Armenian conductor waiting for that train for 20 years

Armenian conductor waiting for that train for 20 years

13:09 04.03.2013

The halt of train services between Turkey and Armenia has created
several tragic human stories; one of them belongs to Agop Gevorgyan.
After train services were suspended, Gevorgyan was dismissed from his
job as a train conductor and made a guard at Akhuryan train station.

There were regular train services between the Akhuryan Train Station
in the Armenian city of Gyumri and Turkey’s DoÄ?u Kapı (East Gate)
station in Kars province. However, upon the closure of the
Turkey-Armenia border, train services were halted in 1993. With this
suspension, serious victims of tragic human stories emerged both on
the Turkish side and the Armenian side.

The Hurriyet Daily News presents the story of Agop Gevorgyan.

‘Agop Gevorgyan was conducting the train to Kars’ DoÄ?u Kapı Station
every day for years. He carried the goods loaded from Armenia to
Turkey. From Turkey, he would bring various food items to his country.
During those trips Agop Gevorgyan became friends with many people,
primarily with an official named Å?ükrü at the DoÄ?u Kapı station in
Turkey. In March 1993, while Agop Gevorgyan was preparing for a Kars
trip, he received an order, `You will not go today, services have been
halted.’

Gevorgyan first thought this would be a short-lived decision and
expected the border to be opened soon. He waited for the start of
train services with hope. Days went by and the order of `start
services’ never came. Gevorgyan’s train never left the station to
Kars. However, Gevorgyan never abandoned the Akhuryan train station.
Because there were no train services, he was dismissed as a conductor
and was made a guard. He said, `After the services were halted I
started working as a guard in this station. Our time was spent
sitting, most of the time idly. For 20 years we have been waiting for
the train services to start. Over there, there are the lights of
Turkey. We have been watching those lights for 20 years and waiting
for the border to reopen. People in the Akhurik village situated
around this station moved away.’

With the closure of the border, Gevorgyan explained, those friendships
he had formed in Turkey also ended: `I had a friend named Å?ükrü in
Turkey. On those trips to Turkey, we would always get together.

We would meet each other every day. Å?ükrü was a good friend of mine
but when the border was closed, our connection was cut. I learned a
few years ago that Å?ükrü had died. I was very sad. I would have wanted
to see him again.’ Gevorgyan said he was hopefully waiting for the
train services to start.

`It is very boring for us now to wait the entire day. ¦ It is time the
border opens and I go back and forth to Turkey with my train.’

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/03/04/armenian-conductor-waiting-for-that-train-for-20-years/

Yerevan protests continue calling for boycotting classes

Yerevan protests continue calling for boycotting classes

March 04, 2013 | 11:28

YEREVAN. – The protests, which started on February 25 in Armenia’s
capital city Yerevan and with a call for boycotting university
classes, are continuing on Monday.

A group of youth has gathered in front of the main building of Yerevan
State University (YSU) and is demanding the dismissal of Gevorg
Melkonyan, the Assistant to YSU Rector.

On the same day, the youth will stage a demonstration also before the
Constitutional Court where, at 5:30pm, the representatives of
opposition Heritage Party Chairman Raffi Hovannisian – who is declared
runner-up to the winner, incumbent President Serzh Sargsyan, as a
result of the presidential election that was conducted on February 18,
but who claims to be the real winner in the vote – will submit a
petition to the Court.

To note, a group of youth is holding pickets, in front of Yerevan
universities ever since February 25, and is voicing its protest of the
results of the presidential vote. Also, these youth are calling upon
the university students to boycott their classes as a sign of protest.

An incident occurred during the demonstration that was held on
February 27 at the YSU main building. In response to the
demonstrators’ cry, `We love you!’ YSU Rector Assistant Gevorg
Melkonyan had stated: `We love you, too, but only the girls.’ Also, he
had exclaimed: `Bring the troops, the boys forward!’

The YSU administration, on the other hand, neither punished nor
reprimanded Melkonyan, and this had caused anger among the protesting
youth.

