Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

Residents of Syria’s Deir ez-Zor fear IS massacre

February 27, 2017 By administrator

Smoke rises in the distance after fighters from the Syrian Democratic Forces fired a mortar from the village of Sabah al-Khayr on the northern outskirts of Deir Ez-Zor, Syria, Feb. 21, 2017. (photo by DELIL SOULEIMAN/AFP/Getty Images)

By Nour Samaha,

In the Syrian city of Deir ez-Zor, the days are heavy and the nights are long. The sounds of explosions resonate and the streets are deserted as residents seek refuge in their homes. Too tired, poor, scared and hungry to venture outside, they struggle to survive from one day to the next amid the crippling siege as well as the ongoing Islamic State onslaught.

“All of us have this feeling that you might leave your home and not return,” Zein, a resident of Deir ez-Zor’s al-Qusoor neighborhood, told Al-Monitor over the phone. “All the people are traumatized. There is no way to cope, as people become accustomed to a situation that then just gets worse.”

He continued, “There is no feeling of security whatsoever, and mortar rounds are hitting the city daily. No part of the city is safe.”

The residents of Deir ez-Zor, which has been under a partial siege since October 2013 and a full one since the end of 2014, have watched helplessly as fuel, water, electricity and now communication with the outside world have slowly disappeared. Today, local mafias rule the streets, basic food products have reached exorbitant prices and the very real threat of an IS-perpetrated massacre looms as the government and its allies scramble to prevent the advance of IS fighters into the city.

Located on the Euphrates River between Raqqa and Mosul — the two IS strongholds — the residents of Deir ez-Zor have been facing a strong offensive by the group since Jan. 14. After launching something of a surprise attack on the city, catching the government’s forces and allies on the ground off guard, IS managed to quickly separate the air base from the rest of the city, effectively cutting off the last remaining aid supply line to approximately 100,000 civilians still stuck inside the city.

The offensive had been somewhat expected. Since it laid siege to the entire city at the end of 2014, IS has been eyeing a full takeover of Deir ez-Zor to consolidate its gains and control over northern Syria and western Iraq. In the past year, the group has been testing the defense lines of Deir ez-Zor — conducting at least three “reconnaissance under fire” missions, one of them on the main civilian hospital — as veteran IS fighters from Mosul flood the countryside around the city.

“Deir ez-Zor is located deep inside IS-held territory, close to Iraq, and it is the administrative center of eastern Syria’s oil-rich eastern desert,” explained Aron Lund, a fellow at the Century Foundation who writes on Syria. He told Al-Monitor, “Taking it would hand IS control over another provincial capital, like Raqqa, and neighborhoods and institutions that could extend its power over additional tens of thousands of civilians.”

According to pro-government sources in Beirut, the Syrian government and its allies have not been in agreement over what to do with Deir ez-Zor. The Syrian government, Iran and Hezbollah wanted to focus first on recapturing Aleppo, pointing out that other battles should be prioritized to secure the government’s control over Syrian territory, while others, such as the Russians, wanted to continue northward to Deir ez-Zor after the liberation of Palmyra in March 2016, keen to show the world they are serious about their fight against IS.

“[President Bashar] Assad and Iran seem to have been consistently more interested in the heavily populated core territories of western Syria and in breaking the foreign-backed segments of the rebellion, which they see as a greater strategic threat,” said Lund. “Objectively speaking, they are right, but things may look differently if you’re in Moscow and they must certainly look very different if you have the misfortune of being trapped inside Deir ez-Zor.”

In 2014, Deir ez-Zor had a population of about 300,000 people. Since then it has dwindled to about a third of that size after many residents fled, either by paying enormous fees to get airlifted out by the Syrian army — from $500 to over $1,000 per spot on the helicopters — or risking their lives by traveling over land through the IS-controlled territories surrounding Deir ez-Zor.

