Le Génocide des Grecs Ottomans

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Le Génocide des Grecs Ottomans

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Etudes sur la Campagne d’Extermination des Chrétiens d’Asie Mineure
Organisée par l’Etat (1913-1922) et de ses Suites : Histoire, Droit,
Mémoire

Edité par Tessa Hofmann, Matthias Bjorlund et Vasileios Meichanetsidis

relié ; 512 pages, 37 photographies, cartes

Tout au long de la période d’effondrement de l’Empire ottoman et de la
fondation de la République turque, un certain nombre de plans
d’action, largement organisés par une élite de dirigeants bornés,
visait à installer un état national moderne. L’un de ces processus
était l’élimination planifiée et délibérée des minorités chrétiennes
(et de certaines autres minorités), en fait leur extermination. Les
nombres tirés d’études démographiques sont éloquents : en 1912, les
régions d’Asie mineure et de Thrace étaient habitées d’environ 4 à 5
millions de Chrétiens et d’environ 7 à 8 millions de Musulmans ; en
1923, il ne restait que 250 à 300 000 Chrétiens.

Raphaël Lemkin, le juriste de haut niveau qui introduisit le terme de
génocide dans le droit international, a défini les premiers caractères
de la notion de crime de guerre à partir de l’étude de la destruction
des Chrétiens d’Asie mineure, tandis que le distingué turcologue
Neoklis Sarris a démontré que l’annihilation des minorités chrétiennes
a constitué une étape à part entière dans l’instauration de la
République turque. Comme l’ont relevé les éditeurs de cet ouvrage, la
résolution adoptée dernièrement par l’Association Internationale des
Chercheurs en Génocide implique que d’autres groupes de victimes
doivent être ajoutés à la liste. Ce livre ouvre donc de nouvelles
pistes pour l’étude de la destruction délibérée et l’élimination d’une
présence grecque sur les lieux qui deviendront la République turque,
une présence grecque trois fois millénaire.

Les deux dernières décennies ont vu s’engager une quantité énorme de
recherches sur le génocide de la population arménienne dans le
contexte ottoman et turc ; notre maison d’édition a publié un certain
nombre de travaux, dont les plus notables sont les témoignages directs
du Consul des USA Leslie A. Davis à Kharpout (La Province Abattoir :
le Rapport d’un Diplomate Américain sur le Génocide Arménien de
1915-1917). Les travaux de chercheurs sur le génocide des Grecs d’Asie
Mineure et de Thrace sont beaucoup moins nombreux ; il y a à cela
beaucoup de raisons, par exemple le fait que tout au long de la
dernière génération, les gouvernements turcs ont réussi à intimider
les diplomates dans le contexte des relations entre la Turquie et la
Grèce, et à s’immiscer dans le travail des universitaires (obtenant de
certains chercheurs qu’ils s’engagent dans une carrière de
négationnistes avec le soutien d’ONG internationales, tous au nom de
l’opposition au nationalisme).

Des articles relatifs aux domaines sous titrés sont annexés : Vue
d’Ensemble Historique, Documentation, Interprétation, Doléances et
Droit ; Enseignement du Génocide ; Devoir de mémoire ;
Conceptualisation ; ainsi qu’une bibliographie très complète.

dimanche 29 juillet 2012,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Obama Promised to Prevent Atrocities but Remains Mum on Nuba

South Sudan News Agency (Colorado Springs)
July 27 2012

South Sudan: Obama Promised to Prevent Atrocities but Remains Mum As
the People of the Nuba Mountains Starve to Death

by Samuel Totten

An untold number of people (certainly thousands and possibly tens of
thousands) in the Nuba Mountains are suffering severe malnutrition and
many have already begun to perish from starvation. Huddled in mountain
caves and crevasses as they seek security from the ongoing bombings
from Government of Sudan airplanes, the Nuba Mountains people are
resorting to eating insects, weeds, and leaves in a desperate effort
to remain alive. The international response to this latest crisis
instigated by Sudanese President Omar al Bashir, who has been indicted
by the International Criminal Court on charges of genocide and crimes
against humanity for the atrocities perpetrated in Darfur, Sudan, has
been anemic.