– See more at:

http://news.am/eng/news/142858.html#sthash.0ocpHLIA.dpuf

Liturgy dedicated to 25th anniversary of Sumgait pogroms offered in

Liturgy dedicated to 25th anniversary of Sumgait pogroms offered in Brussels

11:19, 4 March, 2013

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENRPESS. Liturgy dedicated to 25th anniversary
of Sumgait pogroms offered at St. Mary Magdalene Armenian Apostolic
Church in Brussels. Vicar of the Patriarchal Delegate of the Armenian
Apostolic Church in Western Europe Archimandrite Zatik Avetikyan
served the liturgy. As reports “Armenpress” a number of members of the
Armenian diplomatic corps to Belgium, EU, and NATO, heads of community
structures, and representatives of the Armenian community attended the
rite. The Armenian National Committee of Belgium and “Hayasa” Student
Union held an act of protest in front of the Azerbaijani Embassy to
the Kingdom of Belgium in memory of the victims of the Sumgait
massacre. After the action the participants marched to the cross-stone
raised in memory of the Armenian Genocide victims in one of the
central squares of Brussels.

The Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia to Belgium Avet Adonts and
the Head of the Mission of the Republic of Armenia in NATO Armen
Yedigaryan alongside with a number of representatives of the Armenian
community laid wreaths at the cross-stone.

– See more at:

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/710260/liturgy-dedicated-to-25th-anniversary-of-sumgait-pogroms-offered-in-brussels.html#sthash.7IYzZHUH.dpuf

Lent: choosing which instincts to nourish

Ekklesia, UK
March 3 2013

Lent: choosing which instincts to nourish

Submitted by Harry Hagopian on 3 March 2013 – 5:09pm

Recently, Fr Vazken Movsesian, priest of the Armenian Orthodox Church
in the USA, and wise guide to many followers and bloggers across five
continents, reminded us of an instructive (and familiar) story.

It is part of the Armenian Orthodoxy Lenten Journey. You can access
those daily spiritual feeds on:

For me, this parable applies as much to my ‘inner’ life as it does to
my ‘outer’ political or ecumenical work. Mind you, I am not too sure
that it could stretch enough to apply to all my legal work!

One evening an old Cherokee told his grandson about a battle that goes
inside people.

He said, `My son, the battle is between two wolves inside us all. One
is evil. It is anger, jealousy, sorrow, regret, greed arrogance, self
pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, deception, false pride,
superiority and ego. The other wolf is good. It is joy, peace, love,
hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity,
truth, righteousness, compassion and faith.’

The grandson thought about it for a moment and replied, `But
grandfather, which one wins?’

The old Cherokee simply replied, “The one you feed.”

http://armodoxy.blogspot.co.uk/
http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/18094

‘Surat must preserve its 300-yr-old maritime heritage’

The Times of India (TOI)
March 2, 2013 Saturday

‘Surat must preserve its 300-yr-old maritime heritage’

Ramaninder K Bhatia

VADODARA: Five years after Indiana University (IU) Professor Charles D
Beeker connected the origins of the 300-year-old shipwreck lost in the
Caribbean sea to Surat, and conclusively established its identity as
the Armenia-owned ‘Quedagh Merchant’, the explorer-academician, during
his ongoing India visit, has now declared Surat to be the cradle of
international trade with a rich maritime heritage.

“Three days ago, I was taken by the Wadia family, which is in the
business of shipbuilding for several generations, to Bilimora to show
a ship being constructed. I was amazed to see a vessel being
constructed with the same technique in the present times, which we saw
in the 300-year-old Quedagh Merchant, including the same teak keel and
rabbeted joints,” an excited sounding Beeker told TOI.

But, the researcher had a word of caution too, “The 300-year-old
technique of shipbuilding is still being used here, but it may not
stay alive 10 years from now, with the fiberglass ships taking over
the expensive teak and the labour intensive traditional techniques. If
I had my way, I would pick up this ship in Bilimora and preserve it in
a museum as part of the rich maritime heritage of this place,” he
declared after presenting his address on the discovery of Quedagh
Merchant.

