Armenian President, Georgian PM discuss bilateral ties

Armenian President, Georgian PM discuss bilateral ties

17:52 22/08/2014 >> POLITICS

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan met with Georgian Prime Minister
Irakli Garibashvili who was in Armenia on an official visit, the
President’s press service reported.

Serzh Sargsyan said that Armenian-Georgian relations are at the
highest level and this gives a possibility to discuss any issue.

The Georgian Prime Minister said that he came to Armenia to once again
ensure his deep respect for the Republic of Armenia, its President and
people and to give a new impetus to Armenian-Georgian relations.

Mr Garibashvili stressed that Armenia is not only Georgia’s neighbor,
but also its friendly country and these friendly relations should help
to do many useful and good things for the prosperity of the two
countries.

The Georgian Prime Minister presented the results of his meetings in
Armenia and the agreements reached during his visit.

The two sides discussed Armenian-Georgian relations and the regional
developments.

They voiced satisfaction with the fact that an agreement was reached
during the Armenian President’s official visit to Georgia on June 18
about the construction of a new bridge on the Bagratashen-Sadakhlo
checkpoint, which the sides called Friendship Bridge. The
interlocutors reaffirmed their commitment to speeding up the
construction of the bridge.

A working dinner was given at the Presidential Palace in honor of the
Georgian Prime Minister after the meeting.

http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2014/08/22/sargsyan-gharibashvili/

Armenia condemns barbaric killing of James Foley

Armenia condemns barbaric killing of James Foley

20:04, 22.08.2014

YEREVAN. – Armenia condemns the barbaric killing of James Foley, an
American journalist murdered by Islamists in Iraq.

“It is not possible to express by words indignation caused by barbaric
murder of American journalist James Foley. We want to express our deep
condolences to his family and friends,” spokesperson for Armenian
Foreign Ministry Tigran Balayan said.

He said the brutal killing carried out by extremists shows wild nature
of their acts and makes it imperative for the international
community’s efforts and determination to unite and fight against
terrorism.

Armenia News – NEWS.am

Italian news provider referred to Karen Petrosyan’s tragic death

Italian news provider referred to Karen Petrosyan’s tragic death

19:13, 22 August, 2014

YEREVAN, AUGUST 22, ARMENPRESS. Italian Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso
(OBC) online news provider referred to the tragic death of Karen
Petrosyan, who had been taken captive by Azerbaijan. As reports
`Armenpress’, the Italian news provider introduces the story of Karen
Petrosyan, a thirty-one year-old Armenian villager of Chinari, who
died in Azerbaijani captivity.

Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso writes that a person from the same
village as Petrosyan said he went lost fetching wood, another that he
was drunk, while for Baku he was just a saboteur and a spy.

Yet, an interview conducted by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty with
Farida Tagiyeva, the first person Petrosyan encountered after crossing
the border, tips the balance in favour of the Armenian interpretation.
According to Tagiyeva and other people of the village, the man, who
had approached her asking for tea, was unarmed and in civilian
clothes. As a proof, an amateur video
depicts a bewildered Petrosyan answering questions in Russian made by
the inhabitants of AÄ?bulaq.

In what has been also a propaganda escalation, the same Petrosyan
appears later in a video posted online dressed in military uniform,
while he confesses to a senior military officer to be an agent. A
large range of weapons are shown to prove the assumption. The next
morning, Karen Petrosyan was declared dead by the Baku Ministry of
Defence, officially `due to an acute heart and lung failure.’ The
Armenian authorities, who are convinced that the man was tortured and
killed instead, asked an autopsy of the body of Petrosyan by an
independent panel of international experts.

According to the Italian news provider, no less alarming was the
bellicose rhetoric displayed by the authorities in Baku. The Twitter
profile of the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has been filled on
August 7 by a remarkable series of threats, accusations and boasts of
military superiority directed against the `Armenian barbarians and
vandals’. On the following day, there was a statement by the Defence
Minister
Hafiz Heydarov, who said he was ready, if necessary, to destroy the
Armenian capital Yerevan with its missiles.
Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso also writes that it is no coincidence
that together with the military escalation and rhetoric, there has
been an unprecedented wave of repression in Azerbaijan. The crisis
between the two countries seems at the moment to have subsided, after
a series of meetings held on August 9 and 10 in Sochi between
President Aliyev, his Armenian counterpart Sargsyan, and Vladimir
Putin.

