Delay Of Pensions Due To Internal Resistance

DELAY OF PENSIONS DUE TO INTERNAL RESISTANCE

Delay of payment of pensions in early August is due to internal
resistance, said Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, apologizing to
pensioners for disturbance. 1400 pensioners did not receive their
pensions on time because the lists were not delivered on time.

“I have instructed the minister of labor and social affairs to carry
out an investigation, as well as the prime minister’s control service
has been given an assignment. Despite fundamental changes, there is
internal resistance to the introduction of the new system,” Tigran
Sargsyan said.

He noted that some people dislike the system of transfer of pensions
and they are trying to achieve paper pensions. The prime minister
says that this very paperwork generates corruption risks.

“The minister has reported fresh cases of violations in the last
three months despite recently revealed abuse. There are still some
people who are trying to make money with old methods,” he noted.

The prime minister informed that in September the government will
publish breaches and attempts to make money illegally. He also noted
that the minister has promised that in September the pensioners will
get their pensions on time.

13:22 08/08/2013 Story from Lragir.am News:

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/country/view/30656

On The Initiative Of The Counterpart International Orange Employees

ON THE INITIATIVE OF THE COUNTERPART INTERNATIONAL ORANGE EMPLOYEES HELD TRAINING COURSES FOR PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYEES

07-08-2013 17:01:49 | Armenia | Science and Technology

Yerevan, August 7, 2013

Customer Service training courses were held in Yerevan and Vanadzor
from July 29 till August 1 for the public sector employees, among them
employees of registry offices or village municipalities, librarians,
from different regions of Armenia. The training courses were held on
the initiative of the Counterpart International. The organization was
looking for a private company, distinguished for its high qualities
and skills of customer service, and Orange Armenia was selected as
the company to provide trainers for the mentioned courses.

Overall, 30 participants from Vanadzor, Sevan, Gavar, Alaverdi,
Akhtala, Dsegh, Nor Geghi and form other small and big settlements
of the regions of Armenia participated in the courses.

“Provision of high-quality customer service is one of our priorities,
and we are happy that Counterpart International as well thinks that we
are one of the companies with the best customer service in Armenia. We
are pleased to share our skills, and although the participants of the
courses do not represent the private sector, however, we are sure that
the knowledge gained during these courses will be helpful to them in
their day-to-day activities, as they are also dealing with a great
number of visitors every day,” said Orange Armenia Sales Director
Arsen Hovhannisyan.

“Public service quality is a matter of importance all over the world
and not only in Armenia. By cooperating with a private company, we will
be able to give the public employees the service skills that we cannot
give them alone and neither can the state. We are grateful to Orange
for their readiness to participate in this project. We believe that
it’s a good start, which will pave the way for our further long-term
cooperation,” said Counterpart International Country Director Carel
Hofstra.

The results of the survey held after the courses showed that the
participants were quite satisfied with the courses and the quality of
the methodology and they were of the opinion that the topics chosen
for the courses were, indeed, necessary for them to handle their
day-to-day duties.

-ends-

– Science and Technology News from Armenia and Diaspora – Noyan Tapan –
See more at:

http://www.nt.am/en/news/184861/#sthash.dBDdpkE1.dpuf

"Ankle Nearly Does Not Hurt": Henrikh Mkhitaryan

“ANKLE NEARLY DOES NOT HURT”: HENRIKH MKHITARYAN

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

11:57, 8 August, 2013

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS: The ankle of Henrikh Mkhitaryan nearly
does not disturb the midfielder of the Armenian National Football team
and Borussia Dortmund. As reported by Armenpress, quoting the German
website Ruhrnachrichten, Henrikh Mkhitaryan is already playing with
the ball and can perfectly possess it. But still Mkhitaryan should
wait for the real games.

“I am waiting with impatience for the time I could work and train
with the guys. My ankle nearly does not disturb me. Certainly, it
was not the time to get an injury, but you cannot change anything”,
– said Henrikh Mkhitaryan.

The German Bundesliga launches on August 10. The first game of Borussia
will be held with the FC Augsburg.

The midfielder of the Armenian National Football team and Borussia
Dortmund Henrikh Mkhitaryan moved to the German Borussia Dortmund
from the Ukrainian Shakhtar. He has already managed to participate
in several Borussia’s friendly matches and got integrated in the team.

The midfielder of the Armenian National Football team and Borussia
Dortmund has returned to his trainings about a week ago. On July 16
he injured his ankle and could not train for four weeks.

