Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

Turkey Continues Campaign of Denial at Lecture in OC

June 17, 2016 By administrator

turkish ambassador LAMISSION VIEJO—On the eve of Germany’s recognition of the Armenian Genocide, Turkish Consul General of Los Angeles, Raife Gulru Gezer, continued Turkey’s campaign of denial during a presentation hosted by the World Affairs Council of Orange County (WACOC).

During her presentation, she discussed the Syrian refugee crisis and Turkey’s humanitarian efforts in the region, claiming Turkey was actually helping millions of Syrian refugees. She omitted discussing Turkey’s relations with ISIS (Dayesh), the strained relations with Russia and Israel and failed in her attempt to portray the Republic of Turkey and Erdogan as compassionate and caring champions of human rights.

At the end of the presentation, as is customary during WACOC event, attendees wrote their questions on cards and submitted them for the moderator to read aloud.

When asked about land records and deeds, and personal property belonging to Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians that had been lost during World War I and the Armenian Genocide, the Gezer’s response was dismissive: she simply stated that in times of war property is lost and gained by many people.

When asked about Turkey’s terrible record with countless journalists in jail, she reached for a handbook under the podium and read aloud the number of journalists in prison and arrogantly stated their incarceration is due to doing more than reporting facts as a journalist.

The Consul General was also asked how Turkey reconciles its position regarding the Armenian Genocide with the fact that the architects of the Genocide, Talaat, Enver and Jemal Pashas were tried and convicted in Turkey for war crimes and mass killing of Armenians, and sentenced to death in Absentia. Her response was that that the three pashas were acquitted of committing many crimes.

Finally, when asked about the Armenian Genocide and Turkey’s continued campaign of denial in light of world opinion and historical fact, she took a stern approach and restated the Republic of Turkey’s policy of denial as she stared down a few of the Armenians that were present. After which the Armenians left the event in protest.

Prior to the presentation, an Armenian woman was singled out by the numerous attendees of Turkish descent in an attempt to intimidate her and force her to leave. She was quietly seated at her table with the Orange County Board of Supervisors who passed a resolution designating April 24 as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day when a Turkish woman started arguing about the resolution stating that it was offensive. The Armenian woman responded by saying Turkey’s denial of the Genocide is offensive and that it would be best for the two of them to not talk.

Soon after, others attempted to engage the Armenian woman in an aggressive manner. Some complained to the WACOC and venue’s management who came to her table to warn that police were on their way, suggesting she should leave. She was told it was a private event, and that the organizers had complained even though the Armenian woman was a member and purchased her ticket. WACOC board members, including the chairwoman, helped deescalate the situation while defending the Armenian woman’s right to be present and ask questions.

Unfortunately, the Armenian woman was a victim of ethnic persecution here in the United States just as Armenians continue to be victims in Turkey, where even members of parliament such as Garo Palyan are attacked simply for being Armenian.

The World Affairs Council of Orange County held an event in 2015 during the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide where the ANCA Orange County chapter was one of the sponsors.

Amnesty International Press Release from April 2016 about actual events occurring in Turkey which were omitted in Gezer’s presentation:

“TURKEY: ILLEGAL MASS RETURNS OF SYRIAN REFUGEES EXPOSE FATAL FLAWS IN EU-TURKEY DEAL.

New research carried out by the organization in Turkey’s southern border provinces suggests that Turkish authorities have been rounding up and expelling groups of around 100 Syrian men, women and children to Syria on a near-daily basis since mid-January. Over three days last week, Amnesty International researchers gathered multiple testimonies of large-scale returns from Hatay province, confirming a practice that is an open secret in the region.

It is reported that refugee “registration is required to access basic services. In Gaziantep, Amnesty International met with the son of a woman requiring emergency surgery to save her life but who was denied the ability to register – and therefore have the surgery. She eventually was able to register elsewhere and receive the life-saving treatment.

All forced returns to Syria are illegal under Turkish, EU and international law.”

For more information on Turkey’s human rights violations, visit:  

Amnesty International: http://www.amnestyusa.org/our-work/countries/europe/turkey

Human Rights Watch: https://www.hrw.org/europe/central-asia/turkey

Reporters without Borders: https://rsf.org/en/turkey

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: denial, Genocide, Lecture, Turkey

Germany’s century-long struggle with the Armenian genocide – Jerusalem Post

June 14, 2016 By administrator

f575ffdf6747a7_575ffdf6747e2.thumb

By Stefan Ihrig,  historian at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, book Atatürk in the Nazi Imagination (Harvard University Press, 2014).

