Tag: Disinformation

  • Candidate says history not on her agenda

    Candidate says history not on her agenda

    LALE HANIMI BOLGESEL OLARAK VE TUM GUCUMUZLE DESTEKLEMELIYIZ.. ERMENI VE YUNAN GURUPLARI SIMDIDEN MENFI PROPOGANDAYA BASLADI

    DR. KAYAALP BUYUKATAMAN

    BASKAN, TURKISH FORUM

    =============

    Lale, looks like  facing fierce opposition

    Meltem Birkegren
    ===============================

    Candidate says history not on her agenda

    95-year-old genocide become campaign issue

    By Matthew Pearson, The Ottawa CitizenOctober 13, 2010 10:06 PM

    School board candidate Lale Eskicioglu has controversial views on the 1915 Armenian genocide.

    A candidate for Ottawa school board trustee says her views on the complicated shared history of Turkey and Armenia would have no bearing on how she would do her job if she unseats Zone 8 incumbent John Shea.

    “I would most definitely put the well-being of all our children above and beyond anything else,” Lale Eskicioglu said. Zone 8 includes the municipal wards of Orléans and Cumberland.

    The Ottawa chapter of the Armenian National Committee of Canada says it has “grave” concerns about Eskicioglu.

    The committee says Eskicioglu lobbied against Canada’s recognition of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, in which an estimated 1.5 million people were killed by soldiers of the Ottoman Empire. It remains one of the most disputed events of the 20th century, with Turkey, the empire’s successor, insisting that the count of the dead is inflated and that atrocities were mutual.

    The ANCC claims Eskicioglu was also a vocal opponent of the Toronto District School Board’s decision to include details about the genocide in a Grade 11 history course. The group alleges that, if elected, she will use her position as trustee to block the curriculum from being presented in Ottawa schools.

    “Given her credentials, it is questionable whether Ms. Eskicioglu will put the interest of Ontario’s students first before other agendas she may be pursuing,” the ANCC said Tuesday in a release.

    © Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen
    __._,_.___

  • CYPRUS (TRNC) : Another Anti-Turkish Bill PASSED House Of Represantatives

    CYPRUS (TRNC) : Another Anti-Turkish Bill PASSED House Of Represantatives

    Oldu bitti rezaleti. The Bill passed the House

    Bill Text Versions

    111th Congress (2009-2010)

    H.RES.1631

    There are 2 versions of Bill Number H.RES.1631 for the 111th Congress.

    Usually, the last item is the most recent.

    1 . Calling for the protection of religious sites and artifacts from

    and in Turkish-occupied areas of northern Cyprus as well as for

    general respect for religious freedom. (Introduced in House –

    IH)[H.RES.1631.IH][PDF]

    2 . Whereas the Government of Turkey invaded the northern area of the

    Republic of Cyprus on July 20, 1974, and the Turkish military

    continues to illegally occupy the territory to this day; (Engrossed in

    House [Passed House] – EH)[H.RES.1631.EH][PDF]

    ———————————————————————

    H.RES.1631 — Whereas the Government of Turkey invaded the northern area of the Republic of Cyprus on July 20, 1974, and the Turkish military continues to illegally occupy the territory to this day; (Engrossed in House [Passed House] – EH)

    ABD Temsilciler Meclisi

    HRES 1631 EH

    H. Res. 1631

    In the House of Representatives, U. S.,

    September 28, 2010.
    Whereas the Government of Turkey invaded the northern area of the Republic of Cyprus on July 20, 1974, and the Turkish military continues to illegally occupy the territory to this day;

    Whereas the Church of Cyprus has filed an application against Turkey with the European Court of Human Rights for violations of freedom of religion and association as Greek Cypriots in the occupied areas are unable to worship freely due to the restricted access to religious sites and continued destruction of the property of the Church of Cyprus;

    Whereas according to the United Nations-brokered Vienna III Agreement of August 2, 1975, `Greek-Cypriots in the north of the island are free to stay and they will be given every help to lead a normal life, including facilities for education and for the practice of their religion * * *’;

    Whereas according to the Secretary General’s Report on the United Nations Operation in Cyprus in June 1996, the Greek Cypriots and Maronites living in the northern part of the island `were subjected to severe restrictions and limitations in many basic freedoms, which had the effect of ensuring that inexorably, with the passage of time, the communities would cease to exist.’;

    Whereas the very future and existence of historic Greek Cypriot, Maronite, and Armenian communities are now in grave danger of extinction;

