Church After Armenian Saint To Be Constructed In Transnistria

CHURCH AFTER ARMENIAN SAINT TO BE CONSTRUCTED IN TRANSNISTRIA

news.am
May 10, 2012 | 19:11

It is planned to build a church in honor of great Armenian Enlightener
Gregory Illuminator in Grigoriopol, Transnistria.

Grigor Lusavorich (Gregory Illuminator) is the patron saint of
Grigoriopol, which was founded in 1792 by Armenian immigrants from
Ishmael. There are two versions of how the city was founded. According
to the first version, Prince Gregory Potemkin called the new Armenian
City ‘in honor of his angle’. According to the second version,
Potemkin ‘commanded to make a city from the village of St. Gregory
the Illuminator of all Armenians’.

Charges Against Mashtots Park Activists

CHARGES AGAINST MASHTOTS PARK ACTIVISTS

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 20:16:28 – 10/05/2012

The police made a statement informing about investigation of the
incident of 29 April 2012 in Mashtots Park. The police statement
informs that criminal proceedings were launched against a group of
activists for violence not dangerous for life or health against police
officers on the basis of ten forensic examinations, explanations of
the participants of the direct participants of the incident, videos,
as well as other documents. Proceedings were launched under Article
316.1 of the RA Criminal Code.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country26146.html

Paper Discloses Details Of RPA Electoral List

PAPER DISCLOSES DETAILS OF RPA ELECTORAL LIST

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 10, 2012 – 10:15 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Though parliamentary elections are already
over, Zhoghovurd paper reveals some interesting details about the
proportional electoral list of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia
(RPA).

According to paper’s data, Armenian President, RPA leader Serzh
Sargsyan had a quite different list in mind prior to the session of
the Prosperous Armenia party held ahead of elections.

However, upon his return from Prosperous Armenia meeting, Sargsyan
suddenly decided to include Ruben Hayrapetyan in the next parliament,
the paper claims.

To do this, RPA leader demanded that Manvel Grigoryan, head of
Yerkrapah volunteer union should submit necessary documents for
Hayrapetyan to be involved in RPA’s proportional list, Zhoghovurd says.

Reasons for Sargsyan’s move are still unclear for many, the paper
claims.

‘If We Can Solve Karabakh, Turkey Can Open Border’ – Vartan Oskanian

‘IF WE CAN SOLVE KARABAKH, TURKEY CAN OPEN BORDER’ – VARTAN OSKANIAN

tert.am
10.05.12

Vartan Oskanian, former Foreign Minister of Armenia (1998-2008),
founder of the Civilitas Foundation and member of the Prosperous
Armenia Party, has said that if the problem over the Nagorno-Karabakh
could be solved by Armenia and Turkey, then Turkey could open its
border with Armenia.

“The Armenian government wants to normalize ties with Turkey. The
problem is how to do it. This whole protocol process made clear to
everyone that there are obstacles in the way. The question is how
both sides could overcome these obstacles. The major obstacle is
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. As long as that issue is not being
addressed or somehow resolved I really don’t see how we can move
forward on Turkey-Armenia ties,” he said to a group of reporters on
Monday from Turkey who came to Armenia with the sponsorship of the
Hrant Dink Foundation and the Heinrich Böll Foundation.

Turkey closed its borders with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity
with Azerbaijan after Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of
Azerbaijan in 1992, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The issue
of Armenia’s withdrawal from the area surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh
is of importance for Ankara, which has frequently signaled that this
step would ease the way for opening the border with Armenia.

However, the Zurich protocols, signed between Turkey and Armenia on
Oct. 10, 2009, do not make any reference to the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, and say that both countries should have the protocols
ratified by their parliaments within a “reasonable time frame.”

Declaring the protocols “dead,” Oskanian said that the Turkish policy
has been clear that there will not be open borders between Turkey
and Armenia before the conflict is resolved.

“Overcoming that obstacle depends not only on Armenia but also on
Azerbaijan. So, our bilateral ties are held hostage to Turkey’s
relations with Azerbaijan,” he said. “For me it is very clear that
the border will not be opened unless the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
is resolved.”