If stopped, they would be subjected to intensive “atonement” training, in which they would be forced to learn IS-approved Islamic values and ways of life. If they failed the exams at the end or tried to flee, or if IS discovered they were in any way involved with the government (including school teachers in government schools), they would be punished, imprisoned or even killed, according to sources from Deir ez-Zor.

For those who have stayed behind, life has become unbearable. The ongoing siege has enabled local gangs to take advantage of the situation and wreak havoc on the lives of civilians.

“There is looting and mugging after sunset, and since there is no electricity, most of the streets have no lights of any kind,” said Zein. “Some of those who joined the NDF [National Defense Forces] are known criminals and have been using their guns to loot and mug people and no one is doing anything about it.”

The lack of fuel has meant residents are resorting to burning everything from furniture to doors and windows, and a civilian vehicle is now a rare sight on the streets.

The lack of food has forced the residents to alter their diets. “Red meats are rare and very expensive, where you would pay around 10,000 Syrian pounds per kilo [around $46],” said Ahmad, another resident still inside Deir ez-Zor. “People now buy them in 50- or 100-gram portions.”

Today a kilogram of sugar goes for 3,500 pounds (around $16), but most people buy 15 grams of an artificial sweetener at 1,000 pounds ($5) instead, while a kilogram of tea sells for 10,000 pounds (around $46). Eggs and a wide range of fruits and vegetables can no longer be found.

“Water is pumped once a week, on Saturdays, but the flow of water is very weak so it only reaches ground-floor flats,” Ahmad continued in his telephone interview. “Landlines do not work, whether to call other governorates or to make local calls. Only mobile phones work, but the coverage is weak and when something happens, everyone is trying to get through so the network dies altogether.”

Asked about medicine, he said, “There is no protection against diseases since we don’t have antibiotics as well as other types of medicine.”

Meanwhile, the electricity situation is so dire that stores are now offering to charge people’s phones on diesel-fueled generators for a small fee.

Making it more difficult for the Syrian government and its allies to push IS away from the front lines and change the balance of the battle, the group has been conducting its offensive through the use of small brigades, thus limiting the impact of government/Russian/US airstrikes on their positions. Today, despite government reinforcements, they are still struggling to push IS back and regain control over areas that are a mere few hundred square meters.

The future of Deir ez-Zor remains incredibly bleak. IS continues to attack on a daily basis, and as it loses ground in Mosul, it is more determined than ever to gain ground in Deir ez-Zor, which could spell disaster for the civilians who have remained in the area.

“If Deir ez-Zor fell, I would assume it would be followed by the sort of brutality we’ve seen when IS took other cities,” said Lund. “They have had a bad couple of years and would want to maximize the propaganda value.

“They could find plenty of enemies there to torture, humiliate or murder on camera in some spectacular fashion, as they have done elsewhere.”

Nour Samaha, is a freelance journalist based in Beirut. She has been covering the region, with a specific focus on Lebanon, Syria and Israel/Palestine, since 2006. She predominantly writes on political, security and humanitarian issues. On Twitter: @nour_samaha

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: deir ez-zor, Massacre, Syria

Reuters report: Germany cancels Istanbul concert “aghet” marking Armenian massacres

October 26, 2016 By administrator

aghetTurkey’s Government do not want Turkish people to see the truth 

The German Foreign Ministry has canceled a long-planned concert by the Dresden Sinfoniker orchestra in Istanbul on Nov. 13 that was to commemorate the 1915 massacre of Armenians after protests by Ankara, orchestra director Markus Rindt said on Wednesday.

The ministry notified the orchestra that the German consulate in Istanbul, where the performance called “aghet”, or “catastrophe” in Armenian, was to have taken place, would not be available on Nov. 13, Rindt said. The piece premiered in Berlin in November.

“It’s definitely been canceled. They said they wanted to reschedule at a better time, but when would that be? This has been planned for years,” Rindt told Reuters.

Turkey, angered by the German parliament’s decision to brand the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman forces a genocide, had protested the use of European Union funding to support the performance, and earlier this month withdrew from the EU cultural arms program that was funding the project.

