UN Structures Sure To Start Working In Turkey’s Interests After Movi

UN STRUCTURES SURE TO START WORKING IN TURKEY’S INTERESTS AFTER MOVING TO ISTANBUL – ARMENIAN MP

12:05 * 03.03.15

He who pays the piper calls the tune, Tevan Poghosyan, MP of the
Heritage party, told Tert.am as he commented on the transfer of US
bodies to Istanbul, Turkey.

Nearly three years ago, Mr Poghosyan, as Chairman of the International
Center for Human Development (ICHD), along more than 20 organizations
signed a letter addressed to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

“The problem is that UN offices are moving to a country that
disrespects human rights, numerous UN conventions. It is a state
where the oil stolen by the Islamic State is supplied. All the factors
considered, sooner or later Turkey will try to make the international
community serve its own interests, which may pose numerous threats in
the future. Well aware of that we raised the problem of such threats
in due time, and it is an accomplished fact now,” Mr Poghosyan told
Tert.am.

Many of UN experts are pointing out this fact as well.

“They will try to help coordination Armenia-related programs by other
centers. If financing is their reason for transfer to Istanbul it
means that he who pays the piper calls the tune,” Mr Poghosyan said.

According to Azatutyun radio, UNICEF and a number of women support
programs have moved to Istanbul, and the UNDP is going to.

“International practice shows that people living in a country for a
rather long period face a problem of loyalty in the course of time.

This is the reason why diplomats, after serving in a country for
a certain period, are transferred to a different state. But in this
case, we have a problem of institutional ideology,” Mr Poghosyan said.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/03/03/tevan-poghosyan/1605482

Teheran Accueille Un Concert Pour Le Centenaire Du Genocide Armenien

TEHERAN ACCUEILLE UN CONCERT POUR LE CENTENAIRE DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN CENTENAIRE

IRAN

Le 22 Fevrier, la commission locale de Teheran de coordination des
evenements du centenaire du genocide armenien a organise un concert
dedie a Komitas salle du centre culturel de Teheran Ararat dedie au
100e anniversaire du genocide.

Les Ambassadeurs et representants des ambassades de l’Uruguay, de la
France, de la Belgique, de Chypre, d’Inde, de la Bulgarie, du Japon et
d’Armenie, ainsi que quelque 350 invites de la communaute armenienne
de Teheran ont assiste a l’evenement.

Un court metrage sur les pays qui ont reconnu le genocide armenien a
ete projete, suivi par la performance de quatuor a cordes des melodies
de Komitas avec des arrangements d’Aslamazian.

Le choeur Mashtots a joue des chansons folkloriques armeniennes,
des chansons classiques et spirituelles dirigees par le chef Razmik
Ohanian.

mardi 3 mars 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=108467

Kirk Kerkorian, 393eme Homme Le Plus Riche Du Monde Et 130eme Aux Et

KIRK KERKORIAN, 393EME HOMME LE PLUS RICHE DU MONDE ET 130EME AUX ETATS-UNIS AVEC 4,2 MILLIARDS DE DOLLARS

FORTUNES

Selon le mensuel Forbes qui vient de publier la liste des plus riches
de la planète, l’armeno-americain Kirk Kerkorian est le 393ème homme
le plus riche du monde. L’an dernier Kirk Kerkorian etait classe
328ème. Il est egalement en 130ème position des plus grandes fortunes
des Etats-Unis. La fortune de Kirk Kerkorian (97 ans) est estimee a
4,2 milliards de dollars essentiellement places dans les casinos et
hôtels de luxe en majorite a Las Vegas, la capitale mondiale des jeux.

K. Kerkorian est marie et le père de deux enfants. Ancien pilote de
chasse et pilote d’avion de ligne, boxeur et ayant exerce de nombreux
metiers, Kirk Kerkorian a debute ses investissements a Las Vegas en
1962. En 1969 il ouvrait l’hôtel-casino MGM, le plus connu et le plus
imposant de Las Vegas. Il est egalement l’Armenien le plus fortune
de la planète. Il aida egalement beaucoup l’Armenie.

Krikor Amirzayan

mardi 3 mars 2015, Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

Discussion: Establishment of a New Anti-Corruption Council

PRESS RELEASE
MEDIA CENTER in YEREVAN
30 Saryan str.
Tel: +37460 505 898
+37499 755 898
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Discussion: Establishment of a New Anti-Corruption Council

March 3, 11:00: The Media Center will hold a panel discussion on the
law of the establishment of a new anti-corruption council. The
discussion will feature the efficiency of anti-corruption tools and
necessity of establishment of a new anti-corruption council.

