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Beirut to host int’l conference on 100th anniv. of Armenian Genocide

January 19, 2015 By administrator

187291Haykazyan University of Beirut and the Lebanese central body for the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will organize on Jan 31-Feb 1 an international conference “Armenian Genocide centennial: Consequences and assignments”, sponsored by the head of the Union of the Armenian Evangelical Churches in Middle East, Megerdich Karageozian.

Suren Manukyan (The demographic, cultural, geographical, economic and political consequences of the Armenian Genocide), Vladimir Vardanyan (The elimination of the consequences of the Armenian genocide by international law), Zaven Msryan (The international community resistance during and after the Armenian genocide), Saleh Zahreddin (Genocide abuse by states against Turkey), Arsen Avagyan (Armenia-Turkey relations from 1991-2014), Tatul Hakobyan (Armenia- Turkey non-governmental relations), Bulent Bilmez (The attitude of Turkey towards minorities (1923-2014), Hranush Kharatyan (The status of Armenians in Modern Turkey: Islamized Armenians) will deliver reports with the above-mentioned titles.

Before closing the conference, the presentation of the volumes (in Arabic) “100 Arabian testimonies: The 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide” by Damascus University professor Nora Arisian and “Artsakh Diary: Green and Black” by journalist and expert at the ANI Center Tatul Hakobyan will be held.

Related links:

Aniarc.am: 100-ամյակի միջազգային գիտաժողով Բեյրութում

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 100th, anniversary, armenian genocide, BEIRUT, commemoration, Haykazyan, university

Istanbul Hrant Dink was commemorated at the tomb

January 18, 2015 By administrator

By Mira Manukyan

20150118_144030Agos newspaper chief editor Hrant Dink assassination and was referred to at the beginning of the 8th year in a family grave where the ceremony also attended by lovers.

Zeytinburnu Fish Armenian Cemetery hour 14: 30 PoweredUSB to held to commemorate Dink’s wife Rakel, son Arat, he joined his brothers and lovers.

Fans attending the memorial ceremony, the flowers they brought with them was left to Hrant Dink’s grave. Then the ritual was performed. After the ceremony, I was praying for Hrant Dink.

After the prayer, as every year, the cemetery guard Malik Yalcin read a poem to commemorate Dink.

CHP deputy Sezgin Tanrikulu also attended the memorial service. Dunk Tanrikulu reminded that the AK Party in the time of the murder, the murder of the trial process with timely ruling, he said. Promoted the defending Tanrikulu and responsibility of those who should neglect the murder, “a matter of responsibility today is the responsibility of the governments in an effort to transfer it to others.” he said. Tanrikulu said the organization is still not revealed outside shooter 3-5.

On 19 January 2007, killed in front of Hrant Dink tomorrow (19 January) ceremony held in front of the Agos newspaper.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: commemoration, Hrant dink, İstanbul

BELGIUM Call to commemorate 8 years after the assassination of Hrant Dink

January 17, 2015 By administrator

VICTIM OF IDEOLOGY OF TURKISH STATE GENOCIDAL

arton107087-414x335“All those who believe that hope and have faith in the future have a duty not to give up, not to forget and tirelessly demanding justice for the journalist passionate [Dink] but also for all other who preceded him and follow him in Turkey “Doğan Özgüden

WE DO NOT FORGET T’A CAN NOT FORGET NOT Te

On the occasion of the commemoration of the eighth anniversary of the assassination of Hrant Dink we invite you to be present (after the requiem in memory of Hrant Dink the Armenian Church)

January 18, 2015 at 12:30

In front of the monument to the Armenian Genocide.

Location: Square Henri Michaux – Ixelles 1050 Brussels

Democrats Armenian Association of Belgium

Info: 0489-739 701

Saturday, January 17, 2015,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 8-year, assassination, Hrant dink

Armenian pogroms in Baku: The New York Times – Indifference and silence can cause another genocide

January 17, 2015 By administrator

It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

new-york-time-1990The New York Times, July 27, 1990.
blishing the series of evidences of the eyewitness, statements of political and public figures about the Armenian pogroms held in Baku on 13-20 January 1990. The articles are posted on the website of KarabakhRecords.info
Indifference and silence can cause another genocide…

An open letter to international public opinion on anti-Armenia pogroms in the Soviet Union

It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

The New York Times, July 27, 1990.

