Lawsuit filed against Americana at Brand over Armenian Genocide appa

Lawsuit filed against Americana at Brand over Armenian Genocide
apparel controversy

March 27, 2015

Glendale News Press – A cart vendor at the Americana at Brand who was
allegedly told to remove displays of clothing making reference to the
Armenian Genocide has filed a lawsuit against the upscale outdoor
mall.

Management officials behind rap label Pentagon Records filed a
complaint in Los Angeles Superior Court on March 13 and, in the
document, they claim they were discriminated against by the mall’s
management.

Pentagon officials started selling clothing out of a cart at the
Americana in February. Shortly after setting up shop, they were
reportedly told to they could not display items that read either “our
wounds are still open 1915” or “we are still here 2015,” though they
could still be purchased if customers asked for them.

The order stemmed from shoppers complaining about the clothing.

Americana’s management apologized on its Facebook page, claiming there
was a misunderstanding and that the vendor is allowed to display the
apparel in question.

However, Tina Chuldzhyan, a production manager for the record label,
said in a phone interview on Thursday she has yet to hear that kind of
message directly from mall management.

Until then, she said she won’t display the 1915 clothing items.

The goal of the lawsuit, she said, is to get the court to compel the
outdoor mall’s management team to allow the display to resume,
Chuldzhyan said.

“We want [the] Americana to do something for the community; this goes
far past us … it really affected a whole community of people,” she
said. “We’re trying to make sure they acknowledge they made a
mistake.”

After word got out about the controversy, members of Glendale’s large
Armenian community held a silent protest at the Americana, while the
mall’s alleged actions drew criticism from Mayor Zareh Sinanyan.

Liz Jaeger, vice president of public relations for Caruso Affiliated,
which owns the Americana, declined to comment on the pending
litigation.

According to the complaint, Pentagon Records is also seeking damages,
but not for itself.

“Although the complaint seeks damages, my clients intend to use the
proceeds from this lawsuit to further promote recognition and
awareness of the Armenian Genocide,” said Pentagon’s attorney, Richard
Foster, in an email.

An order-to-show-cause hearing is scheduled for May 27.

,0,2302283.story

http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/64651
http://www.glendalenewspress.com/news/tn-gnp-americana-at-brand-becomes-target-of-criticism-over-vendors-apparel-referencing-armenian-genocide-20150312

USSR and world football legends pay tribute to Armenian Genocide vic

USSR and world football legends pay tribute to Armenian Genocide victims memory

15:14, 28 March, 2015

YEREVAN, 28 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The football legends of the world and
USSR have paid tribute to memory of the Armenian Genocide victims at
the Tzizternakaberd Genocide Memorial. The Armenian Genocide
Museum-Institute informed “Armenpress” about this. The football
players, who have arrived in Armenia to participate in the event
dedicated to the 60th birth anniversary of Khoren Hovhannisyan, also
have visited the hall of Museum Institute’s temporary exhibition.

On March 28, USSR and international football teams will play a
friendly match devoted to the 60th birth anniversary of legendary
Armenian soccer player Khoren Hovhannisyan in Yerevan.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/799576/ussr-and-world-football-legends-pay-tribute-to-armenian-genocide-victims-memory.html

Berezovsky: Roman and the Armenia national team

Berezovsky: Roman and the Armenia national team

March 27, 2015 13:46
EXCLUSIVE

On March 29, the Armenia national football team will hold its first
match this year. After a long pause, Armenian fans will again have a
chance to watch our footballers play. They will attempt to not only
play well in Albania v Armenia match, but also earn three points and
again rejoice us all.

Ahead of the match, Mediamax Sport had a meeting with experienced and
beloved captain of our national Roman Berezovsky with whose help we
will introduce the players of our national.

Gevorg Kasparov: I have known Gevorg for a long time. We always stay
in the same room during the camps. I feel very comfortable with him
and we always do our best to help each other during the matches and
trainings. He has good reaction.

Robert Arzumanyan: Robert’s absence on the defense line was highly
tangible when his injury forced him to miss the national’s matches. We
feel more confident on the pitch when he is with us.

Hrayr Mkoyan: Hrayr is one of the primary players of the central
defense. He is a very important player for us.

Varazdat Haroyan: Varazdat stands out with his bold game and ability
to play well “on the second floor.” He has already managed to gain
more practice and not to commit errors – not to get red cards or
become a reason for penalties.

