Expert: Azeri FM’s Statement On Karabakh Peace Part Of "Military Pro

EXPERT: AZERI FM’S STATEMENT ON KARABAKH PEACE PART OF “MILITARY PROCESS”

KARABAKH | 16.10.14 | 15:06

NAZIK ARMENAKYAN
ArmeniaNow

GOHAR ABRAHAMYAN
ArmeniaNow reporter

Yerevan-based Caucasus Institute director, political analyst Alexander
Iskandaryan on Thursday told reporters that a recent statement by
Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov is not worth serious
consideration.

Enlarge Photo

According to Azerbaijani Trend media agency, Mamedyarov on Wednesday
commented on Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents’ upcoming meeting
saying that: “Azerbaijan is ready to start works on the peace treaty,”
adding that there have been many suggestions regarding removing armed
forces, refugee repatriation, and creating a working group between
structures solving problems of transport and substructures.

“Azerbaijan is ready to start such negotiations on the level of
experts. We are waiting for the response of the Armenian side.”

The Armenian side variously blamed Azerbaijan in unpreparedness for
a peaceful regulation of the problem.

“We should not treat Mamedyarov’s statement seriously, not like there
is a possibility of progress in the negotiations. This is just another
swing by which Azerbaijan realizes its military policy,” the political
analyst said.

After an up-tick in border skirmishes in August and a subsequent
meeting between the warring countries’ presidents some peace was
regained on the border. However new tensions have arisen as the October
24 meeting of presidents approaches. On this account Iskandaryan said
that normally border occurrences are related to the events around
the Karabakhi conflict resolution process.

“This way Azerbaijani strategy is realized, there is tension on the
border, there is a blow, after which an announcement is made. This
is a swing that swings from one side to the other, we cannot treat
it as a serious prospect,” Iskandaryan said.

http://armenianow.com/karabakh/57675/armeniaazerbaijan_peace_negotiations_elmar_mamedyarov_alexander_iskandaryan

Assyrian Community Supports Armenia’s Accession To EEU

ASSYRIAN COMMUNITY SUPPORTS ARMENIA’S ACCESSION TO EEU

15:16 16/10/2014 >> SOCIETY

The Armenian National Assembly should pay more attention to the issue
of Assyrian Genocide, head of the Federation of Assyrian Organizations
of Armenia Irina Gasparyan told reporters on Thursday.

There has been no response regarding the bill on recognition of the
Assyrian Genocide, submitted to the Armenian parliament two years ago,
she said.

Ms Gasparyan said that they cooperate with ARF Dashnaktsutyun
parliamentary faction and the Federation of Assyrian Organizations
of Armenia is making serious efforts towards the recognition of the
Assyrian Genocide.

Meanwhile, Irina Gasparyan noted progress in solution of the Assyrian
community’s problems. The Assyrian language is taught in several
Armenian schools, she said.

According to her, there is no discrimination against the Assyrians
in Armenia. The Assyrians consider Armenia their homeland and support
Armenia’s entry into the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), Ms Gasparyan
concluded.

Source: Panorama.am

Experts Speak Of Prospects Of Armenia’s Accession To Eurasian Econom

EXPERTS SPEAK OF PROSPECTS OF ARMENIA’S ACCESSION TO EURASIAN ECONOMIC UNION

21:48 * 14.10.14

Head of the Modus Vivendi center Ara Papoyan believes that Armenia’s
accession to the Eurasian Economic Union raises a number of questions.

“Price rise and other problems are visible and inevitable, while
prospects are bleak and desirable,” he told Tert.am.

Any doubt that a treaty on Armenia’s accession would be signed on
October 10 was reasonable because the treaty was to have been signed
as far back as May.

“If we had signed it in May, we would have been a founding member. At
that time we would all have formed a union, whereas now they are
admitting us to their union,” Mr Papoyan said.

The treaties are to be ratified by the member-states, and Kazakhstan
may set conditions.

“For example, Aliyev may give Nazarbayev five million dollars and
ask him to raise a question that Armenia must make a statement on a
customs station with Artsakh,” he said. Russia may attempt relevant
negotiations on behalf of Armenia as well.

As to whether this uncertainty is to Armenia’s benefit, Mr Papyan said:

“The present situation is bad because if we want to join the Eurasian
Economic Union, but we do not actually join means that West European
countries keep their distance from our country. A worse option is,
however, when a treaty is signed, without being ratified later.”

