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Exposing Turkish PM Davutoglu Episode 1 dividing Christians & Muslim

December 1, 2015 By administrator

After his pan-islamist neo-ottoman project failure now he belong to European nation.

Exposing Davutoglu Episode 1 This is how the Turks playing there dirty games dividing Muslim & Christians #Turkey pic.twitter.com/ymBFPKKdnI

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) December 1, 2015

 

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: Davutoglu, decaptive, Turkish

New Music Video Based on Popular Song ‘Karabakhtsin’ Shot in Artsakh

November 25, 2015 By administrator

Karabakh musicSTEPANAKERT (ARTSAKHPRESS)—A new music video based on the popular song about the people of Artsakh, “Karabakhtsin,” was shot in the cities of Stepanakert and Shushi and sponsored by the Tashir Charitable Foundation.

Lira Kocharyan, music producer for the “Voices of Artsakh” project, told Artsakhpress that the new rendition of the song attempts to make it more relevant to young people.

“This song is familiar to our society. I aimed to present the song in a new style in order to make it more accessible and beloved, especially for young people,” she said, adding that the video recently premiered at the “Artsakh Days in Moscow” project. The video was directed by Arsen Bayadyan and Artyom Abovyan. Watch below.

 

Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: Karabakhtsin, song, VIDEO)

Terrorist State of Turkey Lobbyist in full controle of Washington

November 12, 2015 By administrator

No Country in the world control Washington more than Turkey, hundreds of well paid lobbyist from politicians to Government officials.

Turkish-Lobbyist-in-Washington

Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: lobbyist, Turkish, Washington

Video #Turkish Lobbyist Infestation State of Ohio and Pennsylvania.

November 10, 2015 By administrator

Time for De-Turkification of Turkish Lobbyist. State of Pennsylvania and Ohio

State-of-Pennsylvania-&-Ohio

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: Infestation, ohio, Pennsylvania, Turkish Lobbyist

Syrian leader Bashar Assad ‘West crying for refugees with one eye, aiming gun with the other’ (INTERVIEW)

September 16, 2015 By administrator

By RT Corespondents

55f8d288c4618895738b45e1Question 1:Mr. President, thank you from the Russian media, from RT, from Rossiyskaya Gazeta, Channel 1, Russia 24, RIA Novosti, and NTV channel, for giving us all the opportunity to talk to you during this very critical phase of the crisis in Syria, where there are many questions that need to be addressed on where exactly the political process to achieve peace in Syria is heading, what’s the latest developments on the fight against ISIL, and the status of the Russian and Syrian partnership, and of course the enormous exodus of Syrian refugees that has been dominating headlines in Europe.

Now, the crisis in Syria is entering its fifth year. You have defied all predictions by Western leaders that you would be ousted imminently, and continue to serve today as the President of the Syrian Arab Republic. Now, there has been a lot of speculation recently caused by reports that officials from your government met with officials from your adversary Saudi Arabia that caused speculation that the political process in Syria has entered a new phase, but then statements from Saudi Arabia that continue to insist on your departure suggest that in fact very little has changed despite the grave threat that groups like ISIL pose far beyond Syria’s borders.

So, what is your position on the political process? How do you feel about power sharing and working with those groups in the opposition that continue to say publically that there can be no political solution in Syria unless that includes your immediate departure? Have they sent you any signal that they are willing to team up with you and your government? In addition to that, since the beginning of the crisis in Syria, many of those groups were calling to you to carry out reforms and political change. But is such change even possible now under the current circumstances with the war and the ongoing spread of terror in Syria?

President Assad: Let me first divide this question. It’s a multi question in one question. The first part regarding the political process, since the beginning of the crisis we adopted the dialogue approach, and there were many rounds of dialogue between Syrians in Syria, in Moscow, and in Geneva. Actually, the only step that has been made or achieved was in Moscow 2, not in Geneva, not in Moscow 1, and actually it’s a partial step, it’s not a full step, and that’s natural because it’s a big crisis. You cannot achieve solutions in a few hours or a few days. It’s a step forward, and we are waiting for Moscow 3. I think we need to continue the dialogue between the Syrian entities, political entities or political currents, in parallel with fighting terrorism in order to achieve or reach a consensus about the future of Syria. So, that’s what we have to continue.

