Cyprus President To Visit Tsitsernakaberd With A Representative Dele

CYPRUS PRESIDENT TO VISIT TSITSERNAKABERD WITH A REPRESENTATIVE DELEGATION

17:37, 8 April, 2015

NICOSIA, 8 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. President of Cyprus Nicos Anastasiades
will be accompanied by Members of the Parliament of Cyprus and
representatives of the Cypriot-Armenian community during his April
22-25 visit to Armenia. As a representative of the office of Armenian
Member of the Parliament of Cyprus Vartkes Mahdessian said in an
interview with “Armenpress”, the President will be accompanied
by members of the country’s three major political parties at
Tsitsernakaberd Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex. “Member of
the Parliament of Cyprus, leader of Tisi Party and chair of the
Cyprus-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group Averof Noephytou,
secretary of Akel Party of Nicosia Stefanos Stefanou and former leader
of Cyprus’s TICO Party and former parliamentary speaker, current
Member of Parliament Marios Garoyian will also be participating in
the ceremonies commemorating the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide
to be held in Armenia on 22-25 April,” as reported from Nicosia.

Armenian Member of the Parliament of Cyprus Vartkes Mahdessian will
also be joining the President on his visit to Armenia.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/800891/cyprus-president-to-visit-tsitsernakaberd-with-a-representative-delegation.html

Vladimir Spivakov To Give Armenian Genocide Centenary Commemoration

VLADIMIR SPIVAKOV TO GIVE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CENTENARY COMMEMORATION CONCERT IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, April 8. /ARKA/. The National Philharmonic of Russia led by
world-known conductor Vladmir Spivakov will hold concerts in Armenia
to commemorate the centenary of the Armenian genocide, the Top Concert
facebook page reports.

The concerts will take place at the National Academic Theatre of
Opera and Ballet in Yerevan.

The concert program includes Mozart Piano Concert N12 and Requiem
(April 14), Verdi, Mozart, Bellini, Donizetti and Puccini (April 15)
and Chaplin “Big City Lights” multimedia project (April 16). -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/society/vladimir_spivakov_to_give_armenian_genocide_centenary_commemoration_concert_in_yerevan_/#sthash.rlua8QxK.dpuf

Report: Plaque Of Azerbaijani Monument Broken In Turkish Park

REPORT: PLAQUE OF AZERBAIJANI MONUMENT BROKEN IN TURKISH PARK

14:41 08/04/2015 ” SOCIETY

Unknown people broke the plaque in the Park of Shekhids in the Turkish
district Turgutlu which was set to memorize the victims of Aghdam
events in 1992, Azerbaijani site Report.az writes.

According to the article, Turgay Sirin, the head of Turgutlu district
municipality, said that some parts of the plaque were broken, and
the Turkish flag was taken off and thrown to the ground.

The agency notes that the park was opened in the street Ozgun,
block Turgutlar on February 27, 2015 upon the decision of the local
municipality board.

On February 26, 1992, during the war in Karabakh, around 200 to 300
people (according to Human Rights Watch, and more than 600 according
to the version propagated by Azerbaijan) were killed in unknown
circumstances near the city of Aghdam. They have been deliberately
withheld by the Azerbaijani authorities in the midst of the military
actions. Population of the village of Khojalu, which was one of the
firing points shooting at the blockaded Stepanakert (among five others)
was kept in the village for months by force and was not evacuated by
the authorities of Azerbaijan deliberately, in order to use them as
human shields later.

Residents of Khojalu coming out through the humanitarian corridor,
that the self-defense forces of NKR had left open, freely passed more
than 10 km and reached the Aghdam city controlled by the Azerbaijani
troops. Later, not far from the positions of Azerbaijani troops dead
bodies of the villagers were found. The exact death toll remains
unknown as the official Baku publishes data contradicting each other.

Parliamentary Commission investigating the tragic death of the
civilians at Aghdam city was dissolved by the order of Heydar Aliyev,
the investigative materials are kept secret.

