Resumption Of Karabakh War Will Be Disastrous For Region – Eu Specia

RESUMPTION OF KARABAKH WAR WILL BE DISASTROUS FOR REGION – EU SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE

news.am
June 01, 2012 | 14:09

YEREVAN. – Belligerent rhetoric is impermissible under the conditions
of a complicated Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, stated Ambassador Philippe
Lefort, the EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the
Crisis in Georgia, during Friday’s gathering at the Armenian capital
city Yerevan State University.

Ambassador Lefort stressed that bellicose statements are unacceptable
and the arms race must end.

“The EU is against any war. The resumption of military operations
will become a disaster for the region,” he stressed.

Philippe Lefort recalled that the cease-fire violations and
Azerbaijan’s provocations likewise are within the OSCE monitoring, and
that the conflicting parties have reached accordance on investigating
the incidents.

“Such incidents further inflame the fire,” the Ambassador concluded,
and added that the EU is attempting to contribute to improving the
situation.

“What’s important is the parties’ awareness that it should no longer
continue in this way. It is impermissible to live under the constant
threat of a resumption of war,” Philippe Lefort noted.

From: Baghdasarian

Hrant Bagratyan: "They Killed Judicial System"

HRANT BAGRATYAN: “THEY KILLED JUDICIAL SYSTEM”

03:36 pm | Today | Politics

The toothless policy of the Armenian Constitutional Court over the past
10-15 years has killed the judicial system, turning it into a real
shred for the authorities’ arbitrary actions, said Hrant Bagratyan,
a senior representative of the opposition National Congress (HAK).

“The main reason for this is that most CC members pursue business
interests and are easily controlled by the authorities,” said the
HAK MP.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2012/06/01/hrant-bagratyan

K. Manoyan: Azerbaijani Actions May Cause War

K. MANOYAN: AZERBAIJANI ACTIONS MAY CAUSE WAR

01.06.12

Today Director of the International Secretariat of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation Bureau in Yerevan Kiro Manoyan had a meeting
with journalists and referred to the regional issues and possible
developments.

Speaking about the possible developments on NK issue settlement the
speaker noted no expectation for advantage is real. “Everything and
the international society as well realizes that Azerbaijani attitude
is guilty for it. So the same international society does not have
enough measures to have influence on Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan will try
to transfer the settlement of the issue into UN as it is non-permanent
member of the UN SC. So there is no sense to have any real expectations
for the issue settlement in near future”.

According to K. manoyan OSCE MG co-chairs also have the same opinion
and that is why they do not make great efforts to neutralize danger
of the war. The speaker noted at the same time that the possibility
of war must not be excepted at all.

“Azerbaijan is not sure that it will be able to win the war, it
is not ready for the war, but the possibility of war must not be
excluded at all. At the same time if the war started the blessing of
oil will become a damn as the oil likes peace. Azerbaijani military
announcements, provocations and cease-fire regime violations can
cause war even without Azerbaijani will”, K. Manoyan underlined.

The speaker also referred to US State Secretary H. Clinton’s visit
to the region and noted that visit proves the troubles in the region
exist. As he noted the main troubles are connected with Iran.

According to Manoyan Armenia must use the occasion to make
clarifications for the Armenian-Turkish relations and NK issue. “We
must claim the USA to treat seriously Armenian-Turkish relations and
to make pressure on Turkey to have relations without predictions with
Armenia by recognizing Armenian Genocide.”

K. Manoyan also spoke about the situation in Syria and about Armenian
Community there. He said that Armenian Community does not have serious
problems with the security yet but the situation in Syria is still
troubling.

From: Baghdasarian

http://times.am/?l=en&p=7879

Armenia’s International Reserves Have Reduced

ARMENIA’S INTERNATIONAL RESERVES HAVE REDUCED

news.am
June 01, 2012 | 13:47

YEREVAN. – The international reserves of Armenia comprised US$ 1.69
billion as of April 2012, the Central Bank informs.