https://youtu.be/U7hCtLARbZQ

Source: RT.com

Filed Under: Interviews, News, Videos Tagged With: bashar-assad, intervew, Syria

Watch Live streaming from Yerevan 1in.am LIVE #ElectricYerevan

June 27, 2015 By administrator

 

 

Electric yerevan 9

Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: electric yerevan, Protest

Hrazdan, Armenia One day visit with Gghiazaryan wounderful Family (Video)

June 6, 2015 By administrator

By Wally Sarkeesian
hrazdan-33The town of Hrazdan is located in the northeastern part of Armenia, within the Kotayk Province. It is bordered by the Pambak mountains range from the north and the Tsaghkunyats mountain range from the southwest. The borders of the town are extended towards the east, crossing the Geghama mountains reaching up to the top of Mount Gutanasar. While passing through the town, Hrazdan River receives its tributaries; Marmarik and Aghveran rivers.

Hrazdan town has an average elevation 1675 meters above sea level. The average temperature is 4,8 °C (-9°C in January to 16,8°C in August).[3] The annual precipitation is between 715 and 730 mm.

Education and culture

Hrazdan is home to the Humanitarian University of Hrazdan. Owned by the private sector, the university has 3 faculties: law, pedagogy and economics. As of 2009, 13 public education schools, 13 nursery schools, 1 school for special needs and several musical and sport academies are operating in Hrazdan.

The Hrazdan Dramatic Theatre was founded in 1953. The Hrazdan branch of the National Gallery of Armenia and the Geological Museum of Hrazdan are also among the prominent cultural institutions in the town. The History Museum in Hrazdan founded by Armen Aivazyan, features more than 4000 historical remnants and valuable pieces.

Many religious structures in the town are among the favoorite destinations of the visitors:

  • Aghbyurak Church of the 10th century.
  • Surp Stepanos (Saint Stephen) Monastic Complex of the 10th century.
  • Makravank Monastery, consists of 2 churches: Surp Amenaprkich (the Holy Saviour) of the 10th century and Surp Astvatsatsin (the Holy Motehr of God) of the 13th century.
  • Surp Karapet Church of Jrarat, built in 1831.
  • Surp Khach (Holy Cross) Church of Kojor, built in 1861.
  • Surp Mariam Astvatsatsin (Holy Mother of God) Church of Vanatur, built in 1883.

 

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: Armenia, hrazdan, visit

Egyptian composer Samir Aiad has dedicated a song to the Armenian Genocide centennial. (Video)

May 11, 2015 By administrator

samir aiadSamir Aiad is the author of both the music and lyrics.
The composer left the following note on his Facebook page:

“Many are aware of the tragedy that befell this great nation – the Armenians.
I have heard these stories from my teacher of violin, who worked in my school. 
She was Armenian, one of those Armenians, who reached Egypt with her mother through the Syrian deserts.
Peace to the souls of all victims and shame on the people that perpetrated this crime.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide, Videos Tagged With: Armenian, composer, Egyptian, Genocide, Samir-Aiad, song

Turkish writers & Journalist address letter to Armenian people (video)

May 5, 2015 By administrator

191670On the centenary of the Armenian Genocide, eight writers from Turkey post this letter to their fellow Armenians.

“It has been a hundred years since hundreds of thousands of Armenians of this land have fallen under the systematic massacre of the Ottoman State. In 1915, women and men, young and old, they lost their lives, their families, and their homes… We, at P24 (Independent Journalism Platform) humbly pay our respect to the fallen and present this letter from eight writer,” the letter says, according to Massis Post.

The short video produced by P24 and directed by Enis Riza carries the messages of Adalet Agaoglu, Ahmet Altan, Oya Baydar, Murat Belge, Hasan Cemal, Cengiz Çandar, Perihan Magden, and Bejan Matur.

 

Related links:

Massis Post. Letter to the Armenians

Filed Under: Genocide, News, Videos Tagged With: address, Armenian, people, Turkish, writers

Turkish film ‘Mastermind’ purports to reveal Jewish conspiracy

May 3, 2015 By administrator

6024703099791640360noAnti-Semitic documentary, based in part on Erdogan speech, claims Jews have conspired to dominate the world for 3,500 years; Turkish ruling party said to be encouraging such conspiracy theories.

