Istanbul Bezchian Collage Was Returned To Armenian Community

ISTANBUL BEZCHIAN COLLAGE WAS RETURNED TO ARMENIAN COMMUNITY

13:08, 7 February, 2013

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS: Vakfi one of the biggest
non-governmental organizations in Turkey continues to give a positive
response to applications submitted by Armenian various district
councils in their demand to return important estates to Armenian
community.

As Armenpress reports citing Istanbul based “Marmara” daily, reportedly
by the decision of Vakfi Istanbul Bezchian collage building was
returned to Armenian Church St Nshan based in Kartal district.The
district council made the decision of returning collage building on
February 5. The collage occupies 1510 square meters land area.

Bezchian collage was opened in 1812 and continued its activities
by 1937. The district council sued state officials in demand to
return collage building still 2009. Yet only three years later, by
the decision made in 2013, January 10, the building was returned to
Armenian community.

From: Baghdasarian

Total Of 9, 314.6 Tons Of Canned Food Produced In Armenia Over 2012

TOTAL OF 9, 314.6 TONS OF CANNED FOOD PRODUCED IN ARMENIA OVER 2012

YEREVAN, February 7. /ARKA/. Canned food production output totaled
9,314.6 tons in Armenia in 2012, a 20.9% reduction from the year
before, the country’s National Statistical Service reported.

Canned meat production output totaled 723.7 tons in 2012, as compared
to 285.3 tons in 2011 (2.5-time increase).

A total of 2,951.2 tons of canned vegetables were produced in the
reporting period, compared to 4,248.2 tons in 2011 (30.5% reduction),
according to the statistics.

Canned tomatoes production was 2,919.3 tons in January-December
2012, against 4,944.8 tons in the same period of the year before
(41% decline).

A total of 2,666.1 tons of canned fruits were manufactured in the
reporting period, which is a 16.3% increase over the level of the
year before.

In the period some 223.4 tons of ketchup were produced (56.7%
reduction from 2011). Natural juice production totalled 16,144,100
litres against 14,111,300 litres in 2011 (14.4% increase). -0-

From: Baghdasarian

Erdogan Opposes Nato, Israel Security Cooperation

ERDOGAN OPPOSES NATO, ISRAEL SECURITY COOPERATION

Published: 02.06.13, 13:10 / Israel News

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country is
opposed to NATO’s initiative to include Israeli in the joining of its
ranks, the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet reported. Erdogan said “as far
as we are concerned, we are unwilling to be a part of NATO so long as
Israel is a part of the organization.”

About a month and a half ago, a diplomatic source reported that Turkey
removed the veto it placed on the security cooperation between NATO
and Israel. (Ynet)

,7340,L-4341837,00.html

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0

Film Garegin Nzhdeh Helped Us Create Hero – Armenian Director

FILM GAREGIN NZHDEH HELPED US CREATE HERO – ARMENIAN DIRECTOR

TERT.AM
22:06 ~U 06.02.13

A state which does not have an image of hero twenty years after
gaining independence is in a very dangerous situation, an Armenian
director said Wednesday, analyzing the film Garegin Nzhdeh.

The movie telling about the great Armenian political thinker and hero
was premiered it Yerevan’s Moscow cinema on January 28, attracting
a wide positive response by the public.

Speaking to Tert.am, Director Armen Mazmanyan admitted that he had
certain fears before watching the première. “Nzhdeh is something that
you would better leave untouched if he’s beyond your reach,” he said.

“But I was very happy upon leaving. The films objective is to make
the hero reachable to us; and it has proven equal to the task.”

Mazmanyan, who is also the rector of the Yerevan State Institute
of Theatre and Cinematography, noted the film needs a professional
approach, not based on individual tastes or preferences.

“The film’s genre is not a historical chronicle. This is a
historical-epic action with its histrionics and sentimentalism. It
does not seek historical truths; it’s another matter that it provokes
an interest,” the director continued.

Speaking about the technical methods used, Mazmanyan said they aren’t
bad in general though he pointed out to a couple of shortcomings.

“I have told the director in person that this has to do with the
sound settings. They are sometimes monotonous, with music often
deafening the sound. But it is very easy to clear that,” he said,
adding that a comparison with internationally acclaimed films would
not negatively affect Garegin Nzhdeh’s image.

