Les représentants des villes jumelées à Etchmiadzine en viste au Sai

ARMENIE
Les représentants des villes jumelées à Etchmiadzine en viste au Saint Siège

Le 8 Octobre, à l’occasion de la journée de la célébration de
l’anniversaire de la ville d’Etchmiadzine, Sa Grce l’évêque Arshak
Khachatrian, Chancelier du Saint Siège d’Etchmiadzine a reçu les
représentants du programme des villes jumelées avec Etchmiadzine –
Petrozavodsk, en Carélie (Russie) ; Fresno, en Californie (États-Unis)
; et Issy-les-Moulineaux, Paris (France). Ils étaient accompagnés par
le maire d’Etchmiadzin Karen Grigorian.

Se félicitant de la visite des représentants et de leur participation
aux célébrations du 2699e anniversaire de la ville ; Son Excellence
l’évêque Arshak a transmis les bénédictions et les voeux de Sa Sainteté
Karékine II, Patriarche suprême et Catholicos de tous les Arméniens.

Le chancelier était heureux de constater que la célébration de la fête
de la ville d’Etchmiadzine est devenue une tradition, et il a félicité
les participants à l’occasion, en soulignant le renforcement des liens
entre les villes jumelées et la coopération dans divers domaines. Son
Excellence a également réfléchi sur les relations chaleureuses qui
existent entre les autorités municipales et le Saint Siège. Au cours
de la réunion, ils ont parlé sur les activités conjointes prévues par
les villes jumelées à l’occasion du 100e anniversaire du génocide
arménien.

dimanche 19 octobre 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

Génocide arménien : un si long siècle de négation

REVUE DE PRESSE
Génocide arménien : un si long siècle de négation
2015 se veut l’année d’une mobilisation historique de toute la diaspora

Représentant une communauté de plus de 80000 mes, soit près de 10 %
de la population marseillaise,les trois coprésidents du CCAF Sud
(Conseil de coordination des organisations arméniennes de France) Azad
Balalas-Kazandjian, Simon Azilazian et Jacques Donabedian ont présenté
hier le préprogramme d’une année 2015 qui se veut historique à plus
d’un titre.

Le génocide perpétré à leur encontre par l’État turc en 1915, reste en
effet une plaie béante pour tous les Arméniens, notamment la diaspora
qui entend saisir l’occasion du centenaire de cette tragédie pour
faire aboutir ses deux principales revendications : obtenir de la
Turquie qu’elle reconnaisse le génocide en tant que tel ainsi que la
responsabilité de ses dirigeants de l’époque,mais aussi convaincre un
maximum de pays -à commencer par la France- d’inscrire dans leur
législation la pénalisation de la négation de ce même génocide, comme
c’est déjà le cas en Suisse et en Grèce.

“Nous espérons que la Turquie saura saisir cette opportunité pour
faire le geste fort que nous attendons depuis 100 ans”, souligne Simon
Azilazian. Et pour montrer sa détermination, la communauté arménienne
a fait en sorte que cette année commémorative soit avant tout celle de
l’union et de la mobilisation de l’ensemble de ses forces vive,
qu’elles soient religieuses, politiques ou associatives. Mise en place
par la République d’Arménie et le CCAF, la “Mission 2015 ” fédère
ainsi les trois églises catholiques, protestante et apostolique
arméniennes, les trois grands partis (FRA Dachnaksoutioun, Ramgavar et
Hentchakian), mais aussi la JAF (Jeunesse arménienne de France), les
Scouts apostoliques ou encore le Fonds arménien de France. “L’objectif
de la mission est de coordonner tous les événements qui marqueront ce
centenaire, avec notamment le lancement d’une bourse de projets en vue
de leur labellisation, précise Julien Harounyan.

Parmi les temps forts qui devraient marquer ce douloureux
anniversaire, on retiendra l’ambitieux projet de faire sonner toutes
les cloches des églises de France le 24 avril à 19h15 (pour 1915), la
construction d’un “mur de la mémoire et des survivants”, la plantation
d’une centaine d’arbres symboles de renaissance et une opération
spectaculaire d’Amnésie International.