In late January, rumors began circulating that both the United Nations
and the United States were discussing the possibility of establishing
a humanitarian corridor in order to truck foodstuff to the people in
the Nuba Mountains. Purportedly, both the UN and the US approached al
Bashir about such a possibility but he categorically refused to allow
such a corridor to be established. This is exactly what he did in the
early- to mid- 1990s when he, for the first time, purposely withheld
food from the Nuba Mountains people, which resulted in genocide by
attrition. Very few in the world knew about that tragedy, and as a
result al Bashir and his cronies were never held responsible for their
murderous actions. In other words, impunity reigned. (Tellingly, not
ten years later the Sudanese Government carried out another genocide,
this time in western Sudan in a place called Darfur.) And now the
nightmare has started all over again in the Nuba Mountains, but this
time the tragedy has been well documented from its outset.

To allow a dictator, who is an accused genocidare, to dictate to the
UN and US what they can and cannot do in regard to saving thousands,
or more, from imminent starvation is not only ludicrous, it’s
unconscionable.

The time to halt genocide is before it happens. In other words, when
it is evident that crimes against humanity are being perpetrated the
international community must staunch them immediately. When such
crimes are allowed to fester not only does it result in an
ever-increasing number of deaths but it suggests that the killers
enjoy impunity. That, obviously, sends the wrong signal to the
perpetrators. When not held accountable for their actions some
perpetrators are emboldened to kill again and again, all the while
believing that no matter what they do they are above the law.

Standing by and doing little to nothing in the face of genocide is
nothing new to the international community. Indeed, as noted in a book
I recently co-edited, Centuries of Genocide: Essays and Eyewitness
Accounts (New York: Routledge, 2012), the international community
largely stood by and did nothing during the Ottoman Turk genocide of
the Armenians (1915-1919), the Nazi extermination of the Jews during
the Holocaust, the Khmer Rouge slaughter of its own people in Cambodia
(1975-1979), the 1994 Hutu genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda, and the
1995 Serb slaughter of Muslim boys and men in Srebrenica. Be that as
it may, President Barack Obama promised that his administration would
be more proactive in preventing genocide than previous administrations
had been. In fact, at a talk this past April at the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum during which President Obama announced, and
touted, his administration’s establishment of the Atrocities
Prevention Board, he said: “Last year in the first ever presidential
directive on this challenge, I made it clear that preventing mass
atrocities and genocide is a core national security interest and a
core moral responsibility of the United States of America.” And yet,
President Obama’s Administration has seemingly taken no action other
than engaging in a lot of diplomatic jibber jabber. And, as a result,
the situation in the Nuba Mountains has slowly but surely morphed,
first, from the forced dispersal of the people of the Nuba Mountains
as a result of Government of Sudan aerial and ground attacks to
malnutrition and, now, from severe malnutrition to starvation or what
Yassir Arman, the Secretary General of the Sudanese Peoples Liberation
Movement-North, has recently referred to as “the imminent starvation
of thousands of people in the Nuba Mountains.”

What is particularly ironic about the Administration’s inaction
vis-à-vis the imminent starvation in the Nuba Mountains is that Ms.
Samantha Power, who, for years, in one magazine article, editorial and
speech after another, berated one U.S. presidential administration
after another for being weak in the face of genocide, now serves as
Obama’s Special Assistant and Senior Director for Multilateral Affairs
and Human Rights and the Chair of the newly minted Atrocities
Prevention Board. But, she, like her boss, has largely been silent
about the critical need to stanch the incipient starvation in the Nuba
Mountains. As far as can be ascertained, she has done little to
nothing to urge, prod and cajole Obama to apply sustained pressure on
al Bashir to immediately allow for the implementation of a
humanitarian corridor from South Sudan to the Nuba Mountains.