From: Baghdasarian

European Rep. Attends Turkish Journalists’ Trial

EUROPEAN REP. ATTENDS TURKISH JOURNALISTS’ TRIAL

February 6, 2013 – 20:46 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The terrorism charges against Turkish journalists
currently on trial are “shocking to hear,” according to The European
Federation of Journalists President Arne König, who attended the
Feb 4 trial of the 46 journalists in Silivri Prison, Hurriyet Daily
News reported.

König was accompanied by Turkish Union of Journalists (TGS) President
Ercan İpekci during the Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) trials,
which are scheduled to last all week, with journalists accused of
having links to terrorist organizations.

“It was shocking for us to hear that normal journalistic activity
can be considered illegal and an act of terror,” König was quoted
as saying in a statement released by the body today.

İpekci also voiced concern about the trials, saying no “real change
of attitude” was coming from the Turkish authorities.

The Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C) probe,
which resulted in the arrest of nine lawyers for alleged links to
the organization, as well as a possible ban on Turkish organizations
against receiving financial support from foreign sources, could further
strain the freedom of expression in Turkey, the statement added.

Turkish Journalists Federation (TGF) members also visited Silivri
prison to show support for their colleagues, spending time with the
journalists’ relatives as well. Several prominent journalists were
present during the visit.

Around 75 journalists are currently standing trial in Turkey, according
to EFJ numbers.

From: Baghdasarian

Raffi Hovhannisian’s Headquarters Recorded Violations

RAFFI HOVHANNISIAN’S HEADQUARTERS RECORDED VIOLATIONS

05:34 pm | Today | Politics

The campaign headquarters of Armenian presidential candidate Raffi
Hovhannisian has revealed a number of violations of the Electoral
Code during the election campaign, a spokesman for the candidate’s
campaign headquarters said on Wednesday.

Among the major violations, Hovsep Khurshudyan emphasized the usage
of administrative resources, engagement of teachers and pupils in
campaign meetings. Parents are called to schools and urged to vote
for Serzh Sargsyan.

“We have recorded numerous violations, especially in villages.

Unfortunately, we cannot prevent all of them,” he said.

Another violation observed by the campaign headquarters is affixing
the incumbent president’s posters in appropriate or prohibited areas.

Hovsep Khurshudyan considers the authorities’ statement on condemning
and revealing violations to be formal as the ‘National Security
Service, Police and Prosecutor’s Office are accountable before the
president.’

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2013/02/06/hovsep-khurshudyan

Larry Wilson: A Pasadena Monument To Armenian Genocide

LARRY WILSON: A PASADENA MONUMENT TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Posted: 02/05/2013 08:27:56 PM PST
Updated: 02/05/2013 08:30:22 PM PST

I stopped by Bill Paparian’s law office Tuesday morning to see the
preliminary plans for an Armenian Genocide memorial and first saw
what cool digs he’s now practicing in: a century-old Greene & Greene.

For a former mayor of Pasadena, there could be no more classic setup
than a house by the city’s greatest architects preserved and adaptively
reused without compromising the integrity of its design.

While Paparian is still practicing criminal defense law, his passion
right now is another local classic: The well-being of the Armenian
community. The oldest center of the Armenian diaspora in Southern
California is Pasadena, and like many descendants of that immigration,
Paparian’s family goes back many generations here. His grandparents
had a grocery store on Fair Oaks Avenue at the turn of the century.

History is part of our being, and Paparian is working with the
Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee to create a monument
in Memorial Park, at Raymond and Walnut, the planned dedication of
which in 2015 will coincide with 100th anniversary commemorations of
the Armenian Genocide.

Art Center Environmental Design student Catherine Menard won a
competition with 17 entrants – six of them Art Center students. Of
the three finalists, two were from the Pasadena design school.

“These young people are so talented,” Paparian said. “I got emotional
as I listened to each of them” make their oral presentations for
their proposals. “These were American young people who at first really
didn’t know anything about this event. This is something I’ve lived
with all my life, and here you’re looking at something from someone
who is not Armenian.”

One of the finalists, a young architect, actually was of Armenian
background, but Paparian says she’s also enthusiastic about Menard’s
design.

It looks from afar like a simple, open pyramid made from three steel
beams leaning together. But below its apex is a bowl into which
individual drops of water will drip – as tears have dripped for so
long over the loss of so many.

