MP comments on Prosperous Armenia’s refusal to join EPP

MP comments on Prosperous Armenia’s refusal to join EPP

February 11, 2012 – 13:03 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Prosperous Armenian coalition party member Naira
Zohrabyan commented on party’s refusal to join European People’s Party
(EPP), denying a link between the decision and close ties between
leader of the party Gagik Tsarukyan and Belarusian President Alexander
Lukashenko.

However, MP refrained from commenting on rumors claiming Armenian
Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan hampered accession process to EPP.

On February 9, Republican Party of Armenia (RPA), Orinats Yerkir and
Heritage opposition party became EPP members. The decision was taken
at EPP convention in Brussels.

Following four Armenian parties: RPA, Prosperous Armenia, Orinats
Yerkir and Heritage filed an application for EPP membership in 2011,
all of them getting confirmation except for Prosperous Armenia.

New Government believed to be formed

New Government believed to be formed

10:43 11/02/2012 » Daily press review

`Hraparak’ daily has been informed that although parliamentary
elections have not yet started, president’s administration has planned
certain changes in government structure.

According to rumors minister of Defense Seyran Ohanyan will be
appointed as Deputy PM, Chief of Police Vova Gasparyan will get
defense minister’s mandates and Minister of Emergencies Armen
Yeritsyan will become Chief of Police.

Source: Panorama.am

Ahead of book devoting day – entry by books

Ahead of book devoting day – entry by books

13:37 11/02/2012 » Culture

Ahead of book devoting day Ministry of Culture in cooperation with
Flashmob Division implements a series of events the entry of which is
by books.

On February 16-18 the entry in some theatres, concert halls, museums
will be by books. All the books collected on the sidelines of the
initiative will be granted to border community libraries.

Thus, to buy a ticket it will be necessary to chose a book, sign it
and devote to the ticket office.

February 19, the birthday of renowned Armenian writer Hovhannes
Tumanyan, is declared book devoting day.

Source: Panorama.am

Paganini Violin Concerto No. 3 ` first time in Armenia

Paganini Violin Concerto No. 3 ` first time in Armenia

12:19 11/02/2012 » Culture

World renowned violinist Nikolay Madoyan will today perform a concert
at Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall with the Armenian Philharmonic
Orchestra (Artistic Director and Principal Conductor – Eduard
Topchyan). The concert will be conducted by Walter John (South Korea).

The concert will feature Schubert, Overture in D major (in the Italian
style), D. 590, Paganini, Violin Concerto No. 3, Dvo·k, Symphony
No.9.

We should mention that Paganini’s Violin Concerto No. 3 will be
performed in Armenia for the first time.

Source: Panorama.am

Bryza in His Own Words Proves He was Wrong for the Job

Bryza in His Own Words Proves He was Wrong for the Job

Saturday, February 11th, 2012
by Ara Khachatourian

Matthew Bryza

Former US Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Matthew Bryza, who left Baku last
month after the Senate did not confirm his nomination, has left the
Foreign Service and has moved to Turkey. No surprise there.

In an interview with Hurriyet Daily News, Bryza effectively confirms
all the arguments that were made against him to become the US
Ambassador to Baku. In the interview he denies the Armenian Genocide,
says the Armenia-Turkey protocols process should have been tied to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, throws the Obama Administration under the
bus and begrudgingly refers to `the organization that blocked me.’

`Matt Bryza’s angry interview confirms what we have said from the
start, which is that he is the wrong person to represent either U.S.
interests of American values in Azerbaijan,’ said ANCA Executive
Director Aram Hamparian. `His strident attacks on American civil
society voices who have criticized his public record sadly reveal that
he’s as intolerant in dealing with the diversity of American democracy
here at home, as he is uncomfortable in challenging the lack of
democracy back in Azerbaijan.’

Here’s how Hurrieyt describes the Bryza situation: `As a result of the
campaign of the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), two
democratic senators put a hold on his nomination, preventing a Senate
vote. Obama sent Bryza to Baku as a recess appointment but did not
push for him when he re-nominated him as the two senators continued
their blockage.’

