Notes in Georgian, Armenian and other languages found on one of the guns of New Zealand mosque attackers

Notes in Georgian, Armenian and other languages found on one of the guns of New Zealand mosque attackers

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15:56, 15 March, 2019

YEREVAN, MARCH 15, ARMENPRESS. One of the weapons used for the attack on the two mosques in New Zealand is covered with notes in different languages, including Armenian and Georgian, the videos released from the incident show.

The Georgian state security service has already reacted to these reports, stating that it cooperates with its partners to find out details about the persons arrested following the attack and the weapon used.

The gun covered in white lettering featured the names of King Davit Agmashenebeli and Prince David Soslan, the second husband of Queen Tamar, in Georgian, the Battle of Kagul 1770 (Russian-Turkish war) and the Battle of Bulair 1913 were written in Russian.

The Battle of Sarikamish (one of the biggest military clashes between Russian and Ottoman empires during the WWI) is written in Armenian on the gun.

ARMENPRESS is trying to find out from the competent authorities whether the Armenian note on the gun has any connection with the involvement of any Armenian in the New Zealand mosque attacks.

49 people have killed in the shootings in mosques in the city of Christchurch, New Zealand.

New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern described the shootings as a terrorist attack.

Armed people entered the the Al Noor and Linwood Masjid mosques in Christchurch at about 13:45 local time shortly after the day prayer, blocked the entrance doors and opened fire. According to eyewitnesses, about 200 and 300 people were inside the building when the attack occurred. Police told citizens to stay indoors. All schools in the city were closed.

Armenpress: Armenia bans Boeing B-737-MAX 8, MAX 9 aircraft from its airspace amid growing safety concerns

Armenia bans Boeing B-737-MAX 8, MAX 9 aircraft from its airspace amid growing safety concerns

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10:04,

YEREVAN, MARCH 14, ARMENPRESS. Armenian aviation authorities have banned Boeing B-737-MAX 8 and Boeing B-737-MAX 9 aircraft from its entering its airspace.

“Taking into account the safety notice issued by the European Aviation Safety Agency, as well as the NOTAM’s banning the Boeing B-737-MAX 8 and Boeing B-737-MAX 9 aircraft from Turkish and Georgian airspace, the Armenian Civil Aviation Committee, upon studying the situation, and considering flight safety a priority, has decided to ban the operations of B-737-MAX 8 and Boeing B-737-MAX 9 aircraft in Armenian airspace from March 13th to April 13th,” the committee said in a news release.

Many countries have banned the aircraft from entering its airspace until further notice as safety concerns continue to mount following two deadly crashes.

The move comes after the recent Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed all 157 people on board.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan



Azerbaijani Press: Ilham Aliyev: Controversial official statements by Armenia unacceptable, undermine negotiations

Azer News, Azerbaijan
March 7 2019

By  Trend

President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev has received a delegation led by EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in Georgia Toivo Klaar.

Toivo Klaar expressed the EU’s keenness to positively contribute to the peaceful settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

President Ilham Aliyev hailed the European Commission leadership and some of its commissioners’ public statements regarding the settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict on the basis of international law, unsustainability of the current status-quo, continuation of the negotiations in the existing format, and the unacceptability of putting forward conditions in negotiations. The president said Azerbaijan supports this.

The head of state noted that the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict must be settled on the basis of the principles and norms of international law within the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan in accordance with the relevant UN Security Council resolutions, adding that the format of negotiations cannot be changed.

Describing Azerbaijan as the most interested party in the soonest fair settlement of the conflict, President Ilham Aliyev emphasized that the liberation of the occupied lands has always been the crucial component of the negotiation process.

The head of state underlined that the controversial official statements made by the Armenian side are unacceptable and undermine the negotiation process. He said it is necessary that the international community take this into serious consideration and convey targeted statements to Armenia.

The sides also exchanged views on the development of cooperation between Azerbaijan and the European Union in various fields, and Azerbaijan’s involvement in Eastern Partnership program.

168: The bizarre and hilarious story behind this derelict Edinburgh building is stranger than fiction (photos)

Category
Society

Whenever you drive along Abbeyhill at the foot of the Royal Mile, you pass a very unusual single storey sandstone building with cyrillic lettering above the doorway. But have you ever stopped to wonder what it is – or what it used to be?

