Raffi Hovannisian Receives Ambassador Dirk Jan Kop

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Center for National and International Studies
75 Yerznkian Street
Yerevan 0033, Armenia
Tel: (+374 – 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
Fax: (+374 – 10) 52.48.46
Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
Website:

8 July 2014

Raffi Hovannisian Receives Ambassador Dirk Jan Kop

Yerevan–Raffi K. Hovannisian, Heritage Party chairman and founding
director of the Armenian Center for National and International Studies
(ACNIS), met today with Ambassador Dirk Jan Kop, who serves as Special
Representative of the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs for Europe and
the Eastern Partnership. He was joined by Manja Simons, foreign
ministry desk officer for the South Caucasus, and Angele Samura,
chargé d’affaires of the Embassy of the Netherlands.

They discussed issues of mutual interest relating to the domestic
situation and foreign policies of Armenia, focusing on current
developments in the region.

The meeting was attended by Heritage Party secretary general for
international affairs Zaruhi Postanjyan and press secretary David
Sanasaryan.

www.acnis.am

It Turns Out That Terrorist Who Hijacked Plane Flying From Copenhage

IT TURNS OUT THAT TERRORIST WHO HIJACKED PLANE FLYING FROM COPENHAGEN TO OSLO IN APRIL IS AZERBAIJANI

11:22 08/07/2014 >> SOCIETY

It turned out that the terrorist who on April 25th hijacked the
“Boeing 737” flying from Copenhagen to Oslo, is Azerbaijani. His name
is Tamerlane Musayev, the Swedish media reported.

On April 25, at the demand of the terrorist, the plane made an
emergency landing at the Landvetter airport in Swedish town Gothenburg,
saying that there is a bomb in the plane. He threatened to detonate
it if the aircraft didn’t land in Sweden.

It was learned that in 1993 Tamerlane Musayev together with his wife
kidnapped an aircraft performing flight from Tyumen to St. Petersburg
and had demanded to land it in Stockholm. Their newborn baby was also
in that plane.

He explained his action, saying that he did not want to serve in the
Azerbaijani army and didn’t want to participate in the Karabakh war.

After this incident, the Musayevs’ family was deported to Russia,
where Tamerlane Musayev and his wife suffered a criminal punishment
for the crime.

The Swedish media reports that by committing the same offense for
the second time, Musayev was intended to avenge for the deportation
to Russia which he faced in 1993.

Musayev’s case is currently under investigation in Gothenburg court.

The court made decision to expose the terrorist to forensic examination
and to find out in what mental state he is.

Source: Panorama.am

There Is No Future For Apartheid Israel

THERE IS NO FUTURE FOR APARTHEID ISRAEL

Russia Today
July 7 2014

John Wight is a writer and commentator specializing in geopolitics,
UK domestic politics, culture and sport.

The latest round of repression against a relatively defenseless subject
population of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza by the state of
Israel has by now assumed the air of tired routine.

But for those on the receiving end what a largely desensitized world
considers “tired” and “routine” bespeaks terror and brutality. Given
the lack of intervention on the part of the international community
whenever an Israeli security crackdown occurs, it is evident by now
that a tacit acceptance has taken root to the effect that massacring
Palestinians has been elevated to the level of bloodsport within
Israeli society.

“No one people has a monopoly on human suffering and every ethnic
tragedy stands on its own.

If I were a Jew or Gypsy, Nazi barbarity would be the most atrocious
event in history. If I were a Black African, it would be slavery and
apartheid. If I were a Native American, it would be the discovery
of the New World by European explorers and settlers that resulted
in near-total extermination. If I were an Armenian, it would be the
Ottoman massacres.

I happen to be a Palestinian, and for me it is the Nakba.

Humanity should consider all the above repugnant. I do not consider
it advisable to debate hierarchies of suffering. I do not know how
to quantify pain or measure suffering. I do know that we are not
children of a lesser God.”

Afif Safieh – Palestinian diplomat

For those of us who still care about the plight of a people whose only
crime is that they exist on land coveted by a settler colonial state,
the latest manifestation of Israel’s disregard for international law
and human rights is as good a reason as any for closer examination. In
so doing, we must call upon the greatest teacher of them all: history.

