ANKARA: Turkish Ultranationalist Party Leader Meets, Agrees To Close

TURKISH ULTRANATIONALIST PARTY LEADER MEETS, AGREES TO CLOSE DIALOGUE WITH ASSAD

Cihan News Agency (CNA), Turkey
March 3, 2015 Tuesday

İSTANBUL (CİHAN)- The leader of Turkey’s ultranationalist Land
Party (VP), until recently known as the Workers’ Party (İP), met
with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Tuesday.

Dogu Perincek, an ardent critic of the ruling Justice and Development
Party’s (AK Party) Syria policy, often casts the intractable civil
war in Syria as a fight between Damascus and global imperialist powers.

Assad received Perincek and his accompanying group at the presidential
palace in Damascus. Following the meeting, which lasted nearly two
hours, both Perincek and Assad agreed to work in close cooperation
and dialogue to ensure the territorial integrity of both countries.

“Disintegration of Syria means disintegration of Turkey,” said Assad
after the meeting, according to a news report by the Dogan news agency
on Tuesday. Assad concluded that Turks and Syrians, not others outside
the region, must decide their own future.

Perincek believes the Syrian government fights against global
imperialist powers, therefore deserves support.

Perincek was accompanied on his visit to Syria by, among others, Birgul
Ayman Guler, who recently resigned from the Republican People’s Party
(CHP), and former Deputy Prime Minister Abdullatif Ã…~^ener, who was
a founder and former member of the AK Party.

Perincek was in the spotlight after being convicted by a Swiss court
for calling claims of an Armenian genocide an “international lie”
during a series of speeches he delivered in Switzerland in 2007.

Perincek brought the case to the European Court of Human Rights
(ECtHR), which ruled in favor of the Turkish politician on Dec. 17,
2013, saying that the VP leader had exercised his “right to free
speech.” In late January, the ECtHR began hearing an appeal filed by
the Swiss government against Perincek.

His original conviction centered on his denial of claims that 1.5
million Armenians were killed in the final years of the Ottoman Empire
in a systematic campaign of genocide, a claim categorically denied
by Turkey.

From: A. Papazian

Carrefour To Open In Armenia On March 11th

CARREFOUR TO OPEN IN ARMENIA ON MARCH 11TH

21:08, 5 March, 2015

YEREVAN, 5 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. Citizens of Armenia have been waiting for
this day for a long time. The opening of Carrefour hypermarket will
be held at Yerevan Mall on March 11, 2015, as posted on Carrefour’s
Facebook page, as “Armenpress” reports.

Carrefour is the world’s second largest retail network after
Wal-Mart. The largest package of shares of Carrefour group belongs
to famous French businessman Bernard Arnault. The company has nearly
15,000 hypermarkets, supermarkets and small stores in 32 countries
around the world. In 2012, Carrefour opened a hypermarket in Tbilisi,
making it the first Carrefour hypermarket in the region.

From: A. Papazian

Assyrians: Remembering ‘The Year Of The Sword’

ASSYRIANS: REMEMBERING ‘THE YEAR OF THE SWORD’

Assyrian International News Agency AINA
March 3 2015

By Lela Gilbert

I recently spent some time in New York City with Juliana Taimoorazy,
a courageous and outspoken champion of the world’s Assyrian Christian
community. Juliana’s lovely face frequently graces the TV for news
interviews in which she usually finds herself describing yet another
attack on her people.

Also known as Chaldean Christians, Juliana’s fellow believers — who
comprise one of the world’s most ancient churches — continue to be
targeted by radical Islamist groups in Iraq and in Syria.

Our conversations centered on Juliana’s personal story and on the
book that we are collaboratively writing to document the Assyrians’
ongoing persecution in the Middle East and the response of the diaspora
scattered across the globe.

This is a history of relentless abuse that spans centuries; a story
that deserves to be told in rich detail.

During those conversations — held over hot Starbucks coffee during
some exceptionally icy days — we discussed brutal attacks that took
place in Iraq in the mid-2000s: kidnapped priests, blown-up school
buses, beheadings and cold-blooded murders.

All these climaxed on Oct. 31, 2010 with a gruesome assault by the
Islamic State of Iraq (the forerunner of ISIS) on Baghdad’s Our Lady of
Salvation Assyrian Catholic Church. In this bloodbath, 58 worshippers,
police and bystanders lost their lives; 78 were injured or maimed.

Stored in my computer are horrifically graphic photos of that massacre,
sent to me at the time by a military friend. They are almost unbearable
to look at, but I never had the heart to delete them.