Levon Hayrapetyan: Levon is an excellent player, especially when he
joins the attacks. He acts swiftly and takes right decisions. He
played quite well before the injury. We hope he will soon play for a
strong team.

Roman Berezovsky

Photo: Mediamax

Kamo Hovhannisyan: Speed is one of his most important aspects. He
started defending the national team colors from a young age and owing
to that, he has obtained a wealth of experience. He will become a good
right defender or midfielder.

Karlen Lazarian: Our team feels much better when he is in good health
and form. It is clear that the central part is as important for any
team as the foundation for the building.

Artur Yedigaryan: The same refers to Artur. We have attained positive
results in all matches Yedigaryan played with us. He seems to be our
mascot.

Edgar Manucharyan: It’s very good Edgar plays in the starting lineup
of his club. I think he has joined the national in a good form. We’ll
see it in Albania.

Henrikh Mkhitaryan: For already many years he is the best Armenian
footballer. He never spares himself for the national. No matter he has
the captain’s armband or not, he always leads the national forward.

Gevorg Ghazaryan: It’s good that Gevorg is gaining match practice in
the new team. The national will also greatly benefit from it. He now
plays very confidently and is in a good form.

Marcos Pizzelli: Marcos has also joined the national in quite a good
form. Trainings show that he moves quite swiftly and easily.
Roman Berezovsky

Photo: Mediamax

Yura Movsisyan: I think he will go all out for the match with Albania,
especially considering that he is not in the starting lineup of his
club.

Artur Sarkisov: He always helps his team whenever he is on the pitch.
He was one of the best in the match with Serbia. He does his best to
stand out after replacing.

Newcomers: I cannot describe them well yet as we have trained a little
together. Gael Andonian seems to be well prepared – the European
school immediately catches the eye. I did not have much chance to
watch Ruslan Koryan but if he has been invited to the national, then
he must be a good player.

Young players: Many of them have already spent much time in the team.
They have progressed and have drawn lessons from their senior
teammates. It would be good if they played for higher-end football
clubs.

Roman Berezovsky: I constantly work on my self-improvement and get
ready for the match with Albania. This match is highly important for
us, and will give an answer to many questions.

Hasmik Babayan, Gohar Nalbandian

http://sport.mediamax.am/en/news/interviews_sport/13656#sthash.K8CQjUsM.dpuf

ANKARA: The Turkish-Speaking Armenians Who Never Visited Turkey

THE TURKISH-SPEAKING ARMENIANS WHO NEVER VISITED TURKEY

Journal of Turkish Weekly
March 26 2015

Anadolu Agency
26 March 2015

Lives and languages entwine as AA traces the Avagyan family’s journey
from Anatolia via Greece and Lebanon to Armenia.

Many assume history between Turks and Armenians is black-and-white,
but the story of one family in Yerevan reveals that lives and language
in this part of the world can be intertwined.

Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink — assassinated by a Turkish
teenager in 2007 — once described Turkey and Armenia as: “Two close
nations, two distant neighbors.”

One such “distant neighbor” is Hovhannes Avagyan. Born in Athens in
1920, this was the same year that the multiethnic Ottoman Empire was
collapsing and Armenia become part of the Soviet Union.

Now living in Armenia, Hovhannes has never been to Turkey but his
family, including his two granddaughters, speaks fluent Turkish.

The Avagyans’ story begins as Anatolian Armenians during the Ottoman
era even before Hovhannes was born. His grandfather was from Ankara
and his grandmother was from Turkey’s western province of Afyon.

His grandfather, Agop, was in the Ottoman army as a baker during the
Gallipoli (Gelibolu) Campaign in 1915.

Meanwhile Agop’s sons — Melkon, 12, and Rupen, 14 — lived in Ankara
until the family was split up after they lost their mother to illness.

During the turmoil of WWI, the two brothers stayed in Istanbul for
a time and then sheltered in a U.S.-funded orphanage in Greece.

When Hovhannes’ grandfather was discharged from the Ottoman army,
Agop started to look for his children and found them by sending
letters to churches and orphanages.

Agop eventually found them in Athens working as shoeshine boys.

By the time they met again Melkon was 17 and Ruben was 19. The
re-united family started to live in a tent city in Athens with
thousands of other ethnic Armenians.

Ruben married an Armenian girl from Turkey’s Aegean province of Usak
and eventually moved to France.

Melkon also met his future partner in the form of an Armenian girl
who was staying in another tent city in the Greek city of Thessaloniki
and was in Athens for a visit.

