Les Manifestations En Turquie, 1er Test Serieux Pour L’Adhesion A L’

LES MANIFESTATIONS EN TURQUIE, 1ER TEST SERIEUX POUR L’ADHESION A L’UE (ROME)

Les manifestations en Turquie representent ” le premier test serieux ”
pour l’adhesion de ce pays a l’Union europeenne, a estime mercredi la
ministre italienne des Affaires etrangères Emma Bonino. Elle denonce un
” usage disproportionne de la force ” a Istanbul.

” Le gouvernement turc est en train de passer un examen de maturite
[democratique] dans les places et les rues. Il s’agit probablement du
premier test serieux pour la tenue democratique de la Turquie et pour
son processus d’adhesion a l’Europe “, a declare Mme Bonino devant
les deputes italiens.

” Certains pensaient que la Turquie avait passe cet examen en raison
de son dynamisme economique, mais en fait, elle a besoin de faire bien
plus “, a ajoute Mme Bonino, en appelant a ” l’ouverture d’un dialogue
” entre pouvoir et manifestants.

L’Italie a toujours soutenu l’entree de la Turquie au sein de l’Union
europeenne et Mme Bonino l’a rappele, estimant que ” l’adhesion a
l’UE peut avoir un effet benefique sur la Turquie “.

Mais ” l’Italie veut une Turquie pleinement democratique au sein
de l’Europe “, a poursuivi Mme Bonino, rappelant que ” l’element
democratique ne s’epuise pas avec des elections libres “.

” La Turquie doit decider si elle veut devenir une democratie mûre.

L’usage disproportionne de la force et l’arrestation de 20 avocats
sont inacceptables “, a ajoute la ministre des Affaires etrangères.

La police turque a interpelle mardi 73 avocats qui protestaient et
les a relâches dans la journee après interrogatoires.

Pour Mme Bonino, ” le droit de manifester de manière non violente
est un des piliers indispensables de la democratie ” et ” le recours
a la force est un signe de faiblesse “.

Le premier ministre turc, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a fait evacuer a
deux reprises par la force mardi les manifestants a la place Taksim,
au centre d’Istanbul. Il a aussi prevenu qu’il n’aurait plus ” aucune
tolerance ” envers leur mouvement.

” La place Taksim n’est pas la place Tahrir et les Turcs ne sont pas
des Arabes “, a par ailleurs estime Mme Bonino, refusant un parallèle
entre ” le printemps arabe ” et un hypothetique ” printemps turc “.

Pour elle, les manifestations en Turquie rappellent davantage celles
qui se deroulent dans de grandes villes occidentales comme le mouvement
Occupy Wall Street.

vendredi 14 juin 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

Le President Du Parlement Veut Lutter Contre L’absenteisme

LE PRESIDENT DU PARLEMENT VEUT LUTTER CONTRE L’ABSENTEISME

Le president du Parlement armenien Hovik Abrahamian a adopte une ligne
dure sur l’absenteisme chronique de certains deputes et a demande
aux membres du corps legislatif d’assister a toutes les sessions
a partir d’aujourd’hui et de s’engager dans le travail legislatif
avec diligence.

Selon Panorama.am Abrahamian aurait ensuite demande au Secretariat
de mettre en place des listes de deputes qui sont absents lors des
reunions du parlement et de les fournir aux medias.

” J’appelle tous les medias a diffuser les noms de tous ces deputes
[absents] a travers les reseaux sociaux afin que les electeurs sachent
pour qui ils votent au parlement ” a declave le president du parlement.

vendredi 14 juin 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

Soccer: Armenia End Denmark Hopes

ARMENIA END DENMARK HOPES

Gulf Daily News, Bahrain
June 13 2013

COPENHAGEN: Denmark’s hopes of reaching the 2014 World Cup finals are
all but over after it slumped to a dismal 4-0 home defeat by Armenia
in a qualifier on Tuesday.

“This is the worst evening in my football life,” Denmark coach Morten
Olsen said. “It is beyond my understanding that we cannot do better,
but it is my fault 100 per cent.”

Armenia striker Yura Movsisyan opened the scoring within 30 seconds of
the kickoff after Denmark’s Simon Kjaer accidentally passed the ball
to him. Aras Ozbiliz made it 2-0 in the 19th minute, sending his shot
past goalkeeper Stephan Andersen after a mistake by an increasingly
error-prone Denmark defense.

Movsisyan added Armenia’s third goal in the 59th minute, prompting
fans to start leaving the Parken stadium. Armenia almost scored again
in the 71st minute when Movsisyan’s effort beat Andersen, only for
William Kvist to make a goalline clearance.

