Tag: armenians

  • Armenian military joins Russia in Syria

    Armenian military joins Russia in Syria

    U.S. Azeris Network [usazerisnetwork@gmail.com]

    Call to Action Armenia sent an 83-person strong military mission to Aleppo, Syria comprised of servicemen, military and civilian de-miners and medics. Russian and Assad’s forces have been in control o

    Call to Action

    Armenia sent an 83-person strong military mission to Aleppo, Syria comprised of servicemen, military and civilian de-miners and medics. Russian and Assad’s forces have been in control of Aleppo since its capture in 2017. With the announcement of US withdrawal from Syria, Russia has been adamantly establishing its positions in the country by strengthening its forces and pulling along its closest allies. Armenia was the first ally of Moscow to publicly announce its decision to go hand-in-hand with Kremlin in its foreign policy endeavors in the Middle East.

    Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan described this step by Yerevan as a “joint decision” of Russia and Armenia back in September 2018 after meeting Russian President Putin in Moscow.

    Portraying the joint mission as “humanitarian” Armenia announced it on February 8, 2019 when its Defense Minister met his Russian counterpart in Moscow. Russian Defense Minister thanked Armenia for being the “first to respond to our (Russian) appeal to help the Syrian people,” and called it a “significant contribution” while Armenian Defense Minister thanked Russia for “organizing our humanitarian mission in Syria.” Armenian Defense Ministry also clarified that Armenian military will serve in Syria “with the assistance of the Russian side.” Armenia’s joining Russian counterparts in Syria signifies the “presence” of international support to Russia’s presence in the country.

    This is the first serious foreign policy decision by the new Pashinyan Government formed in Armenia in January. For Prime Minister Pashinyan, it is a personal oath of loyalty to Moscow while for Armenia it reconfirms the path of unbreakable dependence on Russia.

    Please take a moment to send this letter to your elected officials and local media to inform them about the development, and how Armenia continues to work against US interests in Syria and the region, as a whole.gYIxSVsjhqPPmfFgBeGtYw.jpg

  • Men are like that

    Men are like that

    men are like that leonard ramsden hartillProduct details

    • Hardcover: 305 pages
    • Publisher: The Bobbs-Merrill Company; y First edition edition (1928)
    • Language: English
    • ASIN: B00086W8B0
    • Package Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.6 x 1.1 inches
    • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds

    Download : MEN ARE LIKE THAT

    https://www.turkishnews.com/tr/content/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/MEN-ARE-LIKE-THAT.pdf

  • The Myth of Innocence Exposed

    The Myth of Innocence Exposed

    ermeni cete adapazari 1915

    The members of Armenian terorist group along with the weapons and bomb found in their house in Adapazari in 1915.

    While The Turks were fighting with the Russians, English and the French, what should have they done with these coldbloodedmurderers who backstabbed The Turks andmurdered women and children while men were away fighting in the battlefields?

    Armenia and the Armenians: Origins of the terms Armenia and Armenian.
    The earliest known history of the Armenians. The Armenian kingdom of
    Cilicia.

    The origins of the Armenian Question: The Armenian Church. The
    activities of missionaries. The difference of religion. Propaganda.

    The Armenians in the Ottoman Empire and the Policies of the Great
    Powers: The Ottoman Empire until the imperial reform edict.The policies of
    the great powers. From the reform edict to the Berlin Congress. The
    population question. Armenian sources. Ottoman sources. Foreign Sources.
    The province of Erzurum. The province of Van. The province of Bitlis. The
    province of Diyarbekir. The province of Elaziz. The province of Sivas. The
    1877-8 Russian war and the Berlin Congress. Total Armenian population.