When the family bought a small piece of land from a wealthy Armenian
family in Athens, Hovhannes’s parents and grandfather built a simple
house made of adobe brick.

They lived together in Athens, working in their own grocery store
and bakery, until 1945 when an official from the Soviet Union came
to talk about moving to Armenia.

At the beginning they did not want to go. The Avagyans’ eschewed
the first two ships which carried away thousands of hopeful Armenian
immigrants seeking a new life in their ancestral homeland.

But eventually the number of Armenians in Athens decreased so much
that the Avagyans found themselves running out of customers.

The loss of their regular customers hit the business hard because
some local Greeks refused to shop at an Armenian store.

“As it [our name] was written on the shop sign — Agop Avagyan —
local Greeks did not deal with us Armenians,” says Hovhannes, sitting
in his Yerevan home.

In the end this led them to board a ship with around 2,700 passengers
in 1947. Including the Avagyan family, this third group passed through
Istanbul’s Bosphorus Strait en route to a new life and an uncertain
future in Armenia.

Hovhannes recalls that time: “Armenians living in Istanbul were waving
white sheets to salute them.”

The family arrived in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, where they still
live today; Hovhannes’ father re-established his bakery while Hovhannes
worked as a bus driver.

Looking at his wife Hovhannes recalls living under communism: “I can
speak with you openly now but under Stalin’s rule I would not even
speak freely with my wife.”

Hovhannes married Pertshuhi Krepekyan — now 83 — in 1955.

Pertshuhi, who also speaks Turkish and whose parents were from Turkey’s
southern province of Adana, came to Armenia via Lebanon.

Coming “home” was not the happy ending the Avagyan family had dreamed
of: “My father always wanted to see where he was born,” Hovhannes
says, musing.

“But it was Soviet times and it was very difficult.”

They kept speaking Turkish at home. That is why even today both
Hovhannes and Pertshuhi speak fluent Turkish with an Anatolian accent.

Their first years in Armenia were not easy; they were the newcomers
and they were called “ahpar” which means literally “brother” which
Hovhannes’ Yerevan-born granddaughter Pertshuhi Avagyan, 24, says had a
“marginalizing” meaning.

Coming from Anatolia meant a different cuisine as well as culture.

“Even eating olives was strange for the locals as they did not have
it here in Armenia,” says granddaughter Pertshuhi, who is a linguist
and translator.

Hovhannes still misses traditional tahini halva, a dessert which is
quite common in western Anatolia and Greece.

Although he and his family have never lived in Turkey, their
granddaughters learned how to speak Turkish just by listening to her
grandparents and watching Turkish TV.

“I was watching Turkish TV programs and cartoons since I do not even
remember, maybe from when I was six years old,” Pertshuhi says.

Pertshuhi — named after her Lebanon-born grandmother — says:
“It is very difficult to comment about Turkish people without going
there even once but I can say this; the people there are very warm
and hospitable, just like Armenians.”

Pertshuhi hopes to live together with Turks and peacefully with
“doors open,” a reference to the Turkish-Armenian border, which has
been closed since 1993.

It is true that no member of the Avagyan family lived in Turkey at any
time. But from their way of speaking to their cuisine and Hovhannes’
attitude to his granddaughter — disapproving when she was a little
late home that night — they are Anatolian.

As Hovhannes puts it: “We are from Turkey, I never forgot this.”

26 March 2015

http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/182408/the-turkish-speaking-armenians-who-never-visited-turkey.html

Greeks And Armenians Protest Against Kemal Ataturk Monument In Sydne

GREEKS AND ARMENIANS PROTEST AGAINST KEMAL ATATURK MONUMENT IN SYDNEY

Greek Reporter
March 26 2015

by Ioanna Zikakou – Mar 26, 2015 –

Greeks and Armenians in Australia are reacting to the erection of a
monument in honor of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in Sydney’s Hyde Park.

Several Greek Diaspora, Pontic and Armenian organizations expressed
their disagreement with the monument in a written statement addressed
to Sydney officials and news agencies.

“Kemal Ataturk was responsible for the mass-murder and forced death
marches of ethnic minorities living in Turkey as well as those Turkish
citizens who opposed his dictatorship during the early 20th century.

Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and his supporters known as ‘Kemalists’ carried
out a wave of barbaric violence against minorities living in Turkey,”
wrote the Armenian Youth Federation of Australia, in a letter of
protest addressed to NSW State Government MP Victor Dominello. The
federation also invited the supporters of their cause to sign a
petition for the monument’s withdrawal, which was unveiled on February
19, as part of the centennial Gallipoli landing anniversary.

