Moscow’s Answer To Seiran Ohanyan

MOSCOW’S ANSWER TO SEIRAN OHANYAN

Haikazn Ghahriyan, Editor-in-Chief
Comments – 02 March 2015, 12:06

On February 28 the enemy undertook a reconnaissance-in-force. The front
units of the Defense Army prevented the advancement of the enemy’s
special units and pushed them back to their starting positions. During
the fight 2 Armenian servicemen were killed, the Defense Army informed.

On the previous day the RA minister of defense Seiran Ohanyan held an
interview with the Russian Regnum and extended hope that in case of
military actions Russia will fulfill its obligations. In other words,
will intervene to help the Armenian side, as is stipulated by the
Armenian-Russian agreement.

It is hard to tell why Seiran Ohanyan made this statement. Does he
believe that the Russians will fulfill their obligations or does he
want to leave the Russians “in debt”?

One thing is obvious – if military actions start, Russia will not
fulfill its obligations to Armenia. First, it is strategic agreements
with Azerbaijan and Russia. Second, Russia will only intervene to
fulfill those agreements, i.e. to shift the status quo. Russia has
already broken the balance in the region in favor of Azerbaijan.

When this was brought up a year ago, it received a backlash but
this has been so obvious during the past year that nobody argues,
even the pro-Russian ones. And because the official circles of Moscow
have started speaking about it.

Many have noticed that the border incidents in Armenia and Artsakh
usually coincide with some regional developments. Besides, most
people have realized that if Russia wants, Azerbaijan will not shoot
at the borders.

The Armenian army remains the only organization that protects the
country’s sovereignty and is capable of resolving the issues of defense
and security. In this respect, the Armenian army has an exceptional
role in the region because it is not a consumer of security but creator
of security. This has a big value in international relations, and it
still maintains Armenia in the prospect of international relations.

Azerbaijan and its army are, on the contrary, a consumer of security
and a source of instability. This circumstance underscores the
importance and value of the Armenian army.

The problem is to preserve this value. Of course, in a global situation
no separate unit can fulfill security issues at full, and it requires
broad foreign cooperation in the sphere of security. However, it
should not be in a system which objectively becomes a threat to
security for Armenia.

By a curious repetition, the border incidents coincide with evocation
of the Russian obligations. Apparently, the Russians are trying to
let the Armenians know that there is no need to rely on them. In
other words, Russia is being honest to the Armenians in this matter.

On these days Andranik Ozanyan’s 150th anniversary was marked. In
the 1920s he was asked in Paris that he said the Russians would help
us. I am sorry, I was mistaken, he said.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/comments/view/33708#sthash.wFIDa51d.dpuf

Kuwaiti Amb. meets Armenian PM

Kuwait News Agency, Kuwait
Feb 28 2015

Kuwaiti Amb. meets Armenian PM

28/02/2015 | 05:03 PM | Kuwait News

Kuwaiti Ambassador to Armenia Bassam Al-Qabandi meets Armenian Prime
Minister Hovik Abrahamyan

KUWAIT, Feb 28 (KUNA) — Kuwaiti Ambassador to Armenia Bassam
Al-Qabandi met Saturday Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan to
discuss arrangements for his visit to Kuwait next month.

In a press statement, the Ambassador Al-Qabandi noted that the meeting
also tackled the strong friendship relations between the two
countries.

He noted that he has also conveyed to the Armenian Premier the
greetings of His Highness the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak
Al-Hamad Al-Sabah.

The Ambassador added that Abrahamyan’s planned visit to Kuwait came
within the framework of the concerted efforts to expand bilateral
cooperation in various domains, especially the commercial one.

