Category: Armenian Question

“The great Turk is governing in peace twenty nations from different religions. Turks have taught to Christians how to be moderate in peace and gentle in victory.”Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary

  • Press Release : Federation Of Canadian Turkish Association

    Press Release : Federation Of Canadian Turkish Association

    Press Release
    CBC Radio-1 Interview with Peter Balakian
    May 30, 2009
    Dear CBC Ombudsman,
    The following interview of Ann Maria Tremonti on behalf of GBC Radio-1 with Peter Balakian on alleged
    “Armenian Genocide” ) is way beyond the
    boundaries of a fair, neutral and reasonable fact finding reporting practice.
    What the interviewer is doing here seems to be an extraordinary effort to making sure that every aspect of the
    well known typical Armenian propaganda can be heard one more time by Canadian public through CBC. This
    effort, with directing questions and reminding of the propaganda elements forgotten even by the interviewee
    himself, can not be without any collaborative intentions. This is not an acceptable attitude for a public
    institution which is established and maintained by tax payers’ money like myself.
    First of all, regardless of who is right in this scholarly long disputed 1915 events, it is okay to let anybody to
    express his/her side of the story, but without any contributing/supportive efforts, as long as other side of the
    story also is being heard fairly. Unfortunately, by not following this established public media ethics rule and
    integrity code, your interviewer Ann Maria and CBC has breached the public trust that has been granted. As
    the representative of Turkish Canadian tax payers, we, the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations
    condemn this intentional wrongdoing, and demand an explanation from CBC management. We are also
    demanding an apology from Turkish Canadians with the assurance that it will never happen again.
    CBC, or any fair media for that matter, have to provide all involved parties of such disputed issues with equal
    opportunities, including the Turkish side in this particular case. We are aware that CBC has consistently failed
    to follow this simple fairness rule so far, and it is hard to believe this is just a coincidence.
    All these worldwide orchestrated Armenian allegations that have been spread by their propaganda machine
    tirelessly for decades are politically motivated with land and retribution demands (which are not a secret
    anymore) for the following reasons, rather than seeking the truth and justice :
    · Armenia has refused to sign a border agreement with her neighbor Turkey as of today.
    · All Armenian educational materials show east of Turkey as south part of Armenia.
    · Armenians at any level never have acknowledged atrocities committed by Armenian bands to Turks,
    Azeri Turks, Kurds, Jewish and other Muslims of Anatolia and Caucasus during the same period, in
    corporation with the great powers of time under Russian, Franch and British uniforms.
    · Armenia today keeps 25% of Azerbaijan since 1992, and despite many UN resolutions to return the
    occupied land and let a million Azeri refuges to get back their homes, Armenia refuses to comply.
    Turkey has imposed economic embargo to Armenia since then blocking its borders with Armenia.
    · In 1980s, Armenian terrorists have killed over 60 innocent people around the world including an
    RCMP officer and 40 Turkish diplomats, and as of today non of these killers have been condemned by
    Armenians at any level, including their churches. These killers have been protected, praised as
    freedom fighters, encouraged and rewarded by Armenian lobbies, civic organizations and political
    parties of Armenian state.
    · Turkey has long opened Ottoman achieves for a fair review of the events by neutral historians/scholars
    and promised to comply with its outcomes no matter what, and demanded all parties involved to do
    same. Neither Armenians nor her former (and currently same) allies France and Russia have agreed
    with the process yet!!! Armenia indicated would cooperate if and only if its genocide allegation is
    accepted first, without any dispute. This is not surprise considering that Brian Ardouny of the
    Armenian Assembly of America in a videotaped interview clearly clucked lately: “We don’t need to
    prove the genocide historically, because it has already been accepted politically.” Thanks to the
    support of opportunist politicians and fair (!) media such as CBC.
    KTDF-FCTA | [email protected]
    |
    PO Box: 45024, 5845 Yonge Street, Willowdale, Ontario, M2M 4K3, CANADA
    Press Release
    CBC Radio-1 Interview with Peter Balakian
    May 30, 2009
    Considering the fact that there is no legitimate/legal verdict by any genocide tribunals such as International
    Court of Justice or any other authorized UN bodies for the 1915 events yet, and Armenians have never
    attempted to seek the arbitration of these institutions in resolving the issue (never mention about their denial of
    revealing own archives to world scholars); helping these Armenian lobbies in their effort in building political
    allies at Western parliaments such as Canada and US by passing motions in favor, unfairly influencing the
    public opinion via supposedly neutral media such as CBC, aiming at finally to dictating their one-sided
    allegations on Turks, will not contribute World peace and harmony at all. To the contrary, it will push Turkey
    to take stronger defensive position against this efforts, due to a loss of trust in West’s justice and fairness.
    As a Canadian tax payer of Turkish decent, I don’t believe that this is the result, we, democratic nations like
    Canada, desire to reach. Especially in such times when all the World (including Canada) has been fighting a
    war against global terrorism and its adverse consequences (economical/social chaos), it is unlikely that we can
    prevail without our NATO ally Turkey’s support, which is sitting in the middle of world energy resources and
    the largest energy distribution hub of the middle east, Caspian Sea, Near Asia and Caucasus, with the second
    largest army of NATO after US. Therefore, on behalf of the Turkish Canadians, the Federation of Canadian
    Turkish Assassinations is strongly against the encouragement of these Armenian lobbies to be less cooperative
    in finding truth and more aggressive/abusive in misusing foreign politics by our wrong policies; and we
    condemn any irresponsible acts of trusted public entities such as CBC in this regard.
    We hope that CBC leadership is capable of anticipating all these facts as what they are and make sure that in
    the future all its employees will act responsibly in dealing with such sensitive issues, according to the
    requirements of these aforementioned realities, avoiding to take supportive positions for one side or another in
    disputed matters. We all need to help retain Canada’s well known reputation of fairness/neutrality instead.
    From Turkish perspective of the issue, I would like to bring to your attention, the elaboration of a March 23,
    1920, letter of Col. Charles Furlong, an Army intelligence officer and U.S. Delegate to the Paris Peace
    Conference: “We hear much, both truth and gross exaggeration of Turkish massacres of Armenians, but little
    or nothing of the Armenian massacres of Turks. … The recent so-called Marash massacres [of Armenians]
    have not been substantiated. In fact, in the minds of many who are familiar with the situation, there is a grave
    question whether it was not the Turk who suffered at the hands of the Armenian and French armed contingents
    which were known to be occupying that city and vicinity. … Our opportunity to gain the esteem and respect of
    the Muslim world … will depend much on whether America hears Turkey’s untrammeled voice and evidence
    which she has never succeeded in placing before the Court of Nations.”
    Nothing seems to have changed from those days, when Christian lives were more precious than the lives of the
    “others”, Turks and Muslims. If you are interested in learning more of the Turkish side of the story from the
    neutral sources, please find attached the opinions of a list of non-Turkish scholars and the entities, which do
    not agree with the Armenian allegations.
    Until this dispute is resolved justly on the legitimate International platforms and a scholarly agreement is
    established between two nations (Armenians and Turks), the third parties (governments and media such as
    CBC) should only encourage them to openly discuss the matter and mediate if needed by only giving equal
    chances for both side, rather than filtering one’s voice and supporting the other all the time.
    Sincerely.
    Dr. Mehmet Bor
    A. President of Canadian Turkish Associations.
    Tel: +1-647-230 9397
    www.canturk.net, [email protected]
    KTDF-FCTA | [email protected]
    |
    PO Box: 45024, 5845 Yonge Street, Willowdale, Ontario, M2M 4K3, CANADA

  • TIMELY RESPONCE TO CANADIAN UNIVERSITY

    TIMELY RESPONCE TO CANADIAN UNIVERSITY

    logo

    SUBJECT: https://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2009/06/02/canada-ryerson-apologizes-for-ataov-event/

    To:  Sheldon Levy, President and Vice-Chancellor, [email protected]

    Cc:  Kanizehn Wadia, Executive Secretary to the President, [email protected]
    Erin McGinn, Director, Office of the President, [email protected]
    Carrie-Ann Bissonnette, Special Assistant, Events & Special Projects, [email protected]
    Alan Shepard, Provost and Vice President Academic – [email protected]
    Dr. Heather Lane Vetere, Vice Provost, Students  – [email protected]
    Terry Gillin, Dean of sociology,  [email protected]
    Mustafa Koc, Professor,   Sociology Department, [email protected]

    June 3, 2009

    Re:  Intolerance to reasoned, scholarly debate

    Dear President Levy:

    I am responding to the apology you issued to the Armenian students for the scholarly seminar organized by the Turkish students at Ryerson University on February 18, 2009, featuring Professor Turkkaya Ataov, a researcher who authored of more than 80 books.  I found your apology  biased, unfair, and unscholarly. Here are my reasons and thoughts:

    BIAS IN THE TERM “ARMENIAN GENOCIDE”

    If one cherishes values like fairness, objectivity, truth, and honesty, then one should really use the term  “Turkish-Armenian conflict”.  Reducing this complex human tragedy that affected all the people of the area down to  “Do you accept or deny Armenian Genocide” simply shows one’s anti-Turkish bias.  The question should be re-phrased “What is your stand on the Turkish-Armenian conflict?”

