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

  • Jewish of Armenia to commemorate Holocaust victims

    Jewish of Armenia to commemorate Holocaust victims

    20.04.2009 21:17

    jews-of-armenia/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On April 21, Menora Jewish cultural center, Jewish Religious Community of Armenia and Jewish Community of Armenia will commemorate the victims of Holocaust.

    “This day we meet at the memorial to Holocaust victims, rabbi offers Kaddish (memorial prays) and we light candles. The ceremony starts at 12:00 Yerevan time, which is 10:00 Israel time,” Menora President Willy Vainer told Pan.ARMENIAN.Net.

    “On this day, at 10:00 Israel time all countries all over the world remember 6 million victims of World War 2. And on April 24 Jewish of Armenia attend the Armenian Genocide memorial, he said.

    Source:  www.panarmenian.net, 20.04.2009

  • Statement of Obama on Armenian Remembrance Day

    Statement of Obama on Armenian Remembrance Day

    Friday, 24 April 2009 12:36
    Below is the text of President Obama’s Statement on Armenian Remembrance Day, released by the White House on April 24, 2009.
    Ninety four years ago, one of the great atrocities of the 20th century began. Each year, we pause to remember the 1.5 million Armenians who were subsequently massacred or marched to their death in the final days of the Ottoman Empire. The Meds Yeghern must live on in our memories, just as it lives on in the hearts of the Armenian people.
    History, unresolved, can be a heavy weight. Just as the terrible events of 1915 remind us of the dark prospect of man’s inhumanity to man, reckoning with the past holds out the powerful promise of reconciliation. I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915, and my view of that history has not changed. My interest remains the achievement of a full, frank and just acknowledgment of the facts.
    The best way to advance that goal right now is for the Armenian and Turkish people to address the facts of the past as a part of their efforts to move forward. I strongly support efforts by the Turkish and Armenian people to work through this painful history in a way that is honest, open, and constructive. To that end, there has been courageous and important dialogue among Armenians and Turks, and within Turkey itself. I also strongly support the efforts by Turkey and Armenia to normalize their bilateral relations. Under Swiss auspices, the two governments have agreed on a framework and roadmap for normalization. I commend this progress, and urge them to fulfill its promise.
    Together, Armenia and Turkey can forge a relationship that is peaceful, productive and prosperous. And together, the Armenian and Turkish people will be stronger as they acknowledge their common history and recognize their common humanity.
    Nothing can bring back those who were lost in the Meds Yeghern. But the contributions that Armenians have made over the last ninety-four years stand as a testament to the talent, dynamism and resilience of the Armenian people, and as the ultimate rebuke to those who tried to destroy them. The United States of America is a far richer country because of the many Americans of Armenian descent who have contributed to our society, many of whom immigrated to this country in the aftermath of 1915. Today, I stand with them and with Armenians everywhere with a sense of friendship, solidarity, and deep respect.

    AA-BBC

  • Armenia marks so-called genocide anniversary

    Armenia marks so-called genocide anniversary

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    Armenia – Armenians mark Genocide Remembarence Day, Yerevan, 24Apr2009

    24.04.2009
    Hovannes Shoghikian

    Hundreds of thousands of people silently marched to a hilltop memorial in Yerevan on Friday in an annual remembrance of more than one million of fellow Armenians killed in Ottoman Turkey in what is widely considered the first genocide of the 20th century.

    As always, a steady stream of mourners flowed to the genocide memorial on the Tsitsernakabert hill overlooking the city center throughout the day, laying flowers by its eternal fire surrounded by twelve inward-bending basalt columns.

    The day marked the 94th anniversary of the arrest and subsequent execution by the regime of the Young Turks of hundreds of Armenian intellectuals in Istanbul. That was followed by the mass killings and depurations of the virtually entire ethnic Armenian population of the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

    The somber commemoration began in the morning with a traditional prayer service at Tsitsernakabert led by Catholicos Garegin II, head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, and attended by President Serzh Sarkisian and other top government officials.