Source: Panorama.am

Armenia’s Second President Finds Constitutional Reform Senseless

ARMENIA’S SECOND PRESIDENT FINDS CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM SENSELESS

YEREVAN, April 8. /ARKA/. Armenia’s second president Robert Kocharyan
finds constitutional reform senseless.

He is convinced that the country’s problems are not connected with
the Constitution, especially with the type of governance.

Kocharyan said in an interview he posted on his informal
website.

In his opinion, important is an accomplished system of parties and
democracy and struggle inside parties that renewed their leadership
and update their strategies.

“Do you know such parties in Armenia? Unfortunately, even the level
of political discussions is extremely primitive here,” he said.

“It is naivety to think that a parliamentary governance model will
automatically create democratic and competitive environment for
parties. It is more likely to strengthen cronyism in the governance,
which is dangerously commonplace in Armenia and is one of the
country’s woes.”

On March 14, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan approved the concept
of constitutional reforms that has been worked out by a professional
commission.

In compliance with the president’s instruction, the commission must
organize discussions with political parties and respond to their
proposals and remarks.

The concept is focused on reasonability of transition from

Robert Fisk: The Christian Tragedy In The Middle East Started With T

ROBERT FISK: THE CHRISTIAN TRAGEDY IN THE MIDDLE EAST STARTED WITH THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

16:05, 07 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

The Christian tragedy in the Middle East did not begin with ISIS,
writes Robert Fisk, The Independent’smultiple award-winning Middle
East correspondent, based in Beirut.

According to him, “hundred years on from the Armenian genocide,
a Christian minority is again suffering.”

“The Christian tragedy in the Middle East today needs to be re-thought
– as it will be, of course, when Armenians around the world commemorate
the 100th anniversary of the genocide of their people by Ottoman
Turkey. Perhaps it is time that we acknowledge not only this act of
genocide but come to regard it not as just the murder of a minority
within the Ottoman Empire, but specifically a Christian minority,
killed because they were Armenian but also because they were Christian
(many of whom, unfortunately, rather liked the Orthodox, anti-Ottoman
Tsar),” Robert Fisk writes.

“And their fate bears some uncommon parallels with the Islamic State
murderers of today. The Armenian men were massacred. The women were
gang-raped or forced to convert or left to die of hunger. Babies were
burned alive – after being stacked in piles. Islamic State cruelty is
not new, even if the cult’s technology defeats anything its opponents
can achieve,” the author continues.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/07/robert-fisk-the-christian-tragedy-in-the-middle-east-started-with-the-armenian-genocide/
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/the-christian-tragedy-in-the-middle-east-did-not-begin-with-isis-10157239.html

Stories Of Struggle: Istanbul Artist’s New Exhibition On 1915 Follow

STORIES OF STRUGGLE: ISTANBUL ARTIST’S NEW EXHIBITION ON 1915 FOLLOWS WOMEN WHO RESISTED

14:00, April 7, 2015

Aret Gıcır’s second solo exhibition, Between Fire and Sword, will
run from April 10 to May 9 at the Oktem & Aykut contemporary art
gallery in Istanbul.

Its title inspired by the writer Zabel Yesayan’s depiction of the 1909
Cilicia massacres, Between Fire and Sword explores the irreversible
rupture that took place in Anatolia one century ago. The artist
attempts to approach the Catastrophe through the stories of Armenian
women who struggled to protect their children, families, churches,
schools and land by taking up arms and who resisted in order to stay
alive in the period leading to 1915.

In his paintings, Gıcır abstracts once again the already isolated
geography and people by displacing them onto different, estranged
spaces. He also challenges the perpetual reproduction – through
politics, art, literature and cinema – of images of Anatolia that
have depicted it as a lonely, romantic, forlorn or static landscape
since the late years of the Ottoman Empire and the early years of
the Republic. Against recent revived attempts at re-signification,
Gıcır’s paintings suggest that such imaginaries of Anatolia did
not correspond to reality in the first place.

The women whose stories and names are barely known except for the few
photographs they have left behind and who are caught Between Fire and
Sword (in Armenian, Unt Hur yev Unt Sur), now stand suspended before
us between, on the one hand, bearing witness, and on the other hand,
the impossibility of witnessing. The paintings ultimately question
whether it is indeed ever possible to depict the Catastrophe within the
limits of the artist’s grasp, since, in the words of the novelist Hagop
Oshagan, “The Catastrophe, immensurable yet at the same time peculiarly
uniform, will always elude the artist who tries to penetrate it.”