Juliana, in turn, showed me videos of three devastated survivors of
that same attack, interviewed just days after the massacre. Clearly
traumatized, they choked on their tears as they recalled the shooting
of a 3-year-old boy, a beloved member of their family, who pleaded
with the killers, “Enough! Enough!” — even as they took his life.

Reviewing all this shook us both to the core. It also strengthened
our resolve to tell the story as lucidly and thoroughly as possible.

Alas, there would be no shortage of material. In just over a week’s
time, news agencies were reporting yet another ISIS attack on Assyrian
Christians.

Beginning early in the morning on Feb. 23, ISIS terrorists abducted
more than 150 women, men, children and elderly from their Syrian homes.

The weary world, still dazed by the beheading of 21 Coptic Christians
the week before, watched in silent horror.

By Thursday afternoon, the number of kidnapped Christians in Syria
had reportedly risen to 220. ISIS had continued its rampage through
11 Christian villages near the town of Tal Tamr, not far from the
Syrian-Turkish border.

My Hudson Institute colleague Nina Shea wrote for Fox News,

The Islamist militants reportedly separated the captives, men from
women and children — a pattern also seen when ISIS attacked Iraq’s
Yizidi community on Sinjar mountain last August. The Syrian Christians’
fate is unknown but could include murder, enslavement, rape or being
traded as a hostage. Churches in the seized villages could be seen
ablaze from the opposite riverbank.

Syrian-Catholic Archbishop of Hasakah-Nisibi, Jacques Behnan Hindo,
told the Vatican press Fides that the Christians feel like they are
‘abandoned into the hands’ of ISIS.

The Archbishop explained:

“Yesterday American bombers flew over the area several times, but
without taking action. We have a hundred Assyrian families who have
taken refuge in Hasakah, but they have received no assistance either
from the Red Crescent or from Syrian government aid workers, perhaps
because they are Christians. The UN High Commission for Refugees is
nowhere to be seen.”

By the time all this happened, Juliana and I were in two different
places. She had flown to a conference in Nashville where she would
once again present her appeal on behalf of Assyrian Christians.

I had returned to Jerusalem, where reported atrocities against
religious minorities in surrounding countries are all too common. In
fact, Israel is the only country in the Middle East where Christians
live without fear of radical Islamist aggression.

Before long, the Middle East media reported that a respected bishop
was placing the blame for the Assyrians’ abduction on the Turkish
government. Jacques Behnan Hindo, the Syrian Catholic Archbishop of
Hasakah-Nisibi, made the claim on Vatican Radio:

Every day, families are emigrating from Damascus by plane because of
the blockade we have around us.

In the north, Turkey allows through lorries, Daesh [ISIS] fighters,
oil stolen from Syria, wheat and cotton: all of these can cross the
border but nobody [from the Christian community] can pass over.

Meanwhile, a typical ISIS response, reported by Reuters, was:
Some people have tried to [reach their loved ones] by cellphone, the
relatives that have been abducted, and they get an answer from a member
of ISIS who tells that they will send the head of their relative.

“They are trying to terrorize the parents, the relatives in the
Christian Assyrian community,” said Ishak, who is president of the
Syriac National Council of Syria.

My own experience with the Assyrian Christians began in late October,
when I visited some of the refugees who had fled from ISIS. They were
among thousands of Christians who were driven out of Mosul and the
Nineveh Plain in Iraq during in the summer of 2014. Tens of thousands
of them found refuge in Erbil, Kurdistan.

For the record, no one I talked to there would have been the least
bit surprised to hear that Turkey was again being suspected of
supporting ISIS.

At the same time, the utter losses that those refugees in Erbil had
endured creased their fatigued faces. Not only had everything they
had accomplished in a lifetime been stripped away, but some of their
loved ones were nowhere to be found. And haunting atrocities were
burned into their memories — cruelties they could never forget.

Today’s massacres, great and small, evoke the mass murder of more
than 1.5 million Christians that took place in the early 20th century.

Usually described as the Armenian genocide, Armenians indeed bore
the heaviest death toll. But they were not the only victims.

In his landmark book The Lost History of Christianity, historian
Philip Jenkins wrote,

Lord [James] Bryce alleged that the Turkish government was pursuing
a “plan for exterminating Christianity, root and branch,” which
equally targeted “the minor communities, such as the Nestorian and
the Assyro-Chaldean churches.” Claiming to have lost two-thirds of
their own people during their own wartime genocide, the Assyrians
recall 1915 as sayfo, “the Year of the Sword.”