    Turks document it clearly that it was an inter communal warfare mostly fought by Turkish and Armenian irregulars, a civil war which is engineered, provoked, and waged by the Armenian revolutionaries, with active support from Russia, England, France, and other countries, as well as Western media and missionaries, all interested in the vast resources of the collapsing Ottoman Empire for different reasons and to varying degrees, against a backdrop of a raging world war.

    Armenians, on the other hand, ignoring Armenian agitation, raids, rebellions, terrorism, treason, territorial demands, and Turkish victims killed by Armenians, claim that it was a one way genocide, a claim never tested at a court of law but mostly based on hearsay and forgeries.

    GENOCIDE ALLEGATIONS IGNORE “THE SIX T’S OF THE TURKISH-ARMENIAN CONFLICT”

    While some in unsuspecting public may be forgiven for taking the blatant and ceaseless Armenian propaganda at face value and believing Armenian falsifications merely because they are repeated so often, it is difficult and painful for someone like me, the son of Turkish survivors on both maternal and paternal sides, whose story is hardly ever heard due to censorship induced by Armenian pressure groups.

    Those seemingly endless “War years” of 1912-1922 brought three separate but consecutive wars on Ottoman soil  (The Balkans, WWI, and the Independence Wars) and wide-spread death and destruction on to all Ottoman citizens. No Turkish family was left touched, mine certainly included. Those nameless, faceless Turkish victims are killed for a second time today with politically motivated and baseless charges of Armenian genocide.  Those wars were brought onto Turks, not vice-versa, fought on Turkish soil, not in England, France, or Russia, and Turks were only defending their home, not out for conquest.

    ALLEGATIONS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ARE RACIST AND  DISHONEST  HISTORY

    They are racist because they ignore the Turkish dead: about 3 million during WWI; more than half a million of them at the hands of Armenian nationalists.

    And the allegations of Armenian genocide are dishonest because they simply dismiss

    THE SIX T’S OF THE TURKISH-ARMENIAN CONFLICT:

    1) TUMULT (as in numerous Armenian armed uprisings, 1878-1921)

    2) TERRORISM (by well-armed Armenian nationalists and militias victimizing Ottoman-Muslims, 1882-1922)

    3) TREASON (Armenians joining the invading enemy armies, 1914-1921)

    4) TERRITORIAL DEMANDS (where Armenians were a minority, not a majority, attempting to establish Greater Armenia, the would-be first apartheid of the 20th Century with a Christian minority ruling over a Muslim majority, 1878- present )

    5) TURKISH SUFFERING AND LOSSES (i.e. those caused by the Armenian nationalists: 524,000 Muslims, mostly Turks, met their tragic end at the hands of Armenian revolutionaries during WWI, documented by the Turkish Historical Society. This figure is not to be confused with about 2.5 million Muslim dead who lost their lives due to non-Armenian causes during WWI.)

    6) TERESET (temporary resettlement) triggered by the first five T’s above and amply documented as such; not to be equated to the Armenian misrepresentations as genocide.)

    VERDICT WITHOUT DUE PROCESS AMOUNTS TO LYNCHING

    Those who take the Armenian “allegations” of genocide at face value seem to also ignore the following:

    1- Genocide is a legal, technical term precisely defined by the U.N. 1948 convention (Like all proper laws, it is not retroactive to 1915.)

    2- Genocide verdict can only be given by a “competent court” after “due process” where both sides are properly represented and evidence mutually cross examined.

    3-  For a genocide verdict, the accusers must prove “intent” at a competent court and after due process.  This could never be done by the Armenians whose evidence mostly fall into five major categories:  hearsay,  mis-representations, exaggerations, forgeries, and “other”.

    4- Such a “competent court” was never convened in the case of Turkish-Armenian conflict and a genocide verdict does not exist  (save a Kangaroo court in occupied Istanbul in 1920 where partisanship, vendettas, and revenge motives left no room for due process.)

    5-  Genocide claim is political, not historical or factual.  It reflects bias against Turks. Therefore, the  term genocide must be used with the qualifier “alleged”, for scholarly objectivity and truth.

    POLITICAL  LYNCHING OF THE TURKS BY ARMENIANS TODAY

    Recognizing Armenian claim as genocide, therefore, will deeply insult Turkish-Canadians and Turks around the globe and poison the otherwise excellent relations currently enjoyed between the Canada and Turkey.  It will, no doubt, please Armenians but disappoint, insult, and outrage Turkey,  one of Canada’s closest allies and a partner in NATO. Turks stood shoulder to shoulder with Canadians in Gulf War, Somalia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, and more.   Genocide charge, unproven and unjustified, is the worst insult that can be dished out to an entire nation and a democracy respecting human rights, not to mention a close friend, an staunch ally , and a reliable partner in a troubled part of the world.

    History is not a matter of ” gut feelings, thoughts, beliefs, conviction, consensus,  political resolutions, or propaganda.”  History is a matter of unbiased research, honest peer review, thoughtful debate, and meticulous scholarship. Even historians, by the U.N. definition, cannot decide on a genocide verdict, which is a special task reserved for a “competent court” with its legal expertise and due process.

    What we witness today amounts to lynching of the Turks by Armenians to satisfy the age old Armenian hate, bias, and bigotry.   Values like fairness, presumption of innocence until proven guilty, objectivity, balance, honesty, and freedom of speech are stumped under the fanatic Armenian feet.

    Those who claim genocide verdict today, based on the much discredited Armenian evidence, are actually engaging in “conviction and execution without due process”.  Last time I checked with the dictionary, that was the definition of “lynching”.

    Isn’t it about time to stop fighting the First World War after almost a century and give peace a real chance?

    Perhaps an even better question is, isn’t it time to allow the historians, researchers, and scholars to take over this debate?

    The capability to explore and discuss contentious issues in a rational, scholarly manner is one of the trademarks that makes a University community a stimulating and exciting place.  Your apology to Armenian students, implying that the Turkish-Armenian controversy should be represented like settled history in line with untested, unproven Armenian allegations,  deals a blow to academic freedom and freedom of speech, thus vibrancy of a university.

    After all, what good is a university if reasoned, scholarly debate is not allowed?

    Peace,

    ergun_s1

    ERGUN KIRLIKOVALI

    Turkish Forum Advisory Board Member

    Son of Turkish Survivors from Both Maternal & Paternal Side

    www.turkishforum.com

    www.turkla.com

    www.ethocide.com

    0000000000000000000000000000

    CANADA: Ryerson Apologizes for Ataov Event

    Ryerson Apologizes for Ataov Event and Reaffirms its commitment to uphold the Truth
    Toronto, Ontario; On February 18, 2009, The Department of Sociology at Ryerson University, and the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations organized an evening lecture on campus titled “Elaborations on Turkish strategies to dealing with issues around Armenian Allegations and beyond”. The lecture was delivered by Professor Turkkaya Ataov, a leading denier of the Armenian Genocide. The lecture was equivalent to Neo-Nazi propaganda presented to deny the Jewish Holocaust. Prof. Ataov trivialized the reality of the Armenian Genocide and presented the usual Turkish Government’s views.Ryerson University’s student body was outraged by the fact that such an event had been cosponsored by a department of their university and raised concerns through letters and by signing petitions which included names of approximately 300 Ryerson students.

    After several meetings with department heads and administration, Dr. Sheldon Levy, the president of Ryerson University, in a letter to Sally Sahagian, the president of the Armenian Students’ Association at Ryerson University, apologized to the Ryerson community by stating, “On behalf of Ryerson University, I would like to apologize for the pain and suffering experienced in particular by the members of the Armenian.

    Community as a result of this event” He then assured the student body that the university’s views were in line with that of the Canadian Government, the International Association of Genocide Scholars and the hundreds of historians and experts researching the topic internationally. Dr. Levy stated, “Ryerson University supports Prime Minster Harper’s statement on behalf of all Canadians that the Armenian Genocide is a historical fact, unquestionably part of the historical record with tremendous suffering.”

    Ryerson University’s response indicated that although the university is a space where students can practice their freedom of speech, the university will not become an accomplice to racism and genocide denial. This form of hate propaganda has no place in our academic and scholarly circles.

    The administration of Ryerson University, through its principled stand, has proven to remain true to the role of the university as an institution committed to upholding the truth. The Armenian Students’ Association at Ryerson University together with all its members and the Armenian Community at large would like to thank the Ryerson University administration for identifying genocide denial as a threat to academia and society at large, consequently taking a principled stand against the crime of genocide.

    For more info, please contact Sally Sahagian – [email protected].

    29 May 2009 by Press Office

    In America, there are “equal access”  and “”equal time” laws governing libelous attacks in public.  I am sure similar laws are in the books in Canada, too. The first step should be a firm, informative, fair, polite, but demanding letter, worded by a lawyer (or law firm) specializing in freedom of speech issues in Canada should be sent.  This should be done immediately (within the next several days) to set the stage.