In a 2001 article entitled “Bystanders to Genocide,” which appeared in
the Atlantic Magazine, Power asked a series of questions aimed at the
administration of Bill Clinton: “Why did the United States not do more
for the Rwandans at the time of the killings? Did the President really
not know about the genocide, as his marginalia suggested? Who were the
people in his Administration who made the life-and-death decisions
that dictated U.S. policy? Why did they decide (or decide not to
decide) as they did? Were any voices inside or outside the U.S.
government demanding that the United States do more? If so, why
weren’t they heeded? And most crucial, what could the United States
have done to save lives?” One has to wonder whether Power, who
certainly has President Obama’s ear, has had the integrity and
gumption to posit the same sort of questions to her boss (or, for that
matter, herself) vis-à-vis the tragedy that has been unfolding in the
Nuba Mountains over the past twelve months.

Indeed, one has to wonder whether Power is better at criticism and
wielding the pen than she is at heeding her own advice. More
specifically, back in 2002 while speaking about the need for
individuals to stand up and be heard whenever genocide rears its ugly
head, she said: “… Unless regular people and not just human rights
people start to identify with upstanders, we’ll always be saying
‘never again’… Instead of marginalizing upstanders as soft and
irrational, we have to send a message that there will be a political
price to be paid for looking the other way” (quoted in Kirst, 2002).
Thus far, instead of being an “upstander” within the Obama
Administration, Power has seemingly been the loyal bureaucrat who does
not, for whatever reason, make waves. In her fiery days as an
“upstander” she would more than likely have deemed such a stance
nothing less than “hypocrisy.”

Also in 2002, while speaking to the graduating class at Swarthmore,
Power said: “How many of us do not believe that the presidents,
senators, bureaucrats, journalists, and ordinary citizens who did
nothing [during the Holocaust years], choosing to look away rather
than to face hard choices and wrenching moral dilemmas, were wrong?
And how can something so clear in retrospect become so muddled at the
time by rationalizations, institutional constraints, and a lack of
imagination? How can it be that those who fight on behalf of these
principles are the ones deemed unreasonable?” Again, one has to
wonder: has Ms. Power asked herself this very question as she sits in
a seat of power in Washington, D.C.?

Quite frankly, President Obama and Ms. Power seem little different
than the presidents and bureaucrats, respectively, who proceeded them;
that is, they, like their predecessors, seem to more readily gravitate
to realpolitk than humanitarian action.

That said, there are two distinct differences between Obama and Power
and their predecessors: first, the former are much more slick in their
effort to appear caring (i.e., saying the “right words” and
establishing this and that job title/position or agency to purportedly
fight genocide); and second, they are far more inclined to pat
themselves on the back for ostensibly being proactive vis-à-vis the
prevention of genocide. But, as we all know, actions speak louder than
words.

For those U.S. citizens who truly care that tens of thousands of
innocent men, women, children and infants are facing imminent
starvation, it is time to stand up and be counted. And in doing so, it
is imperative for them to flood their members of Congress, President
Obama, Ms. Power, and Ms. Hilary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State,
with the demand to act now to establish a way to get food to the
people of the Nuba Mountains.

What we, the people, cannot do, is allow more time to pass without our
voices being heard. For as time passes, the people of the Nuba
Mountains shall continue to die horrific deaths.

Together, we must hold Obama to honor his words and promises, starting
with the following utterance he made at the USHMM at the 2012
Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony: “On this day, and all days, we
must do more than remember. We must resolve that ‘never again’ is more
than an empty slogan. As individuals, we must guard against
indifference in our hearts and recognize ourselves in our fellow human
beings.”

Samuel Totten is a genocide scholar based at the University of
Arkansas, Fayetteville. Over the past two years has conducted research
in the Nuba Mountains. His latest book, Genocide by Attrition, Nuba
Mountains, Sudan (about the genocidal actions of the Government of
Sudan in the 1990s) was published last week by Transaction Publishers.

