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gagrule.net congratulate Asbarez on 108 years anniversary

August 15, 2016 By administrator

asbarez-108

The first issue of Asbarez published on August 14, 1908

The Asbarez newspaper marks its 108th anniversary today, Sunday, we wish them a happy anniversary.
Pictured is the front page of our first edition published on Aug. 14, 1908, in Fresno

From Archives
Read a first-person account of how Asbarez was founded (Published, August 14, 2008)

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: 108th, anniversary, asbarez, marks, newspaper

Today marks 21st anniversary of Armenia’s Constitution

July 5, 2016 By administrator

Armenian constitution dayJuly the 5th is annually celebrated as the Day of Constitution in Armenia.
The independent republic adopted its basic law in the wake of a universal referendum in 1995. This anniversary, however, is different from all the previous ones, as the country has now made a transition to the parliamentary form of government. After the 2015 constitutional referendum, Armenia practically adopted a new model of forming parliament, switching over to the 100% proportional representation system.
Although December 6, 2015 is officially known to be the new Constitution’s effective date, the transitional provisions contained therein make the state and society still feel somewhat “between” two constitutions.
The new Constitution was first enforced in February when the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on State and Legal Affairs elected the ombudsman. It will be implemented a second time during the local government elections in Yerevan and the second largest city of Gyumri. The new procedure requires that only political parties run for elections with proportional representation ballots.
Speaking to Tert.am, Edmon Marukuyan, a parliament member who is a lawyer by profession, said he sees differences between the Constitution’s text and the mechanisms of implementation. “[A lot depends on] who is responsible for the implementation and what political elite they shape ‘to bring the text to life’,” he said, not ruling out the possibility of discrepancies.
Marukyan stressed the importance of interpreting and implementing the basic law in good faith, admitting at the same time that the Republican Party of Armenia, as the only governing political force, has predominant positions over the other parties.
According to Artak Zeynalyan, a public and political figure specializing in legal studies, Armenia needs “two democratic elections” to give life to the new Constitution. In his words, officials still keep violating the basic law, ignoring particularly Article 3 thereof (establishing state guarantees to ensure fundamental human rights and freedoms).

Arthur Ghazinyan, the founder and head of the Yerevan State University’s Center for European Studies, says despite the Constitution’s 20-year history and the recent referendum, constitutional life hasn’t yet become constitutionalized among the citizens of Armenia.
“Constitution is not yet being perceived as a normative [legal] act regulating routine life in the human-to-human relationship or human-state dialogue. We haven’t to date developed that understanding; that’s a deep-rooted problem that has to be resolved over the course of years. And although the Constitution is cited in all the debates, people do not perceive and understand it. The population needs to understand that the constitution is the key normative act regulating their  routine life as it does in Europe and the United States,” Ghazinyan added.

 

Anush Dashtents

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anniversary, Armenia’s, Constitution, marks 21st, today

Armenian Independence Declaration marks 25th anniversary

August 23, 2015 By administrator

Armenian Independence Declaration marks 25th anniversary

Armenian Independence Declaration marks 25th anniversary

Today, August 23, marks the 25th anniversary of adoption of the Declaration of Armenia’s Independence.

On August 23, 1990, the Supreme Council of Armenia adopted the Declaration thus proclaiming the start of formation of an independent state.

In an interview with Tert.am, Aram Manukyan, who read out the Independence Declaration 25 years ago, said that he feel s both proud and sorry every time he thinks of the document because it is not being properly presented to generations.

“The document was the result of the national liberation movement of the Soviet times, when the Supreme Council elected by means of free elections unanimously adopted a historical document that has never been criticized by anyone nor can it be,” he said.

Regrettably, the document has been in oblivion for the last 15 years.

“The values incorporated in it have not at all been a prayer book or ideal for authorities because authorities are living in an entirely different world with entirely different values.  Those who adopted the document lived an entirely different world with entirely different moral values,” Mr Manukyan said.

Speaking of the historic significance of the document, Mr Manukyan said:

“The historical value of the document is that its 12 provisions contain about 40 principles that are our people’s dreams collected in one document.”

A year later, on September 21, 1991, the Supreme Council of Armenia decided on a referendum on secession from the Soviet Union and Armenia’s state independence. 94.99% of Armenian citizens voted for independence.