The other ‘discovery’ that has got Beeker and his Armenian colleague
Pavel Galoumian excited was that of an old grave in Surat’s Armenian
cemetery. “The grave belonged to a member of ‘Kalantar’ family. This
was the same family which had commissioned Quedagh Merchant,” said
Galoumian, a physicist by profession, who has been associated with
Beeker and the shipwreck ever since its discovery, due to its Armenian
connection.

Quedagh Merchant, the 17th century Armenia-owned, and Surti
craftsmen-built, was leased to Armenian traders before it was
commandeered by Capt Willian Kidd in the India Ocean, which eventually
led to a high-profile court trial in the United Kingdom, leading to
the execution of Kidd. Till today, opinions are divided over whether
Kidd was a pirate or a privateer, who became a victim of international
political intrigue.

Box- The 21 canons

To researchers’ delight, the IU professor has offered to bring one of
the 21 cannons of Quedagh Merchant to India, if there were any takers.
It was the sight of one of these cannons in the pristine, shallow
seawaters of Dominican Republic that brought Beeker’s team to the site
in 2007 and establish the ship’s antecedents. The cannon is lying in a
museum in the USA but the professor is keen to take it around the
world.

The shipwreck is being preserved as a ‘living museum in the sea’ with
four biological monitoring stations located around it to preserve the
marine ecology around it.

Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan under fire for Zionism remarks

Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan under fire for Zionism remarks

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s prime minister, is facing a chorus of
international criticism after branding Zionism `a crime against
humanity’ akin to Fascism and anti-Semitism.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Photo: AP
By Robert Tait, Jerusalem

11:26AM GMT 01 Mar 2013

The comments, made at a United Nations conference on tolerance, were
denounced as `dark and mendacious’ by the Israeli prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and condemned the US and the UN secretary general,
Ban Ki-moon, who was present and heard them in simultaneous
translation.

They also threatened to cause diplomatic embarrassment for the US
secretary of state, John Kerry, as he arrived in the Turkish capital
Ankara on Friday for talks on Syria.

`As is the case for Zionism, anti-Semitism and fascism, it is
inevitable that Islamophobia be considered a crime against humanity,’
Mr Erdogan said in a speech to the fifth global forum of the Alliance
of Civilizations in Vienna on Wednesday.

After the remark circulated widely on Israeli media, Mr Netanyahu
issued an official response, calling it `a dark and mendacious
statement the likes of which we thought had passed from the world’.

The Obama administration, which has sought to maintain close ties with
Turkey, a NATO ally called Mr Erdogan’s comments `offensive and
wrong’.

`We encourage people of all faiths, cultures, and ideas to denounce
hateful actions and to overcome the differences of our times,’ a
spokesman for the National Security Council, Tommy Vietor, said.

Mr Ban, who was criticised by a Geneva-based website, UN Watch which
proclaims itself as being “affiliated to the American-Jewish
community”, for initially staying silent about Mr Erdogan’s comments,
said they breached the spirit of the Alliance of Civilisations, which
was formed in 2005 to promote east-west understanding and combat
extremism.

“The Secretary-General believes is it is unfortunate that such hurtful
and divisive comments were uttered at a meeting being held under the
theme of responsible leadership,’ a statement from his office said.

Relations between Israel and Turkey – once close allies – have been in
the doldrums since 2010, when nine Turkish activists were killed after
Israeli commandoes stormed a flotilla heading for the Gaza Strip. Mr
Netanyahu has resisted Turkish pressure to apologise and pay
compensation for the incident. Ties between the two nations were
recently said to be undergoing a quiet revival, amid reports that
Israel had resumed selling armament equipment to Turkey.

