Ex-Congressman in PR Activities For Turkish-Occupied Northern Cyprus

EX-CONGRESSMAN IN PR ACTIVITIES FOR TURKISH-OCCUPIED NORTHERN CYPRUS

By Kevin McCauley – Former Brooklyn/Staten Island Congressman Mike
McMahon is handling public affairs/government relations duties for the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, the occupied section of Cyprus.

The Democrat is working as lead on a $200K, one-year contract won by
Herrick Feinstein in New York.

According to HF’s contract, Team McMahon is to arrange Congressional
visits to the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, a state recognized
only by Turkey, and promote a positive image for it in the media.

Tea Party-backed Republican Michael Grimm defeated McMahon, a former
member of the House Foreign Affairs committee, in 2010.

McMahon also handled the development, and construction of Turkey’s
expanded consulate in New York, across from the United Nations’
General Assembly building. (OD)

http://www.gibrahayer.com/

Shishkert: A shining light in a `lost’ land

Shishkert: A shining light in a `lost’ land

FEATURES | 22.09.13 | 22:35

NAZIK ARMENAKYAN
ArmeniaNow

By GAYANE MKRTCHYAN
ArmeniaNow reporter

The horizon holds abundant forest and blue skies. A gorge, like a
wedge, divides the forest into two parts. Similar-looking redish tufa
houses can be spotted on one side. In the settlement embraced by the
woods like an island in the sea, serenity reigns with the undisputable
authority of a monarch. Knocks on the door remain unanswered – no one
to hear them – no adults, no children, no cheerful screams of
excitement in the yards. Only the river flowing in the depth of the
gorge, some stray dog barks every now and then, and the buzz of bees
challenge the otherwise solid silence…

In the distance one can spot beekeepers, wearing all white clothes and
special net masks to fence from stings. I stand far from them and have
to shout my questions, then strain my hearing to catch the answer:
`They made it so that this village vanished from the map, but I will
continue living here, proving that the village exists. And I am
Lavrenty Grigoryan, 68 years of age.’

On my way to the village, our group of reporters was taking pictures
and placing on Facebook right away, with a comment that we were in
Shishkert, however the Google maps would automatically change it to
Azerbaijan, regarding our post erroneous. Perhaps that is the reason
why Shishkert, indeed cannot be found on the map of Armenia, or maybe
because the name of the village derives from Turkish `sis’ meaning
`six’.

The beekeeper’s story repeats the life tale of hundreds of Armenians,
with just different names and residence addresses: their children have
left, his wife and he remained at their home and will continue
staying. He says they have no community and that they got merged with
the neighbor Tsav community, 12 kilometers away from Shishkert. To the
question where the other residents of the village are, Lavrenty says
with a smile: `Search and you might find.’

Shishert is a village with a rich historic past, vague present and no
future prospects. Locks on abandoned houses are the most common site
here. But it is hard to lock the hearts of those 18 residents
stubbornly refusing to leave their homes. The only child here is
two-year-old Hayk. The village has no shops and no school. A bumpy
dirt road leads to the settlement. As if to compensate, people here
are of strong will, rich in heart, fighters by nature. They survive
due to livestock breeding and field work. The climatic conditions are
quite favorable for animal husbandry, which the Soviet Union took into
consideration in choosing the direction of development.

`This is a splendid village, 50 km from Kapan, the farthest by
location. There are six villages from Kapan till here and ours was the
best – it was the remotest and the biggest, with pastures, haylofts,
developed sheep breeding. We had 12,000 heads of sheep during the
Soviet times, and more than 150 households, with no less than three
children in each family,’ recalls mathematician Ishkhan Galstyan, who
at his time moved to Shishkert from Yerevan.
Wrinkles on his face turn deeper when speaking about losing the village.

`Back during the tenure of Nadir shah people of this village were
driven away to Persia [modern day Iran], but they came back, recovered
the settlement. Last time it happened in 1800s, and now the village is
destroyed in broad daylight,’ he says, putting out another cigarette
in the ashtray.

He lives alone. His sons have left the village, and a while ago his
wife passed away. He leads me to the basement to show the accurate
rows of books he has read and keeps with great care. When seeing me
off he apologizes for having talked too much and says: `For days there
is no one to talk to.’

Shishkert is under the supervision of Tsav village head. For shopping
they again have to go to Tsav.

