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System Of A Down Never Planned To Present Armenia At Eurovision

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  • System Of A Down Never Planned To Present Armenia At Eurovision

    System Of A Down NEVER PLANNED TO PRESENT ARMENIA AT EUROVISION

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    20.01.2009 16:09 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Turkish media regularly reports false stories
    and makes exaggerated claims. The latest example of misinformation is
    the Turkish claim of preventing the participation of the world famous
    American-Armenian rock band System of A Down (SOAD) in the May 2009
    Eurovision Song Contest in Moscow, Harut Sassounian, Publisher of
    The California Courier, writes in his editorial.

    The article goes on:

    "What are the facts? Last August, in an interview with Asbarez
    newspaper, SOAD's lead singer Serj Tankian said that a Finnish
    journalist had asked him if he would be interested in participating in
    "a song competition" which would raise "awareness about the Armenian
    Genocide." Tankian told the reporter that it was "an interesting
    idea." When the reporter asked if he would be interested in
    participating in such a song contest, Tankian said, "Maybe, yeah."

    Soon after the Finnish interview, Tankian said he was inundated with
    media reports that he was "going to take System of A Down to do this
    Eurovision thing." He told Asbarez: "It was all a misinterpretation
    and a misunderstanding to a point where I had to actually call my
    label reps [representatives] in Finland and asked them to please tell
    the journalist to retract those statements, since I never said that."

    Despite Tankian's attempts to lay these rumors to rest, the Armenian
    and Turkish media continued to report that SOAD would be presenting
    a song on the Armenian Genocide on behalf of Armenia in the 2009
    Eurovision Song Contest. Armenian public TV officials, who have the
    task of selecting Armenia's official representative to the Eurovision
    Song Contest, repeatedly announced that they had received no such
    request from SOAD.

    Nevertheless, Parliamentarian Akif Ekici, a member of an opposition
    Party, speaking in the Turkish Parliament, urged Prime Minister Erdogan
    to act quickly to prevent SOAD from presenting a song dedicated to the
    Armenian Genocide in the Eurovision Contest. Worried that hundreds
    of millions of viewers throughout the world would become aware of
    the Armenian Genocide, Ekinci asked Erdogan: "What will happen
    if this group wins the contest with its song on [the] so-called
    'genocide?' Would the world recognize [the] genocide?" Ekinci also
    wanted to know if Erdogan had taken any steps in this regard with
    the Armenian government.

    Having invented a fictional participation by SOAD in Eurovision,
    the Turkish media went further in misleading the public. Last week,
    Kanalturk proudly announced a decisive Turkish victory, claiming
    that as a result of Turkish complaints, the SOAD song on the Armenian
    Genocide was left out of the Eurovision competition.

    Turkish State Television claimed that Armenia was forced "to withdraw
    the SOAD group" from Eurovision because of "the great reaction" of the
    media "reaching all the way to the Turkish Parliament." Kanalturk
    further alleged that Armenian officials did not find SOAD's
    participation in Eurovision appropriate, at a time when they were
    trying to reconcile with Turkey. Regrettably, Lragir, an opposition
    newspaper in Armenia, reprinted these false allegations last week,
    claiming that Armenia withdrew SOAD from the Eurovision Song Contest
    at Turkey's demand.

    To set the record straight, once and for all, this writer contacted
    Serj Tankian who stated: "This whole Eurovision thing has been a funny
    and interesting phenomenon. It started with a Finnish journalist asking
    me if I would ever be interested in participating in Eurovision,
    (which I had no idea what it was), and use it as a way to promote
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide. I told him I didn't know what
    it was but I'd look into it. He kept on re-raising the issue over and
    over, and I said 'you're making it sound like a good idea' so I'll look
    into it. I never said to him or anyone else that I would do anything
    regarding Eurovision, let alone get SOAD involved in it. In fact,
    after the initial reports I called our Warner label rep in Finland and
    asked them to call the journalist and have him retract the statement,
    because it's false. Nonetheless this has spread. I have denied it in
    the press numerous times already."

    Tankian further noted: "Neither I nor anyone I know has spoken to
    the Armenian government about Eurovision. However if the Turkish
    government doesn't fess up to its own history and recognize the
    Genocide, it may be something to consider."

    It would be highly ironic if Turkish claims of success in suppressing
    the dissemination of information about the Armenian Genocide through
    music trigger a popular demand for the participation of SOAD in
    Eurovision, which would dramatically raise the issue of the Genocide
    before a worldwide audience!"
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