He stated that a number of cooperation agreements are expected to be
signed during the Armenian PM’s visit to Kuwait. (end) ibi

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.kuna.net.kw/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=2427274&language=en

Les Arméniens manifestent devant l’Ambassade d’Azerbaïdjan à Buenos

ARMENIENS-ARGENTINE
Les Arméniens manifestent devant l’Ambassade d’Azerbaïdjan à Buenos
Aires pour protester contre les massacres de Soumgaït, Bakou et
Kirovabad

La communauté arménienne d’Argentine a organisé hier une manifestation
devant l’Ambassade d’Azerbaïdjan à Buenos Aires afin de protester
contre les massacres d’Arméniens à Soumgaït, Bakou et Kirovabad
organisés entre 1988 et 1990 par les autorités azéries. Les Arméniens
désiraient également informer l’opinion publique d’Argentine sur la
politique anti-arménienne, agressive et raciste de l’Azerbaïdjan ainsi
que les agissements des diplomates azéris à Buenos Aires. Ari
Asadourian, l’un des membres du mouvement de la Jeunesse arménienne
qui avait pris part à la manifestation a affirmé
From: Baghdasarian

Les Armeniens De Provence : Un Magazine Au Coeur D’une Communaute

LES ARMENIENS DE PROVENCE : UN MAGAZINE AU COEUR D’UNE COMMUNAUTE

FRANCE

Depuis 600 ans, une forte communaute armenienne est presente a
Marseille. Initialement, il s’agissait de marchands qui ont importe
ici l’art de peindre les cotonnades. L’un d’eux, Jean Althen,
developpera près d’Avignon la culture de la garance. A la fin du 19e
siècle et au debut du 20e, c’est donc dans le Sud-Est de la France
que se sont refugies des dizaines de milliers d’Armeniens rescapes
des persecutions perpetrees par les autorites turques. Aujourd’hui,
les Armeniens de Provence sont quelque 150 000.

A l’occasion du Centenaire du genocide qui a demarre en avril 1915,
“La Provence” publie le vendredi 13 fevrier un magazine de 136 pages
pour presenter les multiples visages de la communaute armenienne de
notre region. Nourri par les archives de notre journal et par des fonds
publics, il retrace les etapes douloureuses qui ont marque l’arrivee de
ces familles deracinees. Il s’interesse egalement a la place occupee
aujourd’hui par les Armeniens de Provence dans les mondes economique,
culturel, sportif, etc., a leur combat pour la memoire, a la manière
dont ils maintiennent leurs traditions, aux nombreuses operations de
solidarite qui les unissent, etc.

Parmi les temps forts du magazine “Les Armeniens de Provence”, des
interviews de Charles Aznavour, Robert Guediguian et Yves Ternon,
le programme des rendez-vous organises pour la commemoration du
Centenaire du genocide, de nombreux documents et temoignages inedits
confies par nos lecteurs, etc.

En complement de la sortie de ce magazine, une rubrique speciale est
creee sur LaProvence.com : elle permet notamment de decouvrir des
films rares issus des collections de l’Ina et d’avoir accès a des
archives photographiques et sonores.

Les Armeniens de Provence (serie La Provence – Histoire). Sortie le
vendredi 13 fevrier, disponible dans les kiosques de la region et
sur LaProvence.com (espace Boutique). Prix : 3,5 euros.

lundi 2 mars 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

Three Detained On Suspicion Of Murdering Another Serviceman

THREE DETAINED ON SUSPICION OF MURDERING ANOTHER SERVICEMAN

14:46 | March 2,2015 | Official

Three persons have been detained in connection with the death of
soldier Albert Safaryan, Armenia’s Investigative Committee reports.

Subaltern Arayik Sukiasyan, soldier Gevorg Ghazaryan and junior
sergeant Mihran Hovakimyan were detained within the framework of
a criminal case launched by the Chief Investigation Department of
Armenia’s Investigative Committee.

They are suspected of committing crimes under Article 359 (Part 1 and
2) of the Armenian Criminal Code (breach of relations, prescribed by
field manuals, between servicemen not subordinated to each other,
expressed in humiliation of the person’s honor and self-esteem,
persecution or violence) and Article 358.1 (Battery or other violent
actions against the commander related to the performance of his
military duties).