Two-thirds of the Assyrian Christian community was estimated as
750,000 dead. And as many as 3,000 more were slaughtered in the Simele
massacre, carried out by the Iraqi government specifically against
Assyrian Christians in August 1933.

Because of these seemingly endless assaults, some believe that the
ancient Christian communities in the Middle East are finished, and
that only tattered remnants will survive. Philip Jenkins wrote,

Middle Eastern Christianity will not become extinct in the same way
that animal or plant species vanish, with no representatives left
to carry on the line and no hope of revival. Even in the worst-case
scenario, a few families, a few old believers, will linger on for
decades to come. Millions of people from the region will also continue
the tradition elsewhere. For practical purposes, however, Middle
Eastern Christianity has, within living memory, all but disappeared
as a living force.

But others, like Juliana Taimoorazy, have far greater hope for their
beleaguered people. Juliana is quick to remind her listeners that
there’s more to the Assyrian Christian community than meets the eye.

These believers not only cherish a religious identity, but many also
see themselves as a nation — a nation that dates back to the 7th
Century BCE.

And more than a few have never given up the hope of rebuilding it.

The Assyrian Nation’s roots lie in the primeval soil of the Nineveh
Plain where it all began a millennia ago. And the idea of a national
resurrection is not lost on those who fear the demise of Christianity’s
most venerable communities.

When I was in Erbil, conversations with refugees often had to do with
their desire to return to their lost homes. Some wanted to go back;
others did not. But all agreed that such a return could only take
place if and when a safe haven were to be established for them —
a protected Christian enclave.

And, of course, it would be founded on the Nineveh Plain.

In fact, twice in the early 20th Century, Assyrian Christians appealed
to the world powers to establish a Christian “reservation” in Nineveh,
governed by their Patriarch and protected by their own warriors. In
both cases, the attempt failed disastrously.

Thankfully, for visionaries, it’s never too late.

It so happens that the safe-haven idea is being revisited by former
U.S. Congressman Frank Wolf, the guardian of persecuted Christians
and long-time advocate for religious freedom.

A report from Wolf’s newly-minted Wilberforce 21 Initiative proposed:

[T]he establishment of a Nineveh Plains Province uniquely designed for
Christians, Yezidis and other besieged minorities. Despite the horrors
they face, the majority of the religious and ethnic minorities want
to remain as productive and peaceful citizens within Iraq and their
historic homelands.

One Iraqi priest implored, “Help me to stay.”

Will his cry fall on deaf ears or will policymakers and people of
good will be propelled to act?

It’s a provocative question. And for the besieged Assyrian Christian
community — who breathlessly await word of ISIS’s most recent captives
— an affirmative answer can’t come soon enough.

From: A. Papazian

http://philosproject.org
http://www.aina.org/news/20150303153717.htm

Speech Of Hon. Katherine M. Clark Of Massachusetts In The House Of R

WASHINGTON: HON. KATHERINE M. CLARK OF MASSACHUSETTS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES MONDAY, MARCH 2, 2015

US Official News
March 3, 2015 Tuesday

Washington

The Library of Congress, The Government of USA has issued the
following Speech:

Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Mr. Speaker, February 27 marked the 27th
anniversary of harrowing violence against the Armenian community in
Sumgait, Azerbaijan.

I am proud to stand today with the Armenian-American community,
including many of my constituents in Massachusetts, in remembrance
and mourning of this unspeakable tragedy.

In February of 1988, anti-Armenian rallies through Azerbaijan gave way
to waves of ethnically-motivated violence, death and destruction. In
the aftermath of these terrible events, Azerbaijan’s Armenian community
all but disappeared, with thousands displaced, culminating in a war
against the people of Nagorno Karabakh.

That war resulted in almost 30,000 dead on both sides. Hundreds of
thousands of refugees were forced to flee their homes. And to this
day, those who lost their lives or were displaced by this violence
still seek resolution and justice.

Many displaced Armenian families have sought refuge in America,
and are now making vital contributions in the Fifth District of
Massachusetts. Proudly, our diverse District is home to one of the
largest Armenian communities in the nation. Together, our community
is a thriving example of strength and perseverance in the face of
extreme adversity.

Like the persecution of too many others before it, the lessons of
the Sumgait Pogrom must not be forgotten.

We have a moral obligation to promote tolerance and justice, and we
have a duty to recognize the atrocities that have kept us from our
common goal.