An era which we all thought ended, the era of pogroms, has resurfaced. Once again this year, the Armenian community of Azerbaijan has been the victim of atrocious and intolerable premeditated massacres.

As scholars, writers, scientists, political leaders and artists we wish, first of all, to express our profound indignation over such barbaric acts, which we wanted to believe belonged to humanity’s past. We intend this statement as more than an after-the-fact condemnation. We want to alert international public opinion to the continuing danger that racism represents to the future of humanity. It forebodes ill that we are experiencing the same powerlessness when faced with such flagrant violations of human rights a half century after the genocide of the Jewish people in Nazi concentration camps and forty years after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It would be inexcusable if, because of our silence now, we contributed to the suffering of new victims.

The situation of Armenians in the Caucasus is, in fact, too serious for us to remain silent. There are moments when we must assume the moral obligation to assist a people in peril. Our sense of obligation leads us today to appeal to the international community and to public opinion.

More than two years ago, active persecution against Armenians began in Azerbaijan. The pogroms of Sumgait in February 1988 were followed by massacres in Kirovabad and Baku in November 1988. As recently as January 1990, the pogroms continued in Baku and other parts of Azerbaijan. The mere fact that these pogroms were repeated and the fact that they followed the same pattern, leads us to think that these tragic events are no accidents or spontaneous outbursts.

Rather we are compelled to recognize that the crimes against the Armenian minority have become consistent practice – if not consistent policy – in Soviet Azerbaijan. According, to the late Andrei Sakharov (New York Times, November 26, 1988), these pogroms constitute “a real threat of extermination” to the indigenous Armenian community in Azerbaijan and in the autonomous region of Mountainous Karabakh, whose inhabitants are 80 percent Armenian.

Horror has no limits, especially when we remember that the threat is against the Armenian people, who in 1915 paid dearly for their right to be different in the Ottoman Empire. There, Armenians lost half their population to genocide, the worst consequence of racism. Furthermore, if the recent pogroms have revived nightmares of extermination not yet overcome, the current total blockade of Armenia and Mountainous Karabakh and 85 percent of those into Armenia pass through Azerbaijan; it would not be an exaggeration to maintain that such a blockade amounts to the strangulation of Armenia. In a land devastated by the earthquake of December 7, 1988, the blockade has paralyzed the economy and dealt a mortal blow to the reconstruction efforts.

It is our sincere hope that perestroika will succeed. But we also hope for the success of glasnost and democratization. We recognize that the passage from a totalitarian state to a rule of law cannot be achieved overnight. It is nonetheless necessary that in the process of transition, the government of the Soviet Union promote legalize and institutionalize such critical forces for democracy as human rights, the principle of toleration, and democratic movements. There is no better defense and demonstration of democracy. At any rate, that is the only way to avoid the worst. In the case of the multinational state, the, worst may mean threats to the right of a people or a minority to exist. It is during periods of transition and uncertainty that rights of peoples – today Armenians, tomorrow another people or minority – are threatened or denied. In this respect, the ease with which we see today the development in the USSR of racist movements, especially the anti-Semitic movement known as Paymat, is for us cause for grave concern.

In the name of our duty of vigilance, we demand that Soviet authorities as well as the international community condemn univocally these anti-Armenian pogroms and that they denounce especially the racist ideology which has been used by the perpetrators of these crimes as justification.

We ask from the Soviet authorities and the international community that all necessary measures be taken immediately to ensure the protection and security of Armenians in the Caucasus and other parts of the Soviet Union. This can begin by bringing about a definitive lifting of the Azerbaijani blockade. It should be clear that the forceful deportation of Armenians is not the solution to the problem of Mountainous Karabakh which, in essence, is a problem of human rights.

The international community of states under the rule of law must prove the authenticity of its commitment to human rights in order to ensure that, due to indifference and silence bordering on complicity, another genocide does not occur.