With respect to the Kazakh president’s position, he said:

“Nazarbayev stated that they made a compromise, which means they made
a concession, and we made another. We do not know anything about the
Armenian side’s concessions. When we know it, we can make assessments.”

As regards Armenia-EU relations, Mr Papyan said:

“Even if we try to maintain the relations, the legal framework will be
entirely different especially since it is not we that will be dealing
with the problem of our borders. For example, we have 5-year import
contracts with numerous European companies, and Russia says we have
to compensate for the difference from our budget.”

Political scientist Levon Shirinyan believes that the treaty on
Armenia’s accession to the Eurasian Economic Union will be ratified
just as it was signed.

It is Armenia’s geographic location that accounts for its decision
in favor of the Eurasian Economic Union.

“We should think of benefiting and avoiding challenges,” he said.

“Russia is mobilizing its potential, and will modernize itself
without the West’s assistance. Russia’s intellectual resources are
limited, and the Armenia people can benefit greatly. By and large,
Armenia and Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh] could turn into a scientific
and industrial union to serve the Eurasian Economic Union’s economic
and scientific-technical market,” Mr Shirinyan said.

He sees a threat in cultural intervention.

“We urgently need a state concept of cultural security, which will
protect our spiritual and cultural heritage. We are not joining Russia,
but we are joining an alliance with dignity,” he said.

“A vast area with enormous resources will be open to us. The point
is whether we will have an elite that would defend our national
interests within this union – about which I have serious doubts,”
Mr Shirinyan said.

Armenia’s accession to the Eurasian Economic Union is an accomplished
fact.

“We know that neither Belarus nor Kazakhstan or, far less so,
Armenia is a democratic state. Therefore, it is going to happen as
Putin orders. We are taking this step for our statehood, without any
confrontation with the West. We are forming an alliance and economic
relations with Russia, which is not aimed at the United States,
Iran or any other nation,” the expert said.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Seyran Ohanyan And Bogdan Klich Discussed The Development Of The Arm

SEYRAN OHANYAN AND BOGDAN KLICH DISCUSSED THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ARMENIAN-POLISH MILITARY COOPERATION

20:41, 14 Oct 2014

Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan received the member of Polish
Senate, the former Minister of National Defense, Bogdan Klich, the
press service of RA Ministry of Defense reports. The parties discussed
the development of the Armenian-Polish military cooperation after
the resignation of Bogdan Klich, as well as issues of mutual interest.

Senator Bogdan Klich arrived in Armenia to participate in the opening
ceremony of a joint Armenian-Polish “Liubava Armenia” enterprise,
to be held on 16 October.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/10/14/seyran-ohanyan-and-bogdan-klich-discussed-the-development-of-the-armenian-polish-military-cooperation/

Zhamanak: We Want Armenia To Look To The West, Says US Ambassador

ZHAMANAK: WE WANT ARMENIA TO LOOK TO THE WEST, SAYS US AMBASSADOR

09:37 * 15.10.14

The paper has talked to US Ambassador John Heffern over Armenia’s
decision to accede to the Eurasian Economic Union.

Addressing President Serzh Sargsyan’s September 3, 2013 statement
expressing the country’s intention to join the Russia-led economic
bloc, the diplomat reportedly said that it is up to any state to
make decisions about membership in different supranational bodies. He
added that the US is more interested to see Armenia look to the West
sometime in the future.

Asked whether Armenia has made the right choice, the ambassador
replied that every country is free to decide on its own future. The
paper further quotes Mr Heffern as saying that he doesn’t find himself
the right person to make judgments about the country’s decision.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Losses In Armenian Electricity System Caused By Aged Network And Non

LOSSES IN ARMENIAN ELECTRICITY SYSTEM CAUSED BY AGED NETWORK AND NON-OPTIMAL MANAGEMENT – TRACTEBEL ENGINEERING S.A.

YEREVAN, October 15./ARKA/. High losses in Armenia’s high-voltage
electricity networks are caused by the aged network and non-optimal
management, Vincent Lambillon, manager of Tractebel Engineering S.A.,
said at the presentation of the report on energy network development
and optimization.