What I particularly like about her simple design is her proposal
to incorporate plantings of blazing-red pomegranates and pyracantha
around the pyramid – both of the plants are native to Armenia.

Of course the whole notion of such a monument has not been without
the arguments that blaze a century on from the killings. Last August
representatives from the Turkish government paid a visit to Pasadena
City Hall objecting to the very idea of the plan.

The proposal “deeply offends” the Turkish people, the diplomats said,
and claimed to Pasadena officials that in the case of the hundreds of
thousands of Armenians who died at the hands of the Ottoman empire,
the term genocide is one of legitimate scholarly debate.

It’s not, actually, except among scholars associated with the Turkish
government. As with climate change, it’s time to put that canard of
“reasonable people can disagree” behind us.

Private funds will pay for the monument, a welcome addition – along
with the proposed moving of the plaque honoring Pasadena Medal of
Honor recipient Reginald Desiderio – to Memorial Park.

At random on Wednesday: Pasadena Councilman Victor Gordo correctly
notes that, while it’s true as I wrote that Israel Estrada has stopped
his council campaign, the latter’s name stays on the ballot. So Gordo
technically still faces an opponent March 5.

Twitter: @PublicEditor

[email protected]

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.whittierdailynews.com/columnists/ci_22528059/larry-wilson-pasadena-monument-armenian-genocide

Domestic Violence And Armenia’s Failed Response

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND ARMENIA’S FAILED RESPONSE

Society | 06.02.13 | 11:25

By Gayane Abrahamyan
>From Eurasianet.org

Increasingly the issue of domestic violence in Armenia is a topic for
public discussion. Yet greater attention to the issue isn’t yet
translating into an expansion of programmes to alleviate suffering and
address policy shortcomings.

In 2012, Armenia set a grim record for domestic violence when six
women, ranging in age from 21 to 50 years old, died over the course of
six months in incidents involving their husbands or fathers-in-law.

Collectively, the six dead women left behind 12 children.

No official registry of domestic-violence attacks exists in Armenia.

But a 2008 survey of 1,000 Armenian women by Amnesty International
found that more than three out of 10 had suffered from physical abuse,
and 66 percent from psychological abuse.

The outcry over the recent deaths prompted activists to believe that
the government would start making state funds available for the
protection and treatment of victims of domestic violence. But on Jan.

21, the government blocked passage of what would have been the
country’s first domestic-violence law, saying that revisions should be
made to existing legislation, or to the bill itself.

In the absence of government funding, non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) are struggling to meet needs.

“There are many cases, and only NGO efforts do not suffice,” commented
Susanna Vardanian, director of the Women’s Rights Center, a
Yerevan-based NGO, which is a backer of the stalled draft law.

At present, three private domestic-violence shelters (two in Yerevan
and one in the nearby region of Armavir), along with several NGO-run
hotlines are all that exist for female domestic violence victims. Over
the past two years, the Women’s Rights Centre, which runs two
hotlines, four regional crisis centres and one shelter, has received
some 2,557 calls from women seeking help, according to Vardanian.

At a facility run by the charitable foundation Lighthouse in the
village of Ptghunts, the 55 women residents are mostly unemployed, and
either pregnant or raising children. The shelter provides basic job
training, as well as psychological counselling.

For decades, domestic violence was a topic that not only battered
women, but also officials and law-enforcement authorities shied away
from acknowledging or discussing. But now, that has begun to change,
with people starting to be held accountable for abusive actions.

For example, Haykanush Mikayelian received a 10-month sentence in 2012
for her role in the abuse of her 23-year-old daughter-in-law, Mariam
Gevorgian, over a prolonged period starting in 2009. According to
testimony at the trial, Mikayelian burned Gevorgian’s body with an
iron and a cigarette lighter, beat her regularly and kept her locked
indoors under key.

Although police officers are arguably now more aware of the
domestic-violence problem than several years ago, they are often left
flummoxed by the lack of state-run shelters and legal mechanisms to
prevent ongoing abuse of a woman by a husband or relative.

“As soon as it comes to taking actual steps, we seem to be faced with
the same resistance,” remarked Lara Aharomian, director of the Women’s
Resource Centre, another Yerevan-based NGO active in addressing
domestic violence.

