The EU Reiterates Importance Of Intensifying Relations With Armenia

THE EU REITERATES IMPORTANCE OF INTENSIFYING RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
YEREVAN
MAY 13, 2011

The European Union made a statement May 12 on recent developments
in Armenia.

“The EU has on a number of occasions raised concerns about freedom
of assembly in the country. We therefore welcome the fact that, for
the first time in many years, the political opposition was granted
permission to hold a rally in Liberty Square on 28 April. We hope
that future requests to hold rallies will be handled in the same
way. This rally passed off in an orderly manner due, it seems, to the
effective cooperation between law enforcement bodies and opposition
groups. With Armenia due to begin a new cycle of elections in 2012,
we attach particular importance to the respect for freedom of assembly.

The EU also welcomes President Sargsyan’s statement of 20 April in
which he called for a more meticulous investigation into the violent
events of March 2008. In that same context, we welcome the fact that
in recent weeks three opposition activists, Harutyun Urutyan, Roman
Mnatsakanyan and Aram Bareghamyan, sentenced and imprisoned in the
aftermath of those events, have been released on parole. We call on
the Armenian authorities to release all the activists that remain in
detention soon. The EU believes that a thorough investigation of the
violent events of March 2008 and the release of all those in custody
in relation to those events will help Armenia to truly move on.

Finally the EU would like to reiterate once again the importance
it attaches to intensified relations with Armenia and invites the
Armenian government to make full use of the opportunities provided
by the Eastern Partnership and the European Neighbourhood Policy”.

From: A. Papazian

Syria’s Armenians Have No Intention To Leave Country

SYRIA’S ARMENIANS HAVE NO INTENTION TO LEAVE COUNTRY

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 12, 2011 – 16:29 AMT

Armenian community of Syria is leading a relatively calm life, the
riots did not affect us. Syria’s Armenians reside mainly in Damascus
and Aleppo, a representative of Syria’s Armenian community, a member
of the Union of Arab Writers said.

As Nora Arisian noted in a conversation with a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter, no disorders were observed in Damascus and Aleppo.

At the same time, she remarked that the members of the Armenian
community have no intention to leave the country. “About 10000
Armenians reside in Syria; 6000 of them in Damascus; 4000 in Aleppo,”
she said.

Syria’s Armenians always supported President Bashar al-Assad. At
present there’s concern that the pro-Islamic opposition may start
persecution of Syria-residing Christians.

From: A. Papazian

Lyudmila Sargsyan: Robert Kocharyan Is Afraid Of Armenian President’

LYUDMILA SARGSYAN: ROBERT KOCHARYAN IS AFRAID OF ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S WILLINGNESS TO DISCLOSE THE CASE OF MARCH 1 2008

arminfo
Thursday, May 12, 18:01

There is no cooperation between the Armenian authorities and the
oppositional Armenian National Congress (ANC), but there is a
possibility for a dialogue between them, said Lyudmila Sargsyan,
Chairwoman of the Social Democrat Hnchakyan Party, member of the ANC,
at today’s press conference in Yerevan.

“At the moment, both parties are ready for cooperation, which causes
many people’s envy, particularly, the envy of those who refused to
join the ANC”, said Sargsyan.

When commenting on the recent interview of the second president of
Armenia Robert Kocharyan, she said that the second president is
frightened of the incumbent President Serzh Sargsyan’s intention
to disclose the developments of 1 March 2008. Moreover, Kocharyan
realizes that he bears responsibility for the developments and will
be punished sooner or later.

“He violated the Constitution, imposed a state of emergency on the
country which he had no right to do, and organized murder of 10 people,
thereby trying to justify the imposition of the state of emergency. For
a long time Kocharyan was trying to blame the opposition for what had
happened, but having seen Sargsyan’s willingness to disclose the case
of March 1 2008, he got frightened”, said the politician and added
that she expects all the political prisoners to be released on May 28.

To recall, on March 1 2008 as a result of clashed between the
opposition headed by the first president of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosyan
and law-enforcers, 10 people died and over 200 were wounded.

