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Over 100 Iraqi journalists killed, injured while covering Mosul battle: FAJ

July 14, 2017 By administrator

Mosul Journalist killedThe Federation of Arab Journalists (FAJ)  has announced that more than Iraqi journalists have lost their lives and sustained injuries while covering fierce battles between Iraqi government forces and Takfiri Daesh terrorists in the run-up to the liberation of the country’s second largest city from the extremists.

The Cairo-based FAJ, in a statement released on Thursday, announced that forty-seven journalists were killed, while fifty-five others were wounded while accompanying security troops during battles in Mosul and reporting on the skirmishes.

The federation also extended its deep felicitations to the Iraqi journalists, who covered the details of the battles in Mosul, praising government troops’ victory over Daesh there.

On June 24, French journalist Véronique Robert died from wounds she had sustained earlier in a mine explosion in the western part of Mosul as she was covering Iraqi government forces’ advances against Daesh Takfiri terrorists.

Sophie Pommier, a spokeswoman for the French Embassy in Baghdad, said Robert lost her life at a hospital in the French capital Paris.

The late journalist had been repatriated and transferred to the hospital on Friday after being operated in Baghdad.

State-owned France Television said Robert had covered numerous conflicts and expressed its “sincere condolences.”

French video journalist Stephan Villeneuve and Iraqi Kurdish journalist Bakhtiyar Haddad, who were working with Robert, were killed in the June 19 explosion in Mosul. Haddad died moments after the blast and Villeneuve died hours later from his wounds.

They were reporting for investigative news program Envoye Special broadcast by France 2 national television channel.

Reporter Samuel Forey, who worked for a number of French media organizations, including French daily Le Figaro, also suffered light injuries in the act of terror.

The Metro Center for Journalists’ Rights and Advocacy said Haddad had been injured three times before as he covered the war in Mosul.

In February, Iraqi Kurdish correspondent Shifa Gardi, 30, was killed in a roadside bomb blast while covering clashes between Iraqi government forces and Daesh terrorists just south of Mosul for the Kurdish-language Rudaw television network. Her colleague, Younis Mustafa was wounded.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Journalist, Killed, Mosul

Turkish publisher condemns Genocide denial policies

July 12, 2017 By administrator

A human being dismissing objective facts of history must be devoid of dignity, a Turkish writer publisher said today, condemning his government’s policy of Armenian Genocide denial.
At a news conference in Yerevan, Zeynel Abidin Kyzykyaprak also addressed the recent March of Justice (organized by the opposition People’s Democratic Party’s leader), describing it as an unprecedented event in the country’s history.

“The People’s Democratic Party more than lived up to its potential. I characterize that party’s March for Justice as a real victory,” he said.

Asked by Tert.am whether Turkey now sees any alternative to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the publisher said he knows that the problem is real for the opposition “which is still undecided about choosing a leader”.

Asked to comment on the recently proposed bill envisaging sanctions over genocide remarks in the Turkish  parliament, Kyzykyaprak replied, “It is practically difficult to predetermine anything in Turkey, but I don’t think anything of the kind will be signed into law. The National Movement party, which initiated the [draft] law, scolds the Justice and Development party every time, calling for a protection of national interests.  But I don’t think Justice and Development will take that step to give [the bill] a legal effect,” he said, noting that no legal act in the Turkish legislation bans the use of “Armenian Genocide” in essence.

“A human being denying true happenings of history must be devoid of dignity. If you are a state in the world civilization, you must, first of all, deserve respect,” the publisher added.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: armenian genocide, Journalist, Turkish

G20: Police blacklisted journalists who ‘worked in Turkish Kurdish regions’

July 12, 2017 By administrator

 At least 32 journalists at the G20 summit in Hamburg had their accreditations taken off them by German police without explanation, sparking press freedom concerns. Some had worked in the Kurdish regions of Turkey.

At least four of the journalists who had their press accreditations confiscated by police at the G20 summitlast Friday had worked in the Kurdish regions of southeastern Turkey, raising suspicions in the German media that the Turkish government may have pressured German authorities into shutting them out.

According to reports by German public broadcaster ARD and the Süddeutsche Zeitung, the journalists’ press passes were taken off them without explanation, even after they had been in and out of the secured area around the conference center in Hamburg where the summit was held.