It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

The New York Times, July 27, 1990.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Baku, new york time, program

Cal State Northridge to host conference on Armenian Genocide

January 17, 2015 By administrator

187251California State University, Northridge’s Armenian Studies Program will host a one-day conference on Saturday, Jan. 31, in the Grand Salon at the University Student Union.

“The Armenian Genocide: Accounting and Accountability” is dedicated to the generations of 1915 and 2015 as a part of the United Armenian Council of Los Angeles’ Armenian Genocide Centennial Commemorative Events.

“The significance of hosting the conference at CSUN is three-fold,” said Vahram Shemmassian, director of CSUN’s Armenian Studies program within the Department of Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures. “CSUN has the largest number of students of Armenian background outside of Armenia, as far as four-year universities are concerned. The greater Los Angeles area is home to the second-largest community of the worldwide Armenian diaspora. Lastly, the conference also aims to further expose CSUN to the Armenian community at large, hopefully attracting more friends and supporters as a result.”

The morning session will include two panels. The first panel, “Language as a Victim,” will be moderated by Hagop Gulludjian and will feature the following speakers and topics: Vartan Matiossian, “Pleading no Context: On Uses and Abuses of the Word Yeghern;” professor Barlow Der Mugrdechian, “Western Armenian Language and Literature in Exile: Genocide and Its Consequences;” and Shushan Karapetian, “The Burden of Language as a Moral Obligation.”

The second panel will explore “Teaching Genocide,” with Rubina Peroomian moderating. Hasmig Baran will talk about “Content and Pedagogy of Genocide Education in the 21st Century: The Armenian Case”; Roxanne Makasdjian will talk about “Armenian Genocide Education in Secondary Schools Today;” and Kori Street will talk about “Educating for Change: Using Testimonies in Teaching about Genocide.”

Levon Marashlian will moderate the third panel, “Those Who Were Forced to Assimilate.” It will feature the following speakers and subjects: Khatchig Mouradian on “Un-Hiding the Past: Myth-Making and the ‘Hidden Armenians’ of Turkey;” Elyse Semerdjian on “‘The Girl with the Cross Tattoo:’ Field Notes on Crypto-Armenians;” and Vahram Shemmassian on “The Fate of Captive Armenian Genocide Survivors in Syria.”

The Armenian Bar Association will conduct the fourth panel, titled “Legal Responses to Genocide-Related Liabilities.” Garo Ghazarian will introduce the panelists. Armen K. Hovannisian will moderate the panel. The speakers and their topics include: Saro Kerkonian on “Justice for Genocide: Opportunities and Challenges in United States Courts;” Edvin Minassian on “Justice for Genocide: Opportunities and Challenges in Turkey’s Courts;” and Karnig Kerkonian on “Justice for Genocide: Opportunities and Challenges in International Courts.” The conference will conclude with a commentary by Richard G. Hovannisian.

The Department of Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures at CSUN is co-sponsoring the event, along with the United Armenian Council of Los Angeles, the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, The Knights of Vartan – Los Angeles County Chapters, the Armenian Bar Association and the Armenian General Benevolent Union. The Ararat-Eskijian Museum of Mission Hills will exhibit American Near East Relief posters during the conference.

Related links:

Scvnews.com. Jan. 31: CSUN Conference on Armenian Genocide

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, cal-state, Conference, northridge

Turkish press covers Sargsyan’s response by rejecting invitation to Erdogan’s April 24 invitation

January 17, 2015 By administrator

turkish pressAll Turkish media have covered Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s response to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s April 24 invitation letter.

Presenting the Armenian president’s response, several Turkish pro-government media cited solely Sargsyan’s following words: “It is not a common practice for us [, Armenians,] to be hosted at the invitee’s, without receiving a response to our [own] invitation.”