    Whereas the Abbot of the Monastery of the Apostle Barnabas is routinely denied permission to hold services or reside in the monastery of the founder of the Church of Cyprus and the Bishop of Karpass has been refused permission to perform the Easter Service for the few enclaved people in his occupied diocese;

    Whereas there are only two priests serving the religious needs of the enclaved in the Karpas peninsula, Armenians are not allowed access to any of their religious sites or income generating property, and Maronites are unable to celebrate the mass daily in many churches;

    Whereas in the past Muslim Alevis were forced out of their place of prayer and until recently were denied the right to build a new place of worship;

    Whereas under the Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus, religious sites have been systematically destroyed and a large number of religious and archaeological objects illegally looted, exported, and subsequently sold or traded in international art markets, including an estimated 16,000 icons, mosaics, and mural decorations stripped from most of the churches, and 60,000 archaeological items dating from the 6th to 20th centuries;

    Whereas at a hearing held on July 21, 2009, entitled `Cyprus’
    Religious Cultural Heritage in Peril’ by the U.S. Helsinki Commission, Michael Jansen provided testimony detailing first-hand accounts of Turkish soldiers throwing icons from looted churches onto burning pyres during the Turkish invasion and provided testimonies of how churches were left open to both looters and vandals with nothing done to secure the religious sites by the Turkish forces occupying northern Cyprus;

    Whereas Dr. Charalampos G. Chotzakakoglou also provided testimony to the U.S. Helsinki Commission that around 500 churches, monasteries, cemeteries, and other religious sites have been desecrated, pillaged, looted, and destroyed, including one Jewish cemetery;

    Whereas 80 Christian churches have been converted into mosques, 28 are being used by the Turkish army as stores and barracks, 6 have been turned into museums, and many others are used for other nonreligious purposes such as coffee shops, hotels, public baths, nightclubs, stables, cultural centers, theaters, barns, workshops, and one is even used as a mortuary;

    Whereas expert reports indicate that since 2004 several churches have been leveled, such as St. Catherine Church in Gerani which was bulldozed in mid-2008, the northern wall of the Chapel of St.
    Euphemianos in Lysi which was destroyed by looters as they removed all metal objects within the wall, the Church of the Holy Virgin in the site of Trachonas was used as a dancing school until the Turkish occupiers built a road that destroyed part of it in March 2010, the Church of the Templars was converted into a night club, and the Church of Panagia Trapeza in Acheritou village was used as a sheep stall before it was recently destroyed by looters removing metal objects from medieval graves within the church;

    Whereas the Republic of Cyprus discovered iron-inscribed crosses stolen from Greek cemeteries in the north in trucks owned by a Turkish-Cypriot firm that intended to send them to India to be recycled;

    Whereas United States art dealer Peggy Goldberg was found culpable for illegally marketing 6th century mosaics from the Panagia Kanakaria church because the judge found that a `thief obtains no title or right of possession of stolen items’ and therefore `a thief cannot pass any right of ownership * * * to subsequent purchasers.’;

    Whereas the extent of the illicit trade of religious artifacts from the churches in the Turkish occupied areas of northern Cyprus by Turkish black market dealer Aydin Dikmen was exposed following a search of his property by the Bavarian central department of crime which confiscated Byzantine mosaics, frescoes, and icons valued at over =30 million;

    Whereas a report prepared by the Law Library of Congress on the `Destruction of Cultural Property in the Northern Part of Cyprus and Violations of International Law’ for the U.S. Helsinki Commission details what obligations the Government of Turkey has as the occupying power in northern Cyprus for the destruction of religious and cultural property there under international law;

    Whereas the Hague Convention of 1954 for the Protection of Cultural Property During Armed Conflict, of which Turkey is a party, states in article 4(3) that the occupying power undertakes to `Prohibit, prevent and, if necessary, put a stop to any form of theft, pillage or misappropriation of any acts of vandalism directed against cultural property’;

    Whereas according to the 1970 United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership which has been ratified by Cyprus and Turkey, parties are required to take steps to prevent illicit traffic through the adoption of legal and administrative measures and the adoption of an export certificate for any cultural object that is exported, and `illicit’
    refers to any export or transfer of ownership of cultural property under compulsion that arises from the occupation of a country by a foreign power;

    Whereas according to the European Court of Human Rights in its judgment in the case of Cyprus v. Turkey of May 10, 2001, Turkey was responsible for continuing human rights abuses under the European Convention on Human Rights throughout its 27-year military occupation of northern Cyprus, including restricting freedom of movement for Greek Cypriots and limiting access to their places of worship and participation in other aspects of religious life;