Source: tert.am

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 25th, anniversary, Armenian, day, independence

May 18 marks 23rd anniversary of Berdzor liberation

May 18, 2015 By administrator

19226922 years ago, on May 18, 1992, the defense army of Artsakh liberated Lachin (now Berdzor), with the move becoming a military, political and psychological victory.

After liberation of Shushi, Armenian forces had a new goal – to cleave the Road of Life at the shortest section between Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia, since Karabakh was under conditions of severe economic blockade.

Electricity and gas supplies were halted. Ammunition, food and medicine were delivered from Armenia by civil aviation, the flight becoming possible after liberation of Khojalu, where the only airport in Karabakh was located.

On May 13, 1992, Armenian forces continued concentrating near Zarasly settlement located between Shushi and Lachin. The communication with Lachin was cut off, while its hospital, school and building of local administration were destructed.

On May 15, Armenian detachments attacked upland Gulablu settlement of Aghdam region. Azerbaijani troops, which had numerical and positional advantages, repelled the attack. The enemy’s army fired at civilians of Stepanakert and other Armenian settlements from high levels of Gulablu.

On May 17, Armenian forces rebuffed the Azerbaijani army’s attack on Shushi. According to the NKR defense army, fire exchange took place in Lachin between the Azerbaijani armed detachments and local Kurds. However, as soon as traffic through a bypass road from Berdzor to Goris region was resumed, the Azerbaijani detachments started urgently leaving Lachin.

On May 18, Armenian Defense Minister Vazgen Sargsyan told the parliament of Armenia that the road linking Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia is open. A representative of the Azerbaijani defense ministry admitted the fall of Lachin later on May 18.

Berdzor, the center of Kashatagh region with a population of 9800, continues to serve as the Road of Life connecting Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anniversary, Berdzor, Karabakh, liberation

100th Anniversary Of Armenian Genocide Reflects A Politically Inconvenient Reality

May 18, 2015 By administrator

By Jeffrey Cavanaugh | May 18, 2015
An Armenian woman kneeling beside a dead child in field “within sight of help and safety at Aleppo

An Armenian woman kneeling beside a dead child in field “within sight of help and safety at Aleppo

A massacre can be termed genocide in one country, an atrocity in another, or something barely worth mentioning in a third. But at what point can we all agree to use the “G”-word? The answer to that question is largely a political matter.

The recent passing of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide is a reminder that not all tragedies are counted the same, and that politics, both at home and abroad, can color our interpretation of history.

In modern Turkey, mention of the genocide is politically unpopular both inside and outside of government. Although officials today admit that atrocities took place, Turkish officialdom insists they were neither planned nor systematically coordinated so as to eradicate the Armenian population. Meanwhile, the vast majority of Turks agree that their country should not label what happened to its Armenian population in 1915 a genocide nor apologize for it.

Such are feelings on the matter in the Republic of Turkey that states wishing to do business with Ankara are well advised to avoid mentioning the “G”-word. Here in the United States, for instance, President Obama pointedly avoided calling the killing of 1.5 million Armenians a genocide even though there was some debate on the issue inside the White House. Instead, he used the term “great calamity,” which sounds like 1.5 million people were killed by accident via happenstance — they were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time, so to speak.

Even U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, not usually one to sound tougher on an issue, used the slightly more descriptive term “atrocity crimes” to describe the genocide.

Israel, which has tried hard to maintain good relations with Turkey in order to balance against its generally unfriendly neighbors, has also tread lightly when it comes to calling a genocidal spade a spade. Officially, Israel, like many more powerful countries, neither recognizes nor denies the Armenian genocide. And although though the Knesset has a debate on the issue every year, the body does not seem likely to change its position any time soon. Given that the founding of the State of Israel was in no small part due to the perpetration of a similar crime against European Jews, Israeli ambivalence on the subject is perhaps the most poignant reminder that national interests nearly always trump historical fact when said facts are entirely too inconvenient.

Other crimes, other times, other places

This tendency to avoid calling something what it is doesn’t just apply after the fact, either. During the Rwandan genocide, for instance, the White House told officials to avoid the use of the “G”-word during that mass slaughter in central Africa and use the euphemism “acts of genocide” instead, although just how many acts were required before a genocide could be labeled as such wasn’t something the Clinton administration was willing to say.

Lest one think this is a problem that only Democratic presidents have, during the Bush years there was also resistance to using the term to describe the goings-on in Sudan’s Darfur region until then-Secretary of State Colin Powell decided to finally call it out as such in 2004.

