Ukraine Will Try To Move Karabakh Issue From Dead Point

UKRAINE WILL TRY TO MOVE KARABAKH ISSUE FROM DEAD POINT

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 16:53:24 – 13/07/2012

Assuming the OSCE Chairmanship in 2013, Ukraine will try to move the
Transdniestria and Nagorno Karabakh conflicts from the dead point,
said president of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovich.

He stated that Ukraine has already started receiving the documents
on the unsolved conflicts and if it fails to solve them definitely,
it will at least try to preserve the peace.

He said he has good relations with the presidents of Armenia and
Azerbaijan and he thinks it will promote progress in the settlement
of the issue.

Serzh Sargsyan has recently been invited by Yanukovich to Kiev to
watch Euro 2012 final match.

PAP leader Gagik Tsarukyan has friendly relations with Yanukovich.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics26848.html

On 12 July President Bako Sahakyan Signed A Decree

ON 12 JULY PRESIDENT BAKO SAHAKYAN SIGNED A DECREE

Thursday, 12 July 2012 15:02

On 12 July President Bako Sahakyan signed a decree appointing Hakob
Ghahramanyan chairman of the NKR State Commission on regulating public
services and economic competition with 5 year term of office.

CENTRAL INFORMATION DEPARTMENT

OF THE OFFICE OF THE ARTSAKH REPUBLIC PRESIDENT

http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=759:-on-12-july-president-bako-sahakyan-signed-a-decree&catid=11:official&Itemid=23

Hraparak: Rima Demirchyan Makes Revelations

HRAPARAK: RIMA DEMIRCHYAN MAKES REVELATIONS

Panorama.am
14/07/2012

Hraparak daily writes about Rima Demirchyan’s book Memory. The book
starts with Karen Demirchyan’s birth and ends with events that followed
the attack on the Armenian parliament on October 27, 1999.

“According to official election results, Karen received 40.52 percent
of the vote, while according to protocols, he got nearly 75 percent
of votes. CEC chairman Bezirjyan, who was involved in fraud in the
elections, after settling in U.S., apparently decided to clear himself
and published a brochure saying that Karen Demirchyan got 73 percent
of the vote…”

According to Rima Demirchyan, after the National Security Council
meeting Karen Demirchyan had a presentiment, or rather he realized
the possibility of impending danger.

Sarop’s Armed Struggle

SAROP’S ARMED STRUGGLE
by Paolo Martino

Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso

July 12 2012
Italy

Arafat’s bodyguard, then on the front line in the Armenian armed
struggle and for 10 years a prisoner in a Syrian jail. “When I came
out, everything had changed. The USSR no longer existed”. The meeting
with Sarop, in Beirut’s Armenian quarter. The second episode of the
report “From the Caucasus to Beirut”

Dawra wakes up while the night slips into the sea, followed by a
trail of fog. Still sleepy on the sidewalks, Syrian hand laborers
take part in the day labor lottery. Dawra, “the roundabout”, is
the epicenter where every trip starts and ends. To the North-East,
Junie, a Maronite stronghold guarding Tripoli and Syria; to the West,
the highway, an aorta that chokes off in the jam of Martyrs’ Square;
to the South-East, the Mountain, refuge for the mosaic of minorities
that have populated Lebanon throughout the centuries. But all around,
lapping the sidewalks of the roundabout, is Burj Hammoud, Beirut’s
quarter where the soul of the Armenian minority nests, after having
come here a century ago following a journey with no return.

“If you think you have understood Lebanon it’s because it was not
explained to you well enough”.

Lebanese saying

“Sarop’s shape appears in the frame of the door to Rafi’s factory,
in the backstreets of Burj Hammoud. The two old friends allow each
other a long embrace, surrounded by sewing machines, presses, turns and
hammers. “Ever since I’ve known him, Sarop is always in a hurry. And
when he leaves, you never know when he’s going to come back. Once,
in the ’70s – Rafi smiles- he came to say goodbye to me saying he was
leaving on a very short trip, just a few days. I saw him again after
ten years”. Rafi has worked for weeks on organizing this meeting with
Sarop. The moment for greetings and tea gives me time to go over my
memories again and organize my thoughts.

In the early ’70s, Lebanon was already a powder keg: Palestinian
fighters, come out of Jordan after the Black September, moved to
Lebanese land. Society struggled to hide the tension, distracted only
by the economic boom and desire for normality. In this climate, also
the Armenian community, on its third generation and comprising as
many as 300.000-member, started developing political demands, first
and foremost the recognition from the International community of the
genocide inflicted by the Ottoman government sixty years earlier.