Henrikh Mkhitaryan was born on January 21, 1989. As a member of the
Armenian national team Mkhitaryan participated in 33 international
matches and scored 8 goals since his debut in an away friendly
match against Panama on 14 January 2007. His previous clubs include
Pyunik Yerevan, where he came through the youth system, and Metalurg
Donetsk. Mkhitaryan was chosen Armenian Footballer of the Year in
2009, 2011 and 2012. He was also voted as the best Shakhtar player
of 2011-12 season by the fans. In 2012 Mkhitaryan was named in UEFA’s
Top 100 players by UEFA European Football Yearbook 2012-13.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/728572/%E2%80%9Cankle-nearly-does-not-hurt%E2%80%9D-henrikh-mkhitaryan.html

Armenian Soldier Finds Himself In Azerbaijan’s Territory

ARMENIAN SOLDIER FINDS HIMSELF IN AZERBAIJAN’S TERRITORY

12:52 08/08/2013 ” SOCIETY

An Armenian soldier identified as Hakob Injighulyan, 22, has crossed
into Azerbaijan’s territory losing his orientation while carrying
out his military duty around 3:00 am on August 8, according to
preliminary reports.

An investigation is underway into the incident, the press service of
NKR Defense Army reported.

Source: Panorama.am

Collectif VAN : L’ephemeride Du 8 Aout

COLLECTIF VAN : L’éPHéMéRIDE DU 8 AOÔT

Publié le : 08-08-2013

Info Collectif VAN – – La rubrique “Ephéméride”
du Collectif VAN a été lancée le 6 décembre 2010. Elle recense
la liste d’événements survenus a une date donnée, a différentes
époques de l’Histoire, sur les thématiques que l’association suit au
quotidien. L’éphéméride du Collectif VAN repose sur des informations
en ligne sur de nombreux sites (les sources sont spécifiées sous
chaque entrée). Vous pouvez retrouver tous les éphémérides du
Collectif VAN dans la Rubrique Actions VAN, en cliquant sur ces liens:

Les éphémérides du Collectif VAN (1ère partie)

Les éphémérides du Collectif VAN (2ème partie)

Légende photo : 8 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : l’ordre de
déportation générale est rendu public le 8 aoÔt 1915 a Kayseri
comme a Talas. Les déportations commencent cinq jours plus tard
par les quartiers péri¬phériques et s’achèvent par Taldon et le
centre ville. Les propriétés arméniennes sont confisquées et le
monastère Saint-Garabèd transformé en orphelinat pour y ” islamiser
les enfants arméniens ” ; certaines églises sont converties en
mosquées (Saint-Grégoire) ou en dépôts militaires. Catholiques et
protestants ont certes été épargnés, mais dépouillés de leurs
biens et relégués a la périphérie de la ville. Environ vingt
mille personnes sont déportées de Kayseri et de Talas. Les convois
empruntent la route Incesu, Develi, Nidge, Bor, Ulukicla, sous la
supervision personnelle de Yakub Cemil bey, le délégué du CUP.

Ca s’est passé un 8 aoÔt (les événements sont classés du plus
ancien au plus récent) :

8 aoÔt 1655 — Les cosaques et les troupes moscovites occupent
la ville de Vilna (Lituanie) et massacrent les habitants juifs qui
n’ont pas fui, ainsi que de nombreux chrétiens. Le quartier juif est
incendié mais le feu se propage et détruit l’ensemble de la ville.

Skynet : 8 aoÔt, ce jour-la, n’oubliez pas

8 aoÔt 1820 — Empire ottoman : démonstration des roturiers
arménienne de Constantinople. Elle est supprimée par le gouvernement
turc.

American University of Armenia : This day in Armenian history

8 aoÔt 1894 — Empire ottoman : le déclenchement de l’affaire du
Sassoun, le 8 aoÔt 1894, entre les Kurdes de Valkan et les Arméniens
de Chénik, provoque une répression sanglante ordonnée par le sultan
et organisée par son beau-frère Zéki-Pacha, et pousse aussitôt
les puissances a exiger des réformes. L’inefficacité du résultat
conduira a la tragique présentation au grand vizir d’un mémorandum
rédigé par les Hentchakistes et a une autre vague de massacres
suivie de vaines promesses. André Barre rapporte en détail les
atrocités commises durant cette période, qualifiant la Turquie d’
” asile de déments ” et déplorant chez les Arméniens ” cette
naïve confiance dans la pitié de l’Europe ”.