Une présidence collégiale

Le nouveau bureau du CCAF vise à relever le défi du centenaire avec la
mise en place d’une direction collégiale (et non plus tournante)
constituée de trois présidents dont la mandature ne coure plus d’avril
à avril mais de janvier à décembre. Ce bureau intègre également deux
référents “mission 2015” : Julien Harounyan et d’Annie Stepanow.

La Provence

samedi 11 octobre 2014

dimanche 19 octobre 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

Mobilisons-nous pour soutenir la résistance de Kobanê contre Daesh!

MANIFESTATION SAMEDI 15 PLACE DE LA BASTILLE
Mobilisons-nous pour soutenir la résistance de Kobanê contre Daesh !

Kobanê ne doit pas tomber ! Mobilisons-nous pour soutenir la
résistance de Kobanê contre Daesh ! Appel à manifester samedi 18
octobre, 15h, de la Place de la Bastille à la Place de la Nation

Depuis le 15 septembre, les gangs de l’Etat islamique (EI ou Daesh en
arabe) lancent des offensives sur trois fronts contre le canton de
Kobanê, au Kurdistan de Syrie, utilisant des armes lourdes saisies en
Irak et en Syrie, et soutenus par la Turquie qui leur apporte une
large aide militaire, politique et logistique. Depuis près d’un mois,
les forces d’autodéfense kurdes (YPG-YPJ) résistent avec acharnement
mais n’ont pas suffisamment d’armes pour freiner l’avancée de cette
organisation surarmée. Les hordes de barbares sont maintenant dans
Kobanê. Le massacre de milliers de civils est à craindre.

Depuis l’invasion de Daesh, des dizaines de milliers de civils
contraints de fuir sont amassés le long de la frontière entre la
Turquie et la Syrie, et pris en étau entre les djihadistes et l’armée
turque. Par ailleurs, les autorités turques répriment dans le sang
toutes les manifestations de solidarité avec Kobanê. Au cours des
trois derniers jours, cette répression a causé la mort de quelque 40
manifestants kurdes tués par les forces de l’ordre ou par des membres
du Hezbollah turc proche de Daesh.

Conditionnant son entrée dans la “coalition internationale contre
Daesh” à la création d’une zone tampon placée sous son autorité, la
Turquie poursuit l’objectif d’occuper le Rojava (Ouest-Kurdistan, nord
de la Syrie) en le vidant de sa population kurde et en en détruisant
l’administration autonome. Cette administration établie
démocratiquement par la population a permis jusqu’à présent, grce à
un système d’autodéfense, de préserver la paix dans la région et de
protéger les différentes communautés ethniques et religieuses contre
les forces du régime et, surtout, contre les gangs de Daesh.

La communauté internationale reste sourde aux appels au soutien et aux
alertes de massacres lancés par les Kurdes. Ceux-ci n’ont reçu ni aide
humanitaire, ni aide militaire. Jusqu’à présent, les frappes
effectuées par la “coalition internationale contre Daesh” n’ont pas
été efficaces, faute de coordination avec les forces kurdes sur le
terrain. L’inaction coupable de la communauté internationale expose la
population de Kobanê à un danger imminent de génocide.

Mêmes seuls, les Kurdes poursuivent leur résistance farouche contre
Daesh et sont déterminés à chasser les djihadistes de la ville de
Kobanê quel qu’en soit le prix à payer. En luttant contre ces
barbares, ils défendent les valeurs universelles de la dignité humaine
et de la démocratie.

Afin de mettre fin à cette tragédie humaine et afin de freiner
l’avancée de Daesh, nous demandons d’urgence à la communauté
internationale, à la France en particulier : De fournir immédiatement
aux forces des YPG et des YPJ des moyens de défense adéquats pour leur
permettre de résister contre l’EI ;

De prendre des mesures urgentes pour protéger la population civile de Kobanê

D’apporter une aide humanitaire aux réfugiés qui ont dû fuir Kobanê.

