"Who Is Gagik Buniatyan To Speak For Yezidis?" – Counter Statement

“WHO IS GAGIK BUNIATYAN TO SPEAK FOR YEZIDIS?” – COUNTER STATEMENT

02.27.2015 11:57 epress.am

A representative of Armenia’s Yezidi Community Rustam Bakoyan has
expressed his dissatisfaction with National Commission on Television
and Radio (NCTR) President Gagik Buniatyan’s (pictured) statement
made yesterday in the National Assembly. In a counter response,
Bakoyan stressed that Buniatyan did not have the right to speak for
the Yezidi community. Yesterday, responding to HAK faction MP Nikol
Pashinyan’s remark as to why Armenian television stations show films
in Russian but not in the languages of other national minorities,
Buniatyan stated the latter absence was due to the lack of demand.

“I don’t understand, who is Gagik Buniatyan to speak on behalf of
Yezidis and other national minorities living in Armenia and make
spineless statements such as there is no demand for programs in these
languages. Honorable NCTR President, let me inform you that there
are 60,000 Yezidis in Armenia, when have you ever asked the opinion
of those 60,000 people to have come to such a conclusion?

I say this on behalf of myself and all Yezidis, that we, as residents
of the Republic of Armenia, as Armenian citizens, have always wished
and in some ways, we demand, that Armenian television stations provide
time for Yezidi broadcasts, so in case of an opportunity, you don’t
state that there is no demand.

Let me inform you that according to article 28 of the Law on Television
and Radio Broadcasting, public television stations could provide time
in the languages of the Republic of Armenia’s national minorities
with special programs or broadcasts. The general number of hours for
such broadcasts should not exceed one hour per week for television,
and one hour per day for radio broadcasts,” writes Bakoyan.

http://www.epress.am/en/2015/02/27/%E2%80%9Cwho-is-gagik-buniatyan-to-speak-for-yezidis%E2%80%9D-counter-statement.html

The Only Obstacle Between Yerevan And Ankara Is Baku: Political Expe

THE ONLY OBSTACLE BETWEEN YEREVAN AND ANKARA IS BAKU: POLITICAL EXPERT

09:26, 27 February, 2015

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 27, ARMENPRESS: The Director of the Regional Studies
Center and the political expert Richard Giragosian is not surprised by
the fact that the President of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan
decided to withdraw the Armenian-Turkish protocols from the national
Assembly. According to him, especially ahead of the April 24, such
step was expectable. Giragosian told Armenpress that independent from
the fact that the Armenian-Turkish protocols are considered to be
“dead”, the process of the normalization of the relations between
the two countries still breaths.

“We should state that the normalization of the relations does not
depend already on the Armenian-Turkish protocols. Being behind
the stage, nevertheless, there is an opportunity to restart the
negotiations without ratification of the protocols. With regards
to the protocols, though they are dead already”, – said Giragosian,
adding that there is always hope to restart the relations.

“There is only one obstacle on the way of normalization of the
relations. The only hindrance between Yerevan and Ankara is Baku and
in many cases it is an insult to the Turkish government, as Baku puts
restrictions on the normalization of the relations with Armenia”, –
said Giragosian.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/795717/the-only-obstacle-between-yerevan-and-ankara-is-baku-political-expert.html

Haykakan Zhamanak: Hayrikyan Forming New Opposition Force

HAYKAKAN ZHAMANAK: HAYRIKYAN FORMING NEW OPPOSITION FORCE

10:33 27/02/2015 >> DAILY PRESS

Over the past days, several extra-parliamentary political forces are
conducting joint discussions about Armenia’s domestic and foreign
political developments, Haykakan Zhamanak reports, adding that these
discussions have been initiated by National Self-Determination Union
leader Paruyr Hayrikyan.

Hayrikyan confirmed the report to the newspaper. He added that seven
political forces are participating in the consultations: National
Self-Determination Union, Heritage, Armenian National Movement, Free
Democrats, Constituent Parliament, Conservative Party, and Democratic
Homeland Party.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.panorama.am/en/press/2015/02/27/hzh/

Moscow Reveals What Non-Government Was Needed For

MOSCOW REVEALS WHAT NON-GOVERNMENT WAS NEEDED FOR

Lragir.am
Politics – 27 February 2015, 13:54

After the recent domestic developments interviews with Russian
experts appeared in the Armenian press who stated that Russia does
not interfere with Armenia’s domestic issues. They also state that
it is all the same to Moscow who will be the government of Armenia
unless it does not conduct the policy that Russia needs.