Armenia needs a new infrastructure as energy demand is growing, he
said. Apart from this, optimization may help improve the management
system, he said at a conference on energy loss optimization in Yerevan
on Wednesday.

Lambillion also said his company can propose solutions to reduce
losses.

Tractebel Engineering S.A. is currently implementing two in Armenia
for rehabilitation of electric mains and substations, which is the
first step to reduce losses, he said.

Lambillon noted the company has not studied yet the amount of possible
loss reduction in Armenia, the time and the investments required.

There are two factors contributing to energy losses – technical
and non-technical. The first include losses in the network and the
second is illegal use, bills that are not paid and calculation errors,
Lambillon said.

He said the energy losses have reduced in the last years, from 15%
down to 12%, but are still high as compared to the global 8% level.

According to Electric Networks of Armenia closed joint stock company,
the percentage of losses in relation to total grid output was 12.97%
in 2013 as compared to 13.13% in 2012.

Lambillion said his company is ready to offer long-term and short-term
solutions to the problem and help install special counters measuring
losses in the network.

Tractebel Engineering S.A. is a leading technical consulting company in
energy sector, with an annual turnover of 500 million euros and a staff
of 3,300 experts. The company is represented in some 30 countries.

Tractebel Engineering S.A. has won the tender in Armenia on WB-funded
feasibility studies for Noyemberyan-Larvar 110 kV electric mains. In
2012 the company implemented a “Stress Test” technical assistance
project in the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant.

The company submitted bids for two tender projects implemented in
Armenia by the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

Some earlier reports said the ADB council approved lending of 37
million to Armenia for reconstruction of electric transmission lines.

The project will help the country reconstruct its Soviet-time electric
mains, enhance its management and data transfer systems and modernize
two high-voltage substations.

Tractebel Engineering S.A. cooperates with the Armenian Development
Agency and the Armenia-Belgium Chamber of Commerce and Industry. -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/losses_in_armenian_electricity_system_caused_by_aged_network_and_non_optimal_management_tractebel_en/#sthash.psGXGVzW.dpuf

L’Armenie S’incline 0-3 Face A La France

L’ARMENIE S’INCLINE 0-3 FACE A LA FRANCE

ARMENIE-FRANCE AMICAL A EREVAN

Trois jours après un difficile Armenie-Serbie (1-1) où les
Armeniens realisèrent l’exploit de contrer les Serbes et auraient
meme pu remporter le match -l’Armenie ayant rate un penalty et le but
egalisateur Serbe etant inscrit a la 90e minute- l’equipe d’Armenie qui
avait fourni un effort considerable et privee de ses quatre meilleurs
joueurs etait oppose hier soir a Erevan a l’equipe de France. Dans
un match amical sans veritable enjeu.

Armenie-France amical le 14 octobre 2014 a Erevan (0-3)

Dans ces conditions, l’Armenie n’avait qu’un seul objectif : limiter
les degâts et ne pas etre humiliee par les Bleus sur un score fleuve.

L’equipe de France s’est donc fort logiquement imposee (3-0) face
a une equipe d’Armenie qui etait vaillante en première partie de
jeu mais qui -la fatigue aidant- a flechi en après la pause. Les
francais furent inscrits par Remy (7e), Gignac (sur penalty, 55e)
et Griezmann (84e). Noter que dans le stade Republicain d’Erevan où
près de 8 000 spectateurs avaient pris place -le stade peut contenir
18 000 personnes- les supporters Armeniens ont encourage leur equipe
durant toute la rencontre.

Krikor Amirzayan

mercredi 15 octobre 2014, Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=104306

His Holiness Aram I Visits Iran

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I VISITS IRAN

13:21, 15 Oct 2014

His Holiness Aram I, the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia has
left for Iran today for a pontifical visit. His Holiness will visit
churches and schools in Tehran and New Julfa.

In the city of Isfahan the Catholicos will participate in the events
dedicated to the 350th anniversary of establishment of the St. Savior
Church in New Julfa, will have meetings with religious and state
leaders, and will participate in cultural and religious events.

