German Foreign Ministry Responds To Azerbaijan’s Diplomatic Note

GERMAN FOREIGN MINISTRY RESPONDS TO AZERBAIJAN’S DIPLOMATIC NOTE

Trend, Azerbaijan
Sept 24 2014

24 September 2014, 13:05 (GMT+05:00)

By Saba Aghayeva – Trend:

Germany’s position on the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan is
unchanged. The country considers Nagorno-Karabakh as an integral
part of Azerbaijan’s territory, Acting Spokesman for the Azerbaijani
Foreign Ministry Hikmet Hajiyev told Trend Sept. 24.

The German foreign ministry responded to the diplomatic note of the
Azerbaijani embassy in connection with German MPs Manfred Grund’s
and Albert Weiler’s visit to the occupied territories of Azerbaijan.

“The German foreign ministry constantly urges Bundestag members to
avoid such visits and inform them of Azerbaijan’s fundamental position
in relation to those making such illegal visits,” Hajiyev said.

Hajiyev said that the embassy also appealed with the appropriate
letter to the Bundestag and received a reply stating that German MPs’
trip can not be regarded as a visit initiated by the Bundestag.

“The foreign ministry and the Bundestag said that Bundestag members’
visit to the occupied territories was private,” he said.

“The Azerbaijani embassy in France also intends to take appropriate
actions in connection with the visit of a representative of the French
Senate to the occupied territories of Azerbaijan,” Hajiyev said.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan.

As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied
20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and
seven surrounding districts.

The two countries signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The co-chairs
of the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia, France and the U.S. are currently
holding peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented four U.N. Security Council resolutions
on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions.

BAKU: US Embassy In Azerbaijan: James Warlick Didn’t Mean Nagorno-Ka

US EMBASSY IN AZERBAIJAN: JAMES WARLICK DIDN’T MEAN NAGORNO-KARABAKH’S PARTICIPATION IN THE NEGOTIATIONS AS A THIRD SIDE

APA, Azerbaijan
Sept 24 2014

[ 24 September 2014 15:51 ]

Baku. Rufet Ahmadzadeh – APA. “By saying Nagorno-Karabakh need to
have their voices heard in the negotiations during a press conference
in Armenia, the OSCE Minsk Group’s US Co-Chair James Warlick did not
mean Nagorno-Karabakh’s participation in the peace negotiations as a
third side”, press secretary of the US Embassy in Azerbaijan Nicholas
Barnett told APA.

The ambassador then added that US policy regarding the format of the
OSCE Minsk Group negotiations remains the same.

Noting that he clarified the matter, the embassy representative said
in his response to a tert.am employee’s question about the tensions
on the front line and the probability of NK’s participation in future
negotiations as a third side, Warlick said:

“It’s a tragedy when innocent civilians become victims of war. It
incites me to work to avoid civilian casualties as well as putting
an end to the violence, but particularly civilian casualties. These
are often innocent men, women and children who are victims. It’s
extremely important for both sides to find ways to avoid these kinds
of casualties. The incidents on the border are a tragedy. With regard
to the defacto authorities in NK, their voice needs to be heard. That
is precisely why the Co-Chairs travel to NK on a regular basis to
meet with the de-facto authorities”.

http://en.apa.az/news/216806

Vasily Grossman’s Fate: From Stalingrad And Armenia To The West

VASILY GROSSMAN’S FATE: FROM STALINGRAD AND ARMENIA TO THE WEST

Russia Beyond the Headlines
Sept 24 2014

September 24, 2014 Georgy Manaev, RBTH The translation of Vasily
Grossman’s An Armenian Sketchbook, by Robert and Elizabeth Chandler,
was included in the shortlist for this year’s Read Russia Prize. A
memoir written during a trip to Armenia in the early 1960s, the
book is an unusually personal perspective on his journey through the
country, offering reflections on its people and landscapes as well
as nationalism and illness.

An Armenian Sketchbook, an account of a trip Vasily Grossman made
to Armenia in the early 1960s, translated by Robert Chandler and
Elizabeth Chandler, was made one of the nominees for this year’s Read
Russia Prize, which is awarded for the best translations of Russian
literature into foreign languages.

