Council Of Europe, Osce And Eu Concerned At Further Restrictions To

COUNCIL OF EUROPE, OSCE AND EU CONCERNED AT FURTHER RESTRICTIONS TO FREE EXPRESSION IN AZERBAIJAN

Mediamax, Armenia
June 6 2013

Yerevan, June 6. /Mediamax/. Council of Europe, OSCE and EU concerned
at further restrictions to free expression in Azerbaijan.

The Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Nils Muiznieks,
the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Dunja Mijatovic,
EU High Representative Catherine Ashton and Commissioner Stefan Fule
expressed serious concern today at the promulgation by the Azerbaijani
president Ilham Aliyev of amendments extending the application of
criminal defamation provisions to online expression on 4 June 2013.

Muiznieks and Mijatovic, both of whom had explicitly called on the
President not to sign these amendments into law following their
adoption by Parliament on 14 May 2013, regretted this step, which
clearly contradicts Azerbaijan’s commitments and obligations relating
to the decriminalization of defamation and freedom of expression
in general.

The representatives of European structures “expressed concern that
the new changes will further erode the already limited space for free
expression in the country”.

Defendant States That Armenian Ex-Presidential Candidate Has No Conn

DEFENDANT STATES THAT ARMENIAN EX-PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE HAS NO CONNECTION WITH ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT AGAINST FELLOW CONTENDER

June 07, 2013 | 15:03

YEREVAN. – The court hearing into the case on the assassination
attempt against Paruyr Hayrikyan reconvened on Friday.

The defendants in the case are former presidential contender Vardan
Sedrakyan as well as Khachatur Poghosyan and Samvel Harutyunyan.

Taxi driver Karen Zakaryan, who allegedly drove Khachatur Poghosyan
away after he shot Hayrikyan, testified that he does not remember
Poghosyan, the Sirunyan Law Office told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Defendant Samvel Harutyunyan, on the other hand, announced that
Sedrakyan has no connection with the assassination attempt, and that
they had given false testimony against him.

In his turn, Sedrakyan’s attorney, Aleksandr Sirunyan, stated that the
prosecution has not yet submitted the grounds for the charges that are
laid against his client. In Sirunyan’s view, Sedrakyan’s connection to
the assassination attempt against Hayrikyan is not only disputable,
but there is no indirect evidence in this respect, either. In this
case, as per the attorney, the trial cannot continue in this way.

As Armenian News-NEWS.am informed earlier, opposition National
Self-Determination Union Chairman, ex-presidential candidate Paruyr
Hayrikyan was wounded as a result of an assassination attempt that
was staged against him on January 31 at around 11:20pm in downtown
Yerevan, in front of his home, and during the campaign season for
the presidential election that was held on February 18. First, he was
transferred to capital city Yerevan’s Surb Grigor Lusavorich (Saint
Gregory the Illuminator) Medical Center, where he was operated on.

Subsequently, he was taken to the rehabilitation center of the Armenian
Red Cross Society. Next, Hayrikyan headed to Belgium for treatment,
and he underwent a surgery there.

In the criminal case that was launched into this assassination
attempt, ex-presidential candidate, non-party affiliate, and epic
poetry specialist Vardan Sedrakyan-who is imprisoned-is charged with
organizing the attempted murder of a state, political, or a public
figure. Also, Khachatur Poghosyan is charged with attempted murder of
a state, political, or a public figure and with illegal acquiring,
possession and use of a weapon; and Samvel Harutyunyan is charged
with attempted murder of a state, political, or a public figure.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armenian Diocese In Georgia Offers Condolences On The Death Of Seven

ARMENIAN DIOCESE IN GEORGIA OFFERS CONDOLENCES ON THE DEATH OF SEVEN GEORGIAN SOLDIERS

Diocese of Armenian Apostolic
Orthodox Holy Church in Georgia
7 June 2013

The clergymen and parishioners of the Diocese of the Armenian
Apostolic Orthodox Holy Church in Georgia express deepest condolences
on the terroristic act took place in Afghanistan, resulting in death
of 7 and wounding of 9 Georgian soldiers. Today, in all churches of
the Armenian Diocese in Georgia the requiem service will be served for
souls of the dead Georgian soldiers.