    According to their answers, the next step can be designed accordingly.

    TALDF can help with wording.

    Ergun KIRLIKOVALI

    TURKISH FORUM

     

    erdalatrek

     
       

    Dear David and friends,

    If you were to click on the html “pressoffice” at the bottom of Sally Sahagian’s disgusting “press release” you would see the email address:

    [email protected]

    While Sahagian gives her email address as [email protected], it is obvious that the “press release” is an Armenian Church of Canada product.

    Perhaps TALDF can seize this opportunity to deliver where it will truly count and weigh the genocide-mongers down.

    Regards,

  • ANCA Endowment Fund

    ANCA Endowment Fund

    Telethon Raises More Than $2.5 Million

    By Asbarez Staff on Jun 1st, 2009 and filed under Community, Featured Story.

    ShareThis

    Hosts Manoug Seraidarian and Karineh Birazian. Photo by Nora Yacoubian


    EDITOR’S NOTE: Below is a mere snapshot of the ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon. In future editions, Asbarez will feature complete coverage of the event, including behind-the-scenes interviews and perspectives, as well as reactions from the community and participants.

    LITTLE ARMENIA-In what became a strong show of grassroots participation and reinforced the power of national community participation, $2.6 million was raised during Sunday’s six-hour nationally televised ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon.

    Bolstered by a matching donation of $150,000 by Kirk Kerkorian’s Lincy Foundation, the telethon attracted a broad cross-section of the community and the final results proved the commitment of the Armenian-American community to the advancement the Armenian Cause.

    With donations ranging from $5 to $150,000, thousands of Armenian-Americans took part in the fund-raising effort, with hundreds more volunteering their time, services and other resources to ensure the telethon was a success.

    Volunteers man the phones, collecting donations. Photo by Nora Yacoubian

    The program, aired nationally on Horizon Armenian Television and the Armenian Russian Television Network (ARTN) and local outlets throughout the country, featured segments highlighting the ANCA Endowment Fund’s achievements and activities in Genocide education, youth empowerment, advocacy training, the advancement of an enduring relationship between the United States and Armenia and the promotion of public awareness of the circumstances surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The telethon, which was filmed live in the Horizon studios, also featured appearances by Western Prelate Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, leader of the Armenian Catholic Community Father Antoine Saroyan, Rev. Joe Matossian of the Armenian Evangelical Church, Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca, ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian, ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian, as well as major donors and sponsors.

    Video messages were broadcast from Western Primate Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, California State Assemblyman Paul Krikorian and San Francisco Mayor and California gubernatorial candidate Gavin Newsom.

    Ferrahian preschoolers present a check for $10,000 to the ANCA Endowment Fund. Photo by Nora Yacoubian

    The 2009 Telethon Committee, which has been planning and executing the project for the past several months, had produced a well-executed program hosted by 11 community and media leaders from throughout the United States, all of whom emphasized the importance of the ANCA Endowment Fund to the advancement of Armenian-American community aspirations.

    Hosts Karine Birazian, Paul Chaderjian, Alina Dorian, Saro Haroun, Silva Haroutounian, Ari Killian, Roxanne Makasjian, Steve Mesrobian, Anahid Oshagan, Aram Sarafian and Manoug Seraidarian adeptly navigated the audience through the six-hour broadcasts, which was intertwined with information and education segments, live in-studio appearances, and pleas from community leaders.

    Another highlight of the telethon was the participation of community organizations, churches and schools, which had activated their membership and raised funds that were presented on behalf of the respective groups.

    The funds raised during the telethon will be allocated to furthering the mission of the ANCA Endowment Fund to educate and empower the community toward advancing issues of concern to the Armenian-American community.

    Related posts:

    1. More Than $2.5 Million Raised at ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon
    2. Prominent Activists Rally Support for ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon
    3. ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon Coming To A Channel Near You
    4. Schools, Organizations Gear Up For ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon
    5. ANCA Announces 2009 Telethon
  • Amnesty International Report 2009 on Armenia

    Amnesty International Report 2009 on Armenia

    Amnesty International Report 2009 on Armenia Reveals the Racist Nature of the Caucasus Tyranny

    Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis June 01, 2009

    Caucasus´ tiny state is the realm of Obduracy, Odium, and Oppression; the racist Anti-Turkish, Anti-Azeri, Anti-Turkmen and Anti-Islamic tyranny of Armenia illegally occupies part of Azerbaijan´s territory, counting on the Anti-Islamic stratagems of Russia.

    Supported by donations of the villainous, rancorous, revengeful and hateful Armenian Diaspora, the tyranny of Yerevan is one of the world´s cruelest and most inhuman regimes and has actually a most preoccupying record of Human Rights´ violations perpetrated not only against the ethnic minorities but also against religious groups who reject the Fascist version of the Westernized Armenian Christianity.

    Turkey, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and the entire Islamic World must set up a long term policy to force Russia to either abandon its evil Caucasus ally or be lethally hit by all means in its heart, Moscow. The demolition of the Armenian tyranny is a prerequisite for the prevalence of peace in Caucasus region without any blackmailing, rogue attitude or reference to the ghosts of the past.

    I herewith republish the Amnesty International Report that sheds light on the persecution of the Jehovah´s Witnesses in Armenia; quite unfortunately, they are not the only to be persecuted there.

    Amnesty International report 2009 – Armenia

    Portrait

    Head of state: Serge Sargsian replaced Robert Kocharian in April

    Head of government: Tigran Sargsian (replaced Serge Sargsian in April)

    Death penalty: abolitionist for all crimes

    Population: 3 million

    Life expectancy: 71.7 years

    Under-5 mortality (m/f): 36/31 per 1,000

    Adult literacy: 99.4 per cent

    Amnesty International report 2009 – Armenia

    Mass protests over disputed presidential elections in February led to a 20-day state of emergency and a crackdown on civil and political rights evident throughout the year. Freedoms of assembly and expression were heavily restricted. Opposition and human rights activists were subjected to violent acts by unknown persons. Conscientious objectors continued to be imprisoned. Structures and resources to combat violence against women remained inadequate.

    Freedom of assembly

    Excessive use of force

    On 1 March, police used force in the capital Yerevan to break up protests that had been ongoing since the results were published of the 19 February presidential election. Serge Sargsian, incumbent Prime Minister and close associate of outgoing President Robert Kocharian, had officially won. At least 10 people died, including two police officers, and over 350 were injured, including some 58 policemen. Police were reported as using truncheons, iron bars, tracer bullets, tear gas and conducted energy devices. The authorities declared a state of emergency on the same day.

    In June a parliamentary commission was established for three months to investigate the March events. In mid-October, the commission requested a two-month extension in order to incorporate the findings of a second fact-finding group.

    Arbitrary arrests and detentions

    Dozens of opposition members were arrested in the aftermath of the 1 March violence, including many high-ranking figures associated with Levon Ter-Petrosian, the main rival to Serge Sargsian, and members of the opposition Republic party. Some of those arrested were reportedly beaten or ill-treated in police custody. Many of those arrested were still in pre-trial detention at the end of the year. The Council of Europe repeatedly expressed concern at the excessive length of the official inquiry into the March events, and the continued imprisonment, in some cases without trial, of dozens of opposition supporters. The trial of seven of those detained started on 19 December.

    Legal, constitutional or institutional developments

    On 17 March the National Assembly approved amendments to the law on public assembly giving local authorities the power to ban public meetings. After the lifting of the state of emergency there were continued reports of extensive detentions and harassment by security officials of citizens gathering in public places in central Yerevan. Concerns expressed by the OSCE and the Council of Europe led to the Armenian authorities agreeing on 22 April to the repeal or revision of the March amendments. Nonetheless, the Yerevan municipal authorities continued to ban some demonstrations by the opposition.

    Freedom of expression

    Journalists and media outlets that covered opposition activities were harassed. The vague wording of restrictions on freedom of expression gave the authorities broad powers to restrict opposition or independent media. Several opposition media outlets reported having websites closed, and newspaper editions were refused permission for publication. The Yerevan Press Club, the Committee to Protect Freedom of Expression, Internews, the Asparez Press Club of Giumri and the Femida public organization expressed concern that further delays to the government issuing broadcast licences would result in reduced media diversity.

    In August Haykakan Zhamanak (Armenian Times) journalist Lusineh Barseghian was beaten by unknown men. Later that month, Hratch Melkumian, acting head of the Armenian Service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, was beaten in central Yerevan. There was reportedly no progress in the investigations into these assaults by the end of the year.

    The independent Giumri-based television station Gala TV faced consistent harassment after it screened campaigning speeches by Levon Ter-Petrosian. On 19 March a fine of almost 27 million drams (about US$87,700) was imposed on Gala TV for alleged tax evasion; the sum was reportedly paid off by contributions from private donations. In April Gala TV was ordered to vacate its premises in Giumri´s television tower, forcing it to temporarily cease broadcasting.