Well, wonder no more, because we’ve looked into its history, and it was way weirder, more entertaining and unusual than we could ever have imagined. Think a real life Fawlty Towers, but with an Armenian twist. But let’s start at the very beginning.

55 Abbeyhill was built in 1896 as a police station in a unique style, with castle-like elements, corner turrets and animal figure gargoyles. It was used as a police station until at least 1932, as there are records of officers being based there at that time.

A group of Abbeyhill police officers taken outside the station in the early 20th century (Image: Creative Commons)

So far, so normal. But after the police service moved out of the property, the story of this building takes a fascinating twist.

From the 1980s until at least 2008, the small ex-police station became arguably the strangest and most mysterious restaurant in Edinburgh. It was called Aghtamar Lake Van Monastery in Exile, an Armenian eatery notorious for its random opening times and extremely eccentric owner.

For years, the restaurant was the stuff of legend. If you could track down the owner and make a booking (no easy feat – one reviewer says it took a “month of phone calls”) you could access some utterly amazing food in the form of a ten-course Armenian banquet that diners raved about.

The man behind this delicious spread was Petros Vartynian, an unusual business owner who had a reputation for throwing customers out of the restaurant for – amongst other things – asking for more food or wine, turning up a few minutes late (he would refuse to give people directions to the restaurant), or failing to join in with one of his Armenian dancing tutorials.

We were also told that Vartynian, who still lives in Edinburgh, would ask customers to help with the washing up, and if people didn’t finish one of their courses they weren’t allowed any more food.

The last online review for the Aghtamar was left in late 2008, so it seems likely it stopped operating regularly at that time, although there are some accounts of people dining there as late as 2011. However, the building has gradually fallen into disrepair since and is now classed as “at risk”.

“A giant moose head adorned the wall, and posters advertising the Armenian tourist board were scattered around”

According to a now-archived blog post by local writer Jonny MacFarlane, the interior wasn’t particularly welcoming. Jonny spoke to a friend who had the rare honour of eating there, who said:

“The main eating hall was vast, cold and dark with only candle-light to guide your steps. There didn’t appear to be electricity.

“A giant moose head adorned the wall and various different posters advertising the Armenian tourist board were scattered around.

“There was a ghetto-blaster in the corner playing what sounded like red army choir music from an old, scratchy cassette.

“The whole place had a Soviet era, beyond the iron curtain feel. There were no amenities like heating, menus or salt and pepper.

The Queen was recently spotted driving past the derelict restaurant (Image: Reddit)

“The best dish had minced pork and rice rolled up in cabbage leaves. The whole thing was steamed and served with a very nice salad with an amazing dressing. Dessert was also very memorable, a sort of fruit trifle, with very pungent flavors.”

One group once asked for Turkish instead of Armenian coffee – forgetting that Turkey and Armenia have serious historical beef. They instantly regretted it:

“In a sudden rage the owner unceremoniously threw out the entire group, ignoring their apologies and protestations. I think most saw the owner as part of the charm, temper and all. It wasn’t really about a meal, it was about an experience.”

The article also says that an Armenian newspaper reported in 2012 that the restaurant was going to be turned into an Armenian Cultural Centre. However, it’s currently on the Buildings At Risk Register and the Edinburgh City Council’s planning officer hasn’t added any information about planned renovations, so it’s fair to say that’s unlikely.

But whatever happens to it in the future, the next time you drive past this iconic building, you can imagine was it was like to dine at the bizarre Aghtamar Lake Van Monastery in Exile: Edinburgh’s most unusual and mysterious restaurant.

edinburghlive.co.uk

We do not intend to return a single inch of land. Vanetsyan’s message from Artsakh

  • 01.03.2019
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  • Armenia:
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Our compatriots should live in our lands and build our country. Artur Vanetsyan, director of the RA National Security Service, announced this during his visit to Artsakh.


“The program, which we call the resettlement program, will be the main guarantee of our country’s security in my and all of our objective assessment. Because those words, those expressions and those people who always speculate on the topic that the lands will be given back, negotiated, conceded, etc., as a result of that program, we will give a clear message to the entire Armenian people and the whole world that we do not intend to give back a single inch of land, but on the contrary, our compatriots should live in our lands and build our country,” said Artur Vanetsyan.