The visit will last for about two weeks.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/10/15/his-holiness-aram-i-visits-iran/

A Century Later, Private Sarkis Returns To The Streets Of Canakkale

A CENTURY LATER, PRIVATE SARKIS RETURNS TO THE STREETS OF CANAKKALE

Agos Armenian paper, Turkey
Oct 14 2014

Lebanese director Nigol Bezjian’s work titled ‘Canakayna’ is on view
at the 4th Canakkale Biennial, open from September 27 to November 2

EVRİM KAYA [email protected]

Bezjian was inspired by his research on Canakkale to realize this
project. Composed of a video and photographs, the name of the work,
‘Canakayna’ is a pun on the city’s name. Bezjian explains: “To return
to look again is similar to looking at yourself in the mirror. I
first went to Canakkale for the screening of my film ‘I Left My Shoes
in Istanbul. I returned for this project, and I created this work
entirely by thinking about the history and streets of Canakkale.”

In the work, the 15-minute video to be shown as a loop from a screen
mounted on a wall, contains the conversations made by an actor who
wanders the streets of the city wearing the uniform worn by soldiers
who fought at the Battle of Canakkale (also known as the Battle of
Gallipoli, during the Dardanelles Campaign). The actor introduces
himself as ‘Sarkis’ and asks the people he meets how they are. Bezjian
continues: “Sarkis asks the people he comes across on the street,
‘How are you?’ and tries to find out if they need anything. Because he
is a soldier who fought for them a century ago; he wants to know if the
people he went to war for are enjoying themselves, if they are happy.

There were some warm dialogues. Only a single person reacted to the
name Sarkis, and began to talk, saying ‘Before us, Armenians and
Greeks lived here.'”

The other walls of the section allocated to Bezjian’s work features
photographs of Armenian soldiers that served in the army from the
Ottoman period to the present day. There is also a photo of Sevag
Balıkcı in the series, who was murdered on 24 April 2011, the
remembrance day of the Armenian Genocide, whilst carrying out his
military service in Batman. “The history of the army goes further
back than the Republic. As I began to produce this work, I took
into consideration a history of six centuries, because tradition is
continuous,” says Bezjian, and adds that his research has not ended:
“I can’t say the project has concluded. Two days ago, I found a
photograph of an Armenian who served as a pharmacist in the Ottoman
army. I read the diaries of Avedis Cebeciyan. He was a doctor in the
army. In the diaries he kept during the years 1914-1918 he describes
the Battle of Canakkale. This is a simple answer to the rhetoric that
goes, ‘The Armenians were traitors, they joined the Russian Army,’
which is constantly repeated and used as a pretext for the Genocide.

If there were Armenians on that side, there were Armenians on this
side as well. They were at Canakkale together with the Turks.”

http://www.agos.com.tr/haber.php?seo=a-century-later-private-sarkis-returns-to-the-streets-of-canakkale&haberid=8369

Ukrainian Nationalists’ Long Ascent To New Heights Of Power

UKRAINIAN NATIONALISTS’ LONG ASCENT TO NEW HEIGHTS OF POWER

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

Topic: Situation in the South-East of Ukraine

A representative of the Ukrainian Nationalists’ Congress, with a
portrait of Stepan Bandera.

(C) RIA Novosti. Petr Zadorozhny 02:32 14/10/2014

ent-to-New-Heights-of-Power.html

OSCOW, October 13 (RIA Novosti), Ekaterina Blinova – From the
western Ukrainian city of Lviv to the front lines of the civil war,
far-right neo-fascist groups have made their presence felt on and
off the battlefield; these groups started to influence the country’s
national consciousness following the country’s “Orange Revolution”,
and gained an unprecedented level of political and military amid the
Euromaidan coup of February 2014.

As radicals, who sided with the Nazis against Poland and organized
the active purging of the Polish community in the part of Poland,
which was to become western Ukraine, Stepan Bandera and Yaroslav
Stetsko seem like unlikely heroes in the 21st century. However,
this is how they are perceived in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv,
which started the 20th century as a vibrant, Austro-Hungarian melting
pot of Polish, Jewish, Ukrainian and Armenian culture and ended it
as a solidly Ukrainian hotbed of ultra-nationalist and anti-Russian
sentiment. One of the city’s most influential residents is Oleh
Tyahnibok, leader of the right-wing Svoboda Party.

