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| Key House Panel Passes Armenian Genocide Bill - March 4, 2010 WASHINGTON–Against the backdrop of severe opposition and pressure, the Armenian Genocide resolution, H.Res. 252, cleared a critical hurdle Thursday, when the House Foreign Affairs Committee voted in favor of the bill—23 to 22—paving the way for a vote by the entire House of Representatives. read more ... |
| Perception of ‘Domestic Threat’ At the Root of Turkey’s Problems - January 31, 2010 Turkey is now opening up discussion once again on a document called the National Security Policy Document, a resolution that acts as a guideline for the military in situations of domestic conflict. read more ... |
| Turkey Is Trying to Dictate to Armenia - January 30, 2010 The passages of time never heal completely when such crimes have been committed and the aggressor refuses to either admit to such barbaric crimes or makes lame excuses all the time. Despite this, Armenia entered talks with Turkey in the hope of solving long held problems and in the need to stabilize the region. read more ... |
| Israel Accuses Turkish PM of Inciting Anti-Semitism - January 26, 2010 Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon's humiliation of the Turkish ambassador earlier this month seriously offended Turkey, but also made it clear to Ankara that it had crossed red lines in its relationship with Israel, according to a report on Israel-Turkey relations prepared by the Foreign Ministry.
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| Remembering Black January and the Massacre of Baku’s Armenians - January 19, 2010 ISTANBUL (Today’s Zaman)–Three years after Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was fatally shot outside his office by an ultranationalist teenager, the investigation into his murder has stalled as the suspected perpetrator and his immediate accomplices have been put on trial, but those who masterminded the plot to kill him still wait to be revealed. read more ... |
| Three Years After Dink Murder, Case Remains Unsolved - January 19, 2010 YEREVAN (Combined Sources)—A conference dedicated to the 1990 massacres of Armenians in Baku took place at the Armenian National Academy of Sciences on Tuesday. The symposium brought together journalists, scholars and politicians to explore the slaughter of Baku’s Armenians that began on January 13 and continued for a week before Soviet troops were brought into the city to end the violence. read more ... |
| Protocols Signed After Delay - October 10, 2009 ZURICH, Switzerland (A.W.)–The signing of the protocols between Turkey and Armenia in Zurich took place after a delay of a few hours on Oct. 10. The signing was delayed after Armenian officials expressed reservations over a statement Turkey was to issue after the signing. The two sides eventually agreed on not releasing a statement. |
| Armenia, Turkey to Sign Protocols in Six Weeks - August 31, 2009 BERNE, YEREVAN, ANKARA (Foreign Ministry Press Service)—The foreign ministers of Armenia, Turkey and Switzerland issued a joint announcement Monday outlining the protocols that will guide the establishment and development of relations between Turkey and Armenia. read more ... |
| Secret Police Behind Dink Assassination - August 19, 2009 ISTANBUL (Today’s Zaman)—The assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was fatally shot outside his office by an ultranationalist teenager, was the work of the secret gendarmerie intelligence unit, know as JITEM, whose existence has been denied by officials, according to a document included in the third indictment into Ergenekon, a clandestine gang accused of plotting to overthrow the government. read more ... |
| Ergenekon plotted bloodshed, dark future for Turkey - August 14, 2009
Ergenekon, a clandestine gang charged with plotting to overthrow the government, had devised plots to assassinate tens of people, including bureaucrats, judges, journalists, politicians and writers, which were prepared in graphic detail, including the names of the would-be hitmen, claims the prosecution in the third indictment prepared in the case, which was accepted by the 13th Higher Crime Court of İstanbul on Wednesday...The new indictment also includes details about a plot to assassinate Armenian Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan, based on documents found in the home of İbrahim Şahin. read more ... |
| Singer Aram Tigran Not to Be Buried In Turkey - August 13, 2009 ISTANBUL (Today’s Zaman)—Aram Tigran, the Armenian singer who is well-known by Kurds and Turks and who died in Athens last week, had wished to be buried in the southeastern Anatolian province of Diyarbakır, which he said he loved so much.