While Turkey accepts that many Armenians died in partisan fighting beginning in 1915, it denies that up to 1.5 million were killed and that this constituted an act of genocide, a term used by many Western historians and foreign parliaments.

The Dresden Sinfoniker performance includes musicians from Turkey, Armenia, Germany and members of the No Borders Orchestra, which is comprised of musicians from the former Yugoslavia. Additional performances are planned in Belgrade on Nov. 5 and in Yerevan, Armenia on Nov. 10.

Ties between Germany and Turkey remain strained over the Armenia resolution and Ankara’s frustration about what it sees as Germany’s half-hearted expressions of solidarity after the July 15 attempted military coup in Turkey.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; editing by Ralph Boulton)

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-turkey-concert-idUSKCN12Q1K9

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: AGHET, Armenian, Germany, İstanbul, Massacre, Turkey

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

September 11, 2016 By administrator

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

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

read more….

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

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

New York Time: Despite Campaign Vow, Obama Declines to Call Massacre of Armenians ‘Genocide’

April 24, 2016 By administrator

Erdogan-obama-silenced(nytimes.com) WASHINGTON — President Obama declined on Friday to refer to the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide, breaking a campaign promise as his presidency nears its end.

Mr. Obama, in a statement to mark Armenian Remembrance Day on April 24, called the massacre the first mass atrocity of the 20th century and a tragedy that must not be repeated. Yet he stopped short of using the word genocide, a term he applied to the killings before he became president in 2009.

“I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915, and my view has not changed,” Mr. Obama said.

Armenian-American leaders have urged Mr. Obama each year to keep a pledge he made as a presidential candidate in 2008, when he said the United States government had a responsibility to recognize the attacks as genocide and vowed to do so if elected. Mr. Obama’s failure to fulfill that pledge in his final annual statement on the massacre infuriated advocates and lawmakers who accused the president of outsourcing America’s moral voice to Turkey, which staunchly opposes the genocide label.

“It’s a Turkish government veto over U.S. policy on the Armenian genocide,” Aram Hamparian, head of the Armenian National Committee of America, said in an interview. Referring to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, Mr. Hamparian said “it’s like Erdogan imposing a gag rule very publicly and an American president enforcing that gag rule.”

Historians estimate that as many as 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks in an episode widely viewed by scholars as genocide. Turkey, a United States partner and NATO ally, denies that the killings constituted genocide and says the death toll has been inflated.

How #Turkish Dictator SILENCED most powerfull country in the world #USA to deny #ArmenianGenocide #Obama the coward pic.twitter.com/ggNbnbvNN3

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) April 24, 2016

Though Obama administration officials have debated using the genocide label in the past, this year’s deliberations come as Mr. Obama seeks Turkey’s assistance in fighting the Islamic State — especially along Turkey’s border with Syria. The United States and its European partners are also counting on Mr. Erdogan to help stem the influx of migrants to Europe.

If Mr. Obama felt pressure not to offend Turkey, he was not alone among world leaders. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany has faced intense criticism for allowing the possible prosecution of a television satirist for reciting an intentionally offensive poem about Mr. Erdogan.

Mr. Hamparian said officials from the White House’s National Security Council and the Atrocities Prevention Board that Mr. Obama established told him on Thursday that labeling the killings as genocide would introduce uncertainty in the region during a time when Turkey is playing an important role in a number of matters. He said it was hypocritical for Mr. Obama to call every year for “a full, frank, and just acknowledgment of the facts” while refusing to acknowledge them himself. “It’s like, ‘You should do this, but I won’t,’ ” Mr. Hamparian said.

Mr. Obama’s calls for transparency about the massacre played a prominent role in his presidential campaign, held up by him as an example of the type of sorely needed straight talk about foreign affairs and historical events. Samantha Power, one of his campaign surrogates and now his United Nations ambassador, issued a roughly five-minute video imploring Armenian-Americans to vote for Mr. Obama precisely because he would follow through on his promise.