Chris Grodotzki, a photographer for Germany’s Der Spiegel, told DW that he had picked up his accreditation normally on Wednesday, but on trying to re-enter the conference center on Friday had been faced with police officers carrying a two-page list of names that they said they had been given by Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA).

He said the officers had been systematically checking all journalists going into the center. “Then they told me they can’t let me go in, and put me in a closed tent to one side, where I sat for a while, and then the superiors came and told me that the accreditation had been cancelled,” said Grodotzki. He added that he was not asked any questions by the officers, and that they themselves did not seem to know why the accreditations were being confiscated.

The German government has refused to release the list for “data protection” reasons, though Grodotzki said it was no problem for him to see it at the time, and believes that suggestion that 32 names were on it – reported in the press – sounded accurate.

No reason given

Nine of the journalists, who were mostly German, were later told in writing by the BKA that they were being shut out of the event “in consultation between the participating authorities.”

According to the Süddeutsche Zeitung, four of these nine had previously worked in the Kurdish areas of Turkey, though German government spokesman Steffen Seibert insisted on Tuesday that the authorities mentioned in the letter were all German – and did not belong to any foreign government.

One of the journalists, Björn Kietzmann, a photojournalist at the Action Press agency who had worked for the taz newspaper among others, had previously photographed fighting at the Syrian border city of Kobane, on the Turkish-Syrian border. The same was true of Chris Grodotzki, a photographer for Germany’s Der Spiegel.

Kietzmann tweeted that his accreditation had been confiscated by the BKA on Friday:

Similarly, Willi Effenberger, a photographer for the Junge Welt newspaper who also had his accreditation confiscated, told the taz newspaper that he had once been arrested in Turkey, and had taken photos in Diyarbakir, one of the largest Kurdish-dominated cities of southeastern Turkey.

Adil Yigit, a Turkish journalist for the Avrupa Postasi outlet, who also had his accreditation confiscated, told the taz newspaper, “I think the Turkish side is behind this. The head of the Turkish secret service Hakan Fidan was with [Turkish President] Erdogan in Hamburg on Thursday. I took photos of both of them and reported on it. I think the Turkish intelligence agency passed that on to their German colleagues.”

At Monday’s regular government press conference, German Interior Ministry spokesman Johannes Dimroth refused to say what security risks the journalists represented at the G20, or even what kinds of security risks journalists might represent, on the grounds that this would infringe the privacy rights of the journalists involved.

Dimroth insisted, however, that the confiscation was “in no form meant as a criticism of their reporting.” The confiscations were “exclusively for security reasons.”

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: blacklisted, g20, Journalist

Journalists from Egypt visit Tsitsernakaberd Memorial complex

June 25, 2017 By administrator

egyptian journalist visit Tsitsernakaberd MemorialFive Egyptian journalists who visited Armenia on the first regular flight of “Air Cairo” Airlines, visited number of Armenia’s sightseeing, Garni, Geghard, Lake Sevan, Tsakhkadzor, Echmiadzin, and Matenadaran Scientific Research Institute of Ancient Manuscripts named after Mesrop Mashtots.
The Egyptian journalists also visited Tsitsernakaberd Memorial complex to pay tribute to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

Hakob Berberyan, who accompanied the foreigners, told Panorama.am the journalist themselves wished to visit the Memorial complex.

“They knew well the story of the Armenian Genocide,” Berberyan added.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Egyptian, Journalist, Memorial, Tsitsernakaberd, visit

Threatened torture for Azerbaijani journalist kidnapped in Georgia

June 2, 2017 By administrator

Threatened torture for Azerbaijani journalist kidnapped in GeorgiaAfgan Mukhtarli, an Azerbaijani investigative journalist who was abducted by strangers in the evening of 29 May in Tbilisi, reappears 24 hours later in a prison in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan , From which he had fled the authoritarian regime to seek refuge in Georgia. His lawyer said he risked ill-treatment and torture in the Azeri prison where he was detained and was taken to the border crossing between Georgia and Azerbaijan, Arbitrary and illegal. Local activists and his lawyer say the journalist was kept in detention in a prison of the Azerbaijani Border Guard Investigation Unit. The journalist took refuge with his wife in Georgia in 2015, fearing for his safety because of his investigations into the corruption of President Ilham Aliyev and his entourage.