The Armenian genocide and the German dimension of it should make us rethink our perception of humanity – what does it mean that people knew of genocide and mass atrocities in progress? And did so already in the years before the Holocaust?

Perhaps Germany’s recent vote to recognize the Armenian genocide as well as its own role in it might come as a surprise to many there as well as abroad. But the Armenian genocide has a long German history. Already over a hundred years ago, in January 1916, the agenda of the German parliament featured a question about the Armenian genocide.

A month earlier the socialist parliament member Karl Liebknecht had submitted a written question to the German chancellor in which he mentioned that Armenians had been “butchered in the hundred thousands”: would Germany would do something for the remaining Armenians now? Liebknecht’s question had come on the heels of a similar request made a few weeks earlier by the Catholic and Protestant Churches of Germany to the chancellor. He had replied that Germany would ensure that nobody suffered from persecution on religious grounds. Political Germany, the Churches and Liebknecht knew that this answer was an outright rejection. People at the time understood what was happening not so much as a religious matter, but rather in terms of national or racial persecution.

When Liebknecht’s question was finally answered in parliament, it turned into a rather disgraceful performance by Germany’s parliamentarians.

After having received another evasive answer, Liebknecht responded that some experts after all spoke of the “extermination of the Armenians.” He was laughed off the stage and treated like a buffoon.

And yet, behind closed doors political Germany knew Liebknecht was right. Since May 1915 German diplomats in the Ottoman Empire had bombarded their Constantinople embassy and Berlin with reports of genocide in progress; many of these diplomats begged their superiors to intervene for the Armenians, to stop genocide, in vain.

After the end of World War I, the German Foreign Office published a collection from precisely this diplomatic correspondence on the Armenians to fend off accusations of German guilt during the Paris peace treaty negotiations. This attempt failed – not least because Germany had done nothing of real import for the Armenians, all the while enabling the Ottoman leadership to carry out genocide – but it kicked off a debate in Germany itself about this “murder of a nation” or “annihilation of the Armenians” which continued in some form until 1923.

This debate took shocking twists and turns: condemnation and denial, trivialization and shock, and finally broad acceptance of the charge of “murder of a nation,” i.e. genocide – only then to have some far-right voices, including the Nazis, to go on to outright justify genocide. All this merely a decade before Hitler came to power – and yes, already then (Jewish) commentators warned of the possible future implications of this shocking genocide debate for the Jews of Germany under Nazi or other radical far-right rule.

Germany’s own checkered history with the violence against the Ottoman Armenians (from the 1890s) is indeed and itself the link between the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust. But this link is not at all necessary for recognizing the Armenian genocide for what it was, and neither are the comparisons to the Holocaust, which have often obscured the unique, intrinsic significance of the Armenian genocide. And often enough these have been used to fend off the application of the label.

The German diplomatic documents, first published in selection in 1919 and now available in expanded editions in German and English (2005 and 2013), edited by former Der Spiegel editor Wolfgang Gust, are the greatest advocates of the label “genocide.” Denialists generally choose to simply ignore the existence of these documents.

This is mainly because there is no easy way to dismiss them and no sensible (denialist) explanation as to why German diplomats would make up reports of genocide, continually so, when these caused such great anxiety in Berlin about the political fallout of genocide right from the start.

Thus a hundred years later, with the Bundestag’s resolution on the Armenian genocide Germany has found a (first) conclusion to its very own hundred-year conflict over the Armenian topic. Thus German parliament did not only deliberate on the history of another country, but made a statement about its own Armenian history. The Armenian genocide is, to some extent, also a German story. It cannot be relegated to the obscurity of specialist historical writing and historiographical debate; it is part of the core experiences and themes of our bloody and traumatic 20th century.