The most recent translation of Vasily Grossman’s works by the pair,
An Armenian Sketchbook (New York Review Books Classics, 2013) is
a short memoir written in early 1962 that was not published during
Grossman’s lifetime, and which translator Robert Chandler believes
offers a rare glimpse into the writer’s inner world.

‘An Armenian Sketchbook’ by Vasily Grossman, NYRB Classics, Maclehose,
2013 “There is not a lot of reliable information about Grossman’s
life,” says Chandler, who explains that this account of the two months
Grossman spent in Armenia in late 1961 is of particular interest
since it is his only autobiographical work.

“From it we get a clear sense of Grossman’s sense of humor, of his
reluctance to take himself too seriously, and of his constant curiosity
about other people,” says Chandler of An Armenian Sketchbook, which
also features “vivid evocations” of the country’s barren landscape,
“lucid, witty discussions of nationalism,” a description of a village
wedding, and what Chandler describes as “several unforgettable pages
about a night when Grossman thought he was dying.”

Honesty banned

Russian writer Vasily Grossman (1905 – 1964) was little-known to
British audiences until 2011, when a BBC drama serial based on
Grossman’s epic novel of Stalingrad, Life and Fate (1959), aired
on Radio 4. After that, the novel, first translated to English by
Robert Chandler in 1985, became a huge success in the UK, topping
Amazon’s bestseller list at one point. Military historian Antony
Beevor has named Life and Fate, whose manuscript was confiscated by
Soviet authorities in February 1961, the best Russian novel of the
20th century.

One of possible reasons reason for the ban on the book’s publication
was the unprecedented honesty and courage of the author, who wrote
about the Second World War not in the polished, patriotic style of many
accounts, but instead poured out all the truth about the hardships and
bitterness of life at war. In 1941, Grossman, already 36 at the time,
worked as a war correspondent, dispatching articles straight from the
front about the battles of Moscow, Stalingrad, Kursk, and Berlin. His
novel People are Immortal was among the first and still the best
first-hand accounts of the historical feat of the Soviet people.

Grossman’s ‘Life and Fate’ manuscript has left the secret archives
“Vasily Grossman was a man of unusual courage, both physically and
morally,” Robert Chandler said to RBTH. “He spent longer than any other
Soviet journalist in the thick of the fighting on the right bank of
the Volga, in the ruins being fought over building by building and
even room by room. And then, within months of the Soviet victory at
Stalingrad, he was writing some of the first articles and stories
published in any language about the Shoah. His mother – to whom he
later dedicated Life and Fate – was one of the 12,000 Jews shot by
the Nazis in a massacre outside the town of Berdichev.”

In Mandelstam’s footsteps

However, after the war, Grossman had to heavily edit his novel about
the Siege of Stalingrad, For a Just Cause – it was heavily criticized
in the Soviet press. Life and Fate was to become the sequel for this
novel, but in 1961, the manuscript was confiscated from the author by
the KGB – because of the anti-Stalinist message of the novel. Life
and Fate, smuggled to Europe by Grossman’s friends after his death,
was first published in Switzerland in 1980. In the USSR, it was
released only in 1988, during perestroika.

After Life and Fate was banned, Soviet publishers stopped printing
all of Grossman’s books. In search of any kind of income, Grossman
managed to get a commission to translate an Armenian novel and went to
Armenia – just like another Russian writer, Osip Mandelstam had done
30 years earlier, also in a quest to escape the wrath of the Soviet
authorities. The Armenian trip, during which Grossman created the
series of non-fiction sketches and stories that later became the work
that the Chandlers have given the title An Armenian Sketchbook, turned
out to be one of his last works – he died of cancer in Moscow in 1964.

The Armenian works were published in the USSR only posthumously,
in 1967.

http://rbth.com/literature/2014/09/24/vasily_grossmans_fate_from_stalingrad_and_armenia_to_the_west_40055.html

How My Family Survived The Caliphate

HOW MY FAMILY SURVIVED THE CALIPHATE

World News Daily WND
Sept 23 2014

David Kupelian tells harrowing story of Christians, jihadists and
genocide

David Kupelian

Two things compel me to share the following personal family story
about what happens to Christians living under an Islamic caliphate.

