Al-Monitor: Planned Armenian Genocide Memorial Ruffles Ankara

AL-MONITOR: PLANNED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEMORIAL RUFFLES ANKARA

11:28, 25 Dec 2014

A proposed art project commemorating the 1915 mass slaughter by
the Ottoman Turks of the empire’s Armenian subjects has sparked a
tug-of-war between the Turkish government and Switzerland’s ethnic
Armenian community, sharpening decades of mutual suspicion and
resentment and pitting the federal government in Bern against the
local government in Geneva, where the monument is to be placed,
Al-Monitor writes.

With only months to go before the April 24 centenary of the genocide,
the stakes are higher than ever — and so far, Turkey is prevailing. In
early December, the Swiss Foreign Ministry declared that it opposes
erecting the Armenian monument in the canton of Geneva because
“it is important for federal authorities to preserve the absolute
impartiality of Geneva,” where the United Nations and various other
international organizations are headquartered, Turkey’s semi-official
Anadolu news agency crowed.

More likely, the Swiss are responding to Turkish bullying, Armenian
activists and diplomatic observers say. The UN has reportedly also
sided with Turkey. A UN spokeswoman in Geneva declined to comment.

“It is an international scandal that Swiss diplomacy surrendered
so voluntarily to Turkish pressure,” complained Vicken Cheterian, a
Geneva-based ethnic Armenian academic in an interview with Al-Monitor.

“A beautiful artwork is now in exile in search of a safe haven where
it can rest, to reflect the memory of a people sacrificed and humanity
in denial.”

The project, called “Reverberes de la Memoire,” or “Streetlights of
Memory,” consists of eight lampposts placed in an arc in parkland
lying between the International Red Cross building and the Palais des
Nations, where the United Nations’ precursor, the League of Nations,
once stood. The lamp posts will soar to nine meters (29.5 ft.) and
sprout elongated chrome tear drops in which pedestrians can view their
own reflections. The pillars will be inscribed with texts about exile
and dispossession by acclaimed French Armenian psychoanalyst Janine
Altounian, whose parents survived the genocide.

A Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman did not return calls for comment.

But Turkish officials speaking on condition of strict anonymity
privately acknowledged to Al-Monitor that the Swiss government had been
“encouraged” to scupper the bronze memorial, which was conceived in
2008 by the French Armenian artist Melik Ohanian. In keeping with
Switzerland’s federal laws, the final say rests with the cantonal
government in Geneva, expected to deliver its verdict in mid-January.

Stefan Kristensen, a Swiss Armenian activist, says should the local
administration follow the Foreign Ministry’s advice, the project
organizers will pursue the matter in court. “There is no legal
basis for caving to pressure from Bern and Ankara,” Kristensen told
Al-Monitor.

Sympathy for the Armenians among the Swiss people is nothing new. In
the late 19th century, when the ruling Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid
II ordered pogroms against the Armenians, more than 400,000 Swiss
citizens (13.7% of the population) signed a petition demanding that
their federal government intervene with the Sublime Porte to end
its brutality.

Swiss pharmacist Jacob Kunzler and his wife, Elizabeth, figure
prominently in the Armenian pantheon of heroes. Between 1899 and 1922,
the couple saved thousands of Armenian orphans in Turkey and Lebanon.

Moreover, Switzerland has laws that criminalize denying or justifying
genocide. In 2007, a federal court found Turkish writer and leftwing
politician Dogu Perincek guilty of racial discrimination for calling
the genocide “an international lie” on Swiss soil. The case wound up in
the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in 2013. The Strasbourg-based
court concluded that Switzerland had violated Perincek’s right to free
speech. In March, Switzerland appealed to the ECHR’s 17-judge Grand
Chamber to overturn the ruling. Armenia waded in on Switzerland’s
side with its own team of lawyers. The latter is said to include
Amal Alamuddin, the much-respected Lebanese-born international human
rights lawyer married to actor George Clooney. In a further twist,
Alamuddin’s great uncle, Najib, is said to have been married to
Kunzler’s daughter, Ida.

