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Armenia and the information war

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  • Mos
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    I just saw Georgia's Saakashvili giving Hillary Clinton a Georgian passport. It's the final stage of a*s licking.

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  • BakvitsYekatz
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    Thu 24 May 2012
    Over 300 Islamic monuments exist in occupied lands

    There are over 300 Islamic monuments in the occupied Azerbaijani lands, spokesman of the State Committee for Work with Religious Associations Saleh Aslanov has said.

    According to Aslanov, there are 17 mosques in Shusha, 15 mosques in Jabrayil, Agdam city mosque, Haji Akbar mosque in Fizuli, Giyas-ad-Din mosque and other mosques belonging to the 17th century.

    The occupied territories are rich also with other historical monuments. (Yes indeed...ours )

    "There are mosques and sacred places in many other villages, the Sheikh Babi Yagub sepulcher belonging to the 13th century in Babi village and over 600-year-old grave in Khojaly city. And there is a sepulcher near Yerevan, which was built in 1413."

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  • Federate
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    French senators' visit

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  • Federate
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    More blacklistings )))


    Azerbaijan blacklists senators visiting Karabakh


    May 25, 2012 | 14:02
    Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry declared “persona non grata” three French Senators who had visited Nagorno-Karabakh without permission of official Baku, Ministry’s representative said.

    Elman Abdullayev said such visits escalate situation and create uncertainty. He said the trip to Karabakh damages mediatory mission of France and settlement of the Karabakh conflict as a co-chairing state of the OSCE Minsk Group, Kavkazskiy Uzel reports.

    He said the Azerbaijani Ambassador in Paris has filed a note of protest to the French foreign office and sent a letter to the Senate.

    As Armenian News-NEWS.am reported previously, members of the French Senate Philippe Marini, Sophie Joissains and Bernard Fournier arrived in the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic on May 22 to hold meetings with local leadership.
    Azerbaijani Ambassador in Paris has filed a note of protest to the French foreign office...

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  • ninetoyadome
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    Book by Azerbaijani official denounces Armenian falsification
    Fri 11 May 2012 09:26 GMT | 2:26 Local Time
    Text size:

    Fuad Akhundov
    Presentation of the book “Destroyers of the falsification”, written by sector chief of the Presidential Administration, political analyst Fuad Akhundov and denouncing Armenian falsification of history, was held in Baku.
    APA reports that the book was prepared by the Center of Caucasian History under Public and Political Researches Institute.

    The book’s author Fuad Akhundov and head of Center of the Caucasian History Shalala Hasanova participated in the event. Hasanova said that the conceptual innovation in the book is that the Armenian falsification is disclosed by the foreign scientists, politicians, writers and public figures in the book. The opinions and scientific thesis by 152 authors from the US, European countries, Russia and Georgia were gathered in 32 thematic sections like “Armenized Albania”, “Science and anti-science”, “False manuscripts and translations”, “Iravan, history, truth and false”, “Robbed works and cuneiforms”, “Armenized famous personalities”, “Alphabet: in search of truth” and etc.

    In his turn, Akhundov said that the book was published in Russian, but it would be translated into the other languages, including Armenian. He said that the book also contains the opinions of 21 Armenian scientists who were surprised by the falsification attempts of Armenian historians.

    The five-part videotape “Nonexistent country… Armenia in the Caucasus?” was shown in the event. The book presented the decisions of Russian emperors against the revolt of Armenian extremism, the facts of removal of Azerbaijani place names, cultural samples, historical and architectural monuments after declaration of the Republic of Armenia in the historical Azerbaijani lands. This film will be attached to YouTube.

    News.Az

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  • Federate
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    Google Maps show Baku avenue in Armenian


    April 30, 2012 - 18:02 AMT
    PanARMENIAN.Net - Name of Neftchilar Avenue of Baku has been shown on Google Maps in Armenian language, Azerbaijan Press Agency reports citing ICT Information Center.
    According to the information, the mentioned fact can be understood as informational provocation against Azerbaijan, living in state of war as a result of military aggression of Armenia.
    “Such attitude of Google - the world leader in electronic cartography, toward an independent Azerbaijan is unacceptable,” the message says.
    A spokesman for the Ministry of Communications and Information Technologies Mushfig Amirov noted that the ministry was aware of this issue: ‘The Ministry has already addressed the Google and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry for elimination of this problem. I think the problem will be solved soon. Such a case is not the first. Every time Azerbaijan addresses the relevant organizations and the error is corrected’.

