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Greece: Cyprus: Athens excludes settlement without withdrawal of Turkish troops

December 2, 2016 By administrator

Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias

Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias

Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias reaffirmed that a settlement in Cyprus was conditional on the withdrawal of Turkish troops stationed on the island, whose leaders are trying to revive dialogue for reunification.

Any agreement to end the division of the island must include a “clause” providing for the departure of Turkish troops, said the minister on the Greek radio Alpha. He stressed that Athens did not require an “overnight” withdrawal, but within an “adequate” timeframe. He noted by way of example that the withdrawal of Soviet troops during the German reunification took “four years”.

Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades and Turkish-Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci are currently seeking to revive their dialogue after their failure to reach an agreement during ten days of negotiations in Switzerland under the aegis of the UN.

Greece, Mr Kotzias said, did not intervene in these inter-communal negotiations, which particularly affected the territorial division between the two entities. But it has a voice on the issue of the security of the island because of the regime in force since its independence granting a right of intervention to three “guaranteeing powers”, Britain as former colonial power , Greece and Turkey.

According to Kotzias, London agrees with Greece on the need to end the guarantor regime, judged “anachronistic” by Athens.

To clear the way for a settlement on this chapter, which must be submitted to a multilateral agreement, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras proposed this week a meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

No date has so far been fixed but Greece remains asking for such an appointment, Kotzias said. However, he said that since the failed coup d’état of 15 July, the Erdogan regime no longer demonstrates the “willingness to compromise” on Cyprus.

Cyprus has been divided since the invasion in 1974 by the Turkish army in the northern part of the island in reaction to a coup aimed at linking the country to Greece.

Friday, December 2, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, Cyprus, greece. Greek Foreign Minister, Nikos Kotzias, Turkey

Bracelet created by Armenian jewelers is most popular gold ornament in Turkey

November 10, 2016 By administrator

gold-jewelersThe bracelet, which Armenian jewelers had created 300 years ago in Tokat Province of Turkey, is still the most popular and respected gold ornament in Turkey.

Yaşar Gençay, President of the Jewelers’ Association of Tokat, noted that this bracelet quickly gained great reputation and it was named the Tokat Bracelet, according to Sözcü newspaper of Turkey.

Gençay stressed, however, that even though the Tokat Bracelet is one of the most popular and respected pieces of jewelry in Turkey, people in the country are now facing financial difficulties because of the devaluation of the Turkish lira, due to the US presidential election.

But he expressed the hope that everything will return to normal in the coming days and the Tokat Bracelet will be sold as before.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, Armenian, created, Gold, jewelries, Turkey

Do not let Erdogan génocider Kurds! by Franz-Olivier Giesbert, West given carte blanche to Erdogan to exterminate the Kurds,

September 11, 2016 By administrator

massacre-of-kurdThe West has given carte blanche to Turkey to exterminate the Kurds, is scandalized Franz-Olivier Giesbert. Are we going to do?

It’s an amazing story, on cynical background, fumigation and encyclopedic ignorance: the West has given carte blanche to Turkey to exterminate the Kurds when they were in the process of annihilating the Islamic State in northern Syria. Even if it does not move the Western media, often in the boot of their chancellery or delay of a war, this infamy is assumed. John Golden Mouth US diplomat, John Kerry has spilled the beans by declaring: “We do not support the Kurdish initiative in Syria. “

read more….

http://www.lepoint.fr/editos-du-point/franz-olivier-giesbert/ne-laissons-pas-erdogan-genocider-les-kurdes-10-09-2016-2067398_70.php

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, carte blanche, Kurd, Massacre, Turkey, west

Germany: Berlin not distancing itself from Armenia Genocide resolution

September 2, 2016 By administrator

genocide and turkeyA German government spokesman denied claims made in a news report that Berlin was going to tone down a resolution calling the murder of Armenians a genocide. Leaders pointed out, however, that it is not legally binding.

The German news magazine “Der Spiegel” had reported on Friday that Berlin planned a gesture to appease Turkish government anger over the Bundestag’s Armenia resolution. That report, however, was denied by German government spokesman Steffen Seibert.

He said there could be no talk of Germany distancing itself from the parliamentary resolution.

The report in “Der Spiegel” said Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government hoped to resolve a dispute that has seen German parliamentarians barred from visiting Bundeswehr troops stationed at the Incirlik airbase in eastern Turkey.

Germany’s lower house unanimously backed a resolution in early June that explicitly declared the ethnic slaughter of Armenians by the Ottoman regime during World War I to have been a genocide.