Starting from those days, there was a return to relative calm on the
border. Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso concludes that among the few
positive notes of these days is a call for peace in Karabakh signed,
during the hottest days of the conflict, by various representatives of
the Armenian and Azerbaijani civil society, as well as by some
international experts.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/773438/italian-news-provider-referred-to-karen-petrosyan%E2%80%99s-tragic-death.html

Armenia to have gas turbine power plant

Armenia to have gas turbine power plant

14:27 22/08/2014 >> ECONOMY

The Armenian government and Anaklia IEP Holding today signed the
fundamentals of the agreement on the construction of a 540 MW-capacity
gas turbine power plant in Armenia, the Ministry of Energy and Natural
Resources reports.

Anaklia IEP Holding is to invest around $600 million in the project.
Gas turbines produced by General Electric company will be installed in
the power plant.

The Armenian government will assist in the implementation of the project.

The construction of the gas turbine power plant will ensure security
of Armenia’s energy system as well as will expand the country’s
ability to export electricity.

Source: Panorama.am

Lecture dedicated to Armenian Genocide and Human Rights to be held i

Lecture dedicated to Armenian Genocide and Human Rights to be held in
Buenos Aires

10:35, 22 August, 2014

YEREVAN, AUGUST 22, ARMENPRESS. “Racism and the World’s Forgetfulness”
psychological lecture-discussion dedicated to Human Rights and
Armenian Genocide will held on August 23 in Buenos Aires’s Center
Foundation psychological center. As reports “Armenpress” citing Prensa
Armenia website, the author of the initiative is Center Foundation
psychological center.

Researcher and lecturer Alejandro Kaufman, lawyer Anna Arzumanyan,
director Ignaiso Dimatia, the Head of Armenian
National Committee of Buenos Aires Carolina Karagyozyan and
psychoanalyst Pablo Vilar will deliver lectures on the subject.

The lectures will be followed by Iganiso Dimatia’s “Dialogue without
Borders” film which reflects on the Armenian Genocide.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/773336/lecture-dedicated-to-armenian-genocide-and-human-rights-to-be-held-in-buenos-aires.html

Erevan facilite l’immigration des Arméniens d’Irak

IRAK/ARMÉNIE
Erevan facilite l’immigration des Arméniens d’Irak

Le gouvernement a approuvé le jeudi les mesures visant à rendre plus
facile la venue des Arméniens irakiens qui voudraient se réfugier en
Arménie et de leur accorder la double nationalité suite à la montée de
l’insurrection islamiste en Irak.

En particulier, le gouvernement a simplifié les procédures pour le
traitement des demandes de citoyenneté arménienne.

Selon le ministre adjoint des Affaires étrangères Shavarsh Kotcharian,
les ressortissants irakiens d’origine arménienne pourront désormais
recevoir leurs nouveaux passeports dans les missions diplomatiques de
l’Arménie en Irak et dans les pays voisins. Ils devaient jusqu’à
maintenant se rendre à Erevan pour les obtenir.

S’exprimant lors d’une réunion hebdomadaire du cabinet à Erevan,
Kotcharian a déclaré que les Arméniens fuyant la violence en Irak
seront également exemptés de visa arménien, de permis de séjour et de
frais de passeport.

Les autorités d’Erevan ont approuvé des mesures similaires pour les
membres de la communauté arménienne en Syrie peu après le début de la
guerre civile. Des milliers d’entre eux ont trouvé refuge en Arménie
et ont obtenu la citoyenneté arménienne depuis.

Avant l’invasion américaine de 2003, il y avait environ 20.000
Arméniens en Irak, la plupart d’entre eux descendant des survivants du
génocide arménien de 1915 en Turquie ottomane. Leur nombre aurait
diminué au moins de moitié au cours de la dernière décennie. Plusieurs
centaines d’entre eux ont fui vers l’Arménie après le renversement de
Saddam Hussein et le chaos résultant dans le pays.

La communauté s’est principalement concentrée à Bagdad. Des centaines,
voire des milliers d’Arméniens vivaient à Mossoul et d’autres parties
du nord de l’Irak avant les avancées récentes accomplis par les
militants de l’État islamique (IS). La quasi-totalité de la population
chrétienne de Mossoul a été forcée de quitter la ville, lorsqu’elle a
été attaquée par les djihadistes.

Le gouvernement arménien n’a pas facilité l’obligation de visa pour
les Yézidis irakiens. Il fait face à des appels de plus en plus
pressants de l’importante communauté Yézidi d’Arménie et de la société
civile arménienne pour faciliter leur immigration.