The encounter with the Palestinian armed movements served as a
catalyst. On October 14th, 1974, Yasser Arafat gave his first speech
at the UN with the holster on his belt: thanks to the armed struggle,
the Palestinian issue was now part of the worldwide agenda. For some
Armenians, the way to obtain equal visibility had been paved. At
noon on October 22nd, 1975, the Turkish Ambassador Danis Tunaligil
was murdered. The assassination, whose responsibility was claimed by
the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia, gave way to a
decade of repeated armed attacks on Ankara’s diplomatic staff, Turkish
air lines, representation seats of Turkey and its allies. Operations
caused victims in France, Italy, Belgium, Switzerland, Greece, USA,
Iran and Turkey and were planned in Beirut, which had in the meantime
sunk into the vortex of civil war.

“Why did you choose the armed struggle?”. In Rafi’s office time runs
fast, there is no way to dodge around the issue. “What did you say
your name was?” Sarop answers with a question. “Paolo”. He stares at
me. “You know, Paolo, I saw many like you, years ago, coming to Beirut
with their pencil and notebook to interview, study, understand the
war. After a few weeks, I would see them going around with a machine
gun on their shoulder and their war name, enlisted in this or that
other militia”. He pauses. “War only speaks one language. If you want
to survive, you learn it”. Middle-aged, Sarop has the tone and the
look of a fully self-confident man.

-The reportage — -“What started your armed struggle?” On his face, a
melancholic smile. “Without the Palestinian revolution, nothing would
have happened. Even the name I bear, it was given to me by Yasser
Arafat. One day, he told me ‘We Palestinians are fighting so history
does not forget us like it has done you Armenians’. So I understood
we had to put up an armed struggle too”. For a few years, Sarop
served as Arafat’s personal bodyguard, until the Palestinian leader
was forced to flee Lebanon because of the Israeli occupation. Soon
after, the world witnessed the massacres in the Palestinian refugee
camps of Sabra and Chatila by the Christian phalangist militias,
who had often used their arms against the Armenians as well.

“In September 1979, about 200 Armenians were lined up in front of a
wall and shot to death. The phalangists did not tolerate that in this
Country there were Christians who did not follow their orders”. Only
three years earlier, right outside Burj Hammoud, 4.000 Palestinians
were slaughtered in the siege of the Tall Zatar refugee camp and in
the Karantina massacre. Rivers of blood ran across the perimeter of
the Armenians quarter. “But our dead were avenged and if their number
was not too high, it was thanks to our secret armed organizations”.

Sarop played a leading role and was a witness in this story only until
1980. He was then the victim of an attack that kneecapped him, and was
taken to Romania to get treatment. Here, in the shadow of the Soviet
godfather, Syrian agents approached him to have his collaboration,
given the huge interests Damascus exercised on Lebanon. With his
refusal, he was doomed. “I spent ten years in a Syrian prison and
when I came out, nothing was the same. The USSR no longer existed,
Armenia was a free Country, the war in Lebanon had come to an end. In
the Palestinian camps, Marx and Lenin’s portraits had been replaced
with the verses of the Qur’an. And the revolution had died”.

“Do you still believe that killing Turkish diplomats was justified?”.

Sarop checks his watch. “Until 1915, my family used to live in a large
farm. My grandfather, surviving the genocide, ate sand in the Iraqi
desert during the deportation before finding himself in a filthy shed
in Beirut”. The pace of his voice speeds up: “But nobody cried for
those tragedies then. I’m sure not going to cry the death of Turkish
officials today. Armed struggle, right or wrong, is now over, anyway.

And we obtained a lot. Many Countries have recognized the genocide
and others will. However – Sarop is already standing up – the souls
of the hundreds of thousands of victims of the genocide are still
marching in lines on the Anatolian plateaus, awaiting justice. I swore
I would never walk that land as long as it is occupied by the Turks,
but you are free to go there. Go, you will still find the dead souls.”

>>From my diary, October 6thSarop comes out of the office annoyed for
having to prove the moral legitimacy of his armed group’s operations.

In war, indeed, one principle stands, by which the end justifies the
means. As for the ongoing uprising in Syria, he himself admitted:
“I hold strong resentment towards the Assad dynasty, it owes me ten
years of my life. But in this moment, its regime is the only one
that can protect the Armenian minority in Syria. Until alternatives
are found, it is good for the situation not to evolve”. Victims and
murderers hold hands.

