Economic crisis was serious blow to men-women relations

Economic crisis was serious blow to men-women relations – Armenian psychologist

news.am
November 03, 2012 | 11:55

YEREVAN. – When the global economic crisis hit and men became
unemployed en masse, this situation became a very serious blow for the
men and women alike. And many women shouldered the burden of
financially securing their families, but, in the meantime, they felt a
lack of support, psychologist Karine Nalchajyan stated, during a press
conference on Saturday, speaking on the reasons why numerous girls in
Armenia now prefer foreign fiancés.

In her words, she, as a psychologist, has also encountered deliriums
caused by jealousy. Karine Nalchajyan believes the economic downturn
likewise has played a part in all this.

La grande quête de Lernik Martirosian

LaDépêche.fr, France
2 nov 2012

La grande quête de Lernik Martirosian

Boxe. Ring auscitain. Demain à Tarbes.

C’est en 2003, tout juste gé de 10 ans, que le petit Arménien Lernik
Martirosian est venu s’installer à Auch en compagnie de ses parents.
Il allait successivement fréquenter l’école du Garros, le collège
Salinis puis le lycée Pardailhan duquel il sortira avec un BEP
hôtellerie et restauration en poche. En 2004, parallèlement à ses
études, il allait pousser la porte de la petite salle de la rue
Michelet, un lieu qu’il n’a plus quitté : «Je voulais découvrir, ça
m’a plu et j’y suis toujours», souligne Lernik, qui a toujours baigné
dans le milieu des sports de combat, son père était lutteur de bon
niveau en Arménie. Tout allait s’enchaîner très vite pour le protéger
de Clément Ramirez, trois titres régionaux et un interrégional en boxe
éducative puis le passage en catégorie amateur en 2009. Avec un
palmarès de 4 victoires, 1 nul pour 3 revers, Lernik a décidé sous les
conseils de son coach de viser plus haut : «Je suis tenté par le
professionnalisme, histoire de finir le cycle éducatif et amateur,
c’est excitant malgré les difficultés de la discipline. Elles imposent
beaucoup de sacrifices, j’ai arrêté la restauration pour pouvoir
m’entraîner. Je vais enchaîner d’ici quelques jours une dizaine de
combats de façon à éventuellement prétendre à pouvoir passer dans les
rangs professionnels. Ce sera encore plus contraignant mais je veux me
donner les moyens d’y parvenir, on verra bien en fonction des
résultats».

Mais un bonheur n’arrive jamais seul, Clément Ramirez qui fonde de
gros espoirs en son jeune protégé souhaite aussi en faire son
successeur à la tête du Ring auscitain.

Lernik va donc débuter d’ici peu une formation d’instructeur puis
d’entraîneur fédéral afin de pouvoir entraîner dès septembre. Bien
entendu, Clément Ramirez l’accompagnera quelque temps, du moins au
début, et peut-être plus si sa carrière professionnelle s’avère
prometteuse. Début des réjouissances ce samedi 3 novembre à Tarbes.

http://www.ladepeche.fr/article/2012/11/02/1480340-la-grande-quete-de-lernik-martirosian.html

Procès d’un clan arménien à Nice: son chef présumé condamné mais lib

Agence France Presse
2 novembre 2012 vendredi 8:40 PM GMT

Procès d’un clan arménien à Nice: son chef présumé condamné mais libre

NICE 02 nov 2012

Le chef présumé d’un clan mafieux arménien installé sur la Côte
d’Azur, accusé notamment de trafic de fausse monnaie, a été condamné
vendredi par le tribunal correctionnel de Nice à 18 mois de prison –
une peine déjà effectuée en détention provisoire – alors que sept ans
avaient été requis.

En tout, seize prévenus d’origine arménienne et deux camorristes
italiens étaient jugés depuis le 22 octobre pour une large gamme de
motifs dont blanchiment, non-justification de ressources, association
de malfaiteurs, violences…

Quinze des accusés, dont les deux Italiens, ont finalement été
condamnés à des peines allant de six mois avec sursis à trois ans
d’emprisonnement, essentiellement pour détention ou mise en
circulation de fausse monnaie.