Most empires and colonial projects fall under the weight of their own
contradictions, but usually over a protracted period of resistance,
both passive and active, on the part of its victims. At the same time
the material privileges gained from the exploitation and expropriation
of a colonized people acts as a slow-acting corrosive on the society
of the colonizing state, poisoning it with racism and hatred for those
it has colonized as it seeks to justify the material privileges and
psychological sense of supremacy and national pride that accrues
from that colonization. This moral decay is commonly reflected in
the degeneration that takes place in the armed forces of the state in
question, where the emphasis of the troops shifts from self-sacrifice
and heroism in support of a just and galvanizing cause to personal
survival as demoralization sets in.

In other words, the day-to-day reality of perpetuating oppression and
injustice overcomes any amount of national propaganda in support of
that oppression. In this, the case of American troops in Vietnam is
a prime example.

There, the reality on the ground of killing and being killed in a
country thousands of miles from home in an ignoble war eventually
proved stronger than the propaganda the troops had been fed that they
were fighting in the cause of freedom. This resulted in a widespread
and growing breakdown in discipline, almost to the point where the
US military effort in Vietnam was in danger of complete collapse. It
might even be argued that on a certain level atrocities like My Lai
were informed by a projection of the self-loathing experienced by
more and more American troops in the field as the reality of the
injustices they were committing took hold.

Another and contemporary example of this moral degeneration is the
case of the Orwellian-named Israel Defense Forces. More than any
other, the IDF is a product of the constructed mythology that has
sustained Israel since its creation in 1948. It is a mythology which
combines both a biblical and political justification for the state’s
existence. On the one hand it constitutes the realization of an ancient
covenant in which the land of historic Palestine was promised by God
to the Israelites, the descendants of Abraham, over 2,000 years ago,
while on the other hand it is the fulfillment of the Zionist postulate
that in a world that is irredeemably anti-Semitic the Jewish people,
hitherto stateless, would never find peace and security until they
had a state of their own.

While the former can instantly be dismissed as obscurantist poppycock,
it must be said that the second of the aforementioned philosophical
arguments in support of Israel’s existence reflects a concrete
historical reality in the shape of the wave of anti-Semitism that
swept across Europe in the latter part of the 19th century, and which
gave rise to the emergence of Zionism.

Israeli Defense Force soldiers set off on a tracking drill near
Tze’elim in southern Israel June 9, 2014. (Reuters)

If anyone was still in any doubt as to the power behind the early
proponents of calls for a Jewish state, as the vast majority of Jews
around the world were for decades, the inimitable horrors of the
Holocaust in the Second World War instantly dispelled them. Indeed,
the psychological impact of the Holocaust on the Jewish people cannot
be underestimated even today, despite it proving fertile ground for
the extreme nationalism that has taken root within a significant
section of Israeli society.

No matter the impact of the Holocaust on Israel, however, it can
never justify the decades of injustice suffered by the Palestinian
people as a consequence, else we describe a world in which the only
answer to oppression is oppression. Moreover, the victims of the Nazi
Holocaust share a bond of humanity with victims of every other genocide
and state sanctioned crimes against humanity throughout history. It
is a bond that transcends ethnicity, religion and/or nationality, and
which embraces the many thousands of Palestinian victims of the Nakba
and the millions more subsequently rendered stateless and refugees
as a consequence.

Desperate propaganda

The romantic ideals attached to the pioneering spirit of the founders
of Israel, along with international sympathy for a people who’d
suffered such grotesque brutality at the hands of the Nazis, imbued
the nascent state with a sense of purpose and destiny that helped
mask the atrocities being carried out in its name.

A mythology of heroism and bravery was already well on the way to being
constructed in 1948 when it came to Zionist militia organizations like
the Haganah and Irgun. It was a mythology that continued on into the
ranks of IDF when Israel was founded in 1948, embodied in the adoption
of the state’s guiding “purity of arms” ethos, one designed to give
romantic flavor to the militarism that sits at its heart. Yet in truth
the ranks of the Haganah, Irgun and various other militia groups were
filled with racist killers massacring men, women and children in order
to fulfill the biblical and national destinies previously mentioned.

This toxic mix of racism and exceptionalism has led to the existence of
a state that since its formation has viewed its repeated violations
of international law and its crimes against humanity entirely
justified. So deeply ingrained is the biblical and historical
justification for Israel’s continued depredations against the
Palestinians that when it comes to international condemnation of its
crimes, rather than a cause for reflection and introspection within
Israeli society, for many it merely serves to reaffirm Israel’s view
of itself as the last bastion of defense of the Jewish people in a
hostile world.