Rafi takes me back through the streets of Burj Hammoud. Signs, road
signs, merchants screaming: all in Armenian, as if to tie again a knot
to the thread of continuity between this community and its origins, a
thread that history cut off a century ago. Plaster coming off the walls
reveals hails of bullets that riddled the quarter in 20 years of civil
war, even though the Armenians had declared their neutrality right from
the beginning. “Rafi, did you believe in the armed fighting too?” The
alleys finally open on Dawra and all of a sudden Rafi stops: “Right
in this spot, there was a small market where they sold Kalashnikovs
and grenades. On that street” he points at one of Dawra’s tangents,
“my brother was killed by a bomb. Sarop was shot by a running car
in front of those bar tables. He made it thanks to his bodyguard’s
sacrifice. You understand what Sarop meant when he said that war only
speaks one language?”

The taxi is leaving Dawra, where history has left the story melting
with the present. My thoughts are on the challenge Sarop cast when he
left: “The ghosts of my people still roam in the wind of the Anatolian
plateau. Go, you will still find them there”.

http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Dossiers/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/Sarop-s-armed-struggle-119636

Sos Sargsyan Is In Hospital

SOS SARGSYAN IS IN HOSPITAL

ARMENPRESS
12 July, 2012
YEREVAN

Yerevan, July 12, Armenpress: The Republic Armenia’s national artist,
popular actor Sos Sargsyan is in hospital. The actor was to participate
in the Academy Awards ceremony to be taken place in the Parajanov
museum, but he was taken to hospital.

As Armenian Deputy Minister of Culture Arthur Poghosyan noted in the
interview with “Armenpress”, now Sos Sargsyan is sick, but “there is
nothing serious”. “Now he is under doctors’ supervision”,-outlined
the deputy minister.

He also added that they have spoken to Sos Sargsyan’s wife Nelli
Sargsyan, who assured that the actor’s state is stable. “Armenpress”
wishes the great artist to soon recover.

Armenian Authorities Are Absolutely Indifferent To Assyrians

ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES ARE ABSOLUTELY INDIFFERENT TO ASSYRIANS

arminfo
Thursday, July 12, 16:34

The Armenian authorities are absolutely indifferent to the
Assyrians living in Armenia, President of the Federation of Assyrian
Organizations of Armenia Irina Gasparyan told journalists on Thursday.

She said that officially there are 3,400 Assyrians in Armenia while
in reality their number is almost 7,000.

“During the census 2001 the census officer asked my daughter what her
nationality was. She said ‘Assyrian’ but he still registered her as
‘Armenian’ just because her father was Armenian,” Gasparyan said.

As regards the Assyrian Genocide monument unveiled in Armenia Apr 25
2012, she said that it was just a pre-election PR move.

“No single Assyrian was involved in that project. Nobody even cared
to ask us if we liked that monument or not. As a result, we found lots
of mistakes in its inscriptions. So, what they actually cared for was
not the monument itself but their own political goals,” Gasparyan said.

She noted that the Armenians and the Assyrians should closely
cooperate as their fates are very similar and both were once victims
to a genocide.

Armenia Active OSCE Member – Lamberto Zannier

ARMENIA ACTIVE OSCE MEMBER – LAMBERTO ZANNIER

news.am
July 12, 2012 | 13:48

YEREVAN.- The OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier said Armenia
is an active member of the organization.

The Secretary General said that the 20 years of Armenia’s participation
in the CSCE/OSCE marked this year was “an important milestone” and
welcomed the reform path that the country had embarked on.

“The OSCE stands ready to fully support the country in its profound
regulatory, economic, police, judicial, and democratic reforms,
including through the OSCE Office in Yerevan which has been closely
involved in the reform process,” he told reporters in Yerevan on
Thursday.

In his turn, Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said Armenia
contributed to the election of Lamberto Zannier as the head of OSCE
expressing confidence that Zannier, as an experienced diplomat,
will make contribution to the development of the organization.

“OSCE plays an important role from Vancouver to Vladivostok,” he said.

Bus Wars: Tsarukyan’S Free Rides Creates Problems For Commercial Dri

BUS WARS: TSARUKYAN’S FREE RIDES CREATES PROBLEMS FOR COMMERCIAL DRIVERS
By Siranuysh Gevorgyan

ArmeniaNow
12.07.12 | 16:23

About 50 bus drivers serving the Abovyan-Yerevan and
Charentsavan-Yerevan routes, resumed their services today after a
one-day strike in protest of a free bus service that was cutting into
their business.

Drivers with the King de Luxe Company complain that the buses belonging
to tycoon Gagik Tsarukyan’s charitable foundation offer free rides
along the same routes and take away their passengers.