Meanwhile, a protest letter has been circulating in social media and
Greek Diaspora organizations, who have asked supporters of the cause
to forward the letter to several email addresses in order to express
their disagreement toward the Kemal Ataturk monument.

The Armenian National Committee of Australia wrote: “2015 marks not
only the centennial of Anzac Day but also of the Armenian Genocide. It
is critical that during such an important period of modern history,
facts are correctly reported.”

http://au.greekreporter.com/2015/03/26/greek-and-armenians-protest-against-kemal-ataturk-monument-in-sydney/

ANKARA: Armenian As An ‘Insult’

ARMENIAN AS AN ‘INSULT’

Hurriyet Daily News, turkey
March 26 2015

Ankara Mayor Melih Gökcek has sued writer Hayko Bagdat on the grounds
the writer insulted him in Twitter. In the tweet which was considered
insulting, Bagdat wrote, “They have given Ankara to an Armenian,
what a shame.”

Gökcek’s lawyers, in the petition they submitted to court, said,
“For a person who is so much loved and respected by the people, this
word which was used with a disgusting meaning was a heavy violation
of the personal rights of our client as well as hugely disrespectful
toward all those who support, love and respect our client.”

It is impossible for me to understand why the word “Armenian” is
“disgusting.”

The words Turkish, Kurdish, Armenian, Greek, British, German, Italian,
etc. refer to an “ethnic” belonging. They cannot be considered
insulting; those who use it as an insulting word and who perceive it
as insulting word are committing a racist hate crime, let’s be clear
of that fact first.

On the other hand, who would believe an Armenian would use this word
as an insult?

Obviously, in those days when the “I’m sorry but Armenian” matter
was debated, Bagdat would have been making a joke.

However, in this country, for a long time, instead of laughing at
jokes we have been stuck in a situation where we draw an insult out
of them. Nobody is laughing; nobody makes fun of themselves. “Grave
seriousness” has become stuck on people.

Bagdat’s last book, “Gollik,” was published by İnkılap Publishing
House. In it, Bagdat wisely and light-heartedly makes fun of himself,
his identity, his immediate environment and everybody else; I recommend
you read it. I wish Gökcek’s lawyers had also read this book; there
would have been no need for them to open this case…

The PM should name this situation

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is an interesting person. When I listen
to his speeches, the rhetoric he uses gives me the impression we live
on a different meridian.

For instance, he spoke like this the other day: “We did not have any
communication problem with our president on any matter in the past
seven months. If there is a flaw in the information flow, this could
be eliminated. If there are differences in evaluation, this may be
discussed. Nobody should be expecting chaos over a scenario that there
is a difference of opinion between the government and the president.”

We know the difference of opinion is not a “scenario” because the
president himself declared this difference of opinion. It was nobody
else but the president who said, “There is a communication problem.

Let’s bring the presidential system and leave this behind.”

If there is a “scenario,” then the scriptwriter is sitting in BeÃ…~_tepe
Palace. The prime minister had declared the “transparency package” as
his first major move; when the president said, “You will not be able
to find a district head of the organization for the party or a mayor,”
the prime minister had to give up the package he had announced with
a press conference.

Do I need to recall the Hakan Fidan incident? Or the “security
package,” which was to be revised through talks with the opposition,
but was hastily brought to parliament? Or the Dolmabahce declaration
and the monitoring committee?

Nobody has an “expectation of chaos.” The thing we are living through
can only be called this, nothing else. The question is: who is running
this government?

If we need to name it, then let’s not name it “chaos.” Let’s be polite
to the prime minister.

Well, then, what do we call it?

Back two rows

Davutoglu said Istanbul would make it to 25th place in the 2018 list of
“World Finance Centers.” Not a lot of time has passed since he said
this, since it was only the last week of 2014.

A new list has been issued and Istanbul fell two places from the
previous list. While it had been in the 42nd spot previously, it lost
its place to Casablanca and fell to 44th.

In order to find the answer to why Istanbul is going backwards, let us
look at what kind of criteria is sought to determine the ranking. The
first is corruption and the rule of law. If you cannot curb corruption
and cannot apply the laws equally, then you lose points. Second are
tax laws. They need to be simple, just, predictable and transparent.

Third is the human resources issue. Knowledgeable, well-educated and
talented human resources are needed, but our education system is not
even able to teach Turkish decently.