Albert E Safaryan, 19, was fatally wounded on his combat duty post on
February 27. Armenia’s Investigative Service has instituted a criminal
proceeding into the incident based on the provisions prescribed by
Article 110 (1) of the Criminal Code (causing somebody to commit
suicide).

From: Baghdasarian

http://en.a1plus.am/1207056.html

Karine Danielyan: Oil And Gas Prospecting Near Sevan Will Be Devasta

KARINE DANIELYAN: OIL AND GAS PROSPECTING NEAR SEVAN WILL BE DEVASTATING FOR THE LAKE

by Karina Manukyan

Monday, March 2, 16:23

Oil and gas prospecting near Sevan will be devastating for the lake,
Head of the Association for Sustainable Development Karine Danielyan
told ArmInfo.

Earlier, EcoLur Ngo reported tha the Nature Protection Ministry
issued a positive opinion to “Blackstars Energy Armenia” LLC for
prospecting oil and gas in the areas of Hayravanq, Tsaghkashen and
Noradus villages dealing with fishing in the basin of Lake Sevan. The
permission is granted for a period of 2015-2016. The activities will
cost $11 million.

Meanwhile, Armenian environmentalists already alarm of the possible
impacts of the prospecting. “First, it runs contrary to the Law
on Lake Sevan. Second, we can already see the negative impacts of
oil prospecting in the Caspian Sea. We are sure that such activity
will be disastrous for Lake Sevan,” Danielyan said. She is sure that
environmentalists will not allow oil and gas prospecting to be launched
in the basin of the Lake.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=4A0689E0-C0DF-11E4-8BBA0EB7C0D21663

Russia And Region: Moscow Floats Ideas On Ensuring Railroad Link Wit

RUSSIA AND REGION: MOSCOW FLOATS IDEAS ON ENSURING RAILROAD LINK WITH ARMENIA VIA GEORGIA

ANALYSIS | 02.03.15 | 10:09

By NAIRA HAYRUMYAN

ArmeniaNow correspondent

Some Russian media in recent days and weeks have been publishing
analytical forecasts regarding how Russia, by introducing troops
into Georgia, will try to establish a direct link with Armenia. In
particular, this is what an article that recently appeared in Lenta.ru,
a web portal standing close to the Kremlin, says. Many believe this
article is a sort of “probe” to test the situation.

The article notes that Russia could take advantage of the problems
of ethnic minorities in Georgia, in particular, Ossetians and the
Kabardian peoples to send troops for their “protection” as Russian
citizens (many of them have received Russian passports) and open a
land route to Armenia. Many residents of Georgia’s Armenian-populated
region of Javakheti also have Russian passports.

Several factors show that such a scenario is quit real. Firstly,
Russia has the experience of “protecting its citizens” in the Crimea,
Abkhazia, South Ossetia and in Donbass, and Georgia is not the
most powerful opponent for Russia. Secondly, the current Georgian
leadership, which is controlled by ex-prime minister, leader of the
Georgian Dream party Bidzina Ivanishvili from behind the scenes, is
openly called proteges of Moscow. Despite the fact that the Georgian
leadership still cannot overcome the powerful pro-Western public
opinion, it is obvious that at the right time it may open the way
for Russia in Georgia.

Last week saw another meeting at the level of deputy ministers of
Georgia and Russia in Prague. Zurab Abashidze, who represents Georgia,
said after the meeting that Georgia is ready for improving relations
with Russia if the border between the two states is controlled by
a Swiss company. (The agreement on this was signed in 2009, when
Georgia agreed to Russia’s entry into the World Trade Organization).

However, the Russian representative, Grigoriy Karasin, said that
discussed was the issue of opening the Abkhazian railway. The Georgian
Foreign Ministry denied this information, however, the events in
Georgia itself indicated that this was likely true.