Petite encyclopédie du génocide arménien : L’esclavage
blanc. (Arménie et Macédoine)

8 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : l’ordre de déportation générale est
rendu public le 8 aoÔt 1915 a Kayseri comme a Talas. Les déportations
commencent cinq jours plus tard par les quartiers péri¬phériques
et s’achèvent par Taldon et le centre ville. Les propriétés
arméniennes sont confisquées et le monastère Saint-Garabèd
transformé en orphelinat pour y ” islamiser les enfants arméniens ”
; certaines églises sont converties en mosquées (Saint-Grégoire)
ou en dépôts militaires. Catholiques et protestants ont certes
été épargnés, mais dépouillés de leurs biens et relégués a
la périphérie de la ville.

Environ vingt mille personnes sont déportées de Kayseri et de Talas.

Les convois empruntent la route Incesu, Develi, Nidge, Bor, Ulukicla,
sous la supervision personnelle de Yakub Cemil bey, le délégué
du CUP.

Le génocide des Arméniens, Raymond Kévorkian,éd. Odile Jacob,
2006 Skynet : Génocide arménien : un génocide chrétien

8 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : le commandant de la IIIe armée,
Mahmud Kâmil, recoit l’ordre de ne plus s’occuper des déportations,
mais uniquement de coopérer avec l’administration. Cette mesure a
été prise a la suite d’une conférence qui s’est tenue a Erzincan
autour du 31 juillet 1915, réunissant les vali d’Erzerum, Trébizonde,
Harpout, Sıvas et de nombreux mutesarif et kaïmakam, comme celui
de Bayburt, sous la présidence du Dr Bahaeddin Sakir, chef de l’O.S.

** (Kévorkian, 2006 :382).

Mass violence : Chronologie de l’extermination des Arméniens de
l’Empire ottoman par le régime jeune-turc (1915-1916)

8 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : kaza de Cezire (sancak de Mardin).

L’extermination des habitants des zones rurales de la Cezire commence
le 8 aoÔt et se prolonge durant une semaine.

** (Simon, s.d. :88).

Mass violence : Chronologie de l’extermination des Arméniens de
l’Empire ottoman par le régime jeune-turc (1915-1916)

8 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : kaza de Yozgat (vilayet d’Angora). 471
notables arméniens de Yozgat sont arrêtés et déportés. Peu après
un deuxième groupe, formé de 300 hommes, a été envoyé a quatre
heures de la ville, a Dere Mumlu et liquidé.

** (Kévorkian, 2006 :634-635).

Mass violence : Chronologie de l’extermination des Arméniens de
l’Empire ottoman par le régime jeune-turc (1915-1916)

8 au 12 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : Sıvas. Les détenus de la
medrese de Sifahdiye ont été emmenés, par groupe de deux cents
a trois cents, dans une ferme située a trois heures de Sıvas,
près de l’école d’apprentissage. Ils y ont été exécutés sous
les ordres du secrétaire-responsable de l’Ittihad, Gani bey.

** (Kévorkian, 2006 :568).

Mass violence : Chronologie de l’extermination des Arméniens de
l’Empire ottoman par le régime jeune-turc (1915-1916)

8 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : trois semaines avant les massacres de
Djezireh, le 8 aoÔt, plusieurs villages jacobites et quinze villages
chaldéens sont anéantis. Parmi les victimes, le père Rhétoré
mentionne trois prêtres chaldéens : les abbés Augustin Murdjâni
et Thomas Chérin, élèves du séminaire Saint-Jean de Mossoul, et
l’abbé Petros de Takian. On raconte, ajoute le père Rhétoré, que
l’abbé Augustin, desservant du village de Mansourieh, est convoqué
par le mudir qui lui transmet la volonté du sultan : il faut tuer
tous les chrétiens a moins qu’ils ne se convertissent. L’abbé rend
grâce au sultan et demande la faveur d’aller communiquer cette offre
a ses paroissiens.

Le mudir accepte. L’abbé réunit ses ouailles et leur annonce que
le gouvernement a décidé de les tuer. Il les exhorte a demeurer
fidèles a leur foi et leur promet la vie éternelle. Les chrétiens
de Mansourieh sont prêts a mourir lorsque les Kurdes arrivent pour
les tuer. Les tortionnaires s’acharnent particulièrement sur l’abbé
Murdjâni : il est lardé de coups de poignards, puis étranglé par
une corde que deux hommes placés de chaque côté tirent lentement
pour faire durer le supplice.

Thomas Chérin est tué dans le village de Péchabour dont il est le
prêtre. C’est un gros bourg de 1 300 habitants, très prospère,
situé sur la rive gauche du Tigre, en aval de Djezireh, a une
journée de marche. Le village est attaqué le 8 aoÔt par Mohamed
agha, chef des nomades Artsuyi.