Quasiment tous les accusés sont sans profession, vivant d’aides
sociales, mais roulant souvent dans des voitures de luxe ou jouant
dans les casinos de la Côte d’Azur, parfois avec des fausses coupures.

A la tête de l’édifice, un ancien champion de lutte, Mirdat Assatrian
dit “Miro”, 49 ans, naturalisé Français. Il a tout nié à la barre. Il
ressort finalement de ce procès condamné, mais libre.

Le Napolitain Antonio Corrieri, 74 ans, habitant Menton
(Alpes-Maritimes) et fiché comme membre de la Camorra, a été dénoncé
par plusieurs Arméniens comme étant le fournisseur de fausse monnaie.
Durant l’enquête, il a menacé de mort le juge d’instruction. Il est le
plus lourdement condamné: trois ans de prison, dont deux restent à
exécuter, au lieu des cinq requis.

Deux hommes accusés d’écouler les faux euros, Robert Mekhitarian dit
“Roubo”, 49 ans, et son fils Aren, ont été respectivement condamnés à
30 mois d’emprisonnement (contre sept ans requis) et deux ans (contre
quatre ans requis).

Le tribunal a prononcé trois relaxes, dont celle du “sulfureux” Artur
Ayrapetyan, dit “père Vatché”, ex-prêtre de l’église arménienne
niçoise, notamment accusé de violences à l’égard de l’unique partie
civile au procès.

“C’est un échec de l’accusation. Peu de détention et beaucoup de
relaxes: cela prouve bien que le dossier de l’instruction était mal
monté”, a estimé Me Zia Oloumi, qui défendait “Roubo”.

Assyrian community rebuilds

The Daily News of Los Angeles
November 3, 2012 Saturday
VALLEY EDITION

Assyrian community rebuilds

TARZANA – On the night the fire destroyed their church, some members
of the local Assyrian community said they felt as if a loved one had
died.

But as any Assyrian will tell you, nothing can shake their rock solid faith.

So they pulled together, held fundraisers, worked and prayed until
little by little, stone by stone, another church rose from the ashes.

On Sunday, for the first time in three years, the Assyrians of St.
Mary’s parish will recite their ancient prayers in an all new
sanctuary.

“The church has been resurrected,” said an elated Rev. George
Bet-Rasho of St. Mary’s Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the
East, in Tarzana.

“When the church burned down three years ago, we felt like the
Apostles must have felt when Jesus was crucified. We were saddened,”
he said. “Now we feel as they must have felt, when he rose and they
saw him again.”

On Thursday, a flurry of construction workers labored over some last
minute details to make the church ready for a ribbon-cutting ceremony
to be held today.

Bet-Rasho said the fire, while painful to see, allowed the community
to build their church in the traditions they wanted.

“We wanted a church that stayed true to both the California mission
style and the Church of the East,” Bet-Rasho said.

That tradition includes constructing an altar that faces east. And
from top to bottom of the sanctuary, each part of the church is
symbolic, from the flaxen-colored Jerusalem stone floors, to the
stained glass windows that feature familiar images from the Old and
New Testaments, to the ceiling painted in sky blue, to remind
worshippers of heaven. Prayers in Aramaic, the language spoken during
the Mass, will also welcome those who enter.

Churchgoers who have watched the construction say they are in
disbelief. Josephine Dizayer watched three years ago as the fire sent
flames 150 feet from the old church’s soaring stained glass windows,
into the darkening sky.

“I look at this whole thing as if it were a miracle,” Dizayer said
now. “There was so much work from so many people, financially,
physically, spiritually, to have this. I’m very happy.”

The blaze blackened the white brick facade of the old church, charred
pews, drapes, vestments and even some books written in Aramaic.

One of those books, the Gospels, survived. Its edges singed but
otherwise legible, the book will be placed on a special shelf for all
to see.