Most importantly, however, with regard to the so-called non-government
of Armenia, they are stating bluntly that it was necessary to keep
the Armenian government within Russia’s political interests. In other
words, the non-governmental format was leverage on the government,
and had the latter conducted a policy against Russia’s interests,
particularly of integration with Western organizations, there would
be a change of government in Armenia with the help of Moscow.

Of course, the Russian experts are not saying something new because the
Armenian political and media circles have dwelt on this circumstance
in detail. Besides, the non-governmental forces did not hide that
they serve Russia’s interests.

The problem is different. Moscow actually confirms this, thereby
giving up on its agents to some extent. One of the signs of this was
the statement of one of the Kremlin’s spokespersons that the Armenian
non-government are “clowns” if they wish to come to government and
maintain the oligarchic system with Moscow’s help. This was followed
by the famous developments and Serzh Sargsyan’s statement on refraining
from turning the political field to a circus.

Apparently, Moscow has achieved its goal in Armenia or certain problems
have occurred that have forced the governments of Armenia and Russia
to give up on clownery. Why have the Russians openly given up on the
non-government will become known in the future or will not become
known at all due to some subtleties.

The point is whether the non-governmental forces are aware how the
forces serving the interests of another state’s goals and interests
are referred to in history and political science. After all, do they
know how they are eventually treated at home and outside the country?

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/politics/view/33695#sthash.AmkokG61.dpuf

An Important Decision Has Been Made

AN IMPORTANT DECISION HAS BEEN MADE

Igor Muradyan, Political Analyst
Comments – 27 February 2015, 12:31

There are two approaches to NATO enlargement: the U.S.-UK and the
French-German. However, controversies are not so sharp. Recently,
the approach of the United States and the United Kingdom has been
getting closer to that of France and Germany, including in terms NATO
policy in the regions.

During Sarkozy’s office France tried to be more active and become a
European leader of regional policy, and new positions were gained.

However, very soon it became clear that this policy is meaningful
only in case of the cooperation between the United States and the
UK. The Libyan developments demonstrated this, the same can be noticed
in Syria.

Now the essence of the politics of the leading states of the West
includes two important components – the financial-economic issues and
the regional strategy. In fact, the future international policy will
present the observation of the regional objectives. In this respect,
development of cooperation between NATO and partners has considerable
prospects.

This objective is not a NATO priority but only at this stage. In the
future, NATO will not be able to resolve the problems without new
partners. Some new partners may gain more importance in the solution
of NATO problems than some members of the alliance.

The issue of development of NATO cooperation with new partners will
have a powerful influence on the political situation of the regions
and on different strategies in global terms.

The issues relating to the South Caucasus are sensitive because
there are internal and external issues. Now the attention of the
Western community towards the South Caucasus is low but something
more important happened than the previous accelerated actions of the
Western community in this region.

There are no doubts that NATO and the European community have decided
to integrate this region, and the decision was not made equivocally.

However, along with different projects, all the Western states
have accepted the objectives of integration of Eastern Europe and
particularly the South Caucasus.

The situation in Ukraine has a crucial importance in Eastern Europe
but the South Caucasus has more importance in the Eurasian strategy.

Without presence in and control on the South Caucasus the Western
community cannot conduct a policy in Eurasia.

Armenia is a Christian country, in complicated geopolitical conditions,
but is capable of drastic political steps and building a policy aimed
at different “poles”, at the same time maintaining close relations
with Iran.

Some factors that Armenia has interest NATO and the European Union.

These two Western organizations integrate with the countries of
the South Caucasus and Eastern Europe at different pace. These two
organizations are independent from each other but include almost the
same states, and development of relations between Armenia and the
European Union affects relations with NATO.

Experts think that Armenia and Georgia have an opportunity for new
stages of development of relations with NATO, which will, in one way
or another, lead to the membership of these two countries. Azerbaijan
has a slightly different situation and prospects.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/comments/view/33694#sthash.mX8q5Onh.dpuf

Armenia: My Illusion

ARMENIA: MY ILLUSION

13:14, February 27, 2015

By Meltem Naz KaÃ…~_o

A week after a three-month stay in Armenia, I am once again at home
in my green room in Istanbul, Turkey.