However, Mukhtarli’s lawyer was able to speak briefly with him in the detention center where he was detained on 31 May. The lawyer indicates that the unknown persons who kidnapped A.Mukhtarli in Tbilisi were in civilian clothes and spoke in Georgian. The attackers immediately hindered their victim, whom they beat repeatedly as they drove him to the suburbs of the Georgian capital. They allegedly changed vehicles twice before crossing the border with Azerbaijan. A.Mukhtarli told his lawyer that they would have slipped 10,000 Euros into his pocket just before crossing the border, so that the Azerbaijani police had a pretext to stop him because of trafficking. A.Mukhtarli also said that he had been treated more brutally still on the Azerbaijani side of the border.

Levan Asatiani, a representative of Amnesty International in the South Caucasus, who is currently in Tbilisi, said that “this is a very worrying event in a country already known for its repression of journalists And human rights defenders “, adding that” Afgan Mukhtarli must be released immediately and unconditionally and free from torture and other ill-treatment “. “He is a prisoner of conscience who was imprisoned for the sole reason that he was working as a journalist,” said the human rights defender, explicitly questioning the Georgian authorities, who maintain excellent Relations with the Azeri regime, in particular because of the close economic links between Baku and Tbilisi. “It appears that the Georgian authorities were also complicit in the kidnapping of Afgan Mukhtarli and his forcible return to Azerbaijan. His family told Amnesty International that he was often followed by men speaking in Azeri in the streets of Tbilisi, where he was clearly under surveillance. Georgia must promptly and impartially investigate the exact circumstances of the kidnapping and ensure that the perpetrators of this odious operation are held accountable, “said Asatiani.

For their part, Georgian journalists, worried about the fate of their colleague, asked the government for explanations concerning this case. Together with local NGOs, Georgian journalists mobilized to show their support for the journalist and plan to gather in front of the government headquarters in Tbilisi to challenge ministers on the circumstances of the abduction. Georgia Online reported that the organizers of the demonstration are calling on all those concerned by this operation, which violates all human rights and international law rules to join them. “Join us and express your indignation at the disappearance of our Azerbaijani colleague who has lived in Georgia for the past two years. Join us and express your support for this by demanding explanations from the Georgian government, “said the text of the appeal.

Friday, June 2, 2017,
Gari © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Georgia, Journalist, kidnapped, Threatened torture for Azerbaijani

Azerbaijani journalist sentenced to 30 days in prison

May 24, 2017 By administrator

New York, May 24, 2017—Azerbaijani authorities should immediately release freelance journalist Nijat Amiraslanov, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today. A district court in the northwestern Azerbaijani city of Gazakh yesterday sentenced the journalist to 30 days in prison on charges of resisting police.
The journalist’s lawyer, Elchin Sadygov, told CPJ that police arrested Amiraslanov on May 22 with no explanation as he quietly drank tea in a Gazakh café, and that Amiraslanov denied charges of resisting arrest. “If one is a journalist working with [independent media], one expects to be detained any time. And nobody can defend himself. It’s useless,” Sadygov said, adding that he had no doubt that Amiraslanov’s journalism was the reason for his arrest.
One of Amiraslanov’s colleagues, who spoke to CPJ on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, said Amiraslanov is well-known in Gazakh for his critical reports for local and regional media about poverty in the region and corruption among local officials. Four other Azerbaijani journalists, also speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, also told CPJ that they believe Amiraslanov was arrested for his critical reporting.
“We call on Azerbaijani authorities not to contest Nijat Amiraslanov’s appeal of this verdict, and to cease harassing and jailing critical reporters,” CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program Coordinator Nina Ognianova said. “We call on Azerbaijan to reverse its record of jailing journalists on trumped-up, retaliatory charges.”
At least five journalists were imprisoned in Azerbaijan for their work on December 1, 2016, when CPJ last conducted its annual census of journalists imprisoned around the world. In April, the government blocked access to at least five critical news websites by decree and sought a court order to make that censorship permanent, according to media reports.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijani, Journalist, Prison

An Armenian journalist assaulted while attending a problem buying vote

May 15, 2017 By administrator

A correspondent for the Armenian service of RFE / RL (Azatutyun.am) covering Sunday’s municipal elections in Yerevan was assaulted by government worshipers after witnessing a distribution of money in front of a Republican campaign office (HHK) .