That the book survived also is a metaphor for the community. Assyrians
trace their ancestral lands to what is now known as Iraq, where the
last and largest concentration of Aramaic-speaking people in the world
have lived for thousands of years. Those who follow the Church of the
East trace their origins to 33 A.D. But they have no country to call
their own. In the early 20th century, 750,000 Assyrians died in the
Ottoman Empire and in Iran during what is more commonly known as the
Armenian Genocide. There were 3,000 killed in Iraq in a 1933 massacre.

In recent years, St. Mary’s has seen more members come from war-torn
Iraq and other countries, as Christians from their ancestral homeland
continue to escape Islamic extremism. Still, they persevere.

Bet-Rasho has estimated there are more than 40,000 Assyrians in
California and about 10,000 in the Los Angeles area.

At least 1,000 families belong to St. Mary’s parish, which moved to
the Lindley Avenue church in Tarzana 15 years ago, from North
Hollywood.

Charles Begini, the former president of the church board, called the
new church a blessed achievement.

“Especially for us as minorities, to be able to achieve such a
wonderful project, is amazing,” he said. “Here in the United States,
there is a feeling of freedom, to be able to practice your religion
with no fear at all.”

Bet-Rasho said that while Assyrian hands designed and constructed the
church, its overall existence comes from a higher power.

“If you submit to God,” Bet-Rasho said, “good things happen.”

[email protected]

A creative exchange: Artists from around the world share talents her

Plain Dealer, Cleveland, OH
Nov 4 2012

A creative exchange: Artists from around the world share talents here
and take ideas home

By Donald Rosenberg, The Plain Dealer

The fourth-graders at Boulevard School in Shaker Heights are
mesmerized. They’re listening to Lucineh Hovanissian, a musician from
Armenia dressed in national attire, regale them with sounds and images
from her homeland.

The youngsters learn simple words — arev means sun, and if you add
“b” to make barev, it becomes hello — and sing a folk tune. Then
Hovanissian asks them to make drawings using the symbolic colors of
the Armenian flag (red for pomegranate, blue for lake, apricot for —
what else? — apricot).

“How lovely,” Hovanissian says, in her lilting voice, when they’re
done. “You’re so talented.”

Big smiles all around.

Such enlightening encounters are happening throughout the region these
days as five international artists share their expertise and their
cultures with local students, professionals and the public.

The artists are participants in Creative Fusion, a Cleveland
Foundation program that places visiting dancers, musicians, visual
artists and specialists in other disciplines in residencies with
nonprofit organizations.

“The purpose of the residency is to give the Cleveland community
access to creative individuals from cultures that they might not have
the opportunity to engage otherwise,” says Kathleen Cerveny, the
foundation’s director of evaluation and institutional learning.

Like her colleagues in the program this fall from Chile, India, Mexico
and Sri Lanka, Hovanissian is embedded in a local organization — in
her case, Music and Art at Trinity Cathedral — that chose her from
dozens of applicants to work on-site and reach out to nearby
constituencies.

Hovanissian, 39, is spending her three months in Cleveland introducing
her country in classrooms and making music in worship services at
Trinity. As part of her residency, she composed “Quo Vadis,” based on
an ancient Armenian melody, for the cathedral’s choir.

The other Creative Fusion participants also are busy on many fronts
creating, instructing and learning from area artists and students.
Kapila Palihawadana, a dancer and choreographer from Sri Lanka, has
devised a work that Inlet Dance Theatre will perform Friday, Nov. 16,
at the Hanna Theatre. India’s Sanjib Bhattacharya is immersing
students at the Rainey Institute in his country’s dance traditions.

At Zygote Press, the printmaking workshop, Chilean artist Ivan Lecaros
works on his creations when he isn’t teaching classes at the Cleveland
Institute of Art and elsewhere. Young Audiences is hosting another
printmaker, Guillermo Trejo from Mexico, who’s stretching his artistry
though a variety of professional and educational experiences.