Press service of the Armenian Diocese in Georgia
18, Armazi Street, 0103, Tbilisi, Georgia
Phone: +995322546411
Cell: +995593397170
Fax: +995322751790
Email: [email protected]
Website:

www.armenianchurch.ge

Armenian-Americans Urge Us Leadership To Call On State Department To

ARMENIAN-AMERICANS URGE US LEADERSHIP TO CALL ON STATE DEPARTMENT TO ASSIST SYRIA’S VULNERABLE CHRISTIANS

12:53, 7 June, 2013

YEREVAN, JUNE 7, ARMENPRESS: Armenian-Americans urge U. S. Secretary
John Kerry to call on State Department to assist Syria’s vulnerable
christians. As reports Armenpress, the Armenian Committee of America’s
organized online petitions to Secretary Kerry urging the State
Department to publicly and prominently reaffirm America’s defense
of religious tolerance, and add the full force of U.S. diplomacy
to our calls upon all parties in Syria to refrain from acts of
terror and intimidation against faith-based minorities. As well
as, act now to meaningfully upgrade relief efforts for faith-based
minorities”For our part, as Armenian Americans, we are gratified that
the U.S. House Appropriations Committee, in its FY13 State-Foreign
Operations Bill, calls upon the State Department to prioritize
humanitarian and resettlement assistance for minority communities,
including Armenians and other Christian populations in Syria and
elsewhere in the Middle East. We look forward to the inclusion of
this provision in the final bill, and urge the Administration to act
now in the spirit of this measure to meaningfully upgrade its relief
efforts for these populations,” reads the petition.

All The Light There Was – A Story Of Armenian-Run Resistance Movemen

ALL THE LIGHT THERE WAS – A STORY OF ARMENIAN-RUN RESISTANCE MOVEMENT IN NAZI FRANCE

11:04 07.06.2013

Nancy Kricorian’s novel shines light on a little-known Armenian-run
resistance movement in Nazi France.

Several years ago, novelist Nancy Kricorian happened upon a 29-year-old
documentary film called Terrorists in Retirement by French filmmaker
Mosco Boucault. The movie chronicled the work of a World War II-era
anti-Nazi resistance network in France that was made up of Armenian,
Italian, Spanish and Jewish immigrants and led by Missak Manouchian,
a survivor of the Armenian genocide who had escaped to France in 1925
as a teenager, In These Times reports.

The film fired Kricorian’s imagination and sent her searching for
more information about the men and women who formed this largely
unheralded anti-fascist effort. The result was All The Light There
Was, a novel that beautifully conjures both the Manouchian resistance
and the Armenian refugee community of the 1940s. Readers are brought
into the Rue de Belleville in working-class Paris to experience the
terror of falling bombs, the misery of food shortages and the horror
of watching Jews, Communists and other “undesirables” suddenly removed
from a tight-knit community.

The story is told in the voice of the fictional Maral Pegorian, 16,
a hard-working girl who wants nothing more than to help her family and
excel in her studies. Her older brother, Missak, is less academically
inclined and as the Nazis-who are called by the derogatory name Boche,
or cabbage heads, by most Belleville residents-take claim to France,
he becomes part of a well-oiled underground forgery operation. What’s
more, while the family fears for its own health and safety, all of them
risk their lives to help save a Jewish child who might otherwise have
perished in a concentration camp. They shroud this deed in secrecy
lest a pro-Nazi neighbor report them.

The story is given additional heft by the fact that Maral and Missak’s
parents and adult circle are survivors of the Armenian genocide,
a three-year atrocity that began in April 1915. Under the government
of a group called the Young Turks, between 1 million and 1.5 million
people were killed. As the characters’ emotional scars are opened by
Hitler’s incursion into their adopted homeland, the novel showcases
the post-traumatic stress that lingers long after a particular conflict
finally grinds to a halt.

