Category: Armenia

  • Istanbul feminists protest attacks on Armenian women

    Istanbul feminists protest attacks on Armenian women

    Istanbul feminists protest attacks on Armenian women

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    Activists of the Istanbul Feminist Collective held a march in Samatya district of Istanbul against recent attacks on elderly Armenian women, Bianet.org reported.

    The protesters, carrying placards saying “Armenian women are not alone,” “I am Maritsa, I am Eva,” “Don’t touch my neighbor,” laid flowers in front of the house of 85-year-old Maritsa Kucuk who was brutally murdered on Dec. 28.

    A number of attacks were committed against elderly Armenian women in their homes in Samatya over the past few months, one of which resulted in a death. The first attack in the past few months was on Nov. 1, 2012. A woman named Gonul A. was beaten by an intruder, and her valuables were stolen. On Nov. 28, Tuivat A. (87) was attacked inside her house. She lost one eye in the attack and her valuables were also taken. On Dec. 28, Maritsa Kucuk (85) was brutally murdered in her house, where she lived alone. In the fifth attack, Sultan Aykar (80) was stabbed as she entered her house.

    Source: Panorama.am

    via Istanbul feminists protest attacks on Armenian women – Society – Panorama | Armenian news.

  • Khojaly Airport – a danger to aviation

    Khojaly Airport – a danger to aviation

    The European Azerbaijan Society

    Press Release: The prospective opening of the airport in Khojaly, in the Armenian-occupied Azerbaijani region of Nagorno-Karabakh, has dismayed those involved in ensuring international air safety.

    Khojaly Airport was closed on 25 February 1992, after being occupied by Armenian forces during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The airport was rebuilt during 2010–11, and its opening has already been delayed for over a year.

    The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, tasked with achieving a negotiated resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, previously issued a statement in which they expressed their concern that the planned opening of the airport could lead to further increased tensions.

    H.E. Richard Morningstar, US Ambassador to Azerbaijan, subsequently commented: “The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs said that the parties need to abstain from steps that may affect the peace process. The opening of the airport in Khojaly may create tensions in the peace talks.”

    The potential opening violates international law, including several provisions of the Chicago Convention – in particular, articles 1, 2, 5, 6, 10–16, 24 and 68. Legally, Khojaly airport cannot operate, unauthorised flights through Azerbaijani airspace are not permitted, and any violations could have dangerous consequences.

    The International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), a specialised UN agency, is also supportive of Azerbaijan. Following the Armenian invasion of Nagorno-Karabakh and the seven surrounding regions, four UN Security Council resolutions were passed requesting the immediate withdrawal of Armenian forces. Despite their non-implementation, Azerbaijani territorial integrity has been recognised and unequivocally reconfirmed by the UN and its governing bodies.

    Operating flights from Khojaly Airport would represent an expansion of the Armenian military occupation into Azerbaijani airspace with potentially disastrous consequences.

     

     

    The European Azerbaijan Society

  • Knives Out: Turkey’s and Armenia’s War Over Food

    Knives Out: Turkey’s and Armenia’s War Over Food

    In the Caucasus, culinary nationalism is an extension of the region’s long-simmering disputes.

    A demonstrator sets fire to a Turkish flag as he attends a torch-bearing march marking the anniversary of the 1915 mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman Empire, in Yerevan

    A demonstrator sets fire to a Turkish flag as he attends a torch-bearing march marking the anniversary of the 1915 mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman Empire, in Yerevan on April 23, 2010. (Reuters)

    There is perhaps nothing more closely bound up with one’s national identity than food. Specific local dishes are often seen as the embodiment of various cultures and many nations promote their food as a celebration of national identity. Sometimes, however, a country’s cuisine can also be used to highlight national rivalries.

    Czechs, for example, sometimes affectionately (some would say condescendingly) refer to their Slovak cousins as “Halusky” after the typical gnocchi dish that comprises part of their national cuisine. Similarly, the English often disparagingly call their French neighbors “Frogs” because of the Gallic penchant for eating the legs of said amphibians.

