Opposition Parliamentary Factions Demand Holding Of Extraordinary Se

OPPOSITION PARLIAMENTARY FACTIONS DEMAND HOLDING OF EXTRAORDINARY SESSION BECAUSE OF BEATING UP ARAM MANUKYAN AND VETERANS OF THE KARABAKH WAR

by Nana Martirosyan

Monday, December 15, 12:40

The opposition parliamentary factions demand holding of extraordinary
session because of beating up of a member of the parliament from
Armenian National Congress, Aram Manukyan, and veterans of the Karabakh
war, Suren Sargsyan, Razmik Petrosyan and Manvel Egiazaryan.

Secretary of the Prosperous Armenia Party faction, Naira Zohrabyan,
said that the parliament should delay discussion of the issues involved
in the agenda and immediately start discussing the above mentioned
incidents, otherwise the PAP will boycott the session.

The head of the Heritage faction, Ruben Hakobyan, said that they will
also boycott the parliamentary session if the issue is not discussed.

For her part, the head of the Orinats Yerkir faction, Heghine
Bisharyan, said that beating up of Aram Manukyan is like a slap in
the face of the whole parliament. She also added that beating up
of a member of the parliament and Karabakh war veterans has left a
negative trace in the Armenian society. Therefore, the parliament
should adequately assess the situation. She also said about the
readiness of their faction to boycott the session.

Speaker of the parliament, Galust Sahakyan, did not rule out the
possibility of discussion of the incidents at the extraordinary
session of the parliament and offered to prepare the text of the
statement on the matter.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=6CE42F90-843E-11E4-B4BA0EB7C0D21663

La Communaute Internationale Ne Doit Pas Permettre Que La Suprematie

LA COMMUNAUTE INTERNATIONALE NE DOIT PAS PERMETTRE QUE LA SUPREMATIE DE LA LOI SOIT REMPLACEE PAR LA SUPREMATIE DU PETROLE

ARMENIE

Hayastani Hanrapetoutioun reproduit le discours du Ministre des
AE, Edward Nalbandian, au Conseil Ministeriel de l’OSCE a Bâle,
a l’occasion duquel il a accuse Bakou de ne pas respecter les
principes et les fondements memes de l’organisation.

La Representante Du FMI Affirme Que L’Armenie Peut Eviter D’etre Ent

LA REPRESENTANTE DU FMI AFFIRME QUE L’ARMENIE PEUT EVITER D’ETRE ENTRAENEE PAR LA CRISE EN RUSSIE AVEC UNE BONNE PREPARATION

ARMENIE

Les inquietudes grandissent en Armenie sur la facon dont elle sera
affectee par les problèmes economiques de la Russie provoques par
les sanctions internationales mais selon un representant du Fonds
monetaire international la stabilite interne servira de contre-poids
contre le malaise etranger.

Teresa Sanchez Daban, Representante residente du FMI, a declare
aux journalistes que la Banque centrale de l’Armenie (CB) et le
Gouvernement de l’Armenie peuvent preserver la stabilite economique
et financière avec la mise en oeuvre correcte d’une politique.

> a declare Sanchez. >.

Afin de preserver la stabilite de la situation, le FMI a conseille
au gouvernement armenien de depenser plus tout en soulignant qu’il
est important d’avoir un budget stable.

Neanmoins, l’Armenie devra faire face aussi a des difficultes.

Au cours des 10 derniers mois, les transferts de la Russie a
l’Armenie ont diminue de plus de 53 millions de dollars (sur un
montant de 1,34 milliard de dollars) ce qui, selon l’evaluation du
FMI, est conditionnes par la diminution des prix du petrole sur le
marche international et les problèmes auxquels l’economie russe est
confrontee en raison des sanctions occidentales.

Le FMI, en meme temps, ne craint pas un niveau eleve d’inflation a la
fin de l’annee en Armenie, en disant que la Banque Centrale sera en
mesure de preserver la hausse des prix dans la gamme des 4% prevue
en l’expliquant par la faible inflation (1,3 pour cent) jusqu’ici
cette annee.