Perincek was merely parroting Turkey’s official line. Turkey denies
that the 1915 tragedy constitutes genocide. Imposing its own version
of events — that most of the Armenians died of exposure, starvation
and disease during forced deportations to the Syrian desert — has
long been a cornerstone of Turkish foreign policy. Sabotaging planned
genocide memorials is an integral part of this. Thus, when the ethnic
Armenian residents of the California town of Montebello decided
to build a monument to honor the victims of 1915 in the mid-1960s,
Myron Goldsmith, a retired army major who doubled as Turkey’s honorary
consul general, lobbied the city council to prevent its construction.

The episode was colorfully depicted in journalist Michael
Bobelian’s 2009 book “Children of Armenia: A Forgotten Genocide
and the Century-Long Struggle for Justice.” We learn, for instance,
that Goldman accused the Armenians of “concocting a Communist plot”
and that the State Department “contacted Montebello’s city council
to pressure it to shut down the project.” In the end, the council
voted in favor of the monument but “bowed to the State Department’s
wishes,” spurning Armenian demands for the genocide to be mentioned
in its dedicatory plaque. A former Turkish intelligence officer who
requested anonymity claimed in remarks to Al-Monitor that the Turkish
government had “wasted hundreds of thousands of dollars” in covert
operations to deface Armenian genocide memorials. California is home
to the largest Armenian diaspora community in the United States,
and three Turkish diplomats were murdered there in revenge killings
carried out by ethnic Armenians between 1973 and 1982.

In 2011, the battle against monuments shifted to Kars, a city close to
Turkey’s sealed border with Armenia, where a former mayor commissioned
a sculpture that was meant to symbolize reconciliation. Turkey’s
President (then Prime Minister) Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the work a
“freak” and an “abomination” that needed to be demolished and replaced
with “a beautiful park.” Demolition of the two giant figures facing
each other, hands extended in a gesture of peace, duly began in April
of that year, with their decapitation.

“It cost more money to destroy the monument than to build,” observed
former mayor Naif Alibeyoglu.

Such actions run counter to the recent softening in Turkey’s official
stance — last year, Erdogan went as far as to offer an apology of
sorts when he acknowledged the suffering endured by the Armenians in
a statement made that April 24.

Using the word “genocide” is no longer a criminal offense in Turkey.

Yet, Turkey’s sustained efforts to suppress commemorative monuments
are “a pernicious kind of aggression against our right to remember,
to celebrate the fact that we are still alive,” said Heghnar Zeitlian
Watenpaugh, an art historian at the University of California, in an
email interview with Al-Monitor. Should Ankara succeed in permanently
switching off Geneva’s “Streetlights of Memory,” the wounds of the
past will be even harder to heal.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/12/25/al-monitor-planned-armenian-genocide-memorial-ruffles-ankara/

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry Tries Hardest To Conceal The Losses Af

AZERBAIJAN’S DEFENSE MINISTRY TRIES HARDEST TO CONCEAL THE LOSSES AFTER ARMENIA’S RETALIATION FOR THE DOWNED HELICOPTER, A SOURCE IN SECURITY AGENCIES SAYS

by David Stepanyan

Thursday, December 25, 12:33

Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan tries hardest to conceal their
losses after Armenia’s asymmetric retaliation to the recently downed
helicopter, ArmInfo’s source in the security agencies says.

As Armenia shows restraint, Baku tries to save its image after downing
an Armenian helicopter on the line of contact of the Nagorny Karabakh
and Azerbaijani forces.

“Instead of admitting its mistakes and telling, at least, its society
the truth about that incident, the senseless deaths of its soldiers,
the Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan keeps distorting the statements
of Armenian officials. In particular, Spokesperson, Colonel Vagif
Dargyakhli, was displeased with how Defense Minister of Armenia Seyran
Ohanyan described the retaliation for the downed helicopter. The
minister said that the details of the operation cannot be made public
so far, but the people will be informed about them when it is time,”
the source says.

The ideas of “military secrecy” and “non-disclosure of important
data,” as well as transparent activity of the national armed forces
are, probably, strange to the Azerbaijan army that lacks military
traditions. To distract the public attention from the real death toll
in the Azerbaijani army, Dargyakhli tried to distort the facts and even
said that the Armenian defense minister made the above statement at the
final discussions for 2014. In fact, there were no final discussions,
the minister made that statement to reporters.