But these reserves have reduced in recent months. As case in point,
Armenia’s international reserves constituted $1.93 billion at the
end of 2011, and $1.7 billion in March of this year.

The majority of Armenia’s international reserves is still securities,
worth $1.37 billion, and the cash foreign currency amounts to $264
million.

Armenia’s international reserves do not have assets exported by way
of gold or euro.

From: Baghdasarian

The Independent. Snipers On The Armenian Border

THE INDEPENDENT. SNIPERS ON THE ARMENIAN BORDER

ARMENPRESS
1 June, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS: Amid the hysteria generated by the
Eurovision Song Contest, we should not overlook the aggressive attitude
of Azerbaijan towards its neighbour Armenia, reports Armenpress citing
The Independent.

Last week, while participating in a scientific collaboration with
Armenian colleagues, I was in the north of Armenia and at various
points very close to the border with Azerbaijan. In one village
people came out of their houses to advise us not to drive further
along the road as Azeri snipers were regularly shooting across the
border. A number of people, peacefully working in their fields, and
even schoolchildren had been shot dead. Such incidents are widespread.

The purpose of such killings can only be to provoke retaliation
by Armenia.

This part of Armenia is ethnically Armenian and the inhabitants are
Christian and speak Armenian. Let us hope that democratic choice and
the rule of law will prevail.

From: Baghdasarian

No Security Threats Posed Against Syria’s Armenian Community – ARF D

NO SECURITY THREATS POSED AGAINST SYRIA’S ARMENIAN COMMUNITY – ARF DASHNAKTSUTYUN

news.am
June 01, 2012 | 12:46

YEREVAN. – The current state of affairs in Syria is worrisome,
but, fortunately, there are no problems with the country’s Armenian
community in terms of security, said Giro Manoyan, Director of the
International Secretariat of the ARF Bureau and Head of the Armenian
Cause Office, during a press conference on Friday.

He added that the Syrian-Armenian community’s emigration has not been
too considerable.

In his words, the developments in Syria impact the countries of the
Middle East, too.

“In any case, there are numerous other matters, since the developments
unrolling in the country also leave their economic impact on the
Armenian community,” Giro Manoyan noted.

From: Baghdasarian

Evacues Syriens Accueillis Par Les Jesuites Au Couvent De Saint Vart

EVACUES SYRIENS ACCUEILLIS PAR LES JESUITES AU COUVENT DE SAINT VARTAN
Stephane

armenews.com
vendredi 1er juin 2012

Des familles d’evacues syriens ayant fui le conflit qui caracterise
l’ouest du pays ont trouve refuge et hospitalite au Couvent de Saint
Vartan, gere par les Jesuites dans le quartier de Midan, au c~ur
d’Alep. Le couvent, dedie a ce saint armenien, abritait, voici un
siècle une ecole armenienne avant d’accueillir les refugies armeniens.

En novembre 2008, les jesuites, par l’intermediaire du Jesuit
Refugee Service y ont ouvert, après avoir restaure la structure, un
Centre d’accueil proposant un soutien scolaire aux jeunes et d’autres
activites sociales. Ont beneficie du centre des refugies irakiens et
des enfants de familles syriennes pauvres. Le Centre a ensuite continue
a accueillir, jusqu’en 2010, de nouvelles familles provenant d’Irak,
familles qui se sont progressivement integrees au tissu social de la
ville, s’etablissant en Syrie. Aujourd’hui, le centre ouvre ses portes
aux evacues et aux necessiteux sans aucune discrimination de religion,
de groupe ethnique, de provenance. Vu la poursuite de la violence en
Syrie, un certain nombre d’evacues sont arrives au centre, y trouvant
un oasis d’accueil et de solidarite. Le drame des refugies syriens se
poursuit : selon le dernier rapport de l’UNICEF, les refugies syriens
presents en Jordanie, au Liban, en Irak et en Turquie sont plus de
54.000, sachant que 50% d’entre eux sont des enfants qui ont quitte les
ecoles, souffrent de pauvrete et de traumatismes lies a la fuite. (PA)

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.fides.org/aree/news/newsdet.php?idnews=33109&lan=fra

Les Etats-Unis Restent Critiques Quant Aux Droits De L’Homme

LES ETATS-UNIS RESTENT CRITIQUES QUANT AUX DROITS DE L’HOMME
Stephane

armenews.com
vendredi 1er juin 2012

Les autorites en Armenie ont continue a limiter le droit des citoyens
a changer de gouvernement, la liberte de parole et l’independance
juridique tandis que les mauvais traitements sur les suspects restent
la norme a affirme le Departement d’Etat americain.