Georgia is going to privatize and sell a 25-percent stake in the
railway, and as the most likely buyer it calls Russia. The Russian
company, Rosneft, recently bought a majority stake of the port of
Poti and there are no obstacles to buying the railway, in particular,
its Abkhazian section.

In Georgia, this turn of events may cause a new political turmoil,
because the opening of the road with Abkhazia will require Tbilisi’s
rejection of rights to its former regions. In particular, there
are already talks about the probability of early elections and
that Ivanishvili’s party may be removed from power. The question is
whether Ivanishvili will manage to make the deal with Russia before
the elections.

In Armenia, the opening of the Abkhazian railway from a purely economic
point of view is seen as a positive development – it will provide a
cheap and safe way to Russia. However, from the political point of view
the opening of the railroad will mark the return of Georgia, and with
it of the entire South Caucasus, to the borders of the Russian Empire.

From: Baghdasarian

http://armenianow.com/commentary/analysis/61051/armenia_russia_caucasus_troops_georgia

Agassi’s American dream built on toughest of love

The Times (London), UK
February 28, 2015 Saturday

Agassi’s American dream built on toughest of love

by Matthew Syed

Andre Agassi has spent most of his life trying to come to terms with
his childhood. He started playing tennis in his cot, a mobile of balls
hung above his head, a ping-pong bat taped to his hand, his dad
standing above encouraging little Andre to hit, hit, hit.

When he was old enough to walk, he played in the yard against the
so-called Dragon, a mechanical device custommade by his father to spit
tennis balls from a steep angle at more than 100mph in the Las Vegas
haze. Agassi estimates that he hit one million balls per year
throughout his childhood, his dad screaming every time he missed.

At the age of 13, he was packed off to boarding school to play yet
more tennis at the Bollettieri academy in Florida. “It was more like a
prison than a tennis academy,” he says. “It was on an old tomato farm
and the courts stretched one after the other into the distance. We
only went to school for four hours a day. The rest of the time we
played tennis.”

To meet Agassi in the flesh is to feel the contradictions in one of
the most revelatory of modern sporting lives. He hated tennis, but
loved it, too. He begrudged his upbringing, but acknowledges that it
laid the foundations for everything he has achieved in life. He
resented his dad, but has gradually come to recognise that for all the
pain, mistakes and shouting matches, this complex man, still railing
against the world at the age of 84, acted out of love.

“He is an extraordinary and complex man,” Agassi says. “I have spent a
lifetime trying to understand him. His mum was a Russian Armenian who
moved to Tehran after the Armenian genocide in 1915. Dad grew up in
Tehran as a Christian and he had some pretty horrible experiences.
They were very poor. I think that taught him to fight. He took up
boxing, won two golden gloves and competed in two Olympic Games for
Iran.

“When he came to America, he had one ambition: ‘I will spend my life
trying to create an environment where my kids can have the one thing I
never had, money’. He conditioned us to leave our heritage behind. His
attitude was: ‘We are Americans. We are going to live the American
dream.’ He didn’t want us to learn [Persian]. We changed our name from
Aghassian to Agassi. He didn’t want anyone to think we were Muslim.”

The parental urge for betterment, for leaving a former world behind,
will strike a chord with many second generation immigrants. So will the
vision of a tortured dad, who felt that everyone was against him,
seeking to ensure that his children had every opportunity to succeed.
But the sheer intensity of what Agassi endured will seem extreme, even
to immigrant eyes. He was pushed, cajoled, urged and goaded, every
spare hour, of every day.

“The irony is that I had it pretty easy,” Agassi says. “It was my
three older siblings who really felt the heat of my father’s ambition.
I was the baby. Thank god he had the sense to save me from himself.
That is why he sent me away at 13 to the tennis academy. Our
relationship was on the brink of self destruction. He just couldn’t
stop himself pushing, pushing, pushing.”