“The response by the Baku officials once again proves that there was
retaliation and it was asymmetric. They are well aware of the outcomes
of that retaliation, as their own media is flooded with the reports of
‘accidents.’ In Baku they will never admit that they failed to force
their scenario upon the Armenian party and are now reluctant to pay
for their behavior,” the source says.

The Azerbaijani armed forces downed an Armenian Mi-24 while it was
conducting a training flight near the Line on Contact on 12 November.

Three officers of the NKR Armed Forces, Sergey Sahakyan, Sargis
Nazaryan and Azat Sahakyan, were on board. The Azeri officer that
shot the helicopter down has been awarded a medal. On 22 November,
the NKR Defense Army Special Forces recovered the body of a crewmember
and the remains of the two pilots of Mi-24 helicopter that was downed
by Azerbaijani forces on 12 November. The necessary wreckage was
recovered too. Two Azerbaijani militaries were killed in the course
of the special operation. The NKR Defense Army suffered no losses.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=09DC96C0-8C19-11E4-9F190EB7C0D21663

Un Membre Du Gouvernement Signale Des Plans Pour Une Nouvelle Hausse

UN MEMBRE DU GOUVERNEMENT SIGNALE DES PLANS POUR UNE NOUVELLE HAUSSE DU TARIF DE L’ELECTRICITE EN ARMENIE

ARMENIE

Le vice-ministre de l’energie et des ressources naturelles, a
declare que la depreciation de la monnaie nationale va conduire a
une augmentation des tarifs d’electricite.

S’exprimant lors d’une conference de presse a Erevan, Areg Galstyan
a dit : “Ce que nous avons vu le mois dernier aura son impact direct
sur nos calculs et les approches.”

Prie de dire s’il y avait des mesures visant a eviter la hausse des
prix de l’electricite, le vice-ministre a declare que “personne ne
peut repondre a la question maintenant.”

“Mais une chose est claire, l’influence sera inevitable,” a-t-il dit.

Le tarif de l’electricite a deja ete releve a deux reprises en Armenie
dans les deux dernières annees. En Juillet 2013, la Commission de
regulation des services publics l’a augmente de 27 pour cent, avec une
augmentation supplementaire de 10 pour cent approuve un an plus tard.

À l’heure actuelle, les menages paient en Armenie 41,85 drams par
kilowatt d’electricite (31,85 drams pour les heures de nuit).

jeudi 25 decembre 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Nature Protection Minister’s Final Press Conference For 2014: SHPPs,

NATURE PROTECTION MINISTER’S FINAL PRESS CONFERENCE FOR 2014: SHPPS, PART 4

12:35 December 25, 2014

EcoLur

Nature Protection Minister Aramayis Grigoryan finalized the performance
of the ministry for year 2014 at the press conference held on 22
December.

EcoLur presents the materials of the press categorized by topics:

“The materials displayed in this section were developed in the frames
of “Supporting reforms in the sector of small hydro power plants
through enabling a dialogue between civil society and the Ministry of
Nature Protection for sustainable use of river ecosystems” supported
by UNDP/GEF Small Grants Programme”.

http://ecolur.org/en/news/officials/nature-protection-ministers-final-press-conference-for-2014-shpps-part-4/6918/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntldXThzj_A

Hayk Demoyan: Turkey Tries To Sow Discord Within Armenian Diaspora S

HAYK DEMOYAN: TURKEY TRIES TO SOW DISCORD WITHIN ARMENIAN DIASPORA STRUCTURES ON THE THRESHOLD OF THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

by Ashot Safaryan

Thursday, December 25, 15:04

On the threshold of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide,
Turkey has been trying to sow discord within Armenian Diaspora
structures by all means, to sabotage numerous events – scientific
conferences, exhibitions and forums, and these attempts are becoming
obvious, Director of the Armenian genocide Museum-Institute, Hayk
Demoyan said at today’s press-conference.

The Turkish party has drawn out a strict strategy for neutralizing
of the possible influence and actions from our side. These attempts
have been taken in two directions – the interference in the Diaspora
structures as well as parallel organizing by the Turkish party of the
“response” conferences and exhibitions in different countries of the
world, where the topic of the genocide is presented by the Turkish
interpretation. The second direction are the attempts to cause interior
distractions within the scientific circles of Armenia and Diaspora”,
– Demoyan said.