The journalist, Sisak Gabrielian, saw a group of citizens receiving money from another person shortly after leaving the office in the central Kentron district.

“Have you voted for Taron?”, A man asked them, referring to the outgoing mayor of Yerevan, Taron Markarian, affiliated with HHK. “Yes, we did,” one of the citizens said.

Gabrielian then went to the office and tried to interview HHK activists working there. Clearly surprised, they immediately hid their papers that were on a desk. One of them said that they shared pastry recipes with local residents.

Moments later, some of the young men began to verbally abuse and shove Gabrielian, who was forced to stop filming them with his cell phone. One of them hit the journalist with his hat.

Gabrielian then heard threats from another man, who presented himself as an affiliate member of HHK of the outgoing Yerevan municipal council. The man apologized to the journalist shortly afterwards.

HHK management did not immediately comment on the incident.

Gabrielian was assaulted while witnessing a similar cash distribution to voters in another HHK campaign office in Yerevan during the April 2 parliamentary elections. One man was later accused of hindering the “legitimate professional activities of a journalist”. The law enforcement authorities argued, however, that HHK claimed that the ruling party paid the “wages” of its local activists rather than buying votes.

The Armenian opposition and civic groups argue that the party headed by President Serge Sarkisian strongly depended on the purchase of votes to win the April 2 election. European watchdogs also cited “credible information on the purchase of votes”.

A spokesman for the HHK admitted on April 5 that bribes had been awarded by some candidates. But he insisted that they had not had a “substantial impact” on the election results.

Monday, May 15, 2017,
Claire © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: buying vote, Journalist

250,000 activists sign petition to back jailed Turkish journalists: Amnesty

May 3, 2017 By administrator

Amnesty International says tens of thousands of activists worldwide have signed an online petition calling for the release of around 120 journalists detained in Turkey following the abortive July 2016 military coup.

In a Wednesday report, the UK-based rights group said top journalists, cartoonists and world-renowned artists are among the signatories to the petition, which also wants the Ankara government to stop the “ruthless crackdown on freedom of expression” in the country.

The #FreeTurkeyMedia campaign has gathered some 250,000 signatures since February, the report said.

“A large swathe of Turkey’s independent journalists are languishing behind bars, held for months on end without charge or trial, or facing prosecution on the basis of vague anti-terrorism laws,” said Amnesty International’s Secretary General Salil Shetty.

“Today our thoughts are with all journalists who are imprisoned or facing threats and reprisals, but our particular focus is on Turkey where free expression is being ruthlessly muzzled. We call on Turkey’s authorities to immediately and unconditionally release all journalists jailed simply for doing their job,” he added.

The report comes as protests are planned in different world cities on Wednesday to mark World Press Freedom Day.

Since the failed coup last summer, Ankara has closed down at least 156 media outlets, while an estimated 2,500 journalists and other media workers have lost their jobs.

Many of the journalists and cartoonists behind bars in Turkey stand accused of terrorism offences due to the online posts and cartoons or opinion pieces critical of the government.

As part of a wider post-coup clampdown, around 47,000 people have been remanded in prison and more than 100,000 public sector employees summarily dismissed in Turkey.

The Amnesty report also criticized Turkey’s post-coup state of emergency, which allows lengthy periods of pre-trial detention.

“Charges leveled against media workers are often trumped up, sometimes patently absurd or wholly lacking any evidence of an actual criminal offence,” the report added.

According to the 2017 World Press Freedom Index issued by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) in April, Turkey has descended into an authoritarian government under Erdogan and is currently “the world’s biggest prison for media professionals.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: jailed, Journalist, Turkey

Pro-Turkish Journalist Stephen Kinzer’s Assault on the Armenian Genocide and Armenians