Oskanian added that he was critical of the Armenian government’s
position in signing the protocols with Turkey, explaining, “The current
[Armenian] administration did not want to listen. They said no,
there is a possibility that Turkey delinked our bilateral relations
over the issue of Karabakh. But eventually they themselves became
convinced eventually that is not the case.”

He added that the most Armenians understand that it is a priority for
Turkey that Azerbaijani interests be addressed and met before Turkey
opens its border with Armenia. Asked if there is hope for a solution
to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Oskanian said that it is difficult.

“I am not hopeless but it will not be easy. The Karabakh conflict has
already lasted 20 years and it is not going to be resolved unless
Turkey changes its position — which I very much doubt will happen
since they haven’t done it in 20 years,” he said.

“Negotiations are continuing but the process as far as I am concerned
is in a deadlock. After these [Armenian] parliamentary elections,
I don’t know if the process will be resuscitated.”

On Sunday’s elections in Armenia, the incumbent Serzh Sargsyan’s
Republican Party won about 68 seats, a majority in the 131-seat
parliament, according to results released on Monday.

The Prosperous Armenia Party came out of the elections as the second
most popular party. Oskanian is expected to run for presidential
elections if the ruling Republican Party does not invite the Prosperous
Armenia Party to form a coalition government. The Prosperous Armenia
party, led by wealthy businessman Gagik Tsarukyan, was the Republican
Party’s coalition partner in the previous parliament but Sargsyan’s
party will no longer need its backing to pass most laws, which require
a majority.

“Prosperous Armenia doubled its number of members in Parliament,
but still fell short of what we could have achieved had there been
a cleaner election. Had there not been certain violations, I think
we would have gotten better results. It is too early to assess the
situation,” he said, ruling out the possibility that he will run
in the presidential elections. International monitors gave a mixed
assessment of the elections, however, praising Armenia for holding
a peaceful election but criticizing violations of campaign law and
interference by parties.

The results in the former Soviet republic, where the Republican Party
was just short of a majority in the previous parliament, give Sargsyan
a strong platform to seek a second presidential term next year.

Asked by the Turkish reporters if Turkey’s proposal for the
establishment of a historical commission to study the 1915 events
was acceptable for the Armenians, Oskanian said:

“That would mean putting the whole genocide issue up for study again,
something that has been done and conclusions have been reached by
international scholars and by Armenians that the 1915 events are
genocide. The Armenian side will never accept such a commission. So the
demand that is put by Turkish Prime Minister [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan
is not realistic as far as the Armenian side is concerned. We would
suggest that Turkey opens the border without conditions, we normalize
our ties and then, at the governmental level, we can address the issues
that are raised by one side or the other. But to create a specific
commission for genocide will not be acceptable by the Armenian side,
in my view, under any administration.”

Armenian Political Scientist Comments On Coalition Options

ARMENIAN POLITICAL SCIENTIST COMMENTS ON COALITION OPTIONS

news.am
May 10, 2012 | 15:25

YEREVAN. – If the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) does not form a
coalition with the Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP), it could form a
coalition with the Orinats Yerkir (Rule of Law) Party (RLP), or the
Heritage Party, political scientist Stepan Grigoryan said during a
press conference on Thursday.

In his words, Heritage is no longer an opposition party, and this
is demonstrated by the first part of its party list in the May 6
parliamentary elections and its demeanor during the campaign season.

“Yesterday’s and today’s Heritage must be separated. This election
race showed that they were not so much an opposition,” Grigoryan noted.

And in regard to the RPA forming a coalition with the PAP, “the
likelihood of forming such coalition is very high.”

“The RPA needs this [coalition] for domestic legitimacy, and uniting
with this [political] force means increasing its legitimacy. The
society’s expectations from the PAP are very high. And, naturally,
this will raise the Parliament’s legitimacy. The PAP has the role of
a contradictor, which makes this coalition all the more likely. The
international community likewise will positively view this step,”
Stepan Grigoryan noted.

To note, Armenia’s Central Electoral Commission has issued the
preliminary results of the May 6 parliamentary elections. Five
political parties and one bloc will be represented in the 131-seat
National Assembly (Parliament) of Armenia: Republican Party of Armenia
– 44.05%, Prosperous Armenia Party – 30.20%, Armenian National Congress
– 7.10%, Heritage Party – 5.79%, ARF Dashnaktsutyun Party – 5.73%,
and Orinats Yerkir Party – 5.49%.