The panelists include:

Varuzhan Hoktanyan, head of the Transparency Anti-Corruption Center

Tevan Poghosyan, MP, Heritage Faction

Marat Atovmyan, head of Yerevan Anti-Corruption Center, member of
Young Lawyers’ Association

The list of panelists may be updated.

http://www.media-center.am/

Centenaire Du Genocide Des Armeniens : Premiere Manifestation Ce Sam

CENTENAIRE DU GENOCIDE DES ARMENIENS : PREMIERE MANIFESTATION CE SAMEDI 7 MARS A AIX-EN-PROVENCE

DESTIMED, France
2 mars 2015

lundi 2 mars 2015

En 1915, un million et demi d’Armeniens -les deux tiers des Armeniens
de l’Empire ottoman- sont assassines par les Turcs ou deportes
sans retour. A l’occasion du centenaire de ce premier genocide du
XXe siècle, l’association Hay’s Club a mis sur pied un programme qui
s’etend de mars a septembre et compte une vingtaine de manifestations :
conferences, concerts, films, exposition…

La première est un colloque sur >. Elle se tiendra le samedi 7 mars de 9h30 a 18 heures a la
faculte de droit (amphitheâtre Dumas). Les intervenants de ce colloque
: Moderateur : Norbert Nourian – Delegue general du Centre d’etudes
economiques politiques et sociales (Cepos) – Yves Ternon, Docteur en
histoire a l’universite de Paris IV-Sorbonne, historien francais,
qui interviendra sur le thème : > –
Gaidz Minassian, Docteur en sciences politiques, chercheur au Groupe
d’analyse politique (GAP) a l’universite de Paris X Nanterre et au
Centre d’etudes et de recherches de l’enseignement superieur militaire
(Cerems) : > – Hamit
Bozarslan, Historien, specialiste de la Turquie et du Proche-Orient,
docteur en histoire et en sciences politiques, directeur d’etudes a
l’EHESS : >.

http://destimed.fr/+Centenaire-du-Genocide-des+

Art: Major Photographic Acquisition By Library & Archives Canada

MALAK: MAJOR PHOTOGRAPHIC ACQUISITION BY LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA

States News Service
March 1, 2015 Sunday

GATINEAU, QC

The following information was released by the Government of Canada:

On the 100th anniversary of the birth of acclaimed Canadian
photographer Malak (OC, MPA), Library and Archives Canada (LAC)
is pleased to announce the acquisition of a significant amount of
the artists photographic archives. The recent acquisition includes
approximately 200,000 photographic transparencies and negatives, ca.

19682001, as well as 13 exhibitions prints and textual records. This
constitutes a significant addition to the Malak (19152001) fonds held
by LAC.

LAC will work to make these holdings available through its website
as they become digitized.

Quick Facts

Malaks portrayal of Canadas geographical and cultural diversity has
been very influential in shaping how Canadians view their own country
and its visual identity.

Malaks images have been used on at least 11 Canadian stamps, and his
iconic photograph of the log drive below Parliament Hill appeared on
the $1 bill (19741989).

Malak was a recipient of the Key to the City of Ottawa, and played
a major role in the creation of the Canadian Tulip Festival.

Quotes

Our Government is proud to have acquired this important part of
our Canadian heritage. Library and Archives Canadas acquisitions
continue to document the rich diversity of Canadian society. The 100th
anniversary of the birth of acclaimed Canadian photographer Malak is
a great opportunity to reflect and appreciate our geographical and
cultural diversity.

– The Honourable Shelly Glover

Minister of Canadian Heritage and Official

Photography is an integral and invaluable part of our documentary
heritage. It serves as a recordproviding not only a repository
of information and knowledge, but also portraying a wide range of
emotionswhich gives it a broad and comprehensive relevance. Library
and Archives Canada will preserve the images of the Malak fonds in
optimal conditions and will digitize them to enable all Canadians to
discover them on our digital platforms.

– Dr. Guy Berthiaume

Librarian and Archivist of Canada

Our family is very pleased that the Malak fonds at LAC will now
constitute a far-reaching and unique photographic record of the beauty
of Canada, its landscape and its people, and their activities, seen
through the lens of an Armenian immigrant who truly loved his adopted
country. We are very excited that Malaks legacy will be conserved
and made available for Canadians to enjoy.