`The village had over a hundred households, and over the recent years
some 18 or 19 families used to live in the newly-built houses, but
they, too, have left. There is no school, so partly they leave because
of that, others to find jobs. Slowly there is almost nobody left, no
village. It’s only this few of us,’ says Hmayak Galstyan from
Shishkert.

The five families live like one. Day or night, they come to one
another’s help and say their home is Shishkert.

Among the members of the five families 60-year-old Valya Balayan is
the most stubborn. She has married-off her daughters, but keeps living
here together with her husband and three sons. She won’t let her
children leave for Kapan or Yerevan, or abroad.

`I won’t let them leave… why would I send them to Russia leaving our
land and water. They now force foreigners to leave Russia. Let Serzh
(President Sargsyan) do something, look after our youth, I will wed
them, they’ll have families, children, a school would open, a shop
would open, why leave when they can live in their homeland? If they
move to Russia, who is going to work our land, protect our border, if
something happens now, won’t my three sons be the first to go?’ says
Valya with both pride and frustration.

Rebelling against the idea of moving to Tsav, she says her home is here.

Years have emptied the village, but the five lights scattering the
obscurity of the night, lighting an uncertain future for 18 residents
prove that there can be heroes outside a battlefield or on the border.

http://armenianow.com/society/features/48646/armenia_migration_azerbaijan_border_shishkert

Les prêts ont augmenté de 20,6 pour cent

ARMENIE
Les prêts ont augmenté de 20,6 pour cent

Les prêts à l’économie arménienne par les institutions financières ont
augmenté de 20,6% en mai 2013 par rapport à l’année précédente et ce
sont les prêts en devises qui ont prévalu a annoncé la Banque centrale
d’Arménie dans un communiqué.

Selon le Service national de la statistique, les prêts des banques
commerciales aux résidents en mai s’élevaient à 1622,8 milliards de
drams, soit une augmentation de 1,48% par rapport à avril.

L’encours des prêts accordés par les institutions de crédits en mai
s’élevait à environ 127 milliards de drams, après avoir augmenté de
2,3%.

Selon le Service national des statistiques, le montant des dépôts
individuels en drams en mai s’élevait à 370,6 milliards de drams, le
volume des dépôts en devises à 646,2 milliards de drams.

dimanche 22 septembre 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Armen Nazarian « Artur Alexanyan méritait la médaille d’or mondiale

CHAMPIONNATS DU MONDE DE LUTTE GRECO-ROMAINE
Armen Nazarian « Artur Alexanyan méritait la médaille d’or mondiale »

La défaite du représentant de l’Arménie Artur Alaxanyan hier soir en
finale des 96 kg des championnats du monde de lutte gréco-romaine à
Budapest a plongé nombre de supporters Arméniens dans la frustration.
Tous affirment qu’Artur Alexanyan devait conquérir la médaille d’or et
il fut privé de ce titre mondial par la faute de jugement de
l’arbitre. Le combat entre Artur Alexanyan contre le russe Kiril
Melnikov s’était terminé sur le score nul de 2-2 mais l’Arménien fut
pénalisé et déclaré défait pour avoir reçu un avertissement de
l’arbitre lors du combat. Un arbitre qui avait jugé qu’Artur Alexanyan
avait lors de son combat dépassé le cadre du tracé du tapis. Armen
Nazarian qui est à ce jour le premier et seul champion olympique sous
les couleurs de l’Arménie (lutte gréco-romaine aux J.O. d’Atlanta en
1996) estime qu’Artur Alexanyan devait avoir la médaille d’or et qu’il
fut dépossédé de ce titre mondial par la faute de jugement de
l’arbitre. « Nous sommes tous tristes pour Artur Alexanyan qui
méritait le titre de champion du monde » a ajouté Armen Nazarian.
Samvel Kevorkian l’entraîneur de l’équipe d’Arménie de lutte
gréco-romaine affirme de son côté qu’Artur Alexanyan est très triste
et affecté par cette défaite injuste à ses yeux. Hier soir sur le
podium lors de la remise des médailles, la mine triste d’Artur
Alexanyan résumait à elle seule cette défaite injuste sur une décision
arbitraire. Mais à 22 ans, l’Arménien peut encore conquérir l’or
mondial et pourquoi pas l’or olympique…

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 22 septembre 2013,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Kuwait Amir congratulates Armenia, Belize, Malta on Nat’l Day

Kuwait News Agency (KUNA)
September 21, 2013 Saturday

Kuwait Amir congratulates Armenia, Belize, Malta on Nat’l Day

| KUWAIT, Sept 21 (KUNA) — HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber
Al-Sabah congratulated each of Armenia, Belize and Malta on their
respective National Day on Saturday.