    The Armenian Question: First attempts at reform. The internationalization of
    the subject of reform. Armenian preparation for revolt. Associations and
    committees. The revolutionary Hunchak Party. The revolutionary Armenian
    Federation (Dashnaksutyun). Terrorist activities, rebellions. The Arrest of the
    defenders of the Motherland. The incident of Musa Bey. The shoot-out with
    the Armenakan band members. The Erzurum incident. The demonstration of
    Kumkapi (Kumkapu). Other incidents before the Sassun rebellion.The first
    Sassun rebellion. The Babiali demonstration. Incidents in other cities during
    1895-96. The Zeitun rebellion. The Van rebellion. The raid on the Ottoman
    bank.The second Sassun rebellion. The Yildiz Palace assassination attempt.
    Overall picture of the rebellions. Further attempts at reform. The Adana
    incident and the end of attempts at reform. The Adana incident. Final attempts
    at reform.

    The First World War: The Armenians during the War. The relocation decision
    and its implementation. The partition of the Ottoman Empire. The elimination
    of the eastern front. Armistice and hunting of offenders. The Treaty of Sevres.
    Property of the Turkish Forum-World Turkish Alliance

    The War of Independence: The beginning of the National Struggle and its
    aims. The eastern front. The southern front. The western front. The Treaty of
    Lausanne.

    Download the Armenian file : https://www.turkishnews.com/tr/content/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/Kamuraneng-ermeni-konusu-armenian-file.pdf

    Kamuraneng-ermeni-konusu-armenian-file

  • HISTORICAL FACTS IN TURKISH-ARMENIAN RELATIONS

    HISTORICAL FACTS IN TURKISH-ARMENIAN RELATIONS

    armenian population ermeni nüfusu

    Historical Facts in Turkish Armenian Relations
    Talaat Pasha Committee Publication -2
    Address:
    Asmalı Mescit Mahallesi, İstiklal Caddesi, Deva Çıkmazı
    No: 3/2 Beyoğlu / İSTANBUL
    Orders and Correspondence:
    talatpasa2015@gmail.com
    Printing and Binding:
    Kayhan Matbaacılık San. Tic. ve Ltd. Şti.
    Davutpaşa Cad. Güven San. Sit. C-Blok
    No: 244, Topkapı – Zeytinburnu / İSTANBUL
    Tel: (0212) 612 31 85 – 576 00 66
    Certificate No: 12156
    This publication is free of charge, it cannot be sold in exchange for money.

    INDEX
    The Lives of Armenians during Seljuk and Ottoman Rule 5
    Armenian Revolts 7
    Massacre of Turks by Armenians Started Long Before Their Forced Migration 8
    The Decision of Forced Migration and Those Exempted from it 9
    Measures Taken To Insure Safety of the Displaced Armenians 10
    Population of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire and the Number of
    Armenians Relocated 12
    The Decree to Stop Migration and Commence the Return of Those Willing 13
    Armenian Cooperation with Enemy Forces 14
    Statements Made by Russian and Armenian Statesmen 16
    Malta Exiles and the Efforts of the British to Find Documents Against the
    Ottoman Government 17
    American Research Committees 18
    The proposed Investigation Committee by the Ottoman Empire 18
    The Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Committee and the Efforts of the
    Turkish-Armenian Platform 18
    Fraudulent Documents and Pictures Manufactured by the Armenians 19
    Number of Turks who were Massacred in 4 Provinces of Eastern Anatolia
    During 1912-1922 23
    Turks Forced to Migrate in Order to Escape from Armenian Massacres 25
    A Comparison Between Deaths of Turks and Armenians and the Armenian
    Desires for More Land 26
    Assassination of Turkish Diplomats by Armenians 27
    Armenian threats and Terror Directed Towards Foreign Parliamentarians and
    Historians 28
    Armenians Raising Their New Generation as Haters of Turks and Turkey 29
    Conclusion 30
    References 31 Property of the Turkish Forum-World Turkish Alliance

    THE LIVES OF ARMENIANS DURING SELJUK AND OTTOMAN RULE

    Contact between the Turks and Armenians began in the year 1026 with the arrival of Çağrı Bey into Anatolia. Until the Seljuks defeated the Byzantines and gained control of Anatolia, Armenians had been living in principalities as vassals of the Byzantine Empire. Once Turks started to rule over these lands, Armenians then became dependent on the Seljuks….