– Barbara Karsh and family

Associated Links

Malak Karsh fonds

Sneak preview of Malak Karsh fonds

Why Don’t Armenian Banks Issue Dram Loans?

WHY DON’T ARMENIAN BANKS ISSUE DRAM LOANS?

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
March 2 2015

2 March 2015 – 12:01pm

Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan. Exclusively to Vestnik Kavkaza

Since the end of last year the Armenian commercial market has been
characterized by passivity due to significant fluctuations in the dram
exchange rate against the dollar. Banks froze some deals, including
issuing personal loans and mortgage loans. Today, despite relevant
financial stability, the situation in the financial sphere of Armenia
is still worrying. Even though the peak of the crisis which was caused
by devaluation of the national currency is over in Armenia; however,
few people believe that the stability is real, and the financial
market won’t be changed. Armenian banks avoid issuing loans in drams.

Notwithstanding the type of a loan – personal, student, business
development, or agricultural loan – banks turn down many applications
for loans in drams. Meanwhile, some economists believe that from the
point of view of revaluation of the national currency, loans should
be issued in drams.

In several banks one can get only dollar loans, even though previously
they freely issued dram loans. Previously, Inekobank offered its
clients a Credit Plus Card with a loan for up to 1 million drams with
24-percent annual interest rate, recently the offer was transformed
into a loan in dollars. Moreover, banks don’t give explanations.

Furthermore, those who agree to a dollar loan find themselves in a
very difficult situation. Firstly, a client of a bank should count
his income in drams into an income in dollars. Secondly, loan payments
may grow due to a growth of the dollar exchange rate.

According to economist Vaagan Khachatryan, the fact that banks
refuse to issue loans even with state aid means that the Central
Bank is creating an artificial deficit of the dram. On the one hand,
it artificially increases the dram rate and doesn’t let it devaluate;
on the other hand, the Central Bank tries to make banks put dollars
on the market and fill the dollar deficit on the financial market.

Obviously, the deficit of the dram and the dollar will lead to
significant price growth. “The CB’s policy and the fact that the
government has no anti-crisis plan mean that the Armenian economy
is sick, while the reason for the disease is the government policy
of supporting corruption and the absence of competitiveness,”
Khachatryan thinks.

Banks reacted to the CB’s measures and launched protective mechanisms,
rejecting an active credit policy. As a result, the process of giving
loans is frozen now. Some banks even doubled their loan interest rates.

Meanwhile, relative financial stability has been registered in Armenia
in the last 1.5-2 months. The dram began to fall in late November; and
today it has stopped devaluation at the level of 476-478 drams per $1
(the initial exchange rate was 410 drams per $1). According to some
experts, the instability of the financial situation makes banks refuse
to issue loans. According to Ayk Gevorkyan, an economic observer of
Armenian Time, if stability was real and inspired confidence in banks
and economic units, nobody would agree to a 24-percent interest rate,
and banks would have to decrease the interest rate. “However, both
banks and economic units realize that it is an illusion of stability,”
Gevorkyan thinks.

Some experts believe that today it is not profitable for banks to
issue dram loans. For example, a person gets a loan for 100 million
drams ($208 thousand), in a year he should pay 124 million drams
($258 thousand). If a loan should be paid in a period of the dram
devaluation by 10%, for example, a bank will get not $258 thousand,
but $236 thousand.

The absence of loans which are thought to be a main source of
development is one of the most serious economic problems of Armenia.

Problems with issuing liand negatively influence the development of
business activity.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/economy/67152.html

We Remember The Armenian Genocide

WE REMEMBER THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Duke Chronicle
March 2 2015

By Stephen Ghazikhanian on March 2, 2015

“One day the gendarmes [Ottoman military police] came, and chased
us out of our house. They didn’t tell us where we were going, just
to get out of the house,” recounted Yeranouhi Kazanjian Najarian,
an Armenian Genocide survivor, in a recorded testimonial from the
early 1980s. She and her two sisters were the sole survivors from her
entire family–both her grandmothers were buried alive, her father
imprisoned and never seen again. Her mother, brother, and sister were
herded into the mountains with thousands of other Armenians and forced
to walk hundreds of miles south towards concentration camps. During
the deportation, her mother was left in the mountains to die and her
brother beheaded. While it has been over thirty years since Yeranouhi
recorded this testimonial, and only months short of a century since
these events took place, Yeranouhi’s words will always be remembered.