Lors de la reunion gouvernementale de jeudi le Premier ministre
Hovik Abrahamian a demande une surveillance etroite des biens de
consommation afin de temperer les rumeurs sur une hausse de 10 a 15
pour cent de l’inflation attendue dans les prochaines semaines.

La representante du FMI n’a pas su prevoir comment les evenements
vont suivre avec la devualuation du dram et les achats liees a la
Nouvelle Annee.

7 Armenian Ministers Arrive In Tehran

7 ARMENIAN MINISTERS ARRIVE IN TEHRAN

December 15, 2014 09:43

Photo:

Yerevan/Mediamax/. 7 members of the Armenian government will be
in Tehran to take part in the session of the Armenian-Iranian
Intergovernmental Commission today.

Armenian Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, Minister of Finance,
Minister of Transport and Communication, Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Minister of Agriculture, Minister of Urban Development and Minister
of Health will take part in the meeting, Iranian Tasnim agency reports.

In October 2014, Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan visited
Tehran.

– See more at:

http://neftegaz.ru/
http://www.mediamax.am/en/news/foreignpolicy/12584/#sthash.wmCRddam.dpuf

Archaeologists Unveil Amenhotep III Statue Rescued After 3,200 Years

ARCHAEOLOGISTS UNVEIL AMENHOTEP III STATUE RESCUED AFTER 3,200 YEARS

12:48, 15 Dec 2014

Two huge statues of Egyptian Pharoah Amenhotep III that were toppled
by an earthquake in the year 1,200 B.C., have been re-erected on their
bases at the northern entrance to the ruler’s funerary temple on the
west bank of the Nile River here, the GlobalPost reports.

An international team of archaeologists headed by Armenia’s Hourig
Sourouzian and Egypt’s Abdelkarim Karrar on Sunday unveiled the second
of the two colossal restored statues in the presence of Egyptian
Antiquities Minister Mamduh al Damati and Luxor Gov. Tarek Saad el Din.

The two statues, which had broken into some 200 chunks of stone and
had lain submerged in the river had suffered the ravages of 3,200
years of humidity, erosion and vandalism.

The project to raise them, which was deemed an emergency by
archaeological and cultural authorities, was undertaken in two stages
within a single year, an unusual feat.

The first stage was completed between January and March 2014, when
more than 200 fragments of the statues were removed from the water,
transported 50 meters (yards) to dry land and reassembled into the
first of the two colossi standing 12.35 meters (40.5 feet) high and
showing the pharoah striding forward.

In November, the second stage was carried out, in which the second
statue – this one standing 12.93 meters (42.4 feet) high and weighing
110 tons – was raised and reassembled over the course of a month and
10 days.

“It’s the best reconstruction of colossal (statues) in the world,”
the technical director of the operation, Spanish archaeologist and
restoration expert Migual Angel Lopez, told Efe.

The project was made possible thanks to a system of compressed air
cushions and pulleys capable of moving items weighing up to 70 tons.

The huge pieces of stone were glued together with various types of
resins and reinforced with steel spikes.

Plans are for the entire temple – which also includes the famous
Colossi of Memnon, which are also huge, albeit seated and badly
damaged, statues of Amenhotep III, as well as three patios, a
peristyle, a sanctuary and other archaeological elements – to be
made into a museum in which assorted monumental art and other works
commissioned by the pharoah will be displayed.

Amenhotep III was the son of Pharoah Thutmose IV and belonged to
the 18th Egyptian dynasty, which ruled Egypt from 1554-1304 B.C.,
during which time the empire’s capital was located at Thebes.

The pharoah – who was the grandfather of Tutankhamen – died in
about 1354 B.C. and experts say his reign marked Ancient Egyptian
civilization’s political and cultural zenith.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/12/15/archaeologists-unveil-amenhotep-iii-statue-rescued-after-3200-years/

Opposition Boycotting Parliament Session In Armenia, Demanding A Dis

OPPOSITION BOYCOTTING PARLIAMENT SESSION IN ARMENIA, DEMANDING A DISCUSSION ON THE LAWMAKER BEATING

YEREVAN, December 15. /ARKA/. The opposition factions of the Armenian
parliament are boycotting the special session that started on Monday
after the speaker Galust Sahakyan refused to hold a special discussion
on the fact of attack on the opposition Armenian National Congress
(ANC) deputy Aram Manukyan, Novosti-Armenia reports.