The experience has shaped Agassi’s attitude profoundly to his own
children from his marriage to Steffi Graf: Jaden, 13, and Jaz, 11. “I
didn’t want to make the same mistakes,” he says. “Even when the
children were very young, I didn’t define their ambitions for them. I
try to let them decide what they are passionate about. But once they
define it, I hold them to a standard of commitment. Their dreams
become my dreams and I won’t allow them to stop caring just because
they have had a disappointment or two.

“I am not saying it is easy to get the balance right. My daughter used
to ride horses and she flew off a couple of years ago, and the horse
stomped around a foot from her head. And it changed her on a dime. She
didn’t want to get back on her horse. And that was kind of an
interesting one for me. I don’t know if I handled it right. I didn’t
push her to carry on, but that was because I didn’t want to see her on
the back of a 1,200lb animal.

“My son had a tough experience, too. He is very into baseball and he
was hit by the ball and broke his palate last year. I would have
understood if that had affected him. But he went out the next day and
on the very first pitch, he hit it to deep right. That took character.
I celebrated that. That is what I try to do with my kids: to give them
context. I don’t tell them what to do, but I encourage them to keep
going at the things they love, even when the going gets tough.”

Perhaps it is the experience of mentoring his children that has
triggered a reinterpretation of his upbringing. In recent years he has
come not merely to respect, but to admire his father, a man so
vigilant to insults, so proud, so driven by an inner turmoil that he
never fully resolved, that he would step out of his car and offer to
fight anyone who cut him up on the Vegas strip.

“It is only recently that I have realised how difficult life has been
for him,” he says. “Even my tennis career was tough on him. He watched
me play live on average once a year. I never knew when that time would
be. It might be in Palm Springs. It might be in LA. But he never
missed a single match on TV, wherever I was playing in the world. He
would record it and watch it 50 times. He lived and died with it.
Watching me lose, watching me suffer. He was suffering, too.

“What I can say for certain is that my dad was motivated for all the
right reasons. He was not acting out of betterment for himself; he was
acting out of love for me. Whether he was right or wrong, whether he
made good or bad judgment calls, I know he just wanted his boy to live
the American Dream. All that work, all that pressure, all that angst:
he was pushing me to have the success that was denied to him. And that
realisation goes a long way.”

Today, they are reconciled. They have a relationship that works, at
least in away that they can both live with. Agassi would love to
shower his father with gifts, but he has to be conscious of his dad’s
pride. “To say this man has lifeforce is an understatement,” he says.
“He worked until he was 80. He just kept going. He only accepts gifts
from me today if he is convinced they aren’t costing me much. He
wouldn’t accept a thing if he felt it was a sacrifice for me.”

Today, Agassi lives in a small community a few miles from the Vegas
strip and divides his time between his family and his charitable
foundation. The school that bears his name – he donated a reported $35
million (about £23 million) to create it – has segued into a new
business venture with a social conscience, funding Charter schools
across the United States. He is busy, but has found a balance, both in
his professional life and the personal relationships that matter most.

Perhaps the deepest irony about the fragile rapport he has found with
his father is that it was most imperilled by the book that lifted the
lid on their relationship. When Agassi brought out his tell-all
autobiography in 2010, he was terrified that his father would take
offence. “I called him up before publication and said, ‘Dad, you
haven’t read the book. You haven’t even let me talk to you about the
book. Can I at least walk you through how I have portrayed you, so you
are clear about why I did it?’ “He just said: ‘I am 80 years old. Why
would I give a s*** about what people think about me? I know what I
did and why I did it. And I would do the same all over again.’ I sort
of smiled because that was my dad all over: strong, proud, never
prepared to admit a weakness.