Le gouvernement a alloué une aide humanitaire de 100.000 $ aux
Yézidis. Kotcharian a déclaré qu’elle sera distribuée par le HCR,
l’agence des réfugiés des Nations-Unies.

vendredi 22 août 2014,
Ara (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=102623

Imitation Or Threat To Russia?- Opinions On Georgian-Turkish-Azerbai

IMITATION OR THREAT TO RUSSIA?- OPINIONS ON GEORGIAN-TURKISH-AZERBAIJANI TALKS

11:10 * 22.08.14

A closer partnership among Georgia, Turkey and Azerbaijan is likely to
be directed against Armenia at any moment, a former parliament member
has said, commenting on the three countries’ recent ministerial-level
talks in Nakicevan.

“in case the Georgian transport route, which serves to carry goods
to Armenia, is closed, we will find ourselves in quite a difficult
situation,” Vardan Khachatryan told Tert.am.

The Georgian, Turkish and Azerbaijani defense ministers met in
Nakicevan on Wednesday to discuss cooperation plans. The agreed
mutually that a deeper partnership among states would be directed
to national security in the defense sector in future. “Against the
backdrop of the existing challenges and the security risks in the
region, we must commit ourselves to a closer cooperation,” Georgian
Defense Minister Irakli Alasania told his counterparts.

Khachatryan said he sees that Turkey exercises a strong influence on
Georgia. “A large part of Georgia’s economy is under Turkey’s control.

>From this point of view, their desire to join NATO with rapid efforts
is linked to the fact that Turkey is going to be their elder brother
in the alliance,” he noted.

Khachatryan said he nonetheless hopes that Georgia will take sides
with Armenia, opposing to the existing alliance. “We should not count
on the Georgians as a brother nation; they will act in the interests
of Armenia, as they have done many times before,” he added.

Commenting on Russia’s position, the former lawmaker said that
he doesn’t think the country would derive any benefits in case of
abandoning Armenia. “Should Russia surrender its strategic ally, it
will split up, as the CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organization]
will stop operating then. Nobody will believe it has influence in
the world, whereas the CSTO considers itself a challenger of NATO,”
he added.

Hayk Sanosyan, a former Republican lawmaker from Georgia’s Armenian
populated region of Javakhk, said he doesn’t think the agreements
reached during the ministerial talks pose any threat at all. “Their
closer relations cannot pose any hazard to us as Georgia is our
friend,” he said, noting that the country traditionally maintains
close economic ties with Azerbaijan and Turkey.

“I think it was Turkey’s initiative to hold the meeting in Nakicevan.

And I believe that the proactive step by Turkey was directed against
Russia in an attempt to demonstrate that they hold dominant positions
in the region. It was an imitation, so I don’t treat it seriously;
it is not a threat,” he said.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/08/22/vkhachatryan-hsanosyan-hchaqryan/

German-Turkish Director Fatih Akin’s Latest Film Raises Furor In Tur

GERMAN-TURKISH DIRECTOR FATIH AKIN’S LATEST FILM RAISES FUROR IN TURKEY, DRAWS THREATS FROM NATIONALISTS

August 21, 2014

HAARETZ – The documentary film by the German-Turkish film director
Fatih Akin, “Crossing the Bridge: The Sound of Istanbul” (2005),
was one of the most beautiful love songs ever created for and about
Istanbul. A musical documentary, it depicts the rich and varied music
scene in modern Istanbul. While it also sets forth the tensions and
conflicts in this complex city with its many cultural influences,
it shows love and appreciation for each one.

But Akin, who was born in Hamburg to a family that had emigrated
from Turkey, has dealt mainly with the integration, or lack of it, of
Turks into Germany. His films combine political and social criticism
and a sharp look at the situation with a bit of humor. The most
prominent of his works, “Head-On” (2004) and “The Edge of Heaven”
(2007), won him many awards at prominent film festivals worldwide.

But in contemporary Turkey, awards and loving homage apparently are not
enough to enable a film director to criticize his beloved ancestral
country or touch one of its taboos — the Armenian genocide of the
early 20th century.

Akin’s latest film, “The Cut,” focuses on that topic and will be
competing at the Venice Film Festival opening late this month. It
has already aroused the ire of Turkish radical nationalists, who are
calling for a boycott of the film and for Akin to be prevented from
entering Turkey.

Following an interview in the bilingual weekly newspaper Agos, which
is published in Istanbul in both Turkish and Armenian, fanatical
Turkish nationalists sent death threats to Akin both directly and
through Agos’s editorial board.

