Armenia To Deepen Agricultural Cooperation With Israel

ARMENIA TO DEEPEN AGRICULTURAL COOPERATION WITH ISRAEL

ARMENPRESS
APRIL 16, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, APRIL 16, ARMENPRESS: Armenia and Israel will sign a
cooperation agreement in the field of economy. The news was announced
by Sergo Karapetyan, Armenian Minister of Agriculture, and Orit Noked,
Agriculture and Rural development Minister of Israel,at April 16’s
press conference.

Orit Noked expressed the hope that the cooperation will not only be in
the form of an agreement but will become a reality in a few years. The
Minister informed that a special working group will be formed to solve
the issues discussed at the meeting. The discussion, in particular,
touched upon such issues as the sharing of work experience in livestock
production sector as well as the issues of specialist trainings.

“Our relations with Israel have a great potential of development”,
Armenian Minister of Agriculture said. He expressed the conviction
that mutual visits will boost cooperation and development in the
agricultural field.

Noked invited Karaperyan to a response visit to Israel in May.

The delegation headed by Orit Noked will pay a two-day visit in
Armenia on April 15-17.

Easter Is Celebrated At Armenian Church In Turkey’s Diyarbakir

EASTER IS CELEBRATED AT ARMENIAN CHURCH IN TURKEY’S DIYARBAKIR

news.am
April 16, 2012 | 10:01

An Easter mass was celebrated for the first time in the St. Giragos
Armenian Church in Diyarbakir, Turkey, ever since its restoration.

The Divine Liturgy was served by pastor Avedis Tabashyan of the Forty
Children Church in Hatay Province, Turkish Haberfx informs.

Aside from the Diyarbakir Armenians, Mayor Abdullah Demirbas of Sur
city and other officials also attended the Holy Mass.

The St. Giragos Armenian Church, which is one the biggest churches
in the Middle East, was reopened and consecrated on October 22, 2011,
and the first mass was celebrated on the next day.

The St. Giragos Armenian Church of Diyarbakir was built in 1376 at the
city’s Hancepek district, which was called the “gavur (non-Muslim;
infidel) district” by the local Muslims, since a great number of
Christians used to live there until the Armenian Genocide.

Armenian Opposition Ready To Cooperate To Get Rid Of Ruling Regime

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION READY TO COOPERATE TO GET RID OF RULING REGIME

news.am
April 17, 2012 | 15:29

YEREVAN.- The opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC) bloc is
ready to do everything to get rid of present authorities, ANC leader
Levon Ter-Petrosyan said.

“We are ready to cooperate with any political force to get rid of
the ruling regime,” he told reporters on Tuesday.

He is confident that their main goal is to work hard not to have
election rigging. “We will work hard. Serzh Sargsyan will not be a
president on May 7,” he added.

On Tuesday ANC activists headed by Levon Ter-Petrosyan visited Komitas
Pantheon-Park in Yerevan to commemorate the 80th anniversary of former
speaker Karen Demirchyan killed during the 1999 Armenian parliament
terror attack.

Malaysia May Buy Russian Missiles

MALAYSIA MAY BUY RUSSIAN MISSILES

PanARMENIAN.Net
April 17, 2012 – 15:58 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Malaysia is close to a contract with Russia on
the delivery of Kornet antitank missile systems, Igla portable
anti-aircraft missiles and is also negotiating a deal on Russian
guided missile and patrol boats, Russian state-controlled arms exporter
Rosoboronexport said on Tuesday, April 17, according to RIA Novosti.

Rosoboronexport deputy chief Viktor Komardin said Russia is ready to
sell Malaysia a license to build Molniya-class guided missile boats
and Mirazh-class patrol boats.

“Malaysia is interested in our Molniya and Mirazh boats,” he said.

“This refers to their construction under license at local shipyards
as shipbuilding in Malaysia is well developed.”

New Treatment For Prostate Cancer Gives ‘Perfect Results’

NEW TREATMENT FOR PROSTATE CANCER GIVES ‘PERFECT RESULTS’

Tert.am
17.04.12

A new treatment for prostate cancer can rid the disease from nine in
ten men without debilitating side effects, a study has found, leading
to new hope for tens of thousands of men, The Telegraph reports.

It is hoped the new treatment, which involves heating only the
tumours with a highly focused ultrasound, will mean men can be treated
without an overnight stay in hospital and avoiding the distressing
side effects associated with current therapies.

A study has found that focal HIFU, high-intensity focused ultrasound,
provides the ‘perfect’ outcome of no major side effects and free of
cancer 12 months after treatment, in nine out of ten cases.

Traditional surgery or radiotherapy can only provide the perfect
outcome in half of cases currently.

Experts have said the results are ‘very encouraging’ and were a
‘paradigm’ shift in treatment of the disease.