    Impunity

    A number of assaults on opposition and human rights activists were not investigated promptly or thoroughly. On 21 May, Mikael Danielian, a prominent human rights activist and director of the Armenian Helsinki Association, a human rights NGO, was shot at point-blank range with a pneumatic gun (a gun firing compressed air), reportedly by a former leader of a political party. Mikael Danielian was not seriously wounded. On 28 May Arsen Kharatian, a leader of the Armenian Democratic Youth Movement, was assaulted in Yerevan by unknown men. He was hospitalized with severe head injuries. On 25 June Narek Hovakimian, a member of the Hima youth movement and the opposition Alternative coalition, was assaulted in Yerevan by two unknown men. No one had been charged for these assaults by the end of the year.

    Discrimination – Jehovah´s Witnesses

    Jehovah´s Witnesses continued to face imprisonment because of their beliefs. As of 1 September, 77 young men were in prison for refusing on grounds of conscience to perform military service. The authorities still failed to introduce a genuinely civilian alternative service, in spite of previous commitments, with military supervision continuing over the alternative civilian service.

    Jehovah´s Witnesses reported further problems on release. The authorities refused to grant them certification of full service, without which important documents such as passports and internal residence permits were harder to obtain.

    There were also reports of physical attacks on Jehovah´s Witnesses, including allegedly by supporters of the country´s dominant religious group. Investigation of these assaults was said to be slow or non-existent.

    Violence against women and girls

    Over a quarter of women in Armenia were said to have been hit by a family member and about two-thirds were said to have experienced psychological abuse, yet the authorities failed to prevent, investigate and punish violence against women. Adequate structures and resources to combat violence against women were lacking. Shelters previously operated by NGOs had closed due to lack of funding early in the year; one was able to reopen in September. A draft law on domestic violence, promoted by the Women´s Rights Centre NGO, was made available for public discussion.

    Amnesty International visits

    Amnesty International delegates visited Armenia in February, July and November.

    Addendum

    Document – Armenia: Fear of the freedom of conscience and religion: violations of the rights of Jehovah’s Witnesses

    Armenia

    Fear of the freedom of conscience and religion: violations of the rights of Jehovah´s Witnesses

    1. Introduction

    Amnesty International is concerned that Jehovah´s Witnesses continue to be victims of human rights violations in Armenia, despite the country´s obligations under international human rights law to respect and protect the right to freedom of conscience and religion. Jehovah´s Witnesses in Armenia also face violations of the right to liberty and security of the person, the right not to be discriminated against and the right to legal remedy. This report lays out Amnesty International´s concerns relating to Jehovah´s Witnesses in Armenia, and ends with a series of concrete recommendations to the Armenian authorities to ensure the protection of their rights.

    Amnesty International is concerned by the continuing practice of imprisoning conscientious objectors, the vast majority of whom are Jehovah´s Witnesses, in defiance of Armenia´s obligations under international human rights standards.

    Rather than providing a genuinely civilian alternative to military service, an obligation undertaken by Armenia upon accession to the Council of Europe in 2001, the current legislative framework, implementation and legal enforcement of the alternative service are characterized by measures suggesting a pattern of deterrence aimed at discouraging conscientious objection. There is considerable evidence pointing to military oversight and control of the alternative service introduced in 2004, making it incompatible with the beliefs and convictions of Jehovah´s Witnesses (and others whose beliefs and convictions prevent them from taking up arms). Numbers of Jehovah´s Witnesses imprisoned are on the increase, due to more severe sentencing, and those who serve their terms continue to face bureaucratic obstacles to the fulfilment of economic, social and cultural rights upon their release. All are imprisoned in contravention of Armenia´s obligations to respect and protect the right to freedom of conscience and religion, and all are considered by Amnesty International to be prisoners of conscience. As such all of them should be released immediately and unconditionally.

    Increased reports of physical attacks on Jehovah´s Witnesses and reportedly slow or non-existent investigation of these assaults represent further concerns for Amnesty International. These acts of violence are directed at Jehovah´s Witnesses as members of a particular group, and therefore constitute a form of discrimination as well as crimes in their own right. The Armenian authorities have an obligation to exercise due diligence in protecting Jehovah´s Witnesses against such attacks, including by the thorough, independent and impartial investigation and, where appropriate, prosecution of perpetrators of physical assault. Amnesty International is concerned that the reported failure to punish such crimes may be contributing to a climate of impunity for the physical assault of Jehovah´s Witnesses, and, accordingly, impunity for discrimination against them.

    A number of sources were consulted in the preparation of this report. An Amnesty International delegate visited Armenia in March 2007 and met with the Jehovah´s Witnesses organization in the capital Yerevan. Meetings were also conducted in London with the European Association of Jehovah´s Christian Witnesses, whose reports and other documents were also used. On 31 August Amnesty International also wrote to several agencies within the Armenian government to elicit information and responses to the organization´s concerns.

    Letters were sent to the Minister of Defence, the Republic of Armenia Police, the Prosecutor General´s Office, the Ombudsman´s Office, the Department for National Minorities and Religious Issues and the Division for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Replies were received from the Republic of Armenia Police, the Prosecutor General´s Office and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; the information received in this correspondence was considered in the final drafting of this report. Finally a wide range of internet-based news services were also consulted.

    2. The right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion

    The right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion is guaranteed by the Armenian Constitution and a wide array of instruments of international human rights law, to which Armenia is a State Party. Article 26 of the Armenian Constitution specifies that “[E]veryone shall have the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion” and further stipulates that “[T]he exercise of this right may be restricted only by law in the interests of the public security, health, morality or the protection of rights and freedoms of others”. Article 18(1) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which enshrines the right to freedom of religion, declares that “[E]veryone shall have the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion” and the freedom “either individually or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in worship, observance, practice and teaching”. Armenia is also a State Party to the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR), Article 9 of which guarantees the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion.

    The principle of non-discrimination in the enjoyment of rights is enshrined in Article 2(1) and 2(2) of the ICCPR and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). Article 2(1) of the ICCPR obliges Armenia to “ensure to all individuals within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction the rights recognized in the present Covenant, without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origins, property, birth or other status.” Article 14 of the ECHR likewise guarantees the enjoyment of rights and freedoms without discrimination of any kind.

    The ICCPR (Article 2(3)) and ECHR (Article 13) further enshrine the right to legal remedy in case of violation of the rights and freedoms set forth in these documents. Specifically, Article 2(3) of the ICCPR obliges Armenia to ensure that any person whose rights have been violated shall have an effective remedy, “notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity”.

    The right to refuse to perform military service for reasons of conscience is inherent in the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, enshrined in Article 18 of the ICCPR, Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in Article 9 of the ECHR. At the regional level the Council of Europe and the European Parliament have both urged governments to actively provide for the fulfilment of this right through the creation of a genuinely civilian alternative to military service. They have further stipulated that this alternative must not be of a length which could be considered punitive in relation to military service, and recommended that individuals may be allowed to register as conscientious objectors at any time before or during their military service.

    3. Background

    Jehovah´s Witnesses have been active in Armenia since 1975. Armenia´s independence from the Soviet Union dramatically changed the context for their activities in the country, and they first requested legal registration as a religious organization in 1995. A Jehovah´s Witness lawyer in Armenia, Lyova Margarian, told Amnesty International that the organization was refused registration 15 times.1 At the same time, aspects of the organization´s activities in Armenia became the source of friction with representatives of the Armenian Apostolic Church.2 There were also reports of discrimination against members of the organization (and other religious minorities).3 The Jehovah´s Witnesses were finally granted registration on 8 October 2004; according to the European Association of Jehovah´s Christian Witnesses, there are now thought to be some 9,000 Jehovah´s Witnesses in Armenia.4

    Although the organization has been able to import religious literature since that time, it reported to Amnesty International that it regularly faces problems renting rooms or buildings for religious meetings. Jehovah´s Witnesses in the Armenian capital Yerevan reported several instances where contracts for the rental of premises for the holding of religious meetings had been reneged upon without the reimbursement of funds paid in the form of deposits, thereby incurring financial loss for the organization. In several instances it was state authorities, such as the Ministry of Culture and Youth Affairs, which had intervened to prohibit the fulfilment of contracts.