Representative Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said he was “gravely disappointed” that Mr. Obama would leave office with the campaign pledge unfulfilled. Mr. Schiff has introduced legislation calling on the president to urge Turkey to fully acknowledge the genocide.

“Remaining silent in an effort to curry favor with Turkey is as morally indefensible as it will be ineffectual,” Mr. Schiff said.

The White House issued Mr. Obama’s annual statement on the massacre while the president was in London but declined to comment on the matter.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenians Genocide, call, declines, Massacre, Obama

Burned to death, beheaded’: Cizre Kurds accuse Erdogan’s forces of civilian massacre

March 11, 2016 By administrator

56e26625c36188f53e8b4581Harrowing accounts of an alleged massacre of dozens of Kurdish civilians in the southeastern Turkish town of Cizre have been collected by RT’s William Whiteman, who traveled to the area following reports of a brutal military crackdown on the population.

Reports of Turkish troops slaughtering hundreds of civilians trapped in the basements of Cizre, which is located in Turkey’s Sirnak province, first surfaced in February. Some 150 people were allegedly burned to death in one of them

That particular claim was made by Turkish MP Feleknas Uca from the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party, who spoke to Sputnik agency. These and other trapped people were reportedly denied access to food and medical supplies. However, until now, the alleged atrocities committed by the Turkish forces could not be substantiated on the ground.

Whiteman found witnesses who survived the offensive and were able to show the exact place of the mass killing, while providing terrifying details on what had happened.

I wouldn’t wish this on anyone. Erdogan has destroyed our world. He has burned us,” said a female witness, while showing blood stains on the debris of the deadly building.

Three, four – maybe five hundred people. There were old people, women and children – some as young as 10 years old. They killed a heavily pregnant woman,” added the woman, blaming Erdogan for indiscriminately killing innocent people during the so-called counter-terrorism operation against Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) separatists.

“Women and children lived here. Erdogan killed all of them with heavy artillery, he destroyed this home,” added the woman.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Erdogan, Kurd, Massacre, Turkey

Germany: Armenia massacre: Too much regard for Turkey?

February 26, 2016 By administrator

Armenian Genocide, Germany

Armenian Genocide, Germany

The timing is provocative: Just two weeks before the EU-Turkey summit, the Green Party is putting before parliament a resolution which describes the massacre of the Armenian people 100 years ago as genocide.

For the governing coalition, the timing of the Greens’ resolution couldn’t be worse. Because of the refugee crisis, the government is trying to avoid being too hard on Turkey and referring to the mass murder of Armenians a century ago as “genocide.”

The government is under pressure to noticeably reduce the number of refugees coming to Germany. In Chancellor Angela Merkel’s strategy, Turkey has a special role as the most significant transit country for migrants.

On March 7, important negotiations with Ankara at the EU-Turkey summit are set to take place. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is considered to be an irritable negotiating partner and Germany does not want to get his back up.

According to Armenian accounts, some 1.5 million members of the Armenian minority community were killed between April 1915 and 1917 at the hands of their Ottoman rulers in what is present-day Turkey. For its part, Turkey maintains that between 300,000 and 500,000 Armenians were killed, and that just as many Turks died during the same period. Ankara speaks of an atmosphere of civil war and famine. To this day, the Turkish government reacts with hostility whenever the term genocide is used to describe the killings.

Everyone on the same page

The governing coalition takes the same view on the issue as the Greens. At a parliamentary debate in April 2015, parliamentarians were unanimous in their opinion that the massacre of the Armenian people a century ago was genocide. German President Joachim Gauck and Bundestag President Norbert Lammert both used the term to describe the killings.

But what was missing was the passing of a parliamentary resolution that included the term “genocide.” In October, the CDU/CSU, SPD, and the Green Party finally agreed on its adoption. But the resolution was brought before parliament as being solely from the Greens. The draft text says that the fate of the murdered Armenians “stands as an example of the mass extermination, ethnic cleansing, expulsion, and even genocide that has so terribly marked the history of the 20th century.” The text also refers to the “uniqueness of the Holocaust” as well as the “inglorious role of the German Reich” in the massacre of the Armenian people.