A two-way street of experience

All of the genial Creative Fusion visitors say they’re benefiting from
contact with Cleveland artists and citizens while making their own
contributions to the city’s cultural life.

“I find here the interest, the knowledge, the support,” says
Palihawadana, artistic director of nATANDA Dance Theatre of Sri Lanka.
“You can conceptualize and verbalize your work. That is a challenging
experience for me.

“I can draw profundities and put those qualities in my work when I go
back. I feel I learn something here I could share with my people.”

Which is just what the Cleveland Foundation envisioned when it
inaugurated the program in 2010.

“One of our agendas for doing this is to get an awareness of the
creativity and innovation happening in Cleveland in different parts of
the world,” Cerveny says. “We hope the artists will carry the good
word of Cleveland back home.”

Since the program began, the foundation has designated nearly $800,000
for the residencies of 16 artists, operating costs, and program design
and evaluation. Aside from the current group of artists, participants
have come from Cuba, South Africa, Turkey and Uganda. Among the
countries to be represented in the next round of artists in 2013 are
Croatia, Israel and Vietnam.

On a balmy September morning, Lecaros is showing students and faculty
at the Cleveland Institute of Art how to mix chemicals to prepare a
print. He leans closely to the surface he’ll brush to heighten the
cuts in the etching.

Several years ago, Lecaros, 40, couldn’t see his artwork unless it
came within inches of his face. As a child, he was afflicted with the
disorder known as lazy eye, which didn’t stop him from pursuing his
love of drawing.

His prints “became small, almost microscopic,” until a doctor who took
interest in his plight years later performed surgery that corrected
his eyesight.

“After that, I could see everything!” he exclaims. “So this is what
it’s like to see the world.”

Lecaros uses this experience to teach a life lesson to aspiring
artists in Cleveland and students at his studio in Chile, Aguafuerte
(Spanish for etching).

He heard about Creative Fusion from a friend who’d worked at Zygote
Press with co-founder Liz Maugans. Lecaros friended Maugans on
Facebook, and she told him about the Cleveland program.

At Zygote, Lecaros has made prints and exhibited his pieces in a solo
show. He also has worked with students in Esperanza, the educational
program for Hispanic students, and observed local colleagues.

“I’m learning a lot,” Lecaros says. “One of the things I wanted to see
is how things are done in the states. Now I’m here as an artist. They
give you all you need to work.”

Along with equipment and supplies, the Creative Fusion artists are
housed at Reserve Square or Judson Manor, not far from their host
organizations. The Cleveland Foundation grants each organization
$25,000 for the three-month residency. The artists aren’t paid, but
they receive per-diem allowances and, through the Council of
International Programs, health insurance.

Living in downtown Cleveland gives Trejo, 29, the chance to explore
the city when he bikes to Zygote, where he’s in creative mode in the
afternoon. He uses his observations in his art.

“I bring objects I’ve found around the location and the studio —
something about the circumstances of the city,” Trejo says. “There is
a social-engaged aspect in my work.”

Taking inspiration back home

Cleveland is only the second U.S. destination, after New York, that
Trejo has visited since moving five years ago to Ottawa, Ontario,
where his wife works for the Canadian International Development
Agency. Along with his endeavors at Zygote, he’s taught printmaking at
area schools, including John Hay High School.

“Working with Young Audiences is showing me I have the capacity to
teach, which I enjoy,” says Trejo. “It’s been a nice surprise.”

How much of a surprise?

“When I was young, I went to an alternative school that had small
classes, with a focus on the arts,” Trejo says. “I believe this
experience shaped my life.

“To come to these classes [in Cleveland] with 30 kids can give them a
chance to see other realities. It’s important to see someone who looks
like yourself doing other stuff. I want to show something [about
Mexico] that’s not necessarily the war on drugs. There are positive
things going on.”

