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ANC-CA: Thomas Goltz makes racist remarks about Armenians in Ottawa

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  • ANC-CA: Thomas Goltz makes racist remarks about Armenians in Ottawa

    Armenian National Committee of Canada
    Comité National Arménien du Canada
    130 Albert St., Suite/Bureau 1007
    Ottawa, ON
    KIP 5G4
    Tel./Tél. (613) 235-2622 Fax/Téléc. (613) 238-2622
    E-mail/courriel:national.office@anc-canad a.com
    www.anccanada.org

    Press Release

    March 5, 2009
    Contact: Roupen Kouyoumjian

    "Let the Garlic-Growing Armenians Beg to Join You [Azerbaijan]"
    --Thomas Goltz' Racist Remarks About Armenians


    Ottawa, March 4 - At a lecture sponsored by the Assembly of
    Azerbaijani-Canadian Organizations, with "kind assistance from the
    Azerbaijani Embassy in Ottawa", American journalist and professor of
    political science Thomas Goltz made racist and derogatory remarks about
    Armenians in Ottawa earlier this week. Goltz' remarks were in response
    to a question from the audience on how to convince Armenians of
    Nagorno-Karabagh to stay within the "current boundaries of Azerbaijan."
    Goltz, who teaches at the Montana State University, replied: "By
    building a forward-looking democracy you will be able to let the
    garlic-growing Armenians beg to join you [Azerbaijan]."

    Goltz was in Ottawa as a speaker, invited by the Azeri embassy and the
    Assembly of Azerbaijani-Canadian Organizations, to talk about the events
    of February 26, 1992 in the town of Khojaly in Nagorno-Karabagh. Goltz
    delivered his speech "Khojaly Massacre: Crime and No Punishment", at the
    National Archives of Canada. Some 60 people (mostly Azeris and Turks)
    attended. Next day Goltz delivered a variation of the same lecture at
    the National Press Club's Newsmaker Breakfast series, hosted by the
    Azeri embassy. About 20 people attended that gathering.

    As an informal mouthpiece of the Azeri government, Goltz delivered
    propaganda and rant against Armenians. First he talked about the
    contradiction in the self-determination versus territorial integrity
    concept of the United Nations. He then praised Azeri "secularist
    attitude" and how Azeris preceded Ataturk in adopting this stance as a
    governing model by five years.

    Goltz accused Armenians of perpetrating "ethnic cleansing" in Khojaly
    and said the Armenia argument that the Khojaly operation was a necessary
    pre-emptive and defensive measure to relieve Nagorno-Karabagh's capital
    Stepanakerd from relentless shelling from Khojaly was "nonsense". He
    asserted that Khojaly did not have military significance. He also mocked
    Armenian claims that the heavy Azeri civilian casualties were the result
    of Azeri internal strife and intrigue.

    The most dramatic moment of the lectures occurred when Aris Babikian
    from the Armenian National Committee of Canada (ANCC) successfully
    refuted two controversial statements by Goltz. Goltz had paraphrased
    two quotes from author Thomas de Waal's book where supposedly the
    current president of Armenia [Serzh Sarkisian] had said: "We showed to
    the Azerbaijanis that we [Armenians] are not afraid of killing
    civilians." The second quote cited by Goltz was from a book by the
    brother of Nagorno-Karabagh military leader Monty Melkonian. According
    to the American journalist, when Melkonian visited liberated Khojaly and
    saw the Azeri corpses, he exclaimed: "What have you done?"

    At the Newsmaker Breakfast lecture, Aris Babikian, executive director of
    the ANCC, confronted Goltz and mocked him for his "command performance
    of misrepresentation and revisionism." Babikian exposed Goltz' hypocrisy
    by pointing out that the American journalist had "conveniently forgotten
    to mention the Sumgait, Baku and Maragh massacres of Armenians by
    Azeris... and that had it not been for the Russian Navy 230,000 Armenian
    inhabitants of Baku would have not survived."

    Regarding the Khojaly killings, Babikian said: "Armenians did not claim
    that Azeris had perpetrated the massacres of their own people. It was
    the Azeri president, Ayaz Mutalibov, who made such a statement in an
    April 2, 2004 interview published in Nezavisimaya Gazeta. In the
    interview with Czech journalist Yana Mazalova, Mutalibov said that his
    opposition, the National Front of Azerbaijan, were behind the killings
    to undermine his authority and to topple him.

    In further questioning, Babikian asked Goltz to explain why the bodies
    of Azeri victims were found 11 km from Khojaly and 2 km from the most
    heavily fortified Azeri military town of Aghdam. "Is it logical for
    Armenians to follow Azeri 11 km, risking their own lives to eliminate
    the enemy around Aghdam, instead of killing them in Khojaly?" Babikian
    asked.

    Babikian challenged Goltz to explain why so "many Azeri journalists who
    had questioned Azeri government's version of Khojaly events were jailed
    or killed. Babikian cited the case of jailed Azeri journalist Eynulla
    Fatullayev whose jailing was investigated by the European Court for
    Human Rights.

    Babikian asked Goltz to be honest and impartial when employing quotes
    and to do so "without misrepresentation and misquotation so that they
    can fit and augment his [Goltz'] narrative of the events."

    The ANCC executive said that he found it strange that Goltz praised his
    "old friend" the late "great" Aliyev as an "extraordinary guy" when
    everyone in Azerbaijan knows that he was a despot and a man who stiffled
    democracy while his son, the current president, follows in his father's
    infamous steps. Babikian said it was obvious that for Goltz "the lure of
    the petro-dollar is much stronger than the lure of truth and
    impartiality."

    Goltz did not answer any of Babikian's questions and skirted around
    them.

    Dr. Girair Basmadjian, president of ANCC, said: "We condemn such racist
    and hate-disseminating lectures spewed by the mouthpiece of a foreign
    government on Canadian podiums. It is unfortunate that some Canadian
    Parliamentarians, Senators, and journalists had to hear such vile
    statements without even raising an objection or questioning the
    organizers and the speaker about the validity of their words and
    action."

    The ANCC leader added that "The Canadian government and police should
    investigate the grave and far-reaching consequences of such hateful
    speeches. We also would like to ask Canadian Parliamentarians to
    disassociate themselves from this lecture and the anxiety it has caused
    to the Canadian-Armenian community."

    *****


    The ANCC is the largest and the most influential Canadian-Armenian
    grassroots political organization. Working in coordination with a
    network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and
    affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCC actively advances
    the concerns of the Canadian-Armenian community on a broad range of
    issues.

    ------
    Le CNAC est l'organisation politique canadienne-arménienne la plus
    large et influentielle. Collaborant avec une série de bureaux,
    chapitres et souteneurs à travers le Canada et des organisations
    affiliées à travers le monde, le CNAC s'occupe activement des
    inquiétudes de la communauté canadienne-arménienne.

    Regional Chapters/Sections régionales
    Montréal - Laval - Ottawa - Toronto - Hamilton - Cambridge - St.
    Catharines - Windsor - Vancouver

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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