From: A. Papazian

Regional Administration Didn’t Give Money Directed To The Building I

REGIONAL ADMINISTRATION DIDN’T GIVE MONEY DIRECTED TO THE BUILDING IN DISREPAIR TO THE RESIDENTS

12:24 | March 5,2015 | Social

There are again lots of people in front of the Government building,
“Nairit” plant employees are on one side of the building, the residents
of Armavir region Lenughi community 4th category building in disrepair
are on another side. They are demanding compensation for acquiring new
flats. Today 29-30 families note that they live in inhuman conditions
and last year the regional administration didn’t give money directed
to the building in disrepair to the residents.

“Nairit” plant employees continue demanding their 18-24 months’
unpaid salaries.

From: A. Papazian

http://en.a1plus.am/1207284.html

Carson City Council Unanimously Rejects Ataturk Monument Measure

CARSON CITY COUNCIL UNANIMOUSLY REJECTS ATATURK MONUMENT MEASURE

Posted on March 5, 2015

CARSON, CA – Earlier this evening, the Carson City Council
unanimously rejected the proposal to erect a memorial monument for
Genocide Perpetrator and Denier Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in the city’s
International Sculpture Garden.

The 4-0 vote came after an overflow crowd of community organizations,
leaders, activists and concerned community members packed Carson’s
City Hall to voice their concerns during the public comment session.

While over 298 members opposing the monument and 101 in favor submitted
cards to speak, only 6 from each side were afforded the opportunity
to comment.

In the weeks leading up to today’s vote, the ANCA-WR, Armenian
Revolutionary Federation, Armenian Youth Federation, American Hellenic
Council, elected officials from neighboring cities, and the concerned
citizenry of the local South Bay community, respectively had all
been educating the Carson City Councilmembers who had been lobbied by
the Los Angeles Turkish American Association with the ill-conceived
proposition for erecting a statue of Ataturk on public grounds and
rallying the community for tonight’s meeting.

“We thank our grassroots and the community based organizations for
their unrelenting vigor to time and again advocate for the truth,
which Turkish lobbyists shamelessly and unsuccessfully, as evidenced
today, try to bury with corrupt funding and preposterous schemes,”
stated ANCA-WR Executive Director Elen Asatryan. “We applaud Mayor
Jim Dear, Mayor Pro Tempore Elita Santarina, and Councilmembers
Lula Davis-Homes and Albert Robles for listening to the testimonies
and comments from our community and allies and voting against such
revisionist agendas,” added Asatryan.

Glendale City Mayor Zareh Sinanyan was the first to speak in
opposition of the proposal, and recounted his family’s personal story
of survival of the Armenian Genocide. He informed the Carson City
Council that Ataturk was idolized by Nazi Germany and by Hitler for
how he ‘liberated’ Turkey. This liberation, however, included trying
to finish what the Armenian Genocide perpetrated by Ottoman Turkey
attempted but failed–total annihilation of the Armenians. At the end
of his comments Mayor Sinanyan urged the Council to vote against the
measure and noted that having an Ataturk Memorial would be the same
as having one of Hitler.

“To honor Ataturk is to honor murder, rape, dictatorship, repression,
ethnic cleansing and genocide. Today the Armenian community of S.

California made sure there is no place for that here or anywhere else
in the civilized world,” stated Mayor Sinanyan.

Sinanyan’s statements were followed by Honorable Mayor of Montebello
Jack Hadjinian, Glendale City Clerk Ardashes “Ardy” Kassakhian,
Professor Levon Marashlian, and the Vice Chairman of the American
Hellenic Council Aris Anagnos who shed light on the historical facts
surrounding the Armenian Genocide and Ataturk, all urging the Council
to reject this ridiculous measure. In his remarks, Anagnos posed the
question that crossed the minds of many “Why would an American city
choose to honor a General who fought against Americans?”

Professor of History, Dr. Levon Marashlian during his public comment
recounted the words spoken by Ataturk himself who once asserted,
“I am a dictator so that Turkey will never again have a dictator.”

Marashlian noted that Mustafa Kemal continued the crimes of the
Armenian Genocide and read an excerpt from American nurse Edith Woods’
eyewitness testimony in 1922 of the atrocities committed against the
Armenians during Kemal’s forced deportations of the Armenians from
Turkey. “The children would often be dead before I had taken their
names. 40 to 50 of the older women died each day, their mouths were
massive sores and their teeth were dropping out and their feet, those
poor bleeding feet. Deportation assured death, and a far more horrible
death than massacre. Unless one sees these things it is difficult to
believe that such monstrous cruelty and barbarity exists in the world.”

