Azerbaijan Is Concerned That Morningstar Is Interested In Armenian C

AZERBAIJAN IS CONCERNED THAT MORNINGSTAR IS INTERESTED IN ARMENIAN CEMETERY IN OLD JUGHA

ARMENPRESS
18 June, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JUNE 18, ARMENPRESS: Candidate for the post of ambassador
of USA to Azerbaijan Richard Morningstar during the hearings in the
foreign affairs committee of US Senate declared that in case of his
appointment in the post of ambassador one of his first works would
be the visit to Armenian cemetery of Old Jugha which was destroyed
by Azerbaijanis. Azerbaijani authorities became concerned about this
declaration. “I will do my best to visit Armenian cemetery of Old
Jugha. Such insult towards dead people is not acceptable” he had said.

Armenpress reports citing “Azadlg” newspaper that the fact that
Morningstar speaks about the destroying of Armenian cemetery before
being appointed made Azerbaijani authorities to be concerned.

Azerbaijani Parliament deputy Zahid Orudz expressed opinion that
Azerbaijan must implement diplomatic steps towards that direction.

“Morningstar’s words caused anxiety and dissatisfaction in Baku. We
can not be satisfied with the appointment of an ambassador with such
intentions. The ambassador’s speech with such arguments can worsen
the relations in future. Morningstar’s wish to search Armenian traces
is unacceptable” mentioned Azerbaijani deputy.

From: Baghdasarian

Glendale Songs Of Retreat – Gegham Fears He’ll Go Crazy Before Retur

GLENDALE SONGS OF RETREAT – GEGHAM FEARS HE’LL GO CRAZY BEFORE RETURNING TO ARMENIA
Edik Baghdasaryan

hetq
12:40, June 18, 2012

On my recent trip to Los Angeles, I met up with Gegham, a middle-aged
man who hails from the village of Verin Artashat in Armenia.

He’s been working in a Glendale “shawurma” joint since he arrived
in 2003.

So you’re a reporter from Armenia – Gegham says.

That’s right. I’m returning to Yerevan tomorrow – I answer.

I then ask Gegham why he doesn’t go back.

I’m going back. This time for good – Gegham says.

Verin Artashat is a village in Armenia’s Ararat Marz. Glendale, tens
of thousands of miles away in southern California, is considered the
most concentrated community of Armenians outside the homeland.

Gegham tells me about the fields he left behind and how his brother
now tends to them. Gegham has a total of two brothers and four sisters;
all in Armenia.

“I fear I might go mad before I ever get back,” Gegham tells me.

During my two week trip, this was the second Armenian citizen who
was counting the days before returning to Armenia.

“I follow all the news and know what’s going on back home. I spend
my days here reliving that life,” says Gegham, and he begins to ask
questions about the elections and various political figures.

Gegham says his son runs a profitable business in Glendale and that
he no longer feels the need to stay.

“My son can make it on his own. I’ve miss working the land and want
to get back.”

He asks about life in Armenia and I tell him things are bad since so
many are leaving.

“There is no one who wants to change things,” I explain.

“That’s what we all say, that nothing can change. So we all leave. I’m
guilty as well,” Gegham replies.

Gegham brings me a platter of fries and says – it’s on the house.

I was with the daughter of a friend. We had gone out to buy presents
for the people back home on my last day in California. On the way back,
the girl said we should get a bite to eat at a shawurma place.

She blasted some music on the car’s stereo. It was deafening –
“Yerevan, Yerevan, I’m coming back, coming back to stay….”

I had heard this song before, but this rabiz melody really grated
on my brain like never before. Here, on the quiet suburban streets
of Glendale, this rabiz music blaring from open car windows hits you
like a mine exploding in your ears.

I don’t like this city. I have been constantly barraged by stories
told by my former countrymen who now call Glendale “home”. It’s
a constant assault on the senses. It’s an assault of charges and
counter-charges. Oftentimes, people demand justice from me for the
conditions back home. Go figure.

There are even Armenians here who fought in the Artsakh War. They have
their own little groups and preach patriotism, replete with song and
dance. At one such encounter, I found myself unwittingly whispering
some lines from “The Vision of Death” by Yegishe Charents. Images
flashed before my eyes of those who had left Armenia. Those images
included the faces of my friends and acquaintances as well.

Like a taut string of a discarded cello, My heart trembles with an
awesome longing– It is the summit of my yearnings–the last lyre!

A sturdy rope and two crossed beams.

As the dark derision of my fate, or An old, miscarried promise that
I betrayed– Behold, the beams of the gallows standing Proud in the
city, waiting for the condemned!

They stand, silent, leaning on each other, paired pieces of wood,
And in the center quivers, loose and swaying, A rope, as gray–in
these sad days–as the doused sorrow of my orphaned Nayirian soul.

June 10, 1920 – Yeghishe Charents (Translated by Tatul Sonentz)

No, I do not like this town. After talking to my former countrymen
I am reminded of the gallow beams in the poem by Charents. I don’t
understand why these people talk so much about the problems back in
Armenia. Why should they care?