In his 2013 article, “The Return of the Ukrainian Far Right. The
Case of VO Svoboda,” Per Anders Rudling, an Associate Professor
of the Department of History at Lund University (Sweden), wrote:
“Political rituals, processions, re-enactments and sacralization
of memory are characteristic features of the intellectual life
in contemporary Lviv… The 70th anniversary of the German
invasion and [OUN leader] Stetsko’s ‘renewal of Ukrainian statehood’
was re-enacted in Lviv as a popular festival, where parents with
small children waved flags to re-enactors in SS uniforms…
Ultra-nationalist ideologues have found both effective and lucrative
ways to work with entrepreneurs to popularize and disseminate their
narrative to the youth.”

Rudling emphasizes that Tyahnibok’s Svoboda party as well as the
National Socialist parties which banded together to become the Right
Sector claim to be the “heirs” of Bandera’s Organization of
Ukrainian Nationalists-Ukrainian Insurgent Army (OUN-UPA). Along with
the Ukrainian trident and the colors red and black, the organization
uses “a mirror image of the so-called Wolfsangel, or Wolf’s hook,
which was used by several SS divisions and, after the war, by neo-Nazi
organizations,” the professor points out. Rudling explains that the
roots of OUN-UPA lie in “indigenous Ukrainian fascism” which was
“based upon Friedrich Nietzsche, Georges Sorel and Charles Maurras”
as well as the translated works of Hitler and Mussolini.

Ukrainian nationalist organizations, such as the Svoboda party,
have always put an emphasis on cultivating the younger generation,
recruiting new members and involving them in nationalist activities.

Former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko, who Ukrainians voted
out after he’d served his single term in 2005-2010, facilitated
such efforts by altering the Ukrainian school curriculum. Under
his presidency’s educational reforms, OUN-UPA was glorified;
he declared Stepan Bandera, its leader, a national hero of Ukraine.

Rudling underscores that the state went about actively “emphasizing
the OUN-UPA’s ‘patriotism, national solidarity, self-sacrifice, and
idealistic commitment to common goals and values’,” while turning a
blind eye to its involvement in the holocaust and collaboration with
Nazi Germany.

Between 2006 and 2010, Valentyn Nalyvaichenko, the director of
the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU), played an important role in
disseminating “the historical truth of the past of the Ukrainian
people,” presenting the mythological conceptions of OUN-UPA’s
“self-sacrificial heroism” and a large-scale Soviet genocide of
Ukrainians, the professor notes. Following the events of February 2014,
Valentin Nalyvaichenko reassumed the post of SBU chief.

In his article, written in 2012-2013, Rudling notes that Svoboda
party facilitated the emergence of its radical wing, headed by Yurii
Mykhalchyshyn – Tyahnibok’s adviser on ideological matters. According
to the professor, Mykhalchyshyn served as a link between Svoboda
and the so-called autonomous nationalists. The key component of the
Ukrainian ultra-nationalism subculture was street violence and the
cult of force. According to Rudling, in 2011, three years before the
Euromaidan coup, Mykhalchyshyn said: “Our Banderite army will cross
the Dnipro and throw that blue-ass gang [Party of Regions], which
today usurps the power, out of Ukraine. That will make those Asiatic
dogs shut their ugly mouths.” In three short years, Mykhalchyshyn
would get his chance.

During the Euromaidan coup of February 2014, young Ukrainians were used
as the main fighting force of the Ukrainian nationalist movement,
and this continues to be the case. The Right Sector, a radical
paramilitary organization headed by Dmitro Yarosh, unified the
ultra-nationalist groups. When Donetsk and Lugansk voted to secede
from an increasingly hostile Ukraine, many Right Sector supporters
joined nationalist volunteer squads such as the Azov Battalion and the
Ukrainian Volunteer Corps (DUK), all-volunteer far-right paramilitary
detachments, whose battle insignia is the Social-National Assembly
logo, the altered Wolfsangel. While millions in Ukraine, Russia, and
throughout the world pray quietly for peace following the September
ceasefire talks, Azov Battalion commander Andriy Biletskiy stated that
any “attempt to reach an agreement concerning Ukrainian soil with
separatists [is] obviously…a betrayal,” according to the BBC.

Since ultra-nationalists have become a heavy armed military force,
the question remains if the Ukrainian policy-makers will be able to
maintain control over the ugly genie they let out of the bottle.

http://en.ria.ru/analysis/20141014/194044957/Ukrainian-Nationalists-Long-Asc