The Flower Seller Of Aleppo

THE FLOWER SELLER OF ALEPPO

The Majalla Magazine
June 11 2014

An Armenian-Syrian remembers his blooms and the city he loves

by Hannah Lucinda Smith

BACKGAMMON blog: A board game played in smoky cafes from Beirut to
Baghdad. Backgammon’s earliest ancestor is five thousand years old
and was unearthed in southern Iraq. ‘Backgammon’ covers the state of
play in the countries spanning the Fertile Crescent: Syria, Lebanon,
Israel, Palestine, Jordan, and Iraq.

“Flowers, I love flowers!” exclaims Krikor. “I used to skip school
so I could go and pick flowers. Everyone in Aleppo knew me by my
nickname–I was Krikor, the flower seller!”

His eyes shone bright as he talked about the job and the city he
loved. Krikor was as intertwined with Aleppo’s Armenian quarter as
the honey-colored bricks of the old Orthodox churches. Everyone knew
him, he says–he didn’t have friends, he had customers. They would
go to see him for important and happy occasions–their weddings, new
babies and birthdays–and he would lovingly put together a bouquet
for them, made up of Aleppo’s finest blooms. “I swear, I was loved,”
he says. “Any events that occurred, I enjoyed them. And at the end
of the day, I would say ‘Thank God!'”

Two generations earlier, Krikor’s grandparents were famous too. “They
were the za’atar makers!” he says. Za’atar is a fragrant blend of
dried herbs, sumac and sesame seeds.”They were the best za’atar makers
in all of Aleppo. All the survivors [of the massacre of Armenians in
Turkey in 1915] came to them to buy their za’atar.”

Krikor’s grandparents were also survivors of the atrocities committed
in 1915 at the hands of the Ottomans. They fled their hometown of
Konya, in central Turkey, and like thousands of others they settled
in Aleppo and built the foundations of the city’s thriving Armenian
quarter. A century later, 70,000 Armenians lived in the city, working
as artisans and running businesses, speaking in Arabic with other
Syrians but in Armenian among themselves, and worshipping in the
Armenian churches.

Like many others, Krikor started small. In the third grade he started
selling flowers on the street. His father was ashamed. “He said that
Arabs were known as flower sellers,” says Krikor. “He told me that
no one would want me to marry their daughter.”

But Krikor loved flowers and so he continued, selling them day after
day on the streets of his city. His business grew and he became well
known. By the time he left Aleppo he had his own shop and he had just
put down the deposit on a house. “Everything I had I paid for with the
sweat off my brow,” he says. “That was the first house I ever owned.”

But throughout the searing summer of 2012, as the conflict began to
encroach on Aleppo, everything started to change. The bombs and the
curfews were the impersonal signs, but it was the sudden change in
Krikor’s business that told the human story of what was happening. No
one was getting married anymore; no one wanted to celebrate their
birthdays. His customers started asking him to arrange funeral wreaths.

Krikor was one of the first Aleppines to flee: when the Armenian
government sent a plane to Aleppo to collect its citizens, he boarded
it with his wife. She held an Armenian passport and he knew that his
ancestry would afford him safe passage. They settled in Armenia’s
capital, Yerevan, and hoped they would only be there for a few months.

But that was two years ago, and they are still here. Krikor can’t sell
flowers in Armenia, so instead he paints doors and dreams of the day
when he will be able to go back to Aleppo. His house is still there
and so are his parents. Until seven months ago he used to travel
back to see them regularly, taking the coach south through Turkey,
crossing over a rebel-held border crossing and boarding the rickety
bus to Aleppo city.

On his last trip there, in October 2013, he fell foul of the conflict’s
ruthless sectarian edge, which he had feared since the earliest
days of the uprising. In between the border and Aleppo, the bus he
was traveling on was stopped at a checkpoint controlled by Al-Nusra
Front, one of the most extreme Islamist rebel groups. The fighters
checked all the passengers’ passports, and those with Muslim names
were allowed to go. Krikor, with his Armenian surname, was arrested,
detained and tortured. His only crime was being a Christian.

Out on the streets of Yerevan, Krikor unrolled the Syrian flag with
two stars that he carried with him in his coat pocket and held it
between outstretched arms, proud and unafraid. He did not want to
talk about politics, or Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, or who is
right and wrong. All he wanted to speak about was his love for his
city and for flowers.