As a result, this is a country where politicians are trying to bankrupt
a bank… What is going on here never escapes the attention of those
who monitor these kinds of developments in the world…

March/26/2015

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/armenian-as-an-insult.aspx?PageID=238&NID=80177&NewsCatID=503

Turquie : L’assassin De Dink Entraine Dans Le Crime Par L’Etat

TURQUIE : L’ASSASSIN DE DINK ENTRAINE DANS LE CRIME PAR L’ETAT

Publié le : 27-03-2015

Info Collectif VAN – – Condamné a verser
une indemnité a la famille Dink pour le meurtre de Hrant Dink, le
ministère turc de l’Intérieur a ouvert un procès en révocation pour
récupérer 1 million 659 mille lires des auteurs [de l’assassinat]. Le
père de l’assassin Ogun Samast demande l’abandon des charges en
accusant l’Ã~Itat qui a entraîné son enfant dans le crime. Le
Collectif VAN vous propose la traduction de cet article en anglais
publié sur le site d’Agos le 19 mars 2015.

Agos

19 mars 2015

Le père d’Ogun Samast: L’Ã~Itat a entraîné mon enfant dans le crime

Condamné a verser une indemnité a la famille Dink pour le meurtre
de Hrant Dink, le Ministère de l’Intérieur a ouvert un procès en
révocation pour récupérer 1 million 659 mille lires des auteurs
[de l’assassinat].

Selon le rapport de Hayati Arıgan de Haberturk, dans sa requête,
le père de Samast, Ahmet Samast, a expliqué que ‘l’Ã~Itat profond’
avait incité son fils a assassiner Hrant Dink et avait volé sa vie
en le faisant glisser dans la criminalité. Samast a aussi estimé
que son fils a subi les plus grands dommages [financiers] concernant
Hrant Dink et sa famille.

Demandant l’abandon des charges, le père, Ahmet Samast, a dit:
” De la même manière qu’elle a failli a protéger la vie de la
victime, l’administration n’a pas pris non plus les précautions
nécessaires pour empêcher un enfant de 16 ans d’être entraîné
dans la criminalité.

”

Ahmet Samast a souligné que l’Etat a manqué a son devoir fondamental
et il a demandé l’abandon des charges.

En 2008, la famille Dink avait intenté un procès contre le Ministère
de l’Intérieur devant le 6ème Tribunal Administratif d’Istanbul.

Dans le procès qui a pris fin en 2012, le tribunal avait condamné
le ministère a payer 1 million 659 000 LT (livre turque) de
dédommagement.

Le ministère a ensuite déposé un procès en révocation devant le
tribunal civil de première instance d’Istanbul pour récupérer
auprès des auteurs de l’assassinat de Dink la somme qu’il a
payée. Affirmant que ” les actions des assassins de Hrant Dink
représentent un acte délictueux commis contre l’Ã~Itat, le Ministère
a exigé la somme qu’il a payée, avec les intérêts, a Yasin Hayal,
Ersin Yolcu, Ahmet Iskender et Ogun Samast.

©Traduction de l’anglais Collectif VAN – 25 mars 2015 –

Lire aussi:

Dossier du Collectif VAN : Meurtres et agressions anti-arméniennes
en Turquie

Source/Lien : Agos

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=86968
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org

Culver Student Organizes Locals For Walk To End Genocide

CULVER STUDENT ORGANIZES LOCALS FOR WALK TO END GENOCIDE

Culver City Observer
March 26 2015

March 26, 2015

On April 19 thousands will gather from throughout Southern California
for Jewish World Watch’s 9th annual Walk to End Genocide – the largest
annual anti-genocide rally in the United States.

A wide-ranging, multi-faith coalition of policymakers, religious
leaders, schools, and activists will join for a day of action, walking
together to highlight the power of local communities to fight genocides
and mass atrocities around the world.

The event will raise funds for anti-genocide educational and advocacy
efforts in the U.S. – and to support on-the ground projects that aid
refugees and survivors of the conflicts in Sudan and Congo.

Hundreds of Culver City residents are embracing the cause. At the
center of these efforts are students from the New LA Charter School,
which is fielding a large and passionate team.

Hayley Rothbart is another young Culver City resident taking action.

She has organized a team for her Girl Scout Troop, inspiring her
peers to take notice and participate.

This year’s Walk coincides with the 70th anniversary of the liberation
of Auschwitz and the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. Both
tragedies will be commemorated during the event.