Dans son rapport annuel sur les droits de l’homme dans le monde entier
presente par la Secretaire d’Etat Hillary Clinton, le departement
a aussi note la sortie en mai et juin 2011 des derniers membres de
l’opposition restant en prison suite aux troubles post-election de
2008 a Erevan.

” Les problèmes des droits de l’homme les plus significatifs [en
2011] etaient des limitations au droit des citoyens de changer de
gouvernement, la liberte de parole et de la presse et l’independance
du pouvoir judiciaire ” dit le rapport en ce qui concerne l’Armenie.

” Les cours de justice sont restees soumises a la pression politique de
la branche executive et des juges ont opere dans une culture juridique
qui s’est attendue a ce que les cours aient trouve l’accuse coupable
dans presque chaque cas ” dit le rapport ajoutant que seulement
environ 2 pour cent des individus suspectes de crimes divers ont
ete acquittes par les cours armeniennes l’annee dernière. Le taux
d’acquittement a ete de 0,9 pour cent en 2010.

Le manque d’independance juridique a longtemps ete lie avec la pratique
de la torture sur les detenus selon les ONG internationales.

” Tandis que la loi interdit de telles pratiques, les membres des
forces de securite ont continue a les employer regulièrement ” dit
le rapport americain. ” Les temoins ont annonce que la police bat
des citoyens pendant leur arrestation et interrogatoire “.

Selon le Departement d’Etat, la police a examine l’annee dernière
35 plaintes pour brutalite de la police et environ la moitie des
policiers impliques ont recu une sanction disciplinaire. Aucun d’eux
n’a ete apparemment poursuivi ou renvoye.

” Les autorites ont continue a arreter et retenir des suspects sans
preuve raisonnable et retenir des individus arbitrairement en raison de
leur affiliation politique ou d’activites politiques ” dit le rapport.

Le Departement d’Etat a aussi pointe la forte influence du pouvoir
sur les medias. ” La plupart des chaînes appartiennent aux politiciens
du parti au pouvoir ou a des hommes d’affaires proches du pouvoir et
ont presente les vues unilaterales des evenements ” dit le rapport.

From: Baghdasarian

La Grace S’Impose 1-0 Face A Armenie En Match Amical

LA GRACE S’IMPOSE 1-0 FACE A ARMENIE EN MATCH AMICAL
Krikor Amirzayan

armenews.com
vendredi 1er juin 2012

Hier soir au stade ” Arena ” de Kufstein (Autriche) l’Armenie
affrontait la Grèce en match amical. La Grèce s’est imposee 1-0 par
un but marque de la tete par le defenseur Kiriakos Papadopoulos a
la 23e minute. Deception pour l’Armenie largement dominee par les
Grecs en première partie de jeu. C’est grâce au portier armenien
Roman Berezovski que les proteges de l’entraîneur Vartan Minassian
n’encaissaient pas d’autres buts. Mais après la mi-temps, la situation
changeait avec une equipe d’Armenie plus alerte et incisive. A la 48e
Kevork Ghazarian etait tout près de tromper le gardien Grec Mikhalis
Safakis. Henrikh Mekhitarian, Youra Movsissian et Marcos Piselli ont
egalement eu des occasions d’egalisation. A la 70e sur une faute dans
la surface de reparation du defenseur Sarkis Hovsepian, l’arbitre
sifflait un penalty contre l’Armenie. Mais Roman Berezovski arretait
le tir. A la 85e l’arbitre sifflait une nouvelle fois pour une faute
d’Arthur Yedigarian dans la surface de reparation. Roman Berzovski en
très grande forme, arretait une nouvelle fois le penalty permettant
a l’Armenie de s’incliner sur le plus petit des scores (1-0) face a
la Grèce qui va disputer l’Euro 2012.

