AND IN OTHER NEWS: From Kazakhstan to Baku Pogroms
So far, the new year has taken things in very unexpected directions. Most prominently, after a fruitless year of encouraging the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) to respond to the attacks on Armenia by Azerbaijan, it suddenly sprung into action for the first time ever in response to sudden massive protests in member state Kazakhstan. This means Armenian troops headed to Kazakhstan to defend strategic sites while still facing the daily threat on their borders. Some believe it was the distraction in Kazakhstan which led to Azerbaijan’s latest attack against Armenia on January 11. Three young soldiers, Arthur Artyom Mkhitaryan (born in 2002), Rudik Rafik Gharibyan (born in 2002) and Vahan Vachagan Babayan (born in 2003), were killed in the clashes.
In memory of our first SMART Citizen.
It's heartbreaking to lose our very own bright and lively Rudik, who we all knew as a dedicated friend, an eager learner, and a big dreamer. Rudik Gharibyan was the first student to graduate from the COAF SMART Center in Lori. pic.twitter.com/kkpy1t8D7B
-- Children of Armenia Fund (@coafkids) January 12, 2022
Their deaths struck a nerve in Armenian social media, as Rudik in particular was a well-known denizen of that space. He was an Eastern Armenian language Wikipedian, one of many young people who contributed their time to translating and expanding the site’s offerings in the Armenian language. He was also the first graduate of COAF’s SMART Center in Lori which provides creative, technical and intellectual resources to youth in that northern region that borders Georgia. With Ilham Aliyev essentially taking credit for the deaths of three young men who had so much to offer, it was a callous reminder of the violent lengths the dictator in Baku will go to in order to get his way, despite his claims to the world that he is seeking peace.
Disagree with you on Armenia. While dominated by Russia who essentially controls their borders, Armenia has a democratically elected government and just threw out some of the pro corruption old guard a couple of years ago. They certainly are not a full fledged democracy and . <https://t.co/vh8Y57Z00n>
-- Howard Dean (@GovHowardDean) January 5, 2022
One interesting thing about following social media is you never know who might speak up about Armenia. The recent CSTO mobilization resulted in former US Ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul, calling the organization “a club of autocrats to counter the democratic EU”. He was refuted by none other than former US presidential candidate and Vermont Governor Howard Dean, who succinctly countered that Armenia has a democratically elected government and must be careful not to offend Russia.
I should've been clearer (twitter is hard!) Armenia was an autocracy when it JOINED. Then had a peaceful democratic breakthrough in 2018. But today @freedomhouse calls Armenia a "Semi-Consolidated Authoritarian regime" (Im not expert). (Ihttps://freedomhouse.org/country/armenia <https://t.co/BNA1uDi74l>
-- Michael McFaul (@McFaul) January 6, 2022
McFaul countered that he meant to say Armenia was an autocracy when it joined CSTO, which again invited pushback as the term autocracy hardly seems appropriate to describe any of Armenia’s past governments, especially in the context of its fellow CSTO members. In addition, note that Armenia is an original member of CSTO from the defense pact’s founding in 1992. McFaul’s assertion that Armenia joined at some later date along with Kyrgyzstan is incorrect.
Every day, Azerbaijani authorities send news outlets instructions on how to cover events large and small. We got our hands on a cache of the messages. <https://t.co/I3hZ0LxNdB>
-- Eurasianet (@eurasianet) December 20, 2021
If you follow Caucasus region social media like we do, you’ll notice that various Azerbaijani officials, leading figures, and sympathetic “analysts” seem to move in lock-step from week to week through various, usually anti-Armenian, talking points. It has been quite obvious that just like governmental structure, much of Azerbaijani social media is also a top-down dictated affair, even extending to various non-Azerbaijanis at American think tanks. This recent piece by EurasiaNet published a cache of messages which confirm what we have long suspected: that there is indeed a network of news outlets, journalists, analysts and paid lobbyists who receive daily instructions via WhatsApp from the Aliyev regime about what talking points to emphasize that day. It’s always good social media hygiene to know the true origin of what you are reading, even when it purports to come from “independent” analysts based in D.C.
SWC joined scores of Christian-Muslim-Jewish clergy from NorthAmerica-Lebanon-Russia to visit Muslim Christian+Jewish communities in Azerbaijan over last decade. Isn’t it time 4 @ANCA_DC to go beyond posturing+invite us to visit Armenia? Faith leaders’ obligation to build bridges
-- SimonWiesenthalCntr (@simonwiesenthal) December 17, 2021
Unfortunately, the above aren’t the only ones carrying water for the Aliyev regime on social media. Over the past couple of years, it has become glaringly obvious that the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which was founded as an international center for Holocaust remembrance and the defense of human rights, has also become one of the Aliyev regime’s lobbying partners. Besides tweeting its “thanks” to President Aliyev for his friendship, and other pro-Azerbaijani statements, there are regular blatantly anti-Armenian messages as well, such as the one above.