From: A. Papazian

Historical And Cultural Museum-Reservation Of Garni Gets UNESCO Priz

HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL MUSEUM-RESERVATION OF GARNI GETS UNESCO PRIZE

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 12, 2011 – 14:38 AMT

The Historical and Cultural Museum-Reservation of Garni (Armenia)
and the Palestinian cultural landscape of Battir are the winners of
this year’s Melina Mercouri International Prize for the Safeguarding
and Management of Cultural Landscapes (UNESCO-Greece). The prize will
be awarded at a ceremony to be held at UNESCO Headquarters on May 24.

“In rewarding the management of Garni and Battir, UNESCO wishes
to raise awareness of these sites’ beauty and importance, of their
tangible and symbolic values, so as to help avert threats to their
continued preservation,” said the Director-General of UNESCO Irina
Bokova, endorsing the recommendation of an international jury.

The laureates will receive $US 15,000 each, UNESCO said on its
official website.

The Museum-Reservation of Garni covers a total area of 5.1 hectares in
and around Garni Village, some 28 km East of Yerevan in the volcanic
Armenia plateau of the Caucasus Mountains. It features a series of
historical and architectural vestiges and buildings from the Bronze
Age (Cyclopean walls), to Hellenic times (temples, bath-house),
as well as early Christian elements.

The site has been recognized for measures taken to preserve its
cultural vestiges, and the emphasis placed on efforts to interpret
and open the site for national and international visitors. The jury
also praised the integration of this work into the lives of local
communities, encouraging social and economic development. Part of the
site was inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage List as The Monastery
of Geghard and the Upper Azat Valley in 2000.

From: A. Papazian

Court Orders Reinstatement Of French University Teachers

COURT ORDERS REINSTATEMENT OF FRENCH UNIVERSITY TEACHERS
Mаry Mamyan

hetq
14:27, May 12, 2011

Twelve out of the 29 teachers who had been let go by the Universite
Francaise en Armenia in Yerevan last July will be reinstated to their
former positions and will receive their back pay, according to a
recent verdict by a Yerevan court.

Thirteen teachers in all had taken the college to court but one came
to an outside settlement with the school. The school decided not to
renew the contracts of all 29 when they came due, later arguing that
the teachers had failed to meet certain quality standards.

Hrant Grigoryan, the school’s attorney, refused to comment on the
court’s decision.

From: A. Papazian

EU Not To Present Accreditation To " Nagorno-Garabagh" Office

EU NOT TO PRESENT ACCREDITATION TO ” NAGORNO-GARABAGH” OFFICE

Azerbaijan Business Center
May 12 2011

Baku, Fineko/abc.az. European Union will not  present accreditation
to the office of  Nagorno-Garabagh republic ” under it.

Today in Baku head of EU delegation in Azerbaijan Roland Kobia has
reported that the issue of creation of EU office in Nagorno-Garabagh
does not correspond to reality.

” We have no information about creation of EU office in
Nagorno-Garabagh. It was and still remains a rumour for me. We can
cooperate with Azerbaijan and Armenia but have no relations with
Nagorno-Garabagh for obvious reasons. They can open such office but
EU will not grant accreditation to this office “,- Kobia said.

“Nagorno-Garabagh republic ” has been created on 20% territory of
Azerbaijan occupied by Armenia in Nagorno-Garabagh conflict.

From: A. Papazian

Azerbaijani Armed Forces Kill Armenian Civilian In Line Of Contact

AZERBAIJANI ARMED FORCES KILL ARMENIAN CIVILIAN IN LINE OF CONTACT

news.am
May 12 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN. An Armenian civilian was killed in the line of contact
of Armenian and Azerbaijani armed forces on May 11 as a result of
ceasefire violation by Azerbaijani armed forces.

Arayik Balasanyan, 33-year-old occupant of Kyuratagh village, Hadrut
region of Nagorno-Karabakh, received a gunshot wound in the head,
while operating a tractor at 6:05 p.m. Harutyunyan died on the way
to Hadrut hospital at 7:20 p.m.

The details of the incident are being clarified, the press service
of NKR Defense Ministry informed Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Azerbaijani armed forces regularly violate the ceasefire regime in
different directions of the contact line. The Azerbaijani side fired
at Karabakh positions 400 times only within the recent two days.