The warm sentiments were conveyed in separate congratulatory cables to
Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan, the Belize Governor-General Sir
Colville Young and Malta’s President George Abela, according to an
Amiri Diwan statement.

HH the Amir wished the leaders the best of health and their nations
development and prosperity.

Both HH the Deputy Amir and Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad
Al-Jaber Al-Sabah and HH the Prime Minister Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Hamad
Al-Sabah both sent similar cables. (end) sd KUNA 211058 Sep 13NNNN

Armenia’s Senior Officials Visit Yerablur Military Pantheon

ARMENIA’S SENIOR OFFICIALS VISIT YERABLUR MILITARY PANTHEON

September 21, 2013 | 11:23

YEREVAN. – In connection with the 22nd anniversary of the independence
of Armenia, President Serzh Sargsyan, Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan,
Catholicos of All Armenian Karekin II, Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
President Bako Sahakyan, National Security Council Secretary Arthur
Baghdasaryan, capital city Yerevan Mayor Taron Margaryan, Police
Chief Vladimir Gasparyan, and numerous MPs visited Yerablur Military
Pantheon on Saturday.

They paid their respects to the memory of those that fell during
the Karabakh War, placed flowers and laid wreaths to the tombs of
Armenia’s late PM, Supreme Commander Vazgen Sargsyan, and General
Andranik Ozanian, and to the memorial of the fallen freedom fighters.

The Karabakh War veterans and the parents of those that fell during
the war likewise were at the pantheon.

The defense minister approached all war veterans, shook their
hands, and congratulated them on the occasion of the anniversary of
independence, the Armenian News-NEWS.am reporter informs.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Guerre Sur Les Reseaux Sociaux : Le Gouvernement Turc Recrute 6.000

GUERRE SUR LES RESEAUX SOCIAUX : LE GOUVERNEMENT TURC RECRUTE 6.000 E-MILITANTS

REVUE DE PRESSE

Pour faire face a l’opposition en Turquie, le parti au pouvoir a
decide de recruter et de former 6.000 e-militants pour la contrer
sur le front des reseaux sociaux.

L’objectif du parti serait booster sa presence sur les reseaux sociaux
pour faire face aux opposants qui ont toujours domine ce terrain. Il
s’agit probablement d’une lecon apprise lors des Printemps Arabes
qui ont eu lieu dans des pays voisins, et où les reseaux sociaux
ont joue un rôle important. Au lieu de couper l’accès a internet ou
d’interdire l’accès aux services comme Twitter ou Facebook, le parti
au pouvoir a decide de participer a cette ” guerre numerique “.

De ce fait, le parti mene par l’actuel Premier Ministre Recep Tayyip
Erdogan est en train de recruter 6.000 volontaires pour courtiser
d’eventuels partisans et contrer les critiques en ligne. L’information
provient d’un officiel du parti politique, selon le Wall Street
Journal.

Ces recrues sont principalement de jeunes technophiles, membres
du parti, qui ont suivi une formation a Ankara. Le but serait de
former ces jeunes pour qu’ils soient capables de representer le
parti politique sur les medias sociaux. Ces jeunes beneficieraient
notamment de cours de communications, leur permettant d’adopter un
langage politique credible et positif. Ils seront amenes a partager
et discuter sur les plateformes comme Twitter, Facebook, Instagram,
YouTube afin de promouvoir l’ideologie du parti et surveiller les
discussions en ligne.

POUR LIRE LA SUITE CLIQUER SUR LE LIEN

samedi 21 septembre 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

http://www.presse-citron.net/guerre-sur-les-reseaux-sociaux-le-gouvernement-turc-recrute-6-000-e-militants

Le President De La Banque Centrale D’Armenie Explique Que L’adhesion

LE PRESIDENT DE LA BANQUE CENTRALE D’ARMENIE EXPLIQUE QUE L’ADHESION A L’UNION DOUANIÈRE AURA UN EFFET POSITIF SUR LE SYSTEME FINANCIER DE L’ARMENIE

ARMENIE

Le President de la Banque Centrale d’Armenie Arthur Javadyan a declare
que l’adhesion de l’Armenie a l’Union douanière aura un effet positif
sur le système financier de l’Armenie.