The day-to-day reality of this corrosive outlook involves young Israeli
soldiers, mostly conscripts, humiliating, intimidating and brutalizing
civilians at checkpoints, or killing Palestinians and Arabs in general
in the knowledge they are able to do so with relative impunity.

Israeli soldiers take part in an operation to locate three Israeli
teens near the West Bank City of Hebron June 21, 2014. (Reuters)

But when those same soldiers come up against a determined and dogged
resistance on the ground, such as they did in 2006 during the brief war
against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, their resolve crumbles and they
are defeated. This is key to understanding why Israel, just like its
chief sponsor the US when it comes to its own military operations, has
come to rely on an advanced arsenal of missiles, aircraft, helicopter
gunships, drones and tanks in its continuing conflict with the entire
population of Gaza for the crime of exercising its right to elect a
government of its own choosing.

Such would be the demoralizing effect not only on the troops but
also and more importantly on Israeli society at large. Israel knows
it cannot afford to sustain heavy casualties during its repeated
military operations against a largely unarmed population.

To put it another way, while Israeli troops are more than willing
to kill to maintain the material privileges attached to living in
a settler colonial state, one in which their consumer lifestyles
are subsidized by the West, they have consistently demonstrated a
reluctance to die for those privileges. Evidence of the increased
pressure that Israel is under is reflected in the growing desperation
of its propaganda in painting the motivation of its growing number of
critics and opponents as being founded in anti-Semitism. But where
previously such calumniation would have been suffice to silence
dissenting voices, now it merely discredits Israel’s supporters and
apologists further.

Throughout history, humanity has been locked in struggle between
oppressor and oppressed. It is a struggle that has posed the same
question to each succeeding generation: Whose side are you on?

Israel as an apartheid state has no future. Only as a state which
embraces the concept of universal human rights, justice and dignity
for all who share the same land can it ensure the peace and security of
its people. More than any other this is the abiding lesson of history.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely
those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

http://rt.com/op-edge/170912-israel-no-furute-apartheid/

Chanter pour soutenir une famille arménienne

Journal de Saône et Loire, France
Jeudi 3 juillet 2014

Chanter pour soutenir une famille arménienne

>, confie Lianna Manoukyan, une Arménienne de
35 ans. Son mari Ignat Stamboulyan et ses trois enfants sont menacés
d’expulsion par l’administration française. Pourtant, cela fait trois
ans qu’ils ont commencé à construire leur vie en Côte-d’Or. Pour
soutenir cette famille, la Chorale du Mardi, accompagnée par la
Chorale de la Vapeur, a organisé un concert de soutien pour leurs amis
choristes arméniens devant la préfecture. À la fin du concert, le père
de famille Ignat Stamboulyan a utilisé sa flûte arménienne pour jouer
les solistes le temps d’un morceau. Dans leur pays, Lianna Manoukyan
et Ignat Stamboulyan étaient musiciens. C’est grce à une travailleuse
sociale, ancienne choriste de l’association, qu’ils ont intégré la
Chorale du Mardi. >

Mais ces amis musiciens ne font pas que chanter. La Chorale a fait une
demande d’audience à la préfecture pour témoigner de la volonté
d’intégration de la famille.

http://www.lejsl.com/saone-et-loire/2014/07/03/chanter-pour-soutenir-une-famille-armenienne

OSCE parliamentarians adopt Baku Declaration

OSCE parliamentarians adopt Baku Declaration

15:26 02/07/2014 >> POLITICS

The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly has adopted the Baku Declaration,
lending political support to wide-ranging policy recommendations for
the OSCE and its 57 participating States in the fields of political
affairs and security, economics, the environment and human rights, the
OSCE PA press service reports.

The crisis in Ukraine is among the document’s central themes.

The Declaration was adopted after 97 parliamentarians voted in favour
and 1 against at the conclusion of the 2014 OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly’s Annual Session in the Azerbaijani capital.

Nine OSCE parliamentarians abstained, including members of the Russian
Delegation to the Assembly.

In its 140 clauses, the Baku Declaration encompasses the resolutions
of the PA’s three General Committees — the Committee on Political
Affairs and Security; the Committee on Economic Affairs, Science,
Technology and Environment; and the Committee on Democracy, Human
Rights and Humanitarian Questions.