March 29, 2017 By administrator

Stephen Kinzer photo, The Light Millennium

By David Boyajian,

Recent years have witnessed an increasing number of writers who blatantly favor Turkey and/or Azerbaijan and are hostile to Armenians. Some enlistees in this pro-Turkic brigade include Justin Amler, Richard Falk, Alexander Murinson, and Brenda Schaffer.
Another such enlistee is American journalist Stephen A. Kinzer.
Throughout his career, Kinzer has not only diminished the factuality of the Armenian genocide committed by Turkey from 1915-23 but also misrepresented the Armenian people and their homeland.
He spoke at the Watertown, Massachusetts Library on February 21, 2017. His presentation, titled “U.S. Foreign Policy: Intervention or Restraint? What can we expect from President Trump?”, focused on his new book The True Flag: Theodore Roosevelt, Mark Twain, and the Birth of American Empire.
His previous books include Crescent & Star: Turkey between Two Worlds (2001), Reset Middle East: Old Friends and New Allies: Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Israel, and Iran (2010), and A Thousand Hills: Rwanda’s Rebirth and the Man Who Dreamed It (2008) about the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Kinzer himself is descended from Dutch Jews who perished in the Holocaust.
Watertown Citizens for Peace, Justice and the Environment and the Cambridge-based Massachusetts Peace Action sponsored his talk.
I attended and questioned him. More on that later.
Kinzer was NY Times bureau chief in Istanbul from 1996 to 2000, and currently writes for The Boston Globe.
Once termed “Turkey’s Goodwill Ambassador to the US,” he’s a Turkophile. Kemal Ataturk, says Kinzer, would have made a great United Nations leader today. At times Kinzer has, as its friend, criticized Turkey.
He has conceded that in the 1915 period — though not in the 1919-23 Ataturk period — Turkey committed massacres and atrocities against Armenians. He thinks Turkey should acknowledge these. However, he repeatedly explains away the murders, never recognizes them as ‘genocide,’ doesn’t cite the voluminous evidence for that genocide, and often misrepresents Armenians and Armenia. He has visited the latter and eastern Turkey/Western Armenia.
Kinzer has written many thousands of words about 1915, Armenians, and Turkey. We have space to expose only a fraction of his countless distortions.
Diminishing the Genocide
“There are troublesome questions,” Kinzer has written, “about the fate of Ottoman Armenians” in 1915. These events are, in his words, “debatable,” “hotly debated,” and “still unclear.”
Kinzer never acknowledges that the vast majority of non-Armenian specialist historians long ago concluded that Turkey committed genocide.
He writes about an “orgy of ethnic violence” in 1915. Translation: Armenians were about as guilty as Turks.
Moreover, the “Ottoman atrocity” must be placed “in the context of other 20th massacres.” Kinzer probably makes meaningless assertions like that to obfuscate the real issues.
Ottoman authorities “ordered the expulsion of Armenians from eastern Anatolia.” Kinzer doesn’t mention that central and western “Anatolia” and Istanbul were also the sites of Armenian “expulsions” and mass murders.
Kinzer considers 1915 “highly emotional for Turks and Armenians.” Translation: The victimizer nation’s anger is as appropriate as that of its victims.
Genocide Resolutions
The US House is “foolish,” wrote Kinzer in 2010, to consider an Armenian genocide resolution. It would “harm US-Turkey ties.” He won’t admit that three successful House resolutions (1975/84/96) on the Armenian genocide haven’t harmed US interests.
Congress “has neither the capacity nor moral authority” to judge 1915. “Among all killers of the 20th century,” the resolution “[singles out] Turks for censure.” Congress must first “investigate other modern slaughters — [such as] the one perpetrated by the British in Kenya during the 1950s?”
Yet, one or both houses of Congress have officially recognized the ‘genocides’ in Bosnia, Cambodia, Darfur, Rwanda, Ukraine, the present Christian ones in Syria and Iraq, and have approved considerable Holocaust legislation. Indeed, the “Uncompensated [Holocaust] Survivors Today Act” was just recently introduced in Congress.
I can find no evidence that Kinzer opposed any of that legislation.
Kinzer says no president has ever termed the Armenian episode “genocide.” Actually, President Reagan did so in 1981 in Proclamation 4838.
Countless principled Jews have been in the forefront of those who have researched 1915 and acknowledged the Armenian genocide. Sadly, though, some Jews and Jewish organizations — notably the ADL, AJC, AIPAC, and JINSA – have a self-inflicted syndrome I call Holocaust Hypocrisy.
Holocaust Hypocrisy
Kinzer dedicated his book Reset to his Jewish grandparents, Abraham Ricardo and Jeanette De Jongh Ricardo, who died in Nazi Germany’s Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945.