`I will continue what I’ve been doing so far in private life that
involves partly academia as well as advising people, government and
private sector on major investment projects,’ Bryza tells Hurriyet.
`You can’t imagine how happy I am to be in Istanbul. It is the perfect
time to enjoy family life.’

Read the entire interview.

Turkey has strategic importance because it is a secular democracy with
a majority Muslim population, says a former member of the US
administration, adding that any regression in democracy would end
Ankara’s strategic importance. The US is also paying attention to the
plight of arrested Turkish journalists, Matt Bryza adds
Matt Bryza (R) says he anticipates going back to the US after a
certain time to get involved in diplomatic/political life. `I will
continue what I’ve been doing so far in private life that involves
partly academia as well as advising people, government and private
sector on major investment projects,’ says Bryza. `You can’t imagine
how happy I am to be in Istanbul. It is the perfect time to enjoy
family life,’ he adds. DAILY NEWS photo, Emrah GÃ`REL

Barçın Yinanç
[email protected]

The cornerstone of what makes Turkey so important to the United States
strategically is that it remains a secular democracy with a Muslim
majority population, said a former US diplomat.

The Turkish-US strategic partnership would become unsustainable if
there were no sustained progress on democracy, said Matt Bryza, a
career diplomat who was the U.S. ambassador to Baku until recently.

Following the failure of the Senate to endorse his nomination due to
pressure from the Armenian lobby, he left Baku last month to settle in
Istanbul. `Washington should focus on a breakthrough in the
Nagorno-Karabakh [NK] conflict, which will be followed by
Turkey-Armenia reconciliation as a consequence,’ he said in his first
interview since leaving the U.S. foreign service.

Q: Does the failure of the Senate to endorse your nomination to Baku
tell us that the Armenian issue will always hijack the United States’
ties with Ankara and Baku?

A: Most definitely not. Look what President [Barack] Obama did last
year; he used his constitutional powers to go around that blockage. He
understood the strategic interest of Azerbaijan and pressed ahead.
This time, his decision may be based on factors that go beyond factors
related to Baku. Obviously we are in an electoral year.

Q: What are we to expect this year in Washington on April 24 [the day
Armenians commemorate the `genocide’]?

A: I was deeply involved with this issue every single year as I was in
[President George W.] Bush’s staff. We can expect every year that
there will be a lot of tension surrounding this issue, especially as
2015 comes close and especially in an election year. The [Armenian]
organization that blocked me will keep bringing up this issue forever.
But it’s not up to governments but to people to make their own
determination on how to characterize it. The comfortable prediction
would be to say that the current trend will continue.

Q: What is Turkey to expect as 2015 approaches?

A: [Centennial] anniversaries are a milestone. But Turkey has the
ability to influence that debate in a significant way. It can have a
genuine open discussion with credible participants from all elements
of Turkish society to examine the historical records. The radicals
that blocked me hate that, they don’t want to have an open debate; an
open dialogue is their enemy.

Also, I think it’s a huge mistake to explicitly say there is no
connection at all between Turkish-Armenian normalization and a
settlement to the NK problem. I always believed that the two issues
will help each other; as there is progress on the Turkish-Armenian
front, that will help create progress on NK and progress on NK will
help normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia. But if we
artificially say that there is no such relationship, we end up dooming
the prospect for a settlement in NK because we make it impossible for
Armenian leaders to compromise because they are given a huge benefit
[opening the border with Turkey] without making any compromise. So we
need to manage the two processes together at the same time. We saw
that if Azerbaijan feels Turkey is not supporting it with regard to
Armenia, Azerbaijani politicians have a way to make normalization with
Armenia impossible.

Q: Do you believe there has been an evolution in Turkey’s approach to
the Armenian `genocide?’