    Whereas the European Court further ruled that Turkey’s responsibility covers the acts of soldiers and subordinate local administrators because the occupying Turkish forces have effective control of the northern part of the Republic of Cyprus;

    Whereas in March 2008, President Christofias and former Turkish Cypriot leader Talat agreed to the setting up of a `Technical Committee on Cultural Heritage’ with a mandate to engage in `serious work’ to protect the varied cultural heritage of the entire island;

    Whereas this Committee was developing a list of all cultural heritage sites on the island to create an educational interactive program for the island’s youth to understand the shared heritage and to undertake a joint effort to restore the Archangel Michael Church and the Arnvut Mosque;

    Whereas while significant work was done on the Arnvut Mosque, the Archangel Michael Church remains in disrepair; and

    Whereas, on July 16, 2002, and again in 2007, the United States and the Government of the Republic of Cyprus signed a Memorandum of Understanding to impose import restrictions on categories of Pre-Classical and Classical archaeological objects, as well as Byzantine period ecclesiastical and ritual ethnological materials, from Cyprus: Now, therefore, be it

    Resolved, That the House of Representatives–
    (1) expresses appreciation for the efforts of those countries that have restored religious property wrongly confiscated during the Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus;
    (2) welcomes the efforts of many countries to address the complex and difficult question of the status of illegally confiscated religious art and artifacts, and urges those countries to continue to ensure that these items are restored to the Republic of Cyprus in a timely, just manner;
    (3) welcomes the initiatives and commitment of the Republic of Cyprus to work to restore and maintain religious heritage sites;
    (4) urges the Government of Turkey to–
    (A) immediately implement the United Nations Security Council Resolutions relevant to Cyprus as well as the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights;
    (B) work to retrieve and restore all lost artifacts and immediately halt destruction on religious sites, illegal archaeological excavations, and traffic in icons and antiquities; and
    (C) allow for the proper preservation and reconstruction of destroyed or altered religious sites and immediately cease all restrictions on freedom of religion for the enclaved Cypriots;
    (5) calls on the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom to investigate and make recommendations on violations of religious freedom in the areas of northern Cyprus under control of the Turkish military;
    (6) calls on the President and the Secretary of State to include information in the annual International Religious Freedom and Human Rights reports on Cyprus that detail the violations of religious freedom and humanitarian law including the continuous destruction of property, lack of justice in restitution, and restrictions on access to holy sites and the ability of the enclaved to freely practice their faith;
    (7) calls on the State Department Office of International Religious Freedom to address the concerns and actions called for in this resolution with the Government of Turkey, OSCE, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, and other international bodies or foreign governments;
    (8) urges OSCE to ensure that member states do not receive stolen Cypriot art and antiquities; and
    (9) urges OSCE to press the Government of Turkey to abide by its international commitments by calling on it to work to retrieve and restore all lost artifacts, to immediately halt destruction on religious sites, illegal archaeological excavations, and traffic in icons and antiquities, to allow for the proper preservation and reconstruction of destroyed or altered religious sites, and to immediately cease all restrictions on freedom of religion for the enclaved Cypriots.

  • Assyrian Genocide Scholar in New Zealand

    Assyrian Genocide Scholar in New Zealand

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    Sept 4 2010

    Auckland (AINA) — Assyrian genocide scholar Sabri Atman, director of
    the Seyfo Genocide Research Center, presented a lecture on August 26
    at the Assyrian Nineveh Association. In his lecture Mr. Atman outlined
    the Turkish genocide of Assyrians in World War One, in which 750,000
    Assyrians (75%) were killed by Turks and Kurds between 1915 and 1918.
    He also discussed other genocides and pogroms of Assyrians.

    The lecture also included a documentary film on the Genocide which
    included interviews with individuals that lived during 1915 and
    onwards and their experience and the horror they went through during
    events carried out against them by the Ottoman Turks, Kurds and
    Persians in WWI.

    The Assyrian Youth Group, along with the Assyrian Nineveh Association
    and the Assyrian community in Auckland, joined Sabri Atman at One Tree
    Hill on Saturday, September 4. At this prominent location in Auckland,
    Assyrian and New Zealand flags were raised. Signs reading “Never Again
    1915,” “We Will Never Forget Simele 1933” and “Hands Off Mor Gabriel”
    were held by the participants.

    There are about three thousand Assyrians living in New Zealand, based
    in Auckland.

    Mr. Atman began his genocide awareness tour in early July in the
    United States of America, then he came to Australia for the unveiling
    of the Assyrian Genocide Monument in Fairfield (AINA 8-7-2010,
    8-30-2010). From Australia he came to New Zealand will continue his
    tour in Greece, Israel, Syria, Sweden, Switzerland, and Armenia for
    the remaining of the year. Mr Atman’s aim is to travel to many
    countries to educate Assyrians and raise awareness for the recognition
    of the Assyrian Genocide.