Mr Erdogan, a former Islamist, has sharply criticised Israel in the
past. In 2009 he stormed out of a debate with the Israeli president,
Shimon Peres, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, after telling him
`you Israelis know how to kill’.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/turkey/9902255/Turkeys-Recep-Tayyip-Erdogan-under-fire-for-Zionism-remarks.html

Barevolution Continues at Liberty Square

PRESS RELEASE
RAFFI HOVANNISIAN HEADQUARTERS
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]
Website:

2 March 2013

Barevolution Continues at Liberty Square

Yerevan–Raffi K. Hovannisian held a rally tonight before tens of
thousands at Yerevan’s Liberty Square, which opened with a live
performance of `It’s Possible,’ the anthem of Hovannisian’s
presidential campaign. `It’s no longer just possible,’ Hovannisian
said before the song. `It has already happened.’

In his opening address, Hovannisian called for Serzh Sargsyan, Prime
Minister Tigran Sargsyan, and Yerevan Mayor Taron Margaryan to resign,
and invited them to come to the Liberty Square on March 5 to make
their resignation public. Several political and public figures who
spoke at the event added their demand for these resignations, and said
that the Armenian people will make sure they are filed sooner rather
than later.

Armen Martirosyan, vice-chairman of the Heritage board, reflected on
the improved objectivity of the OSCE/ODIHR interim report that was
released today. `This was a result of our struggle at Liberty Square,
and so long as we keep our voices strong the outside world will be
forced to objectively assess the falsification of the February 18
election results,’ he said.

Raffi Hovannisian concluded the event by praising Armenian citizens
for their courage and heroic action since February 18, and asserted
that the people’s victory will be complete by April 9, the date of the
new president’s official inauguration.

On March 5, at 5pm, the next Barevolution rally will take place at
Liberty Square. At 2pm the same day, all demonstrators are welcome to
join Raffi Hovannisian as he visits Yerablur to honor Vazgen Sargsyan.

Yerevan, Liberty Square

Raffi Hovannisian’s speech at Liberty Square

Raffi Hovannisian Headquarters

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ck6b59YLAsc&feature=youtube_gdata
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Xfrlk8yUIw&feature=youtube_gdata
www.raffi4president.am

Conférence: Le Printemps Arabe Et Les Chretiens: Opportunite Ou Mena

Conférence – débat : LE PRINTEMPS ARABE ET LES CHRETIENS : UNE
OPPORTUNITE OU UNE MENACE ?
Les chrétiens de Syrie demandent une sécurité physique

La conférence-débat sur les chrétiens de Syrie a eu lieu le mercredi
13 février au Sénat français. Evoqué pour la première fois en France,
loin des clichés, il s’agissait d’un événement de grande envergure,
évoquant la situation complexe des chrétiens, leurs positions diverses
et leur sécurité physique pour leur maintien en Syrie. La conférence a
rassemblé des parlementaires, de membres de la diaspora
assyro-chaldéennesyriaque, des associations d’opposants syriens, des
organisations arméniennes et chrétiennes. Au total, près de 70
personnes avaient répondu présent à cet événement. Loin des clichés et
des discours partisans qui pullule le net, la conférence – débat « Le
printemps arabe et les chrétiens : une opportunité ou une menace ? »
tenue le 13 février 2013 au Sénat a permis de sensibiliser l’opinion
publique et politique à la situation difficile des chrétiens de Syrie,
plongés malgré eux, dans un conflit complexe sans précédent, qui
compte déjà plus de 20.000 morts dont une centaine de chrétiens. Des
Syriens chrétiens venus spécialement à la conférence pour évoquer la
réalité de leur situation et leur position, loin des amalgames
occidentaux, prétendant que les chrétiens soutiendraient le régime de
Bachar et que l’opposition serait uniquement composée d’islamistes
soutenue par les monarchies du Golfe. Les différents intervenants ont
démontré que la réalité du pays est bien plus complexe et l’opposition
beaucoup plus diverse.

Organisée par l’Institut Assyro-chaldéen-syriaque et l’European Syriac
Union, sous le haut patronage de Mme le Sénateur Christiane
Kammermann, la conférence a réunis près de 70 participants et
intervenants.

Parmi eux :

Bassam Ishak, Said Malki et Randa Kassis, des militants chrétiens
syriens opposants à Bachar al-Assad.