A: There has been a progression. [There is more acceptance of] an open
discussion of what happened. I think the Hrant Dink murder was a huge
awakening for millions of Turks. It’s not just the government, it’s
society that has moved forward to consider that terrible killings were
committed by Ottoman troops. But what has not changed at all for
legitimate reasons is the firm Turkish view that this should not be
recognized politically as genocide; it’s not the business of any
politician in any country to characterize these events as genocide or
not as genocide. It has to be up to societies, not to others, to have
a decision taken based on a political calendar. To me that’s dishonest
[otherwise].

Q: How Turkey should tackle the Armenian lobby’s efforts?

A: Truth is on everyone side, especially on Turkey’s side. The debate
about this issue is really one-sided right now. Anybody who voices a
different view is attacked as a genocide-denier, which immediately
means you are against human rights. If you believe there was a
genocide committed, you can equally argue looking from a narrow
definition of the word that genocide was committed to many others,
against Turks or Muslims, in eastern Anatolia. Let’s have a dialogue
of the multiple atrocities that [were committed against] many groups.
Let’s talk about it all. Let’s be fair and not forget the suffering of
others.

Q: What has failed in Turkish-Armenian reconciliation? Is it because
the NK dimension was neglected in the protocols?

A: The Turkish leadership realized that by opening the border with
Armenia totally outside the context of NK, Turkey was moving in a new
direction because Turkey closed the border in the context of the NK
conflict. Azerbaijanis will never forget that. Azerbaijanis have
significant political influence in Turkey.
In Azerbaijan there is no country that is as loved as Turkey. It is
overwhelmingly the most popular country in Azerbaijan. It was always
painful for me to see [the U.S.’] approval rating in the 20s and 30s
while Turkey was well into the 90s. So if anybody takes a step that
Azerbaijan is extremely uncomfortable with, that step will never
succeed in Turkish politics. It’s impossible.

Q: What’s the way to move forward based on past experience? It seems
like it’s a case of putting the cart before the horse.

A: That’s the point. Keep the horse in front of the cart. Sequencing
matters but the sequencing was out of order. The most important issue
for both Yerevan and Baku is NK, not reconciliation. For Armenia it is
much more important to eliminate the risk of war and have a fair and
sustainable settlement in NK than have direct trading relations with
Turkey. What I advocated is to focus on getting that breakthrough on
NK. If you do that, Turkish-Armenian reconciliation comes as a
consequence.

Q: What will your advice be to Washington on the
Armenia-Azerbaijan-Turkey triangle?

A: As I said to the secretary of state, focus on getting a
breakthrough on NK, it’s achievable, the breakthrough would not be on
the final peace agreement but on the framework agreement for the peace
agreement. Once you work hard to get the framework agreement, make
clear you will do everything possible to make sure the framework
becomes a final peace agreement. And then with that process moving
forward, go back to Turkey-Armenia negotiations.

Q: As 2015 approaches, won’t it be difficult to convince Armenia?

A: I think Armenia will come to understand that if our president and
state secretary are personally involved, and if they make clear that
the drafting of the agreement will be truly trilateral ` and not only
be driven by one side, the Russian side, but by the equal
participation of the two other countries, the U.S. and France ` I
think there will be a chance for a breakthrough. What is on the table
is fair and reasonable.

There has been huge progress. The sides are extremely close to a
breakthrough. There are a couple of core, key details that can only be
agreed upon if the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan make a very
difficult and risky political decision. They would not do that until
they feel they receive political support from the U.S. and France.

Q: Will the U.S. step in?

A: Based on my conversation with Clinton, I believe the willingness is
there. But it is a busy time in foreign policy. I can’t predict
whether our top-level leaders will sustain this interest but I know
it’s there now. I just had conversations in Washington two weeks ago.

Q: Where do you think Turkey has come in fulfilling its aspirations on
energy policies?