Choreographer-dancer Palihawadana also hails from a country that has
endured extended strife. From 1983 to 2009, Sri Lanka — the island
southeast of India formerly known as Ceylon — was embroiled in a
civil war that left nearly 100,000 dead.

Palihawadana, 36, wasn’t encouraged by his family to pursue dance,
believing it wouldn’t provide security. But “dance was in my blood,”
Palihawadana says, and he would go on to found the country’s first
modern-dance company, nATANDA, whose name combines international
iterations of the word “dance.”

The company presents one big production per year — without funding
from the country — and works in communities teaching Palihawadana’s
blend of traditional Sri Lankan dance and martial arts. He’s been
sharing his style here with Inlet Dance Theatre and in master classes
for schools and Verb Ballets.

“Cleveland is a place that really wants to involve the community,”
Palihawadana says, “and how you can give opportunities through your
work to the community.”

Bhattacharya, his Indian colleague, spends most of his Creative Fusion
hours at Rainey teaching inner-city elementary and middle-school
children.

“I’m used to working with professionals,” he says. “This time is very
different for me. I’m not working as a professional artist. I’m
working as a social activist.”

In a studio at Rainey, Bhattacharya, 43, takes youngsters through
subtle gestures and techniques based on rhythmic patterns (tala) that
introduce them to Indian culture. He is dressed in a flowing orange
kurta (shirt) and dhoti (pants), traditional Indian attire.

Born in Calcutta and now a resident of New Delhi, Bhattacharya served
as a dance coordinator in an international school, but he’s been an
independent artist for the past decade. He works with major artists on
collaborative productions, appears as a soloist, runs workshops and
directs his own dance company.

Bhattacharya was alerted to Creative Fusion while serving as a
representative to the Asia Pacific Cultural Exchange Program at the
University of California at Los Angeles. He made contact with Lee
Lazar, executive director of Rainey, and they hit it off immediately.

“We’re all about kids,” says Lazar, “but we wanted someone who could
connect with people of all ages. We had about 30 nominations [for the
residency] in all disciplines. As Sanjib says, I think this was meant
to be.”

Bhattacharya isn’t sure what his experience in Cleveland will mean
once he returns home. He says the American system of fundraising and
nonprofit organizations could have relevance in India.

Bhattacharya and Lazar have discussed applying to the Cleveland
Foundation for a grant to open a branch of the Rainey Institute in New
Delhi.

“I am working [there] with blind children and street children,”
Bhattacharya says. “Maybe I can try. This time [in Cleveland] has
influenced me to do something.”

Armenia’s Hovanissian has many options as she contemplates life after
Cleveland. In addition to her solo career and collaborations with
Armenian musicians (she’s made several albums), she has worked in
journalism, done theoretical work in neuroscience and practiced as a
child’s dentist.

She says her sacred music reflects the meeting of art and science —
“what goes on in the brain when trying to connect to this unknown.”

As Hovanissian talks about making connections in Northeast Ohio, she
heaps praise on Creative Fusion for uniting international visitors
with local residents.

“It’s a huge amount of time to be close to these artists,” says
Hovanissian, whose only previous trip to the U.S. was a six-week
residency in New York in 2009.

“Here it’s really the everyday life of the community. It’s wonderful
to discover America and share my culture.”

http://www.cleveland.com/musicdance/index.ssf/2012/11/creative_fusion_story.html

Elda Green Should Be Held Responsible

Elda Green Should Be Held Responsible

Law – Monday, 29 October 2012, 16:11

Dwelling on judicial breaches relating to the case of the serviceman
Artak Nazaryan’s murder, the representative of the victim’s successor
Attorney Ruben Martirosyan says the court hearing has been going on
for a year and a half, and despite a number of crimes committed by the
investigation the victim’s lawyers point out, they continue to cover
up the case.

According to him, a systemic crime has been committed which, if
revealed, will necessitate prosecution of 20-30 legal officials. He
says the military prosecutor, the prosecutor general and the minister
of defense are aware of the case and they have committed the crime
together.