“Yerevan, Yerevan, I’m coming back, coming back to stay….” And then
they’ll go to feast on some khash and khorovatz.

And that’s what these people will do; those who sing along with the
lyrics of this melody.

They’ll come back just to eat and drink – to taste the country.

Armenia is a word in one of their songs. They need Armenia in order
to sing.

But singing about Armenia is easy. The Azeris are singing songs about
Gharabakh, and Shoushi. They are singing about their losses. Their
songs are lamentations full of woe.

We Armenians sing of Mush and Sassoon. Former Artsakh freedom fighters
sing songs of patriotism here in Glendale.

They say it’s a form of cultural preservation – hayapahpanoum…

Americans would say – really?

By singing patriotic songs on foreign shores you can’t build a homeland
that is being emptied slowly but surely.

Almost a century ago, an Armenian writer captured the mood of the
times with his – Retreat without Song.

Today, we proudly sing about our collective retreat.

Saying goodbye to Gegham, I tell him we’ll meet up back in Yerevan.

I know he will return to Verin Artashat and leave the singing to
others.

Home page

From: Baghdasarian

New Armenian Government Presents Program For 2012-2017

NEW ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT PRESENTS PROGRAM FOR 2012-2017

Vestnik Kavkaza
June 18 2012
Russia

The Armenian government has held a session and presented a development
program for 2012-2017 today, ARKA reports.

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan introduced the program, adding
that it had been developed with account of strategic national security,
electoral programs of the Republican Party and Orinats Yerkir.

Armenia has limited foreign resources due to low world demand and
unclear prospects. Development using own resources will be the priority
for Armenia. Export will increase.

The prime minister said that the GDP grows by 5-7% annually, export
growth exceeds import, minimal wages will double, the birth quotient
will reach 1.8.

The government plans to allow 90% of children aged 5-6 to get
education, increase accumulative pensions to 125-135% of poverty level,
reduce poverty by 8-10%, open over 100,000 new workplaces, employed
population by 30,000-50,000, increase taxing efficiency by 0.3-0.4%
of the GDP.

From: Baghdasarian

Head Of Armenian Armed Forces Leaves For Croatia

HEAD OF ARMENIAN ARMED FORCES LEAVES FOR CROATIA

news.am
June 18, 2012 | 17:47

An Armenian delegation led by Chief of Staff of the Armenian Armed
Forces Yuri Khachaturov left for Zagreb, Croatia, on Monday.

Yuri Khachaturov will participate in the work of NATO’s Strategic
Military Partner Conference.

NATO and partner countries’ cooperation in the field of defense
and development of defense capabilities will be discussed during
the conference.

From: Baghdasarian

Armenian analyst on Syria: Rubicon is crossed

ARMENIAN ANALYST ON SYRIA: RUBICON IS CROSSED

news.am
June 18, 2012 | 14:50

YEREVAN.- There is almost no possibility for Bashar al-Assad â~@~Nto
preserve power, Rubicon is crossed, Armenian expert told reporters
on Monday.

Alexander Iskandaryan, Director of Caucasus Institute, said it
is difficult to predict the course of events and forecast when the
situation will improve, adding it will definitely be “a bloody chaos”
even worse than in Egypt.

“It will be a humanitarian catastrophe,” he said adding that Syria
is a key regional state and is very important for Armenia.

From: Baghdasarian

What Hinders Armenians

WHAT HINDERS ARMENIANS
Naira Hayrumyan

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 16:58:43 – 18/06/2012

A lot of people who visited the three capitals of the South Caucasus
say that the Armenians have built Baku and Tbilisi in a unique way
while they failed to do the same with their own capital Yerevan.

The U.S. Ambassador to Armenia has recently said something similar,
noting in particular that Armenians living across the world are the
most enterprising layers of the society of the countries they live in,
including in the U.S. “Consequently, I see no cultural obstacles to
the Armenians to be able to succeed in business in their own homeland,”
said Heffern.

What hinders the Armenians to create their own special architecture
and culture of business which they successfully do in other countries?

In his book “Stop the Plane. I Will Drop Out” Ephraim Sevela wrote
that the Jews are like fertilizers. If they’re scattered, they will
make any land fertile but together they are “a pile of manure.”

The point is not whether the Armenians are together or spread
throughout world but in other countries the climate for doing business
is better, and there is much an arena for fulfillment of business
opportunities. In Armenia, these conditions are limited, almost closed.

On June 20, the parliament will consider the program of the
government. PAP member Gagik Minasyan stated that the program is aimed
at fighting oligopolies. He said that we can’t speak about development
without this fight. True, Minasyan didn’t say how they are going to
fight the oligopolies, which are represented in parliament.

This fight is inevitable. Tomorrow, talks between Armenia and the
EU on the free trade agreement will be launched in Brussels. This
agreement excludes the oligopolies and the monopolies. It excludes
also the imitation of fight.