“Men must live and create. Live to the point of tears,” a quote from
Albert Camus, is written on my wall. To me, Armenia seems like an
illusion now. An illusion I lived and created to the point of tears.

For a Turk, going to Armenia seems a crazy idea. It’s not like going
anywhere else with a Turkish passport.

I was selected by the Hrant Dink Foundation to be a research fellow in
a Yerevan-based NGO, to contribute to cross-border understanding. Just
as Turkey has racists, Armenia has its own.

“Somebody can intentionally hurt you, or even kill you, just to
make a point,” a friend of mine said. My cousin who works for the
UN claimed that Yerevan was a safe city. “But not for a Turk,” he
added. I recalled the Armenian terrorist organization ASALA’s killing
of Turkish diplomats around the world in the seventies. They did it
to force discussion of the Armenian Genocide. Hurting a young Turkish
woman in Yerevan during the centennial anniversary of the Genocide,
I imagined, could be equally useful. “Make sure they don’t cut you,”
a Turkish friend said ominously when he wished me farewell.

Immediately after arriving in Armenia, I met a local surgeon who
expressed interest in me. Smelling the white roses he brought me,
I consoled myself in the knowledge that, were my fears realized,
I had a surgeon on my side. He wasn’t a bad guy. Not once did he
come after me with a gun or a knife, or a cross word. But there was
a gulf between us. To him, we were two attractive bodies. To me,
we were souls being pulled towards each other by unknown forces. He
saw magnetism, I wanted magic.

Armenia offered less consuming, and more substantial, delights. Public
Information and Need of Knowledge (PINK), the LGBT rights advocate NGO
for which I worked, was a temple of joy. I still hear, in my world of
illusion, Nvard’s screams of “Meltushiiii” as she hugs me to welcome
me to the office. “Hi darling,” Kolya used to say nonchalantly. His
openness encouraged me to be at ease with myself. Soon, Kolya became
my alter ego. When faced with challenging circumstances, I developed
the habit of asking myself: “What would Kolya do in this situation?”

Never will I forget my host Nouneh either. She opened her house to
me, giving me her daughter’s old room. Now, only after a week, the
names of the streets of Yerevan are disappearing from my mind. Facts
are becoming illusionary. But what stays with me is the proportion of
Nouneh’s eyes, nose, and lips. Her familiar face made me feel at home
when we cooked recipes she had learned from her deceased mother. Out
of generosity and love she shared her legacy with a stranger.

I was lucky enough to know the Seferian brothers as well. One evening,
I invited Nar over for dinner. I provided the food while he brought
memories to laugh about and information on history and politics. With
his inquisitive eyes, he looked around and found something wise to
say about the architecture of the house and the future of Armenia
and Turkey. His older brother, Naz, frequently read my written work
before I dared share it with the rest of the world. To him, I exposed
my most vulnerable self: my stories.

During my last week in Armenia, the Seferian brothers, Naz’s wife
Mariam, his little son Mikael, and I went to a restaurant. It was
called Aintab, a city in today’s southeast Turkey, and branded itself
as a provider of “Western Armenian Food.”

It was right then and there, sharing appetizers and kebab with them,
that I realized the price of the Genocide and the forced departure of
Armenians. What it must have been then and what it is today. A price
in more than land and money. It was the price of home, of proximity
and trust, of exchange and empathy. I understood and wished that,
somehow, the Seferians had stayed in Western Armenia, their home,
so that we could be neighbors.

Figments of my imagination produced almost-fictional women whom I
registered as my “mother Armenias.”Ani, Anna, and Anush – the three
of them guided me in fashioning armor to protect me from people
or place that sought to do me harm. The armor was in the form of
a feminine, home-made apron shield. Ani, two years older than me,
accepted my naivety wholeheartedly and guided me to listen to the
strong voice inside me and not to give in to anxiety. Anna and Anush,
the organizers of my fellowship program had planned my visit with
logic and forethought.

During our farewell lunch at the Central Cafe, Anna gave me a book
of poetry that she had published. She wrote about what it meant to
be a woman. That same night, I read her book under candle light,
repeating over and over again two of her poems. She taught me how
rationality and intuition can go hand in hand.

On my last day in Armenia, Anush, a green stone I held in my hands for
those three months, brought me to the Parisian Cafe on Abovyan Street.