Armenia Expects Agriculture To Increase Output By 8-9%

ARMENIA EXPECTS AGRICULTURE TO INCREASE OUTPUT BY 8-9%

Vestnik Kavkaza
July 27 2012
Russia

Armenian Minister for Agriculture Sergo Karapetyan expects agriculture
to increase output by 8-9% in 2012, ARKA reports.

The gross product of agriculture reached 203.6 billion drams in the
first half of 2012, exceeding the same period last year by 8.1%. The
highest growth was registered in planting (28%), animal husbandry
(2%) and fishing (25.2%).

Agriculture needs a two-digit increase in 2012 in the light of the
goal to have an economic growth of 7% this year. Economic growth
increased by 7.8%, compared with 2011.

The highest increase was registered in industry (13%), exports (13.5%)
and agriculture (8.1%).

The Assyrian Genocide By Ottoman Turkey

THE ASSYRIAN GENOCIDE BY OTTOMAN TURKEY

Assyrian International News Agency AINA

July 26 2012

Assyrians are the indigenous people of Iraq, Turkey, Iran, Syria and
Lebanon. , who have a history that spans over 7000 years. Today’s
Assyrians are the descendants of the ancient Assyrian Empire that
was one of the earliest civilizations to emerge in Mesopotamia.

The Assyrian language is classical Syriac, an offshoot of Aramaic,
the language Jesus Christ spoke. The Christian Assyrian nation has
five apostolic churches; the three major being the Assyrian Church
of the East, the Chaldean Church and the Syrian Orthodox Church.

Following the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ, Assyrians were
one of the first nations to convert to Christianity, tracing its
roots to the first and oldest Church, the Holy Apostolic Catholic
Assyrian Church of the East which was founded by Saint Thomas the
Apostle as well as Saints Mari and Addai, The Church of the East had
been an active evangelical church, spreading the teaching of Christ
peacefully further east to Asia.

Since the collapse of the Assyrian Empire in 612 BC, colonisation
of their lands by various powers has been a common occurrence, with
each wave of such colonisation causing more land losses, more human
losses and more tragedies for the Assyrians.

However, the twentieth century was to be the darkest chapter in the
history of the Assyrians. Those few millions who had withstood the
melting process of the millennia, and had remained homogeneous in their
ancestral homeland, became the victims of one of the worst Assyrian
genocides in the early part of the 20th century by the Ottomans Empire
that dominated most of the Middle East from fifteenth century to the
first part of the twentieth century, which completely reshaped the
destiny of the Assyrian people.

In 1842 Assyrians living in the mountains of Hakkari South East of
Turkey faced a massive attack by a Kurdish Leader advancing from East,
which resulted in the death of tens of thousands of Christian Assyrians
and occupying their lands.

1895-1896, witnessed the Assyrian massacres in Diyarbakir, Hasankeyef,
Sivas and other parts of Anatolia, by Sultan Abdul Hamid II. These
attacks caused the

death of over 55,000 Assyrians and the forced Ottomanisation of a
further 100,000 Assyrians – the inhabitants of 245 villages. A further
100,000 Assyrian women and children were forced into Turkish harems.

The Turkish troops looted the remains of the Assyrian settlements.

Assyrians were raped, tortured and murdered.

In 1911, the Young Turk “Committee for Unity and Progress” declared
its goal to “Turkify” all Ottoman subjects. This implementation of
the Pan-Turkic program and ideology can be described as the “Dark
Period” of ethnic and religious “cleansing” of the Assyrians, Greeks
and Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, without fear of international
condemnation and political reprisals.

Prior to WWI Assyrians lived as one nation numbering a million and
half, and inhabiting about 750 villages across the Taurus mountains,
Tur Abdin, Hakkari, Botan and Tigris areas. Assyrians also lived in the
larger towns of Urhai, Diyarbakir, Mardin, Mosul, Aleppo and Damascus.