The Armenian genocide and the German dimension of it should make us rethink our perception of humanity – what does it mean that people knew of genocide and mass atrocities in progress? And did so already in the years before the Holocaust? It has long been assumed that there had been silence on the Armenian genocide in interwar Germany and that this silence had been “a signal for the Shoah” – but it turns out the opposite was true. There had been a debate, a real genocide debate (about the extent, intent and implications of this murder of a people). What does this mean for our understanding of the Holocaust? This latest recognition should also make us discuss when and where this bloody 20th century really began. In Eastern Anatolia during the Armenian genocide? In the sands of Libya during the Italo-Turkish War of 1911-1912? Or in German Southwest Africa during the genocide of the Herero and Nama people (1904-07)? Was there not, historically, a trajectory of large-scale violence which led from colonial spaces to the Middle East and Anatolia and from there back to Europe? Parliamentary recognition is not enough (and the Herero and Nama are still waiting for it), but it can be a starting point for coming to terms with a past that is vaster, more complex and so much bloodier than often assumed.

And nothing of this relativizes the Holocaust or minimizes Germany’s guilt and responsibility – quite the contrary.

The author is a historian at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute and the University of Haifa. His most recent books include: Justifying Genocide – Germany and the Armenians from Bismarck to Hitler (Harvard University Press, 2016) and Atatürk in the Nazi Imagination (Harvard University Press, 2014).

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, german, struggle

how Germany was faced with genocide in Article 8?

June 12, 2016 By administrator

how Germany was faced with genocide

how Germany was faced with genocide

(AGOS) In response to the question of how to confront Germany’s genocide in its history, the turning point of the 8 events.

1) financial compensation to Israel

Federal Republic of Germany, three and a half billion marks compensation paid to the State of Israel. This damages the grounds of the Federal Republic of Germany’s first prime minister in 1949, Konrad Adenauer, “National Socialists made possible the injustice against the Jews, we had to possible compensation” meant the words.

The Republic of Turkey of genocide in society with respect to each agenda ‘three T’s (recognition, compensation, land) the taboo refused. Throughout history, every government spokesman, Turkey’s 1915 recognition if the Armenians would demand compensation and land claimed by the community in a ‘created three T’s paranoia.

2) The Berlin Holocaust Memorial ‘

The German government of the time, the Holocaust in the center of the capital Berlin in May 2005. In an area of 19 thousand square meters with a total memory of those who lost their lives in 2711 he built a monument of concrete blocks. 25 million euros in the inauguration of the monument, which is a cost, the 60th anniversary of the Holocaust, was made on 10 May 2005.

Instead of facing Turkey in 1915 with the date of the perpetrators of the names of schools, streets, avenues, boulevards, giving names to honor them is permissible to term. Examples include Istanbul, Talat Pasha Elementary School in Bomonti, İzmir Konak in Talat Pasha Boulevard, we can show the Talat Pasha neighborhood in Kagithane.

3) writing of textbooks

Germany, on the face of the Holocaust, as well as changes in the narrative of the history books of the financial compensation laid increasingly important steps. changes in the curriculum began in the 1980s.

However, the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Turkey took the nationalist language throughout the history of the subject in 1915. The main example, during World War II Soviet Armenian Millet-i is shown as Sadıka his cooperation Union and Turkey that hit his back, claiming that it was an inevitable relocation of the security measures. Three generations, one described in history books ‘betrayed’ the story read, continues reading.

4) Israel alliance

Since 1948 the establishment of the State of Israel, Germany and Israel, the location of the most important allies of one another.

Turkey, however, by means of the Karabakh problem between Armenia and Azerbaijan closed its border with Armenia in the middle of the 1990s. The two countries are still off limits.

5) the uniqueness of the Holocaust

German Bundestag last week, as the voting offers the Armenian Genocide bill also stated in the text of the Holocaust sees as the biggest massacres of the 20th century and said, “We are aware of the Holocaust’s uniqueness as Germany’s guilty and be responsible,” he says.

Turkey, with the description of it as he denied the genocide Genocide we do, we defend the homeland ‘does form. Some nationalist politicians in the country a step beyond this discourse, “Today, though, we still do,” able to express their views.

6) Holocaust denial a crime

Holocaust denial is considered a crime in Germany. Those who disbelieve are sentenced to many different forms of imprisonment in criminal fines.

In Turkey the situation is not very encouraging. Beyond the usual state of denial of the 1915 genocide to take in the countries concerned ‘with Unfounded Armenian Allegations Against Association’ (the ASİMD) and ‘Unfounded Genocide Allegations Against Association’ (Asimed) has named associations.