La résistance de Kobanê est une résistance pour l’humanité et la dignité !

Ne pas soutenir la résistance kurde aujourd’hui serait être complice de Daesh !

samedi 18 octobre 2014,
Ara (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=104413

Vardan Ayvazyan will become Deputy PM?

168 Hours: Vardan Ayvazyan will become Deputy PM?

10:31 18/10/2014 >> DAILY PRESS

Member of Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) faction of Armenian
parliament, chairman of the National Assembly Standing Committee on
Economic Affairs Vardan Ayvazyan is named as the most likely candidate
for Deputy Prime Minister and Territorial Administration Minister, 168
Hours reports. Reportedly, other likely candidates include Transport
Minister Gagik Beglaryan, Kotayk Governor Aram Harutyunyan, Chief of
Government Staff – Minister David Harutyunyan, and ARFD member David
Lokyan.

Source: Panorama.am

Top 10 : Armeniens De France

TOP 10 : ARMENIENS DE FRANCE

REVUE DE PRESSE

La diaspora armenienne en France comporte 600 000 personnes, dont
Edouard Balladur, Sylvie Vartan ou Francois Berleand. Le foot, lui
non plus, ne donne pas sa part au chien. Un top a lire avec System
of a Down en fond sonore.

Alain Boghossian La dernière fois qu’Alain Boghossian a fait la une
de l’actu, c’etait pour >, de son propre aveu :
avoir accepte, en 2011, l’invitation du peu frequentable president
tchetchène Ramzan Kadyrov de se rendre a Grozny pour participer a
un match de gala qui s’est termine par une indecente distribution de
montres hors de prix. Une mascarade qui a terni l’image de

Les Travaux De Renovation De L’hotel << Dvin >> << Presque Invisible

LES TRAVAUX DE RENOVATION DE L’HOTEL > > SELON LE JOURNAL >

ARMENIE-ECONOMIE

Le journal > rappelle que l’hôtel > a Erevan -qui
etait jadis la fierte de la capitale- est en etat de delabrement,
malgre l’avis des responsables de l’etablissement qui affirment avoir
investi 860 000 dollars l’an dernier pour les travaux de refection.

Cette annee, les proprietaires devaient egalement investir 4 millions
de dollars. Selon les accords -avec le gouvernement armenien- les
travaux de renovation et d’amenagement de l’hôtel > devaient
se terminer en 2016. En cas de non respect de ces obligations,
les proprietaires de l’hôtel seraient soumis a des amendes. > ecrit > qui met ainsi en doute ces
investissements des proprietaires du >.

Krikor Amirzayan

samedi 18 octobre 2014, Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

Armenia’s Role In The Eurasian Economic Union

ARMENIA’S ROLE IN THE EURASIAN ECONOMIC UNION

Silk Road Reporters
Oct 17 2014

Published by John C. K. DalyOctober 17, 2014

Artwork by Mariam Marukian, winner of United Nations stamp contest
marking the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty.

On Oct. 10 Russian, Belarusian and Kazak Eurasian Economic Union (EEU)
leaders signed an agreement on Armenia’s accession to the organization
in Minsk. On May 29 Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan signed the treaty
converting the current Eurasian Customs Union (ECU) into the EEU,
which will formally establish the EEU on Jan. 1, 2015.

The EEU is designed to increase economic cooperation among its member
countries, who under the terms of the treaty agree to guarantee the
free flow of goods, services, capital and labor and to implement
a coordinated policy in the energy, industrial, agricultural and
transport sectors. The three EEU member states account for 85 percent
of the GDP of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), with a
combined GDP in 2013 of $2.43 trillion.

Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan has no doubt that his country’s
accession to the EEU will launch a new phase of integration in
Eurasia, telling reporters, “We will do everything possible for
Armenia, with its expertise and competitive advantages, including
by continuing institutional and structural reforms, to contribute to
the strengthening of the Eurasian space.”