One such sabotage was taken by Hasan Jemal – a grandson of one of
the organizers of the Armenian genocide, Jemal Pasha. Demoyan said
that when he organized an exhibition of the Armenian Museum Institute
of the Armenian genocide in Paris, it became clear that at the same
time Hasan Jemal held presentation of his book in Paris and invited
representatives of the Armenian genocide to the event. “Let them
think that I am a racist, though it is not fit a scientist, but I
simply call on our compatriots both in Armenia and Diaspora to remain
unprovoked and to be on the alert, as Turkish secret services are
implicated in 9 out of 10 events organized by the Turkish party”,
– he said. He also added that many representatives of the Turkish
scientific circles have been purposefully trying to implement quite
dangerous theories about the “kind Turks which saved Armenians”. The
purpose of such statements is to deflect attention away from the key
problem and escape discussion of the main topic. “By coming of the
24 April 2015, the counteraction from the Turkish party will grow”,
– Demoyan concluded.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=2D64EA10-8C2E-11E4-9F190EB7C0D21663

Levon Hayrapetyan Hospitalized From House Arrest

LEVON HAYRAPETYAN HOSPITALIZED FROM HOUSE ARREST

12:29 * 24.12.14

Levon Hayrapetyan, the Russian-Armenian businessman-philantropist
facing a criminal propceeding over alleged links to a money laundering
affair, has been hospitalized from house arrest.

His doctor, Henri Bakunts, has told the information center Artsakh
Today that the businessman was urgently taken under medical care
after his condition began deteriorating sharply.

Hayrapetyan was recently diagnosed with cancer. He also suffers from
diabetes and is known to have problems with blood pressure and heart.

“He needs an in-patient treatment; a few days in hospital are very
little,” the doctor said.

The businessman’s deteriorating health condition was addressed in
detail in the documentaryscreened in Moscow earlier this week.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/12/24/levonhayrapetyan/1544829

EurasiaNet: Fall Of Oil Prices Hits Reserves Of Azerbaijan’s Central

EURASIANET: FALL OF OIL PRICES HITS RESERVES OF AZERBAIJAN’S CENTRAL BANK: AUTHORITIES HAVE NOT PREPARED PEOPLE FOR HARD TIMES

19:47 23/12/2014 >> POLITICS

With Brent crude oil, the benchmark for the oil market, now hovering
around $60 a barrel, Baku might well have something to fear. In an
interview with Russia’s Rossiya-24 TV channel earlier in December,
President Ilham Aliyev admitted that falling oil prices could have
a negative impact on the government’s budgetary plans, reports
informational – analytic portal EurasiaNet.

As noted in the article one-third of the 2015 budget is slotted for
investment projects; 20 percent of those investments are slated to
fund a presidential pet project, the May 2015 European Olympic Games
in the capital, Baku, economists estimate. Aliyev, however, stated
that infrastructure projects could be reduced, if need be.

The industry generates the most economic activity outside of the energy
sector, noted economist Samir Aliyev, editor-in-chief of the Economic
Forum Magazine, an analytical monthly. “If the government halts such
projects now, it will leave lots of people unemployed,” he predicted.

As it is noted in the article, where the price will go in the coming
weeks is hard to predict. What is certain is that the Azerbaijani
government’s margin for expansive spending is slim.

In comments to EurasiaNet, Oil Fund spokesperson Jamala Aliyeva
confirmed that “annual transfers and financing of strategic projects

may cause [a] deficit SOFAZ budget for 2015” as world oil prices
decline.

Economist Samir Aliyev claims the Azerbaijani Central Bank’s reserves
already have been impacted, too, writes the EurasiaNet and adds
that the Bank did not respond to a request for comment in time for
publication.

According to economist Natig Jafarli it was necessary to fight
corruption, diversify the state budget revenues, encourage small and
medium enterprises; however, the government never did that.

“For those who already struggle to make ends meet in Azerbaijan,
lower oil prices are a source of unease. Salman Guliyev, 74, who sells
candies in one of Baku’s backstreets, worries about what higher prices
will mean for his ability to support his disabled wife and himself,”
the portal writes.