© Revue d’Histoire Arménienne Contemporaine pour toutes les éditions
| © Yves Ternon pour le texte Mardin 1915 Imprescriptible : Caza de
Djezireh et de Nisibe

8 aoÔt 1915 — Empire ottoman : les Turcs conquirent le passage de
Mergemer, qui leur ouvrit la plaine d’Alaschkert. Mais les Russes les
repoussèrent de nouveau et, après différents combats, maintinrent
la ligne de Gob a Akhlat.

Imprescriptible : Les opérations des Russes

8 aoÔt 1916 — Empire ottoman : 15000 déportés arméniens sont
retirés d’Alep dans le désert.

Chronology of the Armenian Genocide — 1916 (July-December)

8 aoÔt 1938 — Etablissement du premier camp de concentration en
terre d’Autriche, Mauthausen. On estime qu’environ 335 000 personnes
sont mortes a Mauthausen.

Skynet : 8 aoÔt, ce jour-la, n’oubliez pas

8 aoÔt 1940 — Allemagne : la persécution prend une dimension raciste
: les Juifs convertis au christianisme sont considérés comme juifs
au même titre que les personnes de religion juive.

Skynet : 8 aoÔt, ce jour-la, n’oubliez pas

8 aoÔt 1941 — 330 juifs sont tués dans la cour de la prison de
Chortkov (Ukraine).

– La gendarmerie roumaine réquisitionne 500 juifs et 25 juives dans le
ghetto de Kichinev (Bessarabie) pour les soumettre au travail forcé.

– Les nazis exigent 6 kilos d’or et 12 kilos d’argent des juifs de
Kobryn (Ukraine) et commencent a préparer la création d’un ghetto.

– Les SS fusillent environ 2 000 juifs dans la prison de Dunaburg
( Lettonie).

– 112 jeunes juifs de Korzec (Ukraine) sont arrêtés puis assassinés
par les SS près de la ville.

Skynet : 8 aoÔt, ce jour-la, n’oubliez pas

8 aoÔt 1942 — Après le recensement des intellectuels juifs de
Krzemieniec (Ukraine), tous sont fusillés par la Gestapo et la
police ukrainienne.

– Plusieurs centaines de juifs de Szczebrzeszyn (Pologne) sont
déportés au camp d’extermination de Belzec et tués par les SS.

– 1 000 femmes et enfants juifs sont amenés du ghetto de Rzeszow
(Pologne) au camp de Falkinia, où les SS les assassinent.

Skynet : 8 aoÔt, ce jour-la, n’oubliez pas

8 aoÔt 1944 — Ukraine : la ville de Stryj est libérée le 8
aoÔt 1944.

Plusieurs dizaines de Juifs surgissent de la ville ”aryenne” et
de la forêt. D’autres reviennent plus tard des camps allemands ou
d’Union Soviétique. Mais la plupart d’entre eux quittent la villes
pour d’autres horizons: l’occident ou la Palestine et le nouvel
état d’Israel.

BS Encyclopédie : Les petits ghettos polonais

8 aoÔt 1945 — L’article 6 c) de la Charte du Tribunal militaire
international dite Statut de Nuremberg, annexé a l’Accord de Londres
du 8 aoÔt 1945, énumère les crimes contre l’humanité sans utiliser
le terme de génocide : “l’assassinat, l’extermination, la réduction
en esclavage, la déportation et tout autre acte inhumain commis contre
toutes populations civiles avant ou pendant la guerre, ou bien les
persécutions pour des motifs politiques, raciaux ou religieux”. La
qualification de ces crimes marque un progrès dans le droit pénal
international.

CDCA – Le génocide : un crime contre l’humanité

Compilation réalisée par le site

Retour a la rubrique

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=56223
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org

Un Homme Poignarde Et Tue Son Epouse A Etchmiadzin

UN HOMME POIGNARDE ET TUE SON EPOUSE A ETCHMIADZIN

ARMENIE

La Police a recu un appel de l’hôpital de Vagharshapat mardi a 18h50,
l’informant que Lusine Davtyan, 36 ans, a ete transporte a l’hôpital
avec des blessures par arme blanche.

Elle a egalement informe que son mari l’avait poignarde.

Lusine Davtyan n’a cependant pas repris conscience et est decedee a
l’hôpital, le meme jour a 23 h.

L’escouade de la police a decouvert que son mari, Arsen. A., 37 ans,
l’avait poignarde a plusieurs reprises avec un couteau de cuisine,
le meme jour a environ 17h30, lors d’une dispute dans la maison de
son frère Artak A., 35 ans.

