Tragedy In Gyumri: Six Members Of One Family Killed

TRAGEDY IN GYUMRI: SIX MEMBERS OF ONE FAMILY KILLED

14:53, 12 Jan 2015

Anna Martikyan
Public Radio of Armenia
Gyumri

Six members of the same family were killed in Gyumri this morning. A
six-month baby found at the site of the crime has been taken to
hospital with heavy wounds in the chest.

According to preliminary information, the murder has been committed
by a Russian serviceman from the military base in Gyumri.

Spokesperson of the Investigative Committee of the Republic of Armenia
Sona Truzyan has said the main suspect is Valery Permyakov, who has
reportedly escaped from the Gyumri military base.

“Military boots with the name and surname of the serviceman have been
found at the site,” she added. An AK 74 rifle and 5.45 mm caliber
shells have also been found.

Probe into the details of the case is under way.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/01/12/tragedy-in-gyumri-six-members-of-one-family-killed/

Medvedev Discusses Trade And Economy Cooperation With Kazakhstani An

MEDVEDEV DISCUSSES TRADE AND ECONOMY COOPERATION WITH KAZAKHSTANI AND ARMENIAN COLLEAGUES

YEREVAN, January 12. /ARKA/. The head of the Russian cabinet Dmitry
Medvedev discussed trade and economic cooperation with his Kazakhstani
and Armenian counterparts, the government press office reported.

Medvedev talked with Karim Masimov and Hovik Abrahamyan on the phone,
Novosti-Armenia says referring to RIA Novosti.

The Russian premier wished a Happy New Year to his colleagues, says
the report. -0–

From: A. Papazian

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/medvedev_discusses_trade_and_economy_cooperation_with_kazakhstani_and_armenian_colleagues/#sthash.AdgJGhdK.dpuf

Cognac Production Sees Small Year-On-Year Decrease In Armenia In Jan

COGNAC PRODUCTION SEES SMALL YEAR-ON-YEAR DECREASE IN ARMENIA IN JANUARY-NOVEMBER

YEREVAN, January 12. /ARKA/. Armenia’s cognac production dropped by
6.6% to a total of 16,942,500 liters in January-November, compared
to the same period of 2013, Armenia’s National Statistical Service
(NSS) reported.

A drop was seen also in wine production in the country – 13.6% down
to about 5,082,400 liters in the reporting period.

Vodka production fell by 5.9% to 8,387,900 liters in eleven months.

A total of 400,400 liters of champagne (0.2% decline) and 22,935,000
liters of beer (29.6% increase) was produced in the period.

Non-alcoholic beverages manufactured in the period totaled 70,723,100
liters, an increase of 29.6% compared to January-November the year
before. -0–

From: A. Papazian

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/cognac_production_sees_small_year_on_year_decrease_in_armenia_in_january_november/#sthash.Vdh3bLNm.dpuf

What’s next for Canada’s military

Ottawa Citizen, Canada
Jan 11 2015

What’s next for Canada’s military

Chris Kilford

Published on: January 11, 2015Last Updated: January 11, 2015 7:00 AM EST

When the current mission in Iraq eventually ends it likely won’t be
our last in the region.

Then again, making predictions can be a risky business as I found out
in 2006 as the acting director of a new future security analysis team
in National Defence Headquarters. There were about 10 of us in all –
civilian and military, with various backgrounds and academic
qualifications. Our main focus was to figure out where, when and why
the Canadian military might deploy internationally during the next 20
years. By analyzing various possibilities, the idea was to then
recommend what new equipment, people skills, doctrine, etc. the
military would need to meet the challenges envisaged.

As George Savile, Marquess of Halifax once said, “the best
qualification of a prophet is to have a good memory.” To this end, the
team pored back over previous military deployments and the causes
leading to them. We also analyzed more contemporary issues ranging
from climate change to demographic trends and along the way discovered
that those in the forecasting industry often got it wrong.

For example, few had imagined the total collapse of the Soviet Union
or that supporting the Afghan mujahideen would have such far-reaching
consequences later on. On the other hand, once up and running, it was
the Middle East and the fringes of the former Soviet Union that
attracted our greatest interest. In the post-1945 period, for example,
Canadian troops had repeatedly deployed to the Middle East for
peacekeeping and combat.