Le 5 juin a Erevan, l’Armenie recoit pour un nouveau match amical
le Kazakhstan.

From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Birthright?

ARMENIAN BIRTHRIGHT?

Jewish Exponent

May 31 2012

May 30, 2012 – Bryan Schwartzman, Jewish Exponent Staff

Linda Yepoyan grew up in Pittsburgh, a city that had just 30 Armenian
families and no Armenian church. She felt little cultural connection
to her family’s ancestral homeland.

Or so she thought.

Then came the December 1988 earthquake that ravaged what was then the
Soviet Republic of Armenia. More than 25,000 people were killed. The
devastation was so great that the USSR formally asked the United
States for humanitarian aid, for the first time since World War II.

Yepoyan, then 28 and immersed in a career in film and television, was
so jarred by the images of destruction that she felt a visceral need
to be there. She told her boss at HBO that she would be back in a year.

Instead, she stayed for nearly three years and married Armen Yepoyan,
an Armenian. When she returned to the United States, she spent nearly
a decade working for a Washington, D.C.-based organization that lobbied
for humanitarian and developmental aid for the newly democratic nation,
which gained independence in 1991.

The couple relocated to Wynnewood several years ago so their three
children could attend an Armenian day school in Radnor.

“It was kind of an awakening experience,” Yepoyan said of her
connection with Armenia, a mountainous country of 3 million people
that borders Turkey, Iran, Georgia and Azerbaijan. “It makes you feel
much more whole.”

If Yepoyan’s story bears some resemblance to that of countless American
Jews whose lives were changed by visiting Israel, then the name of
the organization she has directed since its creation in 2003 will
sound really familiar:

Gregory Bilazarian of Mt. Laurel, N.J., left his job as a television
news reporter to do Birthright Armenia and volunteer for a news
website in the capital, Yerevan.

It’s called Birthright Armenia.

Based out of Yepoyan’s home office on the Main Line, Birthright Armenia
was created with the consultation and support of Birthright Israel’s
leadership. Permission to use the name, however, had to be obtained
not from Birthright Israel, but from Birthright International, a
pro-life organization based in Canada that predated the Israel program.

“We are happy to share our experience,” said Barbara Aronson, chief
administrative officer for the Birthright Israel Foundation, who,
a decade ago, had several meetings with Yepoyan and program founder
Edele Hovnanian, whose family foundation helps fund the initiative.

Aronson offered information about her organization’s mission,
programming and evolving educational component.

What’s officially known as Taglit-Birthright Israel has brought more
than 300,000 young adults from around the world to the Jewish state
since its inception in 2000. It is considered by many to be one of the
most successful Jewish programs in recent decades. Birthright Armenia,
by comparison, has had 600 alumni, including 26 from the area.

Gregory Bilazarian Birthright Israel officials have also been
approached by groups in Ireland, Bulgaria and Columbia, as well as
individuals from the Indian-American and African-American communities,
all looking for insights on how to create and sustain similar
identity-building programs.

In fact, Israel’s government, which helps support Birthright Israel, is
helping to foster an exchange on these issues. Yuli Edelstein, Israel’s
minister of public diplomacy and Diaspora affairs, is convening an
International Conference on Diaspora-Homeland Partnerships in Jerusalem
in mid-June. Yepoyan said she had hoped to attend but won’t be able
to make it. She said a program staffer in Armenia would likely make
the trip.

The existence of Birthright Armenia serves as a reminder that, despite
their many differences, Jews and Armenians share similarities. Both
are ancient peoples who suffered mass deaths in the 20th century and
experienced the rebirth of ancient kingdoms as modern nation-states.