It is hoped that large scale trials can now begin so the treatment
could be offered routinely on the NHS within five years.

ISTANBUL: Watch those words

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 15 2012

Watch those words

by Pat Yale

A flexible attitude. A readiness to learn the language. A good support
network. These are suggestions that have come up time and again in my
ongoing straw poll of the characteristics that might help someone make
a success of a new life in Turkey.
Other suggestions have been more specific. For example, `Try to find
out the sensitivities in Turkish culture. Avoid talking about
sensitive or taboo issues when you meet Turkish people for the first
time; only discuss them with your best Turkish friends, and even then
be careful,’ says Dutch enjoy-istanbul.com writer Marc Guillet. `Turks
are very proud and nationalistic and they don’t like to be criticized
(or have the feeling to be criticized) by a foreigner. Those
sensitive/taboo issues/words are: Ataturk, Armenian genocide, PKK,
terrorism, politics.’

Wise words, but to Guillet that doesn’t mean that there aren’t plenty
of safe topics with which to engage new friends: `Talk in general
about issues that Turks are passionate about, like football, soaps,
Turkish food, music, movies, fashion, the beauty of their women, cars,
traffic, your favorite places in İstanbul and Turkey.’

What could be easier and more sensible? After all, every country has
its sensitive subjects. In the UK of my childhood, for example, it
might not have been especially wise for a newcomer to start laying
down the law about the Irish problem in the aftermath of some dreadful
atrocity, and visitors to Germany are probably wise to skirt around
the subject of the Nazis unless they know who they’re talking to. Much
better, always, to look for common-ground topics, at least in the
early days.

Others have emphasized the need to come to grips with Turkish culture
rather than sticking with what feels familiar. `Be prepared for
culture shock and show some respect for the country you have chosen to
move to,’ says `Perking the Pansies’ author Jack Scott, who settled in
Bodrum. `Do what you can to integrate. Understand where you are. Learn
a little history and read the English language newspapers.’

CaptivatingCappadocia.com author Duke Dillard more or less echoes
those sentiments but adds another thought about Turkish culture: `One
mistake expats often make when they arrive in Istanbul or Ankara is to
assume that Turks think like they do. The cities are well developed
with the latest technology and shopping malls and nice cars, so Turks
must think like Europeans. However, most of Turkey is in Asia and the
worldview of the average Turk is not European. That is not a negative.
I am not making a judgment here, but expats who understand this idea,
have a better experience in Turkey and are able to relate to their
Turkish friends on a deeper level.’ Others have commented that
exploring Turkey will help a newcomer understand it better. `Bridge
the gap between you and your new home, learn about the food, culture
and see different places within Turkey,’ suggests Natalie Sayin,
author of turkishtravelblog.com.

In the end, though, I’m leaving the last word to Jack Scott. What
characteristics do you need to make a go of it as an expat here? `The
wisdom of Solomon and the patience of a saint.’ Which, when you come
to think of it, are probably the characteristics you need to make a go
of life anywhere in the world.

Another false bomb alarm in Yerevan

Another false bomb alarm in Yerevan

13:23 . 14/04

There was again a false bomb alarm in Yerevan today. The caller has
said the explosive was allegedly placed at Arabkir’s administrative
building, near Komitas 49 building.

The police, emergency situations ministry coworkers and ambulances
arrived at the scene.

It turned out the alarm was false.

http://www.yerkirmedia.am/?act=news&lan=en&id=6407

Commentary: Armenian Genocide in Progress

Commentary: Armenian Genocide in Progress
By Edmond Y. Azadian –
The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
Saturday, April 14, 2012

Category:Armenian Genocide

Why is the Armenian Genocide relevant today, after 97 years? This
question is asked often by non-Armenians and sometimes even by
Armenians themselves. Therefore, we need a broader definition of that
act of ethnic cleansing that befell the Armenian nation in order to
understand its relevance today.

First of all, the Genocide is not an act that began and ended in 1915.
It had a long history before that date – and it has been continuing
since that date – with the single purpose of exterminating the entire
Armenian race from the face of the earth.

Nazi Germany invented the concept of `vital space’ just before and
during World War II. Their goal was to extend and expand Germany at
the expense of other nations. But the Turks had already been
practicing that philosophy ever since they set foot on the Anatolian
plateau by displacing and exterminating the local people, and from
there on, building their empire.

The major obstacle in their way was the declining Byzantine Empire,
which was destroyed effectively by Fatih Sultan Muhammad in 1453 AD.

The corruption, political myopia and loss of self-respect contributed
to the downfall of the Byzantines, perhaps more than the might of the
emerging Ottomans.

Armenia and the Armenians became the collateral damage in that
apocalyptic collision.

>From then on, it was a natural process for the Turks to seek and
attain that vital space in their need for settlement and expansion.