Kricorian’s touch is light, but the residual impact of war is
nonetheless palpable. Maral and Missak’s Aunt Shakeh, for example,
malnourished and physically ill, goes into a deep depression-and
literally takes to her bed-once the war begins. For her, violence
and death trigger nightmares and negative memories: “We saw it all,”
she tells her niece. “Our parents dead before our eyes. Bodies in
the dirt. Children with big bellies and heads, arms and legs skinny
as spiders. It is the same thing again, the way they sent us to die
in the desert.” To Shakeh, it seems obvious that Hitler used the
anti-Armenian campaign as a prototype for his own brand of murderous
destruction, a hideous replay of a hideous history.

If this makes All the Light There Was sound unbearably heavy, rest
assured that Kricorian weaves in enough romance and coming-of-age
sexuality to keep the pages turning. Maral’s main love interest is
Zaven, a boy whose parents also fled to France to escape the Turks.

But several other eager male suitors appear. One, a Soviet Armenian
named Andon, enlisted and served in the German Army, and Maral is
quick to rebuke him for this decision. Later, she learns that the
issue is complicated by his status as a former prisoner of war in
what was then the USSR.

“Why did you join the German Army?” Maral asks.

“General Dro came to the POW camp,” Andon explains. “He was a hero
of the Russian Caucasus Army during the First World War, and he saved
many Armenian lives during the deportations. He was the first defense
minister of the Armenian Republic. When he came to the POW camp, he
said, ‘Men, we do not know how this war will end, but when it does
Hayastan [Armenia] will need you, so put on the German uniform.'”
Dro’s rationale was based on a promise made by Germany: If they
defeated the Soviets, an independent Armenia would be established.

Although Andon now feels that he was duped, he also believes that
what is done is done, and he hopes to be forgiven by Maral. She,
however, is conflicted. She knows that her brother Missak and his
comrades will be furious that she is keeping company with someone
they’ll dub a collaborator, but in her heart of hearts, she believes
that Andon was naïve and simply made a terrible mistake. Whether or
not she can get past her reservations, however, is one of the book’s
ethical conundrums and is the kind of question that makes a war fought
more than half a century ago relevant to today’s readers.

The dilemmas that Maral, Andon and Missak face-besides having
lived through a world war, questions arise about gender roles,
sexual politics and the quest for personal autonomy-are believable
and well-rendered. Maral, a dutiful and obedient girl-turned-woman,
struggles with what she believes is an either/or proposition-to be a
wife and mother, as expected, or to pursue her education and a career.

Similarly, Missak has to decide between loyalty to family and loyalty
to self, a fraught choice that crops up in every generation and among
all populations.

As the personal and political bump heads in All the Light There Was, a
host of possibilities for individual fulfillment are laid bare. What’s
more, the possibility of multi-ethnic solidarity-the Manouchian-like
coalition against a common Nazi enemy-is also writ large. Still,
the book ends with many open questions-about the future of organizing
in peacetime as well about choosing a meaningful life path-questions
that cannot be easily answered, either in fiction or in life.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/06/07/all-the-light-there-was-a-story-of-armenian-run-resistance-movement-in-nazi-france/

Bakou Regarde Avec Interet Les Manifestations En Turquie

BAKOU REGARDE AVEC INTERET LES MANIFESTATIONS EN TURQUIE

Alors que les manifestations anti-gouvernementales continuent a
destabiliser la Turquie, les spectateurs en Azerbaïdjan regardent
cela avec un melange de solidarite, d’envie et de deni.

Une partie des interets est familiale : l’Azerbaïdjan partage des
liens linguistiques et culturels forts avec son grand-frère de l’ouest.

Mais pour de nombreux Azerbaïdjanais qui ont lutte pour faire vivre
leur mouvement de protestation dans un froid climat d’annee electorale,
les protestations turques ont une importance accrue.

” Je suis tellement desole pour l’Azerbaïdjan “, a ecrit une jeune
journaliste azerbaïdjanais qui suit avidement la suite des evenements
en Turquie sur Facebook. ” En raison de notre propre vie politique
passive, et une societe qui n’avance pas, les jeunes vivent a travers
la vie de leurs voisins “.