The Armenian genocide — the mass murder of the Armenian inhabitants
of the Ottoman Empire during World War I — was preceded by years of
massacres of the Armenians by mobs of Turkish and Kurdish villagers.

They had been incited to believe that the Armenians sought to weaken
the empire, whether because of their desire for national independence
or their support for Russia, the Ottomans’ major foe.

The Armenian genocide started on April 24, 1915, when the government of
the Young Turks arrested about 250 Armenian leaders and intellectuals
in Istanbul and put them to death. With that murderous act, the
Turkish government began a campaign against the Armenians that included
expulsion, abuse, rape and starvation, killing an estimated 1.5 million
people. April 24 is the day of commemoration of the Armenian genocide.

The Armenian refugees were imprisoned in camps, where many of them died
of starvation or disease. Others were killed by burning, drowning or
poison gas as the world’s countries did nothing. When the war ended,
the Turkish government leaders were tried by military courts in Europe
for war crimes and were sentenced to death in absentia. While the
three leaders mainly responsible for the Armenian genocide managed
to evade the death sentence, they did not escape fate: Three years
after the trial, two of them were killed by Armenian assassins and
the third was killed by the Soviet army.

Only about 20 countries officially recognize the Armenian genocide
and the Turkish government’s responsibility for it. The others have
chosen to distance themselves from the issue out of a desire to keep
their relations with Turkey stable. Turkey’s relations with countries
that have recognized the Armenian genocide — such as France, which
also outlawed denial of it — have fallen into diplomatic crises that
even led to the recall of ambassadors.

Recent public debate in Turkey about the Armenian genocide seems
freer and more open than ever. During his term as prime minister,
President-elect Recep Tayyip Erdogan even issued an official statement
apologizing to the grandchildren of the survivors of the Armenian
genocide, saying that a probe of that painful period in history was
both a human and a historical obligation.

But even his stance is not accepted by radical Turkish nationalists.

Next year, Armenian communities in Turkey and elsewhere will be
commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. But
some in Turkey still do not wish to acknowledge past crimes.

Akin’s original idea was to direct a film about the late Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of Agos, who called for dialogue
between the Armenian and Turkish nations and wrote and spoke a great
deal about the Armenian genocide. On January 19, 2007, he was shot dead
at the entrance to the building that housed the newspaper’s offices.

His death shocked Turkey. Hundreds of thousands of people attended his
funeral, carrying signs in Turkish, Armenian and Kurdish that read
“We are all Armenians” and “We are all Hrant Dink.” Others carried
placards reading “[Statute] 301 is the murderer,” a hint at Statute
301 in Turkish criminal law, which prohibits “insulting Turkey.” Under
Statute 301, anyone who accuses Turkey of having committed the Armenian
genocide can be sent to prison. The Turkish writer and Nobel laureate
Orhan Pamuk was put on trial under this statute for having said in
an interview with a Swiss newspaper that a million Armenians and
thousands of Kurds had been murdered in Turkey. The charges were
dropped following an international outcry.

Akin could not find a Turkish actor willing to play the role of Dink.

All the actors to whom he sent the screenplay reacted similarly,
saying the subject was too emotionally loaded. Only after he spoke
about that in an interview with Agos did some of the young and popular
actors, such as Riza Kocalogu (the star of the Turkish suspense series
“Karadayi”), say they were willing to play the role of Dink if only
they were of the right age.

Akin, who insisted that the actor playing the role of Dink be Turkish,
was compelled to give up the original screenplay. The plot of the
new film focuses on a young man, Nazareth Manoogian (played by the
French-Algerian actor Tahar Rahim), a survivor of the genocide who
discovers that his daughters may be alive as well. He searches for
them in Turkey, Syria, Cuba and the U.S.

The film, shot in Jordan, Cuba, Canada, Malta and Germany, contains
appearances by the Franco-Moroccan singer Hindi Zahra and the
Arab-Israeli actor Makram Khoury.

“Turkish society is ready to deal with the topic of the Armenian
genocide,” Akin says. But the radical Turkish nationalists show that
the opposite is true. The statements they sent to Agos’s editorial
board threatened that if Akin’s film was screened in Turkish cinemas,
their activists would be waiting outside the theater in white berets.

That’s a reference to the hat Dink’s assassin wore in a photograph
that was published after the murder. The article of clothing symbolized
these groups’ anti-Armenian demonstrations.

Despite pressure from the Armenian community in Israel, the Israeli
government still has not officially recognized the Armenian genocide.