Une procedure penale est lancee.

Des mesures sont prises pour trouver Artak A., et une enquete est
en cours.

jeudi 8 août 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

Soccer: Two Armenian Refs Banned For Match-Fixing

TWO ARMENIAN REFS BANNED FOR MATCH-FIXING

SBS, Australia
Aug 7 2013

8 Aug 2013, 6:51 am – Source: AAP

UEFA has suspended to Armenian referees for match-fixing, after
spotting “suspicious betting patterns” around a Europa League match.

Two Armenian referees have been suspended for match-fixing after they
admitted attempting to manipulate a Europa League qualifier.

Match referee Andranik Arsenyan and assistant, Hovhannes Avagyan,
both admitted to the Armenian football federation (HFF) trying to
fix the second leg of the first qualifying round match between Inter
Turku of Finland and Vikingur of the Faroes on July 11 this year.

Vikingkur won the game 1-0 to take the tie 2-1 on aggregate.

“The UEFA betting fraud detection system – which monitors over
32,000 matches across Europe, including all first-division and UEFA
competition games – had detected suspicious betting patterns around
this fixture, and this prompted the start of an investigation by UEFA
to which the HFF contributed closely,” a UEFA statement said.

The case will be dealt with by UEFA’s Control and Disciplinary Body
on August 22.

http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/1797719/Two-Armenian-refs-banned-for-match-fixing

Montreal: Councillor Chitilian Joins Coderre’s Team

COUNCILLOR CHITILIAN JOINS CODERRE’S TEAM

The Gazette (Montreal)
August 3, 2013 Saturday
Early Edition

by LINDA GYULAI, The Gazette

Councillor Harout Chitilian, who lost to Laurent Blanchard by two
votes to become Montreal’s new interim mayor in June, has joined
mayoral candidate Denis Coderre’s team.

The councillor from Ahuntsic-Cartierville borough becomes the second
former member of the onceruling Union Montreal party to join Equipe
Denis Coderre this week.

Lionel Perez, interim borough mayor of
Côte-des-Neiges-Note-Dâme-de-Grace, announced his move on Tuesday.

Chitilian, who is council speaker, was first elected to office in
2009 with former mayor Gerald Tremblay’s Union Montreal. He has been
an independent since December.

“After the Nov. 3 election, I think we’re going to be in rebuilding
mode not just in terms of infrastructure, but to rebuild the trust
with the people,” Chitilian said Friday. “We have to get out there and
meet people and … listen to them and listen to their frustrations.”

Chitilian, who was born in Lebanon and is of Lebanese and Armenian
origin, said he considers Coderre accessible to constituents and a
good listener.

Mayoral rival Marcel Côte, of Coalition Montreal, and running mate
Vision Montreal Leader Louise Harel have talked of the need to unite
the east and west ends of the city. However, Chitilian said he doesn’t
understand the message.

“I’ve never seen the divide myself,” he said. “We’re all Montrealers –
equal, of different backgrounds.”

Côte and Coderre will join fellow mayoral contenders Richard Bergeron
of Projet Montreal and Melanie Joly, who is forming a party called
Vrai changement pour Montreal, in a first candidates’ debate at
Universite du Quebec a Montreal on Aug. 16.

The topics will be youth and citizen participation.

The New Jerusalem: In The Holy City, Jews Are Buying Up Arab Propert

OBSERVER MAGAZINE: THE NEW JERUSALEM: IN THE HOLY CITY, JEWS ARE BUYING UP ARAB PROPERTIES, AIMING TO ‘RECLAIM’ ITS ANCIENT MUSLIM QUARTER. HARRIET SHERWOOD MEETS ONE FAMILY DETERMINED NOT TO BE MOVED

The Observer (England)
July 28, 2013

by Harriet Sherwood

In the heart of Jerusalem’s ancient Old City, the Via Dolorosa –
the route that Jesus took, burdened by a wooden cross, on the way
to his public execution almost two millennia ago – straddles the
busy El-Wad thoroughfare. This is where the Najib family encounters
an obstruction almost every time one of them climbs the worn stone
steps to their home of three generations.

The obstruction is an Israeli security guard with a weapon slung across
his body, a baseball cap shadowing his face and an uncompromising
attitude written on his features. He stands, according to members
of the Palestinian family, in the middle of the gloomy staircase,
his body almost filling the narrow passage to the upper floors.

He doesn’t move, they say. Sometimes they edge past, eyes averted,
wanting to avoid any confrontation. Sometimes they stand their ground,
argue even: “Let us pass, this is our home, move out of our way.” Such
encounters may bring a fleeting triumph, but rarely do they last
longer than a second or two. In reality, the Najibs fear that they
and others like them are fighting a battle that may already be lost.