7) Willy Brandt kneeling in

7 December 1970 to West German Chancellor Willy Brandt kneeling in front of the Warsaw Ghetto memorial for the victims was a historic turning point. Germany, on behalf of the Holocaust to confront the past and not to forget

Republic of Turkey and the government of any political step on 1915’l They can not kick until the last period, the condolence message by running the last two years, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. However, in the case of joint and mutual bitter war üzerineyk main emphasis in the message, do not even bet the perpetrator and responsible in the message.

8) Tell me hate Discriminatory language

Germany in the Holocaust process leading to the totalitarian regimes and discriminatory language in the service of the regime carefully the mouths of ministers extracted states ‘Armenian offspring’ discourse has spread Kurds during Sur and attacks in Cizre for people in special operation in the announcement show still target over the Armenian word is experiencing. discriminatory language in the state discourse; the press, blatantly reproduced in various media of popular culture, especially football.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: faced, Genocide, Germany

Michel Marian: With the German conviction, Turkey had not heard the last of the #ArmenianGenocide

June 12, 2016 By administrator

genocide germany moreA very unpleasant surprise for the Turkish government: this has been the vote on 2 June 2016, unanimously with two votes, the Bundestag condemning genocide “committed by the government of Young Turks against the Armenians in 1915 and other Christian minorities. “

Ankara, and particularly President Erdogan could indeed estimate have pulled quite cheaply centenary celebrations in 2015. There had been, indeed, around the world, many more ceremonies, conferences, declarations, of media events recalling the genocide in an ordinary year. But they did not produce any additional diplomatic pressure on Ankara, which had pretty well accept that his continued denial does not make scandal.

read more, see link below

Sunday, June 12, 2016,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com
Other information available: on Slate.fr

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Germany, Turkey

Spain’s Mérida city recognizes Armenian Genocide

June 11, 2016 By administrator

merida cityMérida city of Spain officially recognized and condemned the Armenian Genocide on June 9.

All the four political forces of the City Council unanimously approved the petition of Ararat Armenian Union, Armenian MFA press-service reports.

The adopted institutional statement qualifies the 1915-23 events as a crime against humanity and first genocide of the 20th century.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Mérida, Recognizes, Spain’s

Rhode Island Senate Bill Mandates Armenian Genocide Instruction in Public Schools

June 10, 2016 By administrator

rhode island senateRhodePROVIDENCE, R.I.—The Rhode Island Senate on Wednesday approved a bill that would mandate the teaching of the Holocaust and other genocides, including the Armenian Genocide, in public middle schools and high schools across the state.

The Providence Journal http://www.providencejournal.com/news/20160608/bill-mandating-holocaust-genocide-instruction-advances-in-ri-senate/?Start=1reported that the bill passed unanimously and along with the Armenian Genocide would include curriculum on the Cambodia, Rwanda and Darfur genocides.

If approved, teaching is required to begin in the 2017-18 school year. The House passed a duplicate bill in early May, reported the Providence Journal.

A coalition made up of members of the Armenian community, Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, Rhode Island State Council of Churches, the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island and the Sandra Bornstein Holocaust Education Center have been meeting since last fall to research and draft the legislation.

The lead sponsor of the bill is Sen. Gayle L. Goldin, D-Providence, who said on Monday: “When we look at what’s going on globally, the impact of war and strife, it’s important to place them in a larger historical context, so our children understand the long-term impact of genocides and the Holocaust, so we don’t repeat that history.”

Sen. Donna M. Nesselbush, D-Pawtucket, North Providence, said her district was recently hit by anti-Semitism: a spray-painted swastika was found outside an Orthodox synagogue in Pawtucket.

“There is no room for that kind of hatred in our communities,” Nesselbush said before the vote, “and we will do everything, in addition to this bill, to root it out of our communities.”

Similar measures have been passed or enacted in California, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Genocide, Rhode Island, Senate, teachin

Ballet dedicated to Armenian Genocide wins Emmy Award Video

June 10, 2016 By administrator

ballet for GenocideA ballet titled “Meran Vor Aprink” (They Died So We May Live), dedicated to the Armenian Genocide, was honored with television’s prestigious Emmy Award at the 45th Annual Emmy Awards 2016 Ceremony. The Emmys were presented to the film’s Executive Producers, Diane and Charles Paskerian, Asbarez reported.