Roughly 1.5 Armenians were killed between 1915 and 1923, when the
Ottoman Empire collapsed. Most scholars consider this the first
case of a modern genocide, even though the term was first used in
connection with the Holocaust. Turkey has long contested this view
and some historians have argued that the killing did not follow a
preconceived plan and therefore should not be considered genocide.

Both peoples also share a long history in Jerusalem. The Armenian
Quarter in Jerusalem’s Old City has existed for hundreds of years,
populated by devote Armenian Christians. The area contains several
historic, religious sites and is home to more than 2,000 people.

Jews are believed to have lived in Armenia for more than 2,000 years.

Several hundred Jews still live in the capital, Yerevan.

The Armenian-American poet and memoirist Peter Balakian has written
about how the Jewish response to the Holocaust has served as a model
to Armenians on how to spread awareness of the massacres that took
place amid the instability of World War I and the breakup of the
Ottoman Empire.

There are some major differences between the two Birthright programs.

While Birthright Israel specializes in running short, 10-day programs
that primarily hit the major highlights of the country, Birthright
Armenia facilitates a longer experience that really isn’t a tour
at all.

The Armenian version matches individuals ages 20 to 32 who have at
least one Armenian grandparent with approved volunteer organizations
spread across the nation. The stints are a minimum of two months
but can last longer. The participants live with host families, take
language courses, go on excursions around the country and meet with
government officials. The program is not free but the organization
agrees to reimburse participants’ airfare and other expenses if they
meet several requirements, including gaining a basic grasp of the
Armenian language.

Since the program Hovnanian and Yepoyan created is so different from
the one that’s brought hundreds of thousands of young Jews to Israel,
why pick a name that obviously plays off the other?

Birthright Armenia director Linda Yepoyan with her husband, Armen,
an artist. The couple now lives in Wynnewood.

“I just loved the concept and the foresight of the Jewish leaders
to think 20 years ahead,” Hovnanian said. “I am trying to mold those
who will be the future leaders of the community.”

Since the program requires participants to have only one Armenian
grandparent, Birthright Armenia has several alumni who’ve identified
at least partially as Jews.

Among them is Gregory Bilazarian, a 28-year-old journalist from
Mt. Laurel, N.J.

Bilazarian has a Jewish mother and an Armenian father. Though he
attended Hebrew school, he decided at 13 to become baptized in the
Armenian church. His participation in Birthright Armenia has led to
more than a year’s stay in the country, where he’s now working for
an online news service. He says it has changed his sense of who he is.

“Heritage is often tied to the church, maybe the language, dancing
and food, and pushing for recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide,”
he said, adding that those things never spoke deeply to him. “However,
as a country, I feel I have completely connected with the nation-state
and its people.”

Mykil Bachoian, a 26-year-old lawyer in Los Angeles, also has
a Jewish mother and Armenian father, though unlike Bilazarian, he
wasn’t exposed to either culture.

“I felt like both parents should have embraced their heritage, but
at the same time, I know that their marriage was not easy for either
side of the family,” and that remaining neutral in terms of identity
was the best way to avoid conflict, he wrote in an email response to
several questions.

Not speaking the language or being connected to the church, Bachoian
always felt like something of an outsider in the Armenian community.

“Of course, I also had similar issues within the Jewish community,
but not to the same extent,” he wrote. So many of his Jewish friends
knew little Hebrew or were serious about religion so “I never felt
less Jewish with them.”

As a young adult, Bachoian has sought to deepen his understanding of
both cultures. In 2007, he took part in the 10-day Birthright Israel
program and in 2011 went on Birthright Armenia, where he spent 10
weeks volunteering for the Armenian Young Lawyers Association.

The Israel program, he said, offered a great overview and made him want
to return to Israel, which he did in 2008 through a law school program.

“The experiences of Birthright Armenia and Birthright Israel are
not comparable in any way,” he wrote, “except for the fact that both
provide their respective Diaspora with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
to see their respective homelands.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.jewishexponent.com/article/25995/Armenian_Birthright/