Among its recommendations on political affairs and security, the
Declaration “Express[es] grave concern about the situation in Ukraine
and emphasiz[es] the role of the OSCE in engaging all parties in a
constructive dialogue, monitoring and supporting the implementation of
all OSCE principles and commitments on the ground, preventing further
escalation of the crisis and promoting a diplomatic process towards a
peaceful resolution to the crisis.”

It also calls on Russia to “reverse the annexation of the Autonomous
Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, Ukraine.”

The Declaration also advocates enhanced confidence-building measures
in the military sphere, democratic control of countries’ armed forces
and a comprehensive assessment of cyber threats.

In the sphere of environmental issues and economics, the Declaration
calls for sustained work towards a new universal climate agreement,
regulations to limit the risk of financial crashes, and steps to
ensure the economic empowerment and property rights of women.

It also “encourages the OSCE and its participating States to work on
migration management to increase the benefits of migration while
reducing its potential negative implications.”

The Declaration further focuses on the particular vulnerability of
mountainous regions to climate change and natural disasters and
supports initiatives to improve the efficiency of food production and
water management.

The Declaration also offers a diverse set of recommendations and
pronouncements in the democracy and human rights sphere — from
“deploring” hate crimes against migrant workers to calling for a
redoubled fight against anti-Semitism to raising the cases of specific
individuals in the OSCE region.

The Declaration “expresses concern at the misuse of administrative
procedures and legislation to detain, imprison, intimidate or
otherwise silence human rights defenders and critics in numerous OSCE
participating States, including Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan and
the Russian Federation.”

It further “endorses the adoption by the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe of a resolution confirming the definition of
‘political prisoners.'”

It also calls upon Ukrainian authorities to fully investigate all
recent fatalities during the crisis in the country, and particularly
in Odessa.

The Declaration also asks the government of Turkmenistan to provide
information on the status of persons who have disappeared in the
country’s prisons.

Several paragraphs focus on Azerbaijan, the host country for this
year’s OSCE PA Annual Session, including an expression of “deep
concern at the situation of Mr. Anar Mammadli” and other “citizens who
have been victims of politicized court cases.”

Several supplementary items were adopted by the Parliamentary Assembly
as an annex to the Baku Declaration.

They include resolutions on the prevention and prosecution of child
sex-trafficking, food security and limited water resources in the OSCE
area and an item that “condemns the clear, gross and uncorrected
violation of the Helsinki principles by the Russian Federation with
respect to Ukraine, including the particularly egregious violation of
that country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

The resolution, initiated by U.S. Senator Benjamin Cardin, the Deputy
Head of the U.S. Delegation, was the focus of an at-times heated
parliamentary debate on 1 July.

Source: Panorama.am

Russia to give $300 million to extend Armenian nuclear plant service

Russia to give $300 million to extend Armenian nuclear plant service life

Saturday, July 05, 2014

On early September, the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant (ANPP) will be
shut down for 45 days for planned repairs, Armenian Minister of Energy
and Natural Resources Yervand Zakharyan said, according to the
ministry’s press service.

The minister yesterday visited the ANPP where a meeting on annual
reports of shareholders took place. Zakharyan said Armenia and Russia
will sign an agreement, under which Armenia will receive a $300
million loan from Russia with the aim of extending the service life of
ANPP.

The negotiations are in the final stage, the matter concerns a
long-term loan at a low interest rate, the minister said.

According to him, the construction of a new nuclear plant will cost
$4.5 billion. The project is expected to start in 2018-2019.

TODAY, 16:27
Aysor.am

Turkish Court Rejects Request to Return Historic Building to Armenia

Turkish Court Rejects Request to Return Historic Building to Armenian
Patriarchate

By MassisPost
Updated: July 4, 2014

ISTANBUL — Turkey’s Armenian Patriarchate has lost its legal battle to
reclaim the Sansaryan Han building, which was confiscated by the state
about seven decades ago, Today’s Zaman reported.

The court rejection came in spite of a recent government plan to
return seized properties to minority groups.

The historic building, built in 1895 and commissioned by Migirdich Aga
Sanasaryan, was designed by architect Hovsep Aznavour. It was seized
by the Turkish state in the early years of the republic. The Armenian
Patriarchate has been fighting a legal battle for its return since
2011.

The Istanbul 13th Court of First Instance rejected the patriarchate’s
request for the return of Sansaryan Han in the last session on Friday,
attended by lawyers representing both the Patriarchate and the
Treasury.