And some other Turkish media noted that Sargsyan had stressed that Erdogan’s invitation to take part in the events commemorating the centenary of the Battle of Gallipoli to be held on April 24 of this year was made intentionally, and it serves, “if not a simple-minded goal to distract the attention of the international community from the events [to be held on April 24 of this year and] dedicated to the centennial of the Armenian Genocide.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenia, invitation, rejecting, Turkey

Las Vegas Armenian Genocide memorial will be erected in the Sunset Park

January 16, 2015 By administrator

arton106949-401x300At the initiative of the Armenian-American Cultural Center, a memorial of the Armenian Genocide will be erected in Las Vegas. The City Council of the City agreed. The memorial will be placed in Sunset Park, one of the largest parks in Las Vegas with 57,000 sqm. It is the newspaper “Kantsassar” appearing in Aleppo (Syria) gives this information. The Armenian-American Cultural Center will undertake the financing of this memorial and its security, 200 000 dollars. And the tens of millions of tourists and residents of the capital of the world games, will be remembered that in 1915 nearly 2 million Armenians succumbed to the barbarism of the Ottoman Empire. Remember also that Las Vegas has a small Armenian community of nearly a thousand members.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Las Vegas., Memorial

Armenia: President Sargsyan responds to Erdogan’s invitation (full letter)

January 16, 2015 By administrator

President of armenia-repons-to-erdoganArmenian President Serzh Sargsyan responded to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s invitation to visit Centennial commemoration event dedicated to the Battle of Gallipoli in Turkey, reminding his earlier invitation to visit Yerevan on the same day – April 24 – when the Armenians of the world together with the international community will be marking the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide.

Panorama.am presents the unofficial translation of the letter in English.

Honorable Mr President:

I am in receipt of your invitation to take part in the ceremonies dedicated to the Centennial anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli.

Indeed, the World War I has been one of the most horrible chapters in the history of humankind that resulted in millions of casualties and crippled destinies.

An Armenian artilleryman, captain Sargis Torosyan was one of the conscripts in the Ottoman forces at the Battle of Gallipoli. He was an officer who devoted himself to the defense and security of the Empire, and for his faithful service and heroic deeds received military awards on behalf of the Ottoman Empire. Whereas the wave of mass atrocities and forced deportations, planned and implemented by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenian people, that reached their peak in the same year, encircled even Sargis Torosyan’s family. Among those one and a half million Armenians slaughtered in the Genocide were his parents, who were brutally killed, and his sister died in the deserts of Syria.

It was because of these unprecedented massacres that Raphael Lemkin coined the term “genocide”, and it was the impunity of it that paved the way for the Holocaust and genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda and Darfur.

According to you, not only for Turkey alone, but for the international community as well, the battle of Gallipoli is an exceptional example of friendly relations born out of war, and the battlefield that reminds of bitter legacy of war is now a monument of peace and friendship. Leaving aside the well-known meaning of the Battle of Gallipoli or the controversial role of Turkey in two World Wars, one must not forget that peace and friendship first and foremost should be based on the courage to confront the past, on historical justice, as well as on recognition of full-fledged universal memory and not selective approach.

Alas, Turkey continues its traditional policy of denialism and by “improving” its toolset of distorting the history year by year, for the first time this year the centennial of the Battles of Gallipoli will be marked on April 24, notwithstanding that those began on March 18, 1915 and continued through late January 1916, with the allied landing and battles on the ground starting on April 25. What else if not the simple purpose of diverting the attention of international community from the events marking the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide is this now pursuing? Whereas prior to initiating any commemoration events Turkey had much more important responsibility towards its own people and all humankind — to recognise and condemn of the Armenian Genocide.

Therefore, I would advise to remember and include in Your calls of international peace also a message to the world to recognize the Armenian Genocide and commemorate its one-and-a-half million victims. It is the duty of each of us to deliver the real and undistorted history to the next generations, thus preventing the repetition of massacres and building grounds for the rapprochement and further cooperation among nations, especially those that are neighbors.