In response, Ankara blocked German parliamentarians from visiting German troops stations at Incirlik, where the Bundeswehr is engaged in operations against “Islamic State” (IS). Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced the vote, recalled his ambassador to Berlin for consultations and threatened further action.

The head of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union in parliament said the chancellor would not distance herself from the resolution. Volker Kauder told a committee meeting on Friday that she had called him personally to make it known that she was in favor of the resolution.

Diplomatic hot potato

Germany’s Foreign Ministry has sought to resolve the dispute in recent weeks, with officials reportedly being told that Ankara wanted the German government to distance itself from the legislature’s vote. According to “Der Spiegel,” a spokesman would reiterate that the resolution had no legal effect on the actions of the German government.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier pointed out on Friday that the Bundestag resolution was non-binding.

“The German Bundestag naturally has every right and the freedom to express itself on political issues,” Steinmeier said. “But the Bundestag itself said that there is not a legally binding basis for every resolution.”

Even when it passed the Bundestag, it was clear to lawmakers that the resolution was non-binding.

Both Steinmeier and Merkel are reported to privately support the parliament’s position.

Seibert said on Friday, however, that there could not be any talk of Germany distancing itself from the Armenia resolution.

Call for redeployment

Steinmeier is a member of Germany’s Social Democratic Party (SPD), which has said Germany should redeploy its troops to another support base in the Middle East, should German parliamentarians continue to be barred from visiting personnel.

Although Germany is not directly engaged in combat operations against IS, it has deployed a number of surveillance aircraft to assist the US-led coalition. The German parliament is scheduled to decide on a mandate to extend the mission in December.

The topic of the murder of some 1.5 million Armenians and other Christians by the Ottomans during 1915-16 is a particularly sensitive one in Turkey, which claims the figures are inflated and that the killings do not constitute genocide.

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/berlin-not-distancing-itself-from-armenia-resolution/a-19521960

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, armenian genocide, distancing, german, government, No, Turkey

GENOCIDE A group of Azerbaijani opposition states recognize the Armenian Genocide

July 23, 2016 By administrator

Azeri opositionThe Armenian Mamul.am website says the opposition television channel criticized Meydan.tv Azeri Azeris who deny the Armenian Genocide in 1915 in Ottoman Empire. Medyan.tv said were victims of genocide especially Armenians, Greeks and Assyrian-Chaldean. According Meydan.tv, 4 million Christians that 1.5 million Armenians were killed. Azeri opposition groups as well as relatives of Meydan.tv are indignant that the authorities of Azerbaijan and their friends have a denialist stance on these genocides. These groups Renata Ahoundova the author of a text “injustice against Turkey,” says the government of Azerbaijan and its president contribute to practical denial of the Armenian genocide, while in Azerbaijan nobody puts genocide in quotation marks .

Krikor Amirzayan

Saturday, July 23, 2016,
Krikor Amirzayan © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, Armenian, Azerbaijan, Genocide, opposition, recognize

VIDEO Garo Paylan: I Have Been Exposed to Planned Attack for Being Armenian

June 12, 2016 By administrator

Garo Paylan attacked by Erdogan AKP Muslim Party

Garo Paylan attacked by Erdogan AKP Muslim Party

Ekin Karaca

Ankara – BIA News Desk

HDP’s Paylan has said that he has been deliberately targeted in the fight erupted in Constitution Commission by AKP members for him being Armenian, and told that AKP members said “Garo is here, Garo is here” to each other.

Click here to read the article in Turkish / Haberin Türkçesi için buraya tıklayın

After the fight that broke out between the members of Justice and Development Party (AKP) and Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) occurred again last night in the Parliamentary Constitution Conciliation Committee, one of the most disputed figures has been HDP İstanbul MP Garo Paylan.

We’ve talked to Paylan whom was blamed by AKP İstanbul MP Mehmet Metiner on TV for provocation.

Paylan speaking to bianet said he was tried to be lynched by 10-15 people, however this attack was planned and arose from him being Armenian.

Paylan’s statements as to incidents yesterday is as follows:

“I just said ‘No it’not like that’ and the attack began”

“The Minister of Justice said ‘In the previous commission meeting, HDP MPs and advisors inflicted violence’. Then I said ‘No they didn’t’. That was the only sentence that came out of my mouth. Then the attack began.

“I shared it on social media as well. Anyone willing to see can check the commission minutes. They blame me for provocation but I didn’t do that, I just said ‘No it’s not like that’”.

“I got kicked and punched for around 100 times”

“It is crystal clear that they are targeting me. Lots of MPs attacked on me in a planned way. I was directly targeted and got kicked and punched around 100 times in 20-30 seconds.