Criticism from the Greens

Green Party leader Cem Özdemir has accused the governing coalition of deferring too much to Turkey and pulling back from the common resolution.

“The resolution consciously stops short of asking the federal government to recognize the genocide in order not to make a big deal of this now,” Özdemir told DW. “You could have easily said, well it’s the parliament, it’s not the government.”

CDU member of parliament Christoph Bergner clearly stated his opinion during the debate in April. “I really doubt that we can present ourselves in a convincing way and take a clear position in this discussion if we shy away from using the term ‘genocide’,” Bergner said. Despite this, he’s against the Greens’ resolution. “Our objections refer to the process, not the content,” Bergner told DW. “When you’re in negotiations with a partner, you try not to burden those negotiations,” he said with regard to Turkey. He accuses the Greens of using the genocide issue for a partisan maneuver.

‘There is never going to be a right time’

The right resolution at the wrong time? Özdemir rejects that idea. “There’s never going to be a right time for this issue. It’s been the wrong time for a hundred years now. It’s just an excuse.”

Even though it’s likely that the resolution from the Greens will fail, Bergner says that doesn’t mean the discussion about the Armenian genocide is over. “I hope that we’ll find a better time during this coalition to agree on a formulation.”

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

Turkish document of massacre: Our state is in a difficult period

January 4, 2016 By administrator

Secrit DocumentNEWS DESK – ANF

An official document has been revealed detailing the background of the blatant massacre committed by Turkish state forces against the civilian population in North Kurdistan.

With the impositions of curfews since after the general election of 7 June, state forces have been executing unprecedented atrocity on civilians in Kurdish towns, which has left hundreds of people dead so far.

A classified document numbered “84933840-3000-350-15” with the subject “Soldiers’ Authority To Use Arms And Vigilance of Personnel” is seen to have been issued by Cizre/Şırnak 3rd Tank Battalion Command affiliated to 172nd Armored Brigade Deputy Command of Land Forces Command on 30 July 2015.

The six-point official document openly instructs soldiers to use arms against civilians, on which it kind of promises impunity. The document which encourages troops to use arms gives the following instructions to the Turkish forces operating in Kurdish towns;

1- Soldiers’ authority to use arms is described in the attachment.

2- Troop commanders shall once again notify and teach all personnel about their authorities to use arms.

3-All personnel shall be notified and taught that they are to retaliate against every ambush, sabotage, harassment and attacks with fire.

4- No personnel shall forget not even a moment that any personnel’s restraint from using arms for fear of prosecution might have very grave consequences, result in martyrs on our side, endanger the survival of the state and nation, help traitors, terrorists and enemies of the state feel themselves more powerful.

5- All personnel shall adopt that prosecution is to be preferred over going into the coffin as a result of a treacherous attack.

6- The instruction shall be conveyed to all personnel who shall be vigilant without letting it go out of their mind that our state is going through a difficult period. 

https://twitter.com/Irmak_Ye/status/684121500081893376

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: document, Kurd, Massacre, Turkish

MP: Turkey authorities forced Turks to leave so they could massacre Kurds

December 15, 2015 By administrator

kurd-turkeyThe removal of Turkish teachers from the Kurdish-populated regions in Turkey shows that the authorities clearly highlight that they will massacre the Kurds.

Turkey’s pro-Kurdish “Peoples’ Democratic Party” (HDP) MP İdris Baluken made such a statement.

Baluken noted that the extent of fascism in the country’s Kurdish-populated regions has reached the level of starting a war against the people on the streets of the primarily Kurdish-populated Diyarbakır Province, reported the Kurdish Özgür Gündem website.

