 20, in Yerevan. They are suspected of committing the aforesaid mugging.

According to the source, these young men are from Akhalkalaki, Georgia. 

Filed Under: Articles

Turkey: The big business of academic ghostwriting write (material) for someone else who is the named author.

February 25, 2019 By administrator

In Turkey, many students are using ghostwriting services to write final papers and dissertations. DW takes a look at what has become a booming business.

Turkish universities are facing a new, not very academic challenge: ghostwriting. From bachelor’s and master’s theses to doctor’s dissertations — almost any form of written academic paper can now be ordered, for a price, from specialized companies.

Particularly at private universities, there is a veritable boom in such ghostwriting. Turkey has 63 private universities, most of them established within the past five years.

A short search on online academic forums found that some 50 companies are operating on this ghostwriter market. They ask for the equivalent of between €500 and €3,000 ($567 and $3,400) per paper. That tots up to revenue of more than €25 million per year.

Private universities to blame?

According to Dr. Gorkem Dogan, the chairman of “Egitim Sen,” a union for those working in education and academia, this significant rise in the number of ghostwritten dissertations has been caused solely by the uncontrolled increase in the number of private universities.

Dogan recalled the fact that many university teachers lost their jobs when a state of emergency was imposed following the failed coup of June 2016. Many more than 100,000 public service employees were formally suspended from their jobs, while more than 6,000 academics were made unemployed just by a special decree from President Erdogan.

“It may be hard to prove whether the suspension of these academics caused the marked increase in ghostwriters or not. But it is a fact that the suspensions were another real blow to Turkey’s already shaken academic sphere,” Dogan said.

he main users: Medical students

A DW reporter pretending to be a student writing his master’s thesis asked a representative of a ghostwriting company about the going prices.

The employee said that he himself was an academic. “I am also on the examination board for both the doctoral viva and the thesis defense,” he said. “I write any academic paper for 7,000 Turkish liras (€1,200).”

Filed Under: Articles

Saudi Arabia appoints first female ambassador to US

February 25, 2019 By administrator

Princess Reema Bint Bandar Al Saud replaces the brother of Crowned Prince Mohammed Bin Salman as the Saudi ambassador to the US. Her appointment comes as the kingdom is becoming more progressive on women’s rights.

Women’s rights in Saudi Arabia: A timeline

1955: First school for girls, 1970: First university for women

Saudi Arabia appointed its first female ambassador on Sunday, Princess Reema Bint Bandar Al Saud to serve as the kingdom’s top diplomat in the United States.

She replaces Prince Khalid bin Salman Al Saud, the son of King Salman and the younger brother of Crowned Prince Mohammed Bin Salman who is returning to Riyadh to become the Middle Eastern kingdom’s deputy defense minister.

“I will work with God’s permission to serve my country, its leaders and all its children, and I will spare no effort to that end,” Princess Reema wrote on Twitter after her appointment.

Two decades in US

Princess Reema lived in the US for 20 years while her father, Bandar bin Sultan Al Saud, served as the Saudi ambassador. She studied at George Washington University before returning to Saudi Arabia.

She worked in the kingdom’s private sector before joining the General Sports Authority, where she championed women’s participation in sports and focused on increasing women’s empowerment.

Her appointment as ambassador comes as Saudi Arabia is moving towards granting women some freedoms. Last year, the Saudi government allowed women to drive.

However, the oil-rich nation has also arrested women’s rights activists as part of a wider crackdown on any perceived dissent. 

Women also have to seek permission from a male guardian on issues such as getting married, obtaining a passport or traveling abroad.

Filed Under: Articles

Oscars 2019: ‘Green Book’ wins award for best picture

February 25, 2019 By administrator

Despite criticism, civil rights road-trip drama ‘Green Book’ has been named best picture at this year’s Academy Awards in Los Angeles. German nominees went home empty-handed.