Des parlementaires et ambassadeur, dont la sénatrice Mme Christiane
Kammermann (marraine de l’événement) ; Mme Bariza Khiari, sénatrice de
Paris & Vice-présidente du Sénat ; Adrien Gouteyron, ancien sénateur
chargé d’un rapport du les chrétiens d’Orient ; Eric Chevalier,
ambassadeur français en Syrie ; et bien d’autres. Des membres de la
diaspora assyro-chaldéenne-syriaque et arménienne.

Des associations chrétiennes dont le Père Pascal Gollnisch, président
de l’Oeuvre d’Orient ; Jean Dufour de Christian Solidarity, Des
organisations de soutien à la Syrie, dont France-Syrie Démocratie
représenté par le docteur Jacques Bérès.

Riche en débat, la conférence a surtout permis de comprendre la
diversité des positions des chrétiens en particulier des
Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques en Syrie. Les intervenants et les
participants ont pu faire part de la situation complexe auxquelles
sont confrontées ces populations, de leurs différentes positions
vis-à-vis du conflit, et de leurs demandes.

Des chrétiens sous représentés dans les principaux groupe d’opposition
Animé par Agnès Ide, présidente de l’Institut
Assyro-chaldéen-syriaque, la première table ronde a débuté avec les
témoignages de Bassam Ishak et Said Malki, chrétiens syriaque,
fervents opposants au régime de Bachar Al-Assad. Les deux intervenants
ont insisté sur la situation difficile des chrétiens : pris entre
deux feux, d’un côté le régime de Bachar Al-Assad, qui assassine ses
opposants, bafoue les droits ethniques et culturels des chrétiens, et
de l’autre côté des groupes d’opposition diverses dont une branche
islamiste, jusque là minoritaire mais prenant de l’ampleur à mesure
que le conflit perdure, qui s’attaque aux chrétiens du fait de leur
appartenant religieuse. Bassam Ishak, président du Conseil national
syriaque de Syrie, a fustigé le comportement des principaux groupes
d’oppositions vis à vis des chrétiens : Ils sous-représenteraient
volontairement les chrétiens dans un éventuel futur gouvernement alors
qu’ils constituent entre 7 à 10% de la population syrienne. Pour lui,
il s’agit tout simplement d’une ruse déjà utilisée par le régime de
Bachar Al-Assad et désormais repris par les groupes d’oppositions. Un
conflit aux enjeux complexes L’opposante syrienne Randa Kassis,
présidente du « Mouvement pour une Société Pluraliste », a évoqué les
divisions internes des opposants notamment entre kurdes et rebelles
islamistes dont les intérêts divergent. En effet, les Kurdes veulent
une autonomie dans le nord-est de la Syrie. En général, les Syriens se
battent pour avoir plus de droits au sein des groupes d’oppositions,
composés eux même de membres ayant des positions et des intérêts
différents. Ajoutons à cela, l’existence d’une influence étrangère, un
des points évoqué au cours de la conférence par l’ambassadeur de
France en Syrie : « Les Français veulent que les Russes changent de
positions sur le régime. Les deux États sont contre l’islamisation »,
selon M. Chevallier.

L’insécurité et le manque de gouvernance locale est un des problèmes
de ce conflit. M. Eric Chevallier l’a affirmé : « il y a un vide de
gouvernance et un manque de sécurité. Les Français ont été les
premiers à dire qu’il fallait structurer le gouvernement et proposer
une dynamique de renforcement locale » a déclaré l’ambassadeur de
France en Syrie. Une reconnaissance culturelle des chrétiens
Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques

Au delà des souffrances causées par le banditisme, l’islamisme et les
intérêts kurdes, les intervenants chrétiens syriens ont insisté sur le
désir de reconnaissance de leur identité et de leur maintien sur leur
terre ancestrale en Syrie

Bassam Ishak, président du Conseil national syriaque de Syrie, a
rappelé combien l’identité des Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques a été
longtemps bafouée en Syrie. Et beaucoup de chrétiens ont préféré se
dire arabe pour éviter tous problèmes avec le pouvoir central, tenu
par le parti panarabiste Ba’as. Said Malki, vice-président de l’Union
des Syriaques de Syrie, espère une Syrie nouvelle en paix où les
chrétiens auront pleinement leur place. Il demande une reconnaissance
entière de l’identité des Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques comme peuple
araméophone, ainsi qu’une libre pratique de leur culture et de leur
religion en Syrie.