From: A. Papazian

For Jerusalem’s Armenians, 1,600 Years Of History And An Uncertain F

FOR JERUSALEM’S ARMENIANS, 1,600 YEARS OF HISTORY AND AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE
MATTI FRIEDMAN

Daily Press
,0,3776334.story
May 12 2011

JERUSALEM (AP) – One of the four quarters of old Jerusalem belongs
to the Armenians, keepers of an ancient monastery and library, heirs
to a tragic history and to a stubborn 1,600-year presence that some
fear is now in doubt.

Buffeted by Mideast forces more powerful than themselves and drawn
by better lives elsewhere, this historic Jerusalem community has seen
its numbers quietly drop below 1,000 people. The Armenians, led by an
ailing 94-year-old patriarch, find themselves caught between Jews and
Muslims in a Middle East emptying of Christians, and between a deep
sense of belonging in Jerusalem and a realization that their future
might lie elsewhere.

“Very few will remain here if it goes on like this,” said Kevork
Kahvedjian, a Jerusalem storeowner.

Kahvedjian sells vintage black-and-white photos of the Holy Land from
a store founded in 1949 by his father, who arrived in Jerusalem as
a child after mass killings of Armenians under Ottoman rule during
World War I claimed his own parents. Today, Kahvedjian said, he has
siblings in Canada and the U.S., a son in Washington, D.C., and a
daughter who plans to move away soon.

The insular world of the Jerusalem Armenians is reached through a
modest iron door set in a stone wall.

The door, locked every night at 10:30, leads into a monastery compound
that is home to a contingent of cloaked clergymen and also to several
hundred Armenian laypeople: grandparents, parents and children,
living in a warrens of small apartments alongside their priests in a
self-contained outpost that has existed here, in some form, at least
as far back as the fifth century A.D.

Also inside is a library, a health center, two social clubs and a
school where each grade now has an average of only six or seven pupils.

“We worry about this, of course. But we haven’t found a solution,”
said Samuel Aghoyan, 71, one of the community’s senior priests.

On a recent afternoon in the Armenian monastery’s nerve center,
the medieval cathedral of St. James, clerics in black cowls chanted
under dozens of oil lamps suspended from the vaulted ceiling. Next to
a priest waving a censer was an inlaid panel concealing the entrance
to a staircase ascending inside the wall to the church’s second floor.

The monastery, led by the patriarch Torkom Manoogian, 94, guards
other secrets. It holds the world’s second-largest collection of
ancient Armenian manuscripts, 4,000 texts guarded in a chapel opened
only once a year. It also owns the Bible of Keran, a gold-covered
manuscript named for an Armenian queen and kept in a treasury whose
location the priests will not divulge, and the staff of King Hetum,
made from a single piece of amber and revealed to the public for a
few minutes every January.

The several dozen priests, most of whom are sent to Jerusalem by the
church from elsewhere, will remain, as will their edifices and relics.

But the community itself, made up of laypeople subject to the pressures
and pulls of this world, may not.

Aghoyan arrived at the monastery as a 16-year-old seminarian in 1956
from Syria, where his parents had fled from Turkey. He found the
Jerusalem monastery crowded with families, most of them refugees or
descendants of refugees who escaped the killings.

Many international historians say up to 1.5 million Armenians were
killed by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, which they
call the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey disputes this,
saying the death toll has been inflated and those killed were victims
of civil war and unrest as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

The resulting refugees swelled the small existing community of Armenian
priests and laymen, and by the time Jerusalem was split between
Jordan and Israel in 1948 the Armenians numbered over 25,000, by some
counts. They were traders and craftsmen whose distinctive mosaics of
painted tiles remain one of the city’s signature design features.

After 1948, with the city divided, the Old City under Jordanian control
and economic prospects bleak, most Armenians left, joining thriving
exile communities in places like Fresno, California, and Toronto.

Perhaps 3,000 remained by the time Israel captured the Old City
in 1967.

The Armenians, along with Arab residents of east Jerusalem, were
given residency rights in Israel, and some have since applied for
full citizenship. But the community has tried to plot a neutral
course in a place where that is difficult. Ties with both Israelis
and Palestinians have been tense at times.