The show will open at 6:30pm on April 9 at the Oktem & Aykut gallery
which is located at Buyuk Hendek Caddesi, Portakal Sokak No:2 34420,
Galata, Istanbul.

Born in Istanbul in 1978, Aret Gıcır graduated from the Department
of Painting of Yerevan State Academy of Fine Arts in 2008. His first
one-person exhibition entitled “Yerevan” was held in Tokatlıyan Han in
2009. He was awarded an artist residence in New York for his project,
The Affliction of the Patriarch by the Moon and Stars Project-SVA in
2013. Gıcır lives and works in Istanbul.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/59481/stories-of-struggle-istanbul-artists-new-exhibition-on-1915-follows-women-who-resisted.html

Issy 1915/2015 – Concert Crossroad "Les Armeniens Ont Le Blues"

ISSY 1915/2015 – CONCERT CROSSROAD “LES ARMENIENS ONT LE BLUES”

Publie le : 07-04-2015

Info Collectif VAN – – “Les Armeniens ont le
blues” : C’est sous ce titre evocateur que l’association Crossroad,
qui organise des concerts de blues a Issy-les-Moulineaux, participe au
centenaire du genocide armenien avec un concert de la Bako’s Family le
jeudi 9 avril 2015 a 20h30 a l’Entrepont. Gageons qu’on y retrouvera
toute la famille elargie, avec Lucile, jeune prodige des bidouillages
sonores, son père Pascal “Bako” Mikaelian, harmoniciste, Stephane
Mikaelian (frère de Bako) a la batterie, Slim Batteux a l’orgue et
Stan Noubard-Pacha a la guitare. Entree 6 EURO pour les adherents, 10
EURO pour les autres. Un grand merci a Michel Bertrand, aux manettes
de Crossroad, pour cette programmation engagee que le Collectif VAN
vous invite a soutenir. Vous y prendrez en plus beaucoup de plaisir.

Crossroad

L’Issy-Blues Club presente

“Les Armeniens ont le blues” (avec la Bako’s Family)

le 9 avril 2015 a 20h30

a l’Entrepont 24 chemin d’accès a la gare, 92130 Issy les Moulineaux
gare RER C Issy-Ville

Direction artistique: Norbert Krief

Adherents : 6 EURO Invites : 10 EURO Adhesion : 20 EURO

Avec le soutien de la ville d’Issy-les-Moulineaux.

Source/Lien : Crossroad

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=87191
www.collectifvan.org

Armenia’s Electric Power Output 7 751 Million KWh In 2014

ARMENIA’S ELECTRIC POWER OUTPUT 7 751 MILLION KWH IN 2014

YEREVAN, April 7. /ARKA/. Armenian Energy and Natural Resources
Minister Yervand Zakaryan, presenting today the 2014 activity report
to the prime minister, said the country’s electric power output was
7 751 million kWh in 2014.

He is quoted by the government’s press office as saying that 3 288.6
million kWh here is the electricity generated by thermal power plants,
1 992.6 million kWh by hydro power plants and 2 464.8 million kWh by
the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant.

The minister also said that the electric energy generated by the
country’s power plants and imported here from the outside in 2014
totaled 7 528 million kWh – 65 million kWh more than in 2013.

He said the 2014-2020 program of measures to be taken to enhance
Armenia’s energy security was approved in 2014 and additional
preferences were implied for development of alternative energy.

Besides, in his words, AMD 278.5 million was invested in enhancement
of energy saving in 31 units as part of the WB-supported program.

Zakaryan said that a program implying prolongation of operation of
the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant has been approved and an appropriated
cooperation agreement has been signed with Russia.