Source: Panorama.am

A Jailed Iranian Pastor’s Christmas Prayer

A JAILED IRANIAN PASTOR’S CHRISTMAS PRAYER

Wall Street Journal
Dec 23 2014

This will be Pastor Farshid Fathi’s fourth Christmas in an Iranian
prison, yet his fortitude, faith and indomitable spirit continues to
impress and encourage.

By Miles Windsor Dec. 23, 2014 4:09 p.m. ET

For Christians across the West, this week is a time to celebrate.

Multitudes will throng to church for Christmas services–some dragged
along by family members, others seeking peaceful sanctuary from the
worries of daily life. They will gather there to mark the birth of
their savior, of the God who entered the world in the most humble
of circumstances.

Elsewhere in the world, millions of their co-religionists are
threatened and prevented from exercising their fundamental right to
worship openly, even in this holy season. Christian communities in
North Korea, Pakistan and across much of the Middle East and Africa,
among other places, face various forms of persecution, whether meted
by tyrannical governments or by Islamist fanatics. According to an
estimate by the International Society for Human Rights, some 80%
of all acts of religious violence target Christians.

One of those persecuted Christians is Farshid Fathi, a pastor who this
year will mark his fourth Christmas in an Iranian prison cell. Born
in 1979, the year Ayatollah Khomeini toppled the shah and founded
the Islamic Republic, Pastor Fathi converted to Christianity at the
age of 17. As the pastor would soon learn, Iran is a very dangerous
place to worship Christ.

The Tehran regime likes to tout its treatment of Iran’s historic
Christian communities, the Armenians and Assyrians, as a testament to
its tolerance. It’s true that Armenians and Assyrians are officially
recognized as “People of the Book” under Iranian law, and that status
affords them a measure of legal protection. But it also relegates
them to second-class status. Their churches and schools are intensely
surveilled, their inheritance rights are subsidiary to their Muslim
relatives’, and they are barred from many public offices.

The mullahs reserve the most vicious treatment for Iranian Muslims,
like Pastor Fathi, who have dared to convert to Christianity.

Persian-language Bibles are banned in the country, and apostasy is
punishable by death under Shariah law, which lies at the heart of the
Iranian penal code. Yet to mask its naked persecution of Christian
converts, the Tehran regime usually jails them on national-security
charges or on the pretext that they spy for foreign powers.

That’s what happened to Pastor Fathi. In December 2010, the father
of two was arrested and arbitrarily detained in Tehran’s nightmarish
Evin Prison. His “crime” was serving as the leader of a network of
underground evangelical house churches. After a yearlong interval,
during which he spent months in solitary confinement and was subjected
to psychological abuse, he was convicted by a revolutionary court of
“acting against national security” and sentenced to six years.

In April, Pastor Fathi was one of several prisoners beaten during
an attack by security forces on Ward 350 of Evin, which houses many
of the country’s most prominent dissidents. More recently, he was
transferred to a different prison, Rajai Shahr, outside Tehran,
where he shares a cell with hardened criminals. His right to family
visits, guaranteed under Iran’s own laws, is routinely violated. He
isn’t permitted to sing Christians hymns, and prison authorities have
confiscated his Bible.

For the past few years, I have been advocating on behalf of Pastor
Fathi and other Iranian Christians in Westminster and before the
regime’s representatives. Though his case angers me and calls me
to action, I am more often impressed and encouraged by the pastor’s
fortitude, faith and indomitable spirit as they are reflected in his
letters to supporters from prison.

His latest contains a powerful Christmas message: “Although the beauty
of Christmas or the signs of Christmas cannot be found in this prison,”
the pastor writes, “with the ears of faith I can hear the everlasting
and beautiful truth that: ‘The virgin will conceive and give birth
to a son, and they will call him Immanuel.'”

It is signed “your captive brother who is free in Christ.”