    The Armenian Apostolic Church is the leading religious denomination in the country. Although as noted above the Armenian Constitution provides for the right to freedom of conscience, the Constitution as amended by referendum in 2005 also recognizes “the exclusive historical mission of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church as a national church, in the spiritual life, development of the national culture and preservation of the national identity of the people of Armenia”. Although Soviet rule diminished the salience of actual religious practice among the Armenian population, a strong link was nonetheless maintained between an Armenian ethnic identity and the Armenian Apostolic Church.5 Whether practicing believers or not, some 90 per cent of the population of Armenia belong formally to the Armenian Apostolic Church. The population of Armenia consists of 98 per cent ethnic Armenians, accounting for a strong correlation between the population and at least nominal membership of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    Perceived losses endured by the Armenian Apostolic Church during the period of Soviet rule and the opening up of Armenian society to the activities of other religious denominations have provided a backdrop for the legislation of a number of rights for the Armenian Apostolic Church. Although the ´Law on Freedom of Conscience and Religious Organizations´, adopted in 1991, provides for the separation of church and state, it also grants the Armenian Apostolic Church official status as the national church. Following a period of negotiations beginning in the year 2000, on 14 March 2007 an agreement or concordat was signed codifying the status and rights of the Armenian Apostolic Church.6 When this agreement was signed, human rights activists expressed concern that it effectively entrenched discrimination against other religious denominations denied the same rights and privileges as the Armenian Apostolic Church.7 These concerns were rejected by the director of the Department for National Minorities and Religious Affairs of the Armenian Government, Hranush Kharatyan.

    Although Amnesty International wrote to Hranush Kharatyan in August 2007 to voice some of the concerns addressed in this report, the organization has to date unfortunately not received a response.

    The human rights concerns documented in this report have therefore taken place against a background of the legalization and registration of the Jehovah´s Witnesses and other religious groups in Armenia, concerns expressed by representatives of the Armenian Apostolic Church about the impact of new religious denominations on the Armenian Apostolic faith and new legislation codifying the rights of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    4. Compulsory military service in Armenia

    Compulsory military service in Armenia dates from the Soviet era and is mandated by the Constitution for all young men between the ages of 18 and 27. Procedures for the draft closely resemble those enacted under Soviet rule, and those completing their military service are issued with a certificate of military service (sometimes referred to by its Russian term voenni bilet). Possession of a certificate of military service is necessary in order to apply for a wide range of documents, including passports and visas, and is essential to enact a number of basic civil rights such as the rights to marry, to apply for higher education within the state education system and to apply for public sector employment.

    Since Armenian independence in 1991 the unresolved nature of the conflict between Armenians and Azeris in Nagorny Karabakh has strengthened public perceptions of the need for a strong military in Armenia.8 Following military victory in Nagorny Karabakh the army is more respected by public opinion than other institutions.9 In recent years demands for a strong military have been bolstered by a sense of strategic vulnerability in the context of high military expenditures in Azerbaijan and regular statements by Azerbaijani politicians regarding the possibility of the use of force to resolve the conflict. Jehovah´s Witnesses in Yerevan told Amnesty International that they believed the context of the Nagorny Karabakh conflict militated against the creation of a civilian alternative service, as the authorities fear a ´stampede´ of conscientious objectors that would weaken Armenian military capacity. These factors provide an unfavourable backdrop to the exercise of the right to conscientious objection.10

    5. Alternative civilian service in Armenia: still under military control

    When Armenia acceded to the Council of Europe in 2001 it committed itself to the introduction of a genuinely civilian alternative service of non-punitive length for those whose beliefs do not allow them to perform military service. In July 2004 a Law on Alternative Service was introduced in order to fulfil this commitment. The Deputy Prosecutor General informed Amnesty International that the ´Law on Alternative Service´ offers citizens of Armenia objecting to compulsory military service on conscientious grounds the opportunity to perform “an alternative civilian service”.11 However, since its introduction the extent to which the alternative civilian service is genuinely civilian, and therefore fulfils Armenia´s obligations as a Council of Europe member state and its wider obligations under international human rights law, has been disputed.

    According to information gathered by Amnesty International, in both its legislative framework and implementation the alternative civilian service remains under the supervision and control of the military and so does not constitute a genuinely civilian alternative to military service. Although this has been denied by some Armenian officials, the alternative civilian service continues to be under the overall supervision of the Ministry of Defence, thereby nullifying its ostensibly civilian character.12 The fact of military supervision has been confirmed by Jehovah´s Witnesses who opted to perform the alternative civilian service. Jehovah´s Witnesses told Amnesty International that members of their organization performing the alternative service were, for example, reportedly not allowed to leave their place of work without the permission of the nearest military authority or police. They were reportedly required to wear uniforms provided by the military, could be transferred to reserve units, and were required to keep an official pay-book/identity card marked ´RA Armed Forces´. Those who fell ill during the service were sent to military hospitals for treatment. Allegedly, part of their daily programme was determined by staff in the Ministry of Defence, and involved physical exercise typical of a military, rather than civilian, regime. Furthermore, it was reportedly the Military Prosecutor´s Office that was the authority dealing with alleged breaches of discipline.

    Military oversight of the alternative civilian service is further confirmed by the issuing of Order No.142 on 20 December 2004 by then Deputy Minister of Defence Michael Harutunian. This order mandated weekly military supervision of those performing the alternative civilian service. Monthly written reports were also to be submitted to the Chief of General Staff. Finally, Jehovah´s Witnesses refusing to perform or abandoning the alternative service on grounds of conscientious objection have been prosecuted as if they were military personnel under Articles 327 and 362 of the Armenian Criminal Code, which deal with draft evasion and desertion respectively.

    As noted above, it is stipulated by the Council of Europe that alternative civilian services must not be punitive in length. Those performing military service in Armenia must serve for two years, whereas those performing the alternative civilian service must serve three and a half years. Although there is no simple standard for determining when length of service becomes punitive, Amnesty International believes that the fact that those performing the alternative service must serve for 75 per cent longer than those performing military service is suggestive of an intent to punish, by imposing a significantly longer alternative service requirement.

    A further problem with the legislative framework of the alternative civilian service is that the ´Law on Alternative Service´ does not allow for applications for conscientious objection to be made by serving conscripts. Applications to object to military service on conscientious grounds must be made prior to the beginning of the months of March or September preceding the bi-annual drafts. Serving professional soldiers are omitted entirely from legal provisions regulating conscientious objection.

    Although a number of amendments were introduced to the ´Law on Alternative Service´ in 2005 and 2006, the above deficiencies have been acknowledged by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE). Paragraph 6.7 of PACE Resolution 1532, adopted on 23 January 2007, noted that the PACE was “disappointed to note that the current law, as amended in 2005 and subsequently in June 2006, still does not offer conscientious objectors any guarantee of “genuine alternative service of a clearly civilian nature, which should be neither deterrent nor punitive in character”, as provided for by Council of Europe standards.”13 The Resolution further expressed concern regarding the imprisonment of conscientious objectors.

    Amnesty International welcomes the acquittal in November 2006 of 19 men, all Jehovah´s Witnesses, who began the alternative service in December 2004 but later abandoned it and after their conviction and imprisonment filed an appeal with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) against their imprisonment (Khachatryan and 18 Others v. Armenia).14 These individuals have not received compensation and Amnesty International urges the Armenian authorities to review their applications for compensation commensurate with the distress imposed by wrongful imprisonment.

    However, Amnesty International remains seriously concerned by the continuing imprisonment of increasing numbers of conscientious objectors. As of 26 September 2007 there were 82 Jehovah´s Witnesses imprisoned in Armenia (73 tried and convicted, nine charged and in pre-trial detention). This number represented a new record and the continuation of a trend of increasing numbers of conscientious objectors in prison, a trend fuelled by lengthened sentences (see below) and greater reluctance to release conscientious objectors on parole. According to information supplied to Amnesty International by the Deputy Prosecutor General, a total of 92 Jehovah´s Witnesses were prosecuted under Article 327 of the Armenian Criminal Code between January and September 2007.

    6. Prisoners of conscience

    Although Amnesty International does not question the right of governments to conscript individuals into armed forces, the organization upholds the right of every person to refuse to perform military service on the grounds of conscience, deeply held ethical, moral or philosophical beliefs or profound personal conviction, without suffering any legal or physical penalties as a result. Amnesty International further believes that this right extends to those already conscripted, so that they may claim conscientious objector status at any time up to and after entering the armed forces. Furthermore, a state of war or active hostilities cannot be used as grounds for derogating the right to perform an alternative civilian service. Where an individual has not refused to perform an alternative, genuinely civilian service that is neither punitive nor discriminatory in character, Amnesty International considers that individual to be a prisoner of conscience.

    In the light of the evidence pointing to the compromised civilian nature, as well as punitive length, of the alternative service in Armenia, Amnesty International believes all Jehovah´s Witnesses currently imprisoned for conscientious objection in Armenia to be prisoners of conscience. The organization calls upon the Armenian authorities to fulfil the pledge given to the PACE on 22 June 2004 by the then parliamentary speaker Tigran Torosyan, that all conscientious objectors in Armenia would be released. Amnesty International is also continuing to urge the Armenian authorities to reform the alternative service in order to remove all aspects of military oversight or control, in order that the implementation of the ´Law on Alternative Service´ may provide a genuinely civilian alternative to military service.