He said cooperation with international organizations and banks was
continued to keep implementing some investment programs. —0—–

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/armenia_s_electric_power_output_7_751_million_kwh_in_2014/#sthash.ofmtzH5n.dpuf

Turkey: "Zero Problems With Neighbors"

TURKEY: “ZERO PROBLEMS WITH NEIGHBORS”

Gatestone Institute
April 6 2015

by Burak Bekdil
April 6, 2015 at 4:00 am

After losing Syria, Iran, Lebanon, and Egypt, Turkey has now lost
Libya.

More U.S. politicians are realizing that their country’s old staunch
ally, Turkey, has turned into an unstable, unreliable, authoritarian
and part-time friend that has the habit of sending shipments of arms
to Middle Eastern Islamists of a variety of radical behavior.

In a speech in December 2011, Turkey’s then foreign minister Ahmet
Davutoglu (now Prime Minister) said that Turkey’s Middle East foreign
policy had pushed an “isolated” Israel to “kneel down” before the
Turkish Republic. He also claimed that his own “zero problems with
neighbors” policy would succeed.

More than three years later, however, Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan has admitted to Turkey’s own isolation. “I do not mind
isolation in the world,” Erdogan said, and claimed that “other world
leaders might be jealous of him.”

Apparently, Messrs Erdogan and Davutoglu may have failed in formulating
a realistic foreign policy calculus, but they have proven their skills
in black humor.

In a speech in parliament on March 24, opposition leader Kemal
Kilicdaroglu said that the government’s “foreign policy has collapsed
… Turkey is entirely isolated … For the first time in its history
Turkey does not have ambassadors in four capitals [in its region].”

Turkey is, in fact, the only country in the world that does not
have ambassadors in all of Israel, Egypt, Syria, Yemen and Libya
(in addition to two non-Muslim neighbors, Cyprus and Armenia). But
there is more.

One of Erdogan’s (and Davutoglu’s) strategic policy goals was to
fulfill a long-time Turkish dream: full membership in the European
Union (EU). A recent report by an independent body revealed how
Turkey’s regional isolation in the Middle East echoes on the EU front
as well. The Independent Turkish Commission, a non-governmental
organization led by former Finnish president, Martti Ahtisaari,
reported on March 17 that the EU and Turkey were in fact drifting apart
instead of drawing closer together, “due to growing authoritarianism,
stuttering growth and faltering Kurdish peace process” in Turkey.

The commission summarized it all in one line: Turkey is no longer
“the rising regional star.” The commission’s diagnosis was extremely
realistic: “With a 900-kilometer border with Syria, [Turkey] is
hosting nearly two million Syrian refugees and is vulnerable to
attacks and infiltration by the Islamic State. Tensions with both
Iran and Israel have become deeply entrenched, and the country has
become increasingly dependent on energy from a revanchist Russia.”

Indeed, while trying obsessively to topple Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad, Turkey has created its own Peshawar (a restive,
terror-stricken Afghan region) along its border with Syria by
supporting various jihadist groups, at the price of suspicious (and
belated) looks from its Western and NATO allies.

Additionally, after losing Syria, Iran, Lebanon and Egypt, Turkey
has now lost Libya.

In late February, Libya’s internationally recognized government
accused Turkey of sending weapons to Islamist groups in the country,
and said it would stop dealing with Turkey. Libya’s prime minister,
Abdullah al-Thinni, did not even resort to any diplomatic language:
“Turkey is a state that is not dealing honestly with us. It’s
exporting weapons to us so the Libyan people kill each other.” A
few days earlier, al-Thinni’s government had said it would end all
contracts with Turkish companies. That means a loss of billions of
dollars worth of business, mostly for Turkey’s construction companies.

Against that backdrop, more U.S. politicians are realizing that their
country’s old staunch ally, Turkey, has turned into an unstable,
unreliable, authoritarian and part-time friend that has the habit of
sending shipments of arms to Middle Eastern Islamists of a variety
of radical behavior.

In an unusual move, a group of 74 U.S. Senators sent an unprecedented
letter to Secretary of State John Kerry on March 18, to express their
concern over “deviations from the basic principles of democracy in
Turkey.” The signatories — who make up three fourths of the U.S.

Senate — said: “We write to express our deep concern about the
persistence of human rights violations in Turkey.” About a month
earlier, 90 members of the US Congress had sent a similar letter
to Kerry.