The draft domestic-violence law that the government rejected earlier
in January would have tried to strengthen official measures to protect
victims by introducing restraining orders and expanding the number of
shelters, among other measures.

Activists believe that the six fatal domestic-violence cases in 2012
might have been prevented if Armenia had had a law outlining responses
to the abuse, and, correspondingly, providing state assistance for
shelters.

“(T)he law proposes the creation of a number of facilities, [and the]
training of police, which are preventive measures,” said Anna
Nikoghosian, a project manager for the non-governmental organisation A
Society Without Violence. If shelters had existed near the homes of
the six murdered women, all of whom lived outside of Yerevan, “some .

. . might be alive today.”

“There are many badly in need of support, but it is impossible to
house all of them in only three shelters,” agreed Lighthouse Director
Naira Muradian.

Lala Ghazarian, head of the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare’s
Department for Family, Women and Childcare Issues, stressed that the
domestic-violence bill isn’t gone for good. “It just needs some
changes” to bring it into line with existing criminal law, she said.

“We are all well aware that we need a law, shelter, trained policemen,
functional tools, but it implies extensive work to change legislation,
and it will be done.”

Some government members have said that parliament, now controlled by
the Republican Party of Armenia, could pass a domestic-violence law by
2014 or 2015, once ongoing amendments to the criminal code are
complete.

Meanwhile, as the topic’s stigma fades away, many ordinary Armenians
affirm openly that they are eager to find solutions. In the village of
Burastan, 30 kilometers outside of Yerevan, women in 2006 told
EurasiaNet.org that questions about domestic violence “destroy
traditional Armenian families”. Seven years later, they admitted that
abuse is an issue that “has to be addressed”.

“Our children have been growing up in an atmosphere of beatings and
fights,” commented 67-year-old Karine Galstian, a mother of four.

“Only now we realise how wrong it is to keep silent, because we should
at least teach our daughters that the husband has to respect his wife,
should not beat her, should not humiliate her in front of the
children.”

In the absence of further government measures against domestic
violence, such realisations could make a critical difference.

From: Baghdasarian

http://armenianow.com/society/43185/domestic_violence_armenia_women_rights_lara_aharonian

Safer Internet Day Marked In Yerevan

SAFER INTERNET DAY MARKED IN YEREVAN

16:11 05.02.2013
Armenia, Internet

Sona Hakobyan
“Radiolur”

February 5 is celebrated as Safe Internet Day. Informative and
educational events were organized in Yerevan today to raise the issues
of the importance of the safety of the Internet, especially for
children.

A flash mob was organized in the morning, followed by the summing of
the results of the “Let’s communicate on-line with respect” contest.

Training were organized for teachers and schoolchildren. The events
were organized by Microsoft Armenia, World Vision, the National
Center for Educational Technologies and the Fund for Armenian Relief.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/02/05/safer-internet-day-marked-in-yerevan/

Parliamentary Factions Assess Hayrikyan’s Decision As Reasonable

PARLIAMENTARY FACTIONS ASSESS HAYRIKYAN’S DECISION AS REASONABLE
Lusine Vasilyan

“Radiolur”
17:09 05.02.2013

Factions of the National Assembly assess Paruyr Hayrikyan’s decision
not to postpone the elections as generally reasonable.

Head of the Heritage faction Ruben Hakobyan welcomes Paruyr Hayrikyan’s
decision not to apply to the Constitutional Court to postpone the
elections for two weeks. He urges the authorities to reveal the crime
as soon as possible.

The issue of delay of the elections is of no importance to the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation, as it had decider earlier not
nominate a candidate.

Republican MP Samvel Nikoyan assesses Hayrikyan’s decision as
reasonable. “I think he was guided by a sound and reasonable logic.

Every citizen of the Republic of Armenia has had a chanced to ascertain
that Paruyr Hayrikyan has used all campaign opportunities on these
days. Therefore, his decision was logical.”

The Prosperous Armenia Party is inclined to think that the postponement
of the election would set an unwanted precedent in the electoral
process and would negatively affect the rating of the elections.

“The incident was a blow to the image of our state. The delay of
the election would mean deepening of this trend,” PAP member Stepan
Margaryan said.

Levon Zurabyan of the Armenian National Congress said “the public
opinion will give the best assessment to this decision.”

From: Baghdasarian