Indeed, when I arrived in Turkey as Canada’s defence attaché in the
summer of 2011, our military was busily involved helping rid Libya of
Muammar Gaddafi. Just after I left Ankara in July 2014, others were on
their way to Kuwait or heading to Lithuania for a Baltic air policing
mission. In between, the navy busily patrolled the region on
anti-piracy/anti-terrorism missions and in support of NATO operations
in the Mediterranean and Black Sea. Last month, Canada took command of
Combined Task Force 150, a naval counter-terrorism task force located
in Bahrain.

In the region where I worked there were plenty of other potential
flash-points as well. Turkey was occupying a large portion of Cyprus
after some 40 years. Ethnic Armenian separatists backed by Yerevan had
seized control of the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region in Azerbaijan
in the early 1990s. Today, along the Armenian and Azerbaijani border,
the two sides are dug-in much like it was in Europe during the First
World War. In 2008, Georgia and Russia went to war and in 2014, Russia
annexed Crimea. Furthermore, and much to the annoyance of Georgia,
their breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia are recognized
as independent countries by a small handful of states but in
particular, Russia. Meanwhile, the spillover from the civil war in
Syria has led to refugee, economic and political challenges for Iraq,
Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.

As for the rest of the world, there will always be missions that
seemingly come out of the blue from natural disasters to more menacing
affairs.

Given the vagaries of Middle Eastern politics, however, I would
venture that our men and women in uniform will be serving in and
around the region well into the future.

Tensions with Russia will also persist, meaning that NATO will call on
our assistance more and more.

The good news, if there is any, is that Ottawa established a military
operational support hub with a range of support services in Germany in
2009. Moreover, and in what turned out to be a very timely decision,
Canada signed a new memorandum of understanding with Kuwait in May
2014 for a second hub. Both hubs, I suspect, will be far busier than
their proponents ever imagined.

Dr. Chris Kilford (then Colonel Kilford) served as Canada’s Defence
Attaché to Turkey from 2011-2014. He recently became a fellow with the
Queen’s Centre for International and Defence Policy.

From: A. Papazian

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/national/chris-kilford-whats-next-for-canadas-military

<< C’est la langue qui réunit les Kurdes >>

REVUE DE PRESSE
. La plupart d’entre
eux ont fini sur la potence. Dès l’indépendance, en 1923, Kemal a
décidé la mise en place d’un Etat exclusivement turc. Et, le 3 mars
1924, un décret interdisait les écoles kurdes et les publications en
kurde. C’est à ce moment qu’est né le mouvement de lutte qui, d’une
certaine manière, dure encore.

Le problème de la définition de frontières à la fin de la première
guerre mondiale ne vient-il pas du fait que ce sont des terres où
cohabitent depuis longtemps plusieurs communautés ?

De très importantes communautés arméniennes vivaient là depuis des
siècles, mais lors de la conférence de la paix de Paris, en 1919,
elles ont malheureusement disparu, massacrées… C’était une des
caractéristiques du Kurdistan que ce mélange de juifs, de chrétiens,
d’Assyro-Chaldéens ou d’Arméniens, et de musulmans. Et c’est pour cela
que la plupart des Arméniens qui ont été sauvés lors des massacres de
1915 l’ont été par des Kurdes.

Cependant, les Hamidiye, qui ont largement participé aux débuts du
génocide, étaient essentiellement kurdes…

A la fin du XIXe siècle, après la destruction des principautés kurdes,
le sultan Abdülhamid a cherché à s’inspirer du système des Cosaques,
donnant le titre de > à quelques seigneurs locaux kurdes et
les chargeant de défendre les marches de l’empire contre les Russes.
Mais quand les révoltes d’Arméniens ont éclaté, en 1892-1893, ils se
sont chargés de la répression, massacrant plusieurs centaines de
milliers de personnes.

Ces soldats ont été recrutés d’autant plus facilement qu’ils venaient
de territoires revendiqués par les Arméniens. Ils ont collaboré. Mais
à côté de cela il y avait la société civile, très hostile aux
massacres. En 1915, les deux seuls gouverneurs kurdes de l’Empire
ottoman se sont opposés aux directives d’Istanbul : ils étaient
originaires de Diyarbakir, qui a été vidée des Arméniens et des
syriaques cette année-là.

Les frontières apparues au XXe siècle ont-elles débouché sur des
différences culturelles parmi les Kurdes ?