“I believe things will get better,” he says. “And if things get better,
I will go back.”

http://www.majalla.com/eng/2014/06/article55250245

Armenia To Solve Financial Problems At The Expense Of The People

ARMENIA TO SOLVE FINANCIAL PROBLEMS AT THE EXPENSE OF THE PEOPLE

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
June 11 2014

11 June 2014 – 1:58pm

Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan. Exclusively to VK

The Armenian authorities have recently published a statement saying
that prices for electricity are going to be increased by 3.8-4.3
drams or by 10 percent. The authorities explain that the increase
is necessary in order to secure the financial stability of energy
companies and a stable power supply.

Within the last two or three days various energy companies, including
the Armenian atomic power plant, the Yerevan thermal electric power
station and the Sevano-Razdansky hydro-electric power station have
been saying that they are facing financial problems, as they have to
pay back loans and modernize their facilities. The companies have been
saying that the only way to solve these problems is to increase tarifs
for power. In such a case the companies will be able to overcome the
deficit. Experts believe, however, that in future the companies will
face the same problems.

Some media reported that the Armenian authorities are negotiating
the sale of the Electricity Network of Armenia private corporation,
which now belongs to RAO YeES, to Gazprom. So in order to make the deal
more favourable to Gazprom the authorities are trying to increase the
company’s efficiency. The fact that at the moment the company does not
operate efficiently has been confirmed by its chief executive Yevgeni
Bibin. According to him, in 2012 the company functioned at a loss,
while in 2011 its profits decreased by 75 percent.

This means that the company is a bankrupt. Its assets constitute around
$250 million and it has loans worth $240 million. In other words,
the company cannot pay its loans back and needs further investment.

According to the official data, in first quarter of 2014 the
consumption of energy decreased by 4-5 percent. “The demand for energy
depends on prices. That is why the population and businesses are
trying to consume less power. The decrease is already quite tangible
and production costs more for the energy companies,” lawmaker from the
Flourishing Armenia party Mikael Melkumyan says. According to him,
the production of bread, vegetables and construction materials will
also be affected by the issues, since these kinds of products demand
a lot of power.

Some experts believe that the reason for this is the cabinet’s
inability to draft an adequate development programme for business.

They say the government should develop a scheme, in the framework of
which all the loans should be paid back within 25 years.

Another reason is that the authorities conduct an unwise policy towards
energy production. The authorities have launched the construction of
new energy facilities, while the demand for power is on the decrease.

One more reason is that the cabinet does not control the operation
of the Electricity Network of Armenia, which is in fact a foreign
company. The firm has the unique right to deliver energy to the
country, which is acquired on the condition that all the necessary
investment will be provided. How can one explain how a company,
which was profitable 10 years ago, is now facing bankruptcy?

Some experts point out that it is unacceptable to solve the problems
the company is facing at the expense of the population and businesses
while the social and economic situation is very difficult. In addition
to that, prices for energy already increased 30 percent last year
for daytime use and by 40 percent for nighttime. Experts believe the
state should find other ways to cope with the matter.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/economy/56302.html

Join The Armenians, See The World

JOIN THE ARMENIANS, SEE THE WORLD

Irish Times
June 11 2014

An Irishman’s Diary about oppressed minorities

by Frank McNally

Photo: A 14th-century Armenian gospel with jewelled binding in the
Chester Beatty Library, Dublin. “In the production and reproduction
of holy books, the medieval monks of Armenia far outdid their vaunted
Irish counterparts. And a byproduct of this is that, today, there may
be as many Armenian books in Dublin as actual Armenians.” Photograph:
Paddy Whelan

My mention of the Loyal League of Yiddish Sons of Erin last week
(June 6th) provoked an email from, of all places, Hawaii. Patrick
Fitzgerald Donovan was drawing attention to the existence of an even
more select group of exiles. In poker terms, he was seeing my LLYSE
and raising me IASZ – the Irish Armenian Sons of Zion.

The group was formed, Patrick says, back in the early 1970s, in
Bennington, Vermont. He and the other founders, Eliot Cohen and
Charles Bergamian, were relaxing “with a few beers”. Then, as often
happens with beer, they decided to form a representative organisation
to embrace their collective ethnicities.