First, I was watching my friend Sean Hannity’s recent Fox News special
on the Islamic State, during which many in his “audience of experts”
had good and insightful things to say. But toward the end, noted Islam
scholar Andrew Bostom made the following statement. Taking his cue
from another guest’s reference to the precedent for today’s “Islamic
State” caliphate set by the original seventh-century caliphate of
Muhammad and his successors, Bostom noted:

We have a much more recent precedent – and it’s an ugly precedent. In
1915 – it makes IS look like amateurs – at the collapse of the Ottoman
caliphate, a very bona fide caliphate, slaughtered a million Armenians
in a jihad, slaughtered another 250,000 Syriac Orthodox Christians
and Assyrians, with the same level of brutality – beheadings,
eviscerations, humiliations, creation of harams, sexual slavery. This
is part of a relatively recent history. We’re only coming up on the
100th anniversary next year of the Armenian Genocide. That’s the
precedent that we should be worried about, not the 7th century.

Andrew’s comments plunged me into memories of all the stories I heard
growing up, told by family members who had survived the Armenian
Genocide.

Second, though little discussed in the West, Middle East news
agencies are now reporting that ISIS just destroyed the Armenian
Genocide Memorial Church in Der Zor, Syria, which housed the remains
of Armenian Genocide victims. Der Zor, where hundreds of thousands
of Armenians miserably perished a century ago, is referred to by many
as the Auschwitz of the Armenian Genocide.

Now let me get to my story, which I think is extremely relevant at
this particular time.

My dad, when he was only three years old, was basically sentenced to
death. The Turkish government during the chaotic, waning days of the
Ottoman caliphate was engaged in a deliberate campaign to force him,
his baby sister and his mother, along with hundreds of thousands of
other Armenians, into the Syrian Der Zor desert, where they would die
of starvation, disease or worse – torture and death at the hands of
brutal soldiers or roving bandits.

Islamic Turkey’s gruesome, premeditated genocide of the Christian
Armenian population in that country had been ongoing for decades,
with up to 300,000 Armenians massacred during the mid-1890s under
the caliph, Sultan Abdul Hamid II.

But now it was 1915, considered the peak of the Armenian Genocide,
and my dad, then just a toddler, was caught in the middle of it,
along with his mother and sister. Those not butchered outright –
the men were often killed immediately – were driven into the Der Zor
desert, east of Aleppo, to perish. My father’s father, a doctor,
had been pressed into the Turkish army against his will to head a
medical regiment, to tend to the Turkish soldiers’ injuries.

“One of my earliest recollections, I was not quite three years old
at the time,” my dad told me shortly before he died in 1988, was that
“the wagon we were in had tipped over, my hand was broken and bloody,
and mother was looking for my infant sister, who had rolled away. The
next thing I remember after that, mother was on a horse, holding my
baby sister, and had me sitting behind her, saying, ‘Hold on tight,
or the Turks will get you!'”

The three of them rode off on horseback, ending up in Aleppo, one of
the gateways to the desert deportation and certain death. Once there,
my grandmother, Mary, always a daring and resourceful woman, realized
what she needed to do.

After asking around to find out who was in charge, she bluffed her way
into getting an audience with Aleppo’s governor-general. Since her
Armenian husband was in the service of the Turkish army – albeit by
force – she played her one and only card, brazenly telling the governor
general, “I demand my rights as the wife of a Turkish army officer!”

“What are those rights?”

“I want commissary privileges and two orderlies,” she answered.

“Granted.”

In this way, by masquerading as a Turkish officer’s wife, Mary bluffed
her way out of certain death, saving not only her own life and those of
her son and daughter, but also the lives of her husband’s two brothers,
whom she immediately deputized as orderlies. The group then succeeded
in sneaking several other family members out of harm’s way, and my
grandmother kept them all from starving by obtaining food from the
commissary. Thus was my family spared, although little Adolphina,
my father’s infant sister, was unable to survive the harshness of
those times and died shortly thereafter.

As for my grandfather, Simeon Kupelian, after a bloody battle between
the Turks and the British, he and the other doctors, all Armenians,
tended to the Turkish wounded as best they could – that was their job.

Immediately after this, a squadron of Turkish gunmen came and killed
them all, including my grandfather. Such is the logic of demons.

On returning to their beautiful home in Marash in southern Turkey a
couple of years later, Mary and son, Vahey, who was then about six
years old, found it had been ransacked. Their fine tapestries had
been pulled off the walls, ripped and urinated on. Everything that
could be carried out had been stolen, and everything else had been
deliberately broken. Everything. Every pane of glass in the French
doors was broken, even handles on drawers were destroyed.