Il y a des identités multiples. Les Kurdes iraniens ont été éduqués
dans des écoles, confrontés aux médias persans… De même, en Turquie,
beaucoup de Kurdes ont été assimilés linguistiquement, et ceux qui ne
l’étaient pas ont néanmoins hérité des formes de raisonnement du
kémalisme. On pourrait aisément trouver dans la doctrine des rebelles
du PKK [Parti des travailleurs du Kurdistan] des analogies avec le
mouvement nationaliste turc, notamment la mystique du libérateur de la
patrie…

Il y a également des singularités régionales, mais tout cela n’empêche
pas l’existence d’une identité kurde qui s’exprime de façon évidente
dans la diaspora. Dans les moments de malheur, je suis très frappé de
constater que l’ensemble des Kurdes se mobilisent immédiatement. Mais
si le Kurdistan devait devenir un Etat indépendant, il serait
nécessairement polycentrique et fédéral.

Est-ce que la décomposition des Etats de la région est une chance
historique pour les Kurdes ?

Il y a trente ans, on n’osait rêver du jour où il y aurait un
Kurdistan quasi indépendant en Irak, que des Etats soutenus par
l’ex-URSS ou les Etats-Unis figureraient sur des listes noires, et que
les Kurdes émergeraient comme des partenaires raisonnables. Or c’est
ce qui arrive. Désormais, dans la conscience politique occidentale, il
y a la reconnaissance d’une certaine légitimité des Kurdes à avoir
leur propre Etat. Donc, ce n’est plus qu’une question de temps…

Qu’est-ce qui garantit qu’un Kurdistan indépendant ne deviendrait pas,
comme beaucoup d’Etats de la région, une terre d’oppression ?

Dans la pratique, les Kurdes d’Irak ont fait la démonstration qu’ils
respectaient le pluralisme religieux et politique. Il y a eu trois ou
quatre années difficiles, au sortir de la guerre de 2003, mais même
dans cespériodes de luttes internes, jamais les communautés
religieuses n’ont été inquiétées.

Tout de même, le PKK n’est pas franchement démocratique…

Le PKK a une filiation kémaliste évidente, mtinée de baasisme et de
marxisme, mais ils ont beaucoup évolué. C’est devenu, je pense, un
mouvement qui peut se recycler dans le jeu politique. D’ailleurs, on a
recyclé par le passé des mouvements beaucoup moins fréquentables.

La Syrie a longtemps servi de base arrière au PKK. Qu’en est-il des
rapports entre les Kurdes et Damas après bientôt quatre années de
guerre civile, et alors que fait rage la guerre contre l’Etat
islamique ?

Les Kurdes syriens sont partagés. Le discours du clan Assad n’a pas
changé : nous, alaouites, kurdes et chrétiens, sommes minoritaires en
Syrie, et si les sunnites, dont les plus modérés sont Frères
musulmans, prenaient le pouvoir, ce serait une catastrophe pour tout
le monde.

Comme il s’est placé dans l’optique d’un conflit long, comparable à la
guerre du Liban, Bachar Al-Assad a fait savoir aux Kurdes qu’il se
concentrerait sur la défense de la Syrie >, à savoir Damas et
la région alaouite. Il a proposé la gestion de trois cantons kurdes du
Nord au PKK, et celui-ci l’a aussitôt acceptée.

Quant aux rebelles kurdes modérés, hostiles à Damas, ils ont mis plus
de deux ans pour trouver un accord a minima avec les autres forces
d’opposition à Assad : prisonnières de leur vision nationaliste arabe,
elles refusaient de garantir l’égalité de droits aux minorités. L’Etat
islamique, lui, nous est resté totalement étranger, même s’il y a sans
doute quelques rares trajectoires individuelles.

Qu’est-ce qui explique la persistance de cette revendication unitaire ?

Les Kurdes ont conscience d’être une population cohérente, qui a été
victime de l’Histoire. Et un sentiment d’injustice a alimenté la
résistance. Nous sommes près de 40 millions. Pourquoi les populations
de Saint-Marin, du Liechtenstein ou des petits émirats du Golfe
auraient-elles le droit de se doter d’un Etat et pas nous ? Sans
représentation, nous ne pouvons pas défendre notre patrimoine – comme
celui de la ville d’Hasankeyf, menacée de disparition par un projet de
barrage.

Un autre exemple : il y a une trentaine d’années, j’avais proposé
d’éditer plusieurs volumes de >, sous l’égide
de l’Unesco. Il a fallu plus d’un an pour le faire admettre : le mot
Kurdistan ne passait pas. La Turquie s’y opposait, et l’Iran, l’Irak,
mais aussi, notamment, la Chine, à cause de son annexion du Tibet.