Expert: Police Not Interested In IDitord Forgery Records

EXPERT: POLICE NOT INTERESTED IN IDITORD FORGERY RECORDS

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 10, 2012 – 14:10 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Police launched investigation into two cases
registered at online iDitord platform which aimed to record electoral
fraud, media expert, iDitord coordinator Samvel Martirosyan said on
May 10.

Martirosyan said he does not know the exact number of launched cases,
adding he has seen these two on the police website.

According to director of Transparency International anti-corruption
center, iDitord coordinator Sona Ayzavyan, police is not much
interested in electoral violations identified through the platform.

“We got a report on electoral bribery in the election office of the
Republican Party of Armenia in Vanadzor. We informed the police,
but they did not take any measures at the moment. And only today we
learned that police officers are leaving for Vanadzor to look into
the case,” she told the journalists on May 10.

Martirosyan agrees with Ayzavyan in this, saying that unlike the
police, Armenia’s Defense Ministry demonstrated much interest towards
violations.

“Defense Ministry showed interest in every single report, asked where
the case was registered and tracked it,” Martirosyan said.

"Al Jazeera" Shot A Film About Armenian-Turkish Relations

“AL JAZEERA” SHOT A FILM ABOUT ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS

ARMENPRESS
10 May, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 10, ARMENPRESS: Arabian “Al Jazeera” TV channel has shot a
documentary film about Armenian-Turkish relations titled “Common Pain”.

Armenpress reports that the authors of the film present the history of
existence of Armenian and Turkish people during centuries beginning
from 1453 when sultan Mehmed Second conquered Constantinople and
removed there some part of Armenians from Armenian plateau.

In the film Armenian and Turkish positions about the issue of Armenian
genocide are also shown.

Hrant Dinq’s elucidations about Armenian genocide were also presented
in the film. Different books, documentary films, Armenian and Turkish
opinions about Armenians who had suffered in 1915, has been presented.

The producer of the film Ramazan Muth mentioned that the film will
have no precedents. “If the past works were the continuation of Turkish
propaganda then this work is important for the fact that the views of
both sides have been taken into consideration. The answer of events
which took place in 1915 is being searched” mentioned Muth.

Protester Dragged Out Of Tent

PROTESTER DRAGGED OUT OF TENT

05:25 pm | May 09, 2012 | Social

Artavazd Vardanyan, who has been staging a hunger strike outside the
Central Election Commission for a few days now, today was banned from
erecting a tent in the area.

At first, pol ice officers demanded that the protester show the
municipality’s permission. Later, when deputy chief of Yerevan Police
Robert Melkonyan arrived, Vardanyan was dragged out of the tent. The
tent was removed from the vicinity of the CEC building.

Artavazd Vardanyan, an adherent of the Sardarapat movement initiative,
started the hunger strike six days ago, claiming that elections
never introduce any changes in Armenia. He calls on the society and
intellectual circles to concentrate their attention on possible ways
towards creating an alternative regime.

Members of the initiative are also near the CEC building.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/social/2012/05/09/tent

Cotler: War Criminals Aren’t Being Brought To Justice

COTLER: WAR CRIMINALS AREN’T BEING BROUGHT TO JUSTICE

By Irwin Cotler May 9, 2012

T.S. Eliot famously called April “the cruellest month,” and indeed,
last month we marked the anniversaries of the Rwandan genocide,
Yom HaShoah – Holocaust Remembrance Day – as well as the Armenian
genocide and the Srebrenica massacre.

All of these events began in April, and in respect of that, April
has now been designated as Genocide Prevention Month.

Yet, as we remember the victims, it also bears reminder that many
of the greatest war criminals of the 20th century have not been
held to account for their unspeakable crimes. Indeed, there is
evidence that a significant number of these criminals reside here
in Canada. In particular, on this 18th anniversary of the Rwandan
genocide, Rwanda’s prosecutor general, Martin Ngoga, reported that
many suspected genocidaires today call Canada home, something that
the former Rwandan minister of justice, Jean de Dieu Mucyo, affirmed
in conversations with me.

What is true for Rwandan fugitives is no doubt true for fugitives from
other killing fields. Indeed, the Canadian Centre for International
Justice estimates that approximately 2,000 alleged war criminals and
major criminal human rights violators currently reside in Canada.