According to the lawyer, a bullet was found which was later eliminated
and another bullet was planted somewhere else. According to the
lawyer, the investigation proved that Artak Nazaryan, before going to
the post, had 122 bullets but after the incident only 120 were found,
which means he could not commit a suicide. He also noted that the
investigation started later than the six hours of the case. According
to the medical doctor, Artak Nazaryan had been beaten up and tortured
immediately before the incident. Ruben Martirosyan says the judge has
these facts but ignores them.

In answer to the question who needs the cover-up of the case, Ruben
Martirosyan said that well-known people are involved directly.
According to the other lawyer Mushegh Shushanyan, listing non-combat
cases as suicides is not just a tendency but a policy.

According to him, the medical psychologist Elda Green, who concluded
that Artak Nazaryan had committed suicide should be held responsible
too because she participated in drawing such conclusions for all army
cases.

http://www.lragir.am/index.php/eng/0/right/view/27883

CPJ Executive Director Responds to Criticism over Turkey Report

CPJ Executive Director Responds to Criticism over Turkey Report

November 4, 2012

By Joel Simon

Last week’s release of the Committee to Protect Journalists’ (CPJ)
report on Turkey’s press freedom crisis generated widespread domestic
media coverage and sparked a robust public debate. The response from
Turkish journalists and commentators was largely positive, but there
were some negative reactions as well. Turkey’s Justice Ministry has
promised a detailed response this week. Here is a summary of the
criticism we received during several days of intensive media
interviews, along with our responses.

Over a four-month period, our researchers reviewed lists of detainees
compiled by the Turkish Justice Ministry and local and international
groups, examined indictments, consulted underlying legal documents,
interviewed defense lawyers, spoke with journalists covering the
cases, and evaluated the published, first-hand accounts of the
defendants themselves.
CPJ has a political agenda in Turkey. Not true. CPJ has worked for 31
years to defend the rights of journalists around the world. We are
non-partisan, non-ideological, and independent. We do not accept any
government funding. As journalists ourselves, our sole interest is
ensuring that our media colleagues in Turkey are able to work freely,
without intimidation or the threat of jail. As background, the last
time our organization was this active in Turkey was in the 1990’s when
authorities jailed as many as 78 journalists as part of a widespread
crackdown. Many of those jailed at the time were journalists who wrote
from a religious perspective and were persecuted for their views. When
we included them on our list of imprisoned journalists, we were
harshly criticized by the Turkish government’under different
leadership at the time ‘and by much of the media establishment. We
stood our ground and fought for the release of every single imprisoned
journalist. Today we are guided by the same principles. No journalist
should be imprisoned for his or her work.

You were duped by your Turkish researchers. False. The report was an
organization-wide project and was written by experienced senior staff,
under the coordination of our editorial director, Bill Sweeney, and
our Europe and Central Asia program coordinator, Nina Ognianova. Our
team of highly capable Turkish researchers, led by Ã-zgür Ã-Ä?ret, was
responsible for researching the cases of jailed journalists, which is
an appendix to the main report. The case research was rigorous. Over a
four-month period, our researchers reviewed lists of detainees
compiled by the Turkish Justice Ministry and local and international
groups, examined indictments, consulted underlying legal documents,
interviewed defense lawyers, spoke with journalists covering the
cases, and evaluated the published, first-hand accounts of the
defendants themselves. Ã-Ä?ret traveled to New York to work alongside
our editorial director throughout the editing process. Our research
team provided the data, but CPJ staff made the determination on how to
classify each imprisoned case. In compiling the main report, CPJ staff
traveled to Turkey on three fact-finding missions in 2011 and 2012,
meeting with dozens of journalists, analysts, and lawyers. The report
was an institutional effort, and as executive director I take full
responsibility for its contents.