Finalement, on a dû faire un compromis : il n’y aurait qu’un seul
volume, intitulé >. Quand on n’a pas d’Etat, on est
impuissant…

En savoir plus sur

samedi 10 janvier 2015,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

http://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2014/12/31/c-est-la-langue-qui-reunit-les-kurdes_4548149_3210.html#aBEVVgKQb253DO3P.99

Ministry: 1.32 million Armenian citizens visited Georgia in 2014

Ministry: 1.32 million Armenian citizens visited Georgia in 2014

January 9, 2015 – 17:10 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – 5,493,492 foreign citizens visited Georgia in 2014,
showing a 1.88% increase over the previous year, according to
statistics compiled by the Interior Ministry based on border crossing
data, Civil.ge reports.

In the data provided, travelers entering into Georgia and staying in
the country for more than 24 hours are classified as ‘tourists’.

Of 5.49 million visits registered in 2014, 2,218,050 were identified
as ‘tourists’, a 7.39% increase against 2013.

Citizens from Georgia’s neighboring states made up the largest share
in total visits in 2014.

Turkish citizens led the pack again in 2014 with 1.43 million entries
into Georgia, down by 10.1% compared to 2013, followed by Armenian
citizens with 1.32 million entries (2.3% y/y increase); Azerbaijani
citizens – 1.28 million (19.2% y/y increase); Russian citizens –
810,233 (5.58% y/y increase); Ukrainian citizens – 143,157 (12.9% y/y
increase). Number of visits by Iranian citizens more than halved to
41,747 in 2014.

Number of visits to Georgia by citizens from the EU-member states
increased 11% y/y, reaching 230,323 in 2014.

From: A. Papazian

Syrian-Armenian photographer’s exhibit opens at UN

Syrian-Armenian photographer’s exhibit opens at UN

January 9, 2015 – 12:01 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The UN representative of the opposition Syrian
National Coalition demanded that the United Nations take down a new
photo exhibit sponsored by the Syrian government, saying Syria is
using it to “whitewash the regime’s war crimes,” the Associated Press
reported.

The “My Homeland” exhibit opened Thursday, Jan 9, with photographs of
ruined Aleppo.

The UN secretary-general’s spokesman had no immediate comment on the
letter from Najib Ghadbian asking the UN to “correct this grave
mistake.” A spokeswoman for Ghadbian, Katie Guzzi, said they had not
had an official response from the UN, according to the AP.

Ghadbian said the photos paint Syria’s government as victim, not aggressor.

The fighting in Syria that began with protests against Assad in 2011
has killed more than 200,000 people and forced millions to flee. UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has accused both the Syrian government
forces and opposition forces of targeting civilians, though former UN
human rights chief Navi Pillay last year said atrocities by the Syrian
government “far outweigh” crimes by opposition fighters.

Ghadbian called the photographer behind the new exhibit, Hagop
Vanesian, a propagandist, saying that he at times has been embedded
with Syrian forces in Aleppo.

In a phone call, Vanesian told the AP his work is “humanitarian” and
said he’s not a politician.

“I just photograph the suffering of the people,” he said.

Vanesian, who was born in Aleppo and has been a volunteer photographer
with the aid group Syrian Arab Red Crescent, said he left the divided
northern city eight months ago. Last summer, he posted photos of
Facebook of him shaking hands with Syria’s ambassador to the UN, as
well as black-and-white portraits of the ambassador, Bashar Ja’afari.

“The war in Syria changed my life but not my principals,” Vanesian’s
Twitter profile says.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/186918/