“Afterwards, they spoke racist words and hate speech against me.

“I will not get a report. What can happen if I take this to their jurisdiction? I am leaving the evaluation to conscience of public”.

“Because I am Armenian…”

“At this point, we can talk about the fact that I am Armenian because the speeches in there are hatred speech directly related to my Armenian identity.

“What they can’t digest is this: A person of Armenian identity reveals their lies and stands upright.

“They want to see Armenian obeying them. I as an Armenia putting up a fight for rights have been targeted and subjected to lynching attempt”.

“Garo is here, Garo is here…”

“AKP members’ directly targeting me shows that this is a planned operation.

“They planned that ‘We will take down these people at the first opportunity, we will teach them their lessons’.

“Because them directly turning towards me and calling other MPs as ‘Garo is here, Garo is here’ explains everything”. (EKN/TK)

Filed Under: Genocide, News, Videos Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, akp party, attacked, by Erdogan, Garo Paylan, Turkey

Germany: A resolution on the Armenian Genocide in preparation

May 27, 2016 By administrator

Genocide preparationBerlin, May 26, 2016 (AFP) – A resolution recognizing the first genocide of the Armenians by the Ottoman Empire and the “responsibility” of Germany in these crimes is being prepared in the Bundestag, according to a draft the text obtained by AFP Thursday.

The Bundestag, the lower house of the German Parliament “deplores the acts committed by the Young Turk government of the time, which led to the almost total annihilation of the Armenians”, in the text entitled “Remembrance and commemoration of the genocide of Armenians and other Christian minorities there 101 years. “

The resolution presented by both the members of the coalition parties in power in Berlin – conservative CDU-CSU and SPD Social Democrats – and the opposition Greens, evokes “the movement and annihilation planned more one million Armenians “, and must be voted on Thursday.

The Bundestag also regrets “the deplorable role of the German Reich which, as the main military ally of the Ottoman Empire and despite explicit information of diplomats and German missionaries on the movement and organized the extermination of the Armenians, n has done nothing to stop this crime against humanity. “

“The empire bears a share of responsibility for these events,” the text of the resolution, echoing what was said last year President Joachim Gauck, Germany’s first senior official to be qualified as genocide the massacre of Armenians by the Ottoman empire in 1915.

“The experience of Germany face its own history shows how difficult it is for a company to take on the darkest chapters of its past”, yet the text says, referring to slow the country’s working memory of the Nazi period but also the difficulties of Turkey against the Armenian issue.

Like its President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey accuses those who recognize the genocide “to support claims based on Armenian lies.”

The Bundestag vote on this text thus risk of stoking German-Turkish tensions, already weakened by a controversy over a satirical poem insulting Erdogan, designed by a German comedian.

Friday, May 27, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, Armenian, Genocide, Germany, resolution, Turkey

Forbes: Armenians give life of hope, faith, love 101 years after Genocide:

May 1, 2016 By administrator

211437One hundred and one years ago, 1.5 million Armenians were killed. Armenian sons saw their mothers murdered in front of their eyes. Mothers saw the same of their children, as did brothers, sisters, grandparents, and friends. “If you were in Armenia in 1915, you were a victim of genocide,” speaker, trainer, and author, as well as Forbes contributor Brian Rashid says in a Forbes article he wrote after travelling to Yerevan, Armenia to celebrate – as he puts it – the 101st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

On April 24, 2016, 101 years after the atrocities that wiped 1.5 million lives from the planet, the first annual Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity was held in Armenia. On behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide and in gratitude to their saviors, the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity will be granted annually to an individual whose actions have had an exceptional impact on preserving human life and advancing humanitarian causes. The Selection Committee, including George Clooney – who does his best to shed light on vital issues like this – consists of nine professionals who bring a diverse background. Only one of them is Armenian.

“To say this was a world-class event would be an understatement. Everyone was there to celebrate the Aurora Prize,” Rashid says.

Celebrating the three philanthropists – Vartan Gregorian, Dr. Noubar Afeyan, Ruben Vardanyan – who founded the Aurora Prize, as well as presenting the outstanding individuals and the winner of the prize who through their work have had an exceptional impact on vital humanitarian causes, Rashid says that the event was more than a prize, more than a night of celebration.

When asked if there is anything he needs, Rashid says he wanted to answer that Armenians “have done more for me that you will ever know. In the face of a century of the death you experienced, you have shown me how to live?”