No one can trust your data because your last report cited just eight
Turkish journalists in jail. In December 2011, CPJ published its
prison census, which we have been compiling and publishing annually
since 1985. This was not a special report on Turkey, but rather a
global survey of every country in the world. In an open letter to
Prime Minister ErdoÄ?an on Dec. 22, 2011, CPJ wrote that we believed
there were many other journalists in prison in Turkey, in addition to
the cases confirmed in the census. We committed to carrying out a
systematic review of those cases to determine whether they were in
fact jailed for their professional work as journalists. We have now
completed that review and have confirmed that a total of 61
journalists are in jail in Turkey for their work. We also researched
an additional 15 cases, but did not classify them as confirmed either
because there was insufficient information to determine whether they
were jailed for their journalism, or because they may have been jailed
in retaliation for their political activism. CPJ’s next global prison
census will be published in December.

It’s absurd for CPJ to suggest that Turkey is more repressive than
Iran or Eritrea. It is absurd, and we would never suggest it. What we
reported, based on diligent research, is the objective fact that
Turkey has more journalists in jail than either country. We recognize
that Turkey is an emerging democracy, economic success story, and
regional leader. The public debate about our report indicates just how
lively and vibrant the media in Turkey can be. However, the nation’s
inarguable position as the world’s leading jailer of journalists
invites inevitable comparisons to other countries that jail
journalists.

Turkey’s press freedom problems involve more than imprisonments. We
agree. Although the imprisonment of journalists is a focal point, our
report explores a broad range of threats to freedom of the press. We
examine the routine prosecution of journalists on criminal charges
related to newsgathering; the use of government pressure to instill
self-censorship in the media; and the failure to reform vaguely worded
penal and anti-terror statutes that are applied regularly against the
press.

The language you used in your report was unduly harsh and insulting.
We respectfully disagree. The report was critical but fair. It was
meticulously researched and fact-checked, and our conclusions and
analyses were supported by detailed evidence. We used direct but
measured language to communicate the reality that the Turkish media is
currently under extreme pressure and that dozens of journalists are
now in jail for their work.

CPJ is not the judge and jury. It’s up to the Turkish courts to
determine guilt and innocence. We agree. Our role is to review the
available evidence and to make informed public judgments about whether
the facts support the very serious charges leveled against the
journalists cited in our report. We hope that Turkish authorities will
carry out a similar exercise and decline to pursue cases in which
there is insufficient evidence to win convictions. While we believe
that none of the 61 cases have merit, we also are ready to examine any
new evidence that arises. If warranted, we are prepared to adjust our
conclusions. We are asking to meet with Turkish officials in Ankara
next month and we are hopeful that a productive exchange will take
place.

Joel Simon is the executive director of CPJ, a New York-based,
independent, non-profit organization that works to safeguard press
freedom worldwide.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/11/04/cpj-executive-director-responds-to-criticism-on-turkey-report/

La production agricole d’Arménie en hausse de 10,2 pour cent

ARMENIE
La production agricole d’Arménie en hausse de 10,2 pour cent

La production agricole de l’Arménie au cours des sept premiers mois de
cette année est en hausse de 10,2 pour cent à 290,5 milliards de drams
a annoncé le ministre de l’agriculture Sergo Karapetyan.

Il a dit que les récoltes ont augmenté de plus de 20 pour cent tandis
que le secteur de l’élevage de bétail est en hausse de 2 %.

Le ministre a dit que bien que les rendements cette année soient
élevés les fermiers n’ont aucun problème dans la vente de leur
produit.

Selon le ministre, la part d’agriculture dans le PIB est en hausse.

« En 2010, la part de l’agriculture dans le PIB était environ 17 %. En
2011, grce à un jeu de facteurs, incluant l’exécution des programmes
du gouvernement, le chiffre est monté à 20,2 %. Les données
d’aujourd’hui en temps réel indiquent que cette tendance continuera
cette année » a dit le ministre, ajoutant que la hausse de
l’agriculture a un impact positif sur les exportations.

dimanche 4 novembre 2012,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Ankara: Turks, Armenians And Ottomans

TURKS, ARMENIANS AND OTTOMANS
by MUSTAFA AKYOL

Hurriyet Daily News
nov 3 2012
Turkey

CALIFORNIA – I really was not expecting to eat the best lahmacun of my
life on the western coast of the United States. (Lahmacun, a sort of
thin pizza with minced meat, is prominent in Turkish cuisine.) However
Jack’s Bakery, a small family restaurant in the greater Los Angeles
area, went beyond all my expectations. Not only its lahmacun, but
everything I tasted here were both very delicious and very “Turkish.”