“But then he suddenly said: ‘Actually, there is one thing I would do
different.’ “I had to pull over to the side of the road. I couldn’t
believe he was going to admit a mistake. ‘What would you have done
different, dad?’ I asked. He said: ‘I wouldn’t let you play tennis.
You would be playing baseball or golf if I had my time over. You would
have made a lot more money.’ ” ? Andre Agassi gave this interview as
part of the launch of his BILT by Agassi and Reyes fitness range,
which is available at selected David Lloyd Leisure clubs. More
information at BILT like father like son Sir Alex
Ferguson and Darren Ferguson Darren banned his dad from watching
Peterborough United play while he was in his second spell in charge at
London Road. He claimed that, despite all his father had achieved in
the game, he was a jinx, but Sir Alex saw Darren’s Peterborough win
1-0 against Rochdale in August 2014 and the curse was lifted.

Peter Coe and Lord Coe Peter famously told his son: “You ran like an
idiot,” and chastised him publicly after the 800 metres final of the
1980 Moscow Olympics, where Coe ran badly and lost to Steve Ovett, his
close rival. Peter was Seb’s coach and although his methods were
controversial he clearly got the best out of his son, who understood
his father’s precise nature in their pursuit of excellence.

Floyd Mayweather Sr and Floyd Mayweather Jr Mayweather Sr taught his
son how to throw punches at a young age, but never expected his son to
be throwing them at him. Their relationship has had its ups and downs
since 1993, when Mayweather Sr was jailed for drug trafficking. Over
the past 20 years Mayweather Jr has fired his dad as his coach,
evicted him from a home that he owned and repossessed a car he was
driving.

‘What I can say is that my dad was motivated for all the right reasons’

From: Baghdasarian

http://dl-f.it/

People Sick And Tired Of Sensations – Activist

PEOPLE SICK AND TIRED OF SENSATIONS – ACTIVIST

14:27 * 02.03.15

An Armenian civic activist who heads the Pre-parliament group has
commented upon first President Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s speech delivered
at a recent opposition rally.

In a post on Facebook, Zhirayr Sefilyan said he doesn’t find the
moment appropriate for objecting to politicians.

“Different media outlets have been contacting me since morning, asking
for my reaction to Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s March 1 speech. Through my
Facebook page, I would like to respond to everybody that I do not
find reasonable today to object to politicians. The moment is not
appropriate for that. We must, with maximum rapid efforts, build a
national state, becoming a full-fledged subject of international law.

And to do that, it is necessary to first of all topple the regime
and establish the people’s will and power. Lingering will cause us to
lose all we have. So I call upon all the serious and concerned people
to rapidly embark on consolidating the people to topple the regime,”
reads his status.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/03/02/jirayr-sefilyan/1605228

French Theologian: ‘Massacres’ Of Near East Christians Are ‘Stain On

FRENCH THEOLOGIAN: ‘MASSACRES’ OF NEAR EAST CHRISTIANS ARE ‘STAIN ON CIVILIZATION’

Daily Caller
Feb 27 2015

An Orthodox theologian from France claims that Christians in the Near
East are being massacred because of their religion, 20 Minutes reports.

Jean-Francois Colosimo, author of the book “Unwanted Men: The
Curse on Eastern Christians,” says that ISIS uses Christians of all
denominations — Coptic, Armenian, Orthodox, etc. — as scapegoats.

“They want to increase ethnic tensions in the region,” he told 20
Minutes. “They say Christians are agents of Europe — even though they
have lived in the region long before Islam came — and use them in
order to provoke Western powers and therefore fuel their own animosity
towards Christians.”

“Islamists want religious uniformity in the region,” he continued.

“Today’s Eastern Christians are like 19th-century Jews in Europe: in
minority, stigmatized, without international protection or national
territory.”

However, unlike his fellow country man and member of the French Academy
Jean d’Ormenson, Colosimo does not want to use “genocide” to describe
the dire situation. “A genocide is mass killings that require a plan,
like the 1915 Armenian Genocide. Such is not the case right now.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://dailycaller.com/2015/02/27/french-theologian-massacres-of-near-east-christians-are-stain-on-civilization/