Mr. Windsor, a London-based public-affairs strategist, works on behalf
of Christians persecuted in the Middle East.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/miles-windsor-a-jailed-iranian-pastors-christmas-prayer-1419368962

Russia Expands Eurasian Union In Competition With European Bloc

RUSSIA EXPANDS EURASIAN UNION IN COMPETITION WITH EUROPEAN BLOC

LA Times, CA
Dec 23 2014

By Carol J. Williams

Russian President Vladimir Putin expanded his emerging Eurasian
Economic Union with the announcement Tuesday that tiny and impoverished
Kyrgyzstan will join the bloc four months after it comes into force
on New Year’s Day.

The alliance of former Soviet republics was designed by the Kremlin
leader to counter the Brussels-based European Union, which has spread
its trade and political assimilation up to Russia’s borders, including
the Eastern European states that were members of Moscow-led Comecon
during the Cold War era and the three ex-Soviet Baltic republics.

Russia’s conflict with Ukraine, which erupted in violence in April
and continues to roil Moscow’s relations with much of Europe, was
ignited by the Feb. 21 overthrow of Kremlin-allied Ukrainian President
Viktor Yanukovich and the new Kiev leadership’s decision to seek EU
membership instead of joining Putin’s rival alliance.

But the European Union sanctions imposed on Russia after its seizure of
Ukraine’s Crimea territory have created friction within the Eurasian
bloc too. Russia’s cutoff of EU food imports in retaliation for the
sanctions allowed Belarus, strategically situated between Russia and
the EU states of Eastern Europe, to profit as middle man in importing
European products and reselling them to Russian importers.

That has angered Moscow and driven a wedge between Putin and Belarus
President Alexander Lukashenko, a longtime ally.

After Tuesday’s ceremony in Moscow to sign documents among the five
Eurasian Economic Union states, Lukashenko criticized Russian efforts
to punish Belarus for its end run around sanctions. Russia has stopped
importing meat and dairy products from Belarus, purportedly over
concern about food purity, and put barriers in the way of Belarus
exports through Russia to Kazakhstan.

“In violation of all international norms, we are faced with a
transshipment ban,” Lukashenko said at a news conference, exposing
a rift in the nascent alliance.

The decision Tuesday to admit Kyrgyzstan, the poorest of the
former Soviet bloc countries, also appeared unlikely to advance the
Eurasian Economic Union’s collective prosperity. With a per capita
gross domestic product of $2,500, the tiny, landlocked Central Asian
country of 5.6 million people ranks 185th among the 193 United Nations
member states.

Russia has extended Kyrgyzstan a $200-million grant to help align its
economic institutions with those of the other Eurasian bloc members —
Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Armenia — the Sputnik news agency
reported Tuesday.

Armenia also brings more economic woe than prospects, with its $6,300
per capita GDP and long-running dispute with neighboring Azerbaijan
over its Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Oil-rich Azerbaijan has yet to respond to Kremlin overtures to join
the Eurasian trade group, and Tajikistan has also given no indication
of whether it plans to join.

Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev first proposed in 1994
a union of former Soviet states to facilitate the free movement of
goods, services, labor and capital.

The five states so far committed to joining the Moscow-led bloc
comprise a market of nearly 180 million people.

http://www.latimes.com/world/europe/la-fg-russia-eurasian-union-versus-europe-20141223-story.html

PAP Leader To Convene Conference Jan 20 To Discuss Political, Econom

PAP LEADER TO CONVENE CONFERENCE JAN 20 TO DISCUSS POLITICAL, ECONOMIC SITUATION IN ARMENIA

13:00 / 23.12.2014

Leader of Prosperous Armenia Party Gagik Tsarukyan will convene
a conference of non-governmental political forces, NGOs and civil
initiatives and movements on January 20, spokesperson for the PAP
leader Iveta Tonoyan informed in a statement today.

According to it, the conference will discuss the complicated economic
and political situation created in the country. The event is of
consulting nature and is aimed at analyzing, summing up the already
carried out work, discussing the future activities and steps.

“We rate high the viewpoints and approaches of the political and
public sectors. I also want to clarify that this is not the event
of the party but personal initiative of Gagik Tsarukyan. Realizing
that the discussion of vital issues of the country and the adoption
of the decisions must not be limited in the narrow party format,
we really rate high the viewpoint of our political colleagues and
political and public forces interested in the solution of the issues
of the country,” the statement said.

Nyut.am