A: Turkey has succeeded in becoming a hub. It has gas coming from
Iraq, Azerbaijan and Russia [and will] eventually [get it] from
northern Iraq. Previously, Turkey’s aspiration was to be a link for
its strategic brothers in Azerbaijan and Central Asia with Europe. It
can be both. A hub is a link. The question is for Turkey to decide how
much it wants to play a strategic role as a link or how much it wants
to be at the centerpiece. My hope is that Turkey will think first and
foremost about the importance to Europe ¦ to have a diversified flow
of gas from Central Asia and think of its partners that look to Turkey
as their strategic link to Europe ¦ If Turkey is seen as overplaying
its hand trying to extract too much revenue out of its geographic
position, then it risks losing its status with Europe and Azerbaijan
and other countries. But if it finds the right balance, it will
elevate its strategic position. Make your primary objective be that of
connecting Caspian gas to Europe even as you use the rest of your
position to [attain] the economic benefits of being a hub. Be a
statesman rather than a salesman.

Q: How do you see the evolution of Turkish-U.S. ties?

A: It was shocking to me to see in the 2000s the low approval ratings.
It was the lowest on the globe except for Palestine. It was
mind-boggling because we have such deep ties. Look at me, I am married
to a Turkish woman. [But now] something has changed. It has to do with
Turkey’s own sense of where it stands in the world. It wants to be
recognized as a global player and it is [beginning] to be recognized
as such, and I hope that is what is going to improve Turkey’s
relations with the U.S. Relations are much better now as Turkey
becomes more confident, it will be more confident in its ties with the
U.S. Turkey for years was punching under its weight. It was not
punching hard enough for its weight class. It should punch harder now.

Q: How do you see the level of relations now?

A: They’re very good, especially because of Syria. Regardless of the
political party in government, Turkey can serve as an inspiration to
all those people in all those lands where Ottoman reforms took hold
whether in Damascus or Cairo. [It can become] a modernizing state
providing the same political and economic freedoms that Turks have
achieved to those who seek them in Arab countries. Turkey’s experience
is unique but can inspire and Turkey has fully realized that potential
and is using this card extremely skillfully in the Middle East.

Turkey and the U.S. have a partnership that is equal and focused on
shared strategic interests.
We don’t have identical interests but have many common ones. The
cornerstone of what makes Turkey so important to the U.S.
strategically is that it remains a secular democracy with a Muslim
majority population and a legacy of 170 years of modernizing reforms
that helped to modernize key parts of the Middle East.

Q: The U.S. is criticized for underestimating the democratic deficit in Turkey.

A: If you are in foreign policy-making, your job is to promote
stability in the Middle East. Turkey in this case has proven to be a
great partner. That sort of partnership is unsustainable if there is
no sustained progress on democracy. Turkey’s strategic importance is
because it is a secular democracy with a majority Muslim population.
Were that no longer the case, then the strategic importance would go
away. It will still be relevant and important to the U.S. in working
on a set of issues, but Turkey itself is such a vital spot on the map
¦ Like everywhere else, democracy in Turkey is a work in progress. In
Washington great attention is paid to the plight of arrested
journalists.

Who is Matt Bryza?

DAILY NEWS PHOTO, Emrah GÃ`REL

In the early stages of his career in the United States Foreign
Service, Matt Bryza participated in U.S. diplomatic missions in Poland
and Russia. He began focusing on the Caucasus, Central Asia and the
energy issue in Eurasia in the second half of the 1990s. Throughout
the 2000s he developed U.S. policies on Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, South
Caucasus and Central Asia in the National Security Council as well as
in the State Department as deputy assistant secretary of state.

In 2010 President Barack Obama nominated Bryza as ambassador to Baku.
As a result of the campaign of the Armenian National Committee of
America (ANCA), two democratic senators put a hold on his nomination,
preventing a Senate vote. Obama sent Bryza to Baku as a recess
appointment but did not push for him when he re-nominated him as the
two senators continued their blockage.

Arguments against him have included his opposition to U.S. recognition
of genocide claims, failure to speak out forcefully against
`Azerbaijani aggression’ and supposed conflicts involving his
Turkish-born American citizen wife. He recently left the Foreign
Service.