A contractor leased the building on June 18 from Turkey’s Directorate
General for Foundations (VGM). The lease agreement was executed before
the conclusion of the lawsuit and prompted speculation that the
building will be turned into a hotel.

Ali Eyuboglu, an attorney for the Armenian Patriarchate, said the
court’s reasons for not returning the building are not clear as all
the documents and expert reports indicate that the building rightfully
belongs to the patriarchate. Eyüboglu said they will appeal the
decision once the court issues its reasoned opinion regarding the
verdict.

In a related development, Republican People’s Party (CHP) Deputy
Chairman Sezgin Tanrikulu submitted a parliamentary motion addressed
to Minister of Culture and Tourism Omer Celik inquiring whether the
speculation that the Sansaryan Han will be turned into a hotel is
true.

Minority foundations, seeking the return of properties that were
seized by the Turkish state in the first decade of the Turkish
Republic, have long been saying that they have experienced a number of
challenges. Despite a 2011 law passed to ensure confiscated property
be returned to its rightful owners, the foundations indicate that
reclaiming the properties is not going to be easy.

In August 2011, the Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
government adopted legislation to return all confiscated immovable
property belonging to minority foundations in Turkey, a long-overdue
step towards expanding the rights of minorities in the country. The
decree allows foundations to reclaim real property declared in 1936,
when all the foundations were asked by the government to present lists
of their property assets. Applications for at least 88 items have been
rejected.

http://massispost.com/2014/07/turkish-court-rejects-request-to-return-historic-building-to-armenian-patriarchate/

Zarakolu: What Belongs to the Armenians Must be Returned to the Arme

Zarakolu: What Belongs to the Armenians Must be Returned to the Armenians

By MassisPost
Updated: July 4, 2014

YEREVAN — Turkish publisher and activist Ragib Zarakolu, who is in
Yerevan these days, once again reiterated the need for the recognition
of the Armenian Genocide by Turkey.

At a meeting with the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party (SDHP)
representatives Vazgen Mesropyan, Dmitri Martirosyan and Gagik
Melikyan, Zarakolu said it is now time to speak with official Ankara
with the language of claims.

“What belongs to the Armenians must be returned to the Armenians,” he
said, adding that the Turkish state was founded on the lands of the
Armenians and Greeks.

Hunchakian Party representatives thanked Zarakolu for speaking out in
Turkey about the fact of the Armenian Genocide throughout so many
years and expressed their readiness to cooperate.

Ragip Zarakolu also met with the Hunchakian Party “Sarkis Tkhruni”
Youth Student Union representatives.

http://massispost.com/2014/07/zarakolu-what-belongs-to-the-armenians-must-be-returned-to-the-armenians/

Une politique économique correcte peut apporter une croissance du PI

ARMENIE
Une politique économique correcte peut apporter une croissance du PIB
de 8 à 9% en 2014 selon un expert

L’ Arménie peut atteindre une croissance économique de 8 à 9% en 2014
si le gouvernement poursuit une politique économique correcte, a
déclaré le chef du centre de recherche > l’économiste
Tatul Manaseryan.

Il a dit que cela peut être réalisé en dépit des prévisions
pessimistes du FMI, si le potentiel local existant est correctement
utilisé.

Les projections du FMI pour la croissance économique de l’Arménie sont
de 4,3% pour 2014 et 4,5% pour 2015. Le rapport de la Banque mondiale
affiche une croissance de 5% de l’économie en 2014, 2015 et 2016.

Selon Tatul Manaseryan, le potentiel sera utilisé de manière correcte
si les conditions sont définies pour les entreprises privées, que les
entreprises sont de nouveau en service, et la qualité des produits
locaux est améliorée pour les rendre plus compétitifs sur les marchés
extérieurs. Un autre facteur est l’élévation de la confiance envers le
gouvernement, qui va stimuler les investissements dans le pays, a-t-il
dit.

Tatul Manaseryan a également proposé de mettre en place un fonds de
partenariat entre le gouvernement et le secteur privé, comme cela a
été fait en Géorgie, pour atteindre des indicateurs économiques
élevés.

L’économiste a souligné que l’adhésion de l’Arménie à l’Union
économique eurasienne aura un impact très positif sur le développement
économique, car elle va ouvrir un énorme marché pour les producteurs
arméniens.

samedi 5 juillet 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com