So, in the recent past, we have three examples of when a genocide is a genocide and when it is something different. Are there others? During the savage little Balkan wars in the 1990s and early 2000s, for instance, the term “ethnic cleansing” was more commonly used, given that atrocities were used to clear unwanted elements from certain territories rather than to eliminate a population entirely. What difference that made to the people on the ground seems rather academic, however. Likewise with the Kurds in Iraq during the 1980s, although when Saddam Hussein finally became an enemy of the U.S. after the 1990s we were quick to pin that label on Baghdad’s actions, too.

Curiously, that tends to be the case with a lot of massacres. When Cambodians were slaughtered by the hundreds of thousands by the half-mad Pol Pot and his merry band of Khmer Rouge killers — that was deemed genocide. On the other hand, when Indonesia invaded and occupied East Timor and slaughtered as much of its population as it could, that was something different, as was Jakarta’s earlier mass killing of political opponents in 1965-66. Same, too, in Central America during the 1980s, when peasants and Indians were massacred on a grand scale by right-wing regimes in Guatemala and El Salvador.

Truth is always the first casualty

This tendency to call politically inconvenient violence something other than what it happens to be is endemic to politics, regardless of who is doing the killing or trying to justify or ignore it. All countries do it, and it stems from a basic form of motivated reasoning that is simply part of human psychology. Put very simply: We ascribe good motivations and actions to our own actions and those of our friends, and bad motivations and actions to those who are our adversaries. Thus, a massacre can be termed genocide in one country, an atrocity in another, or something barely worth mentioning in a third. The truth of a given event, as always when it comes to politics, is usually a matter of perspective, regardless of how many people are actually killed.

Understanding this tendency should therefore be front and center when thinking of these grim events as well as the politics that lead up to them. We must accept, no matter how hard it is, that we are not always the “good guys” in our own story. And, indeed, it takes brutal honesty to admit when one’s own country has committed terrible sins in the name of domestic politics or international advantage. After all, no one wants to play the villain, least of all those who have so much to gain, both materially and psychologically, from being the good guy.

So, when you turn on the evening news or read about some terrible conflict in some faraway place, understand that you’re receiving at best an incomplete picture and that we quite often see what we want to believe. This is especially the case when reports from our own media come in about atrocities committed by our adversaries and crimes committed by our own government and allies. Our media almost inevitably plays up reports of the first kind, but downplays the actions of the second.

Being cynical about one’s own side may not make one popular, as those Turks who accept the reality of the Armenian genocide can no doubt attest, but it puts one far closer to the truth that most would readily admit.

Source: mint press news.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 100th, anniversary, Armenian, Genoci Politically, Inconvenient, Realityv

In Syria, Damascus, Armenian mark the 100th anniversary of the mass killing of Armenians

April 25, 2015 By administrator

Syrian Armenian scouts carry Syrian and Armenian national flags as they march in the old city of DamascusIn Syria, a country that continues to enjoy a difficult relationship with present-day Turkey, masses were held in Damascus and Aleppo.
Syrian Armenian scouts carry a Syrian and an Armenian national flags as they march in the old city of Damascus, April 23, 2015, to mark the 100th anniversary of the mass killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915. Picture taken April 23, 2015. (Reuters/Omar Sanadiki)

Filed Under: Articles, Events, Genocide Tagged With: 100th, anniversary, Armenian, Damascus.

Toronto Star: Armenian Genocide: 100th anniversary of a ‘great catastrophe’

April 19, 2015 By administrator

Up to 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of the Ottoman Empire in 1915. One hundred years later, the wounds have not healed.

By: Olivia Ward Foreign Affairs Reporter

illustrationjpg.jpg.size.xxlarge.promoIn 1915, the Ottoman Empire’s Armenians were declared enemies of the state by the ruling junta of ultranationalists, who denounced them as supporters of their wartime foe, Russia.

Even in the dark depths of the First World War, what followed was unique in its calculating brutality.

Fiercely denied by the Turkish government, it would be denounced as the 20th century’s first genocide: an organized attempt to ethnically cleanse the Armenians from their homeland. By the time the massacres and deportations were done, as many as 1.5 million men, women and children had perished.

On April 24, Armenians throughout the world will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the event that destroyed their families, pillaged their patrimony and set them adrift with few, if any, mementos of their past.