Il a indique que les institutions financières de l’Armenie coopèrent
avec succès avec leurs homologues russes et kazakhs. Il a declare que
trois banques russes et une banque kazakhe sont presentes en Armenie,
qui sont guides par les memes normes comptables internationales de
Bâle, la gouvernance d’entreprise etc.

” De ce point de vue, notre cooperation n’aura sue des resultats
positifs ” a declare Javadian.

En ce qui concerne les avantages pour l’economie de l’Armenie Arthur
Javadyan a dit qu’il n’etait pas pret a parler dans les details,
mais a declare que les attentes globales sont positives.

samedi 21 septembre 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

Arthur Abraham Montera Sur Le Ring Le 26 Octobre Avant Son Combat Po

ARTHUR ABRAHAM MONTERA SUR LE RING LE 26 OCTOBRE AVANT SON COMBAT POUR LE TITRE MONDIAL EN 2014

BOXE PROFESSIONNELLE

Sur la route du titre mondial WBO des poids super-moyens, l’Armenien
Arthur Abraham qui monte sur les rings sous les couleurs de l’Allemagne
le 26 octobre. Le nom de son adversaire sera connu prochainement
selon le site Fightnews.com. Le combat se deroulera dans la ville
d’Oldenburg (Allemagne). Il sera pour Arthur Abraham ” une preparation
” selon son entraineur, sur le chemin de la reconquete de son titre
mondial. Arthur Abraham qui devrait en 2014 affronter l’Allemand
Robert Stieglitz pour le titre mondial WBO des super-moyens.

Krikor Amirzayan

samedi 21 septembre 2013, Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Family Boycotts Retrial For Murder Of Turkish-Armenian Journalist

FAMILY BOYCOTTS RETRIAL FOR MURDER OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN JOURNALIST

Al-Monitor
Sept 20 2013

By: Yavuz Baydar for Al-Monitor Turkey Pulse Posted on September 20.

It was an assassination that left an extraordinary mark on the
Turkish judiciary, justice and public conscience. So did the tragedy
it symbolized. With the case of Hrant Dink returned to ground zero
six years after the murder, the victim’s family lost its patience in
an open letter.

Hrant Dink, editor of the weekly Agos, the voice of Turkey’s Armenian
community, was gunned down on Jan. 19, 2007, in a busy Istanbul
street by a young man named Ogun Samast. The murder reverberated
beyond Turkey’s borders in a matter of hours.

Dink was the 62nd journalist to be killed in Turkey since a libertarian
constitution was introduced in 1908. Yet, because of his Armenian
background and much-admired courage, along with the reform process
Turkey was undergoing, his murder trial, which opened in July 2007,
became the most significant litmus test for Turkish justice.

Exasperated by a spate of murky political murders in the 1980s and
1990s, and encouraged by government statements, the Turkish public
saw in the trial a “threshold of hope.”

The Dink family hoped that the judicial process would uncover the
assailant’s links to “shady deep state” mechanisms – a “terrorist
organization” structure – that they believed was behind the murder.

In the months leading up to the assassination, Dink stood trial three
times for “insulting Turkishness,” under the infamous Article 301 of
the penal code, and was convicted in two of the cases. He was summoned
to the Istanbul governor’s office, where members of the intelligence
service, MIT, “cautioned” him over Agos stories. Shortly before his
murder, far-right types were spotted around the Agos office, and the
newspaper was flooded with threats to “shut up.”

The case of his murder gradually transformed into a tussle between the
judges and the Dink family’s legal team as evidence was presented and
rejected and the process dragged on. Many of the requests by the Dink
lawyers were either turned down or lost in the labyrinth of red tape.

After six years, the case wrapped up with 18 convictions for “ordinary
murder.”

The Supreme Court of Appeals has now deepened the family’s tragedy,
overturning the lower court’s rulings and ordering a review of the
case. It rejected the argument that a “state-harbored terrorist
organization” was behind Dink’s murder, holding that the suspects
should be retried on charges of belonging to an ordinary criminal
organization, that is, a mafia-style enterprise.

In a dramatic move, Dink’s devastated wife and children released an
open letter to the Turkish public and international audience.