When I learned more about the story of 51-year-old Jack, whose
big moustache does not overshadow his big smile, I got it all. His
original name is Agop, and his family is from Kilis, an ancient town
in southeastern Turkey. They were one of the hundreds of thousands
of Armenian families who used to live in Anatolia until they were
tragically deported to Syria in 1915 – a painful episode in history
that I call, and condemn, as the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Armenians.

However, while you can take the Armenians out of Anatolia, you
apparently can not take Anatolia out of them. Jack was a living proof.

He was speaking to me in perfect Turkish with a barely noticeable
accent and a beautifully native body language. “We always spoke
Turkish at home,” he told me, remembering his days in Kuwait, where
his family migrated to after some decades in Syria. “I perfected my
Armenian only in school.”

The curious story of Jack reminded me of how Turks and Armenians lived
side by side peacefully as neighbors for almost a thousand years,
before the dark side of modernity befell upon them. In these times,
Turks were considered superior, but thanks to Islamic law they also
recognized Armenians as “people of the book.” The Ottoman Empire
turned traditional Islamic pluralism into the “millet system,” in
which all “millets,” or nations, such as Muslims, Jews or Armenians,
had a certain degree of autonomy.

In fact the Armenians were so well integrated into the empire that the
Ottoman elite called them “the loyal nation.” Armenian architects were
the creators of some of the most beautiful mosques in Istanbul. Thanks
to the introduction of full equal citizenship in 1856, many Armenians
also joined Ottoman bureaucracy and even the Parliament.

However, this Ottoman pluralism would soon be challenged, and
ultimately destroyed, by a very un-Ottoman idea: nationalism. The
modern (and largely secular) belief that every nation should have
a sovereign state of its own led to rebellions, wars and ethnic
cleansings throughout the empire. Armenians got their terrible share
in 1915.

Since then, unfortunately, Turks and Armenians have been bitterly
opposed to each other. Turks have wrongly chosen to dismiss the
Armenians’ tragedy, whereas the latter decided to blame all Turks
for the acts of the Young Turk government of 1915.

“How can I hate you for what happened decades before you were born?”

Jack asked me, shattering many myths that we Turks have about
“the Armenian diaspora,” (we are told that all of them hate us). He
gave me hope that perhaps the gaps between our peoples are not that
unbridgeable.

Not at all, because things are changing, at least on the Turkish side.

No matter how belatedly and slowly, more Turks are realizing
that 1915 is not something to be proud of. And even more of them
are understanding that there is something gravely wrong with the
nationalist paradigm that has ruled Turkey for a century. In their
“neo-Ottomanism,” I believe, lies the key for Turko-Armenian
reconciliation.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turks-armenians–and-ottomans.aspx?pageID=238&nID=33843&NewsCatID=411

Tests Results Of Armenian Nuclear Power Plant To Be Announced In May

TESTS RESULTS OF ARMENIAN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT TO BE ANNOUNCED IN MAY 2013

Vestnik Kavkaza
Nov 2 2012
Russia

Ashot Martirosyan, head of the State Committee for Regulation of
Nuclear Security in Armenia, said that test results of the nuclear
power plant will be ready in May 2013, News.am reports.

First results will be presented to the state commission in
February-March 2013 and then passed to the IAEA and EU. A project
on nuclear security with account of the Fukushima problem will be
presented to the government next week.

The tests were started in 2011 and will be concluded in late 2012.

The European Union does not want modernization of the nuclear power
plant by 2016 and demands closing of the power plant in Armenia.