“As elected officials it is our responsibility to properly identify
real historical figures and honor them for their true heroism or
public service rather than ignore the facts and glorify villains
who thrived from the blood of our ancestors or of any innocent man,”
stated Montebello Mayor Jack Hadjinian.

“Ataturk built the modern republic of Turkey upon the bones and ashes
of its minorities – Greeks, Armenians and others. My own family
survived the burning of Smyrna – one of the worst catastrophes
of the 20th century. To honor such a man is not only insult to
Armenian-Americans but to all Americans who believe that every person
is born with the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,”
remarked Glendale city clerk Ardashes Kassakhian. “Ataturk and his
regime denied thousands of these rights. It is upsetting that the
Mayor of Carson has invited upon his city the stain of honoring a
Genocide denier by proposing such an inappropriate monument. A more
appropriate monument would be one to honor the victims of Ataturk’s
regime,” added Kassakhian.

California State Assemblymembers submitted a letter in opposition to
the monument, which was presented at the meeting by a representative
of Assemblymember and former Carson City Councilman Mike Gipson,
and co-signed by Assemblymembers Adrin Nazarian, Katcho Achadjian,
Scott Wilk and Mike Gatto.

When Turkish Consul General of Los Angeles Raife Gulru Gezer, who was
one of the 6 to speak in favor of the proposed monument, addressed
the City Council, an overwhelming majority of the crowd in attendance
turned their backs to her in protest.

Carson Mayor Jim Dear, who initiated the monument proposal and
used unfair tactics including initially permitting an additional
speaker in favor of than in opposition to the monument and providing
unlimited speaking time to foreign agent Turkish Consul General of Los
Angeles Raife Gulru Gezer, while curtailing the voice of the American
citizenry, made a motion to table the item to a future meeting. The
motion was rejected by the other Councilmembers who did not want to
delay the vote.

Prior to making a motion to reject the monument Councilmember Robles
stated “This type of monument would bring bad notoriety to our City.”

In the end, Dear changed his vote and spent over 10 minutes talking
about the atrocities that took place during the Armenian Genocide.

Armenian press, including Asbarez, was not allowed to enter the City
Council chamber. However, CNN Turk and ABC7 were allowed to cover
the proceedings from inside the chamber.

Upon confirmation of today’s scheduled vote, ANCA-WR disseminated
an action alert, to which its highly mobilized grassroots responded
swiftly. Phone calls and e-mails expressed the grave concerns of
Armenian-Americans who questioned why the city of Carson would ever
consider memorializing a genocide denier, perpetrator and profiteer,
calling their attention to the precarious timing of the vote just
weeks away from the Centennial anniversary of the Armenian genocide of
1915-1923, committed by Ottoman Turkey, a crime still unpunished, and
for which recognition, reparations and restitution are justly sought.

The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the
largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots advocacy
organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination
with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the
Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country,
the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community
on a broad range of issues.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.ancawr.org/carson-rejects-ataturk-monument-measure/

Armenian President Issues Congratulatory Message On Vazgen Sargsyan’

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT ISSUES CONGRATULATORY MESSAGE ON VAZGEN SARGSYAN’S 56TH BIRTHDAY

16:23 05/03/2015 >> SOCIETY

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan today sent a congratulatory message
on Vazgen Sargsyan’s 56th birthday and on the oath ceremony of the
alumni of “Young Yerkrapah” Club.

“Dear alumni of Young Yerkrapah Club,

I congratulate you on your oath ceremony and this beautiful and
significant day of your life. Your oath to serve your fatherland is
holy, and you are the ones who secure our country’s future.

Yerkrapah Volunteer Union was born out of the voluntary movement
which began in Artsakh, Armenia and everywhere where Armenians could
be found. This was the Armenians’ response to the imposed war and
the consequence of the absence of a regular army.

Dear boys,

Remember! The heroic deeds of volunteers are immortal. With their
devotion and self-sacrifice, they filled the absence of state armed
forces. During the given historical period, they did the impossible,
shedding their own blood to buy the valuable time needed for formation
of a regular army. Moreover, they became the foundation of that army.

Also remember that you are no longer going to be “volunteers.” You
are tomorrow’s soldiers and officers of the Republic of Armenia.

Regardless of the path you choose, I am sure that you will become
dignified citizens of our country.

Today is the birthday of Vazgen Sargsyan; a symbolic day and a
beautiful occasion to remember the Sparapet with gratitude and
congratulate him on his birthday.