L’Église plaide pour le maintien des chrétiens en Syrie Le père Pascal
Gollnisch, président de l’Oeuvre d’Orient, une association catholique
venant en aide aux chrétiens orientaux, a rappelé les conditions
terribles de familles syriennes déplacées de force et du risque de
voir revenir le syndrome irakien pour les chrétiens : une émigration
croissante et définitive des chrétiens vers l’étranger. Il a insisté
sur l’importance de la présence chrétienne au Moyen-Orient : « Les
chrétiens joue un rôle considérable en Orient tant sur le plan social,
culturel et religieux. Si ces minorités venaient à disparaitre, cela
générerait des conflits entre pays du Nord et du Sud. Il faut garder
un équilibre spirituel essentiel », a-t-il déclaré. La position de la
France : une structure globale intégrant toutes les minorités
syriennes Contrairement aux idées reçues et largement diffusées selon
lesquelles l’ensemble des chrétiens syriens soutiendraient le régime
de Bachar al-Assad, M. Eric Chevallier, ambassadeur de France en
Syrie, a insisté sur la participation active dans les divers groupes
d’opposition des minorités chrétiennes pour maintenir leur présence en
Syrie. D’ailleurs, M. Eric Chevallier avait personnellement aidé des
opposants chrétiens à fuir la Syrie en 2011, comme M. George Sabra.
Installé à Paris, ce dernier est aujourd’hui président du Conseil
national syrien, principal groupe d’opposition. Il a déclaré
comprendre et respecter les craintes « Il y a des angoisses et de la
peur chez les chrétiens de Syrie », ajoutant « que le seul moyen de
sortir de cette révolution, était dans la structuration d’une
politique alternative car le régime de la famille Al-Assad tombera à
un moment ou à un autre ».

Quelles solutions ?

Randa Kassis : une solution politique avec le Régime de Bashar Al-Assad

Après deux ans de conflit et une opposition divisée, la militante
syrienne Randa Kassis propose un désarmement des deux camps et un
compromis international avec une présence des casques bleus en Syrie :
« Il faudrait revenir vers une solution politique avec le régime de
Bachar Al-Assad. Le conflit a fait beaucoup trop de victimes ». Une
position réfutée par l’ambassadeur de France en Syrie qui précise que
Bachar Al-Assad refuse toutes négociations avec une opposition qu’il
considère comme terroriste.

Saïd Malki : une protection militaire des chrétiens Said Malki,
vice-président de l’Union syriaque en Syrie, a insisté sur la
vulnérabilité les chrétiens en particulier, les
Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques de Syrie. Contrairement aux musulmans, les
chrétiens ne reçoivent aucune aide et n’ont aucune protection
militaire. M. Malki dénonce ainsi : « Tous les groupes sont armés par
différents États. Les Kurdes reçoivent de l’aide militaire du
Kurdistan irakien, les sunnites sont soutenus par les monarchies du
Golfe et les Alaouites sont armés par l’Iran. Les chrétiens ne sont
pas protégés. Personne ne les soutient. », tout en précisant que « le
but des chrétiens n’est pas d’attaquer mais simplement de se défendre
en cas d’attaque ».