When Turkey entered the war in November 1914, the Assyrians were
filled with hope. Those that lived in Turkish Mesopotamia and Persia
thought that liberation was imminent. It was a time of promises for an
independent statehood in the sacred soil of their ancestors. To that
end, Assyrians subjected to hundreds of years of continuous persecution
and massacres, sided with the allies for protection, first with the
Russians from May 1915 to October 1917, then with the British forces
following the Bolshevik Revolution. Instead of liberation they were
subjected to the genocide of their people, and the loss of more than
two-thirds of their then estimated 1.5 million populations.

Documents, historical materials and diaries of eye witness accounts
convey of the beating of little children with stones, dismembered
bodies of women and girls who refused to be raped, the beheading
of men, those who refused to convert to Islam and the burning and
skinning alive of priests, nuns and deacons.

As WWI came to an end, preparations began to settle all disputes
between the winning Allied Powers and the losing Central Powers. At the
1919 Paris Peace Conference, under Article 22 of the League of Nations
Covenant, Iraq was formally made a Class “A” mandate country entrusted
to Britain. Here the British continued to show the Assyrians that
they were going to keep their promise they have made to the Assyrians,
who served the Allies throughout the Great War, including the issue of
a homeland. the thought of a betrayal did not trigger the Assyrians’
mind. But it would become clear in 1932 when the mandate was terminated
and Iraq was admitted to the League of Nations that the policy of the

Colonial Britain has been anything but honorable, as admitted by many
British officials.

By Hermiz Shahen Family World News

http://www.aina.org/news/20120726191659.htm

Chess: Humpy Beats Lilit

HUMPY BEATS LILIT

The Hindu

July 28 2012
India

K. Humpy beat Lilit Mkrtchian of Armenia in the 10th round of the FIDE
women’s Grand Prix at Jermuk (Armenia) on Friday. The second-seeded
Indian has 5.5 points, with just one round left.

http://www.thehindu.com/sport/other-sports/article3693460.ece

Rep. Schmidt Winding Down Her Political Career, Mum About What’s Nex

Schmidt winding down her political career, mum about what’s next
By DEIRDRE SHESGREEN

Gannett News Service
July 26, 2012 Thursday

WASHINGTON–Rep. Jean Schmidt’s most recent campaign finance report
is a window into her waning political career: The Miami Township
Republican ended June with just $152 in the bank. She collected six
campaign donations in three months. And while her House colleagues
have been cutting checks for TV ads and political consultants,
Schmidt’s expenses included items such as thank you letters.

In the nearly five months since Schmidt suffered a surprise defeat
in Ohio’s March 6 primary, the congresswoman has declined repeated
requests from Gannett’s Washington Bureau for an interview.

“She’s unavailable,” her spokesman, Barrett Brunsman, said last week.

Asked for a copy of her congressional schedule, Brunsman also declined
that request.

But while her media blackout and her campaign filings provide some
evidence of a wind-down in Schmidt’s tumultuous stint in Washington,
other signs point to a business-as-usual attitude. Allies say the
60-year-old lawmaker and marathon runner is not likely to fade from
the political scene, but there are few hints about what Schmidt might
do when her term expires in early January.

In the meantime, Schmidt seems to be cutting a low-profile — skipping
the press conference circuit but attending hearings, voting on the
House floor, and meeting with constituents. She was outside the
Supreme Court when the justices issued their historic ruling on the
health care reform law, screaming euphorically when she heard the
initial — and erroneous — reports that the ruling invalidated the
individual mandate.

She has also gone on two congressionally sponsored trips abroad: first
traveling with colleagues from the House Foreign Affairs Committee to
Taiwan and South Korea, and then going with House Democratic leader
Nancy Pelosi and others to Afghanistan and Qatar.