Israel Jewish Scene

A documentary recently aired on pro-government Turkish news channel A Haber has sparked a new debate about anti-Semitism in Turkey, home to approximately 17,000 Jews.

The film, called Üst Akıl (Mastermind) and also published on major pro-government newspaper websites such as Sabah, claims that Jewish people have conspired to dominate the world for 3,500 years.

Several academics, journalists, and Etyen Mahçupyan, former adviser to Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, appear in the film, which is based in part on a speech given by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan last December.

Mastermind opens with the speech, in which Erdoğan describes “operations” against Turkey. “Behind all these there is a mastermind,” he explains, before telling his audience “you know who it is.”

The narrator then says this mastermind, who “rules, burns, destroys, starves the world, creates wars, organizes revolutions and coups, establishes states within states, (and is) the curse of the entire world,” can be found “in Jerusalem, where the sons of Israel live,” before delving into a conspiratorial tirade of historical manipulation.

“This is pretty much the worldview in the AKP now,” says writer and political commentator Mustafa Akyol, referring to Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party.

“The message they’re pumping into society is (that there is) a global Jewish conspiracy against the AKP.”

Akyol explains that anti-Semitism and conspiracy theories in Turkey far predate the AKP, but the party has ushered in an atmosphere wherein these beliefs flourish.

“Unfortunately, conspiracy theory is a national problem,” he says. “But the AKP is now shamelessly aggressive with them, and this so-called documentary is the zenith.”

The AKP started off as a reformist, Islamic-inspired political party in 2001, distancing itself from the conspiracy theories of some of Turkey’s fully Islamist parties.

However, according to Akyol, the party became increasingly paranoid, anti-Semitic and conspiratorial following challenges to its rule such as the widespread Gezi Park protests in spring 2013 and investigation of high-level government corruption in December of that year. The Gezi Park protests, in which 8 people died and around 8,000 were arrested, began as an environmental protest against government plans to urbanize the park but flared into wider dissent, due to heavy handed tactics by riot police and wide spread resentment of the Erdoğan government.

“They decided to interpret these not just as Turkish affairs but a global plot to topple them,” he says.

In one often-ridiculed instance during the protests, Erdoğan’s top economic advisor Yığıt Bulut even alleged that foreign forces were trying to assassinate the then prime minister using telekinesis.

Akyol says the military coup ousting then Egyptian president and Muslim Brotherhood member Mohamed Morsi in July 2013 also scared the pro-Brotherhood AKP.

“In their mind, the coup in Egypt was manufactured by America and Israel to get rid of Ikhwan (the Muslim Brotherhood), and the same thing would have happened in Turkey,” had Erdoğan not prevented it, according to Akyol.

Furthermore, opposition to Israeli policy often transforms into anti-Jewish sentiment.

“Israel isn’t just seen as a nation-state which is heavy-handed in its counter-insurgency,” Akyol says. “It’s seen as ‘the Jews.’ From anger against Israel you jump into a general dislike of the Jews.”

According to the Pew polling agency, 86 percent of Turks see Israel unfavorably.

Dr. Louis Fishman, an American-Israeli specialist in Turkish affairs, worries the anti-Semitism in Turkey is no longer “isolated to the back shelves of bookstores,” but is shifting into the official mainstream.

“The fact that there are anti-Semites or anti-Semitic propaganda in Turkey isn’t the main point. You have anti-Semitism everywhere in the world,” Fishman told The Media Line. “The problem is they’re on state-propagated TV.”

“It’s not just that the state is ignoring it,” he says. “The state is inherently part of it.”

Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç’s said earlier this month that “no one in Turkey is anti-Semitic,” and condemned other countries for “lagging behind Turkey,” in tolerance. However, even high-level AKP officials have publicly made anti-Semitic comments.

During Israel’s Operation Protective Edge in the Gaza Strip last summer, widely condemned in Turkey, AKP deputy Samil Tayyar tweeted, “May your race vanish and may you always have your Hitler.”

Ankara mayor and prominent AKP member Melih Gökçek supported pop star Yıldız Tilbe during the conflict in Gaza after she tweeted, “May Allah bless Hitler.”