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    Armenia – Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian, Catholicos mark Genocide Remembrance Day, Yerevan, 24Apr2009

    In a written address to the nation, Sarkisian described the Armenian genocide as a “crime against humanity” and said Armenia’s government will continue to campaign for its greater international recognition. “For the Armenian people and the Republic of Armenia, international recognition and condemnation of the Armenian genocide is a matter of restoring historical justice,” he said.

    “We have repeatedly pointed out that the process of international recognition of the genocide is not directed against the Turkish people and that Turkey’s recognition of the genocide is not a precondition for establishing bilateral relations,” added Sarkisian. He praised in that regard “those Turkish intellectuals who share our pain.”

    Senior members of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), one of the four parties represented in Sarkisian’s coalition government were conspicuously absent from a large group of officials who accompanied the president. Dashnaktsutyun on Thursday strongly condemned a far-reaching agreement announced by the Armenian and Turkish foreign ministries the previous night. It said the announced “roadmap” for normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations dealt a serious blow to the decades-long Armenian campaign for genocide recognition.

    Armen Rustamian, one of the nationalist party’s leaders, said the Turkish-Armenian deal, many details of which are not known, all but precluded the use of the word genocide by U.S. President Barack Obama in a statement due later on Friday. “I had some expectations, but after this statement those expectations are almost gone,” he told RFE/RL while visiting the genocide memorial.

    According to Rustamian, Sarkisian did not consult with Dashnaktsutyun leaders before signing up to the U.S.-backed statement that seems to have taken the party off the guard. He confirmed that they will decide whether or not to quit the ruling coalition after holding a meeting with Sarkisian “in the coming days.” “This is not the kind of issue that can be taken lightly,” said Rustamian. “We have to make a thorough decision after discussing it in depth.”

    A deputy chairman of Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) defended the Turkish-Armenian statement and claimed that Dashnaktsutyun’s reaction to it was “not that tough.” “I think [the statement] is only the beginning and it is wrong to expect a very quick result,” Razmik Zohrabian told RFE/RL.As always, a steady stream of mourners flowed to the genocide memorial on the Tsitsernakabert hill overlooking the city center throughout the day, laying flowers by its eternal fire surrounded by twelve inward-bending basalt columns.

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    An elderly Armenian carries flowers to the genocide memorial in Yerevan on April 24, 2009.

    https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1615357.html

  • Yerevan Tight-Lipped On Turkish-Armenian ‘Roadmap’

    Yerevan Tight-Lipped On Turkish-Armenian ‘Roadmap’

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    Football fans at Yerevan’s Hrazdan stadium pictured during the Armenia-Turkey match on September 6, 2008.

    24.04.2009
    Emil Danielyan, Tatevik Lazarian

    Armenia’s leadership remained tight-lipped on Friday about details of a potentially ground-breaking agreement with Turkey despite growing pressure from the domestic opposition concerned about its possible implications.

    The Armenian government stopped short of explicitly denying the purported specifics of the “roadmap” for the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations that were reported by Turkish newspapers.

    According to the “Sabah” daily, Armenia will formally recognize its existing border with Turkey and agree to the formation of a joint commission of historians tasked with studying the mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. It said historians from other countries could also join the commission. Turkey will in return gradually establish full diplomatic relations with Armenia and reopen the Turkish-Armenian frontier closed it 1993, reported “Sabah.”

    Another paper, “Hurriyet,” claimed that the lifting of the Turkish blockade will be contingent on a breakthrough in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process. “It would be up to Turkey to decide whether to open the gate,” it wrote on Friday.

    Commenting on the “Sabah” report, Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman Tigran Balayan said: “One should trust information about such serious issues only if it comes from official sources.” He did not elaborate.

    Armenia’s two main opposition forces demanded, meanwhile, the immediate disclosure of the “roadmap” which the two countries’ foreign ministries announced in a joint statement on Wednesday night. The statement said Ankara and Yerevan have agreed on a “comprehensive framework for the normalization of their bilateral relations” but did not give any details.

    “The Armenian authorities do not have the public mandate to make such statements and have in effect put Armenian national interests at risk by abusing the principle of confidentiality [of the talks,]” the opposition Zharangutyun (Heritage) said in a statement. It condemned the fact that the agreement was announced on the eve of the annual commemoration of the Armenian genocide.