On Oct. 2 Armenia Public Television reported that the government
approved the agreement on the nation joining the EEU during a session
held in the capital Erevan, the same day that it approved the EEU
draft treaty of accession. In presenting the draft accession document
Deputy Finance Minister Suren Karayan said, “Armenia will become a
full member of the EEU at the moment the treaty takes effect. The
treaty lists commodities to which special import rates, differing
from unified customs tariffs, will apply on the part of Armenia in
the transitional period.”

The following day in Moscow Russian President Vladimir Putin said
before a government meeting, “Today I signed a federal law on the
ratification of the treaty on the EEU,” hailing the signing as “a
significant stage” in the joint work on integration with Russia’s
closest partners and allies, Belarus and Kazakhstan. The same day
Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan told a press conference before
the executive meeting of the Republican Party of Armenia that the
country would sign an accession agreement to join the EEU in Minsk,
commenting, “There is not much time till Oct. 10. I am sure that
Armenia will sign the contract, and we will enter the Eurasian united
economic space,” adding that he foresaw no obstacles for entry into
the EEU because the country fulfilled all the obligatory prerequisites.

The benefits of the EEU for smaller member states seem clear, as
membership in the bloc would give local producers easier access to a
far larger and more lucrative market than their own. Armenia’s economy
is already intertwined with its fellow EEU members: during the period
Jan.-Aug., Armenian trade with Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia was worth
$839 million, representing 23.1 percent of the nation’s foreign trade.

Energy figures prominently in the EEU’s future agenda, as the three
founding member states have 20 percent of the world’s gas reserves
and 15 percent of oil reserves. Though the three states only make up
2.5 percent of the world’s population, they cover 15 percent of the
total land area. A common energy market concept is being developed
which should be passed by mid-2015 to create a single energy market
and merge EEU members’ energy systems by 2016, with the ultimate goal
of establishing a single hydrocarbon market and single gas transport
system accessible to all EEU members by 2025.

While many analysts speculate that the EEU, economically dominated by
Russia, may become a tool of Russian economic and political policy,
Armenia is already showing signs of daylight in its accession: on Aug.

15 Armenian First Deputy Minister of Economy Garegin Melkonyan stated
that even after joining the EEU, his country would not follow Russia’s
lead in banning imports of agricultural products, feedstock and food
from U.S. and EU states over their sanctions policies towards Russia,
telling the media, “The restrictions announced by Russia can only
be used in Russia’s territory. Under the relevant provisions of the
Agreement on Eurasian Economic Union, the sides have the right to
take some protective and restricting measures.”

Armenia’s EEU accession will present some logistical issues. Sargsyan
said at the session of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in
Minsk, “The membership of Armenia has its own specificity which is
the absence of common borders with the rest of the Eurasian Economic
Union. However, we believe that this would not hamper the integration
of Armenia into the single system of regulation, transportation,
energy, telecommunications and finance in our common economic area. We
are well aware of the special responsibilities that we assume by
joining the treaty.”

Regarding possible Russian intentions to inject political overtones
into the EEU, on June 17, Kazakh first deputy prime minister and
a top negotiator in the EEU accession process Bakytzhan Sagintayev
reiterated that his country was “forming a purely economic union. It is
a pragmatic means to get benefits. We don’t meddle into what Russia
is doing politically, and they cannot tell us what foreign policy
to pursue.” Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev noted, “The Union
is first and foremost economic and does not touch upon the issues
such as independence and political sovereignty of the members of the
integration process.”

Putin certainly sees the EEU as expanding; following the May 29
signing ceremony he told reporters, “It is no accident that already
the largest global economic players are showing interest, most direct
and immediate, towards this union. Wherever I go, whoever I talk to,
everyone asks: how to establish relations with the future Eurasian
Union.”

As for the future, on Oct. 6 in Novo-Ogariovo near Moscow Russian
First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov said that a special group
is also analyzing Kyrgyzstan’s possible accession to the EEU, and
there is a road map for drafting a treaty on Kyrgyzstan’s joining
the EEU but added, “This work will take some time.” Further afield,
Uzbekistan and Tajikistan may join later, and significantly, India,
Israel, New Zealand, Turkey and Vietnam are among the countries that
have expressed a desire to have trade agreements with the EEU.