Think Again: The French turn the leadership tables

Think Again: The French turn the leadership tables
By Zanku Armenian

,0,7064398.story
February 11, 2012 | 10:00 a.m.

The French often are the butt of jokes here, but last month they
turned the tables and are teaching our elected officials about
leadership. With the support of President Nicolas Sarkozy, the lower
house of the French parliament and the French Senate recently passed a
bill that makes it a crime to deny the Armenian Genocide.

On a daily basis, the Turkish government and their agents conduct a
systematic campaign of denial of the Armenian Genocide in the U.S. and
around the world, trying to erase history. It is a history in which
1.5 million innocent people lost their lives in 1915 at the hands of
Ottoman Turkish troops simply because of their race.

Los Angeles Times It is a crime against humanity that has been
perpetrated by many governments since then.

Once the French president signs this bill, whoever publicly denies the
Armenian Genocide in France will be subject to prosecution and will
face monetary penalties or jail. While it doesn’t address the larger
issue of Turkey coming to terms with its past and paying reparations
to the affected Armenian families, it does take a stand on the side of
truth and justice.

Many countries, especially in Europe, have similar laws with regard to
denying genocides, including the Jewish Holocaust. France passed a
Holocaust denial law in 1990. Like others, the Los Angeles Times
editorialized against France’s proposed Armenian Genocide denial law
based on the principle of freedom of speech, even at the price of
protecting hate speech – a topic worth its own column.

However, if making that argument, then one also must oppose the
Holocaust denial law to be consistent. Curiously, the Holocaust denial
law was not mentioned in the editorial.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton advocated for congressional
recognition of the Armenian Genocide while she was a senator and as a
presidential candidate – similar to then-candidate President Obama,
and similar to Vice President Joseph Biden throughout his tenure as a
senator. Their position statements could not have been more clear in
calling it what it is, a genocide. However, once elected, all three
abandoned positions of principle and sold out our national interest
and values by supporting and enabling Turkey’s denial campaign.

This administration’s hypocrisy became even more shameful on Jan. 26.
During a town hall meeting with State Department employees, Clinton
was asked about the French bill. Clinton replied: `I think it’s fair
to say that this has always been viewed, and I think properly so, as a
matter of historical debate and conclusions rather than political. And
I think that is the right posture for the United States government to
be in, because whatever the terrible event might be, or the high
emotions that it represents, to try to use government power to resolve
historical issues, I think, opens a door that is a very dangerous one
to go through.’

She continued: `We need to encourage anyone on any side of any
contentious historical debate to get out into the marketplace of
ideas….’

In 2008, Clinton said the opposite: `I believe the horrible events
perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against Armenians constitute a clear
case of genocide … as president, I will recognize the Armenian
Genocide. Our common morality and our nation’s credibility as a voice
for human rights challenges us to ensure that the Armenian Genocide be
recognized and remembered by the Congress and the President of the
United States.’

Putting questions of Clinton’s `common morality’ to one side, one
thing is clear: She is a hypocrite and has successfully undermined our
nation’s credibility.

This is not a partisan issue. It’s about our country’s leaders
reflecting American values, instead of supporting regimes, like
Turkey’s, that demonstrate they are capable of committing the next
genocide if it serves their political interests.

France’s leaders aligned themselves with an important national value,
differentiating themselves from Turkey on this issue. We must do the
same.

ZANKU ARMENIAN is a resident of Glendale and a corporate
communications and public affairs professional. He can be reached at
[email protected].