    A similar statement was issued by the larger Armenian National Congress (HAK). “We demand that the authorities immediately disclose that document,” Levon Zurabian, a top HAK representative, told RFE/RL on Friday.

    “I am concerned that this statement could stop more countries recognizing the genocide,” said Stepan Demirchian, another HAK leader. “We support the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations but not at the expense of our national dignity.”

    The HAK and its top leader, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, are strongly opposed to the idea of Turkish and Armenian scholars jointly determining whether the 1915-1918 mass killings constituted a genocide. “If there is such a thing in that document, it is unacceptable to us,” said Zurabian.

    That Yerevan agreed to the establishment of a Turkish-Armenian body dealing with historic disputes was seemingly admitted by President Serzh Sarkisian in an interview with “The Wall Street Journal” earlier this week. “You are asking what questions can be addressed by that historical sub-commission,” he said. “I can give you one example. The historic Armenian monuments in the Ottoman Empire and today. There are thousands of such monuments. I am sure that Turkey would have many questions to raise with us.”

    When asked whether that can include the genocide issue, Sarkisian replied: “We cannot prohibit Turkey from raising any issue in any of the sub-commissions, just as they cannot limit us in raising any issue.”

    The Armenian leader also hit out at Turkish Prime Minister Recep for repeatedly stating this month that Ankara will not normalize ties with Yerevan before a solution is found to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. “I think already now the motivation of Turkey has decreased, because as you said Prime Minister Erdogan is now offering preconditions,” he said, speaking two days before the announcement of the “roadmap.”

    Sarkisian further made clear that he will not visit Turkey this October for the return match of the two countries’ national soccer teams if the Turkish-Armenian border is not reopened or about to be reopened by then. “I was not supposed to travel to Turkey as a simple tourist or as a football fan,” he said.

    The prospect of a breakthrough in Turkish-Armenian relations prompted renewed concerns from Azerbaijan, which maintains that their unconditional normalization would deal a heavy blow to its positions in the Karabakh conflict. Turkish President Abdullah Gul phoned his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliev late Thursday in a bid to address those concerns.

    “There is no misunderstanding in our relations,” Gul told journalists on Friday. “We are in agreement that everything that is being done is of advantage to both our countries, Azerbaijan and Turkey,” he said, according to news agencies.

    Erdogan, for his part, appeared to downplay the significance of the Turkish-Armenian understandings. “We will not take any steps that will hurt our [Azeri] brothers,” “Hurriyet Daily News” quoted him as saying. “There is nothing that is signed but a finalized protocol.”

    https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1615483.html

  • Opening of Armenia-Turkish border weakening Russian influence

    Opening of Armenia-Turkish border weakening Russian influence

    By Messenger Staff

    Thursday, April 23

    Alexander Skakov from the Russian Institute of Strategic Research thinks that opening the Turkish and Armenian border will hamper Russian attempts to bring Armenia under its influence.

    Today Armenia is under the Russian sphere of influence because it is confronting Azerbaijan and Turkey. Its connection to the rest of the world through Georgia is partly blocked and therefore the basis of its communications is Iran.

    The Americans think they can offer Armenia better options and thus attract it into the US sphere of interest. Skakov says that if Armenia receives direct access to the Turkish coast, Black Sea and Mediterranean it will engage in more direct trade with the West, bypassing Russia. The West will also guarantee Armenia’s sovereignty. Skakov thinks that after opening the border with Turkey Armenia will become less dependent on Russia and more on NATO and the EU.

    Source:  www.messenger.com.ge, 23 April 2009

  • Will Obama Recognize ‘Armenian Genocide’?

    Will Obama Recognize ‘Armenian Genocide’?

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    Speaking to the Turkish parliament, President Barack Obama said his views on the Armenian killings “are on the record and I have not changed my views.”

    April 24, 2009

    (RFE/RL) — The U.S. president is confronted with a tough choice.

    Does he choose the first April 24 of his term in office to fulfill his campaign promise to recognize the killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide?

    Or does he put off his promised recognition for fear of angering Turkey and jeopardizing the improving relations between Yerevan and Baku?