    Download Link : https://www.turkishnews.com/tr/content/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/HISTORICAL-FACTS-REGARDING-TURKISH-ARMENIAN-RELATIONS.pdf

    HISTORICAL-FACTS-REGARDING-TURKISH-ARMENIAN-RELATIONS

     

  • From Ararat to Europe

    From Ararat to Europe

    This historical documentary tells how the Armenians have been forerunners in spreading Christianity throughout Europe.

    ararat 210For centuries the Armenians have been the forerunners in spreading Christianity in the world and have been sanctified by different European nations. It is remarkable that, thanks to Leonardo da Vinci’s travels to Armenia, European church construction adopted Armenian architectural traits.
    This film aims to reveal how that Armenian mark of influence spread from Ararat to Europe.

    Producer: Arsen Hakobyan and Sargis Petrosyan
    Director: Artak Avdalayan
    Languages: Armenian, Russian, English
    Subtitles: Armenian, Russian, English
    Duration: 52 min.

  • Turks march in Paris to denounce genocide bill

    Turks march in Paris to denounce genocide bill

    paris 1PARIS (AP) — Thousands of Turks from across Europe marched through the French capital Saturday denouncing a bill that would make it a crime to deny that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks nearly a century ago was genocide.

    Turks young and old, waving their country’s red flag, or wrapped in it, marched to the Senate, where the bill will be debated Monday after passage in December in the lower house.

    paris 2They carried banners reading “No to Sarkozy Shame Law,” ”History for Historians, Politics for Politicians” or other slogans denouncing an alleged bid by President Nicolas Sarkozy to “fish for votes” among French Armenians before the two-round presidential elections in April and May.

    Critics claim the real aim of the bill is to ensure votes for PresidentNicolas Sarkozy from French Armenians in the two-round presidential elections in April and May. An estimated 500,000 Armenians live in France.

    The measure would make it a crime to deny that mass killings of Armenians in 1915 by Ottoman Turks constitute genocide. It sets a punishment of up to one year in prison and a fine of €45,000 ($59,000) for those who deny or “outrageously minimize” the killings — putting such action on par with denial of the Holocaust.

    France formally recognized the 1915 killings as genocide in 2001, but provided no penalty for anyone refuting that.

    Despite the passing of nearly 100 years since the killings, the issue remains a deeply emotional one for Armenians who lost loved ones and for Turks who see a challenge to their national honor.

    An irate Turkey briefly recalled its ambassador to France and suspended military, economic and political ties.

    “Politicians who haven’t read an article on this say there was a genocide,” said Beyhan Yildirim, 35, a demonstrator from Berlin. He was among those bused into Paris from Germany and elsewhere for Saturday’s march.

    Scores of buses from France, Germany and elsewhere lined the streets of southern Paris where the march began.

    Armenians plan a demonstration near the Senate on Monday before the debate and vote.

    It was unclear whether the measure would get the easy ride it did in the National Assembly, the lower but more powerful house.

    The Senate is controlled by the rival Socialists who had earlier backed the bill. However, the Senate Commission on Laws voted against its passage last week, saying the measure risks violating constitutional protections including freedom of speech. The question is whether the Socialists will heed the recommendations if only because the issue is becoming an electoral hot potato.

    Compromising freedom of expression in France, considered the cradle of human rights, has been a key argument of the Turkish government against the measure.

    It is unclear whether lawmakers in the National Assembly had an inkling in advance that their vote giving the green light to the bill would trigger a diplomatic dispute. There appeared to be less than 100 lawmakers present for the Dec. 22 vote — out of 577.

    Fadime Ertugrul-Tastan, deputy mayor of small Normandy town of Herouville, was among those demonstrating against the bill on Saturday, wearing the blue, white and red sash of French officials.

    She said her family hailed from Kars, near the Armenian border, and her grandparents were killed by Armenians.

    “I am here to honor their memory,” she said, adding, “There was no genocide because we were in a period of war.”