Naturally, Kinzer approves of the US Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC. It “documents an effort to destroy an entire people … the story it presents is beyond dispute.” He disapproves, however, of the proposed Armenian Genocide Museum in DC because “the [Armenian] events of 1915 are still a matter of intense debate.”
The title of Kinzer’s 1998 article, “Armenia Never Forgets, Maybe it Should,” perfectly expresses his belief that Armenians should put aside their past, especially their genocide. Yet the Armenian genocide and Holocaust are separated by no more than 18 years.
Kinzer, you see, allows himself to dredge up the past — German concentration camps, the Holocaust, Kenya, Rwanda, America’s sins going back to the 19th century, and more. Armenians, on the other hand, should simply “forget” and patch things up with Turkey. You decide if that’s Holocaust Hypocrisy.
Employing a well-known Turkish tactic, Kinzer also attempts to split Armenia from the Armenian diaspora. In so doing, he contradicts himself.
Armenia vs. Diasporans
In Crescent and Star, Kinzer says Armenia’s citizens “want to rebuild their country’s relationship with Turkey and … look toward a better future for both peoples.”
In contrast, the genocide acknowledgment campaign “is waged not from Armenia itself but from Armenian communities abroad.” Diasporan Armenians are “anti-Turkish”, and some are “more nationalistic than most Armenians in Armenia.” They are motivated by “a long-delayed revenge” for the genocide, he claims.
His readers wrongly conclude that Diasporans are fanatics while Armenia is relatively non-nationalistic and cares little about the genocide.
Elsewhere, though, Kinzer declares that it’s Armenia which clings to “ethnocentric nationalism.” And “national thinking is the dominant and almost all-inclusive ideology” there.
Armenia, he claims, views the world through the “prism” of the genocide even though Kinzer had alleged that it was Diasporans who were genocide-obsessed.
“1915 has cut into the Armenian psyche” and “plays an emotional role” in keeping Armenia and Turkey “apart.” Yet Kinzer previously asserted that Armenia was eager to rebuild its “relationship with Turkey.”
Nationalism in Armenia, contends Kinzer, is quite “out of fashion” in the modern world. He doesn’t tell his readers that every one of Armenia’s neighbors — Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, Russia, and Turkey (Kinzer’s favorite) — is also highly nationalistic.
As you’d expect, Kinzer is also pro-Azerbaijani while giving short shrift to Armenian Artsakh/Karabagh.
Artsakh/Karabagh
In “Armenians, Bitter over Enclave, Let the Oil Boom Pass By” (NY Times, Dec. 6, 1998), Kinzer says — sneeringly, in my opinion — that Armenians could have prospered had they simply agreed to Baku’s proposal of an oil or gas ‘peace pipeline’ and placed Artsakh/Karabagh back under Azerbaijan, supposedly as an “autonomous” region.
Kinzer does acknowledge that Armenians would never trade Artsakh for oil. But there is scant evidence that Baku and Ankara would ever have allowed their oil and gas pipelines to cross Armenia. Even had they been so inclined, they would probably have demanded a raft of concessions that Armenia could never agree to.
In other of Kinzer’s writings that continually tout Azerbaijan, I can find only a few short references to Azerbaijan as an autocracy whereas its repression of Artsakh goes unmentioned.
Kinzer’s Answers
I asked Kinzer two questions after his Watertown presentation.
Some Jewish American lobbying organizations — ADL, AJC, AIPAC, and JINSA — and Israel have long colluded with Turkey to defeat Congressional resolutions on the Armenian genocide yet have successfully pushed Congress to enact Holocaust legislation. Do you consider this hypocritical?
Appearing uncomfortable, Kinzer avoided the question. What Jewish groups do, he replied, is not his “business.” Yet his writings have criticized “pro-Israel lobbies” and AIPAC. Maybe Kinzer approves of the Jewish lobby’s Holocaust Hypocrisy but hesitated to admit it publicly?
Your writings express doubt about the Armenian genocide though it’s been widely recognized by scholars, countries, and more. You also believe Congress shouldn’t recognize that genocide. Do you still feel that way?
Kinzer replied that he recognizes the Armenian genocide. That’s inconsistent with his writings but didn’t totally surprise me. His audience was, after all, comprised of politically progressive activists in a town with a sizeable Armenian community. Watertown had also thrown out the ADL in 2007 because it wouldn’t acknowledge the Armenian genocide and opposed its recognition by Congress. In any case, Kinzer’s acknowledgement is now a matter of public record. Kinzer added that he still opposes Armenian genocide resolutions.
The lesson here is that Armenians must continually fight to ensure that their genocide and other issues are treated fairly and factually by journalists and media. And Armenians shouldn’t shy away from confronting those who assault their rights and history.