The secretary of ANC parliament faction Aram Manukyan was attacked last
Thursday outside his house in Yerevan. The case is under investigation.

The speaker told the opposition parties that they can make a statement
on the attack.

“If needed, we can hold a special session on the matter after 18:30,
but it is not appropriate to interrupt the current special session”,
the speaker said after a 20-minute break he took to discuss the issue
with the heads of the factions.

After the speaker’s statement, the head of Heritage faction Ruben
Hakobyan said the five off-power parties are boycotting the parliament
session until a special discussion is held on the attack on Manukyan.

The Prosperous Armenia, Heritahe, Orinats Yerkir, ARF Dashnaktsutiun
and the ANC factions left the parliament.

The police reported on Monday, 41-year-old Arshak Svazyan was detained
early morning on Sunday December 14, suspected of attacking the
lawmaker. The investigation is under way. -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/opposition_boycotting_parliament_session_in_armenia_demanding_a_discussion_on_the_lawmaker_beating/#sthash.jFJuqHL1.dpuf

Inviting Turkish President To Armenia Was Balanced Step: Ara Gochuny

INVITING TURKISH PRESIDENT TO ARMENIA WAS BALANCED STEP: ARA GOCHUNYAN

10:52, 15 December, 2014

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. It’s natural that advancing the
100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide the discussions dedicated
to the Armenian question will be intensified both among the Armenians
and the Turks. Notwithstanding, those discussions do not guarantee
that there will be positive shifts regarding the issue by April 24,
2014. The Editor-in-Chief of the Istanbul-based Armenian periodical
Ara Gochunyan stated this in an interview to “Armenpress” News Agency.

– During the recent months, the visits of a row of Turkish
intellectuals to Armenia have shown that there is a problem of
understanding and being understood by each other both in the Armenian
and Turkish sides. In Your opinion, what can help us to fix this
issue at least to some extent?

– If I try to give a shot answer, I’ll say – time. A serious political
will is necessary to settle these problematic relations. And that will
must be on the state level to conduct the process of regulation on much
firmer basis. But as the Armenian-Turkish relations are not merely
irregular, but also bear the burden of the failed Zurich protocols
and deep atmosphere of lack of confidence, the states have only
a limited opportunity to take the initiative. In these conditions
the process continues predominantly on the societal level, which,
naturally, can have encouraging expressions, but we have to accept
that the public dialogue cannot replace the relations between states.

– Yet in May, the President of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan
announced that he invites the Turkish President to Armenia on April 24,
2015. In Your opinion, will any high ranking Turkish official visit
Armenia, even not on the presidential level, next year on April 24?

– The invitation of President Serzh Sargsyan was a very constructive
and balanced initiative. Armenia’s peaceful approaches have
been precisely expressed; the importance Armenia attaches to the
co-existence of the two neighbors and that we look at future. The
public dialogue was shaken by the handicapped state relations after
the failure of the Zurich protocols.

Only after seeing the impact of the Armenian side’s initiatives and
encountering with the international family’s attitude, the Turkish
side will make up its mind to visit Armenia or not, and if yes,
on what level.

(THE FULL VERSION OF THE INTERVIEW IS AVAILABLE IN ARMENIAN)

Interview by Araks Kasyan

http://armenpress.am/arm/news/787788/inviting-turkish-president-to-armenia-was-balanced-step-ara-gochunyan.html
http://armenpress.am/eng/news/787788/inviting-turkish-president-to-armenia-was-balanced-step-ara-gochunyan.html

OSCE co-chairs meet in Berlin

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Dec 13 2014

OSCE co-chairs meet in Berlin

13 December 2014 – 12:01pm

The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group arrived in Berlin on December
11th in order to discuss possible ways to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, US co-chair James Warlick is quoted as saying.

Some experts expressed the idea that the meeting is being held in
Berlin because Germany is going to take a more active role in the
peaceful resolution process.