Hollywood’s biggest stars converged on the red carpet Sunday for the 91st Academy Awards, with the 7,900-odd voting Academy members faced with a broad array of choices. In a night where no single movie was favored to win, the civil rights drama “Green Book” came out on top. 

“We made this movie with love, tenderness and respect,” producer and director Peter Farrelly said, standing with the cast on the Dolby Theatre stage in Los Angeles. The film tells the story of a friendship between a black musician and his white driver and at its core, Farrelly said, it was “about loving each other despite our differences.”  

For the first time in three decades, no one hosted the Oscars this year. The Academy took the risk after comedian Kevin Hart withdrew from the gig amid controversy over past tweets that were slammed as homophobic. 

In the absence of a host, the show balanced itself on a flow of actors and personalities, which included tennis star Serena Williams, veteran actors like Helen Mirren and Julia Roberts, singers Bette Midler and Barbra Streisand, Congressman John Lewis and comedian Trevor Noah, among many others.

Best leading role

The top awards for acting went to Olivia Colman and Remi Malek. Though Glenn Close had been considered the favorite to win for “The Wife,” Colman took home the Oscar for her performance in “The Favourite.” The award was the biggest surprise of the night, shocking even Colman herself, who jokingly said she hoped her children were watching because “this is not going to happen again.”

Malek earned his first Oscar for his performance as the legendary singer Freddy Mercury in “Bohemian Rhapsody.” Malek was the favorite for the top nod, following trophies at the Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild and British BAFTA awards for the role.

The 37-year-old actor dedicated his win to all young people struggling to find their identity, emphasizing his story as a first-generation American, born to Egyptian parents, and the character he portrayed in the film who was gay and a son of immigrants.

Regina King won the first Oscar of her career

“To be standing here, representing one of the greatest artists of our time, James Baldwin, it’s a little surreal,” King said of the American writer whose novel the movie was based on.

Ali took home his second Oscar, having also won for his supporting role in “Moonlight” in 2017. This year, Ali was awarded for his performance in the interracial road-trip drama “Green Book.”

Best foreign-language film: “Roma”

Director Alfonso Cuaron’s black-and-white cinematic remembrance of his childhood in Mexico, “Roma,” took away the Oscar in the foreign-language category, in a field that included films from Poland, Lebanon, Japan and Germany (“Werk ohne Autor”/”Never Look Away”).

Actors Angela Bassett and Javier Bardem presented the award, with Bardem speaking entirely in Spanish, his native tongue. 

On receiving the Oscar, the Mexican director reflected on the impact that “foreign-language films” in English and French had on his career and work. Cuaron also picked up top honors in directing and cinematography for the film. 

Filed Under: Articles, Events

Pashinyan;s government ‘shaking off’ responsibility for public reforms – opposition MP

February 25, 2019 By administrator

Nikol Pashinyan’s call for turning the transformation of an individual into a public transformation in Armenia hints attempts by his government to adopt a tolerant approach to failures “in an apparent effort to lay the entire burden of responsibility on the people,” according to an opposition MP.  

In a public post on Facebook, Arman Babajanyan of the Bright Armenia faction in parliament has shared his critical remarks on the prime minister’s remark – voiced at the congress of his Civil Contract party

”Every member of Civil Contract must admit that the transformation of an individual is key to public transformation. The role and the behavior of the individual is what the prime minister spoke of this also at the economic forum in Vanadzor on Saturday,” he said.

Babajanyan also criticizes the government for attempts to push for breakthrough reforms ”through, rather than for the sake of, individuals”.

”The transformation or the change of an individual – let alone the society – will not be possible in Armenia without a change in the general atmosphere, in the public, political and social relations. For the society is not just a mechanical entirety – composed of separate individuals – but rather, an organic unity connecting those individuals in multiple ways. Hence the important thing is to transform the individual rather than the society – the public body in which he or she is a member,” reads his status.  

Filed Under: Articles

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