The author is a freelance journalist based in Massachusetts. Many of his articles are archived at www.armeniapedia.org/wiki/David_Boyajian.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Journalist, pro-turkish, Stephen Kinzer

Azerbaijani journalist Chingiz Mustafayev: On Aghdam events: 10 Azerbaijanis were walking among corpses 600 meters away from our post

February 26, 2017 By administrator

Azerbaijani journalist Chingiz Mustafayev known for his shooting of military action in the region of the Karabakh conflict was one of those, who told the truth about Khojaly events. Mustafayev taped corpses of Khojaly residents found near the Azerbaijani positions not far from Aghdam in March 1992 and made public the information about the real perpetrators of Khojaly tragedy.

“On February 28 (1992), when I got there, I asked permission to cross over to the other side and see how the tragedy had happened. I was told that there were bodies only in Khojaly, talks had been held with the Armenians, and the bodies had been exchanged and brought back. Khojaly residents told me that the corpses were near pig farms, and that there were also people left alive. Khojaly residents went there on foot and hid there,” Mustafayev said.

Upon hearing that, the journalist asked them to provide him with a helicopter, a car, or let him go there on foot. They again told him that it was impossible to get there: everyone was massacred; Armenians were allegedly keeping the place under fire, and so on.

“On February 29, while flying by military helicopter to the same place from the village Umudlu, we flew over that side at my request. I saw with my own eyes that I had already passed through that place. The pig farm was 10 kilometers away from Khojaly. More than 50 bodies were scattered seven hundred meters away from our post near Derebeyi. The fact that I saw 10 of our citizens walking among the corpses on the shots taken from above is still a mystery causing shiver. Those people in military uniforms were from Aghdam. I have those shots – they are calmly walking among the corpses. I am still told that there were no bodies, no one could get there, as there were Armenians there and so on. However, when we finally got off the helicopter, three of the helicopters immediately returned to Aghdam allegedly ‘forgetting’ us there. Those 10, having walked there on foot, left on foot,” the journalist emphasized.

According to him, his group was shooting there for 45 minutes. The place was 25 meters away from the road to Nakhichevanik. Cars of Armenians passed through the road twice. They noticed the journalist and his group, who then walked back to Aghdam.

“I still cannot understand why the corpses 6-7 hundred meters away from our posts, among which 10 our people were freely walking, were not taken away. Corpses had been exchanged and brought back from Khojaly provided there were negotiations.

As you see, allegedly, it was a ‘trap’: the Armenians kill our people. It was not allowed to go there also because the Armenians were killing people there,” Mustafayev said.
As for the committee created for the investigation of the events, the journalist noted that he had suspicions about its work.

According to him, the committee was going to show that it worked. However, the committee would be included in the Committee investigating the January tragedy, the helicopter tragedy, and all the tragedies in general, and the investigation would last at least 5-6 years. It was unknown, when it would end.
Forces responsible for those tragedies are preparing something new day by day.

Chingiz Mustafayev was killed on June 15, 1992. He was posthumously awarded the National Hero of Azerbaijan title for his shootings of the military action in the region of the Karabakh conflict. Chingiz Mustafayev is primarily known for his taping of the Khojaly residents’ corpses found near the Azerbaijani positions not far from Aghdam in January 1992. He videotaped those corpses on March 2, 1992. When Mustafayev told Azerbaijan’s former president Ayaz Mutallibov that the bodies’ positions and the corpses’ injuries were not compatible with the initial inspection, the president told him “not to say a single word about it, otherwise, he would be killed.”

 

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Aghdam events, Azerbaijan, Chingiz Mustafayev, Journalist, Karabakh

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