L’Union des Syriaques de Syrie, organisation composée
d’Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques de Syrie,opposant au régime de Bachar
Al-Assad, a récemment mis en place un conseil militaire visant à
protéger les populations chrétiennes du nord est de la Syrie, visées
depuis quelques mois par des attaques et des enlèvements. Venu
spécialement de Syrie, Said Malki, a demandé qu’une telle aide puisse
également parvenir aux chrétiens par la France. Une demande refusée et
critiquée par l’ambassadeur de France en Syrie et le directeur de
l’OEuvre d’Orient. Même s’il comprend la situation difficile des
chrétiens, le Père Pascal Gollnisch, directeur de l’OEuvre d’Orient a
exprimé son inquiétude quant à un éventuel aide militaire aux
chrétiens de Syrie : « Ils doivent poursuivre leur rôle
d’évangélisation ». M. l’Ambassadeur Eric Chevallier conçoit la
volonté des chrétiens Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques de s’armer pour se
protéger mais il a affirmé qu’une aide éventuellement exclusive de la
France aux chrétiens serait « contre productive ». « Nous voulons
éviter que les islamistes pensent que la France arme les chrétiens »
a-t-il déclaré. Il a plutôt conseillé aux Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques de
s’intégrer dans des groupes militaires plus large englobant des
syriens musulmans et chrétiens. Et il finit par reconnaître que «
L’aide que la France peut apporter aux chrétiens de Syrie reste
modeste ».

En conclusion

Après plusieurs heures de débat, Agnès Ide, présidente de l’Institut
Assyro-chaldéen-syriaque (I.A.C.S), a conclu la conférence. Elle a
exprimé son inquiétude quant à une éventuelle répétition du syndrome
irakien risquant par là de faire disparaître le peuple
Assyro-chaldéen-syriaque sur ces terres ancestrales ; et à réduire au
silence toute demande de protection spéciale pour les chrétiens.
L’I.A.C.S a donc proposé : la création d’un groupe de parlementaires
français qui soutiendrait les demandes des Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques
et plus largement des chrétiens d’Orient dans les instances nationales
et internationales, notamment sur le maintien de ses populations sur
leur terre ancestrale et sur la reconnaissance ethnique des
Assyro-chaldéen-syriaques comme un peuple à part entière.

Riche en débat, la conférence a permis de faire réagir un public
fortement préoccupé de la situation sur place en particulier sur la
présence de plus en plus importante d’islamistes dans les groupes
d’opposition et l’aide apportée par la Turquie.

dimanche 3 mars 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Armenian Oppositionist Blames Second, Third Presidents For March 1 E

ARMENIAN OPPOSITIONIST BLAMES SECOND, THIRD PRESIDENTS FOR MARCH 1 EVENTS

TERT.AM
14:50 ~U 01.03.13

The opposition Democratic Fatherland party’s chief considers Armenia’s
second and third presidents responsible for the March 1, 2008
post-electoral turmoil that resulted in 10 deaths in capital Yerevan.

At a news conference on Friday, Petros Makeyan said that second
President Robert Kocharyan opened the tragic chapter, with Serzh
Sargsyan being aware of everything.

As for the current post-electoral developments, Makeyan said they give
rise to the question as to whether such a scenario is possible now, but
he ruled out such a possibility, considering the new political setting.

“The society has changed; so has the international organizations’
attitude because they are aware that they will not resort to a second
[violence] without digesting the first,” he explained.

Makeyan noted that the crowd supporting the Heritage party’s leader,
Raffi Hovhannisian, does so not because it finds the politician an
alternative, but rather because it is sick and tired of the same
political figures.

“They elected Raffi. We hail the society’s rebellion; we are with the
people, participating in the processes. But the people remain there
on the square as long as they see something is being done,” he said,
adding that the opposition has to accomplish its work until Serzh
Sargsyan’s inauguration ceremony due on April 9.

He then called upon both the authorities and the opposition to draw
conclusions of the current developments.

“A mutual concession is the real way out, but that has to meet its
real purpose, instead of being just a show. The opposition must now
set itself a clear-cut timeline; otherwise the same cycle will recur.

But in case the opposition seeks for offices [in government], that
will yield no result,” he said, stressing the importance of dissolving
the parliament and holding a new election.

Makeyan said concession now is the only option left to the
authorities. “The authorities have not given a final answer.

Bargaining is now under way, but there is no other option,” he said.

