Zori Hayki Balayan (Armenian: Զորի Հայկի Բալայան, born February 10, 1935) is an Armeniannovelist, journalist, sports doctor, traveler and sports expert.[1] He was awarded the "Renowned master of the Arts" an Armenian official title.
In 1988, he and Armenian poet Silva Kaputikyan were received by Mikhail Gorbachev and discussed the absence of Armenian-language television programs and textbooks in Nagorno-Karabakh schools as well as other concerns of Karabakh's majority-Armenian population.[5]
Balayan is a journalist for the weekly Russian-language publication Literaturnaya Gazeta.
Book forgery
Sometime after the end of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, a number of Azerbaijani and Turkish sources began to quote a passage from a book supposedly written by Balayan titled Revival of Our Souls (sometimes given as Revival of Our Spirits as well), wherein he confesses to brutally murdering an Azerbaijani child during the war. Balayan, as well as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia, have come out to deny him having ever written such a book.[7][8] Ayşe Günaysu, a member of the Committee Against Racism and Discrimination of the Human Rights Association of Turkey (Istanbul branch), stated that "it should be quite obvious, from the language used in depicting the torture, that the quotation was wholly made up."[9] Onur Caymaz, a Turkish writer, who originally backed the allegation, stated that he was wrong and that Balayan never wrote such a book.[10]
Interpol refused the arrest warrant
Azerbaijani authorities allege that Balayan was involved in a terrorist bombing of the metro in Baku in 1994. In a letter to Balayan, the general secretary of Interpol, however, stated that the agency considered the complaint politically motivated and that it had removed Balayan from its wanted list as a result.[11]
Critics in Armenia
Balayan's views on the annexation of Crimea by Russia and alleged lobbying[12] activities were criticized by some Armenian politicians, including Igor Muradyan[13] and Levon Ter-Petrosian.[14] Balayan's letter to Vladimir Putin, in which he implies that both Armenia and Karabakh are Russian soil, met harsh criticism in Armenia in 2013.[15]
Books
My Cilicia, (Russian), Yerevan, 2004
Zim Kilikia (Armenian: Զիմ Կիլիկիա), Yerevan 2005
Cilicia (Armenian: Կիլիկիա), vols. 2 and 3, Yerevan 2006–2007
Chasm, (Armenian and Russian), Yerevan, 2004
Heaven and Hell (Armenian, Russian and English) Los Angeles, 1997, Yerevan, 1995
^Gambar, Isa (January 1985). Старые песни и новые легенды [Old Songs and New Legends] (in Russian). Archived from the original on February 12, 2012. Retrieved November 29, 2012.
^de Waal, Thomas (2003). Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through War and Peace. New York: NYU press. pp. 142–143. ISBN978-0814760321.