“She seems very active (and) engaged, as far as I can see,” said Rep.
Steve Chabot, R-Westwood, who serves on the Foreign Affairs panel
with Schmidt. “I see her on the floor voting and participating in
committee work.”

Another Ohio lawmaker, Rep. Bob Gibbs, R-Lakeville, said that Schmidt
was clearly floored by her election defeat, but has bounced back
since then.

“I think right after the primary in March, it was a tough time,”
said Gibbs, who sits on the House transportation and agriculture
committees with Schmidt. But “she came back and from what I’ve been
able to tell, she’s been running around like she usually does.”

Schmidt made news recently when she opposed an amendment by
conservatives on the House Agriculture Committee that would have
doubled cuts to the food stamp program. She voted against those
reductions and implored her GOP colleagues to do the same, and was
part of a GOP-Democratic alliance that staved off the deeper cuts.

Schmidt also used that bill to press for more federal research and
stronger tools to combat pests that threaten plants and humans —
such as bed bugs and the Asian long-horned beetle. “My amendments
wouldaÂ~@| ensure that products claiming to control bedbugs actually
work, and local health departments would get additional authority to
justify treatment of bedbug infestations,” Schmidt said in a statement
after the committee approved the farm bill.

Craig Regelbrugge, a lobbyist for the American Nursery and Landscape
Association’s PAC — one of Schmidt’s six donors in the last
fundraising quarter — said that while he has not meet with Schmidt
personally, her work on the farm bill suggests she has not slowed down,
despite her lame-duck status.

“I know she sat through the whole farm bill markup and it was an
endurance contest,” he said of the nearly 15-hour committee session.

“She does the endurance thing very well.”

It’s not clear what Schmidt would like her legacy in the U.S. House to
be. She continues to be dogged by ethical questions, with her latest
financial disclosure filing showing that she had received $582,768 in
legal fees over three years from the Turkish Coalition of America,@
funds deemed an improper gift by the House ethics committee last summer

At the end of 2011, she still owed at least $515,000 of those fees
— a tab stemming from her tangle with David Krikorian, an Armenian
American who challenged her in 2008 and again in the most recent
election. Her last legal expense trust filing showed she has only
raised one $5,000 donation to repay that debt.

Questions about her ties to the Turkish-American group contributed to
Schmidt’s defeat in March, when Republican challenger Brad Wenstrup
bested Schmidt for the GOP nomination. Wenstrup will face the
little-known William R. Smith in November’s general election. Smith
defeated Krikorian in the Democratic primary.

As her potential successors gird for the fall contest, Schmidt
has continued to make the rounds in the 2nd Congressional District
–attending constituent meetings and other events — without giving
any public hint about her future plans.

“She continues to be actively engaged and going about business as
usual,” said Ed Humphrey, a Clermont County Commissioner who has
known Schmidt for two decades. He said Schmidt came to his grandson’s
high school graduation party last month, delivering a congressional
proclamation to congratulate the college-bound boy on a scholarship
he won.

But Humphrey said they didn’t talk much politics, not touching on
either her primary defeat or her political future. Instead they talked
about “her family, my family,” he said.

Chabot and others similarly said they don’t know what the congresswoman
might be planning come January. But her friends and foes alike agree
that Schmidt isn’t likely to fade into the woodwork.

“Jean is not at an age where I think retirement is something she would
do for the long term,” said Tim Burke, chairman of the Hamilton County
Democratic Party. “There are lots of options open for her.”

Armenian Diaspora Minister Hopes French Senate Votes For Armenian Ge

ARMENIAN DIASPORA MINISTER HOPES FRENCH SENATE VOTES FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL SOON

news.am
July 26, 2012 | 21:11

YEREVAN. – Armenian Diaspora Minister Hranush Hakobyan assessed high
the efforts by the French-Armenians and, in particular, French Senate’s
MPs for including the bill criminalizing the denial of the Armenian
Genocide for voting in the French Senate, Hakobyan said during the
meeting with the Marseilles deputy Mayor of Armenian descent Didier
Parakian on Thursday.