    Culinary flashpoints can also arise when neighboring nations all lay claim to the same regional dish. For instance, the Scots, English, and the Irish often bicker about whose fried breakfast is the original and the best of the species.

    In the volatile Caucasus region, though, it seems that such food fights have now been taken to a whole new level. As Eurasianet.org reports, many Armenians are up in arms about a recent UNESCO decision to add the Anatolian stew “Keshkek” to its Intangible Cultural Heritage List on behalf of Turkey. They claim that “Keshkek” is actually an Armenian meal, which they call “Harissa.”

    Now a group of ethnographers from Turkey’s eastern neighbor are actually compiling information on the dish to appeal the ruling by the UN’s cultural agency.

    According to the News.am website, Sedrak Mamulyan, the chairman of the “Development and Preservation of Armenian Culinary Traditions” organization, is intent on demonstrating that “the utensils, methods, and ingredients used for making…Harissa have a pure Armenian origin and it is a purely Armenian dish.” The same organization has also attacked Georgia for commandeering “Khash.” It insists that this tasty beef soup is in fact an Armenian national dish.

    Armenia, meanwhile, has itself come under fire from Azerbaijan, which has accused its neighbor and regional nemesis of “cuisine plagiarism.” Baku’s National Security Ministry has even set up a National Cuisine Center to reinforce its claim to the nation’s cuisine and, in particular, to help counter any Armenian efforts to appropriate what it feels are Azerbaijani dishes.

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    The “Tolma” dish, which consists of meatballs wrapped in grape leaves, seems to be a particular bone of contention between the two countries, especially since Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev publicly announced last year that it was an Azeri national dish.

    This provoked a furious response in Armenia and various initiatives have been launched to help save the country’s national dishes from “occupants.” This even includes holding an annual Tolma Festival to reinforce the idea that it is a typically Armenian food.

    Whatever the upshot of these culinary claims and counterclaims, it sadly doesn’t seem like these regional rivals will be sitting down to break bread with each other anytime soon.

    This post appears courtesy of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

    via Knives Out: Turkey’s and Armenia’s War Over Food – Coilin O’Connor – The Atlantic.

  • Istanbul hosts conference on Karabakh war

    Istanbul hosts conference on Karabakh war

    Istanbul has hosted a conference entitled “Unknown realities of the Karabakh war”.

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    The conference was co-organized by the Turkish Alumni Association and Bulgarian Turks Cultural Association, AzerTAj reports.

    It was attended by staffers of Azerbaijan`s Consulate General in Istanbul, Azerbaijani national hero Ibad Huseynov, senior officials of Istanbul`s Bayrampasa municipality, as well as representatives of political parties and non-governmental organizations.

    Speaking to the conference, chairman of Bulgarian Turks Cultural Association Rafet Uluturk said the Karabakh war was a holy fight of not only Azerbaijanis but the entire Turkish world.

    He said “we will continue efforts towards drawing the international community`s attention to the occupation of Karabakh and seven adjacent regions of Azerbaijan”.

    Other speakers, including chairman of Bayrampasa municipality Atilla Aydıner and chairman of the Turkish Alumni Association Cingiz Bayramov spoke of Armenia`s military aggression against Azerbaijan and ungrounded territorial and genocide claims against Turkey.

    National hero Ibad Huseynov shared his memories of the Karabakh war, calling the Azerbaijani youth to mobilize for the liberation of the country`s lands.

    News.Az

    via News.Az – Istanbul hosts conference on Karabakh war.

  • US being petitioned to push Turkey to open border with Armenia for ethnic Armenians trapped in Syria

    US being petitioned to push Turkey to open border with Armenia for ethnic Armenians trapped in Syria

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    © Collage: Voice of Russia

    The American White House internet site, or rather its section “We are citizens”, which collects signatures under various kinds of petitions, once again has become an arena for discussion of an absolutely non-American problem. One Armenian political scientist has announced that signatures were being collected under an appeal urging Washington to force Turkey to open the border with Armenia for the sake of the fleeing refugees from Syria. The Voice of Russia’s correspondent in the United States, Roman Mamonov, has tried to find out if there is any connection with America.