De nombreux Azerbaïdjanais ont partage des photos qui mettent l’accent
sur la passion des manifestants.

De nombreuses images – y compris celles d’acteurs celèbres se joignant
aux protestations – sont actuellement inimaginable en Azerbaïdjan,
où meme les petites manifestations sont regulièrement brisees et
leurs participants emprisonnes.

Mais d’autres ont mis l’accent sur la brutalite de la police turque,
qui a utilise des gaz lacrymogènes, des canons a eau et des barres
avec peu de retenue afin de riposter aux manifestations a Istanbul,
Ankara, Izmir, et ailleurs.

Ankara a cherche pendant des annees a se positionner comme une
puissance regionale a cheval sur les mondes occidental et musulman,
en depit d’un bilan en matière de droits qui partage un bon nombre
des memes defauts evidents en Azerbaïdjan – en particulier quand il
s’agit de prisonniers politiques et de la detention de journalistes.

Reporters sans frontières cette annee a vise la Turquie comme ” la plus
grande prison du monde pour les journalistes”, avec 72 journalistes a
majorite kurde en detention. Le meme rapport a fait pour l’Azerbaïdjan
un rapport cinglant.

Mais c’est l’Azerbaïdjan et son president autocratique, Ilham Aliyev,
qui ont toujours attire le plus de critiques pour leurs politiques
gouvernementales d’enfermement notamment a la suite d’arrestations
de protestataires a Bakou et Ismayili plus tôt cette annee.

Les autorites azerbaïdjanaises, qui ont utilise des gaz lacrymogènes
et des canons a eau pour empecher les manifestations du cru, ont deja
cherche a capitaliser sur la repression de la protestation turque
comme une occasion de jeter leurs propres tactiques sous un jour
moins contestable.

Aydin Mirzazade, un depute azerbaïdjanais, ce week-end a exprime
sa surprise de l’usage de la violence dans les pays democratiques
tels qu’ils se decrivent eux-meme, et a declare que la societe
azerbaïdjanaise a regrette que la Turquie n’avait pas trouve de
meilleure facon de communiquer avec les manifestants que par ” le
langage de la police “.

” Il est inacceptable que les incidents en Azerbaïdjan deviennent
l’objet d’une condamnation alors qu’eux-memes recours a la force dans
leur pays sous une forme plus sevère “, a-t-il dit.

vendredi 7 juin 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=90269

Armenian Minister Concerned Over Drop In Foreign Investments

ARMENIAN MINISTER CONCERNED OVER DROP IN FOREIGN INVESTMENTS

June 5, 2013 – 15:20 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian minister of economy Vahram Avanesyan has
expressed concern over the drop in foreign investments.

Minister Avanesyan expressed hope that no such drop will occur in 2013,
slamming the lack of investments in communication and construction
sectors.

He further conditioned the volume of investments by several factors,
including the promotion of free trade deal with the European community
and balanced policy in markets.

It’s noteworthy that 3.7% drop in international investments was
reported in late December 2012 as compared with September 2012.

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/161060/

Karabakh President Pleased With How Hail Consequences Are Eliminated

KARABAKH PRESIDENT PLEASED WITH HOW HAIL CONSEQUENCES ARE ELIMINATED

STEPANAKERT, June 5./ARKA/. President of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
(NKR) Bako Sahakyan convoked a working meeting today to discuss the
course of the works to eliminate the consequences of hail that hit
Askeran and Martakert regions.

The related reports were delivered by heads of local administrations
of Askeran and Martakert regions and all the interested structures,
NKR President’s Office said.

“President Sahakyan expressed his satisfaction with the course of
the works to eliminate the consequences of the hail. He added the
current rhythm of activities should be maintained,” the sources tated.

Sahakyan also instructed the responsible bodies to sum up the level
of damage and provide assistance to the citizens impacted by the hail.