The setting for this battle is the historic Old City: a small walled
enclave of less than one square kilometre within the sprawling
city that is Jerusalem, divided into loose quarters for Muslims,
Jews, Christians and Armenians. It is the heart of the decades-old
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the centre for the world’s three great
monotheistic religions, and a magnet for pilgrims and tourists from
all over the world. In this crucible of faith, priests, rabbis and
imams brush past bare-limbed backpackers as they make their way over
the treacherously smooth flagstones of its narrow alleyways. Gaggles
of pilgrims from Eastern Europe, West Africa and Latin America jostle
with ultra-orthodox Jews and devout Muslims on their way to pray at the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Western Wall or the Al-Aqsa mosque.

But away from the souvenir shops selling religious trinkets, olive-wood
chessboards and belly-dancing outfits, a religious and nationalistic
struggle is ratcheting up tensions. Palestinians say a programme of
“Judaisation” of the Old City is accelerating; ideologically driven and
biblically inspired Jewish settlers insist they are simply redeeming
land gifted to them by God.

Around 1,000 Jewish settlers now live among 31,000 Palestinians in
the Muslim Quarter of the Old City, taking over homes that have been
inhabited by Muslim families for decades or even centuries, and flying
Israeli flags from the walls and rooftops of their properties. They
are the frontline fighters in a broader battle – backed by the Israeli
government, city authorities and security

services – to ensure Jewish control of Jerusalem and to drive its
Palestinian population down to a minimum.

TWELVE MEMBERS OF the Najib family – eight adults and four children
– live in the three rooms of their first-floor apartment on El-Wad
street. Ebtahaj Najib, 58, moved into the house on the day she married
her cousin in 1973 and all nine of her children were born and brought
up in the house, including her 38-year-old son Youssef. Her husband
died eight years ago.

By custom, Palestinian extended families live together or close by,
but there is insufficient space at the Najibs’ house, and some of
her sons have been forced to move out since

getting married and starting families of their own.

“You think everyone has a room?” laughs Ebtahaj when

I ask where the remaining family members sleep. The answer is:
crowded together, with the couches in the living room becoming beds
when night falls.

Even so, the Najibs’ home is spacious compared to many in the Muslim
Quarter. Light streams through large windows into a high-ceilinged
living room, the walls of which are adorned with 1950s portraits of
Youssef’s dapper, moustachioed grandfather and glamorous, lipsticked
grandmother. Outside the sparsely furnished room, a balcony overlooks
shops and cafes – the Old City’s best-known hummus place, Abu Shukri,
is almost below.

Immediately above the balcony, five large Israeli flags hang from the
second floor. To casual passers-by, these symbols of the Jewish state,
along with the Hebrew sign over the arched entrance announcing the
Synagogue of the Union of the Fighters of Jerusalem in the Old City,
send a clear message: this building is in Jewish hands. The Najib
family’s presence is rendered almost invisible.

For the past 30 years, a yeshiva – a place for religious study – has
been based in the floors above the Najibs’ home. According to the
Najibs, the students, teachers and round-the-clock armed security
guards make noise, throw garbage down the stairwell and intimidate
the children. “Every minute – midnight, midday, evening, morning –
they are singing, praying, playing music, slamming doors, coming up
and down the stairs. But they never speak to us,” says Youssef.

Nobody at the yeshiva is willing to speak to the Observer, either. As
I leave the Najibs’ home, under the watchful eyes of a security guard
stationed in a sentry box almost opposite the family’s front door,

a group comes down the stairs. I ask to hear their side of the story.

They push past without making eye contact. Daniel Luria, the spokesman
for Ateret Cohanim, the organisation behind the yeshiva, later tells
me that none of the settlers – a term he rejects – in the Muslim
Quarter would be willing to be interviewed. “It’s never advantageous.

We are always seen as the occupier – the Palestinians are always seen
as the residents,” he says.

According to Ateret Cohanim’s website, ateret.org.il, the yeshiva is
the “spiritual epicentre of a community of almost 1,000 residents in
the heart of the Old City in the so-called Muslim Quarter”. It now
refers to the area as the “Renewed Jewish Quarter”.

But Ateret Cohanim is much more than a promoter of religious studies.

It is dedicated to helping Jews buy up Arab properties in the Old City
and East Jerusalem in furtherance of what Luria calls the “physical
and spiritual redemption” of the city. Ateret Cohanim has assisted
in the purchase of at least 50 properties in the Muslim Quarter,
and plans to build on that number.

