
ArmInfo. New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who recalled the genocide of the Artsakh people by Azerbaijan, has become the target of Turkish-Azerbaijani informational and political attacks. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's language is being used as a weapon. This was written by Azerbaijani expert Tatevik Hayrapetyan on her Facebook page in response to the proliferation of articles in the American press against New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who recalled the de- Armenianization of Artsakh.
As Hayrapetyan recalled, the New York mayor, in his April 23 post on X (formerly Twitter) commemorating the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, touched on the events in Artsakh, recalling that in 2020, the armed forces of Azerbaijan and Turkey attacked the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh. "Mamdani emphasized that in 2023, Azerbaijan expelled more than 100,000 Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh, continuing the genocidal campaign that began more than 100 years ago," the expert added.
Hayrapetyan noted that after this, Mamdani became the target of Turkish-Azerbaijani informational and political attacks. She also drew attention to how this is happening.
"Paid and commissioned articles against him continue to be published in the American press to this day. In an article in the New York newspaper Daily Media, published about a week ago, the mayor is answered in, guess whose words? Of course, in the words of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's candidate-Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who stated: 'How is it that there was no genocide agenda in 1939, and how did this agenda emerge in 1950? How did this happen?' When I say that every word and action of the current authorities is directed against us, I mean exactly that. Do you understand the extent of the danger of all this?" Hayrapetyan concluded.
It should be recalled that in early 2025, the Armenian Prime Minister, at a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community in Switzerland, questioned the fact of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. "We must understand what happened and why it happened. And how we perceived it, through whom we perceived it: how did it happen that in 1939 there was no agenda for the Armenian Genocide, but in 1950 it emerged? How this happened, we must understand or we must not understand," the Armenian prime minister noted. Independent experts are inclined to believe that he is either unaware that the term "genocide" was introduced into circulation by genocide scholar Raphael Lemkin only in 1944, or he is deliberately trying to create a narrative that "this issue was artificially raised by the Soviet Union to put pressure on Turkey." Later, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan also stated that "it is necessary to stop looking for a homeland outside the internationally recognized 29,743 square kilometers of the state, since otherwise the country could lose its statehood."