    7. Further punitive and discriminatory measures against conscientious objectors

    Two further aspects of the situation confronting conscientious objectors in Armenia are a source of concern for Amnesty International. The organization is disturbed by increased reports of prosecutors appealing for harsher sentences when courts do not impose the maximum sentence on conscientious objectors (which are two and four years respectively under Articles 327 and 362 of the Armenian Criminal Code). Jehovah´s Witnesses told Amnesty International that prosecutors consistently appeal to the Court of Appeal to increase sentences handed down to Jehovah´s Witnesses. Reportedly, there had been 12 such cases by March 2007, with no such applications being refused by the Court of Appeal.

    For example, the Assistant Prosecutor of the Malatia-Sebastia Community in Yerevan lodged an appeal on 25 September 2006 for the two-year sentence given to Jehovah´s Witness Hayk Gegham Avetisyan to be increased. The Court of Appeal granted the application and increased the sentence to 30 months. It is a concern that increased sentences serve a punitive function further discouraging conscientious objection.

    Another source of concern is the fact that Jehovah´s Witnesses who have served prison terms for conscientious objection face further problems after their release. Jehovah´s Witnesses reported that as of March 2007 there were 30 individuals in this situation. All 30 had served their sentences or been paroled. However, they had not been issued with a certificate equivalent to the certificate of military service (widely referred to by the Russian term voenni bilet); they were told by the relevant document-issuing body to apply to their local military authority (known in Russian as voenni kommisariat) for a certificate, which was then refused. Instead they were told to go back into the army and that they could only receive a certificate when they have reached 27 years of age, the upper limit for military service in Armenia.

    Without a certificate of military service, it is difficult to secure other important documents, such as passports, visas and internal residency permits, to enter public sector employment or to marry. Without the capacity to receive passports or visas Jehovah´s Witnesses´ right to freedom of movement, enshrined in Article 12 of the ICCPR and Article 2 of Protocol No.4 to the ECHR, is violated.

    Paradoxically, Amnesty International has been told that two of the Jehovah´s Witnesses acquitted in November 2006 did receive a certificate of service, indicating that there has been inconsistency in the granting of certificates of service. Amnesty International urges the Armenian authorities to review the cases of these 30 Jehovah´s Witnesses, in order to ensure that having already been imprisoned for exercising their right to conscientious objection, they receive the necessary certification to end any further penalization for their legitimate exercising of this right.

    8. Allegations of impunity relating to violence directed at Jehovah´s Witnesses

    Amnesty International is also concerned by increasing reports of violence directed against Jehovah´s Witnesses, including physical attacks allegedly perpetrated by clergy members of the Armenian Apostolic Church. These attacks represent violations of the right to physical and mental integrity, a right which the Armenian authorities have a responsibility to protect as well as to respect, and since they appear to target their victims as Jehovah´s Witnesses, they further constitute a form of discrimination. In this context Amnesty International is concerned by allegations that the Armenian authorities have failed to exercise due diligence in effectively investigating and prosecuting such assaults, which would have an important preventive and protective effect. A related concern is the apparent violation of the right to effective remedy, as stipulated in Article 2 (3) of the ICCPR and Article 13 of the ECHR (see above).

    In March of this year an Amnesty International delegate met with representatives of the Jehovah´s Witnesses in the capital Yerevan. They told Amnesty International that in some senses conditions had improved since the Jehovah´s Witnesses had been registered as a religious organization on 8 October 2004. For example, they reported that at least until March 2007 (see below) they had been able to import and distribute religious literature. They were also able to hold religious meetings on the same basis as other religious organizations.

    However, Jehovah´s Witnesses also told Amnesty International that acts of violence against them increased following the 2004 registration of their organization. They reported a number of incidents over the previous year in which their members had been physically assaulted by unknown assailants, or by inhabitants of their locality. They further stated that their attempts to secure effective remedy for these physical assaults had been largely unsuccessful.

    These concerns were raised by Amnesty International´s delegate in March with the Head of Division for Human Rights and Humanitarian Issues in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Some of the cases discussed below were confirmed to Amnesty International by the Republic of Armenia Police. Yet surprisingly, Amnesty International was later informed in October by the Deputy Prosecutor General that the Prosecutor´s Office possessed no information relating to assaults against Jehovah´s Witnesses in Armenia. This gives rise to the concern that while some investigative activity into the cases discussed below has taken place, the Armenian authorities are failing to consider the possibility that there is a discriminatory aspect to these assaults, i.e. that they are specifically directed against Jehovah´s Witnesses as members of a particular group. Amnesty International is therefore concerned that the lack of effective investigation and prosecution of such assaults, combined with the apparent denial of their discriminatory basis, is contributing to a climate of impunity for discrimination against Jehovah´s Witnesses and the physical attacks it engenders.

    On 21 August 2006 Jehovah´s Witnesses Zoya Tamaryan and Lena Karapetyan were allegedly physically assaulted in Shengavit by Ashot Poghosyan, a priest of the Armenian Apostolic Church. He reportedly hit both women, one of them so hard that she fell and fractured her arm; he also threw a rock and a bottle at the two women. Police have reportedly confirmed this incident, but did not open a criminal case after Ashot Poghosyan expressed remorse for his assault. Appeals by the Jehovah´s Witnesses to the court of first instance and the court of review to overturn the police decision not to open a criminal case were rejected.

    According to information supplied to Amnesty International by the Police of the Republic of Armenia, the assault was in fact ´a neighbourly quarrel´ between Ashot Poghosyan and Zoya Tamaryan ´who happened to be a Jehovah´s Witness´, although the reasons for the quarrel and why it should have turned violent are unclear. The Armenian Police told Amnesty International that the appeal to open a criminal case against Ashot Poghosyan was rejected in accordance with paragraph 2 of Article 37 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (circumstances giving discretion to refuse criminal prosecution).

    Jehovah´s Witnesses also told Amnesty International that on 28 February 2007 two Jehovah´s Witnesses, Ruben Khachaturian and Narine Gevorkian, were beaten and threatened with being thrown out of a window by neighbours in the apartment block where they live in the Shengavit suburb of Yerevan. They said that one month later the police had failed to institute a prompt investigation of the assault. On 13 March 2007 Jehovah´s Witness Vartan Gevorkian was reportedly attacked by unknown men in the street in Shengavit. His attackers were prevented from seriously beating him by intervening passers-by. On 17 March a Jehovah´s Witnesses meeting in the village of Sevabert in Abovian region was allegedly interrupted when unknown men broke down the door, stole a music system and cut the electricity supply. Allegedly, no investigation into this case was initiated. On 17 April Jehovah´s Witnesses Marine Rushanyan and Elvina Artunyan were threatened by a man with a pistol while conducting public ministry. Although they filed a complaint with the police on 21 May they were informed that a criminal case would not be opened due to lack of evidence. According to the Armenian Police, however, no complaints were lodged with them in relation to these four cases.

    On 1 June, in the village of Lusarat in the Ararat district, Jehovah´s Witnesses Armen Khachatryan and Hamest Petrosyan were physically attacked by an unknown man while engaged in a discussion with a young woman on religious themes. Armen Khachatryan later appealed to the police and Prosecutor General´s office for the case to be investigated as both Witnesses had sustained physical injuries. According to the Jehovah´s Witnesses, the Ararat District Police investigated the case. The alleged attacker in this case was an Armenian Apostolic priest from the town of Gyumri who was visiting his family in Lusarat on the day of the attack. The Jehovah´s Witnesses agreed to try to resolve the matter without legal action if the priest apologized for his actions. However, he denied the incident and the police dropped the case. The Armenian Police told Amnesty International that the opening of a criminal case was rejected due to the absence of any criminal act punishable under the Criminal Code.

    Amnesty International is concerned that this rise in the number of assaults on Jehovah´s Witnesses may be related to perceptions of a climate of impunity in the absence of effective investigation and prosecution of such assaults by law enforcement agencies. State parties to international human rights instruments such as the ICCPR and ECHR are obliged not only to respect human rights in the actions of state institutions and law enforcement agents, but to demonstrate due diligence in taking steps to prevent, investigate and prosecute human rights abuses by non-state actors. States bear a responsibility when they fail to prevent or investigate human rights abuses or secure redress for victims. In this context, Amnesty International is concerned by claims of the lack of prompt, thorough, independent and impartial investigation into cases of alleged assaults against Jehovah´s Witnesses.

    Other concerns regarding discrimination

    As noted above, Jehovah´s Witnesses informed Amnesty International that following registration the organization had been able to import religious literature into Armenia. However, Jehovah´s Witnesses told Amnesty International that in March 2007 Customs Officials raised the import tax on Jehovah´s Witness periodicals from the equivalent of US$0.05 to $1.00, an increase imposing considerable limitations on the capacity of the organization to import religious literature. Amnesty International sought confirmation from the Armenian authorities in August 2007 whether this was a universal tax increase applying to all periodicals, or whether it applied only to literature imported by Jehovah´s Witnesses, but has received no reply on this issue. In the latter case this would constitute an act of discrimination and a human rights violation. Even in the former case, the effect of the tax increase may have a discriminatory effect, since some religious organizations, such as the Jehovah´s Witnesses, are more dependent on imported literature than others.