Ultimately, the hardships and ever-increasing dangers of their life
led my dad and grandmom to do what millions of persecuted people
have done over the last few hundred years. They made the long voyage
to the one country that welcomed them and offered them freedom and
an opportunity for a new life – the most blessed nation on earth,
their promised land: America.

So that’s my father’s side of the family.

But on my mother’s side, the sword of Muhammad was just as merciless.

During this same era, my great-grandfather, a Protestant minister
named Steelianos Leondiades, was traveling to the major Turkish city
of Adana to attend a pastors’ conference. Today, Incirlik Air Base,
used by the U.S. Air Force, is just five miles east of Adana. But
back then, under the caliph, Abdul-Hamid II, ethnic cleansing was the
order of the day. Here’s how my grandmother, Anna Paulson, daughter
of Steelianos, told the story:

“Some of the Turkish officers came to the conference room and told
all these ministers – there were 70 of them, ministers and laymen
and a few wives: ‘If you embrace the Islamic religion, you will all
be saved. If you don’t, you will all be killed.'”

My great-grandfather, acting as a spokesman for the ministers’ group,
asked the Turks for 15 minutes so they could make their decision,
according to my grandmother’s account. During that time, the ministers
and their companions talked, read the Bible to each other and prayed.

In the end, none of them would renounce their Christian faith and
convert to Islam.

“And then,” Anna recalled, “they were all killed.

“They were not even buried. They were all thrown down the ravine.”

The only reason we know any details of this particular massacre,
she said, is that one victim survived the ordeal.

“One man woke up; he wasn’t dead,” my grandmother said. “He woke up
and got up and said, ‘Brethren, brethren, is there anybody alive here?

I’m alive, come on, let’s go out together.'”

As one published history of the “Adana Massacres” puts it:

The annual convention of the Armenian Evangelical Union of Cilicia was
to take place during the week of April 11, 1909, in Adana. Pastors
and delegates from various churches set out for Adana on April 12,
not knowing that they and their many friends were to be martyred. On
the dawn of April 13, 1909, the massacre of the Armenian Evangelical
leadership took place.

My great-grandfather and his fellow massacred Christians – and there
were many, many others also butchered in Adana – were martyrs, real
ones. But today, we most often hear the word martyr used to describe
jihadist zombies who commit unspeakable mass atrocities against
innocents while dementedly chanting “Allahu Akhbar, Allahu Akhbar,
Allahu Akhbar” (“Allah is greatest”) to drown out what little is left
of their conscience.

That’s not martyrdom. It’s terrorism, genocide, metastasizing madness,
hell on earth. Welcome to life in the glorious caliphate.

Although my father and grandmothers passed down these vivid
recollections to us in the comfort of warm, safe suburban homes,
worlds apart from the nightmares of their youth, their painful
psychological scars remained ever fresh.

Allow me to quote the U.S. ambassador to Turkey at the time, Henry
Morgenthau, whose published memoirs exposed the horrors he witnessed
firsthand during the 20th century’s first genocide. Incredibly, he
described how Turkish officials bragged to him about their nightly
meetings where they would enthusiastically share the latest torture
techniques to use on the Armenians:

Each new method of inflicting pain was hailed as a splendid discovery,
and the regular attendants were constantly ransacking their brains
in the effort to devise some new torment. He told me that they even
delved into the records of the Spanish Inquisition and other historic
institutions of torture and adopted all the suggestions found there.

I’ll spare you the details, except to say that Morgenthau, father of
FDR’s treasury secretary of the same name, summed up the “sadistic
orgies” of the Armenian genocide by declaring: “Whatever crimes the
most perverted instincts of the human mind can devise, and whatever
refinements of persecution and injustice the most debased imagination
can conceive, became the daily misfortunes of this devoted people. I
am confident that the whole history of the human race contains no
such horrible episode as this.”

http://www.wnd.com/2014/09/how-my-family-survived-the-caliphate/

US Embassy To Armenia Destruction Of Deir Ez-Zor Church

US EMBASSY TO ARMENIA DESTRUCTION OF DEIR EZ-ZOR CHURCH

09:38 * 24.09.14

US Embassy Yerevan has joined the government and people of Armenia
in strongly condemning the destruction of the Armenian Church in Deir
Ez-zor, Syria.