Adam Schiff Condemns The Ongoing Atmosphere Of Violence In Azerbaija

ADAM SCHIFF CONDEMNS THE ONGOING ATMOSPHERE OF VIOLENCE IN AZERBAIJAN

12:24 01.03.2013

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) commemorated the 25th anniversary of the
Azerbaijani pogroms against the Armenian population of the Azerbaijani
city of Sumgait, and condemned the ongoing atmosphere of violence
and intimidation being fostered by the government of President Ilham
Aliyev, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

Statement by Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA) regarding the 25th
anniversary of the Sumgait Pogroms

This week marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the pogrom against
people of Armenian descent in the town of Sumgait, Azerbaijan. The
three-day massacre in the winter of 1988 resulted in the deaths of
scores of Armenians, many of whom were burnt to death after being
brutally beaten and tortured. Hundreds of others were wounded. Women
and girls were brutally raped. The carnage created thousands of ethnic
Armenian refugees, who had to leave everything behind to be looted
or destroyed, including their homes, cars and businesses.

These crimes, which were proceeded by a wave of anti-Armenian
rallies throughout Azerbaijan, were never adequately prosecuted
by Azerbaijan authorities. Many who organized or participated in
the bloodshed have gone on to serve in high positions on the Azeri
government. For example, in the days leading up to the massacre,
a leader of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, Hidayat Orujev,
warned Armenians in Sumgait: ‘If you do not stop campaigning for the
unification of Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia, if you don’t sober up,
100,000 Azeris from neighboring districts will break into your houses,
torch your apartments, rape your women, and kill your children.’ In
a cruel twist, Orujev went on serve as Azerbaijan’s State Advisor
for Ethnic Policy and later as head of State Committee for Work with
Religious Organizations.

The Sumgait massacres led to wider reprisals against Azerbaijan’s
ethnic minority, resulting in the virtual disappearance of Azerbaijan’s
450,000-strong Armenian community, and culminating in the war launched
against the people of Nagorno Karabakh. That war resulted in almost
30,000 dead on both sides and created more than one million refugees
in both Armenia and Azerbaijan.

In the years since the fighting ended, the people of Artsakh,
the region’s ancestral name, have struggled to build a functioning
democratic state in the midst of unremitting hostility and threats
from Azerbaijan, as well as sniper fire and other incursions across
the Line of Contact between the two sides. Hatred towards Armenians
is both inculcated and celebrated in Azeri youth, as exemplified
by the case of Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani army captain who had
confessed to the savage 2004 axe murder of Armenian army lieutenant
Gurgen Margaryan, while the latter slept. At the time, the two were
participating in a NATO Partnership for Peace exercise in Budapest,
Hungary. After the murder, Safarov was sentenced to life in prison
by a Hungarian court and imprisoned in Hungary.

Last August Safarov was sent home to Azerbaijan, purportedly to serve
out the remainder of his sentence. Instead of prison, he was greeted as
a hero by the Azeri government and promenaded through the streets of
Baku carrying a bouquet of roses. President Ilham Aliyev immediately
pardoned Safarov and he was promoted to the rank of major and given
a new apartment and eight years of back pay.

In recent weeks, 75-year-old Akram Aylisli, one of Azerbaijan’s most
celebrated writers, has been subjected to a campaign of hatred.

According to a report in the BBC, ‘[h]is books have been publicly
burnt. He has been stripped of his national literary awards. And a
high-ranking Azeri politician has offered $13,000 as a bounty for
anyone who will cut off his ear. Aylisi’s crime?’ – in his short
novel Stone Dreams, he dared to look at the conflict between Azeris
and Armenians from the Armenian perspective.

With these disgusting acts, the Azeri state reminded the whole world
why the people of Artsakh must be allowed to determine their own
future and cannot be allowed to slip into Aliyev’s clutches, lest the
carnage of Sumgait a quarter century ago serve as a foreshadowing of
a greater slaughter.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/03/01/adam-schiff-condemns-the-ongoing-atmosphere-of-violence-in-azerbaijan/