Interior Minister Beşir Atalay told Today’s Zaman on Tuesday that Tigran’s family had applied to the Turkish Foreign Ministry in order to be able to bury Tigran’s body in Diyarbakır.
However, due to related legal arrangements, the Foreign Ministry had to refuse this demand, Atalay added. read more ... |
| Turkish Group Pressures Google to Become Complicit in Genocide Denial - August 12, 2009 Launches Online Campaign to Reinstate Google Ads Misinformation Campaign
WASHINGTON—On Aug. 11, the Turkish Coalition of America (TCA) launched an online campaign to pressure internet giant Google into complicity in its denial of the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA). read more ... |
| Revealing Genocide Documents Found in Ottoman Archives - August 11, 2009 It is a known fact that numerous documents on the Armenian Genocide were either destroyed or hidden away by the Turkish government. Determined researchers, however, can still discover materials in the Ottoman archives that shed light on important events and personalities of that tragic period. read more ... |
| FBI Insider Links Turkish Lobby To Bribery And Blackmail - August 11, 2009 WASHINGTON—Former FBI translator Sibel Edmonds testified under oath Saturday about shocking details connecting the Turkish government to an intricate network of individuals and organization that bribed, persuaded, and – at least in one case – blackmailed US lawmakers and corrupted American government officials. Corruption. Espionage. Bribery. All to ensure that the US does not recognize the Armenian Genocide ever again read more ... |
| Balakian: Remembering Hrant Dink - August 8, 2009 The article below is based on a speech delivered by Prof. Peter Balakian during a panel discussion on the legacy of Hrant Dink held at MIT on Feb. 1, 2009.
George Santayana, the philosopher who taught at Harvard for decades, wrote, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
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| Turkish National Assembly Blocks Distribution of Genocide Book to Members - August 7, 2009 The delivery of the Blue Book to the members of the Turkish Grand National Assembly (TGNA) has been rejected by the Speaker of the TGNA.
Armenian Weekly columnist Ayse Gunaysu reports from Istanbul on yet another effort by the Turkish Grand National Assembly to stifle discussion about the Blue Book. read more ... |
| Karabakh People to Determine Status, Says Bryza - August 7, 2009 YEREVAN (RFE/RL)—Washington’s top Nagorno-Karabakh negotiator hinted Friday the OSCE Minsk Group continues to uphold the Karabakh Armenians’ right to determine their status in a referendum.
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| Oskanian Says Armenia Must Raise the Bar in Karabakh Talks - August 3, 2009 YEREVAN (RFE/RL)—Former Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian urged the Armenian government to raise the bar in its negotiations around the Karabakh conflict resolution, saying current policies fundamentally differ from that of his administration. read more ... |
| If Karabakh conflict is not resolved peacefully, military confrontation is inevitable... - August 3, 2009 The Defense Minister of Azerbaijan Safar Abiyev met on Sunday with Defense Minister of Russian Federation Anatoly Serdyukov traveling in Azerbaijan on two-day working visit, the the press service of Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan reported. read more ... |
| Armenian Army Ready, Stronger than Ever, Sarkisian Warns Azerbaijan - July 30, 2009 YEREVAN (RFE/RL)—Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian paid tribute to the Armenian Armed Forces on Thursday, saying, in a thinly veiled warning to Azerbaijan, that they would successfully fight back any military attack on Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. read more ... |
| Turkey Still Committed to Preconditions in Armenia Talks - July 29, 2009 ANKARA (Combined Sources)–Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Wednesday the Turkish government is still “resolute” in its drive to normalize relations with neighboring Armenia, but reiterated that the Turkish-Armenia border will not open until the Karabakh conflict is solved in Azerbaijan’s favor, the Anatolia news agency reported. read more ... |
| China Should Retaliate Against Turkey by Recognizing the Genocide - July 21, 2009 Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan seems to have fallen into the bad habit of periodically accusing various countries of committing genocide. By doing so, the Turkish leader is inadvertently creating new opportunities for the international media to raise the issue of the Armenian Genocide. read more ... |
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