THE COMPLEX AND violent history of this city has filled countless
books. There is no dispute that Jews were its earliest inhabitants,
but the presence of Muslims and Christians also stretches back over
multiple centuries.

More recently, at the end of the war following the declaration of the
State of Israel in 1948, Jerusalem was divided, with the Old City on
the Jordanian-controlled eastern side of the armistice line, known
as the Green Line. The Jewish population within the ancient stone
walls sank to zero.

Nineteen years later, Israel captured East Jerusalem in the 1967
Six Day war, “liberating” – in its terminology – the Old City. Jews
returned to live close to their revered site of the Western Wall and
Israel declared the “reunified, indivisible” city of Jerusalem to be
its “eternal” capital. Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem has never
been recognised by the international community. The Palestinians want
Arab-dominated East Jerusalem as the capital of a future state, but
Israel is determined to resist any division or sharing of the city;
hence the state’s policy of establishing Jewish “neighbourhoods” –
settlements, to the rest of the world – in areas across the pre-1967
Green Line. Some of these settlements are big developments, housing
thousands of Israeli Jews in modern apartment blocks. Others are tiny
pockets of hard-liners in the heart of Palestinian communities, where
the presence of settlers and their security guards causes friction
and animosity.

With little prospect in sight of

a peace deal involving a shared Jerusalem, Ateret Cohanim, one of the
key drivers of religiously motivated settler pockets, is increasing
and consolidating the Jewish presence in the Muslim, Christian and
Armenian quarters of the Old City. According to Luria, the organisation

“facilitates purchases” but does not buy property itself.

This is disputed by its critics, who say it runs a network of front
companies in an attempt to disguise its involvement

in acquisitions.

A report, Jerusalem, The Old City, published in 2009 by the
International Peace and Cooperation Centre (IPCC) –

a Palestinian civil society organisation – said Ateret Cohanim was
“taking the lead in the process of Judaising the Old City”. Properties
were acquired using three different methods, it said: claiming historic
Jewish ownership and securing a court order to evict Palestinian
residents; taking over “absentee property”, or using underhand
transactions, in which the identity of the buyer is concealed.

Luria denies that Ateret Cohanim uses front companies but concedes
that buyers sometimes use Palestinian intermediaries. “Arab law says
that an Arab should be killed if he sells property to a Jew,” he says.

“It’s a disgrace in a modern, democratic country, but Arabs sometimes
have to be protected. He can’t openly be a party to the sale in
some circumstances. So Arab middlemen are sometimes used, and legal
somersaults are performed. Not in every deal, but when necessary.”

The organisation’s current targets include properties near Herod’s
Gate, a Palestinian community centre near Lion’s Gate, and homes near
the Little Western Wall, just below the Haram al-Sharif or Temple
Mount, say Palestinian activists.

“This is the heartland of the Jewish people. Why shouldn’t we return
– especially if we’re paying good money?” says Luria. “We’re not
kicking people out. Jews should be able to buy here, just like in
London or New York. We are the indigenous people in this land.” He
adds: “The Arabs are illegal squatters occupying this land.” If an
Arab feels “uncomfortable” with Jews living in the Muslim Quarter,
“that’s a shame. But if he doesn’t like it, there is no shortage
of other countries with Muslim majorities. If they can’t accept us,
that’s their problem. Why should I apologise or feel bad?”

Despite being loquacious on the rights of Jews to the land,
Luria is reticent on the funding of Ateret Cohanim. I ask him if
Irving Moskowitz, an octogenarian US bingo tycoon whose eponymous
foundation funds settler activities in East Jerusalem and who is
widely reported as giving millions of dollars to Ateret Cohanim,
is one of his backers. “We receive donations from here and abroad,
but we don’t discuss any individual who supports the organisation,”
is all Luria is willing to say. Support also comes from the state of
Israel, not least in the form of security for the settlers.

A FEW METRES from the Najibs’ home, at the junction of El-Wad
street and Via Dolorosa, the Israeli border police maintain a daily
presence, routinely demanding to see Palestinians’ identity papers,
where they live and where they are going. “They never stop the Jews,”
says Youssef Najib. “They are here to help the Jews.”

Meanwhile, in the narrow alleys and hidden courtyards of the Muslim
Quarter, the daily grind of life is worsening little by little. In the
past 30 years its population has doubled, exacerbating already-high
levels of overcrowding and poverty. A report on the Palestinian economy
published earlier this year by the United Nations said housing density
in the Muslim Quarter was almost three times as high as in the Jewish
Quarter, and many Palestinian homes lacked running water and a proper
sewage system. More than 80% of dwellings require major rehabilitation
or urgent maintenance, according to the IPCC.