Ashot Ghulyan, Speaker of NKR National Assembly, Ara Harutyunyan,
Prime Minister, and some other officials are also said to have been
present at the meeting. -0-

AGBU YP and ANC Host Screening of `Orphans Of The Genocide’

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Thursday, June 6, 2013

AGBU YOUNG PROFESSIONALS AND ANC HOST SCREENING OF `ORPHANS OF THE
GENOCIDE’ FOR NY/NJ COMMUNITY

By AGBU YPGNY and ANC-NY Contributors

New York, NY – The AGBU Young Professionals of Greater New York (AGBU
YPGNY) and the Armenian National Committee of New York (ANC-NY)
cosponsored a screening of `Orphans of the Genocide’ on Thursday, May
16, 2013. The film, created by Florida-based, four-time regional Emmy
award winning filmmaker Bared Maronian, was shown at the AGBU Central
Office in New York City.

`The ANC of New York is pleased to work with Mr. Maronian to spread
awareness of this significant film,’ said ANC-NY co-chair Arousiag
Markarian. `The documentary tells an important story in the history of
the Armenian people, and we are happy to showcase the work of
Mr. Maronian, a longtime active community member in Florida.’

Nominated for a regional Emmy award, `Orphans’ is a groundbreaking
90-minute documentary that takes the viewer through never-before-seen
archival footage and discovered memoirs of orphans who lived through
the 20th century’s first fully documented genocide. It profiles
orphans while unveiling many orphanages where Armenians were housed in
the Middle East. The film also explores the humanitarian efforts of
the American Near East Relief in saving, feeding and sheltering more
than 150,000 documented Armenian Genocide orphans between 1919 and
1926.

`We are so proud that photos and documents from the AGBU archives and
Noubarian Library in Paris helped with the production, especially
since YPGNY was instrumental in acquiring the archival photos,’ said
AGBU YPGNY vice chair Lindsey Hagopian. Responding to a call from a
concerned Armenian American who had stumbled upon the relics, several
YPGNY committee members and their friends took the initiative to
purchase the collection of photos from a military antiques shop in Los
Angeles more than a decade ago. It was discovered that the photos had
belonged to Ellen Mary Gerard, a Near East Relief nurse who had
volunteered in Syria and Lebanon for three years, serving over 1,000
Armenian orphans during her tenure. The AGBU YPGNY Gerard Archive can
be viewed at

Maronian has also made use of archival photos and documents from the
Rockefeller Archive Center, Das Bundesarchiv (German National
Archives), Statens Arkiver (Danish National Archives), the Library of
Congress, U.S. National Archives, the Armenian Genocide
Museum-Institute, Houshamadyan, the Armenian Relief Society and other
private archival collections.

Founded in 2006, Maronian’s Armenoid Productions has produced numerous
award-winning Armenian-themed documentaries, among them `Komitas
Hayrig’ and `The Wall of the Genocide.’ `Orphans’ took a little more
than three years to complete. His next project is under the working
title of `Women of 1915,’ dealing with the plight of the Armenian
women during the genocide, and paying tribute to all of the
non-Armenian women who came to the rescue of their sisters. Maronian
was interviewed by Voice of Armenians TV New York, and the segment is
set to be broadcast in the coming weeks.

Local AGBU and ANCA chapters and committees are encouraged to reach
out to their local PBS (Public Broadcasting Service) stations to urge
them to air `Orphans.’ The film has already been broadcast by a number
of PBS stations, including ValleyPBS, Station KPVT 18 in Fresno,
California, and WMHT in Troy, New York. Readers interested in
screening `Orphans of the Genocide’ for their community may send an
email to [email protected].

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
educational, cultural and humanitarian programs, annually touching the
lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please
visit

http://www.flickr.com/photos/agbu/sets.
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org.

Hamazkayin Eastern USA Celebrates its Third Annual Pan-gatherin in B

PRESS RELEASE
Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society
Contact: Ara Nazarian

[email protected]

Hamazkayin Eastern USA Celebrates 3rd Annual Pan-gathering with Great Pump

Watertown, Mass. – On May 4th, the Eastern Region of the Hamazkayin
Armenian Educational and Cultural Society along with its Boston
chapter hosted an evening of fine dining and cultural celebration at
the ACEC Hovnanian Hall, dedicated to the 300th birthday of Master
Troubadour Sayat Nova. The event was the high point of the annual
eastern regional meeting and pan-gathering of all eight chapters of
Hamazkayin Eastern USA which took place in Massachusetts over the
weekend.

