US Embassy In Armenia Organizes Concert Against Domestic Violence

US EMBASSY IN ARMENIA ORGANIZES CONCERT AGAINST DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

news.am
June 20, 2012 | 17:29

US Embassy in Armenia in partnership with Tufenkian Foundation and
Women’s Rights Center organized a concert to support the victims of
domestic violence.

“The Beautified Project” band gave a concert against domestic violence
to raise public awareness of this problem.

On his video blog Ambassador John Heffern said “Rock against violence
against women” concert underscored the embassy’s commitment to ending
violence, advancing the status of women and girls which is a key part
of the efforts to advance global peace, security and prosperity.

He also urged to ask for assistance calling hotline of the center.

Ex Military Prosecutor: The Criminal Case Concerning The Beating Of

EX MILITARY PROSECUTOR: THE CRIMINAL CASE CONCERNING THE BEATING OF A MILITARY DOCTOR BY AN OLIGARCH’S BODYGUARDS MAY CONTINUE TRAVELING FROM OFFICE TO OFFICE

arminfo
Wednesday, June 20, 19:45

The criminal case a military doctor beaten by the security guards
of oligarch Ruben Hayrapetyan may continue traveling from office
to office, ex Military Prosecutor of Armenia, opposition MP Gagik
Jangiryan told journalists on Wednesday.

He said that this red tape is part of the corrupt atmosphere in the
Armenian police.

“The justice reforms planned by the Government in its new program are
very deficient, especially in the part concerning the investigation
process,” Jangiryan said.

Member of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia Koryun Nahapetyan
said that no matter who will investigate the case.

“What matters is that the investigation should be fair and that those
guilty should be punished,” the MP said, adding that he is sure that
the investigation will be fair.

To remind, Hayrapetyan’s security guards severely beat military doctor,
Major Vahe Avetyan in Harsnakar restaurant on Sunday. Avetyan was taken
to hospital and underwent brain surgery. Doctors say he is in a very
bad condition. On Tuesday the Prosecutor General instructed that the
criminal case instituted by the Defense Ministry be transferred to
the Yerevan Police Department. Some media say that Hayrapetyan and
the chief of the department Nersik Nazaryan are on good terms and
assume that the latter may help to cover up the crime.

Turkish Authorities Persecute Turks Recognizing The Armenian Genocid

TURKISH AUTHORITIES PERSECUTE TURKS RECOGNIZING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: TURKISH PROFESSOR

arminfo
Wednesday, June 20, 20:25

Since 1960 I have been trying in vain to understand the policy of the
Turkish Government, Murat Belge, writer, professor of Bilgi University,
said on Wednesday during a discussion on Turkey organized by Civilitas
Foundation.

He said that in Turkey there are people who oppose the Kemalist
ideology as nationalist and are persecuted for that by their
government.

Belge believes that Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide
is forcing France, Germany and the United States to take some
countermeasures. He said that Turkey cannot recognize the genocide
for personal purposes. He noted that it is easy to apologize, but
it is hard to forgive. Even if the governments reach some agreement,
the relations between the peoples will still remain problematic.

Belge said that some 10 years ago few of his students were aware of the
events of 1915 as the authorities sponsored universities so they wrote
books denying the events. Today, they don’t do such things, but they
are still happy when some researcher denies the Armenian Genocide on
his own initiative. For example, one Turkish researcher was awarded
the degree of doctor for an essay saying that the Armenians are an
underdeveloped nation because they had no statehood for centuries.

Belge believes that though proclaimed a doctor, that man needs a
doctor himself.

Turkish Writer To Speak Up Armenian Genocide Without Hesitation

TURKISH WRITER TO SPEAK UP ARMENIAN GENOCIDE WITHOUT HESITATION

news.am
June 20, 2012 | 17:46

YEREVAN. – Turkish writer Murat Belge claims he can speak up
the Armenian Genocide without hesitations, as it is difficult to
characterize killings of over 1 million people otherwise, the writer
said during the discussions ‘Trying to Understand Turkey’ organized
in Yerevan on Wednesday.

“Genocide is a complicated phenomenon bringing forth heavy charges,”
he claimed.

Asked whether it is possible that he also has Armenian blood, Belge
said that his two grandmothers were of Circassian descent, while he
considers himself pure Turk. However, everything is possible as no
one can tell what had happened, for example, 12 generations ago.