To remind, yesterday the President of the Republic of Artsakh Bako Sahakyan together with the Director of the RA National Security Service Artur Vanetsyan visited the southern part of the Artsakh-Azerbaijani border, got acquainted with the service of the soldiers and the prevailing situation.

Ex-mayor of Armenian town arrested in suspicion of embezzlement

Ex-mayor of Armenian town arrested in suspicion of embezzlement

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17:19,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. Former Mayor of Hrazdan Aram Danielyan has been arrested in suspicion of embezzlement and misuse of state funds, the Investigative Committee said.

Danielyan is suspected in embezzling land and property taxes during his years in office as mayor of the Armenian town.

Authorities said he has been placed under arrest at 14:10, February 26.

The Investigative Committee said the criminal investigation is still ongoing.

Danielyan hasn’t yet made any public statement on the matter.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenian community of Netherlands to hold demonstration in Hague

Armenian community of Netherlands to hold demonstration in Hague

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16:52,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. The Federation of Armenian Organizations in the Netherlands (FAON), the Dutch Armenian Committee for Justice and Democracy will hold demonstration in Hague on February 27 for the memory of victims of pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait, Ganja and Baku, the FAON told Armenpress.

The demonstration will start from the Peace Palace to the embassy of Azerbaijan.

The event aims at remembering the victims of the pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait, Ganja and Baku in 1988 and 1990, as well as to protest against the continuing aggression of Azerbaijan against the Republic Artsakh and Armenia.

On the same day the FAON delegation will send a letter to the Dutch foreign minister, as well as the Parliament on issues relating to the status of Artsakh.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Prosperous Armenia parliament faction suggests adding new chapter to proposed government program

News.am, Armenia
Feb 14 2019
Prosperous Armenia parliament faction suggests adding new chapter to proposed government program Prosperous Armenia parliament faction suggests adding new chapter to proposed government program

13:41, 14.02.2019

YEREVAN. – The Prosperous Armenia Party proposes to supplement the government’s program with a ninth chapter that will stipulate the guarantees for implementing this program, expected risks, specific tools and mechanisms for its implementation, obligations—by years, until 2023.

National Assembly (NA) Vice President Vahe Enfiajyan, who is also a member of the Prosperous Armenia faction in parliament, on Thursday said the aforementioned at the NA debates on the proposed five-year program of the government.

He reflected also on the annual GDP growth and taxes, investment dynamics and interest-rate changes, national debt ratio to the GDP, minimum wage and pension increase, as well as poverty reduction in Armenia.

“What kind of a decision will we make on this matter, together with the MPs of our party, depends on your conduct,” Enfiajyan added.

Shoulder to shoulder: France continues to demonstrate its commitment to and support for the Armenian people.

Al-Ahram, Egypt
Feb 13 2019
 
 
Shoulder to shoulder
 
France continues to demonstrate its commitment to and support for the Armenian people.
Nora Koloyan-Keuhnelian looks into the history of their close friendship
 
 
 
Macron and his wife Brigitte plant a fir tree in memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide at the memorial in the Armenian capital Yerevan, October 2018
 
NORA KOLOYAN-KEUHNELIAN
 
French President Emmanuel Macron last week announced that France will “make 24 April a national day of commemoration of the Armenian Genocide”. Speaking to the Armenian community at a dinner in Paris organised by the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organisations of France, Macron added: “France is, first and foremost, the country that knows how to look history in the face. France was among the first to denounce the killing of the Armenian people, which in 1915 named genocide for what it was, and who in 2001, after a long struggle, recognised it in law.”
 
Macron’s remarks honoured a campaign promise from his election in 2017.
 
The French Armenian community is the largest in the European Union, exceeding 500,000.
 
Turkey dismissed the decision of Macron, “who is facing political problems in his own country to save the day,” Turkish Presidential Spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said in a statement. Macron is “turning historic events into political material,” the statement read, referring to the jilet jaune protests, saying that Macron is using the Armenian issue to deflect attention.
 
“The 1913-1923 Christian genocide is Turkey’s original sin. If Turkey wants to be a civilised, democratic and respected nation, they need to face up to the reality of the genocide and do their best to secure some respect and justice for the victims. But they don’t. Instead, they continue verbally attacking the governments that rightfully recognise the genocide,” Washington-based Turkish analyst Uzay Bulut told Al-Ahram Weekly.
 