Consequently the drivers of public buses lose money and hardly cover
fuel expenses.

Gagik Tsarukyan Foundation’s free buses were initially meant for
students from Abovyan (Kotayk province) studying in Yerevan. However,
in February, prior to the parliamentary elections, the foundation
increased the number of free buses, and made them available for the
public at large. (Tsarukyan is chairman of Prosperous Armenia Party.)

The owner of King de Luxe Company – which holds rights to the routes
– is Artur Harutyunyan. Harutyunyan is Tsarukyan’s godchild, but was
at odds with his influential godfather, and quit the PAP and joined
the Republicans before the April elections. According to some news
speculations, Tsarukyan is punishing his “disobedient” godchild
through the free bus service, successfully driving him to bankruptcy.

King de Luxe has turned to the State Commission for the Protection
of Economic Competition of Armenia (SCPEC) and Armenia’s Ministry of
Transport and Communications. SCPEC press secretary Gayane Sahakyan
told ArmeniaNow they received the appeal ten days ago, and are now
considering it, and if they find a violation of competition, they
will take respective measures.

Economist Samvel Avagyan told ArmeniaNow that it is a case of
“classical dumping” but not illegal.

“That charitable company is interconnected with another company
which has business interest, in this case with renowned businessman
Gagik Tsarukyan, so conditionally it can be called dumping. However,
according to our legislation, a charitable company cannot be accused
of dumping,” Avagyan says.

Meanwhile, the free bus rides continue, and responses from PAP say
there are no personal or political motivations.

“Those criminal-like businessmen unable to manage their businesses try
to blame the charitable foundation. Those drivers forced to strike have
nothing in common with the personal interests of the route owners or
the lack of talent in business,” states Elinar Vardanyan, PAP member,
lawmaker and chairwoman of NA Standing Committee on Protection of
Human Rights and Public Affairs.

OSCE PA Azerbaijani Delegation Was In Absurd Situation – Armenian De

OSCE PA AZERBAIJANI DELEGATION WAS IN ABSURD SITUATION – ARMENIAN DELEGATION HEAD

news.am
July 12, 2012 | 12:41

YEREVAN. – Azerbaijan once again appeared in an absurd situation at
the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe Parliamentary
Assembly (OSCE PA) session, which was held in Monaco on July 5-9. Head
of Armenia’s delegation at the Assembly, and ruling Republican Party
of Armenia’s National Assembly (NA) Faction member, Artashes Geghamyan
said this while addressing the NA.

During his speech delivered at PA plenary session on Monday,
Geghamyan cited Azerbaijani official Ziyafet Askerov who, during a
news conference, had stated that the OSCE Minsk Group mediators come
to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict’s line of contact as tourists. Also,
Askerov had said the OSCE is a defunct organization.

“I ‘congratulated’ the presidents of US, Russia, and France for
being members in a defunct organization. Only Azerbaijani officials
could have done such foolish thing and insult and make enemies out
of the superpowers.

Naturally, the delegations understood the standards by which the
Azerbaijani delegates are guided,” noted Geghamyan.

Also, he informed that the Azerbaijani delegation was offended by his
words that there is a civilizational incongruity between the Armenian
and Azerbaijani peoples.

Armenian FM Warns Turkey Against Dead-End Rapprochement Steps

ARMENIAN FM WARNS TURKEY AGAINST DEAD-END RAPPROCHEMENT STEPS

PanARMENIAN.Net
July 12, 2012 – 15:01 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – For 97 years, Turkey has been avoiding serious
steps to normalize ties with Armenia and face its history, Armenian
Foreign Minister said.

As Edward Nalbandian stated during a news conference with OSCE
Secretary General Lamberto Zannier, “if the Turkey continues with
this line of action for the next 3 years, suggesting useless steps,
the result is well-known.”

The Foreign Minister further commented on recent remarks by his Turkish
counterpart. According to Ahmet Davutoglu’s statement, on the threshold
of 100th anniversary of the Genocide, the official Ankara initiated
a 3-step plan, including work with Armenian Diaspora, development of
a new document and a new, subtler diplomacy with Armenia. However,
to make the plan possible, Armenia must “pull troops from a part of
Azeri territories,” Davutoglu said.

“In contrast to Ankara suggestions, the international community is
suggesting another 3-step plan: ratification of Turkish-Armenian
Protocols without preconditions, the document implementation and
refusal from attempts to link rapprochement with Karabakh conflict
settlement or interfere with the issue,” Armenian official said.