As for what he thinks about the fact that Turkey reconstructs Armenian
church Surb Khach in Akhtamar or partly reconstructs churches in Ani
but mentions nothing about Armenians, Belge said it is nationalism
on state level. It is based on the fact that Turkey was not punished
and obliged to take responsibility following the 1915 Genocide of
Armenians.

If Prostitutes Are Taxed, They Can Be Transferred Outside Yerevan –

IF PROSTITUTES ARE TAXED, THEY CAN BE TRANSFERRED OUTSIDE YEREVAN – ARTISTIC DIRECTOR

news.am
June 19, 2012 | 15:06

YEREVAN. – Prostitution and pimping are flourishing in Armenia, because
this is convenient for those agencies whose job it is to prevent this
phenomenon, capital city Yerevan’s Puppet Theater Artistic Director
Ruben Babayan said during a press conference on Tuesday.

“The prostitutes’ profits are shared on the 50/50 principle. And if
they claim that the body is a person’s property and the person can
do whatever he/she pleases with his/her body and provides services
[with it], this service must be taxed and the service-providing
product must be examined,” stated Babayan.

In addition, Ruben Babayan maintained that if the prostitutes’
services are taxed, they can be transferred outside Yerevan, just
like it was in the case of the casinos.

“English scientists have proven that having sex without love damages
the health. So, going to the prostitutes solves no problem and makes
it worst,” he said.

In his turn, Yerevan Council of Elders member, architect Levon
Igityan noted:

“Latter half of the 20th century and the 21st century are most
disgusting centuries in the history of humanity, because human values
are distorted completely.”

Tsvetana Paskaleva To Visit Armenia

TSVETANA PASKALEVA TO VISIT ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
19 June, 2012
KAPAN

KAPAN, JUNE 19, ARMENPRESS: Bulgarian famous journalist, director,
member of international Documentary association Tsvetana Paskaleva
on June 22-24 will visit Syunik region of Armenia. Armenpress was
informed from the information and public relations department of
Regional administration of Syunik that Paskaleva will present to the
audience of Syunik her documentary film series about Artsakh heroic
war named ‘Wounds of Artsakh”. Tsvetana Paskaleva ill hold meetings
in the centre of Culture of Kapan, in the dramatic theatre after V.

Vagarshyan in Goris and in the Palace of Culture after Hamo Sahyan in
Sisian. Tsvetana Paskaleva is a Bulgarian director, cinematographer
and reporter. She was born in Bulgaria and graduated from National
Academy for Theatre and Film Arts in Sofia. Paskaleva was admitted
to a PhD program for documentary film in Moscow and during her
studies in 1990, she went to the South Ossetian region of Georgia to
shoot a film about a brewing ethnic conflict there. Shortly after,
she visited Nagorno-Karabakh and made a film on the deportations of
Armenian residents of Getashen, Martunashen and Shaumyan by Azerbaijani
interior forces backed by the regular Soviet Army units.

V. Oskanyan Comments On Rumors About His House In California

V. OSKANYAN COMMENTS ON RUMORS ABOUT HIS HOUSE IN CALIFORNIA

Armenian former Minister of Foreign Affairs, member of the “Prosperous
Armenia” party, chairman of the “Civilitas” foundation Vardan Oskanian
has presented an explanation over his house in Los- Angeles in his
Facebook page. Oskanian’s name and his properties are very much
discussed in Armenian media recently because of the accusations by
Armenian National Security Service.

Vardan Oskanian and foundation by him are accused in money laundry.

Oskanian especially writes:

“Some media representatives have already started blackmailing me. One
of them put the photo of my house in California and wrote that I have
bought it in 1996 (when I was Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs)
with 350.000 USD and asked how I have bought it?

Let me see first that I bought this house on 1988, when the USSR
still existed and Armenia was not an independent state yet. I bought
it not with 350.000 USD but with 500.000 USD. My son, Arman, was born
in this house in 1988.

The second, let me tell those who do not know me that my family has
been engaged in jewelery and worked out diamond for long years. The
main activities were in Aleppo and then the branches were transferred
to Lebanon, Belgium and the USA. Let me say that our family has been
the leader in this sphere. So everyone can understand that the family
which has been engaged in jewelery for 150 years should have some
property from this business.

But this was not the essential, I have told this just by the way.

The essential point is that I have left such comfortable life in the
USA since 1991 and have come to Armenia as I have had a dream and aim.