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.burbankleader.com/news/opinion/tn-gnp-0212-think-again

French Bill to Stop the `Double Killing’ – Denial of Armenian Genoci

French Bill to Stop the `Double Killing’ – Denial of Armenian Genocide

asbarez
Saturday, February 11th, 2012

BY KATE NAHAPETIAN
>From endgenocide.org

Recognizing and remembering past genocides is an important step toward
ending this cycle of violence. The denial of genocide is widely
recognized as the last stage – a `double killing.’ This double killing
continues today with regard to the Armenian Genocide. What is unique
about the denial of the Armenian Genocide is that it is promulgated by
a multimillion dollar state-sponsored campaign by Turkey. Countries
like the United States have acquiesced to Turkey’s threats and have
failed to recognize the genocide, while countries like France have
stood up and are taking action to prohibit denial.

On January 23, 2012, the French Senate followed the lower house of the
French Parliament in passing legislation criminalizing the denial of
all instances of genocide officially recognized by France, adding the
Armenian Genocide to an earlier version of the law prohibiting denial
of the Holocaust.

Turkey reacted with predictable fury, threatening irreparable harm to
bilateral relations, and trotting out its tired dog-and-pony show of
withdrawn ambassadors, irate declarations, and hypocritical sermons.
Turkey, which has prosecuted, jailed, and – according to the European
Court of Human Rights – effectively allowed the assassination of a
writer, Hrant Dink, for speaking honestly about the Armenian Genocide,
is today preaching to France about free speech and democratic values.

Unlike France, the United States continues to participate in this last
stage of genocide by aiding and abetting Turkey in this `double
killing,’ at tremendous cost to our nation’s credibility on human
rights.

When asked why the United States does not recognize the Armenian
Genocide, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton claimed as recently as
January 26, 2012 `that this has always been viewed, and I think
properly so, as a matter of historical debate and conclusions rather
than political.’

Previously, almost four years ago to the day, then-Senator Clinton
stated that the Armenian Genocide was `a clear case of genocide’ and
that:

`[o]ur common morality and our nation’s credibility as a voice for
human rights challenge us to ensure that the Armenian Genocide be
recognized and remembered by the Congress and the President of the
United States.’

She had consistently cosponsored the Armenian Genocide resolution as a
Senator and had even demanded that President Bush recognize it on
multiple occasions. The only thing that changed prior to her very
public retreat from the truth is that she was subjected, as our
nation’s top diplomat, to Ankara’s high-pressure arm-twisting. Instead
of standing up to Ankara’s bullying, she – and the rest of the
Obama-Biden Administration – let Turkey impose a gag-rule on American
condemnation of a crime against all humanity.

As one French parliamentarian stated, it was precisely because of
Turkey’s state-sponsored campaign of denial and its rage against
France’s efforts to safeguard the truth that dictated the need for
passage of a bill on the Armenian Genocide. Denial of genocide is a
celebration of genocide and a warning that it can easily happen again.
Armenia and the entire region is under threat because of Turkey’s
denial. It is no accident that Turkey also provided political shelter
to the genocidal government of Sudan, with Turkish Prime Minister
Erdogan himself vocally denying Khartoum’s genocide in Darfur.

Help end the cycle of genocide, by standing up against Turkey’s denial
of the Armenian Genocide. Learn more and take action here.

The author is the Government Affairs Director at the Armenian National
Committee of America.

Heritage Statement on EPP Observer Status and Political Corruption

The Heritage Party
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

10 February 2011

HERITAGE STATEMENT ON EPP OBSERVER STATUS AND POLITICAL CORRUPTION IN
ARMENIA

The Heritage Party is pleased to have been granted observer membership
in the European People’s Party by decision of its Political Assembly
meeting in Brussels.

Heritage has been an ideological carrier of EPP values from its
inception, and to date has taken consistent part in the activities of
the EPP group at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe,
Euronest, OSCE and elsewhere.

We are encouraged by the opportunities afforded us by the achievement
of observer status, which also is shared by the ruling Republican
Party and its coalition partner the Country of Laws Party.

At the same time we are deeply concerned, on this eve of parliamentary
and presidential elections in our country, by the unprecedented level
of political corruption prevalent here.