P.S. Your Excellency, I have invited You to Yerevan still a few months ago to honor the memory of the innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide together on April 24, 2015. It is alien to our traditions to visit the invitee without receiving a response to your own invitation.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: responded, Sargsyan, Turkish President

Asbarez Exclusive Interview with LA Councilman Paul Krekorian lacity (Video)

January 16, 2015 By administrator

Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Krekorian, in an interview with Asbarez Editor Ara Khachatourian, discussed the approaching centennial of the Armenian Genocide, the Councilman’s art poster contest in commemoration of the centennial, as well as his upcoming reelection.

www.cd2.lacity.org

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Interview, LA Councilman, Paul

Turkey, Dink lawyer: Gendarmerie knew about plot 6 months before murder

January 16, 2015 By administrator

202384_newsdetailHakan Bakırcıoğlu, a lawyer representing the family of slain Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, has claimed that the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command had known about the assassination plot against Dink six months before the murder took place.

The lawyer said the murder took place on Jan. 19, 2007, and the gendarmerie command was informed in July 2006 that the murder was going to take place. Dink, the editor-in-chief of the Agos newspaper, was assassinated in broad daylight outside his office.

Bakırcıoğlu also claimed that high-ranking gendarmerie commanders, such as Ali Öz and Metin Yıldız, had known that Yasin Hayal, one of the prime suspects in the ongoing Dink murder investigation, was planning to kill Dink.

Dink was shot and killed by an ultra-nationalist teenager. The hitman, Ogün Samast, and 18 others were brought to trial. Since then, the lawyers of the Dink family and the co-plaintiffs in the case have presented evidence indicating that Samast did not act alone.

In his interview with the Agos newspaper, the family’s lawyer also said that a report prepared at 9:30 p.m. on Jan. 20, 2007, at the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command included the exact features of the gun used by Samast. “However, Samast was captured at 11 p.m. [on Jan. 20, 2007] at the Samsun bus station and the murder weapon was seized at that time. This means that officials at the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command had known about the features of the gun even though the gun had not yet been seized,” he said.

The lawyer said the officials from the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command also knew that the suspects were determined to commit the murder. He said they arrived in İstanbul, inspected the road between Dink’s home and his office — the Agos newspaper building — and even drew sketches as to how they could go through with the assassination. He also said they were trying to obtain a gun to commit the murder.

Bakırcıoğlu asked about police chiefs allegedly linked with the Hizmet movement — which is inspired by the teachings of Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen. The chiefs testified to prosecutors as part of the Dink murder probe. In response to a question on whether the Dink investigation will be turned into a case used to try the Hizmet-affiliated police officers, Bakırcıoğlu said the prosecutors must assess the powers and duties of all the related public officials in the case, as well as their possible role in the murder, in order to arrive at the truth.

 

Lawyer: MİT, ex-intel chief did not protect Dink

 

Emphasizing that Dink was living in İstanbul, Bakırcıoğlu said: “His home and the Agos newspaper were both in İstanbul. He was shot during the day on one of the most crowded streets of İstanbul. … According to the Regulations on Protection Services, both the National Intelligence Organization [MİT] and former İstanbul Police Department Intelligence Bureau Chief Ahmet İlhan Güler were directly responsible for taking measures to protect Dink, and it is pretty clear that these responsibilities were not met.”

He also said the Dink murder was an organized assassination and that there is collective responsibility that needs to be taken. “A possible indictment to be prepared should include this [concept of] collective responsibility. An indictment prepared against one particular group or only certain officials will be deficient and misleading,” Bakırcıoğlu said.

There has been a recent attempt by some pro-government circles to put the responsibility for the Dink murder on police officers that they have labeled as being linked to the Hizmet movement. The movement has been subjected to a large-scale smear campaign by the government under claims of it being a “parallel state.” The campaign has been directed at the movement since Dec. 17, 2013, when a major corruption scandal implicating high-ranking state officials, including former Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and four former ministers, went public. The “parallel state” or “parallel structure” is a term used by Erdoğan to refer to the Hizmet movement, which he says was behind the corruption scandal.

Former Police Chief Ali Fuat Yılmazer and the former head of the National Police Department’s intelligence unit, Ramazan Akyürek, were among the police chiefs who testified to prosecutors as part of the Dink murder probe.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: gendarme, hakan-bakırcıoğlu, Hrant dink, murder, plot

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