However German political analyst Heiko Langner says that such a view
is a result of exaggeration.

In the same time, Germany may indeed try to mediate between the
countries of the Minsk Group itself, whose positions are often
different, Langner said.

Russian Gas in Europe after South Stream

Silk Road Reporters
Dec 13 2014

Russian Gas in Europe after South Stream

Published by Joshua NoonanDecember 13, 2014

On 11 December 2014, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak phoned
European Commissioner Maros Sevcovic stating that the South Stream gas
pipeline project has been canceled. Who are the winners and losers in
this culmination of the what some have called the first pipeline war?
The statement to the EC confirmed President Putin’s statement on 1
December in Ankara announcing the rerouting of Russian gas to Turkey.

In 2007, South Stream was created to rival the proposed Nabucco
Pipeline which would go from the Caspian to Europe via the Balkans. By
the time of conceding the cancellation of South Stream, Gazprom, the
Russian gas champion expended $9.4 billion on the failed project.
With Western sanctions taking their toll, Russia has been obliged to
retrench across Central Europe and the Balkans. This project also
signals the durability of the smaller yet important Azerbaijani-driven
TAP, TANAP, South Caucasus Pipeline combination to bring natural gas
to Turkey, Greece, the Balkans, with its terminus in Italy.

The European Union, having seen the post-WWII order shake with the
Russian dismemberment of Ukraine and the soon-to-be-frozen conflict in
the Donbas, have belatedly started to act against Russian market power
within the Union. Due to the constant manipulation of European energy
contracts, there is now talk of forming a new purchasing union. This
Polish-led European Union project would attempt to further reduce
Russian distortion of the markets. With Poland’s former Prime Minister
Donald Tusk taking the reigns as the 2 1/2 year EU President, this
project may take priority as climate priorities are balanced with the
need for a cheap and reliable source of energy.

The Russians have stated that the cancellation of the pipeline will
spell higher energy prices for the Europeans. Moreover, with the shift
in focus to Turkey, they are able to exploit the growth in energy
usage of a large emerging economy. The move towards Turkey can be seen
as a tactical one, as Russia and Turkey continue to spar over issues
ranging from Syria to Cyprus and from Ukraine to the role of the
Russian Federation in the Armenian – Azerbaijani war in Karabakh.

Besides Russia, the other loser in this project is Bulgaria. Bulgaria
is losing the transit fees which would have accrued to it as well as
the diversification of energy sources. The former government of
Bulgaria fell earlier this year due to the cleavages opened by the
South Stream pipeline. The instability of Ukraine-transiting gas is a
systemic issue that may continue as a real threat to the energy
security of Central Europe. This will last as long as the
Russian-driven instability continue to plague the benighted country of
Ukraine. It is estimated that the investment losses to Bulgaria totals
3 billion Euro plus the transit fees totaling $400 million from the 18
billion cubic meters of natural gas transiting its territory according
to Gazprom’s president Alexei Miller. The political nature of natural
gas will continue to play a role in European geopolitics as Russia is
bound to continue to supply a majority of European natural gas.
Nonetheless, with the cancellation of South Stream, the increased use
of LNG, and the rebalancing of Russia to Asia, expect a reduced role
of Russian pipeline investments on the Balkans and Central Europe.

http://www.silkroadreporters.com/2014/12/13/russian-gas-europe-south-stream/

Unearthing a profound legacy of bloodshed

The Washington Post
December 7, 2014 Sunday

Unearthing a profound legacy of bloodshed

Reviewed by Joanna Scutts

THERE WAS AND THERE WAS NOT
A Journey Through Hate and Possibility in Turkey, Armenia, and Beyond
By Meline Toumani
Metropolitan. 286 pp.

The title of Meline Toumani’s memoir, she tells us, is the traditional
opening for a storyteller in both Turkey and Armenia. Like “once upon
a time,” it signals to the listener that what follows is not to be
confused with history: It happened, and it did not. But unlike the
Western fairy-tale opening, which places the story outside recorded
time, Toumani’s story is rooted in a specific year: 1915, when –
depending on who’s telling the story – there was and there was not the
beginning of a genocide.