“Due to the policy run by the death machine of the [ruling] Justice and Development Party [(AKP)], [a total of] 306 citizens were massacred since June 7,” the HDP deputy said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurds, Massacre, Turkey

Turkey: Erdogan receive condolences while he is Massacring Kurd Inside Turkey & Iraq

October 12, 2015 By administrator

Turkey-kurd-massacareThe Turkish air force has pounded Kurdish militants a day after a deadly bomb attack on a rally for peace in the capital Ankara, BBC reported.

Planes hit Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) targets in both the south-east and over the border in northern Iraq.

Saturday’s twin bombing in Ankara killed at least 95 people, making it the deadliest such attack ever.Security sources say they suspect the so-called Islamic State (IS) group was behind the attack.The air force struck after the government rejected a new ceasefire announced by the PKK on Saturday.Tensions in Turkey were already high, with a general election looming on 1 November.
The governing Justice and Development Party (AKP) lost its overall majority in June after gains by the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP), which was involved in Saturday’s rally.

PKK positions were destroyed in the Metina and Zap areas of northern Iraq in Sunday’s air strikes, the Turkish military said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Iraq, Kurd, Massacre, Turkey

Turkish Army Besieges and Attacks Several Kurdish Provinces and Villages (Kurd Massacre in progress)

August 22, 2015 By administrator

By Kurdistan National Congress KNK:

turk-army-300x183With Erdogan’s ending of the Kurdish-Turkish peace process on the 24th of July a new total war against the Kurds is under way. Since this date Kurdish mountains, villages and geography have been under daily attack and bombardment. For almost a week the Turkish Special Forces, supported by the army, has declared a state of emergency in Kurdish towns and are undertaking extrajudicial killings in the region.

Most recently in districts like Varto, Semdinli, Farqin, Yuksekova, Nusaybin and Lice a state of emergency has been declared, civilians have been targeted, workplaces have been bombed and houses have been set alight. They are not allowing for those that have been killed as a result of these attacks to be buried and those that have been injured to receive treatment. All entries and exits from these towns and provinces have been banned, while the security forces are terrorizing the people in the regions that have been cut off from the rest of the country. Main power supplies and water supplies to these towns are being purposefully cut.

The people living in these places are very worried and say that they are facing the threat of massacre. Until now several civilians have been reported killed, however, according to local sources the death toll is much higher than what is being reported on by the state. The Turkish army has also besieged the rural regions surrounding these districts and is conducting heavy bombardments in the villages; these bombardments are still continuing.

The main reason behind these attacks and the extrajudicial killings of civilians is down to Turkish President Erdogan giving unlimited powers to the security forces. This is yet another sign of the animosity of the AKP towards the Kurdish people. By attacking the Kurdish people, the Turkish government and President Erdogan are morally and practically supporting ISIS.

  • We call upon the international public to stand against this war effort led by the Turkish President Erdogan.
  • We call upon the EU and the member states, the USA and the UN to break their silence over the threat of massacre against the Kurds in Turkey.
  • We call upon the international media to take an interest in the issue that has a significant bearing on the fight against ISIS in the region

Source: kurdistantribune.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, Massacre, Turkey, villages

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 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

  • “Nikol Pashinyan Joins the Ranks of 7 World Leaders Accused of Betrayal, Surrender, and Controversial Concessions”
  • The Myth of Authenticity: Why We’re All Just Playing a Role
  • From Revolution to Repression Pashinyan Has Reduced Armenians to ‘Toothless, Barking Dogs’
  • Armenia: Letter from the leader of the Sacred Struggle, political prisoner Bagrat Archbishop Galstanyan
  • U.S. Judge Dismisses $500 Million Lawsuit By Azeri Lawyer Against ANCA & 29 Others

Recent Comments

  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State
  • David on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State
  • Ara Arakelian on A democratic nation has been allowed to die – the UN has failed once more “Nagorno-Karabakh”
  • DV on A democratic nation has been allowed to die – the UN has failed once more “Nagorno-Karabakh”
  • Tavo on I’d call on the people of Syunik to arm themselves, and defend your country – Vazgen Manukyan

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