The Emmy Award is presented for outstanding achievement in television by The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS), San Francisco Northern California Chapter, including Hawaii, Reno, and Sacramento, Oregon. This year there was a record number of 757 English and 179 Spanish entries in 67 categories. “Meron Vor Abrink” was listed under the Arts/Entertainment-Program/Special category.

Davit Karapetyan, Principle Dancer with the San Francisco Ballet, was so inspired when he saw San Francisco’s Armenian Genocide Memorial “Mount Davidson Cross” for the first time, he envisioned choreographing a 100th Genocide Ballet Dance Video as a “Tribute to the Survival of our Ancestors through creative dance and music. We agreed to raise necessary funds for talent and crew….and the “creative process began!”

The ballet took over a year to produce, with original choreography by Davit Karapetyan, fourteen San Francisco Ballet dancers including Karapetyan, Vanessa Zahorian, and a crew of 23. Writing, editing, and development input was done by Diane and Charles Paskerian. Filming took place at Baker’s Beach and the Mount Davidson Cross.

The video project was enthusiastically endorsed by the Bay Area Centennial Committee and the Council of Armenian American Organizations of the Bay Area. The Council is charged with maintaining and supporting the Armenian Genocide Memorial Cross at Mount Davidson, the home of the Annual San Francisco Easter Sunrise Service for almost 100 years, and supporting Armenian Genocide education. The historical cross is the tallest Armenian Genocide Monument in the World.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, award, ballet, Emmy, Genocide, wins

Having Admitted Complicity in Genocide, Germany Should Now Compensate Armenians

June 8, 2016 By administrator

harut-sassounianBY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

Despite ‘Sultan’ Erdogan’s insults and threats, the German Parliament went boldly forward last week and recognized the Armenian Genocide. In retaliation, Turkey immediately withdrew its ambassador from Berlin.

The historic Bundestag resolution, adopted with a near unanimous decision (1 vote against and 1 abstention), is titled: “In remembrance and commemoration of the genocide of Armenians and other Christian minorities in the Ottoman Empire 101 years ago.” According to ARD television, 74% of the German population agrees that genocide was committed against Armenians. Another revealing survey cited by “Der Spiegel” magazine found that 91% of the German public does not trust Erdogan!

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, fed up with Erdogan’s repeated blackmails, decided to put Turkey’s megalomaniac dictator in his place, while Pres. Obama has to muster the courage to do so! The German leadership had to fend off not only the Turkish regime’s attacks but also sharp criticism from many of the three million Turks living in Germany.

After the Parliament’s decision, Erdogan arrogantly declared: “We have nothing in our past to be ashamed of, but those countries that often accuse Turkey of ‘Armenian genocide’ have the blood of millions of innocent victims.” Turkey’s minister of justice Bekir Bozdag was just as brazen, as he told Germans: “First you burn the Jews in ovens, and then you come and accuse the Turkish people of genocide.” Erdogan and Bozdag must be reminded that Germany, unlike Turkey, long ago admitted the Nazi-era crimes, apologized for the Holocaust, and paid billions of dollars in compensation.

It remains to be seen if ‘big mouth’ Turkish leaders would dare to take punitive actions against Germany, besides the routine withdrawal of their ambassador, as they do each time another government acknowledges the Armenian Genocide. Should Erdogan decide to go beyond making empty threats, such steps would backfire on Turkey as Germany is its largest trading partner. Turkey’s economy is already in serious trouble after Russia banned the import of Turkish goods and discouraged its citizens from going to Turkey as tourists because of the downing of a Russian jet by the Turkish military near the Syrian border last year.

Turkish leaders have already damaged their country’s interests by making provocative and scandalous announcements which have helped to publicize worldwide the German Bundestag’s action on the Armenian Genocide. Thousands of newspapers, websites, TV and radio stations covered the German decision and the Turkish outbursts. It is noteworthy that the international media paid particular attention to the German Parliamentarians’ admission that their country, a military ally of Turkey during World War I, was complicit in the Armenian Genocide.

The New York Times and The Times of London, two of the most prestigious newspapers in the world, published powerful editorials on June 3 reaffirming the facts of the Armenian Genocide, supporting the German’s Parliament’s decision, and urging Turkey to confront its dark past.