Whatever the eventual form future EEU policies will take, Armenia,
as the most isolated and poorest of the three post-Soviet Caucasian
states, is being presented with an opportunity to ally itself with
two of Eurasia’s stronger economies, Russia and Kazakhstan. If that
integration comes with significant political baggage remains to
be seen.

Dr. John C. K. Daly is a non-resident Fellow at the Johns Hopkins
Central Asia Caucasus Institute in Washington DC.

http://www.silkroadreporters.com/2014/10/17/armenias-role-eurasian-economic-union/

Learning From 1989: Stanford’s Anne Kiremidjian Studies The Aftermat

LEARNING FROM 1989: STANFORD’S ANNE KIREMIDJIAN STUDIES THE AFTERMATH OF EARTHQUAKES

Stanford Report
Oct 17 2014

By Tom Abate

Civil engineering Professor Anne Kiremidjian was idling at a traffic
light near the Stanford campus at 5:04 p.m. on Oct. 17, 1989, when
she felt a sudden jolt and thought her car had been rear-ended.

“I looked up but there was nothing behind me in the mirror,” she
recalled on the 25th anniversary of the Loma Prieta earthquake. “Then
I noticed the traffic light swaying overhead and the cars in front
of me moving up and down like a wave.”

Kiremedjian had, of course, witnessed the seismic wave caused by
the 6.9 magnitude quake that was centered northeast of Santa Cruz,
resulting in dozens of deaths and widespread damage, and famously
knocking down a span of the Bay Bridge.

Kiremedjian, who has studied the aftermaths of dozens of quakes
since coming to Stanford in 1972, said Northern Californians were
comparatively lucky.

Loma Prieta ruptured a 22-mile stretch of the San Andreas Fault. By
comparison, the 1906 quake, which had an estimated magnitude of 7.8,
tore through 267 miles of Northern California.

“Loma Prieta was a baby earthquake in comparison to 1906,” she said.

Kiremidjian should know. She is an expert at probabilistic seismic
hazard assessment, studying the nature of specific faults, assessing
the likely intensity and duration of ground shaking during a quake and
estimating the probable damage given the type, age and construction
quality of local structures.

Earlier this month Kiremidjian was honored by the American Society
of Civil Engineers for her lifetime achievement in research and her
commitment to education, especially for her efforts to inspire young
women to become engineers.

Born to an Armenian family that moved to avoid persecution, Kiremidjian
was a teenager when she came to the United States from Bulgaria in
1965. She steamed through the Bosporus Straits, admiring the dome of
Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia, and stopped briefly in Athens to marvel at
the Acropolis before her family resumed its odyssey to New York City
with its modern high-rise structures. This early exposure to ancient
and modern buildings inspired her to pursue civil engineering.

Settling in New York City, Kiremedjian entered public high school
speaking not a word of English. But she excelled at math and science
and after getting fired from a secretarial job -“I’m still a lousy
typist,” she said – she was offered a chance to study at Queens
College, where she started classes in 1968.

“In one instant my life turned around and my career began,” recalled
Kiremidjian, who found that her skills often landed her among men
who doubted her abilities.

“Don’t ever tell me I can’t do something, I’ll try that much harder,”
said Kiremidjian, who, in 1972, came to study civil engineering at
Stanford after graduating with honors from Columbia.

She arrived on campus just as Haresh C. Shah, now the Obayashi
Professor in the School of Engineering, Emeritus, was developing
a program in earthquake engineering. One of her first assignments
involved surveying the damage to Managua caused by the earthquake
that devastated the Nicaraguan capital in December 1972.

“It was an exciting time,” recalled Kiremedjian, who earned her
doctorate in 1977. “The John A. Blume Earthquake Engineering Center
was forming. I was at the center of all of these developments, and
many doors were opened for me.” She took an integral part in the
growth of the center, including serving as co-director from 1987 to
1994 and director from 1995 to 2002.