In addition to the flagrant examples of conflicts of interest between
public duty and partisan gain as outlined in Heritage chairman Raffi
K. Hovannisian’s good-faith letter (),
dated 21 November 2011, to Republican Party chairman and incumbent
president Serzh Sargsyan, together with his unresponsive outburst in
reaction thereto, the National Assembly–in which all three EPP
observer members are represented–continues to offer haven to
electoral theft and political forgery.

One recurrent episode took place on the very day EPP observer status
was conferred and the three parties acceded to a common declaration of
intentions and principles. In keeping with a long tradition of voting
fraud both at the polls and in parliament, various individuals
representing the EPP-observing coalition, with the conscious assent
and attempted cover-up of the legislature’s leadership (again observer
party members), were complicit in the commission of outright
falsification, that is, the unlawful casting of votes in the place of
absent colleagues and in plain view of fellow MPs, journalists, and
the public. On this occasion, the foregoing was done for the
parliamentary majority’s illegitimate securing first of a quorum and
then of their desired outcomes on several measures of substance.

In the event of even one further instance of this criminal conduct–in
the National Assembly, at the Presidency, or during the upcoming
elections–the Heritage Party will be unable to reconcile, whether
politically, ethically or otherwise, its participation in the great
family of European parties known as EPP with the presence of those
responsible for such anti-democratic, anti-Armenian, and anti-European
demeanor.

In this connection, but as a matter to be treated separately, we
cannot but express our consternation upon the Armenian prime
minister’s recent public endorsement
() of a serving
foreign official’s candidacy for his country’s presidency.

At this critical juncture, we are at once extremely proud of our EPP
belonging and extremely troubled–for Armenia and for all Europe–by
the endless divide between the words and deeds of the Republic’s de
facto rulers.

And we so very much regret that this statement has become necessary.

The Heritage Party
10 February 2012
Yerevan

http://heritage.am/pr/211111.htm
http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/24478035.html
www.heritage.am

ANTELIAS: CCA Gen Sec invites HH Aram I to Thailand and Indonesia

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Director
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Watch our latest videos on YouTube here:

THE GENERAL SECRETARY OF THE CHRISTIAN CONFERENCE OF ASIA (CCA),
INVITES HIS HOLINESS ARAM I TO THAILAND AND INDONESIA

On Thursday 9 February 2012, His Holiness Aram I held a working session with
Rev. Dr. Henriette Hutabarat-Lebang in his office in Antelias.

The General Secretary briefed the Catholicos on the situation in Asia, the
churches and the activities of CCA. They then discussed the current events
in the Middle East, and the challenges they present to the ecumenical
movement. Dr. Hutabarat-Lebang also spoke of the contribution of the
Catholicosate of Cilicia to the CCA as a member church through its Dioceses
in Iran.

His Holiness concluded the meeting by emphasizing the importance of
interfaith dialogue for churches in both regions. Before taking her leave,
Dr. Hutabarat-Lebang invited His Holiness Aram I as the keynote speaker to
two meetings planned by the Council. The first meeting will be ecumenical
held in Thailand; and the second, an interfaith meeting to be held in
Indonesia.
##
Photo:

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.youtube.com/user/HolySeeOfCilicia
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Photos/Photos670.htm#2

ANTELIAS: HH Aram I in the Christian-Muslim Summit of Religious Lead

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Director
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Watch our latest videos on YouTube here:

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I TEKES PART IN THE CHRISTIAN-MUSLIM SUMMIT OF RELIGIOUS
LEADERS IN LEBANON

On Tuesday 7 February 2012, His Holiness Aram I attended a meeting held at
the Maronite Archbishopric in Beirut, in the presence of the Maronite
Patriarch Béchara Raï and the Heads of Christian and Muslim communities.

At the end of the meeting, the Religious Leaders issued a statement asking
the politicians to safeguard the internal peace of the country, by adopting
a united national position against the divisive challenges presented by
current uprisings in the region.
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Photos:

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.youtube.com/user/HolySeeOfCilicia
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Photos/Photos670.htm