This is not a dispute about facts. Toumani dispenses in a paragraph
with those: In 1915, a “history-shifting number of Armenians” were
killed or driven out of the dying Ottoman Empire, until by the time
the modern Turkish state was founded in 1923, only 200,000 were left,
of 2.5 million who had lived there for millennia. Since then, Turkey
has kept silent about or denied the violence, and ever since the term
“genocide” was coined after World War II, the global Armenian diaspora
to which Toumani belongs has fought to have the events of 1915
recognized as such. As this bold and nuanced book reveals, recognition
and denial – there was and there was not – are two sides of the same
story, which is far more important than history.

Toumani was born in Iran and raised in New Jersey. Her Armenian
identity was forged and maintained through language, religion and an
all-consuming hatred of Turkey. She describes attending an Armenian
summer camp in Massachusetts as a child, where the joy of spending
time among people who looked and spoke like her came at the price of
nodding along to a blood-curdling celebration of terrorist violence
against the Turkish state. But as she grows up and becomes a
journalist, she begins to question the orthodoxies binding her
community together and to wonder whether the goal of genocide
recognition, from any city or state government worldwide that will
grant it, is “worth its emotional and psychological price.”

On a press trip to an Armenian rest home in Queens, she listens to
elderly residents struggle to articulate their distant memories of the
killings in front of an eager audience of reporters. Over the years,
in countless retellings, the stories have either disintegrated into
fragments or become rote and repetitive, “condensed . . . into
plaintive one-liners.” Toumani soon realizes that no matter how
sympathetic she may be to their experiences, these witnesses – women
now in their 90s and older – cannot persuade her of fundamental
Turkish evil. But without that certainty, that hatred, who is she?

Toumani realizes that if she wants to tell stories without an agenda,
to find her way to “artistic objectivity,” there’s nowhere else to
turn but in the direction of her enemy. Her first trip to Turkey is a
tour of the remnants of Armenian culture in the rural southeast, which
turns out to be a “giant, open-air museum,” where Armenian sites and
objects are scattered about “like a thousand elephants in the room.”
It’s during this trip, in 2005, that Toumani meets Hrant Dink, the
editor of a progressive Armenian newspaper in Istanbul. At the time,
Dink was dealing with the fallout from a series of articles he had
written exploring the psychology of the Armenian diaspora, in which he
suggested that Armenian hatred of Turkey had become “like a poison in
their blood.” His comments had been misunderstood as insulting Turks
by saying their blood was poisonous, and he was under official
investigation. Not quite two years later, in January 2007, Dink was
shot dead in the street outside his newspaper’s offices, by a
17-year-old gunman who had read online that the editor had insulted
his countrymen’s blood.

Dink’s murder was a turning point for Toumani, spurring her to return
to Turkey, to live in Istanbul, study Turkish, and interview as many
Turks and Armenians as possible to try to understand the range of
views on the “Armenian issue.” What follows is the story of a
two-month stay that stretches into two years, and the author’s gradual
recognition that artistic, or journalistic, objectivity is an
impossible goal.

There’s the moment in her Turkish class, just after Toumani has
reluctantly admitted she’s Armenian, when a glamorous French student
proudly announces that she lives in a mansion that once belonged to
Enver Pasha – one of the chief architects of the genocide and thus a
part of the “triumvirate of evil” that Toumani has been taught to fear
and hate all her life. Her response is a mixture of uncertainty,
anxiety and latent fury: Is this ignorance? Deliberate provocation? A
power play? Again and again, her interactions in Turkey carry with
them this kind of doubt, pressuring even the most innocent daily
exchanges and making it clear before long that an objective accounting
of the “Armenian issue” is impossible.

Toumani’s emotional responses to her experience in Turkey, and her
honesty in navigating and describing them, lend her story the
authority that can come only from a storyteller who recognizes that
history is a matter of both fact and feeling. Although this book
offers plenty of insight – funny, affectionate, often frustrated –
into a unique diasporic culture, Toumani is ultimately less interested
in what makes a person Armenian, Turkish or anything else than in what
can happen when we start to think beyond those national identities.

[email protected]