The process of genocide began against the Armenians with the
imposition of the Ottoman rule on historic Armenia.

The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide, which was adopted by the United Nations on December 9, 1948,
can be applied retroactively against the Turkish government, which
continually violated the principles of that convention.

Article 2 of the UN Convention defines genocide in the following terms:

1.killing members of the group;
2.causing serious bodily or mental harm to the members of the group;
3.deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated
to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
4.imposing measures intended to prevent birth within the group and
5.forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
All the above conditions were imposed on the Armenians by the Ottoman
rulers, a time which Turkey’s present foreign minister considers one
when there were ideal and idyllic relations between the rulers and
their slave society.

The most cynical condition imposed on the Armenians was section (e) of
the article 2, namely `forcibly transferring children of the group to
another group.’ This case was a wicked component of the Janissary
system, whereby the Ottoman government would seek and kidnap (or
`collect,’ as the term was) the recruits as part of devshirmes, the
name given to the young kidnapping victims. After years of rigorous
military training, these converts were transformed into the most
brutal force used to repress the Armenians and other Christians, the
very people who had given birth to them.

The 1915 Genocide was only a modern version of what was being
perpetrated against the Armenians for centuries before that date. But
the Genocide was not a single act that took place at a certain date
and ended at a certain date. It is a process that has continued since
1915 and continues even to this day. That is why it is important to
broaden its definition and its existential impact on the Armenian
history.

After Turkey was defeated during World War I, the Ittihadist leaders
fled the country to avoid the punishments the military trials were
expected to mete out, but the rank and file, the government
apparatchiks who actually carried out the grisly orders of their
leaders, were still in the country and ready to change their skin and
enter the service of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, whose policy of the
Turkification of Turkey was no different from that of his
predecessors. That is why the Kemalist forces were equally ruthless in
dumping the Greeks into the sea in Smyrna and deporting the Armenians
from Cilicia.

One of the reasons historian Taner Akçam believes Turkey is reluctant
to recognize the Genocide is the fear of compensation, since most of
the families ruling Turkey’s economy now have been sitting on wealth
confiscated from the Armenians.

Ataturk’s Turkification policy was more modern, effective and
thorough, albeit with all the trimmings of racism, which the West
chose to ignore.

Ataturk and his successors were no more charitable than their
Ittihadist predecessors, as they demonstrated time and again their
ruthless policies against the minorities, especially the Armenians,
virtually destroying Armenian schools and applying all manner of legal
gymnastics to the terms of the Treaty of Lausanne of 1923.

And then, another deportation during World War II and its aftermath,
concocting a tax rule, called Wealth Tax (Varlik Vergisi) which ruined
the Armenian, Greek and Jewish communities and murdered many of its
business leaders in the labor camps of Ashkala.

This was the visible phase of the continuing Genocide told by
Armenians leaving Istanbul, especially after the barbaric attacks of
September 6, 1955, in demonstrations sanctioned and organized by the
government, as later revelations came to prove.

Incidentally, similar demonstrations were organized by the government
in Istanbul to commemorate the `genocide’ of Khojali (in Karabagh),
with the participation of the Istanbul Mayor Kadir Topbas and the
Minister of Interior Idris Naim Sahim. The latter spoke to a
bloodthirsty crowd vowing to avenge the blood of Khojali victims.

While these violent acts of terror were being perpetrated against
Armenians in Istanbul recently, the inexorable process of genocide was
continuing against the surviving Armenians in the interior. Millions
of them have been silently converted to Islam or have tried to conceal
their identity in any way they could in order to escape arbitrary
killing, persecution, property confiscation and abuse for being
`gavours.’ The outside world seldom hears about the plight of those
left behind.

Recently, an interesting book was published by a young writer whose
family had survived in the interiors, in Palu, close to the Syrian
border. The book is titled Grey Wolves and White Doves. Although it is
presented as a work of fiction, every abuse, insult and murder
perpetrated against Armenians in that region and described in the book
can be corroborated by eyewitness accounts.The book does not delve
into the Genocide era nor the Ashkala period; instead, it gives
insights into the 1960s and ’70s. The description of a single incident
gives the entire tenor of this 400-page docudrama.

The protagonist, Jonah, and his two brothers, are being taken to the
passport office in Istanbul to receive exit visas to leave for the
Armenian seminary in Jerusalem: `[the passport officer] was clearly
intrigued. Armenians from the Mardin District. His tone was one of
astonishment mixed with a healthy dose of contempt. `I thought we had
solved the Armenian question and no gavours were left in Anatolia.”