A crowd of friends of Armenian culture and prominent figures from
academia filled the Hovnanian Hall that had been completely revamped
and deftly decorated for the occasion. Recent and upcoming projects of
Hamazkayin Eastern USA were outlined at the beginning of the evening.
As one of the major achievements of the executive, Hamazkayin Eastern
Region is pursuing the establishment of a business entity as a source
of income to help fund educational and cultural programs envisioned by
the organization that are currently cost prohibitive.

Special guest and filmmaker Eric Nazarian from Los Angeles shared the
role of master of ceremonies with distinguished librarian and lifelong
Hamazkayin member Arevig Caprielian from New York, as they presided
over the evening program.

The keynote address was delivered by Dr. Thomas Samuelian, Dean of the
American University of Armenia Law School, tackling the theme of
Armenia and the Diaspora at Crossroads. Dr. Samuelian emphasized the
role of Hamazkayin as an organization to bridge the cultural gap
between Armenia and the Diaspora as a fundamental task of Hamazkayin
in the 21st century. For much of Hamazkayin’s existence, Armenia was
not an independent nation. However, with the emergence of the
Republic of Armenia as an independent nation, efforts must be made to
strengthen existing bonds between the Diaspora and the homeland and
introduce new and up to date means to fortify the
relationship. Additionally, as a Diasporan residing in Armenia for
many years, he emphasized the progress observed in Armenia over the
years and challenged us to focus more on the positive gains and build
upon those successes.

Following the need to bring the organization in tune with the
realities and demands of the 21st century, a number of youth oriented
projects, including the creation of Armenian themed apps for iPhone
and Android users and a distance learning initiative to connect
Armenia with Boston, New Work and Washington DC for lectures,
symposia, training sessions and mini-courses are in the pipeline to
provide relevant Armenian cultural and educational offerings to the
youth using their preferred communication modes.

Many prizes were distributed throughout the awards ceremony, of which
the newly established Minas and Kohar Tololyan Prize in Contemporary
Literature (which recognizes the work of talented writers in North
America) was awarded to Christopher Atamian for the translation of
Nigoghos Sarafian’s The Bois de Vincennes from Western Armenian to
English. Also honored were Gary and Susan Lind-Sinanian, curators of
the ALMA (Armenian Library and Museum of America) and Ara Ghazarians,
curator of the Armenian Cultural Foundation in Arlington, each of whom
received the inaugural Hamazkayin Founders Award. This award aims to
acknowledge the work of individuals who have contributed significantly
to Armenian cultural and educational causes in the Diaspora over an
extended period of time.

The second part of the evening featured a concert by the Mayilyan
Vocal Trio from Armenia under the artistic directorship of famed
mezzo-soprano Anna Mayilyan, along with singers Yeva Yeganyan and
Armine Khatchatryan. The artists, accompanied by pianist Lusine
Grigoryan, engaged the audience with their beautifully rendered
repertoire of classical, traditional, and folk songs. The evening
ended on a high note as the crowd praised Hamazkayin members and event
organizers for a successful event. All proceeds from the evening will
benefit the educational and cultural initiatives of Hamazkayin.

###

The Eastern USA region of Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural
Society, a 501 c (3) not for profit organization, constitutes one of
the branches of the worldwide Hamazkayin family, founded in 1928. The
Eastern United States region, headquartered in Massachusetts, consists
of eight chapters in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, New Jersey, New York,
Philadelphia, Providence and Washington, DC.

We aim to empower our chapters and membership to nurture and promote
Armenian arts and culture. Given our millennia long history, we are
cognizant of the dynamic nature of the concept of identity. To that
end, we strive to maintain our cultural identity and heritage and are
committed to grow and further the contribution of the Armenian culture
to the complex tapestry of world civilizations.

Ara Nazarian, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, Harvard Medical School
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University

phone: 617.667.8512
fax: 617.667.7175
web:

www.hamazkayin-usa.org/er
www.nazarianlab.org