“George Clooney shook the winner’s – Marguerite Barankitse – hand as she won the Aurora Prize of $1.1 million. Her life will be forever changed, and she will in turn change the lives of those she lovingly serves,” the author says.

“But for an entire weekend, I was handed something perhaps more valuable than a million dollars.”

“Hope,” Rashid adds. “Because the 1.5 million Armenians that were killed 100 years ago are still alive. They live in the smiles of their beautiful people. The ones we see on the streets. The ones we stand with on the stages. The ones we hold close in our hearts.”

“You (Armenians – editor’s note) have already given me everything I’d ever need. A life of hope, faith and love. So I guess the winner of the Aurora Prize is… you.”

Related links:

Forbes. George Clooney, The Aurora Prize And Hope In Armenia
The Armenian Genocide

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths reaching 1.5 million.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the Genocide survivors.

Present-day Turkey denies the fact of the Armenian Genocide, justifying the atrocities as “deportation to secure Armenians”. Only a few Turkish intellectuals, including Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and scholar Taner Akcam, speak openly about the necessity to recognize this crime against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide was recognized by Uruguay, Russia, France, Lithuania, the Italian Chamber of Deputies, majority of U.S. states, parliaments of Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, Belgium and Wales, National Council of Switzerland, Chamber of Commons of Canada, Polish Sejm, Vatican, European Parliament and the World Council of Churches.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 101 years, A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, Armenian, faith, forbs, Genocide, hope, love

Lebanon Armenian: Genocide recognition is anachronism

January 8, 2016 By administrator

Armenian genocide demondArmenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Dashnaktsutyun Party member, Lebanese Armenian Yervant Pamboukian, believes that Armenian Genocide recognition is now an anachronism.

“We [i.e. Armenians] are only spiritually comforted when we hear that a country has recognized the Genocide,” Pamboukian told Armenian News-NEWS.am. “It’s important that Turkey, US, [and] Great Britain recognize the Genocide, since the state sources of these very countries have documents on the Genocide. The ambassadors of these very countries were the first to gather the materials of that period.

“But we know that they will never recognize the Genocide. [And] the recognition by other countries will not give us anything.”

In the ARF member’s words, Armenians need to move ahead and demand not solely financial reparations, but also the lands they have lost.

“Today, the Armenian authorities and the [Armenian] diaspora organizations need to develop and submit a [respective] joint resolution,” Yervant Pamboukian added. “Otherwise, the rest is a consolation of a burned heart.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, Armenian, Genocide

To Baptize or Not to Baptize the Hidden Armenians in Turkey

August 15, 2015 By administrator

Diyarbakir Armenians baptized at Etchmiadzin in August 2014 (Photo by Gulisor Akkum/The Armenian Weekly)

Diyarbakir Armenians baptized at Etchmiadzin in August 2014 (Photo by Gulisor Akkum/The Armenian Weekly)

BY RAFFI BEDROSYAN

FROM THE ARMENIAN WEEKLY

Along with the many high points experienced during the historic Armenia trip of the 80 hidden Armenians from Turkey, there were also a few low points. The highs included warm welcomes by both Armenian government officials and common people on the street, emotional triumphs at Sardarabad, feelings of grief at the Genocide Museum, new-found friendships, accomplishments like spelling the alphabet during Armenian language classes, or simply being able to order food in Armenian at a restaurant. However, I want to point out a few of the lows our hidden Armenians encountered—all related to baptism.

Among the members of our group, two girls from Dersim and a young man from Diyarbakir wished to be baptized. Unfortunately, at the end of the day, their wish did not come true.

In recent days, Armenian media—both in the Diaspora and in Armenia—ran headline news and opinion pieces on this topic. Various individuals gave press conferences; people opined on TV; statements were released by the church, government, Diaspora organizations, and political parties; while heated debates on social media argued both for and against the decision to refuse the baptisms.

As the organizer of the group whose three members wished to be baptized, and as the designated godfather or “gnkahayr” for these baptisms, I would like to provide a first-hand account of what really happened, why it happened, and what we should do to avoid such scandals in the future.

One may recall that during the trip I organized last year for the 50 hidden Armenians from Diyarbakir to Armenia, we witnessed the baptisms of a man and a woman in Etchmiadzin. The man was a teacher in a public school in Diyarbakir. This year, he brought his son to Armenia to extend the process of returning to Armenian roots to the next generation. The woman baptized last year, on the other hand, had an even more ominous challenge. Her husband, a devout Moslem Kurd, had forbidden her from taking such a step. She nevertheless decided to convert to Christianity to keep her promise to her hidden Armenian father, who had asked her to become a Christian Armenian at his deathbed. I am also pleased to report that she and her husband are still happily married, and are now bravely facing the challenge of how to raise their child together—whether as an Armenian, a Kurd, a Christian, or a Moslem.