Three out of four children in the Muslim Quarter live below the poverty
line, and unemployment is more than 30%. Garbage collection is sporadic
in these back streets, and there are almost no open spaces for children
to play in. The use of child labour is widespread; the dropout rates
from schools are high. Domestic violence and drug abuse is on the rise.

A major reason for the migration into the Old City is an Israeli
requirement for Palestinians to prove that Jerusalem is their “centre
of life” in order for them to keep their valued residency rights in
the city, giving greater access to jobs, education and healthcare.

More than 7,000 Palestinians had Jerusalem residency rights revoked
between 2006 and 2011; faced with such a threat, thousands more moved
from suburbs and villages outside Jerusalem back into the city –
including the Old City – to secure their identity papers. Others, who
found themselves cut off from the city centre by the vast concrete
separation wall, moved into the Old City to avoid daily checkpoint
ordeals.

On top of this, says the UN, Palestinians in the Old City are
“caught between the frontlines of interaction with Israeli settlers
and authorities on a daily basis and the frontlines of a struggle
to preserve and assert Palestinian cultural and political identity
and its Islamic and Christian roots. This has entailed a growing
sense of siege and conflict for indigenous Palestinian residents,
who perceive their lifestyles, livelihoods and social cohesion to
be at risk in the discordant climate reigning in the Old City, with
religious fervour easily degenerating into communal tensions.”

Luria dismisses such a picture. “Jewish families are living in the
Old City side by side with Arabs, in some cases even in the same
courtyard. OK, it is not necessarily beautiful puppy love, but it
is basic coexistence, which is the best you can hope for in a place
as volcanic as Jerusalem. Unfortunately some Arabs have not come to
terms with having Jews live next door to them – Arabs who in general
have a problem living in a national Jewish homeland. But the land of
Israel belongs to the Jewish people.”

In the house on El-Wad street – beneath the fluttering Israeli flags,
along from the armed security guards and Israeli police officers,
and where the sound of the muezzin from the mosque across the street
sometimes competes with the chant of Jewish prayers from the upstairs
yeshiva – Youssef Najib shrugs when I ask if he thinks the Jews are
here to stay in the Muslim Quarter.

“They won’t even give us the West Bank for a state, so you think
they’ll give back East Jerusalem?” he says. But he has created his
personal frontline in the battle for the Old City. Many times settlers
have knocked on the Najibs’ door to offer the family money to leave
the property. But Youssef says:

“If you give me the whole wealth of Israel, I will not give you
my home.”

Captions:

Living on the frontline: Ebtahaj Najib, 58, looks over three of her
grandchildren. They share their three-room apartment with

eight relatives

‘You think everyone has

a room?’: a photo of the Najib family patriarch, who bought the
first-floor apartment on El-Wad street decades ago

‘Unfortunately some Arabs have not come to terms with having Jews
live next door to them’: (above) Arab women are watched by Israeli
soldiers and, left, El-Wad street in the Old City

Rep. Schiff Meets With Interns From ANCA & AAA

REP. SCHIFF MEETS WITH INTERNS FROM ARMENIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF AMERICA AND ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

US Fed News
July 24, 2013 Wednesday 1:09 PM EST

WASHINGTON, July 24 — Rep. Adam Schiff issued the following news:

Today, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) met with several interns from the
Armenian National Committee of America in his Washington D.C. office.

The interns discussed their work at the ANCA and priorities for the
Armenian-American community, both in Congress and at home. They were
also given a chance to ask Rep. Schiff questions about his work in
Congress and to suggest ideas for legislation.

“I am always pleased to see young people in our country engaging
in public service and the legislative process, and am especially
impressed when they demonstrate such enthusiasm and commitment. The
experiences and professional development that internships provide
will position these students well for their future endeavors.”

In June, Rep. Schiff also met with several students from the Armenian
Assembly of America who came to visit his Washington D.C. office. The
students thanked him for sponsoring the Armenian Genocide Resolution
and for creating awareness by speaking on the House Floor in Armenian.

They also shared family stories and asked Rep. Schiff about his
priorities this Congress.

“I am proud to represent a large and vibrant Armenian community,
which has so enriched our nation in so many fields,” Rep. Schiff
said. “As a friend of the Armenian community, I will continue working
hard to pursue recognition for the 1.5 million victims of the Armenian
Genocide, as well as policies to ensure a better life for the Armenian
people in our communities and throughout the world.”