We were there the morning after my arrival in Armenia too. We had
some coffee. The same waitress served us. Anush gifted me mint tea
in a green box. Each time I drink it I return to Armenia, to her arms
and her loving kindness.

I wasn’t all that close to the three Turkish fellows that participated
in the same program. We had no fights or unpleasantness, but I never
felt from them the openness and generosity that I received from my
hosts. What did it mean that I was emotionally closer to my Armenian
friends than the Turks who came with me?

I offer no overarching conclusion about Armenians and Turks. No two
people are the same even if they hold the same national identity. But
I accept that, sometimes, friendships can pass closed borders when
they cannot walk across a room. In illusory worlds, lived and created
to the point of tears, they do.

Meltem Naz KaÃ…~_o is a short story writer, freelance journalist, and
a social science researcher. As part of the Hrant Dink Foundation’s
fellowship program to facilitate cross cultural affiliations between
Armenia and Turkey, she conducted comparative research for Public
Information and Need of Knowledge (Pink Armenia). Meltem received a
Comparative Human Development degree and graduated with honors from
the University of Chicago.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/58750/armenia-my-illusion.html

SYOA Performs In Lebanon As Official Orchestra Of The Al Bustan Inte

SYOA PERFORMS IN LEBANON AS OFFICIAL ORCHESTRA OF THE AL BUSTAN INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL

12:38, 27 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

The State Youth Orchestra of Armenia (SYOA) started its concerts
within the framework of the Al Bustan International Festival by the
performance of “Norma” opera by Vincenzo Bellini. The Youth Orchestra
has been invited to perform in Lebanon as the official orchestra of
the Al Bustan International Festival for the second time.

Speaking of the Youth Orchestra Gianluca Marciano, the conductor and
the artistic director of the Festival said: “My first impression was
fantastic! First of all the orchestra arrived here incredibly well
prepared as usual. You have wonderful musicians, they are active and
professional, not just prepared but they have will and wish to do the
best possible for the performance. I was also surprised by the fact
that being a symphony orchestra, they can perform and understand the
flexibility of the opera performance, which is a completely different
way of playing. Beautiful musicians, always in a good mood and open for
the cooperation with the conductor. Can’t imagine a better atmosphere
to start working again here, in Al Bustan.”

Within the framework of the Festival the SYOA will present another four
concerts, performing compositions by Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky,
etc. The concert dated on March 10 will be headed by Sergey Smbatyan
and dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/27/syoa-performs-in-lebanon-as-official-orchestra-of-the-al-bustan-international-festival/

Another Armenian Killed In Shelling In Aleppo

ANOTHER ARMENIAN KILLED IN SHELLING IN ALEPPO

by Nana Martirosyan

Friday, February 27, 11:12

Hakob Gabrielyan (1964) was killed in rocket attack on Aleppo by
terrorists on February 26, a Syrian newspaper Gandzasar reports.

Another two Armenians Shogher Aslamyan and Sosi Stambulyan-Ohanyan
were wounded in the attack. Earlier on February 21, two Armenians
were killed and five were wounded in Aleppo.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=6F3018A0-BE58-11E4-B48C0EB7C0D21663

Trial Of Gyumri Murder Case To Start In The Near Future

TRIAL OF GYUMRI MURDER CASE TO START IN THE NEAR FUTURE

16:39, 27 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

The Garrison Military Court of the North-Caucasian Command will soon
start hearing of a number of criminal cases, including the murder
of a family of seven in Gyumri, Armenia by Russian soldier Valery
Permyakov, the Court’s representative Mikhail Ptitsin told Tass.

Private of the Russian Military Base #102 is currently undergoing
medical-psychological examination in the military hospital in Gyumri.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/27/trial-of-gyumri-murder-case-to-start-in-the-near-future/

Iraq’s Transport Minister Visits Armenian Genocide Memorial

IRAQ’S TRANSPORT MINISTER VISITS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEMORIAL

15:25, 27 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

The delegation headed by Iraq’s Transport Minister Jabr Al-Zubeidi
visited the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan.

The guests laid wreaths at the Armenian Genocide Memorial and paid
tribute to their memory with a minute of silence.

Deputy Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum Institute Suren
Manukyan presented the history of construction of the Tsitsernakaberd
memorial.

Members of the Iraqi delegation visited the temporary exhibition hall
of AGMI and watched the expo on the Armenian Genocide.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/27/iraqs-transport-minister-visits-armenian-genocide-memorial/