The Minister paid importance to the French President’s readiness to
be loyal to his election promise and expressed belief that a new bill
will be submitted in the Senate soon for criminalizing the denial of
the Genocide.

The Marseilles deputy Mayor thanked the Minister for her activity of
preserving the Armenian heritage, recalling in particular the Come
Home project, which allowed hundreds of French-Armenian young people
recognize and love Armenia.

There Are Only Few Parallels Between Northern Ireland And Nagorno-Ka

THERE ARE ONLY FEW PARALLELS BETWEEN NORTHERN IRELAND AND NAGORNO-KARABAKH – UK AMBASSADOR TO AZERBAIJAN

news.am
July 27, 2012 | 15:10

BAKU. – Great Britain supports the OSCE Minsk Group’s activities
toward a peaceful settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, United
Kingdom Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Peter Bateman, told 1news.az News
Agency of Azerbaijan.

He noted that Great Britain is not a major player in the settlement
process of the Karabakh conflict, and that the OSCE Minsk
Group-specifically its three Co-Chairing countries (France, US,
Russia)-deals with this matter.

“We, together with our European partners, stand ready to jointly do
everything possible to help them in the peaceful settlement,” he said.

The Ambassador added that the problems in Northern Ireland came about
from circumstances which were somewhat different than the problems
in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“I believe there are only few parallels between the Northern Ireland
peace process and Nagorno-Karabakh. There are some lessons which
learned from our own experience and which, at the end of the day,
could be linked with any conflict. First and foremost, this is the
process of reconciliation between the formerly-conflicting layers of
the population,” the UK Ambassador to Azerbaijan said.

Tsakhkadzor To Host International Festival Of Pantomime After Yengib

TSAKHKADZOR TO HOST INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF PANTOMIME AFTER YENGIBAROV
Lena Badeyan

“Radiolur”
27.07.2012 16:15

August 10-15 Tsakhkadzor will host an international pantomime festival
after Leonid Yengibaryan. The event will feature a number of famous
mime artist and groups from Denmark, Poland, Italy, Japan, Turkey,
Kazakhstan and Armenia, director general of the festival Zhirayr
Dadasyan told reporters today.

At the end of the festival Leonid Yengibaryan’s statue will be
unveiled, his last film will be screened, a fire show a flash mob
will be organized. All this, also as the mimic art will be performed
both on the stage and in the streets of Tsakhkadzor. The author of
the state is David Minasyan.

The festival aims to bring the theatre to the street, to the audience.

at the end of the events all participants will get Yengibarov medals.

Yerevan Balloon Blast Investigation Is Completed

YEREVAN BALLOON BLAST INVESTIGATION IS COMPLETED

news.am
July 27, 2012 | 14:43

YEREVAN. – The investigation into the May 4 balloon explosion is
completed, and the case is transferred to court, Armenia’s Police
General Department of Investigation division chief Arsen Ayvazyan
told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

To note, Serob Bozoyan, 54, has been charged with manufacturing and
selling products not meeting safety regulations and causing harm to
two or more people. And a signature bond, to not leave the country,
was specified as his restraining order.

Bozoyan is engaged in filling balloons. He does not have a company
and he personally takes respective orders.

As Armenian News-NEWS.am informed earlier, a tragedy occurred during
the ruling Republican Party of Armenia’s parliamentary election
campaign rally and concert held at capital city Yerevan’s Republic
Square on May 4. Hundreds of balloons filled with gas exploded and
started to burn. Subsequently, the balloons’ melted rubber fell on
the event participants. Those near the stage were affected the most,
and 154 people were injured.

Subsequently, German plastic surgeon Adrian Daigler, who was invited
to Armenia upon the instruction of President and RPA leader Serzh
Sargsyan, operated on nine patients who suffered injuries from the
balloon blast. And the last patient was discharged on July 2.