She became an assistant professor in civil engineering in 1978,
advancing to associate professor in 1985 and full professor in 1991.

When Loma Prieta struck Stanford, all these experiences came home.

Among other lessons, the temblor proved that it was possible to
re-engineer older buildings. A case in point was Roble Hall. Once
slated for demolition and replacement, alumni support led to a change
of plans. A seismic upgrade and other modernizations allowed it to
shrug off Loma Prieta.

“It shows that, when you do a well-planned retrofit, structures can
be made safe,” Kiremedjian said.

To help assess the structural health of individual buildings, in 1995
Kiremidjian developed the first wireless structural monitoring sensors
with her colleague Teresa Meng, now the Reid Weaver Dennis Professor
of Electrical Engineering and professor of computer science, emerita,
and doctoral student Erik Straser.

The sensors can measure how a structure responds to small vibrations,
like those caused by a big truck rumbling down the street, as well
as a large shaking caused by a strong earthquake.

http://news.stanford.edu/news/2014/october/quake-kiremidjian-profile-10-16-14.html

Turkey Loses U.N. Security Council Seat In Huge Upset

TURKEY LOSES U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL SEAT IN HUGE UPSET

By Benny Avni
Filed: 10/16/14 at 6:55 PM | Updated: 10/16/14 at 7:58 PM

U.N. Ebola mission chief Anthony Banbury speaks to members of the
United Nations Security Council. Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

In a tremendous upset, Turkey lost a contest in the United Nations
General Assembly, exposing increasingly contentious frictions with
some of its neighbors and world powers.

Trying to become a nonpermanent member of the Security Council, Turkey
lost out to Spain and New Zealand in a contest for two available
seats reserved for a voting bloc called the Western European and
Others Group, which includes the United States.

In the past few days, according to several diplomatic sources,
there was an intense campaign, led by Egypt and Saudi Arabia, against
Turkey’s membership in the council. The two countries are angered by
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s support for the Muslim Brotherhood,
which both are fighting at home.

Newsweek Magazine is Back In Print

On Wednesday night, Turkey’s foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, hosted
a posh party for diplomats at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York,
where many of the guests predicted an easy victory for Turkey.

But some diplomats said after the Thursday vote they had detected an
unmistakable movement away from the Turkish camp to the Spain.

Syria, as well as its ally Iran and several others, are also peeved
by Erdogan’s frequent calls to unseat Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Several Western countries are alarmed by recent reports of Turkish
attacks on Kurds fighting ISIS in Syria. And Turkey’s traditional
opponent, its neighbor Greece, is also said to have lobbied against
its election to the U.N.’s most prestigious body.

“It’s surprising, because I was told just days ago that Turkey received
letters of support from 160 countries,” said one diplomat after the
secret ballot ended in Turkey’s failure to edge out Spain.

The diplomat noted, however, that Spain received 154 letters of
support from the 193 General Assembly members. “This isn’t the way
this should be done,” said the diplomat, referring to the habit among
member states of expressing support publicly while opposing membership
in secret balloting.

After several rounds of voting, Turkey ended up receiving the support
of only 60 General Assembly members, while Spain got 132 votes,
more than enough to satisfy the necessary threshold of 128 supporters.

New Zealand got elected in an earlier round. Angola, Malaysia and
Venezuela ran unopposed in their regional voting blocs.

The American U.N. ambassador, Samantha Power, homed in on Venezuela
after the vote, saying in a statement, “Venezuela’s conduct at the
U.N. has run counter to the spirit of the U.N. Charter, and its
violations of human rights at home are at odds with the Charter’s
letter. The United States will continue to call upon the government
of Venezuela to respect the fundamental freedoms and universal human
rights of its people.”

The five newly elected members will replace Australia, Argentina,
Luxembourg, South Korea and Rwanda on January 1 and will serve on
the council for two years. Powers’s statement promises to create new
tensions among council members, but perhaps not as tense had Turkey
become a member.

http://www.newsweek.com/venezuela-malaysia-angola-new-zealand-win-un-council-seats-277962