A century later, the world is closer to understanding the facts of the “great catastrophe” that befell the Armenians, as histories of the massive killings have swelled.

In Turkey, the history is hazier.

“What happened in 1915 is the collective secret of Turkish society, and the genocide has been relegated to the black hole of our collective memory,” says Turkish writer Taner Akcam in a foreword to Turkey and the Armenian Ghost.

“Confronting our history means questioning everything — our social institutions, mindset, beliefs, culture, even the language we speak. Our society will have to closely re-examine its own self-image.”

As recently as this week, Turkey sharply criticized the Vatican after the Pope denounced the massacres as genocide, calling on all heads of state to recognize it and oppose such crimes “without ceding to ambiguity or compromise.”

More than 20 countries, including Canada, have passed bills recognizing the killings as genocide. The U.S. does not officially recognize the term, although President Barack Obama had used it before his election.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 100th, a survivor of the Armenian Genocide in The World, anniversary, Armenian, Genocide

NY: Times Square 100th Anniversary Commemoration of Armenian Genocide April 26

April 18, 2015 By administrator

TS-2-300x200NEW YORK—The 100th anniversary commemoration of the Armenian Genocide will be held in Times Square (43rd St. and Broadway) on April 26, beginning at 1:45 p.m. This historic event will pay tribute to the 1.5 million Armenians who were massacred by the Young Turk government of the Ottoman Empire and to the millions of victims of subsequent genocides worldwide.

The Divine Liturgy and Times Square program will begin with church services at 10 am at St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral, located at 630 Second Ave. at 34th St. His Eminence Archbishop Khajag Barsamian will serve as celebrant and His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan as homilist. The procession to Times Square will start at 12 p.m. and the program, which will feature speakers from the political, media, and scholarly fields, will begin at 1:45 p.m. Acclaimed Armenian-American musician Sebu Simonian from the Los Angeles-based indie pop band “Capital Cities” will be a guest performer, while Dr. Stephen Smith, executive director of the USC Shoah Foundation, will serve as keynote speaker. The Areni Choir will also take part in the commemoration.

For parishes organizing transportation to New York, buses should drop off passengers at 2nd Ave. and park on 35th St. (between 1st and 2nd Ave.). Buses will depart for Times Square following services and park on 42nd St. (between 6th Ave. and Broadway). Passengers will be picked up from Times Square (at 43rd St. and Broadway, between 4:30 and 5 p.m.) Sandwiches will be available after services. All events will move forward, rain or shine.

For more information, contact Edward Barsamian (procession) at (347) 556-2666; Leo Manuelian (buses) at (917) 418-3940; Sona Manuelian (buses) at (551) 427-8763; Edward Boladian (floats) at (917) 885-0221; and Tigran Sahakyan (volunteers) at (212) 444-8003.

The 2015 Genocide Commemoration in Times Square is organized by the Mid-Atlantic Knights and Daughters of Vartan in affiliation with the Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee of America (Eastern Region).

This event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit www.april24nyc.com.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 100th, anniversary, commemoration, NY, Times-Square

Centennial renews K Street brawl over Armenian ‘genocide’ resolution

March 25, 2015 By administrator

By Megan R. Wilson – 03/25/15 06:00 AM EDT

Getty Images

Getty Images

Lawmakers in the House are pushing to mark the 100th anniversary of mass killings of Armenians during World War I with a controversial resolution that would officially label it an act of genocide. Report thehill.com

Coming at the centennial, the proposal — which dates back decades — has reignited a lobbying battle, with each side more resolved than ever.

“We’re going to see a level of grassroots activism all across the country that will be unprecedented: huge marches and protests and commemorations, a national campaign to try and move the Congress and the president to recognize the genocide on its centennial,” said Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), one of the resolution’s initial sponsors. “If not after a hundred years, then when?”

Opponents of the measure, led by the Turkish government, have supporters outmatched.

Turkey recognized last year that Armenians faced “inhumane” treatment at the hands of the Ottoman Empire, but its leaders refuse to refer to the mass killings that began in 1915 as genocide.

Unsatisfied, the Armenian National Committee of America spent $120,000 last year lobbying the U.S. government, the most it has spent in at least seven years.

Since 2006, the group has spent $840,000, according to records.

But before lawmakers introduced the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution last week, Turkey renewed its contract with Gephardt Government Affairs, run by former House Democratic Leader Dick Gephardt (Mo.), for $1.7 million.