    Dissemination of discriminatory attitudes

    Amnesty International also received reports of the dissemination of views which may be seen as contributing to a climate of discrimination against Jehovah´s Witnesses. For example, a youth organization or group by the name of ´One Nation´ has reportedly been responsible for public processions and the dissemination of posters and flyers warning the public to ´Beware of the Jehovah´s Witnesses´ and to ´Say no to the sects´ (see attached photograph). As noted above, aggressive commentary from Armenian Apostolic Church representatives directed against the Jehovah´s Witnesses has also been documented. Jehovah´s Witnesses in Yerevan told Amnesty International that negative coverage of the Jehovah´s Witnesses (as well as other religious groups and denominations) is common on Armenian television, including both mainstream television channels such as Armenia TV and the specialist religious television channel Shoghakat (´drop of light´).15 A former Minister of Culture, Hakob Movses, recently stated on Shoghakat TV that “sects are the traitors of the nation”.16 Jehovah´s Witnesses have also reported derogatory statements made about their organization by teachers of courses on the history of the Armenian Apostolic Church in schools, and even the failing of Jehovah´s Witness students who refused to convert to the Armenian Apostolic Church.17

    Article 20(2) of the ICCPR states that ´[A]ny advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence shall be prohibited by law´. Article 226 of the Criminal Code adopted by the Republic of Armenia in August 2003 criminalizes the incitement of national, racial and religious hatred, and stipulates that the committing of such acts by an organized group constitutes an aggravating circumstance. The Armenian authorities have a responsibility to exercise due diligence in taking action to comply with these international and domestic standards. Furthermore, government officials have a positive responsibility to take the lead in showing non-discriminatory and inclusive attitudes towards groups which face discrimination and hostility in society.

    9. Conclusion

    Although registration as a legal religious organization has facilitated certain aspects of the activities of the Jehovah´s Witnesses in Armenia, members of the organization continue to confront serious violations of their human rights as a result of their beliefs. This most clearly applies to young male Jehovah´s Witnesses, whose religious beliefs prohibit them from performing military service. The Armenian authorities have failed to comply with Council of Europe standards in introducing an adequate legal framework or structure for the implementation of a genuinely civilian alternative to compulsory military service. The Armenian alternative service does not, in its present configuration, fulfil conscientious objectors´ right to an alternative, genuinely civilian, service that is neither punitive nor discriminatory in character. That this is the case is further substantiated by the fact that at this time of writing no one in Armenia is performing the alternative service.

    Since the alternative service in its current configuration is not genuinely civilian, Amnesty International considers all those imprisoned on account of their refusal to perform this service to be prisoners of conscience, imprisoned solely on account of their religious beliefs. An integral aspect of the fulfilment of Armenia´s obligations in this field is the immediate and unconditional release of all conscientious objectors currently imprisoned. All those wrongfully imprisoned should receive adequate compensation, and it is the responsibility of the Armenian authorities to ensure that they suffer no further human rights violations through the withholding of documents necessary for the exercise of their civil, political, social and economic rights.

    The Armenian authorities have also failed to protect other rights and freedoms of Jehovah´s Witnesses. They have failed to ensure the prompt, thorough, impartial and independent investigation of reported assaults on Jehovah´s Witnesses, and therefore to prevent the emergence of a climate of impunity with regard to such assaults. Acknowledging the discriminatory aspect to these assaults, that is, that they are directed against Jehovah´s Witnesses as members of a particular group, is a necessary step towards countering discrimination and impunity. Amnesty International urges the Armenian authorities to demonstrate that they are guided by human rights principles in fulfilling and protecting the right to freedom of conscience and religion, and to this end offers the recommendations laid out below.

    10. Recommendations

    Amnesty International calls upon the Armenian authorities to:

    Take active steps to bring the legislative framework and implementation of Armenia´s alternative civilian service into compliance with the commitments and standards to which Armenia is obliged as a Council of Europe member and State party to the ICCPR and ECHR, so that it can offer a genuinely civilian and non-punitive alternative to compulsory military service. Such steps should include:

    Releasing immediately and unconditionally all individuals imprisoned solely for exercising their right to refuse to perform military service in the absence of a genuinely civilian alternative, and refraining from imprisoning conscientious objectors in future.

    Ensuring that military bodies or officials have no part to play in the legislative framework, implementation or disciplinary structures or practices of the alternative civilian service.

    Reducing the length of the alternative civilian service so that the length of the service may not be seen as punishing or deterring the exercise of the right to conscientious objection.

    Ensuring, after the introduction of a genuinely civilian alternative service, that all relevant persons affected by military service, including those already serving in the army, have information available to them about the right to conscientious objection and how to apply for the alternative service.

    Ceasing without delay the imposition of lengthened or maximum prison sentences punishing and deterring the exercise of the right to conscientious objection.

    Issuing without delay a certificate of fulfilment of service to all those who have served prison terms for conscientious objection in order that they face no obstacles in accessing a full range of human rights after their release.

    Take active steps to ensure that a climate of impunity does not emerge with regard to physical assaults against Jehovah´s Witnesses or representatives of other minority religious groups. Such steps may include:

    Exercising due diligence in ensuring the prompt, thorough, impartial and independent investigation and, where appropriate, prosecution of alleged physical assaults against members of the Jehovah´s Witnesses organization.

    Encouraging government officials to take the lead in showing non-discriminatory and inclusive attitudes towards groups which face discrimination and hostility in society.

    Ensure that Jehovah´s Witnesses and other registered religious groups are not discriminated against or prevented from exercising the rights extended to them in the ´Law on freedom of conscience and religious organizations´. This may include:

    Reviewing import tax increases with a view to ensuring that any such increases do not, in either intent or effect, discriminate against the Jehovah Witnesses or any other religious group.

    Ceasing all interventions by state agents to prohibit execution of contracts between the Jehovah´s Witnesses and other parties for venue rental or other services.

    1 Amnesty International interview with Lyova Margarian, Yerevan, 27 March 2007.

    2 A report published by Amnesty International in 1999 on the subject of the imprisonment of conscientious objectors in Armenia cited the commentary of an Armenian Apostolic bishop referring to the Jehovah´s Witnesses as “a totalitarian sect” posing “the most horrible threats to our people, our state, our faith”. See Armenia. “Respect my human dignity”: Imprisonment of conscientious objectors, (AI Index: EUR 54/06/99).

    3 See “ARMENIA: Secret order banishes religious minorities from police”, Forum 18 News Service, 25 April 2003. According to this report, a secret order issued by the head of the police in December 2002 banned representatives of all religious minorities from serving in the police.

    4 European Association of Jehovah´s Christian Witnesses, Armenia´s Unresolved Issue of Conscientious Objection to Military Service, London, 2006, p.3.

    5 In the words of His Holiness Aram I, “[D]ue to ecclesiological self-understanding and historical circumstances, the Armenian Church has become a major player in nation-building. It has become a powerful promoter of national values and aspirations.” On the Renewal of the Armenian Church, Dialogue with Youth No. 10. See dialogues.htm

    6 Among the rights codified are the right to financial assistance from the state budget, the right to implement educational programmes within the state educational system, the right to publication in mass media of the Church´s official reports without changes, the right to recognition by the state of weddings and divorces conducted by the Church and the right to tax-exempt production of items used during religious rites.

    7 Vahan Ishkhanyan, “Theology and Politics: Should the Armenian Church also be the state Church?”, ArmeniaNow.com, Issue 9 (228), 2 March 2007.

    8 The post-Soviet conflict in Nagorny Karabakh, formerly an autonomous region within Soviet Azerbaijan populated by a local Armenian majority, began in 1988 and escalated into full-blown hostilities in 1991. The war ended in 1994 with the de facto secession of Nagorny Karabakh from Azerbaijan; no state, including Armenia, has recognized the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

    9 According to an ´Armenian National Voter Study´ poll conducted by the International Republican Institute, Baltioc Surveys Ltd/The Gallup Organization and the Armenian Sociological Organization in 2006, 83 per cent of the Armenian population has more confidence in the army than in the Church (77 per cent), the president´s office (35 per cent) and the National Assembly (31 per cent). Figures cited in International Crisis Group, Nagorno-Karabakh: Risking war, Europe Report No.187, 14 November 2007, p.18, ft.196.

    10 During Soviet times there was no provision for conscientious objection. However, the Armenian Police told Amnesty International that historically a ´silent agreement´ existed between the authorities and representatives of the Molokan community. A religious minority of Russian origin, the Molokans adhere to pacifist beliefs prohibiting them from taking up arms. As a result of the agreement they would serve in kitchens or construction sites during their military service. Although according to the Armenian Police, to this day Molokan conscientious objectors have never been prosecuted, there are reports of one Molokan, Pavel Karavanov, being released in summer 2006 after serving a sentence for conscientious objection.

    11 Avoidance of this alternative service, as is the case with draft evasion, is a criminal act under Article 327 of the Armenian Criminal Code.