The atrocities Yeranouhi described were part of a systematic
extermination campaign by the Ottoman government against the
Armenians. Up to 1.5 million Armenians perished as a result of
outright killings or death marches through the Syrian Desert to
concentration camps in Deir ez-Zor. The Armenian Genocide marked the
first genocide of the 20th century. Ottoman success in eradicating
the Armenians from their historic homeland and the lack of sufficient
international outrage about these acts against humanity perpetuated
genocide throughout the 20th century and 21st century in WWII Europe,
Rwanda, Cambodia, Bosnia and Darfur. As means of justifying his
horrific actions, Hitler asked “Who, after all, speaks today of the
annihilation of the Armenians?”

It is our duty to tell the story of the Armenians. It is our duty
to remember each victim of genocide and to honor each survivor, for
these acts of commemoration are crucial in preventing future acts of
genocide and mass atrocities. The Coalition for Preserving Memory, an
organization founded by Duke students, is dedicated to memorializing
genocide victims from the 20th and 21st centuries in a way that will
be meaningful and relevant to future generations. CPM unites our
diverse Duke community to remember those who have unjustly perished.

It is our responsibility to make the promise of “Never Again”
a reality.

We invite you to join us in observing the 100th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide and commemorating its victims with an event entitled
“Stories of Survival”. It will take place on Tuesday, March 3rd, at
6:30pm in Sanford School of Public Policy Room 05. At the event, we
will hear panelists from the Duke and Triangle communities, including
Yeranouhi’s grandson, Jeff Essen T’74, share their family narratives
about the Armenian Genocide. With these harrowing descriptions of
destruction and moving stories of survival, we will honor the memory
of the genocide’s victims and survivors, remembering humanity at its
worst to inspire humanity at its best.

Stephen Ghazikhanian is a Trinity junior.

http://www.dukechronicle.com/articles/2015/03/02/we-remember-armenian-genocide

Armenia: Debate Swirls Over How To Care For Disabled Babies

ARMENIA: DEBATE SWIRLS OVER HOW TO CARE FOR DISABLED BABIES

EurasiaNet.org
March 2 2015

March 2, 2015 – 1:30pm, by Gayane Abrahamyan

Leo Forrest is just over a month old, but already has become a potent
symbol of the struggles and discrimination that disabled children
endure in Armenia. Whether his story can catalyze changes in public
attitudes, however, remains unclear.

Baby Leo was diagnosed at birth with Down syndrome. As the US
television network ABC reported earlier this month, doctors urged
Leo’s Armenian mother, Ruzanna Badalian, to give him to an orphanage.

She agreed. His father did not.

“The issue lies in the society, where parents have dogmatic ideas
of their children-to-be,” Leo’s father, New Zealander Samuel Forrest
commented in an interview with EurasiaNet.org in the Armenian capital,
Yerevan. “They imagine the perfect child, and when the newborn does
not match that mental image, they might abandon” the baby.

Data from the Ministry of Healthcare and the Ministry of Labor
and Social Affairs indicates that about 45 children are born with
Down syndrome in Armenia each year; 22 of these children were given
to orphanages in 2014. “Families often tend to hide their disabled
children, keep them locked in, and the main reason is indirect public
pressure,” said Harutyun Balasanian, director of Armenia’s oldest
state-run orphanage for disabled children, located in the village of
Nor Kharberd, 30 kilometers south of Yerevan.

One 2012 UNICEF survey of 6,042 disabled children, parents and social
workers reported that many of these children may never leave their
homes; still more may never leave the facilities that house them.

Lena Hayrapetian, head of the Labor and Social Affairs Ministry’s
Department of Family and Children, believes that while public attitudes
toward the disabled are a significant factor in discrimination,
the real problem lies with Armenia’s lack of infrastructure for the
disabled. “In our country, it is rather challenging to raise a child
with special needs, which require additional care, expenses,” noted
Hayrapetian. Annual per capita income in Armenia amounts to just $6,300
a year. To assist with expenses, the government gives families with
a disabled child monthly assistance of 23,000-30,000 drams (about
$50-$70). “There are few daycare centers, no community centers.”

In this child-centric culture, parents do not “give up right away.”

Not all of the 86 disabled children who were committed to orphanages
in 2014 were infants, she added. The government claims that only 13
percent of the 8,000 Armenian children registered with disabilities
live in orphanages.

Some Armenian advocates for disabled children’s rights contend
that medical professionals are a big part of the dilemma. “When you
return home with the child after giving birth, a pediatrician from a
[state-run] polyclinic comes to visit, and asks, ‘aren’t you giving
it away to an orphanage?'” said Varduhi Aramian, the director of a
non-governmental advocacy group called Armenian Camp. Aramian’s own
17-year-old son suffers from a musculoskeletal disorder.