    The next stop in Mr. Atman’s tour is Athens, where he will demand the
    recognition of the Assyrian Genocide from the Greek government.

    Rena Shlemun contributed to this report.

  • Assyrian, Greek Organizations Condemn Genocide Monument Vandalism

    Assyrian, Greek Organizations Condemn Genocide Monument Vandalism

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    Sept 4 2010

    (AINA) — A number of Melbourne’s Assyrian and Hellenic organizations
    issued a joint statement today condemning recent acts of vandalism
    against two Sydney memorials dedicated to the Assyrian Genocide and
    the Assyrian Levies (AINA 8-30-2010). The six signatories included two
    Greek federations and a number of Assyrian political, social and
    cultural organizations. The six signatories to the letter affirmed
    their opposition to all acts of vandalism and voiced a call for
    worldwide recognition of the Assyrian, Armenian and Pontian-Greek
    Genocide.

    The statement follows:

    We the undersigned Melbourne-based Assyrian and Greek organizations
    express our deep concern at recent events which have seen two Assyrian
    memorial sites vandalised. Sydney’s Assyrian Genocide Monument
    (recently dedicated by the Assyrian Universal Alliance) and the
    Assyrian Levies Plaque (dedicated by the Assyrian Levies Association)
    were both vandalised with physical damage and the painting of
    anti-Assyrian profanities in the preceding week.

    Both the mentioned monuments stand in tribute to millions of
    Assyrians, Armenians and Pontian-Greeks who were ruthlessly murdered
    in a calculated campaign of extermination by the Ottoman Empire.
    Historians have termed this the first genocide of the twentieth
    century. The Assyrian-Australian community, like other communities
    residing in Australia, is entitled to remember these victims of
    genocide with dignity and without hindrance from vandals. We
    explicitly condemn the vandalism of the monument and memorial plaque
    and call upon the relevant authorities to investigate the matter
    hastily.

    While the perpetrators of both these incidents are as yet unknown, and
    police investigations are continuing, it is clear from the content of
    the vandalism, on the Assyrian Genocide Monument in particular, that
    those involved hold a strong level of enmity towards the Assyrian
    people.

    The struggle for the recognition of the Assyrian, Armenian and
    Pontian-Greek Genocide is a continuing one. The historical truth of
    the genocide is not in question, as suggested by the forces of
    genocide denial. The school of scholarly evidence is overwhelming. In
    fact, the world’s leading group of genocide scholars, the
    International Association of Genocide Scholars has affirmed that the
    Assyrian, Armenian and Pontian-Greek was indeed perpetrated by the
    Ottoman Empire during its dying days. This recognition is in addition
    to dozens of federal, state and local governments around the world who
    have also recognized the Assyrian, Armenian and Pontian- Greek
    genocide.

    We renew our call for worldwide recognition of the Assyrian, Armenian
    and Pontian-Greek Genocide. In particular, we call upon the Australian
    federal government, in addition to state governments, to join their
    counterparts around the world and add their voice to truth and justice
    by recognising the genocide.

    We the undersigned organisations extend our support to all
    organizations that have contributed to the Assyrian Genocide
    recognition movement, affirm our rejection of acts designed to insult
    the memories of those who were murdered and condemn any attempt to
    distort the truth of the Assyrian, Armenian and Pontian Greek
    Genocide.

    Australian Assyrian Arts and Literature Foundation
    Federation of Pontian Associations of Australia
    Panepirotic Federation of Australia
    Assyrian Democratic Movement
    The Popular Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Council
    Beth-Nahrin Cultural Club

    By Joseph Haweil

  • ASSYRIAN GENOCIDE MONUMENT TO BE UNVEILED IN SYDNEY

    ASSYRIAN GENOCIDE MONUMENT TO BE UNVEILED IN SYDNEY

    auagm0

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    July 19 2010
    Sydney

    Preparations are under way for the upcoming official unveiling of
    the Assyrian genocide monument, which was approved by Fairfield City
    Council on December 15, 2009.

    According to Mr. Hermiz Shahen, the Regional Secretary of theauagm1
    Assyrian Universal Alliance in Australia and New Zealand, the date
    of the unveiling will be on the seventh of August 2010 at 11:00 am
    at Bonnyrigg Park where the statue is erected. This memorial stands
    for the Assyrian genocide committed at the hands of the Ottomans
    Turkey during WWI, which claimed about 750,000 innocent lives and
    the Simile massacre at the hands of Iraqi army on 7th August 1933,
    which claimed the lives of about 6000 innocent Assyrians. Each year,

    on August 7, the Assyrian communities worldwide commemorate Assyrian
    Martyr’s Day with respect and dignity, Mr. Shahen said.