Les 100 ans du génocide arménien

MIDI LIBRE, France
5 janvier 2015 lundi

Les 100 ans du génocide arménien

Au programme, film et conférences. L’année 2015 marquera les 100 ans
du génocide des Arméniens. Elle sera rythmée par de nombreux
événements culturels et scientifiques. Deux dates sont à retenir au
mois de janvier, à Montpellier. Tout d’abord jeudi 8, à 20 h 25, Serge
Avédikian, réalisateur de talent ayant été récompensé par la Palme
d’or à Cannes pour Chienne d’histoire , viendra présenter son nouveau
film, Le scandale Paradjanov , au Diagonal Capitole (1). Vendredi 23,
ensuite, aura lieu la journée de l’avocat menacé, organisée par
l’Institut des droits de l’homme du barreau de Montpellier, la Ligue
des droits de l’homme et le Syndicat des avocats de France. À la
Maison des avocats (2), la matinée (9 h-12 h) sera consacrée aux robes
noires philippines ; l’après-midi (14 h-17 h) à l’avocat arménien de
1915, avec deux interventions, l’une présentant le contexte du
génocide et ses conséquences sociétales par Héléna Demirdjian ;
l’autre faisant la lumière sur le destin de Krikor Zohrab, par
Virginie Dusen. (1) Cinéma Diagonal, 5 rue de Verdun. 04 67 58 58 10.
(2) Maison des avocats, 14 rue Marcel-de-Serres. 04 67 61 72 60.

From: A. Papazian

ANKARA: Turks, Armenians meet at symposium in centennial year of for

Cihan News Agency (CNA), Turkey
January 5, 2015 Monday

Turks, Armenians meet at symposium in centennial year of forced migration

İSTANBUL (CİHAN)- Turks and Armenians met in İstanbul on Monday to
discuss the historical background of Turkish-Armenian relations in a
year that marks the centennial of the forced migration of Armenians
from Ottoman soil in 1915.

The three-day-long symposium, titled “Turkish-Armenian relations in
the 19th and 20th centuries,” is being organized by the İstanbul
Metropolitan Municipality, İstanbul University and the İstanbul branch
of Turk Ocakları in an effort to bring together Turks and Armenians in
this symbolically important year.

Archbishop Aram AteÅ?yan, the Armenian patriarch based in İstanbul, and
President of Turk Ocakları Dr. Cezmi Bayram delivered opening speeches
at the symposium. AteÃ…?yan said that although the patriarch should stay
out of politics, it is important to make constructive contributions
when the issue is about improving relations. Stating that Turks and
Armenians are like two children who grew up in the same cradle,
AteÃ…?yan noted that these two children are supposed to walk into the
future hand-in-hand, though past pains and sorrows cannot be forgotten
and losses cannot be restored. According to AteÃ…?yan, these two injured
children can only be healed by impartial doctors on both sides, as the
involvement of foreign doctors would only worsen the situation.
AteÃ…?yan also noted that talking about the negativities of the Armenian
diaspora does not do any good and such a vicious cycle should end.

Tatul AnuÃ…?yan, a priest who spoke in one of the sessions about the
history of Armenians and the patriarchate, said he is hopeful about
mending bridges between the two nations.

Deputy Rector Mustafa Ak emphasized the importance of dialogue for
peaceful coexistence, adding that instead of looking for scapegoats,
avoiding the repetition of mistakes should be prioritized. According
to him, progress could be made in Turkish-Armenian relations through
dialogue.

On Tuesday night, as a side event to the symposium, a concert will be
held featuring songs of Armenian composers in Turkey.

Müleyke Barutçu, İstanbul (Cihan/Today’s Zaman) CİHAN

From: A. Papazian

ANKARA: Israel won’t recognize 1915 as Armenian Genocide: Israeli am

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Jan 9 2015

Israel won’t recognize 1915 as Armenian Genocide: Israeli ambassador to Baku

BAKU

A woman places a lit candle on portraits of Armenian intellectuals who
were killed and deported under the Ottoman rule during the World War
I, on April 24, during a commemorative march on Istiklal Avenue in
Istanbul. AFP Photo

Israel does not intend to recognize the killings of Armenians in 1915
as a genocide this year, Israeli Ambassador to Azerbaijan Rafael
Harpaz has said, the Azerbaijani website Trend reported on Jan. 8.

“Israel is a democratic country. Everybody has two opinions [on the
issue], not one,” Harpaz said.

Referring to some Israeli politicians’ call for the government to
officially recognize the genocide, he said the government already has
“a very clear opinion … which was earlier stated by Foreign Minister
Avigdor Lieberman.”

Harpaz also expressed hope that relations between Israel and Turkey
will improve.

“There are enough common interests and issues in the world for us to
cooperate,” he said.

“Take the example of Turkish Airlines. Turkish Airlines is the biggest
foreign airline active in Israel. Istanbul is the biggest hub for
Israelis. The same goes for tourism and trade, which are up. So we
hope that our political relations with Turkey will improve,” the
ambassador added.

January/09/2015

From: A. Papazian

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/israel-wont-recognize-1915-as-armenian-genocide-israeli-ambassador-to-baku.aspx?pageID=238&nID=76711&NewsCatID=359