“As the Dink Family, we will no longer be a tool in the game of state
structures that insults us and will not attend the hearings of the
review of the murder case,” the letter stated. It further read, “Since
the slaying of Hrant Dink on January 19, 2007, the system in Turkey –
with its judiciary, security forces, military and civilian bureaucracy,
and political institutions – has all but mocked us. While pretending
to pursue justice, the criminal alliance called the state re-committed
the murder day by day, hearing by hearing, over and over again. This
alliance is the very crime syndicate that planned the murder and then
covered it up. … No effective investigation was conducted at any
stage of this case. The biggest insult, however, came from the court
when it ruled that no organization was involved in the murder.”

The Dink’s letter leveled harsh criticism at the government of the
Justice and Development Party (AKP): “In this case, political will was
the only thing necessary to uncover the state’s murder mechanisms and
the criminal alliance. Despite all its public statements and pledges,
the government persistently refrained from displaying political will.

Far from pursuing the case as a ‘matter of honor,’ the government chose
to use the murder – perpetrated during its own rule – as a trump card
to prosecute offenders only when the gun was pointed at itself.

It boasted, ‘No murder has remained unresolved during our term,’
ignoring the slaying of the only Armenian in republican history who
had waged a vocal struggle for human rights. We are no longer part
of this show. We have no expectation from anything in which the state
is either in front of or behind the curtain.”

Last week, one of the Dink family’s attorneys, Fethiye Cetin,
published Utanc Duyuyorum (I Feel Ashamed), a book recounting how
the case proceeded. She argues that it is extremely unlikely that
justice will prevail unless public pressure cranks up.

Cetin complains of apathy on the part of the powerful Istanbul Bar
Association because of Dink’s Armenian heritage. She also argues that
the prosecutor, Zekeriya Oz, known for investigating coup networks,
such as Ergenekon, was hampered by the “deep state” and that collusion
between the state and the elected government was instrumental in
covering up the murder. The book provides a detailed accounting of
these arguments.

An analysis published Sept. 19 by Radikal, which has closely followed
the case, contained a startling assessment: “All public servants
suspected of involvement or negligence in the murder have been
promoted. [Former Istanbul governor] Muammer Guler became interior
minister, while [former Istanbul police chief] Celalettin Cerrah
was appointed governor of Osmaniye. The then-Trabzon police chief,
Ramazan Akyurek, and Engin Dinc succeeded each other in ascending to
the helm of the police’s intelligence department. Avni Usta, who had
filed the criminal complaint against Dink under Article 301, became
the police chief of Sirnak. Nihat Omeroglu and Muhittin Mihcak, who
were instrumental in the Appeals Court’s decision to uphold Dink’s
conviction under Article 301, were elected public ombudsman and
deputy public ombudsman, respectively. The head of the appeals court,
Hasan Gerceker, ascended to the Arbitration Board, and Hasan Erbil to
the chief prosecutor’s office. … The [implicated] policemen never
appeared before court. And the investigation into public servants
continues under the veil of secrecy.”

Dink devoted his life to trying to improve the conditions of Turkey’s
70,000-strong Armenian minority, the normalization of ties between
Turkey and Armenia, Ankara’s recognition of the great Armenian tragedy
in 1915 and rapprochement between Turkey and the Armenian diaspora.

With the seventh anniversary of his murder approaching, there is
no visible progress in any of these areas. Similarly, there is no
mention of Armenians in ongoing speculation about the prospective
democratization package, whose official announcement has been postponed
until late September. The only positive development so far has been
the return of about one-fourth of the properties the state had seized
from non-Muslim minorities.

The Armenians are divided over AKP rule. Some complain about the slow
pace of reform, while others refrain from criticizing the government
on the grounds that they are better off compared to in the past. On
the political front, Turkish-Armenian normalization remains “on the
shelf.” The issue has moved down on Turkey’s foreign affairs agenda,
now overwhelmed by the Middle East, and there is no sign of when it
will be taken up again.

In the meantime, the 100th anniversary, in 2015, of the Armenian
deportations is approaching. The current inertia is of no help in
dispelling the mistrust of the Armenian diaspora. One does not have to
be clairvoyant to see that the course of the Dink murder case will be
of crucial significance for those who expect a multifaceted opening
in Turkey’s ossified Armenian problem.

Yavuz Baydar is a contributing writer for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse. A
journalist since 1979, he has been a radio reporter, news presenter,
producer, TV host, foreign correspondent, debater and, in recent
years, a news ombudsmen for the daily Sabah. His opinion pieces can
be followed in the English-language daily Today’s Zaman.

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/09/family-slain-journalist-boycotts-trial.html