Therefore, this year when three members of our group approached me with their wish to be baptized, I thought—perhaps naively—that again I can go ahead and arrange the baptisms for the day we visit Etchmiadzin. The two Dersimtsi girls would take the names Anahit and Nairi, and the Dikranagerdtsi man from Diyarbakir would become Madteos Paramaz. One of the Dersim girls had a brother who was already baptized last year. The Dikranagerdsi man was a distant relative of the family involved in the reconstruction of the Surp Giragos Church in Diyarbakir.

Unfortunately, the baptisms could neither happen in Echmiadzin, nor in the Khor Virab Church the next day, nor in Surp Hovhannes Church in Yerevan the following day. The explanations given to us were as varied as the clerics involved. Some said we had to apply in writing months in advance; then, the applications would be reviewed by a religious council before permission could be considered. Others said we needed to bring a letter from the Istanbul Acting Patriarch Archbisop Aram Atesyan granting permission for the baptisms. One cleric suggested the candidates must visit Armenia at least three times before being eligible. An even more preposterous suggestion came from a cleric who wondered why we don’t go to churches in Turkey since those wishing to be baptized are all from Turkey, instead of causing headaches for him and his superiors. I didn’t bother telling him that although there are churches in Istanbul, no churches are left in historic Armenia except the one we reconstructed in Diyarbakir. Overall, these clerics seemed to be unprepared as to how to deal with the baptism requests and had to make endless calls to their superiors for a decision, which either did not come or was ultimately negative. In any case, they would still lead us on, that by tomorrow, there may be a positive decision. So, each day—with our hopes high, after buying the required towels, crosses, and headscarves for the girls—we would face renewed disappointment. Even the intervention of the Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan did not achieve the desired outcome.

An even more upsetting development was the zeal of critics to use this incident to start misguided attacks. Rather than criticize the decision itself or the persons who made the decision, we have individuals appearing at press conferences and on TV, or writing articles in newspapers, attacking the Armenian Church, the Ministry of Diaspora, and the government in general. One organization called Republic of Western Armenia even went as far as issuing fictitious citizenship and identification cards with the baptized names printed on them, displaying the cards with a fictitious flag, name, and photo at press conferences and on TV. It seems these people forget or don’t care that the two Dersim girls and the Diyarbakir man will return to Turkey, will continue living among Moslem Turks and Kurds, with their names paraded on a fictitious republic’s fake citizenship cards. Do they have the right to jeopardize the lives of these already endangered persons? Or for that matter, do any of these opinion makers, who pass along all sorts of judgment in the media, care about the emotions of these three young people who had made such a personal decision as changing their faith, their religion?

The hidden Armenians have no control over their ethnic roots, their genetic identity—they were given no choice. They were born as Armenians, even though the fact that they are Armenians was not revealed to them until later in life. Some of them have now made a conscious decision to return to their ethnic roots. But changing religion by converting to Christianity is an entirely different matter. No one is born with a religion—Christian or Moslem. Religion is not a genetic identity but a faith acquired by personal choice and through family. If someone has made the decision to become Christian through baptism, there should be no individual, no institution, or no force to prevent that from happening—especially in the case of hidden Armenians, who are taking a risk by revealing their Armenian identity, and by converting to Christianity. If the reason for these increasingly difficult barriers that prevent baptisms is misgivings of abuse, there should be other ways of dealing with them quickly and without delay. Sure, there could be some Moslem Turks or Kurds just pretending to be hidden Armenians. There could be others who have no intention of becoming Christian Armenian and who are getting baptized to gain some sort of advantage, such as employment or a way out of Turkey and into Europe or the Americas. However, these exceptions should not lead to draconian rules and regulations for all others who genuinely want to become Christian. Moreover, why do we have godfathers? The role of the godfather is to assure the Church that the person being baptized is eligible and worthy of baptism, and there should be no excuse or delay by the cleric for further investigation.

The objective of Project Rebirth is to help the hidden Armenians think, feel, and act as Armenians. Our work will continue regardless of the barriers placed by certain people. Whether these hidden Armenians become Christian or not, they have decided to return to their Armenian roots, and we will continue encouraging them. It would be ideal if the Church also fulfils its duty in encouraging them to become Christian Armenians, but if not, it is still alright. After all, Armenians were Armenians for centuries before they adopted Christianity.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, Baptize, hidden armenians, Turkey

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