I believed in the idea. And now just opposite all of these events,
nothing has been changed. I continue believing that it is possible
to build the country which we dream of. And if something is changed
so it is my dream which has become stronger”.

http://times.am/?l=en&p=8712

Anything New In Paris?

ANYTHING NEW IN PARIS?
James Hakobyan

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 11:12:51 – 19/06/2012

In the morning of June 18, when the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign
ministers were preparing for their scheduled meeting mediated by the
OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, an Armenian soldier was killed by the
Azerbaijani sniper.

It is difficult to tell whether the co-chairs and the ministers had
learnt about the incident when the meeting started. Anyway, there was
no word on the death of the soldier in their final statement. On the
contrary, the statement dwelt on the necessity to develop mechanisms
to investigate border incidents and activate humanitarian contacts.

Are they the new proposals about which the U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton had stated?

They are not new and there was nothing new in the Paris statement.

What have the parties been proposed? Was there anything the ministers
need to agree on with the presidents of the countries and to go on
to make it known to the public?

The announced visit of the Co-Chairs to the region in the next few
weeks proves that they will come to learn about the reaction of
the sides.

Once new proposals were made known to public before the reaction
of the states when after a meeting initiated by Russia the co-chairs
announced that the parties were given two weeks to issue their position
on the new principles. Then Armenia rejected the new proposals stating
that everything was already there in the principles of Madrid, while
Azerbaijan accepted the new proposals.

This contradictory picture placed the co-chairs in an awkward
situation, especially Russia, which was active as a mediator in that
stage. Apparently, after having learnt this lesson, nothing is said
about the new proposals until Sargsyan’s and Aliyev’s reaction.

However, in this case, they place Hillary Clinton in an awkward
situation who has already stated about some new proposals to be
introduced in Paris. If Aliyev and Sargsyan reject these proposals
and nothing is said about them, it will become clear that no new
proposals existed. Although, perhaps, Clinton who will soon leave
politics does not care for the possible inconveniency. Apparently,
Hillary Clinton is just trying to mark her regional visit through
the advertisement of the Paris meeting.

In general, the Paris meeting seemed to be sudden, since Clinton’s
message was the first, and had not been preceded by any leak on this
meeting in the Armenian or Azeri press.

The meeting in Paris was certainly initiated by the U.S. when Clinton’s
visit was “shot” in the region. Consequently, the important thing for
the U.S. is not the proposals but the meeting itself. It is noteable
that Paris helped Washington to organize the meeting, and Moscow had
nothing else to do but to agree.

By the way, it is interesting that there was no word on a possible
statement by the presidents of the U.S., France and Russia Obama,
Hollande and Putin at the G 20 summit but it happened. It contained
nothing new, it was just an appeal to the parties to accelerate the
Framework Agreement, as well as to reject use of force.

Apparently, the actors involved in the settlement of the Karabakh issue
tend to keep intact whatever is there and not to propose anything new.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments26589.html

Owen Jones: The Incoherence Of Englishness, And Why Ed Miliband’S En

OWEN JONES: THE INCOHERENCE OF ENGLISHNESS, AND WHY ED MILIBAND’S ENGLAND IS A LOST COUNTRY

Friday 08 June 2012

Labour would do better to champion the interests of

the working people it was set up to represent

Owen Jones Author Biography

What does it mean to be English? I’ve asked strangers and friends
this question a number of times, and the standard response has been
a blank face. Yesterday, I posed the question on Twitter (disclaimer:
not a scientific polling method), and was inundated with hundreds of
replies. Barely anybody attempted to define what Englishness was: a few
suggested football, queuing and tea. I can certainly identify with the
last: I am never going on holiday without a bag of PG Tips ever again.

No other demographic in Britain spends more time mulling over what
“Englishness” means than a well-connected coterie of think-tankers,
political advisers and certain academics. Their efforts came to
full fruition yesterday with Ed Miliband’s much-trailed speech on
Englishness. “Presidential State of the Union speeches are less
worked on this one,” one Labour MP told me. It is an intervention
that bears the hallmarks of Jon Cruddas, the new head of Labour’s
policy review. Labour politicians had “been too nervous to talk of
English pride and English character,” Miliband argued, for fear of
undermining the Union and being tarred with racist nationalism.