Israel’s Interior Ministry does not have statistics on the number
of Armenians. Community leaders like Aghoyan and Tsolag Momjian, the
honorary consul of Armenia, agree there are now fewer than 1,000 in
the city.

The slow decline of the Jerusalem Armenians reflects a broader
shrinking of the Middle East’s ancient Christian population. For
much of the past century, Christians in Lebanon, Iraq, Egypt,
the Palestinian territories and elsewhere have been moving to the
West, fleeing poverty, religious intolerance and violence like the
anti-Christian riot that erupted this week in Cairo, leaving 12 dead
and a church burned.

Young Armenians, expected to marry Armenians, are faced with a shortage
of potential spouses. Because they are typically well-educated, fluent
in English and have family connections abroad, they are equipped to
leave. Those who do join a diaspora that numbers an estimated 11
million people worldwide and supports churches, community centers
and at least a dozen international online dating sites with names
like Armenians Connect and armenianpassion.com.

“Whoever leaves still dreams about Jerusalem and says they’ll come
back. But they won’t,” Aghoyan said.

Others are more optimistic. Ruppen Nalbandian, 29, a community
youth leader with a master’s degree in neurobiology from an Israeli
university, said the outflow has slowed. Of 11 students in his class
at school, he said, only two have left. Ten men he knows have found
brides in Armenia and brought them back to Jerusalem, he said.

Some in the community point to an unexpected boon in the form of
Armenian Christians – possibly more than 10,000 of them, though
estimates vary – who arrived in Israel as part of a mass immigration of
Soviet Jews in the 1990s and were eligible for citizenship because they
had a Jewish parent or spouse. Some have mixed with the established
Armenian community.

Not long after the Armenians adopted Christianity in 301 A.D. in
their homeland around the biblical Mt. Ararat, on the eastern border
of modern-day Turkey, they dispatched priests to Jerusalem.

They have remained ever since, through often devastating conquests by
Arab dynasties, Persian armies, mounted Turkish archers, Crusaders,
the Ottoman Empire, Englishmen, Jordanians and Jews.

“As we have lived here for 1,600 years, we will continue to live here,”
Nalbandian said.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.dailypress.com/news/national/sns-ap-ml-israel-vanishing-armenians

Press Statements By Presidents Serzh Sargsyan And Dalia Gribauskaite

PRESS STATEMENTS BY PRESIDENTS SERZH SARGSYAN AND DALIA GRIBAUSKAITE AT THE JOINT PRESS CONFERENCE

Office of the President

May 12 2011
Armenia

Press Statement by President Serzh Sargsyan at the conclusion of the
meeting with the President of Lithuania

Madam President, Ladies and Gentlemen:

I once again welcome the President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia
GrybauskaitÄ~W and members of her delegation in Armenia.

After our countries regained independence, relations between Armenia
and Lithuania have been developing dynamically. Armenia views Lithuania
as a friendly country and a reliable partner. I would like to note
with satisfaction that the Armenian-Lithuanian dialogue, which rest on
a solid interstate basis, develops and expands by year, encompassing
new areas of cooperation.

During our meeting with President GrybauskaitÄ~W, we held a productive
and constructive discussions on a number of issues of mutual interest
and spoke about some regional and global issues. We reiterated our
mutual desire and readiness to deepen our relations on bilateral and
multilateral levels.

I once again expressed my gratitude to the President of Lithuania
for the unanimous recognition of the Armenian Genocide at the
Parliament of Lithuania which testifies to the high moral standing
of the Lithuanian people and their ability to place universal human
values above momentary considerations. Back in the 19th century, the
Lithuanian people responded to the massacres carried out by the Turks
in the Ottoman Empire, publishing in the papers of the day articles
on the history and culture of the Armenian people, stressing the
similarity of historical fates of the Armenian and Lithuanian people.

Taking into consideration common historical past, I also stressed
the import of adopting the Lithuanian experience of state building,
Eurointegration and assistance in the framework of the Eastern
Partnership. I referred to the cooperation of the Baltic states as a
successful model and expressed regrets that at the moment the same
model cannot be utilized in our region since Azerbaijan continues
to deep the self-created rift, drawing dividing lines which are so
improper in the 21st century.