The first Armenians in France date back to the sixth century. Military and commercial relations between the French and Armenians started growing in the 11th to 14th centuries. In the ninth century, several young Armenians moved to France to receive their education and became part of the social and political life in the country. In 1855, the first French Armenian newspapers, Arevelk (East) and Masyats Aghavni (Pigeon of Mount Masiss) started publishing in Paris.
 
Formal diplomatic relations between France and Armenia were first established in 1992. In 1998, at the time of President Chirac, a resolution by the French National Assembly saying “France recognises the Armenian genocide of 1915” was passed, meeting strong Turkish objections. France was also the first European country to officially recognise the Armenian Genocide, in 2001.
 
In 2012, in the time of Nicolas Sarkozy, tensions mounted between France and Turkey after the  French National Assembly voted in favour of a bill that would leave denial of the Armenian Genocide illegal. Turkey froze relations with France, recalling its ambassador and suspending all economic, political and military meetings in response. Tensions resurfaced in 2016, when the French National Assembly voted again in favour of outlawing denial of the Armenian Genocide, the 2012 bill having been later blocked by the Constitutional Court.
 
During the 1915 massacres, the French welcomed tens of thousands of Armenians into their country as a safe haven. France was also one of the few countries to send rescue boats for the Armenians after a heroic 53-day battle of self-defence known as Musa Ler (Mount Musa).
 
The French pro-Armenian position is historic. “This friendship between the two nations has a multi-decade long history,” Marseille-based member of the Armenian National Committee Hratch Varjabedian told the Weekly. France’s former presidents have all had positive political attitudes towards Armenians. “This is because of the efficiency of the Armenian community of France and its powerful lobbying efforts, which definitely worries Turkey all the time,” Varjabedian said.
 
He believes that continuous Armenian lobbying was one of the reasons that made President Macron take the step he did last week.
 
There are monuments dedicated to victims of the Armenian Genocide in several cities in France, including Paris, Lyon and Marseille. Armenians of France remained close to their cultural origins, while at the same time they integrated in France and contributed greatly to Francophone culture.
 
Many Armenian writers, poets, painters and musicians have worked and died in France. Both French and Armenians are proud of the likes of Charles Aznavour, Henri Verneuil, Marc Aryan, Sylvie Vartan, Youri Djorkaeff, Michel Legrand, Andre Manoukian and other prominent figures in the French Resistance, like Patrick Devedjian, Missak Manouchian and Louise Aslanian. Also died in Paris, founder of the Armenian national school of music, priest, composer, singer and choirmaster; Komitas, whose ashes and manuscripts were transferred to Armenia after his death.
 
“The great respect the French president and his people paid when Aznavour departed this world is never to be forgotten. It was like honouring one of the most respected communities in France,” Varjabedian said.
 
Macron visited Armenia in October 2018 and took part in the 17th Summit of Francophonie.
 
“Most of today’s Turks reject that a genocide existed; however, there is an increasing movement, it’s still in small numbers, of Turks who do accept that something very nasty happened to the Armenians,” France 24’s Jasper Mortimer said in a televised report.
 
According to Mortimer, the Renault automobile factory in Turkey produces 365,000 cars a year. “You see a lot of Renault cars on Turkish roads; trade is very important between the two countries and I expect it to be maintained,” Mortimer said.
 
In response to Macron’s decision, in Turkey, leader of the right-wing Grand Unity Party (BBP) Mustafa Destici called for the deportation of 100,000 Armenian workers who he claimed are working illegally in Turkey.
 
“In 2010 too, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had made a similar statement. He threatened to deport 100,000 Armenians if foreign parliaments continued to recognise the Armenian Genocide. It is ironic that Turkish authorities threaten to harm the Armenians who are alive today when they want to “prove” that their ancestors did not commit crimes against Armenians a century ago. This shows that violating Armenians and other non-Turkish peoples comes so naturally to them that they do not even realise that their statements are incredibly inhumane, hostile and atrocious,” Bulut told the Weekly.
 
It remains to be seen whether trade between the two countries will be affected by Macron’s decision, but Bulut is doubtful.
 
“No. Turkey is going through an economic crisis now and Turkish officials cannot risk commercial troubles with France,” Bulut concluded.