“Pity is offered, rather than support or encouragement,” she said of
doctors, relatives and neighbors. “At every step, you are expected
to either give up your child, or it will die.”

Leo’s father, who has filed for divorce from his wife since their
son’s January 21 birth, told a similar story. “The doctor told us we
had the choice of rejecting him,” said Forrest, who does not speak
Armenian. In an open letter published earlier this month, Leo’s mother
described the choice as “the hardest decision of my life to be made
within a matter of a few hours.”

The Margaryan Medical Center, which handled the delivery, denied a
request to interview the physician responsible for Leo’s care.

Other doctors say that in such situations they simply explain to
parents the problems that the child will face. Frustrated by the
controversy, a senior healthcare ministry official conceded that
“doctors should have explained the issue, informed [the parents]
about the consequences, but should have left the parents to make an
independent decision.”

“I doubt they were given time to think it over,” said Karine
Saribekian, head of the ministry’s Maternity and Childcare Department.

Arshak Jerjerian, the deputy director of the Republican Institute
of Reproductive Health, Perinatology and Gynecology, emphasized that
“the decision is always made by parents; never by doctors.”

“The issue is that parents making that decision are always trying
to find other reasons to justify their decision,” said Jerierian,
who claimed to know Leo’s medical personnel well. He characterized
them as impeccable professionals.

It is “the medical personnel’s attitude that misguides parents into
abandoning their children with birth defects,” contended Balasanian,
who has worked with special-needs children for 20 years.

Disabled Armenian children raised by their families experience plenty
of hardship. The 2012 UNICEF survey found that 77 percent of the 55
parents surveyed said that their child did not receive rehabilitation
therapy. Forty-eight percent of the mentally challenged and 56 percent
of the hearing impaired children surveyed did not attend school at
all. Twelve percent claimed they had no friends.

Meanwhile, experts claim progress has been achieved over the past
decade; Armenia is starting to break with Soviet-era traditions,
under which individuals with physical or mental challenges should be
kept apart and out-of-view.

In 117 Armenian public schools — roughly 8 percent of the overall
total – special-needs children now are placed in general classrooms.

Despite objections from some parents and teachers, UNICEF Educational
Project Manager Mary Poghosian believes the policy is having a
beneficial effect. In one recent UNICEF survey, yet to be published,
most respondents termed “unacceptable” the idea of committing disabled
children to an orphanage, she claimed.

“Attitudes change when people can see [disabled children] next to them,
in the same classroom with them,” Poghosian commented.

For now, the Armenian parents of other disabled children, like Leo,
can only hope that such change will continue.

Editor’s note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a freelance reporter and editor
in Yerevan.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72351

Exhibition Dedicated To Armenia To Be Opened At New York’s Metropoli

EXHIBITION DEDICATED TO ARMENIA TO BE OPENED AT NEW YORK’S METROPOLITAN MUSEUM – PHOTOS

10:37, 2 March, 2015

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. An exhibition devoted to Armenia
may be held in one the world’s most prominent cultural centers the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, located in New York City in 2017. The
representatives of the museum’s Department of Medieval Art and
the Cloisters are currently in Armenia discussing the details of
organization of the possible exhibition.

On March 1, the head of Department of Medieval Art and the Cloisters
at The Metropolitan Museum of Art Griffith Mann and Helen Evans, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Michael Jaharis Curator for Byzantine Art,
visited the History Museum of Armenia, toured in the cultural centre,
and watched the exhibits.

Following the tour, Helen Evans, the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s
Michael Jaharis Curator for Byzantine Art, talked to the journalists
and noted that everything was great, but they are particularly
interested in the medieval art.

As reports “Armenpress”, among other things, Evans noted: “We in
our museum have a tradition to discuss the exhibitions 3-5 years
beforehand and clarify all things. It’s noteworthy that the Armenian
art was introduced in a row of exhibitions. The Armenian samples
became a part of three different exhibitions.” In addition, Helen
Evans stated that she is hopeful that an exhibition dedicated to
Armenia will be held at Metropolitan in 2017.

Michel David-Weill Curator in Charge of the Department of Medieval Art
and the Cloisters Griffith Mann underscored that he was particularly
impressed that history is introduced by the objects.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/795989/exhibition-dedicated-to-armenia-to-be-opened-at-new-yorks-metropolitan-museum.html