We have also spoken about Lithuaniaâ~@~Ys Chairmanship at the OSCE
which is an honorary but at the same time very responsible mission
assumed before the international community. I assessed positively
Vilniusâ~@~Ys desire to support the NK peace process, and underscored
commitment of the Armenian side to reach resolution exclusively
through peaceful means.

Unfortunately, Azerbaijan continues to build up tension through the
recurrent statements, which have nothing to do with the requirements
of civilized dialogue, which seriously undermine the entire process
of negotiations. Azerbaijan has chosen the tactics of foot-dragging,
and is actually waiting for a chance to embark on a new reckless
military scheme.

Armenia welcomes the efforts of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk
Group and personal efforts of the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
aimed at the resolution of the conflict. We are ready to work,
ready to negotiate; we are ready to search for compromise. However,
it is essential that Azerbaijan too manifests similar desire to find
a solution.

I once again thank the President of Lithuania for the engaging
discussions. Madam President, the floor is yours.

***

Press statement by President Dalia Gribauskaite at the conclusion of
the meeting with President Serzh Sargsyan

Thank you, Mr. President,

Certainly, Armenia is very important for us as a stabilizing factor
in the region which it may become. Despite your historical past,
despite ties, relations and painful spots, despite the pain you have
inherited through the ages, your people are able to solve the problems
by peaceful means. The main objective and approach of the international
community, including the OSCE, which is chaired today by Lithuania,
is the resolution of any regional conflict by peaceful means; we
believe that peaceful resolutions are achievable. No one, including
international organizations, will support military solution. This is
my very clear-cut message to all countries I visited in the last three
days. At the same time, Lithuania will, of course, support programs of
all parties aimed at the enhancement of confidence building measures.

And we obviously assume that the measures will be implemented by
both sides.

The second issue and objective of my visit is, undoubtedly,
Eurointegration process of your country. For Lithuania, the process
itself was very useful and efficient; it will be as much useful and
efficient for Armenia. The process will help you to conduct reforms
and achieve prosperity for your country in a shorter period of time. I
congratulate you on the conclusion of yet another two chapters in
the negotiations with the European Union which have commenced quite
recently. Lithuania has rich experience of reforms and negotiations.

We stand ready to share that experience and assist you in getting
ready for negotiations, certainly, if you express such a wish.

The second aspect, which is very important for you, is related to the
programs of nuclear energy. In the view of situation with Fukusima,
Europe and actually the entire world, strives to insure even higher
standards of nuclear safety. It is important not only for Armenia or
Lithuania but for the humankind, for the entire world. Why has Europe
started this initiative to conduct stress tests for all functioning
nuclear power stations in Europe? For your own safety, we would like
to ask all the EU neighboring states to do the same. Itâ~@~Ys done not
only for safety but also to enhance trust among nations, to exchange
information openly and freely. After discussing briefly this issue with
the President of Armenia, I gathered that Armenia is ready to do it.

The second component or package of our relations is our bilateral
relations, whose political level is very high. Our two countries
declared independence from the outset; it means that we will be
celebrating the 20th anniversary of our independence together. Our
economic relations have brilliant future. We are ready to make
investments and are looking forward to your business activities in our
country. In these 20 years, we have been going down different paths,
however there are numerous similarities. We are open and ready to
cooperate and to help.

From: A. Papazian

www.president.am

Many Armenian Travel Agencies Use Facebook To Promote Their Business

MANY ARMENIAN TRAVEL AGENCIES USE FACEBOOK TO PROMOTE THEIR BUSINESS

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 12, 2011 – 19:18 AMT

Dutch expert Willian Blom said that many Armenian travel agencies
use Facebook to promote their business.

Blom is on a visit to Armenia to participate in a seminar on promotion
of e-marketing and travel agencies websites. The seminar hosted 12
leading tour operators from Armenia and Georgia.

However, the Armenian tour operators do not have a certain online
strategy yet, Blom told a press conference in Yerevan.

According to him, currently Internet plays an important role in the
activity of tour operators. Blom noted that travel agencies websites
serve as a bridge between tourists and tour operators. There are
all prerequisites for further tourism development in Armenia,
concluded Blom.

From: A. Papazian