Soccer: Great Danes Tamed By Armenia

GREAT DANES TAMED BY ARMENIA

Oman Tribune, Sultanate of Oman
June 13 2013

PARIS Zlatan Ibrahimovic scored both goals as Sweden beat the Faroe
Islands 2-0 to earn three crucial points in their quest to qualify
for the 2014 World Cup on Tuesday, but their Scandinavian neighbours
Denmark suffered a crushing 4-0 home defeat to Armenia.

Paris Saint-Germain striker Ibrahimovic stabbed home the opener from
close range 10 minutes before the interval at the Friends Arena in
the Stockholm suburb of Solna, and then added a penalty eight minutes
from time.

Sweden were ultimately comfortable winners despite the sending-off
of Andreas Granqvist towards the end, and Erik Hamren’s side climb
back into third place in qualifying Group C.

With 11 points from six games, the Swedes are five points behind
leaders Germany but level on points with second-placed Austria and
the Republic of Ireland in fourth.

Their next game is away to Ireland in September.

Meanwhile, Denmark’s chances of qualifying for a third consecutive
major tournament finals received a hammer blow as they went down 4-0
to Armenia in Copenhagen.

The forward Yura Movsisyan, who once had a spell in the Danish league
but now plays for Spartak Moscow, scored twice for the former Soviet
republic with Aris Ozbiliz and Shakhtar Donetsk star Henrikh Mkhitaryan
also on target.

The scoreline equalled Armenia’s biggest ever victory, while for
Denmark it was a heaviest defeat in a competitive match since going
down 5-1 to Spain at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico.

Their chances of reaching the 2014 finals now appear slim. With four
games remaining in Group B, Morten Olsen’s team are eight points
behind leaders Italy and four adrift of Bulgaria in second.

Armenia, meanwhile, move level on points with the Danes with the two
teams due to meet again in September.

Elsewhere, in Group I, Finland’s chances of finishing second received a
blow as they only managed a 1-1 draw in Belarus, a result that leaves
the Finns four points behind France.

http://www.omantribune.com/index.php?page=news&id=146153&heading=Sports

Soccer: Four-Goal Armenia Devastate Denmark

FOUR-GOAL ARMENIA DEVASTATE DENMARK

UEFA
June 12 2013

Published: Tuesday 11 June 2013, 23.25CET
by Peter Bruun

Yura Movsisyan hit a double – the first coming inside 30 seconds –
as Armenia scored four without reply in a stunning win in Copenhagen.

Armenia ended a run of four straight defeats in FIFA World Cup
qualifying Group B in considerable style, scoring two early goals as
they overwhelmed Denmark 4-0 in Copenhagen.

With the match barely half a minute old, Yura Movsisyan silenced the
Parken crowd with a shock blow from which the Danes never really
recovered. Aras Ozbiliz doubled the visitors’ lead on 19 minutes,
before second-half strikes from Movsisyan and, late on, Henrikh
Mkhitaryan completed a sensational victory.

Certainly, few inside the ground could believe they were watching
Movsisyan and company celebrating so soon after kick-off, after his
angled left-footed shot flew past Denmark goalkeeper Stephan Andersen
and into the bottom-right corner for an immediate breakthrough.

When Ozbiliz arrowed his own left-footed effort in from the
inside-right channel midway through the opening half, the danger from
Vardan Minasyan’s team became very real, however. It sparked something
of a resurgence from the hosts as Dennis Rommedahl and Christian
Eriksen both went close, yet Armenia – humbled 1-0 at home by Malta
just four days ago – took a 2-0 cushion into the dressing room.

Indeed, they never relinquished control of their advantage, and 14
minutes into the second half Movsisyan produced a carbon copy of his
opener to kill off any Danish spirit. Mkhitaryan was the man to put the
final nail in the coffin of Morten Olsen’s men, showing smart footwork
before steering beyond Andersen to cap a famous win. The result lifted
Armenia above the Danes and into fourth place in the six-nation table.

http://www.uefa.com/worldcup/season=2014/matches/round=2000294/match=2008559/postmatch/report/index.html

Georgia Border Heats Up As Russia Encroaches On Territory

GEORGIA BORDER HEATS UP AS RUSSIA ENCROACHES ON TERRITORY

ValueWalk
June 13 2013

The Greater Caucasus Mountains form a natural buffer between Russia
and Georgia. But in the absence of a border agreement between the
two states, even some of the highest peaks in Europe are not enough
to protect Georgia from the risk of Russian territorial nibbling,
analysts say.

The 894-kilometer-long Georgian-Russian border is largely delineated –
meaning there is a line on a map, based on Soviet-era documents, that
defines it. But that line has not been confirmed by both sides. Before
the 2008 war between the two states, 86 percent of the border had been
agreed upon, according to Georgia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The
topic has not been addressed since then.