Signed on March 1, the contract also includes payments to four other firms working on behalf of the Turkish government, including Dickstein Shapiro and Greenburg Traurig. The two firms enlist help from former Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.), former Sen. Tim Hutchinson (R-Ark.) and former Rep. Albert Wynn (D-Md.).

Armenian groups also have public relations operations in place, something the resolution’s supporters hope will make a difference.

“There’s going to be a lot more attention this year,” Aram Hamparian, the executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America said of the events planned to mark the centennial. “Issues like this — human rights issues — tend to do well in the spotlight. They tend to be defeated in the shadows when no one’s looking.”

The issue has been debated in Congress for three decades. Although the resolution has never come to a full vote in Congress, it received as many as 212 co-sponsors in 2007. In 2010, it had under 200. This month, it was introduced in the House with 43.

Rep. Bill Shuster (R-Pa.) is passing around a “Dear Colleague” letter to urge members not to support the nonbinding resolution. He says its adoption would be “cataclysmic.”

Turkey, a strategic U.S. ally in the Middle East, lobbies on many issues involving its reputation and relationships with American politicians and groups. But its outspoken disapproval of the term “genocide” to describe the mass killings has garnered the most attention. Since 2008, the Turkish government has paid lobbyists more than $12 million.

“Every cycle of Congress, there is a draft resolution,” a Turkish official, who requested anonymity to speak freely, told The Hill.

“We are not happy, because our position has not changed, in two ways:

The fact that [the resolution] does not help anyway, to bring a fair memory or to actually bring reconciliation between Turks and Armenians,” the official said. “To politicize a debate is not helpful at all. … The two communities have suffered.”

A new U.S.-based advocacy organization, Turkish Institute for Progress, recently registered with Levick — and former Rep. Connie Mack (R-Fla.) — to lobby on its behalf in regards to Turkish-Armenian relations. While it does not agree with the resolution, the group said it would not be lobbying against it.

“We believe the resolution introduced last week is shortsighted and only serves to exacerbate the division between two countries that have so many strategic and economic interests in common,” said Derya Taskin, the president of the organization, in an email.

However, the dispute between the two countries may not be solved without a more public debate.

“We are confident that, as has been the case for the 30 years, the U.S. Congress will do the right thing and not get involved in this historical debate,” the Turkish official said.

“The genocide issue is the central issue between the Armenian and Turkish peoples,” said Hamparian. “Ignoring it, or forcing others into silence about it has not worked. It’s beyond being just being morally wrong; it practically hasn’t worked.”

This April marks 100 years since the Ottoman Empire, partly composed of present-day Turkey, began a massacre and relocation of ethnic Armenians, whom it accused of supporting its Russian enemies in World War I. More than 1 million people perished.

How the events are described has caused tension, not only between the two countries but between those countries and the U.S.

As a senator and presidential candidate, Barack Obama promised to be the first commander in chief in 30 years to use the term “genocide” to describe the killings. However, since being elected president, he has avoided the word.

Opponents have said that referring to the events as an act of genocide, which is a punishable crime, as opposed to an act of war could cause an undue rift between the United States and Turkey. In past years, Turkey has threatened to recall its U.S. ambassador and restrict U.S. access to a geographically important military base.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 100th, anniversary, armenian genocide, resolution

Today marks first anniversary of Turkish Jihadist invasion of Kessab

March 21, 2015 By administrator

f550d5a69136a6_550d5a69136e1.thumbToday marks the first anniversary of the Islamist attacks in Syria’s Armenian-populated town of Kessab.

The event captured the international media’s attention shortly after the town was controlled by rebel groups.

One year after the heated developments, the Kessab-Armenians are back home, but many say the town has lost its previous image.

Tireless efforts will be needed to restore the town looted and partially destroyed by insurgents, but the local Armenians say they aren’t willing to leave their homes.

Today too, repeated shootings are heard in Kessab, driving he panic-stricken population – especially women and children – to the port city of Latakia. The one-time prosperous town is now under target, with people in fear of even working in their own gardens.

Situated at a distance of 8km from the Mediterranean, Kessab has a population of an estimated 5,000, of whom 80% are Armenians.

The Turkish border town of Yayladagi (from where the shootings began) is just 3km far from there.
Kessab-Armenians claim Turkey’s direct involvement in the attacks.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anniversary, islamist, Kessab, Turkish

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