Canada was at the vanguard of the international fight against
impunity, when – over a decade ago – our government took the lead
in the establishment of an International Criminal Court, worked
to secure the necessary ratifications to bring the ICC treaty into
effect, and enacted the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act,
with all-party support, in implementation of the ICC treaty – a
landmark initiative that became a model for other jurisdictions.

Regrettably, however, the Canadian War Crimes Program, which was
intended to ensure that Canada would never be a base or sanctuary
for these enemies of humanity, is today seriously underfunded,
underutilized, and, as such, simply unable to carry out effective,
proper investigations and prosecutions of suspected war criminals.

The figures speak for themselves: The government’s war crimes program
budget has not had its seriously underfunded annual $15.6-million
budget increased since it was established in 1998. It is not
nearly enough money to carry out complex domestic and overseas
investigations, contributing therefore, to a near total absence of
domestic prosecutions in Canada.

Accordingly, rather than prosecute war criminals domestically as
initially envisaged, the government has resorted to deporting suspects,
a wholly inadequate remedy, and one that risks undermining the cause
of justice and the struggle against impunity.

For when Canada prosecutes international crimes domestically –
under the principle of universal jurisdiction underpinning our war
crimes legislation – it sends a powerful message that not only will
Canada not serve as a base or sanctuary, but that war criminals are
on notice that they will enjoy neither immunity nor impunity for their
international criminality, which transcends borders and jurisdictions.

By prosecuting genocidaires in Canada, we affirm that genocide –
the crime whose name we should shudder to mention – is the ultimate
crime against humanity, and that we have a collective responsibility
to combat it.

Deportation, then, may well allow human rights abusers to evade
punishment for their crimes, particularly if they are not prosecuted
when returned to their countries of origin.

Indeed, human rights activists have expressed concern, for example,
that an alleged Honduran war criminal recently deported from Canada
will be free from prosecution and punishment upon his return home.

Deportation in such cases can also have a seriously prejudicial
impact on post-conflict peace and reconciliation, for there can be
no reconciliation without peace, and no peace without justice for
the victims of such grave human rights abuses.

A no-less-compelling issue is the government’s obligation not to
proceed with prospective deportations of suspected war criminals if
there is a serious risk of unjust prosecution or cruel and unusual
punishment, or even death consequent upon deportation. Indeed,
Canadian courts have affirmed that such deportations violate both
our charter and the foundational principles of international justice.

Simply put, the wholesale, and effectively automatic, deportation of
alleged war criminals is not an appropriate alternative to the domestic
prosecution of war criminals under the Crimes Against Humanity and War
Crimes Act. Yet, the implementation of the act, and the effectiveness
of government undertakings to enforce it, can only succeed in their
obligatory responsibilities if the necessary resources are provided
to give expression to the hoped-for requisite political will.

And so, as we take leave of the solemn Genocide Prevention Month, we
must recommit to – and implement – a robust Canadian Crimes Against
Humanity and War Crimes Program that effectively holds perpetrators to
account, combats the culture of impunity, and implements the principles
of international justice and reconciliation that ensure that Canada is
not a haven for these hostis humani generis – the enemies of humanity.

Irwin Cotler is a Liberal MP and former minister of justice and
attorney general of Canada. He is an emeritus law professor at McGill
University and has written extensively on war crimes justice.

http://www.calgaryherald.com/opinion/op-ed/Cotler+criminals+aren+being+brought+justice/6594536/story.html

Two-Year-Olds Poisoned By Chemical Solution, Kerosene In Armenia

TWO-YEAR-OLDS POISONED BY CHEMICAL SOLUTION, KEROSENE IN ARMENIA

news.am
May 10, 2012 | 13:13

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s Vanadzor City resident Valiko Khachatryan, 2,
was hospitalized, on Wednesday at around 6:30pm, because of kerosene
poisoning.

The doctors say the child is in satisfactory condition, the Rescue
Service informed Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Separately, the emergency medical service hotline informed that capital
Yerevan resident I. Nazarenko, 2, was taken to hospital, on Tuesday
at 4pm, and on symptoms of poisoning caused by a chemical solution.

The physicians say the youngster is in satisfactory state of health.