The situation of the current government also rules out any imitation
because it is obvious that if the government does not outdo the
oligarchs, it will be their first victim.

‘Our core ideology is to help the small and medium-sized enterprises
in Armenia. Competition is a good thing. In Armenia, we see great
potential in four areas and are working towards their establishment.

They are high technology and telecommunications, manufacturing,
pharmaceuticals, tourism. These are the systems of valuesâ~@~Kâ~@~K
for the formation of which we provide resource,” said Ambassador
Heffern. What is the Armenian government going to do besides transition
from the growth strategy to a strategy of economic development? In
theory, it looks smart but in fact oligarch Ruben Hayrapetyan’s
bodyguard beats up in his restaurant a doctor whom they simply
disliked.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country26580.html

Representatives Of Armenia To Meet With Kansas National Guard Leader

REPRESENTATIVES OF ARMENIA TO MEET WITH KANSAS NATIONAL GUARD LEADERS

ARMENPRESS
18 June, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JUNE 18, ARMENPRESS: Two top military officers from
the republic of Armenia are in Kansas this week to meet with
senior National Guard leaders in Topeka and observe training in
Salina, reports Armenpress citing Nebraska TV. The visit comes as
Armenia’s military transitions from a conscripted force to one with
a professional noncommissioned officer corps. The Kansas National
Guard has been joined with the former Soviet republic in a partnership
program since 2003. The program’s director, Lt. Col. Brent Salmans,
says the Armenian delegation will receive briefings in Topeka on
the roles and responsibilities of noncommissioned staff officers. On
Wednesday and Thursday, the Armenians will observe operations at the
Great Plains Joint Training Center in Salina. They’ll also visit the
Officer Candidate School at the 235th Training Regiment.

From: Baghdasarian

Turkey Is Dissatisfied With The Results Of French Elections

TURKEY IS DISSATISFIED WITH THE RESULTS OF FRENCH ELECTIONS

18.06.12

Results of the French Parliamentarian elections trouble Turkey. As
Turkish media informs Valerie Boyer “a deputy who caused crisis in
French-Turkish relations” is reelected. Boyer got 50.65 % of votes and
overcame socialist Christopher Mass. The latter got 49.35 % of votes.

V. Boyer is the author of the bill to criminalize Armenian Genocide
denial. The bill was accepted by both palaces of French Parliament
but was failed by the Constitutional Council of the country.

Boyer announced that she would continue her struggle to criminalize
the denial of Armenian Genocide.

Turkey has another reason to be troubled. Vice-chairman of the
Turkish-French friendship group in the French Parliament Jean-Phillip
Maurer is defeated by the socialist candidate. Maurer has no place
in the Parliament.

Maurer was one of the few deputies who was against the bill of
criminalization of Armenian Genocide and had real investment in the
bill’s failure by the Constitutional Council.

From: Baghdasarian

http://times.am/?l=0&p=8641

Second Stage Of Ari Tun Program Gets Underway

SECOND STAGE OF ARI TUN PROGRAM GETS UNDERWAY
Artak Barseghyan

“Radiolur”
18.06.2012 15:21

The second stage of “Ari Tun” program of the Ministry of Diaspora
kicked off today. It has brought together 100 young people from Russia,
Georgia, Ukraine and the United States. This year the program, which
was launched on June 10, will continue through September 1st and will
be held in eight stages.

During the coming two weeks the young people from Diaspora will
get to know about Armenian history, culture, the public life, will
familiarize with the religious and family traditions.

The participants will visit historical-cultural sites of Armenia,
will attend concerts, festivals, exhibitions, performances and will
take courses of Armenian language, literature, history and religious
traditions.

“Ari Tun” program was successfully launched in 2009 with visits of
over 1,700 Diaspora Armenian youth in 2009-2011 from 36 countries.

Another 1,000 young people are expected to visit Armenia this year.

Welcoming the participants of the second stage of the program, Minister
Hranush Hakobyan voiced hope that the program would play an important
role in preserving the Armenian national identity.

From: Baghdasarian

Mp’s Bodyguard Beat Up The Doctor

MP’S BODYGUARD BEAT UP THE DOCTOR

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 15:07:31 – 18/06/2012

Criminal proceedings have been launched into the incident happened
in Harsnakar restaurant owned by MP Ruben Hayrapetyan.

Yesterday, ay 23:00, the security guards of Member of Parliament Ruben
Hayrapetyan beat up the head of Urology of the Garrison hospital of
Yerevan Vahe Avetyan. Rumors go, Hayrapetyan personally ordered the
guards to beat him. Avetyan was taken to the military hospital for
a head operation. Doctors say his health condition is extremely bad.

Criminal proceedings have been launched with inflicting bodily harm
under the Article 112.

By the way, another military doctor, Artak Bayadyan, was also
transferred to the hospital along with Avetyan. Fortunately, his
health is not extremely bad.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country26578.html