It does not wish to create a parallel of the Armenian genocide with
the Jewish Holocaust in Europe, nor does it wish to destabilize its
relations with Turkey. At least regarding the latter reason, such
considerations seem useless since Israel’s relations with Turkey
are shaky in any case. Either way, everything seems temporary, even
Turkey under Erdogan, and the significance of the full recognition of
the other’s pain cannot be ignored. They are not forgotten, and they
are not resolved on their own, not even after 99 years of trauma,
and certainly not after 66.

http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/47144

Armenian PM Meets With Exporters On Boosting Trade

ARMENIAN PM MEETS WITH EXPORTERS ON BOOSTING TRADE

CISTran Finance
Aug 21 2014

August 21, 2014 7:30 AM
By Lisa Barron

Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan recently met with domestic
exporters to review measures for boosting the country’s external trade.

He said that the increase in exports to Russia could improve the
economy and that the government will support such projects.

The entrepreneurs for their part raised a number of issues, including
export infrastructure and procedures, lending conditions, technology
and equipment and logistics.

The premier suggested the creation of a joint task force to address
export capabilities and resources so that government officials can
devise means of alleviating barriers and increasing exports.

http://cistranfinance.com/news/armenian-pm-meets-with-exporters-on-boosting-trade/4356/

Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey Agree On Joint Military Exercises

GEORGIA, AZERBAIJAN, TURKEY AGREE ON JOINT MILITARY EXERCISES

EurasiaNet.org
Aug 21 2014

August 21, 2014 – 2:07pm, by Joshua Kucera

The nascent alliance between Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey took a
big step forward this week when the defense ministers of the three
countries met trilaterally for the first time and promised to carry
out joint military exercises.

The three ministers, meeting in the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan
on August 19, agreed to work on “tripartite exercises to enhance the
combat capability of the armed forces of the three countries and the
achievement of mutual understanding during joint military operations,
including the organization of joint seminars and conferences,
cooperation in military education, development of military technology,
the exercises for the protection of oil and gas pipelines,” said
Azerbaijani Defense Minister Zakir Hasanov after the meeting.

While the specific results of the meeting may have had to do with
protecting joint infrastructure like the pipelines and railroad
projects that the three countries work on together, the geopolitical
import of the meeting was undeniable. With Russia’s new assertiveness
and the recent spike in tensions in Nagorno Karabakh, Georgia and
Azerbaijan are keen to get support wherever they can. “Georgia is
very fortunate to have such great neighbors and strategic allies
like Azerbaijan and Turkey,” said Georgian Defense Minister Irakli
Alasania. “And these challenging times from the security standpoint
in the wider region we need to cooperate more closely and we need
to be very tightly in touch with each other to defend the critical
infrastructure that is very integral to our development.”

Alasania also took pains to emphasize that the alliance is not
directed at anyone in particular: “I would like to underline that
the only purpose of our meeting is to regulate security and defence
issues and it is not directed against anyone. Moreover such meetings
provided additional basis for regional security.”

But that message wasn’t necessarily the one that Azerbaijan wanted
to send. Elchin Mehdiyev, a senior correspondent for the Azerbaijani
news service Trend.az, wrote that Armenia should take the meeting as
a warning:

All this testifies to the fact that a new, more powerful format is
being created to ensure security in the region. Of course, cooperation
in the above-mentioned areas will further increase military strength,
professionalism of armies, potential of military equipment in these
countries. This will greatly limit the ability of external forces,
trying to exert influence in the region.

The meeting at the same time is a substantial message for Armenia,
which continues to pose a threat to security in the region.

While assessing the power of the Azerbaijani army during Armenia’s
own recent provocations on the contact line between Azerbaijani and
Armenian troops, Armenia must thoroughly think and realize that these
processes will not promise a good future for it. Armenia must take
a constructive stance on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement.

Otherwise, the existence of Armenia due to external donations, and
which is on the verge of collapse will be called into question.

Armenia downplayed those concerns, saying that the presence of Georgia
— which has good relations with Yerevan — in the grouping would
blunt any anti-Armenian initiatives: “Armenia has a broad spectrum of
mutual security interests with our Georgian neighbors, underpinned by
a number of cooperation endeavors, including in the defence sector,”
said Deputy Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan. “I believe Georgian
engagement will restrain these tripartite relations from being at
odds with Armenian national security.”

Meanwhile, there seems to have been curiously little coverage of the
meeting in the Russian press. One exception, a piece on the meeting
in Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta, focused on the amount of
Russian weaponry that Azerbaijan is buying, a not-so-subtle hint that
nice words are one thing, but money talks.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/69646