I wish you to deserve Vazgen Sargsyan’s memory and commandments
with your diligence, devotion and posture,” reads the President’s
congratulatory message.

Source: Panorama.am

From: A. Papazian

Naira Zohrabyan: I Announce PAP Opposition

NAIRA ZOHRABYAN: I ANNOUNCE PAP OPPOSITION

March 5, 2015 16:25

Naira Zohrabyan

Photo: PAN Photo

Yerevan /Mediamax/. New President of Prosperous Armenia Party Naira
Zohrabyan announced PAP opposition today.

She said this during her speech at the PAP special session.

“I’ll announce the same (PAP being opposition – edit.) at the upcoming
parliamentary session. Naturally, we need time to work out our strategy
and further steps. We are now faced with a stage of serious discussions
and analysis to elaborate a clear and perceptible strategy for the
opposition. We will do it together as we are responsible for the
people. There is no other way”, said Naira Zohrabyan.

Touching upon the negative public opinion to the party held by a part
of society after the recent developments, Naira Zohrabyan said that
“indeed, there is disappointment in the PAP”.

“On everyone’s behalf, I apologize to our compatriots whose hopes we
failed to justify. And today I don’t want to speak about the reasons
for what happened and about our and others’ mistakes. We need time
to analyze what happened and it will be done by all means to make
right conclusions for our further steps and actions”, she said.

According to Zohrabyan, now it’s time to discuss and analyze the
events rationally and without excessive emotions.

“We should understand that the state’s and people’s issues weren’t
addressed after this inner political crisis. Actually, they weren’t
even moderated. And if our task is to really stand by the people and
fight for the people’s rights, we should seriously work at this. Our
fight has never been for the sake of posts and powers and I think
the public is well aware of it”, she said.

Touching upon the holding of post of the head of the party, Naira
Zohrabyan said that “it will be quite hard” for her.

“I’m ready for work. I am for teamwork, I support discussions and
debates within the party. But I want to be absolutely honest with you.

If at some point I see that my work is not effective, if my and my
colleagues’ visions on future and plans don’t coincide, I will step
down as PAP President with dignity. I won’t take a step which will
discredit the party and disappoint the people. You can be sure of it”,
she said.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.mediamax.am/en/news/politics/13402/#sthash.jfqGUr1m.dpuf

Armenian FM, Israeli President Discuss The Joint Responsibility To P

ARMENIAN FM, ISRAELI PRESIDENT DISCUSS THE JOINT RESPONSIBILITY TO PREVENT CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY

18:45, 05 Mar 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

On a working visit to Israel, Armenian Foreign Minister had a meeting
with Israeli President Reuven Rivlin.

President Rivlin welcomed the Armenian Foreign Minister’s visit to
Israel, and voiced hope that it would contribute to the reinforcement
of bilateral relations.

Minister Nalbandian noted, in turn, that the Armenian and Jewish
peoples are ties by millennia-long traditions of friendship, which
creates a good basis for the further reinforcement of inter-state
relations.

President Rivlin and Minister Nalbandian attached importance to the
intensification of the political dialogue, which, they said, will
create opportunities for embracing new spheres of cooperation.

The parties discussed the joint responsibility of the Armenian and
Jewish peoples to prevent crimes against humanity.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/03/05/armenian-fm-israeli-president-discuss-the-joint-responsibility-to-prevent-crimes-against-humanity/

Armen Martirosyan: Gagik Tsarukyan’s Decision To Leave His Post Is N

ARMEN MARTIROSYAN: GAGIK TSARUKYAN’S DECISION TO LEAVE HIS POST IS NOT AUTHORITIES’ VICTORY OVER OPPOSITION

by Nana Martirosyan

Thursday, March 5, 15:52

The Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP) leader Gagik Tsarukyan’s decision
to step down as the PAP leader and to renounce his deputy mandate is
not the authorities’ victory over the opposition, Armen Martirosyan,
Deputy Chairman of the Heritage Party, has told ArmInfo.

“This is the authorities’ victory of oppressive measures and illegal
actions over legitimacy, but not a victory over the opposition”, says
Martirosyan. At the moment, he cannot predict the situation in the
domestic political field of Armenia in the near future. “However, what
has happened to the PAP and Tsarukyan is worth regretting”, he says.

To note, at the March 5 congress of the PAP, Gagik Tsarukyan stepped
down as the PAP chairman. Naira Zohrabyan, the PAP Faction Secretary,
has become the PAP chairwoman. She has officially declared the party
as opposition.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=77A77130-C336-11E4-AFD40EB7C0D21663