“This senseless act of destruction demonstrates yet again the utter
disregard the terrorist organization ISIL has for the rich religious
and cultural heritage of the Middle East.

“As Secretary Kerry has stated, ISIL has systematically committed
abuses of human rights and international law and presents a global
terrorist threat. Faced with this threat, the United States urges the
international community to strengthen our united effort to degrade
and destroy ISIL,” reads the statement condemning the terrorist act.

Armenian News – Tert.am
Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
Content-Description:

MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
From: Mihran Keheyian
Subject: US Embassy to Armenia destruction of Deir ez-Zor church

US Embassy to Armenia destruction of Deir ez-Zor church

09:38 * 24.09.14

US Embassy Yerevan has joined the government and people of Armenia in
strongly condemning the destruction of the Armenian Church in Deir
Ez-zor, Syria.

“This senseless act of destruction demonstrates yet again the utter
disregard the terrorist organization ISIL has for the rich religious
and cultural heritage of the Middle East.

“As Secretary Kerry has stated, ISIL has systematically committed
abuses of human rights and international law and presents a global
terrorist threat. Faced with this threat, the United States urges the
international community to strengthen our united effort to degrade and
destroy ISIL,” reads the statement condemning the terrorist act.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Iran And Armenia Discuss Gas Problems

IRAN AND ARMENIA DISCUSS GAS PROBLEMS

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Sept 23 2014

23 September 2014 – 9:24am

The Armenian-Iranian inter-government commission is discussing gas
supplies for Armenia, transit of Iranian gas to the West through
Armenian territory, formation of infrastructure for the transit,
says Iranian Ambassador to Armenia Mohammad Reisi, Trend reports.

Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
Content-Description:

MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
From: Katia Peltekian
Subject: Iran and Armenia discuss gas problems

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Sept 23 2014

Iran and Armenia discuss gas problems

23 September 2014 – 9:24am

The Armenian-Iranian inter-government commission is discussing gas
supplies for Armenia, transit of Iranian gas to the West through
Armenian territory, formation of infrastructure for the transit, says
Iranian Ambassador to Armenia Mohammad Reisi, Trend reports.

Armenia’s C.Bank Keeps Refinancing Rate Unchanged At 6.75 Pct

ARMENIA’S C.BANK KEEPS REFINANCING RATE UNCHANGED AT 6.75 PCT

Reuters
Sept 23 2014

YEREVAN, Sept 23 Tue Sep 23, 2014 6:49pm IST

YEREVAN, Sept 23 (Reuters) – Armenia’s central bank kept its key
refinancing rate unchanged at 6.75 percent on Tuesday after data
showed annual inflation was within the government’s 2014 target.

Annual inflation was 0.8 percent in August, the central bank said,
up from 0.4 percent recorded in July. That is within the government’s
target range of between 2.5 percent and 5.5 percent for 2014.

Monthly inflation in August was 0.7 percent, compared to deflation
of 0.9 percent in July.

The central bank cut its refinancing rate to 6.75 percent from 7.00
percent in August. (Reporting by Hasmik Lazarian; Writing by Margarita
Antidze; Editing by Alexei Anishchuk)

http://in.reuters.com/article/2014/09/23/armenia-rates-idINL6N0RO3M920140923

Assyrians In Iraq Should Go For Self-Determination

ASSYRIANS IN IRAQ SHOULD GO FOR SELF-DETERMINATION

Assyrian International News Agency AINA
sept 23 2014

By Yeghig Tashjian
Posted 2014-09-23 18:57 GMT

An Assyrian family from Baghdede who fled to Ankawa, Iraq.(AINA) — As
World War I broke out, the Turkish government implemented the plan to
destroy the Christian communities within its empire. Around 2 million
(1,500,000 Armenians, 750,000 Assyrians and 500,000 Pontic Greeks)
were massacred and others deported from their ancestral lands.

Churches were burned, some were converted into mosques, memories were
uprooted, and lands confiscated. Some Christian villages rebelled
against the Ottoman Empire’s advance, some succeeded and others did
not, but always with arms in their hands. Today, as history repeats
itself, what can the Assyrian Christians of Iraq learn from their
century old history, and how can they prevent this catastrophe?