With both sides now divided over the status of the breakaway regions
of Abkhazia and South Ossetia – Russia recognizes them as independent
states; Tbilisi does not – further discussion in the near future
is unlikely.

Shota Utiashvili, the former head of the Interior Ministry’s Analytical
Department and currently an analyst at the Free University’s Tbilisi
Center for Policy Analysis, noted that over the past two years Russian
forces within South Ossetia have taken over hundreds of meters of
land, at times dividing Georgian villages in half. He called the
Russian encroachment a “danger.”

“[T]hey are moving this [administrative border line] to basically
wherever they please, and they are telling Georgia … ‘Let’s create
a border demarcation commission,'” he said, in reference to Russian
soldiers’ recent installation of a fence a few hundred meters inside
the Tbilisi-controlled region of Shida Kartli.

Meanwhile, Tbilisi State University political scientist Kornely
Kakachia described efforts to push the frontier forward as part of a
Russian campaign “to somehow propagate the idea that there is a ‘new
political reality’ … that there are the two independent states,
South Ossetia and Abkhazia.”

The lack of an agreement presents potential problems beyond these two
disputed territories. Since the 1991 Soviet collapse, there have been
a few border flaps involving the two countries.

In 1997, Russia attempted unsuccessfully to take over Larsi, now the
sole functioning Georgian-Russian land border crossing, situated in
the northeastern part of the country. A similar unsuccessful Russian
push occurred at the Mamisoni Pass, an area to the west where the
Georgian-controlled region of Racha runs up against the South Ossetian
and Russian frontiers.

In the past, territory near the medieval fortress village of
Shatili, several kilometers from Russia’s Chechnya, also has been
under question, while locals in the southeastern region of Tusheti,
which borders on Chechnya and Dagestan, have raised the alarm at the
appearance of Russian border guards near highland villages.

Kakha Kemoklidze, head of the Analytical Department at the Georgian
Ministry of Internal Affairs, which oversees Georgia’s border guards,
stressed that no major issues exist at present on the Georgian-Russian
border. At the same time, he allowed that “particular segments” could
be considered “problematic.” He declined to elaborate. Meanwhile,
representatives of the border guards did not respond to written
requests for details.

Demarcation has been a tricky issue for the formerly Soviet republics.

Russia and Ukraine, for example, agreed on their border just three
years ago, in 2010. And although Estonia is a member of the European
Union, its border with Russia is not yet demarcated. Central Asian
frontiers remain in dispute in many places.

For Georgia, the lack of a demarcated border is fraught with risk.

“One never knows how this unfinished business of
demarcation/delineation might come out as a new trigger for additional
military confrontation … given Russia’s ambitions to stop Georgia’s
sovereign development,” said Davit Darchiashvili, deputy chairperson
of the Georgian parliament’s Defense Committee. [Editor’s note:
Darchiashvili is a former director of the Open Society Georgia
Foundation, an entity in the Soros foundations network. EurasiaNet.org
operates under the auspices of the Open Society Foundations in New
York, a separate entity in the network].

The lack of an officially demarcated frontier means that abandoned,
highland villages like Ch’ero and Ints’okhni in Tusheti can end up
serving as a de-facto buffer zone for border guards from both sides.

Utiashvili, the former Interior Ministry official, stressed that the
countries’ border guards do not “share” the Tusheti villages. A Tbilisi
tour company that operates in the region confirmed to EurasiaNet.org
that the villages remain under Georgian control.

While reports about Russian border guards allegedly trying to seizing
strategic spots along the border have caused stirs before among
Georgians, Tbilisi is essentially powerless to prevent such acts,
noted political scientists. “How can you … demarcate a border with a
power that is a thousand times stronger than you and has a different
view than you?” asked Alexander Rondeli, the founder of Tbilisi’s
Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies. “It is
a big problem, but this problem has to be solved.”

A special commission was created in 2006 to finalize the border
agreement, according to the Foreign Ministry. The process is also
underway with Armenia and Azerbaijan. Georgia’s only fully demarcated
border is with Turkey.

Although problems periodically flare up on the borders with Armenia
and Azerbaijan, they are less problematic than the border with Russia,
said Darchiashvili.

The Russian-Georgian situation merits close international attention,
said Ariel Cohen, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation
in Washington, DC. “Borders are only as good as both sides decide
to recognize them,” Cohen noted. “If … one of the sides decided
to push a border, and the international community does not react
… not only does it put in danger the weaker power, it threatens
international order in Europe and in the world.”