Armenian groups such as the Armenian National Committee of America have questioned the Wiesenthal Center on its support of Aliyev, and in return received this very antagonistic reply basically telling them to invite (fund) a trip for them to Armenia or else back off. Particularly odd is the tweet’s implication that the US-based ANCA should be acting like a “faith leader”, despite it having nothing to do with religion. Worse is the seeming quid-pro-quo request: fund our work or we’ll write what we like. If there is an explanation, it doesn’t lie in the center’s original mission or the work of its namesake. Is it instead about Israeli arms sales and its animosity with Iran?
MUST WATCH:@DavidHarrisAJC reflects on a just-concluded AJC visit to Azerbaijan, why this South Caucasus country is of such strategic importance, and the story of the proud 2500-year-old Azerbaijani Jewish community. pic.twitter.com/Ic14v0w885
-- American Jewish Committee (@AJCGlobal) January 15, 2022
Within weeks, more waves were made with the American Jewish Committee’s own visit to Baku for its latest photo-op with Ilham Aliyev. The AJC’s relations with the Armenian community has been strained going back to its role in fighting recognition of the Armenian Genocide in Congress, though after President Biden’s recognition in 2021 AJC’s CEO David Harris (who was on the trip) released an op-ed on the importance of that recognition. Also of interest, whereas the AJC saluted the opening of the relatively low-level diplomatic post of “Azerbaijani Trade Representative Office” in Israel, it did not appear to comment at all when Armenia opened a full-fledged embassy in Israel in 2020. Certainly more Armenian-Israeli outreach is needed to get to the bottom of this double standard in relations.
Today is the 32nd anniversary of Baku pogrom, one of the most tragic pages in the history of the #NagornoKarabakh conflict which took lives of at least 90 Armenians and forced thousands to flee. This is the topic we should learn to talk about and take the lessons of the past. +
-- Nazrin Gadimova (@nazringadimova) January 13, 2022
While at its worst, social media is harnessed as a tool for disinformation, dehumanization, and vilification, at its best it can also be a conduit for dialogue and remembrance. A tweet thread by Azerbaijani Nazrin Gadimova dedicated to the 32nd anniversary of the Baku pogrom created a lot of discussion on social media. It created needed public discourse between the two peoples on their shared past.
One of them was my grandma - she saved her Armenian neighbours in Baku from the aggressive mob. Baku pogroms is still a taboo topic in Azerbaijan. <https://t.co/JVOGGoAaAY>
-- Bahruz Samadov (@bahruz_samad) January 13, 2022
When tragic events like these are denied, the existence of those who were on the right side of history is also denied. Many Armenians in Armenia also safeguarded Azerbaijanis from mobs. The stories are still remembered by our elders, but are largely forgotten by our youth. <https://t.co/I3oK18X0wi>
-- nairi hakhverdi (@nairi_h) January 13, 2022
Above are two of many reactions to the thread. While some may doubt the efficacy of this kind of dialogue, it is difficult to argue that such joint remembrances which delve into the complicated aspects of an ugly time are a bad thing. Remembering our common humanity is more important than ever. We will no doubt see more of these in the next month as there are more such anniversaries on the horizon.
He was never my teacher, but his reputation as one of the best in the city was well known. He had only one eye and they called him "the All-seeing Falcon"! <https://t.co/akGNjszT9r>
-- Garry Kasparov (@Kasparov63) January 17, 2022
Another reminder that while Baku is “no country for Armenian” these days, they have a long history there full of colorful characters and legends like “the All-Seeing Falcon”, as recalled by chess champion turned political activist Garry Kasparov.
Here's a great find from Philadelphia both Armenians and Azerbaijanis can appreciate. Printed in Boston in 1924 through the Baykar Press (ADL-Ramgavar), this is an Armenian version of the operetta "Arshin Mal Alan", Azerbaijani composer Uzeyir Hajibeyov about a Shusha/i merchant pic.twitter.com/LLw44eLeUr
-- Paul Vartan (@vartan84) January 11, 2022
With the prominence of the recent war and three decades of animosity, it can be hard to imagine Armenians and Azerbaijanis are linked by anything except the common dispute. However, this thread about a recently found artifact sheds light on the common aspects of history, geography, and culture shared by these two people. In particular, it delves into an acting couple, the Sourabians, who just after World War I had been touring Turkey and the Caucasus in Armenian performances of an Azerbaijani operetta, which they later introduced to America and toured with it there as well. In 1937, they starred in a film version of it, which has the distinction of being the first Armenian language film in America. Who would have thought?
Shout out to @DetroitPistons Assistant Coach Kalamian for notching another win, this time against his former team, the Toronto Raptors! Armenians supporting Armenians.
(Masks off just for the pic) pic.twitter.com/VWfgFBDJ89
-- Mari Manoogian (@MariManoogian) January 15, 2022
Finally, a double-dose of news in the Armenian basketball world. Not only did Rex Kalamian get the chance to fill in as head coach of the Detroit Pistons, perhaps the only Armenian-American do so in the NBA since Jerry Tarkanian’s brief 1992 stint with the San Antonio Spurs, but only days later he was announced as the head coach of the Armenian National Team as well!
The post AND IN OTHER NEWS: From Kazakhstan to Baku Pogroms appeared first on CIVILNET.
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