    Mr. Shahen continued that the worldwide Assyrian community has
    contributed to the cost of the entire project, which exceeded 70000
    dollars. The site is expected to become a pilgrimage site not only
    for the Assyrians but for all Australians who are sympathetic to
    this issue.

    Australians contributed generously to help the displaced families
    during WWI, donating supplies and financial assistance through
    their charitable organizations to help the victims of this Assyrian,
    Greek and Armenian genocide. A great number of Australian soldiers
    engaged in the war helped bravely, saving the innocent victims of
    this genocide from the hands of the enemy and were thus first-hand
    eye-witnesses to the tragedies suffered by the indigenous Assyrians,
    Armenians and Greeks of Anatolia.

    Mr. Shahen said that he expects a large number of representatives from
    Federal, State and Local government to attend the unveiling. It is
    also expected that a large number of media news agencies and writers
    from within and outside Australia to attend this event.

    When asked if the entire construction work for the statue is actually
    completed, Mr. Shahen answered that the construction work has already
    completed in accordance with the time schedule, he added that the
    Assyrian artist, Lewis Batros, is working on the finishing touches of
    the statue. Whether or not the final look of the memorial will remain
    like that of the artist’s imagination at the beginning Mr. Shahen
    replied, the statue will be the same, but there are changes that have
    been previously agreed upon with Fairfield City Council, which I am
    certain will impress the observers.

    “I am expecting over one thousand spectators on the unveiling day,
    including the presence and contributions from the Australian Assyrian,
    Armenian and Greek organizations. Many delegations will attend from
    the city of Melbourne and other Australian cities, as well as New
    Zealand” Mr. Shahen said.

    On the unveiling day, the Assyrian Universal Alliance in collaboration
    with the Australian Institute for Holocaust and Genocide Studies has
    organized a seminar about the Assyrian, Armenian and Pontic Greek’s
    genocide, to be presented by scholars from the Australian Institute
    for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and overseas. A documentary film
    will be screened outlining the genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman
    Turks against the people of the aforementioned three nations.


  • NYT Ties Turkish Group to ‘Terrorism’–by Mixing It Up With a Different Group

    NYT Ties Turkish Group to ‘Terrorism’–by Mixing It Up With a Different Group

    Ever since the Israeli raid on a Turkish group’s boat filled with aid for the Gaza Strip, there has been a lot of attempts in the press, following Israel’s lead, to label the Turkish humanitarian group IHH a supporter of “terrorism.”

    The latest salvo comes from a New York Times article about the Turkish group having “extensive connections with Turkey’s political elite.”

    The Times reports:

    On Monday, Germany banned the charity’s offices, citing its support for Hamas, which Germany considers a terrorist organization. Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière said the charity abused donors’ good intentions “to support a terrorist organization with money supposedly donated for charitable purposes.” The newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung said that from 2007 the charity collected $8.5 million and transferred money to six smaller organizations, two belonging directly to Hamas and four with close ties to it.

    The charity called the ban a “disgrace” and “misanthropic” and said it would challenge it in court.

    It looks like the reporters on this story didn’t do their homework. Numerous news outlets have noted that the German organization, which shares the Turkish group’s initials, is not connected to the Turkish group that co-sponsored the aid flotilla, meaning that Germany did not ban the Turkish group over “terrorist” ties. (The Turkish group’s initials stand for İnsan Hak ve Hürriyetleri, or Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms; the German acronym stands for Internationale Humanitäre Hilfsorganisation, the International Humanitarian Aid Organization.)

    A report in Ha’aretz states: “Despite sharing the name, the German IHH has no connection to the Turkish group that organized the flotilla”; the Financial Times reports that “IHH Turkey and IHH Germany share the same roots, as they were founded as a single group in Freiburg, Germany, in 1992. But the group split in two five years later”; and a Turkish daily states that “German authorities” say the group split in 1997 and “are now two separate entities.”

    The Times also relays the Israeli talking point that “the group has links to Al-Qaeda,” despite the fact that independent journalist Max Blumenthal forced the Israeli Defense Forces to retract that false claim.

    This article originally appeared on the national media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting’s blog.

    https://mondoweiss.net/2010/07/nyt-ties-turkish-group-to-terrorism-by-mixing-it-up-with-a-different-group/