Editor’s note: Molly Corso is a freelance journalist who also works as
editor of Investor.ge, a monthly publication by the American Chamber
of Commerce in Georgia.

Originally published by EurasiaNet.org

http://www.valuewalk.com/2013/06/georgia-border-russia/

Armenian PM’s Statements Are Display Of Cynicism – Opposition MP

ARMENIAN PM’S STATEMENTS ARE DISPLAY OF CYNICISM – OPPOSITION MP

June 13, 2013 | 16:18

YEREVAN. – We propose thatArmenia’s Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan
come and answer the questions that are related to his link to offshore
companies, but he does not agree.

Opposition Armenian National Congress bloc National Assembly Faction
Secretary Aram Manukyan stated the aforesaid to news reporters on
Thursday.

He commented on Sargsyan’s statements that Armenia’s political
opposition likewise is to blame for the emigration from the country,
since it could not become an alternative to the authorities.

“To preserve their positions, the authorities are backing not only the
top criminals, but also the hooliganism that exists in that stratum.

Thus, the authorities are destroying not solely the citizens of its
country, but also the opposition and the MPs,” Manukyan stressed.

He added that the authorities are putting pressure on the MPs, so
that they have an oppositional stance as little as possible.

“The authorities state that they are the opposition. It is a display
of extreme cynicism and dictatorship when they announce that they
are the state. In the meantime, the citizen that leaves the country
is today’s most irreparable loss. The citizen of the country is value
supreme, whereas the objective of the authorities is to deprive them
of their lands,” the opposition MP concluded.

http://news.am/eng/news/157946.html

Cash Stolen From Armenian Church In Cleveland

CASH STOLEN FROM ARMENIAN CHURCH IN CLEVELAND

18:16 13.06.2013
Armenian Church

The pastor of St. Gregory of Narek Armenian Church in Cleveland
reported someone had broken into the church, 678 Richmond Road,
Cleveland.com reports.

It appeared to officers as if the intruder had continually pulled on
the doors on the west side of the church until the locks gave out.

On the church’s south side, the door was apparently pulled until its
handle broke off the door. Stolen was $100 that had been in a basket
inside the church.

The pastor left the church secured at 7 p.m. June 4 and noticed the
break-in at 1 p.m. June 5.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/06/13/cash-stolen-from-armenian-church-in-cleveland/

Section Of Road Between Leningradyan Street And Tsitsernakaberd High

SECTION OF ROAD BETWEEN LENINGRADYAN STREET AND TSITSERNAKABERD HIGHWAY TO REOPEN FOR TRAFFIC JUNE 14

YEREVAN, June 13. / ARKA /. A section of the road between Leningradyan
Street and Tsitsernakaberd Highway in Yerevan will reopen for traffic
on June 14, the Yerevan municipality said, adding that the section
was covered with asphalt.

It said construction of a new road that will connect the Leningradyan
Street with Admiral Isakov Avenue as well improvement of Ulnetsi and
Rubinyants streets continue. ‘The primary purpose of this project is
to take the brunt of traffic off the downtown streets,’ it said in
a statement.

Construction of new roads in the city is envisaged by its master
plan designed for 2005-2020. When completed they are supposed to
greatly ease traffic on Leningradyan, Tsitsernakaberd, Atenk,
Admiral Isakov and some other streets. -0- – See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/society/section_of_road_between_leningradyan_street_and_tsitsernakaberd_highway_to_reopen_for_traffic_june_1/#sthash.cki11oac.dpuf

Total Of 1,240.3 Tons Of Canned Food Produced In Armenia In January-

TOTAL OF 1,240.3 TONS OF CANNED FOOD PRODUCED IN ARMENIA IN JANUARY- APRIL

YEREVAN, June 14. /ARKA/. Canned food production output totaled
1,240.3 tons in Armenia in January-April, an 18.7% increase from the
year before, the country’s National Statistical Service reported.

Canned meat production output totaled 285.9 tons compared to 194.6
tons in the same period of 2012 (46.9% increase).

A total of 214.6 tons of canned vegetables were produced in the
reporting period, compared to 170.1 tons in January-April 2012 (26.2%
increase), according to the statistics.

Canned tomatoes production was only 327.8 tons in the period, a 15.1%
reduction from the year before.

A total of 371.3 tons of canned fruits were manufactured in the period,
which is a 26.4% increase over the level of the year before.

In the period some 63.7 tons of ketchup were produced (14% reduction
from 2012). Natural juice production totalled 4,359,200 litres
against 4,395,300 litres in 2012 (0.8% reduction). -0- – See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/total_of_1_240_3_tons_of_canned_food_produced_in_armenia_in_january_april/#sthash.ZifMDOQj.dpuf