The reluctance of the officer – who had taken the boys to be Jews –
softens upon receiving the proper amount of bribes and he issues the
visas with the following comments: `What do I care if the Jewish
bastards go to Jerusalem or not? As far as I’m concerned, it would be
so much the better for Turkey if they did. We need to get rid of all
of you! Jews, Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Kurds – all the same
despicable vermin!’

Today, the official mentality of the government is no different. The
Turkish government today continues to commit cultural genocide against
2,000 Armenian churches and monasteries, showcasing only the Akhtamar
and Diyrabekir churches to dupe Europe.

The Genocide not only killed 1.5 million, but also many more unborn
millions. This is not an unusual demographic projection, since it has
its precedence. Thus, when Poland joined the EU, its president
demanded that his country be given voting power in the EU Parliament
than its actual population warranted, arguing that Poland’s population
today would have been 25 million more had it not been for the Nazi
extermination. Today the number of Kurds in Turkey has grown to 20-22
million. Had Armenians been left in their historic habitat, they would
certainly have matched that number.

Therefore, the guilt of the Genocide extends over the unborn, which
would have ranked Armenia among the major powers in the region.

Unfortunately, today the Azeri President Ilham Aliyev speaks with
contempt about the dwindling population of Armenia, a direct result of
the Turkish-Azeri blockade in their continuing policy of destroying
Armenia.

The Genocide has also another dimension, which we consider to be our
curse, but we seldom relate to the Turkish plan of assimilating
Armenians. During the negotiations leading to the signing of the
Lausanne Treaty, Lord Curzon of Britain asked the Turkish
representative, Ismet Onunu, whether Turkey would be willing to absorb
the surviving Armenian refugees, and Onunu cynically retorts: `There
are vast and vacant lands in Canada and Brazil. Why don’t you settle
them there?’

And Armenians did exactly what Onunu had prescribed for them.

Yes, indeed, Armenians are living in affluent societies, but material
wealth does not compensate for the loss of identity. And who said that
had Armenians continued to live in their ancestral lands, they would
be less affluent than they are today in the West?

The child who cannot utter his mother tongue is a continuing victim of
the Genocide, no matter how much opulence is afforded to him.

Unfortunately, world powers are still courting their `trusted ally’
and dancing around the word `genocide’ while Turkey’s guilt is
festering and poisoning modern history and civilization.

L’institut de recherche du sud de Birmingham obtient $580K pour trav

ARMENIE
L’institut de recherche du sud de Birmingham obtient 580000 $ pour
travailler en Arménie

L’institut de recherches du Sud de Birmingham a obtenu un marché de
580000 $ pour aider à protéger l’Arménie contre les menaces
biologiques.

L’institut exécute un travail semblable en Ukraine. Dans ce pays un
laboratoire de niveau international a été mis en place.

En Arménie, l’institut aidera à mettre en place un programme contre
les armes de destruction de masse dont les agents biologiques.

dimanche 15 avril 2012,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Les Commandos de L’Affiche rouge

LIVRES
Les Commandos de L’Affiche rouge

Les Commandos de L’Affiche rouge est un essai écrit par Arsène
Tchakarian et Hélène Kosséian-Bairamian, édité en mai 2012 aux
éditions Du Rocher.

Fin 1942. Dans Paris occupé par les Allemands, l’ouvrier poète Missak
Manouchian prend la tête d’un groupe de jeunes Juifs, Hongrois,
Polonais, Roumains, Espagnols, Italiens, Arméniens, tous déterminés à
combattre pour libérer la France.

Dans la clandestinité et au péril de leur vie, les membres de ce
groupe vont devenir des héros. Leurs actions : harceler l’occupant,
dérailler les chemins de fer, arrêter les dénonciateurs.

Mais la police française va finir par les arrêter. Le 21 février 1944,
après trois jours de procès, le verdict tombe. Les membres du groupe
de Manouchian sont condamnés à mort. Les nazis vont faire de cette
arrestation une propagande outrageuse et placarder des affiches de ces
vingt-deux hommes et de cette femme, transformés en criminels, sur les
murs du Tout-Paris et dans la France entière : « l’armée du crime ».
Le jour même, à 15 heures, au mont Valérien, des salves de balles vont
cribler les corps de ces résistants.

La police n’aurait pas retrouvé leur trace sans l’aide d’un
dénonciateur. Qui a vendu le groupe ? Après soixante ans de recherches
et de questionnements, Arsène Tchakarian, dernier survivant de ces
clandestins, continue à faire vivre la mémoire de la Résistance et
pose la question sans détours. Il donne le nom du coupable, celui qui
a sonné la mort de ses compagnons de l’ombre.

Hélène Kosséian-Bairamian est journaliste et écrivain. Elle est
coauteur du documentaire Arménie, La Renaissance, réalisé par Robert
Kéchichian.

ISBN-13 : 9782268074061

dimanche 15 avril 2012,
Jean Eckian ©armenews.com