    Six hundred twenty-five signatures in nine days is a modest result (as of Monday morning) of the petition, posted on the White House site by Daniel Ioannisyan, member of the Heritage opposition party. In this short document (only 10 lines) he calls upon the US government to put pressure on Turkey so that it opens the border with Armenia for the free migration of refugees from Syria. According to Ioannisyan, more than 60 thousand people were killed since the beginning of the conflict in Syria, and half a million people were forced to flee the country. According to the politician, 200 thousand ethnic Armenians live in Syria, most of whom supposedly want to leave the war-stricken Republic and return to their homeland. But the Turkish-Armenian border, which has been closed since 1993, prevents them from doing so. And now Daniel Ioannisyan means to exert pressure on Ankara with the help of Washington. The petition ends with a dramatic phrase, “There should be no closed borders in the 21st century”.

    Even in Armenia, many responded with skepticism to this initiative. Firstly, the very idea of appealing to Washington from Yerevan in order to put pressure on Ankara because of the situation in Syria looks strange.

    Secondly, political analysts doubt that there are so many Armenians in Syria who are ready to abandon everything and fly away to their homeland. And the question remains whether Armenia is ready to welcome this number of migrants.

    Users (from any country of the world) have until February 4 to obtain 25 thousand signatures in order to make the US Administration respond to this appeal. But judging by the current trend, approximately 70 signatures a day, the document will not be sent to the White House, unless a miracle happens.

    It is noteworthy that foreign politicians have long used the “We are citizens” section of the White House website as a means of addressing Washington. At present, signatures are being collected under the appeal to stop trafficking of human organs in China, the appeal to stop the persecution of Shia Muslims in Pakistan, and the appeal to monitor the situation with political rights in Venezuela. There is also a petition with the request to recognize the genocide of the Sikhs in India in 1984.

    via US being petitioned to push Turkey to open border with Armenia for ethnic Armenians trapped in Syria: Voice of Russia.

  • Azerbaijani MP: Turkey will not change its position on opening the border with Armenia

    Azerbaijani MP: Turkey will not change its position on opening the border with Armenia

    Azerbaijan, Baku, Jan. 9 / Trend, M. Aliyev /

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    Turkey will not change its position on opening its border with Armenia, Milli Majlis (Azerbaijani Parliament) member, deputy chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Security and Defense Aydin Mirzazade told Trend on Wednesday.

    “Despite the fact that 20 years has passed since the closure of border, and there has been a succession of governments in Turkey, the government’s position on this issue has not changed and will not change in the future,” Mirzazade said.

    Some Armenians periodically raise the question of the opening of borders with Armenia, he said.

    “However this is nothing but an initiative. Turkey has a democratic society, so the issue of opening the border with Armenia could be brought up for discussion, but broad support for this issue is not possible,” he said.

    Mirzazade said today Armenia has claims on Turkish lands and is trying to falsify history by fabricating a fictional Turkish genocide.

    “The policy pursued by Armenia today has had a negative impact on Armenia itself. This is why it can be said that none of these initiatives will be successful,” he said.

    A collection of signatures for the unconditional opening of the Turkish-Armenian border was launched on the White House website in the U.S. The petition notes that the borders should at least be opened for moving Syrian refugees from Turkey to Armenia.

    There is no need to move Syrian refugees from Turkey to Armenia and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border for this purpose is currently impossible, the Disasters and Emergency Situations Directorate of Turkey AFAD told Trend on Wednesday.

    The needs of Syrian refugees in Turkey are met by the Turkish government and international organizations, the agency said.

    There are no diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia, and the border between the two countries has been closed since 1993. The reasons for this being Armenia’s calls for international recognition of the so-called Armenian genocide and the Armenian armed forces’ occupation of Azerbaijani territories.

    via Azerbaijani MP: Turkey will not change its position on opening the border with Armenia – Trend.Az.