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  • ninetoyadome
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    Armenia & Azerbaijan: Will Tuvalu Strike Again?
    April 3, 2012 - 9:23pm Tamada Tales
    Looks like it's Tuvalu time again. But, this time, in a different part of the breakaway-rich South Caucasus.

    After Tuvalu and Armenia established diplomatic ties last month, commentators in Azerbaijan and its ally, Turkey, started casting suspicious eyes on the tiny South Pacific state.

    They suspected that Tuvalu, already known for its surprise recognition of the independence of the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, might again be preparing to pull a fast one.

    Granted, not on its own steam. Drawing on their own history with Russia constantly breathing down their necks, South Caucasus countries rarely see other small countries as operating on their own initiative; somewhere, in the wings, must stand a deep-pocketed Big Buddy.

    Georgia, locked in a dispute with Moscow over Abkhazia and South Ossetia, is convinced that Russian rubles motivated what Tuvalu claims was an act of trans-Oceanic friendship. Now, it's Azerbaijan’s turn to ask questions.

    Will Tuvalu accept money from Armenia (via Russia, Armenia's own Big Buddy) for recognition of the independence of Nagorno Karabakh?

    “Not that I know of,” Tuvalu’s Permanent Secretary for International Affairs Tapugao Falufao told a radio program in New Zealand. “[T]here is no financial support that we have received from Armenia and there was no financial support that has been pledged by Armenia as far as I am aware,” Falufao said.

    But Tuvalu also has a political opposition that is not happy about the country's foreign policy. An opposition member of the 15-seat parliament, Enele Sapoaga, is concerned over “the government’s drive to set up diplomatic ties with countries in the Caucasus,” and believes that the "peace-loving" island should be more selective in picking its friends, Radio New Zealand International reports.

    Meanwhile, where Armenia itself stands on the topic remains unclear, but, then, perhaps that's to be expected. Despite a long and bitter war with Azerbaijan to back Karabakh separatists and go-nowhere international talks on the conflict, Yerevan has never actually recognized Nagorno Karabakh's independence.

    Will it want a 26-square-kilometer country in the South Pacific to do the honors instead? If so, it's not talkin'.

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  • ninetoyadome
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    Armenian singers refusing to take part in Eurovision 2012 in Baku

    Armenian signers have disseminated a statement addressed to European Broadcasting Union and Armenian Public TV, whereby they announce their decision to boycott Eurovision song contest 2012 in Baku.

    The one-page statement brings it to the attention of international community that the killing of an Armenian soldier Albert Adibekyan from an Azerbaijani sniper shot in border areas of Tavush region, Armenia makes it even impossible to discuss any participation to the song contest on Azerbaijani soil.

    Armenian singers have been taking part in all Eurovision contests, since Armenian Public TV joined the European Broadcasting Union few years ago. The Junior Eurovision Song Contest was hosted in Yerevan in December 2011 after Armenia won the 2010 edition of the famous contest in Minsk, Belarus.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mher
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    Originally posted by ninetoyadome View Post
    The channel is not available anymore, apparently.

    http://www.youtube.com/channels?ytse...RZwKIn1qOCzSDB
    I don't know because when the Genocide bill passed the senate he immediately went on multiple videos spreading the same message and when I would click on the channel, it would display the same message, even though he had posted minutes ago.

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  • ninetoyadome
    replied
    Re: Armenia and the information war

    Originally posted by Mher View Post
    There is an Azeri/Turk user on YouTube spreading propaganda through his anti-western Armenian comments that are on every Armenian video on YouTube. It's a pathetic attempt to divide Armenians. The following is his YouTube account. Is there a way to report him and make sure his account is banned?

    http://www.youtube.com/comment_searc...ayaserforeveer
    The channel is not available anymore, apparently.

    Leave a comment:

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