Former Deputy Prime Minister Beşir Atalay accused “international Jewry” of being behind the Gezi protests because they are “jealous of Turkey’s growth.”

Though Ataly later retracted his statements, none of the other officials apologized nor were condemned for their anti-Semitic remarks.

Erdoğan himself has made public comments about the “interest rate lobby,” often code-word for a Jewish plot, and said Judaism is “demeaning” to women at an award ceremony in Bursa in February.

Dr. Aykan Erdemir is a member of parliament from the secularist opposition Republic People’s Party (CHP) and one of the founding members of the International Panel of Parliamentarians for Freedom of Religion or Belief.

Erdemir says hate speech in the media and politics encourages such views in regular society.

“(Erdogan) has in a way inculcated a lot of prejudice and hate in Turkish society,” he says. “How? Through education, through government-mouthpiece media, through hateful and spiteful government announcements and declarations.”

He worries Turkish society has internalized this government-propagated hate, in the years since AKP came to power in 2002, and that the damage will last for decades.

“Outing the AK Party is a simple task, but undoing hate, intolerance and prejudice, that’s a very long process,” he told The Media Line.

Turkey ranked 17th in a report by the Anti-Defamation League last year, with 69% of Turks labelled anti-Semitic, compared to the world average of 26%.

Between July 17 and 18 last year during the strikes in Gaza, 30,926 Turkish-language tweets were sent by 27,309 users praising Hitler and the Holocaust, according to a survey by research group Gonzo Insight.

Erdemir says that during the AKP’s tenure, “there have been some baby steps vis-à-vis extending minority rights, and I salute them for that. But ultimately, most of this ends up being window dressing,” pointing out that anti-Semitic rhetoric has risen to unprecedented levels.

“Erdoğan said anti-Semitism is a crime against humanity, but then he attacked an aggrieved Soma miner with the words ‘you sperm (or spawn) of Israel,’” Erdemir says, referring to an incident during the Soma mining disaster last May when Erdoğan was caught on video allegedly making the slur.

Mois Gabay, a 31-year-old Jewish Turk who frequently contributes to the Jewish newspaper Şalom, says it’s important to acknowledge the progress made under the AKP.

He mentions the recent opening of the government-restored Great Synagogue in Edirne, Europe’s third largest. “It was such an amazing thing for us,” he says.

Other steps have also been taken.

The Holocaust Memorial Day in January was given more pomp than usual, being held in the capital Ankara and attended by a high-level government official for the first time.

Several old churches and synagogues have been restored and reopened by the government and $2.5 billion worth of minority-owned properties seized by the state in the past have been returned.

Though anti-Semitic speech runs rampant, the government-organized pogroms and minority-targeting taxes of the twentieth century are a thing of the past, and anti-Semitic attacks are exceedingly rare.

“I’m feeling more positive about the atmosphere now, but still feeling negative about the manipulation of the media,” Gabay says.

“It’s become normal to write things against Jews because there’s no punishment for it,” he says, adding that it has worsened in the last two years.

Though hate crime legislation was passed last year, Gabay would like to see a hate speech law.

“The laws have to be changed and have to be more functional for all minorities,” he says.

Though anti-Semitism and other forms of hate speech have been known to creep into even mainstream secularist newspapers, the worst offenders are the Islamist ones such as Yeni Akit, which is distributed onboard Turkey’s national airline, and whose editor regularly meets with Erdoğan and flies in his presidential jet.

During the Soma disaster the paper’s headline proclaimed “The boss’s son-in-law is a Jew.” Last September Yeni Akit columnist Faruk Köse called on Turkey’s Jews to be taxed to pay for buildings damaged in Gaza during Operation Protective Edge.

Gabay told The Media Line that quite a few young Jewish people are leaving Turkey, and he asserts that one reason is because they don’t feel comfortable being bombarded by such hate speech.

Dr. Fishman, who lived in Turkey for 10 years, says this is no surprise.

“If you’re a Jewish family, your people are cursed regularly on the nightly news … you read Yeni Akit and see this anti-Semitism. Do you really want your children to grow up in this atmosphere?”

Dr. Erdemir submitted questions addressing anti-Semitism to parliament last September, but says there wasn’t much of a response.

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: conpiracy, Film, Jewish, mastermind, Turkish

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