Erdogan’s response was typically Erdogan. He accused the U.S. Congress
for being “for hire.” Turkey’s pro-Erdogan media claimed the U.S.

senators who signed the letter had been bribed.

A few days after the Senators’ letter to Kerry, the U.S.

administration expressed concerns over “Turkey’s press freedom
violations, as well as its interference with freedom of assembly and
the administration of justice.”

U.S. State Department Press Office Director Jeff Rathke said that
the U.S. remains concerned about freedom of expression and assembly
in Turkey.

Not surprisingly, Turkey’s international isolation is growing
exponentially. But Prime Minister Davutoglu remains a useful tool in
forecasting regional developments. Whatever he predicts, any smart
man should go and bet on the opposite option.

Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a Turkish columnist for the Hurriyet
Daily and a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/5471/turkey-zero-problems-neighbors

El Genocidio Silenciado

EL GENOCIDIO SILENCIADO

Cronicas de la Emigracion, España
6 abril 2015

Roberto Mansilla Blanco | 06 de abril de 2015

En mayo proximo se cumple el centenario del genocidio armenio,
cuando las autoridades del entonces imperio otomano ordenaron el
desplazamiento y exterminio de poblaciones armenias historicamente
asentadas en la provincia de Anatolia. Así, el año de 1915 constituye
un doloroso recuerdo para los armenios, y para muchos su dolor ha
sido el primer genocidio de la historia contemporanea.

El genocidio armenio ha sido objeto de polemica durante años. La
diaspora armenia en Europa, EE UU y America Latina ha sido
especialmente activa a la hora de presionar a traves de lobbies para
que se reconozca la matanza de armenios por parte de las autoridades
otomanas. De hecho, en 1965, la República Oriental del Uruguay,
que cuenta con una notable diaspora armenia, fue el primer país en
reconocer oficialmente este genocidio.

Por su parte, la actual República de Turquía, sucesora del imperio
otomano, se ha negado sistematica y oficialmente a reconocer
este genocidio, un aspecto que ha provocado una fuerte tension,
principalmente en las relaciones turcas y armenias con diversos países,
principalmente europeos.

Es de reconocer que la actual República de Armenia es un país
independiente desde 1991, tras la desintegracion de la URSS (Union
de Repúblicas Socialistas Sovieticas). Durante casi todo el siglo XX,
siete decadas, entre 1921 a 1991, la actual Armenia formo parte de la
URSS como República Socialista Sovietica de Armenia, sin capacidad
legal y jurídica como país independiente como para erigirse en el
portavoz estatal y oficial de la condena y reconocimiento de este
genocidio. De allí a que, entre otras cosas, diversos historiadores
denominen al mismo como el “genocidio silenciado”.

Según diversas fuentes, el genocidio armenio cobro la vida de mas
de millon y medio de armenios. El presidente estadounidense Woodrow
Wilson reconocio la existencia de este genocidio en 1918, incluso
estipulando la independencia de Armenia tras la disolucion del imperio
otomano. Otras fuentes, principalmente armenias, presuntamente
adjudican a Adolf Hitler su justificacion del Holocausto judío
reconociendo que “los turcos hicieron los mismo con los armenios”
en 1915.

Cien años despues, la polemica sigue servida. Armenia celebrara un
genocidio que ha sido paradojicamente un símbolo de su identidad
nacional. Por su parte, Turquía celebrara en esa misma fecha su
triunfo en la batalla de Gallípoli de 1915, donde lograron derrotar
el dominio naval britanico.

El estratega de esta defensa otomana en Gallípoli, ubicada en
el estrategico estrecho de los Dardanelos, fue un joven oficial,
Mustafa Kemal, posteriormente nombrado Ataturk, creador de la moderna
República turca en 1923, y a quien los armenios tambien acusan de
perpetrar otro genocidio contra armenios y kurdos entre 1922-1923.

Memoria historica mediante, hay heridas que no cierran.

http://www.cronicasdelaemigracion.com/opinion/roberto-mansilla-blanco/genocidio-silenciado/20150406104333065278.html