Local, Regional and International Silence

In my interview with David William Lazar, the chairman of the American
Mesopotamian Organization, regarding the fall of Mosul, he stated that
the Maliki government was partly to blame because of the sectarian
policies that have marginalized the Iraqi Sunni Arab minority,
the Kurds and the Iraqi army for refusing to fight ISIS, and the
West for not preventing the flow of money from the Arab Gulf states
to terrorist groups. For the first time in history, the Christians
of Mosul had to evacuate their city, as the Arab world, Arab League
and rebel Iraqi Baathists sat by and watched it happen. Nineveh, the
ancient capital of the Assyrians was emptied of its indigenous people.

Moreover, David W. Lazar stated that the Assyrian Diaspora, and
specifically the Assyrian Aid Society of America, already started to
mobilize and raise funds for local NGOs to help the refugees.

The United Nation Security Council UNSC has condemned the persecution
of minorities in Iraq. Meanwhile, France declared it is ready to
provide asylum for Iraqi Christian refugees. However, it has become
clear that the international community will not provide aid unless
the Iraqi Christians mobilize an army and take action.

Organizing Delf-Defense Units

Under authoritarian rule, and the lack of a strong Christian political
force, the church has taken on the religious, social and sometimes
political role. A similarity can be drawn both between the Armenian
and the Assyrian churches. During the Ottoman era both churches
were pessimistic and against revolutionary movements within their
communities. Within the Armenian community, the shift occurred
only after the conference of Berlin in 1878, when Father Khrimian,
the Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, later Catholicos of all
Armenians, delivered his famous speech titled “The Paper Ladle,”
urging the Armenian nation to rely on itself to defend its land, and
fight against oppression. He gave the following speech in the church:

Dear Armenian people, could I have dipped my paper ladle in the harissa
[porridge]? It would have become wet and stayed there. There, where
guns talk and swords make noise, what significance do appeals and
petitions have? But alas, all I had was a paper petition, which got
wet in the harissa and we returned empty-handed.

And so, dear and blessed Armenians, when you return to the Fatherland,
to your relatives and friends, take weapons, take weapons and again
weapons. People, above all, place the hope of your liberation on
yourself. Use your brain and your fist! Man must work for himself in
order to be saved.

After a decade Armenians, realizing that diplomacy failed, took up
arms and with a high price independence was declared at the end of
WWI. The Christians of Iraq should stop waiting for the international
community to take action and follow in the footsteps of the Armenians
by taking up arms, and fighting for their land.

Recently, many voices were raised within the Christian community
in Iraq to organize volunteer units. Already videos are showing some
Assyrians and Armenians are armed. David Lazar believes that Christians
and Yazidis should also arm themselves. Lazar stated:

The Federal government in Baghdad is not able to protect its citizens
and the KRG [Kurdistan Regional Government] will only protect its
own areas as it have stated openly, regardless of what happens to
the rest of Iraq. The immediate reaction of the Kurdish militias when
ISIS and Baathist took over Mosul was to immediately occupy what they
refer to as “Disputed territories,” which are mainly Kirkuk and the
Nineveh Plain. Of course now the KRG claims that it is defending the
Christians of the Nineveh Plain, because if they were not there ISIS
would have occupied the area and expelled the Christians, Yazidis
and Shabaks from there.

Meanwhile, the Christian block within the Iraqi Parliament suggested
that the Iraqi federal government and the Kurdistan Regional Government
(KRG) start training the Christians to defend their villages and repel
future attacks by ISIS. Already the Assyrian Democratic Movement
started to recruit volunteers in Iraq and organize self defense
units. In this task, both the church and Christian political parties
in Iraq should participate. It is imperative that they start working
together and to unify their efforts to fight ISIS and demand the
formation of autonomous administrative region in the Nineveh Plain,
where Assyrians would be able to preserve their culture and have
security forces.

The Establishment of Iraq’s Nineveh Plain as an Autonomous Region

Article 125 of the Iraqi Constitution states:

This Constitution shall guarantee the administrative, political,
cultural, and educational rights of the various nationalities, such
as Turkomen, Chaldeans, Assyrians, and all other constituents, and
this shall be regulated by law.

The Nineveh Plain, which is rich in agricultural lands and petroleum
fields, brought economic competition between Kurds and Sunni Arab
tribes in Mosul. This caused Assyrians to become targets of violence.