In an editorial titled, “Yes, It’s Genocide,” The New York Times wrote: “… It was a genocide, the first of the 20th century…. The Armenians are fully justified in their quest for a historical reckoning…. President Obama, who as a candidate in 2008 pledged to recognize the events of 1915 as a genocide, has failed to do so…. The Germans, who have admirably confronted the terrible genocide in their own history, did the right thing in defying Mr. Erdogan’s threats.”

The London Times’ editorial, “Genocide Denial: The mass slaughter of Armenians needs to be acknowledged by Turkey,” was just as impactful: “The German resolution is right not only in its message but also in diplomacy. Turkish pique is regularly directed at allies who recognize the Armenian genocide. That response is worse than undignified and ahistorical: it is a denial of suffering on an unspeakable scale that poisons the politics of Europe to this day, and it needs to be challenged. The slaughter of Armenians was not, as Turkish apologists maintain, one of the unplanned but inescapable tragedies that happen in wartime. It was a specific campaign of deportation and mass killing by the Ottoman regime.… Modern Germany and its statesmen have expressed repeatedly their nation’s remorse for genocidal barbarism in the last century. It is long past time for Turkey to do the same.”

Having recognized the Armenian Genocide and acknowledged its own share of responsibility and complicity, Germany now has to make appropriate amends to Armenians, thus setting a venerable example for Turkey, not only in recognition, but also in restitution!

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: compensate, complicity, Genocide, Germany

Czech Rep. President: Ottomans committed genocide against Armenians

June 7, 2016 By administrator

Czech presidentThe Ottomans committed a genocide against the Armenians, and I urge the Czech parliament to capitalize on the example of German’s Bundestag, which recognized the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire, President of the Czech Republic, Miloš Zeman, said in an interview with Parlamentní listy.

Zeman noted that he will discuss the aforementioned issue with the Czech Republic FM Lubomír Zaorálek after returning from Armenia.

He also recalled that the mass killings of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire have been recognized by Russia, Germany, France, Poland, Slovakia and other countries.

Miloš Zeman will arrive in Armenia Tuesday. The official part of his visit will start Wednesday and with the visit to the Armenian Genocide Museum. Following this, the Czech leader will be received by his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsyan.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Czech, Genocide, ottoman, president

Turkish dictator Erdogan: Germany should be the last country in the world to talk about genocide

June 6, 2016 By administrator

erdogan migrationIn a speech Sunday to the Turkish Exporters Assembly, Erdogan again denounced the Bundestag vote recognizing the Armenian genocide. Lambasting the resolution, he attacked Germany and landed in victim of a conspiracy, while resuming his account quibbles conventional deniers to cast doubt on the historical facts, the guilt of the Young Turk government, and plead good faith nickname of its State. The gist of his words that proceed from the arrogance and cynicism of traditional Turkish authorities on this issue and their complicity in relation to genocide they continue to deny reality, despite the fact that the Germany, their main ally during the First World War not only just to recognize but also to accept its share of responsibility in the crime: “It is contrary to the natural course of life that the last country that can speak of genocide carries such accusation against us, said Erdogan. They must first redefine the Holocaust. They should consider the genocide in Namibia. I know in my heart that the main point is not Armenians. They are simply manipulated. “

Referring to the resolution adopted by the Parliament of the Federal Republic of Germany, President Erdogan has developed the false argument of the archives, as if it was a problem of this nature, knowing in any case that those of his state are either inaccessible (military archives) be redacted and that the German archives contain all ways all the evidence of the extermination company: “Our position on the Armenian issue was clear from the start. I appeal to German politicians. We opened our archives. If you are sincere and honest, open your relevant archives. Compare the archives. Then make your decision based on these records. However, you do not have the courage to do it, because you know that these archives will bring shame on you. Currently, we have millions of documents. Most of these documents have already been examined. We are confident and open about this. If you have documents, open them. But they can not, because such a question is out of the question. Who killed who? Who attacked whom? Who moved that? Who was behind that? These documents will provide answers to these questions. “

“This issue has nothing to do with defending the rights of the Armenians”

Erdogan then dare talk about sincerity: “Here we see a sincere problem. You wear the same accusation against Turkey again and again, while turning our backs on our proposal to shed light on the issue. I say again that we know very well that this issue has nothing to do with defending the rights of the Armenians. This is just a manipulation tool. I hope that Armenians have also noticed this fact and will stop being misled “the president said Erdogan.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Erdogan, Genocide, Germany

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • …
  • 65
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in