The Labour leadership is talking about Englishness for a number of
reasons. Firstly, they lack a coherent narrative, or “story”, as some
advisers put it. How the next Labour government would meet people’s
need for jobs, housing and good wages is unclear. With “Englishness”,
the party offers a “story” to fill that vacuum. But it is also tapping
into a perceived surge in a sense of English identity, driven by
devolution in Scotland and Wales. A report by the IPPR earlier this
year revealed that 17 per cent of people in England rejected the
“British” label altogether in favour of “English”; and nearly a
quarter opted for “more English than British”.

That doesn’t mean “Englishness” is a priority for most: I doubt many
spend much of their life thinking about it unless asked.

Bread-and-butter issues, particularly at a time of economic crisis,
are more pressing, and Labour has to answer them if it is to claw
back some of the five million voters who abandoned the party during
its 13 years in office. The report hinted at tensions within England,
too: nearly nine out of 10 Northerners felt London was one of the
regions the Government best looked after, compared with just 1 per
cent who felt the same about the North-west or Northeast. But it is
certainly true that nationalism has been on the rise across Britain,
and it’s not just down to devolution.

Partly, it is the consequence of a decline in traditional forms of
belonging. A sense of working-class pride has been battered over the
past 30 years. Nearly half of workers were members of trade unions
in the late 1970s; it is little over a quarter today, and unions are
less relevant in people’s everyday lives. The sense of solidarity
they provided was never replaced. The old industrial jobs were often
dirty and backbreaking, as well as often excluding women. But there
was a sense of pride attached to working in a mine or a dock; that is
often missing for those who, for example, stack shelves at Tesco. You
don’t have communities based around supermarkets or call centres as
you might have had with, say, a steelworks.

Much of the left has traditionally been wary of nationalism precisely
because of a belief that working people share common interests; nations
just divide them up. “The workers have no country”, as Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels wrote in The Communist Manifesto. “We cannot take
from them what they have not got.” When the First World War broke
out a generation after Marx’s death, a large chunk of his European
followers wrapped themselves in their respective flags and cheered
on as millions of working-class people were sent by their rulers to
slaughter each other.

But Marx and Engels were right: it is our conflicting interests that
make national identity so problematic. A supermarket checkout worker in
Manchester has more in common with a call centre worker in Aberdeen –
or Paris or Athens, for that matter – than, say, a hedge-fund manager
or globe-trotting billionaire based in London.

We have a habit of airbrushing our nation’s history, too. A big
part of it involved the horrors of Empire. Turkey is often assailed
for not acknowledging the Armenian genocide, but most of us aren’t
even aware of the deaths of millions of Indians under English (and
Scottish and Welsh) rule, as detailed by Mike Davis’s book Late
Victorian Holocausts.

We also hear a lot about the sacrifices made fighting against external
threats; but a big part of our history was English people struggling
against each other for their freedom – the oppressed versus the
oppressor. To be fair, Miliband hinted at it in his speech. It goes
back to the Peasants’ Revolt against the remnants of feudalism in
the 14th century; the English Revolution of the 1640s, in which we
deposed of our king 150 years before the French; the Chartists of the
19th century, who were the world’s first working-class movement; the
suffragettes; early trade unionists; the anti-fascists who said “they
shall not pass” to Oswald Mosley’s Blackshirts in the 1930s; and so on.

There is no coherent or cohesive “Englishness”. It is a catch-all
term for all those who live in England’s borders, who have a
range of identities, interests and histories. Other than newspaper
columnists like myself, I doubt most will spend much time musing
over Ed Miliband’s thoughts on Englishness. Labour would do better to
talk about championing the interests of the people it was set up to
represent: working people, regardless of their national affiliations.

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/owen-jones-the-incoherence-of-englishness-and-why-ed-milibands-england-is-a-lost-country-7827757.html

Prosperous Armenian Party Not In The Opposition

PROSPEROUS ARMENIAN PARTY NOT IN THE OPPOSITION

armradio.am
20.06.2012 12:31

The first session of the National Assembly of fifth convocation
continued today with the government program on the agenda.

Before proceeding to the consideration of the government’s action
plan, in line with the by-law of the National Assembly, the factions
clarified their political stance.

Thus, there will be three opposition parties in the Parliament –
the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, the Heritage and the Armenian
National Congress.

No one from Prosperous Armenia Party has declared about being
opposition.

No one from Prosperous Armenia Party has declared about being
opposition.