Thus, without the Nineveh Plain autonomous administration,
the indigenous Assyrian presence in its ancient homeland may be
endangered. On January 21, 2014 the Iraqi government declared that the
Nineveh Plain would become a new province, which would serve as a safe
haven for Assyrians. Yet David W. Lazar argued that the Christians are
not asking for political rights as Christians, instead they want to be
recognized as an ethnic minority that is indigenous to Northern Iraq.

He stated: “Although our Christian identity is also extremely
important, our national identity comes first and often we endure
discrimination because of our Assyrian ethnic identity rather than
our Christian faith. A good example was during Saddam’s period. The
Baathists tolerated Christians as long as people referred to themselves
as Arab or Iraqi Christians. However, we were oppressed as Assyrians
because we were not allowed to teach our language, give our children
Assyrian names and definitely not allowed to form political parties
or ask for any type of autonomous rule in our ancestral lands.” Lazar
also claimed that Christians want to be part of Iraq, because they
believe in a united, democratic and Federal Iraq with a strong Federal
capital in Baghdad. This is referred to as Centripetal Federalism,
where there is a strong Federal government and weaker provincial or
regional governments. The KRG, on the other hand, prefers the opposite,
Centrifugal Federalism, which means stronger provincial or regional
governments and a weaker federal government.

Many would assume that the Arab world is disintegrating into small
states and this is part of foreign conspiracy. Some say this is a
Western-Zionist plan to divide the Arabs and divert their attention
from the Palestinian cause, others may argue it’s an Iranian plot to
weaken the Sunnis. In reality the political mistakes of Arab leaders,
with the inability of their governments to protect their ethnic and
religious minorities, pushed the non-Arabs to distance themselves
from the Arab reality. Unfortunately, multiculturalism is failing
in the Arab World. The pogroms against the Iraqi Jews in Baghdad are
still fresh in the memories of people. Today, Iraq is devoid of Jews.

Hopefully, the Christians will not face a similar and tragic ending.

The idea of introducing decentralization and federalism should not
be alarming to the Arabs, it can actually solve many socioeconomic,
cultural and political problems.

Yeghig Tashjian is a Lebanese Armenian. He holds BA in Political
Science from Haigazian University and is a research assistant at the
Armenian Diaspora Research Center at Haigazian University, where he
conducts research on minority rights and Middle Eastern conflicts.

http://www.aina.org/guesteds/20140923145744.htm

Fancy Being Woken Up By A Stranger Every Morning? There’s An App For

FANCY BEING WOKEN UP BY A STRANGER EVERY MORNING? THERE’S AN APP FOR THAT

Metro, UK
Sept 23 2014

by Jack Blocker for Metro.co.uk

Are you the sort of person who always hits the snooze button when
the alarm starts going off?

Then maybe you need Wakie, a new app that lets a stranger’s voice
rouse you out of bed.

Don’t worry – this isn’t some seedy hook-up app that organises a
liaison with the sort of partner who’d have you running for the door
before 4am Wakie is only conducted through your phone.

When it’s time to get up, a random user will call your phone, waking
you up with whatever conversation they please.

Similarly, if you’re wide awake and a user in New York needs to hear
your charming British accent to get them moving, then you can serve
as a human alarm clock too.

There really seem to be few drawbacks, as numbers remain anonymous
so it’s easy to hang up on an unpleasant caller.

The app was created by Armenian Hrachik Adjamian, and it’s already
extremely popular in Russia. Check out the website to download Wakie.

http://metro.co.uk/2014/09/23/let-a-stranger-wake-you-up-with-the-new-human-alarm-clock-wakie-4879576/

In 6 Medical Institutions 72 Violations Worth More Than 25 Millions

IN 6 MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS 72 VIOLATIONS WORTH MORE THAN 25 MILLIONS AMD WERE FOUND (VIDEO)

19:59 | September 23,2014 | Politics

In 2013 the Chamber of Control found 72 violations worth more than
25 millions AMD in 6 medical institutions. Today Chamber President
Ishkhan Zakaryan informed the NA healthcare, maternity and childhood
affairs permanent committee.

The Chamber of Control found out that very often the documents are
faked and as a result money from state budget is not used for purpose.

“References are faked in different places,”- informs Chamber of
Control President Ishkhan Zakaryan.

Details later in the video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dbeIR8dpxus
http://en.a1plus.am/1196729.html