“In commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and
the 70th Anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, we must confront
the sad truth that too many in the international community continue
to stand idly by as genocides and mass atrocities plague our planet,”
said Janice Kamenir-Reznik, the co-Founder and President of Jewish
World Watch.

“This Walk provides an important opportunity for people of conscience
across Southern California from different backgrounds and faiths
to join with our elected leaders – and turn the words ‘Never Again’
into action.”

Every year the Walk to end Genocide reflects the unique diversity of
Southern California. Students will walk together with survivors of
past genocides.

Representatives of the Armenian, African-American, Asian and Latino
communities will join with churches, synagogues, and mosques to bring
attention to the plight of communities now faced with genocide and
mass atrocities in Sudan and Congo.

With the goal of inspiring and educating a new generation of local
anti-genocide activists, the day’s activities will include craft
and activist projects, advocacy booths, food, art, music, and solar
cooker demonstrations. The event will be held in collaboration with an
afternoon program for Yom Hashoa – the Day of Holocaust Commemoration –
at the L.A. Museum of the Holocaust.

The Walk to End Genocide will take place in Pan Pacific Park (7600
Beverly Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90036) from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

http://www.culvercityobserver.com/story/2015/03/26/news/culver-student-organizes-locals-for-walk-to-end-genocide/4687.html

Levon Ter-Petrosyan Calls To Stop Putting Pressure On Turkey Over ‘G

LEVON TER-PETROSYAN CALLS TO STOP PUTTING PRESSURE ON TURKEY OVER ‘GENOCIDE’

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
March 26 2015

27 March 2015 – 12:16am

The first president of Armenia, leader of the ‘Armenian National
Congress’ Levon Ter-Petrosyan, has published his own draft of the
message of Armenia to the international community in connection
with the 100th anniversary of the tragic events of 1915. He noted
that although Armenia supports the international recognition of the
‘Armenian genocide’, the issue of recognition of ‘genocide’ should
not be the cornerstone of its foreign policy and it should not be
put in front of Turkey to recognize the genocide claim, considering
it to be an internal affair of the latter country.

“The Armenian Republic at the same time considers it necessary to
emphasize that it is not going to dictate its agenda to the Armenian
diaspora, as representatives of the Armenian people are scattered
throughout the world, as citizens, taxpayers and voters of different
countries, and have the right to put pressure on their governments
and to require them to recognize the condemnation of the Armenian
Genocide,” Ter-Petrosyan said in a letter published in the newspaper
Chorrord Ishkhanutyun.

Armenia, according to Ter-Petrosyan, should appeal to European
countries, so that they do not require recognition of the ‘Armenian
genocide’ as a precondition for negotiations on Turkey’s accession
to the EU. Armenia, according to him, should be ready to establish
diplomatic relations with Turkey on the basis of the Zurich protocols
of 2009, “with the reservation only on the advisability of establishing
a commission of Armenian and Turkish historians to study the genocide.”

Ter-Petrosyan also writes: “Taking into account the interconnectedness
of some of the Armenian-Turkish relations and the Karabakh settlement,
Armenia is ready to resolve the conflict on the basis of the Madrid
principles through peaceful negotiations, and also on the condition
that prior to the implementation the schedule of the settlement, the
terms, conditions and legal consequences of the planned referendum on
the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh will be specified, as well as
issues related to the deployment of international peacekeeping forces
in the region to ensure the safety of the population of Karabakh.”

The leader of the ANC expresses his willingness to listen to and take
into account suggestions, comments and remarks of all stakeholders
about the project, radio station Azatutyun reports.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/news/politics/68525.html

Armenian President, CSTO Chief Discuss Preparations For Unbreakable

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT, CSTO CHIEF DISCUSS PREPARATIONS FOR UNBREAKABLE BROTHERHOOD 2015 EXERCISE

Interfax, Russia
March 24 2015

YEREVAN. March 24

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan met with the Secretary General of the
Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), Nikolai Bordyuzha, in
Baku on Monday to discuss preparations for the Unbreakable Brotherhood
2015 exercise of the CSTO’s collective peacekeeping forces, the
president’s press office told Interfax.

The meeting was held as part of a working visit to Armenia by Bordyuzha
and the chief of the CSTO Joint Staff, Lt. Gen. Alexander Studyonkin,
the press office said.

The attendees also discussed cooperation within the Organization and
security in the Caucasus region.

Earlier on Monday Bordyuzha and Studyonkin met with Armenia’s Defense
Minister, Seyran Ohanyan.