    The White House has given no hint of how it will act. But act it must. U.S. presidents for years have marked April 24 with a statement issued to the press and Obama must observe that tradition.

    So far, no U.S. president has marked April 24 by declaring he recognizes the slaughter of Armenians as genocide. U.S. presidents have used the occasion of their annual message to Armenians to describe the events as mass killings, a calamity, or a tragedy — but not genocide.

    Only Ronald Reagan came very close to recognition. He included Armenians in his statement on April 22, 1981, observing “Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust.”

    “Like the genocide of the Armenians before it, and the genocide of the Cambodians which followed it — and like too many other such persecutions of too many other peoples — the lessons of the Holocaust must never be forgotten,” Reagan said.

    Mounting Pressure

    The pressure on Obama to still more clearly single out the Armenians as victims of genocide are high.

    The president’s home state, Hawaii, on April 6 declared April 24th as a “Day of Remembrance in Recognition of and Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide of 1915,” making it the 42nd of the 50 U.S. states to take such a step.

    And on March 17, a group of U.S. congressmen sponsored a resolution for Washington to officially declare the killings as genocide, as Canada and France have done.

    But if pressure is high, it does not only come from one direction.

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    People lay flowers at the genocide memorial in Yerevan.

    Turkey has long made it clear that it views what happened to Armenians in the World War I era as not the business of third parties.

    Ankara sent a strong reminder of its position this week, saying on April 22 it had recalled its ambassador to Canada after Ottawa reaffirmed its position that Armenians were victims of genocide.

    Obama is well aware he walks a tightrope.

    His administration is trying to give impetus to the still delicate rapprochement drive between Armenia and Turkey. And Ankara has made it clear that any genocide statements in Washington would set back that process.

    Sensitive Talks

    Washington hopes Turkey will reestablish diplomatic relations with Yerevan that Ankara broke off in 1993 following Armenia’s war with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. The United States also wants Turkey — a NATO partner — to reopen its border with Armenia, something that would restore Armenia’s shortest land trade route to Europe.

    Those steps are seen as helpful for stabilizing the South Caucasus, an area which has become a major worry for Washington following Russia’s August war with Georgia. U.S. officials see Moscow as trying to reassert its influence in the volatile but energy-important region at the West’s expense.

    U.S. State Department spokesman Robert Wood underlined Washington’s hopes for the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement as he welcomed on April 23 an announcement by Turkey and Armenia that they intend to normalize relations.

    “What’s important here is the fact that Turkey and Armenia have basically decided to normalize their relationship. To us, that is a huge step,” Wood said.

    “They’re basically saying that we’ve got to move on from the past; we need to reconcile. While there are still going to be differences of opinion, it’s clear that these two governments have taken the very difficult step to move that relationship forward.”

    Ankara and Yerevan announced jointly on April 22 that they “have agreed on a comprehensive framework for the normalization of their bilateral relations in a mutually satisfactory manner.” They did not provide details.

    Moving Forward

    In his visit to Turkey earlier this month, Obama appeared to signal that he might not see this anniversary as the time for a genocide statement if Turkey and Ankara were making progress toward rapprochement.

    Speaking to the Turkish parliament on April 6, he said his views “are on the record and I have not changed my views.”

    Urging Ankara and Yerevan to work together, he said, “what I want to do is not focus on my views right now but focus on the views of the Turkish and the Armenian people.”

    He added, “If they can move forward and deal with a difficult and tragic history, then I think the entire world should encourage them.”

    Turkey and Armenia remain far apart on the question of what happened to the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire, despite the fact April 24 now commemorates events that began almost a century ago.

    Armenia, and genocide scholars, say 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of the Ottoman Turks from 1915-23 in a campaign aimed at eliminating the Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire.

    Armenians have made April 24 “Genocide Remembrance Day” in recognition of the same date in 1915 when Armenian leaders were arrested and later executed.

    Ankara says that up to 600,000 Armenians died during World War I and during deportations out of eastern Anatolia. But it says the deaths were in the context of an Armenian uprising as Armenians sided with invading Russian troops at the time.

    https://www.rferl.org/a/Will_Obama_Recognize_Armenian_Genocide/1615459.html