    12 Artur Agabekyan, chair of the parliamentary Defence Committee, and other officials have denied that the alternative civilian service is under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Defence. They claim that it is under the control of the Ministries of Health and Social Security. See “ARMENIA: 82 religious prisoners of conscience is new record”, Forum 18 News Service, 28 September 2007. Other officials, including the Ombudsman, have confirmed that it is under the overall control of the Ministry of Defence.

    13 Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Resolution 1532 (2007), Honouring of Commitments by Armenia. Retrieved from

    14 This is the fourth application relating to conscientious objection filed by Jehovah´s Witnesses in Armenia at the ECtHR. The others are Bayatyan v. Armenia, Bukharatyan v. Armenia and Tsaturyan v. Armenia. On 12 December 2006 the ECtHR declared the case of Bayatyan v.Armenia admissible. This case is significant in that the ECtHR will consider the question of conscientious objection directly under Article 9 of the ECHR (the right to freedom of conscience and religion).

    15 Shoghakat is an independent television channel originally established in 1998 by then Archbishop Karekin Nersissian, and advocates the values and traditions of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    16 See Vahan Ishkhanyan, ´Essay: Late night lessons in fear´, ArmeniaNow.com, Issue 38 (258), 21 September 2007.

    17 Yerevan Press Club, Partnership for Open Society Initiative and Open Society Institute Human Rights and Governance Grants Programme/Open Society Institute Assistance Foundation-Armenia, Monitoring of Democratic Reforms in Armenia Report 2006, p. 28. This report also acknowledged that such incidents had reduced in number, and that whereas there had previously been cases of teachers who were Jehovah´s Witnesses being fired, this was no longer the case. Available at

    Note

    Picture: Survivor of domestic violence Greta Baghdasaryan calls for better laws protecting women’s and children’s rights, 4 July 2008

  • CANADA: Ryerson Apologizes for Ataov Event

    CANADA: Ryerson Apologizes for Ataov Event

    Ryerson Apologizes for Ataov Event and Reaffirms its commitment to uphold the Truth
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    Toronto, Ontario; On February 18, 2009, The Department of Sociology at Ryerson University, and the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations organized an evening lecture on campus titled “Elaborations on Turkish strategies to dealing with issues around Armenian Allegations and beyond”. The lecture was delivered by Professor Turkkaya Ataov, a leading denier of the Armenian Genocide. The lecture was equivalent to Neo-Nazi propaganda presented to deny the Jewish Holocaust. Prof. Ataov trivialized the reality of the Armenian Genocide and presented the usual Turkish Government’s views.

    Ryerson University’s student body was outraged by the fact that such an event had been cosponsored by a department of their university and raised concerns through letters and by signing petitions which included names of approximately 300 Ryerson students.

    After several meetings with department heads and administration, Dr. Sheldon Levy, the president of Ryerson University, in a letter to Sally Sahagian, the president of the Armenian Students’ Association at Ryerson University, apologized to the Ryerson community by stating, “On behalf of Ryerson University, I would like to apologize for the pain and suffering experienced in particular by the members of the Armenian.

    Community as a result of this event” He then assured the student body that the university’s views were in line with that of the Canadian Government, the International Association of Genocide Scholars and the hundreds of historians and experts researching the topic internationally. Dr. Levy stated, “Ryerson University supports Prime Minster Harper’s statement on behalf of all Canadians that the Armenian Genocide is a historical fact, unquestionably part of the historical record with tremendous suffering.”

    Ryerson University’s response indicated that although the university is a space where students can practice their freedom of speech, the university will not become an accomplice to racism and genocide denial. This form of hate propaganda has no place in our academic and scholarly circles.

    The administration of Ryerson University, through its principled stand, has proven to remain true to the role of the university as an institution committed to upholding the truth. The Armenian Students’ Association at Ryerson University together with all its members and the Armenian Community at large would like to thank the Ryerson University administration for identifying genocide denial as a threat to academia and society at large, consequently taking a principled stand against the crime of genocide.

    For more info, please contact Sally Sahagian – [email protected].

    29 May 2009 by Press Office

    In America, there are “equal access”  and “”equal time” laws governing libelous attacks in public.  I am sure similar laws are in the books in Canada, too. The first step should be a firm, informative, fair, polite, but demanding letter, worded by a lawyer (or law firm) specializing in freedom of speech issues in Canada should be sent.  This should be done immediately (within the next several days) to set the stage.

    According to their answers, the next step can be designed accordingly.

    TALDF can help with wording.

    Ergun KIRLIKOVALI

    TURKISH FORUM

    erdalatrek

    Dear David and friends,

    If you were to click on the html “pressoffice” at the bottom of Sally Sahagian’s disgusting “press release” you would see the email address:

    [email protected]

    While Sahagian gives her email address as [email protected], it is obvious that the “press release” is an Armenian Church of Canada product.

    Perhaps TALDF can seize this opportunity to deliver where it will truly count and weigh the genocide-mongers down.

    Regards,
    Erdal

  • German Scholar Exposes

    German Scholar Exposes

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    Turkish Propaganda about Jews

    By Harut Sassounian

    Publisher, The California Courier

    For many years, the Turkish government and its hired propagandists have claimed that Jews have been well treated in Turkey throughout history.

    In recent years, as Turkey came under intense international pressure to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide, Turkish officials decided to present a more positive image of their country by forcing local Jewish leaders to issue public statements claiming that their community has lived in peace and prosperity for hundreds of years.

    Turkey’s Jewish leaders obediently carried out the dictates of the Turkish government in order to assure the safety of their community and to safeguard their own business interests.

    Very little research has been done, however, on the true conditions of the Jewish community in the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey. German scholar Corry Guttstadt recently filled that gap by publishing a comprehensive study of 520 pages on Turkey’s reprehensible actions during the Holocaust. The book’s title in German is: “Die Turkei, die Juden und der Holocaust” (Turkey, the Jews and the Holocaust). Based on archival materials located in several European countries, she was able to document the tragic fate of Turkish Jewry during the Holocaust.

    In an interview conducted by Sonja Galler and posted on www.Qantara.de, Guttstadt explains why the Jewish community in Turkey dwindled from 150,000 strong during World War I to only 20,000 at the present time.

    “To portray the Ottoman Empire as a ‘multicultural paradise’ is absurd and ahistorical,” Guttstadt says. “As non-Muslims, the Jews were subject to countless constraints. Like the Christians, they had to pay a poll tax and were obliged to behave in a submissive manner towards Muslims.”

    Having witnessed the genocide of the Armenian people, Jews were terrified that they might suffer the same fate. To ensure their safety and survival, Jews did everything possible, including conversion to Islam, to prove that they were loyal Turkish subjects.

    “Most Jews initially regarded themselves as allies of the Kemalist movement and looked to the new Republic with largely positive expectations,” Guttstadt explains. “These hopes were quickly dashed because despite their attempt to adapt and their declarations of loyalty, the Jews quickly became a target for the rigid nationalism of the young Republic. One of the defining policies of the young Republic was the ‘Turkification’ of state, economy, and society,” Guttstadt says. As a result, Jews were “successively driven out of a number of professions and economic sectors. This prompted many Jews to emigrate” from Turkey.

    In the period between the two world wars, there was increasing intolerance in Turkey against Jews and other minorities. According to Guttstadt, “Anti-Semitic tracts like the ‘Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion’ reached Turkey and were translated into Turkish in the 1930’s. Following a visit to Germany, Cevat Rifat Atilhan, who could be described as the father of Islamic anti-Semitism in Turkey, started publishing the anti-Semitic newspaper ‘Milli Inkilap’ (National Revolution) in Istanbul, which contained anti-Semitic caricatures that had been lifted directly out of the Nazi newspaper, ‘Der Sturmer.’ Both the ‘Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion’ and ‘Mein Kampf’ have gone through umpteen new editions to this day. Nationalist measures that affected not only Jews, but also Kurds, Armenians, and Greeks, included forced settlement, the so-called ‘wealth tax’ — which led to the confiscation of assets of those who were not in a position to pay the arbitrarily fixed and frequently astronomical sums they were required to pay — and forced labor in camps in eastern Anatolia.”

    Prior to World War II, close to 30,000 Turkish Jews fled to Europe to escape unfair and sometimes brutal treatment at home. Little did they know that an even more tragic fate awaited them. In 1942, Nazi Germany asked Ankara to remove its Jewish citizens from territories occupied by the German Reich, so they would not be rounded up along with the rest of European Jewry. Ankara, however, refused to allow their return by revoking their Turkish citizenship. As a result, several thousand Turkish Jews perished after being dispatched to German concentration camps.

    Guttstadt also exposes the oft-repeated lie that Turkey provided a safe haven to many European Jews during the Holocaust. She states that some Turkish consuls in European countries, who intervened to obtain the release of incarcerated Turkish Jews, did not always do so “for purely humanitarian reasons,” but “to line their pockets.”

    Corry Guttstadt’s revealing book should be translated and published in several major languages in order to expose the Turkish government’s racist and criminally negligent policies vis-à-vis its Jewish citizens during the Holocaust.