They considered several names, including “Irish Jews in Search of
Armenia”, before settling on the IASZ. And although the group remains
a small one, it’s still going, unlike the LLYSE. “We have been in
existence now for over 40 years”, writes Patrick, “and have a number
of younger members ready to carry on into the next 40”.

It’s not clear (and it seemed indelicate to ask) whether any of the
younger members are the result of interbreeding between two or more of
the diasporas involved. By the law of averages, I suppose, there must
be a few genetically Irish-Armenian Jews somewhere. And if there are,
they must feel uniquely oppressed.

On top of their history of invasion and dispossession, the Armenians
have the added affliction that the world has largely forgotten what
happened to them, even though the worst of it is still less than a
century old.

What is now known as the “Armenian Genocide” of 1915 was called
something else then, because the word genocide was not coined until
1944. But that another genocide had happened by 1944 was in part a
consequence of international indifference to the earlier one.

Here is Hitler briefing his generals in 1939 about the need to
obliterate Poland, and explaining why they’ll get away with it:
“Only in this way will we win the lebensraum that we need. Who,
after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”

The email from Hawaii reminded me that we live on a small planet. I
read it while strolling through central Dublin in the footsteps
(probably) of that celebrated Irish Jew, Leopold Bloom. And it
persuaded me to make a short detour, via Dublin Castle, for an
overdue visit to that wonderful museum, the Chester Beatty Library
of Oriental Art.

Among the treasures there, I knew, were more than 100 Armenian books
and manuscripts of varying antiquity, part of a tradition for which
that country was long famous.

Indeed, in the production and reproduction of holy books, the medieval
monks of Armenia far outdid their vaunted Irish counterparts. And a
byproduct of this is that, today, there may be as many Armenian books
in Dublin as actual Armenians.

Not that I saw the books this time, to be honest. They’re mostly in
storage, and I was in a hurry. So I confined myself to the museum’s
suitably exotic Silk Road cafe, where I toasted the IASZ with coffee
and a date biscuit. I think that qualifies me for honorary membership.

Speaking of honorary membership, and closer to home, I’ve also
been hearing from Mark Minihan in Co Wexford, whose late father
Andy once enjoyed such status with the LLYSE. Andy Minihan is now
perhaps best remembered as the council chairman – or “Mister Mayor”
– who in 1963 welcomed JFK to New Ross, and whose irreverent wit
caused much laughter from the visitor. In the years following, he was
invited to lead St Patrick’s Day parades with the mayors of New York,
Chicago, and Jersey City. And it was while in NY that he was elected
an honorary member of the LLYSE. In typical fashion, he accepted on
condition that they didn’t expect him to have the “operation”.

The Dublin-born league chairman Mike Mann, a New York union boss,
subsequently raised money for the JFK Arboretum in New Ross and
travelled over for the opening with fellow union leader Harry Van
Arsdale, president of the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers.

With such powerful allies, Mark Minihan and a friend of his were not
stuck for jobs when they went to the US on J1 visas the following
summer. Sure enough, Mark got work with an electrical contractor in
the New York Times offices.

His friend’s fortunes, meanwhile, were even more dramatic. He rose
rapidly in the Big Apple. Then he went down, just as fast. Then up
again. And so on all summer. You guessed it. He was a lift operator
in the Empire State Building.

http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/heritage/join-the-armenians-see-the-world-1.1827302

U.S.-Azerbaijan Relations: The Democracy And Human Rights Dimension

U.S.-AZERBAIJAN RELATIONS: THE DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS DIMENSION

US Department of State
June 11 2014

Testimony
Thomas O. Melia
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
Written Testimony to the Commission on Security and Cooperation in
Europe (U.S. Helsinki Commission)
Washington, DC
June 11, 2014

Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission, thank you for inviting me to
speak to you today about the democracy and human rights dimension of
U.S.-Azerbaijan relations in advance of your visit to Baku later this
month for the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly Annual Session. My colleagues
at the State Department and I greatly appreciate the dedication of
you and your fellow Commissioners and your staff to the OSCE and its
institutions – especially to the enduring principles enshrined in the
Helsinki Final Act and the body of commitments that comprise the OSCE’s
“human dimension.” We also greatly value our regular consultations
with you and your staff.

I would like to start by referring to a key principle of the OSCE,
as set forth in the 1991 “Moscow Document” and notably reaffirmed
in the 2010 Astana Summit Declaration, in which OSCE participating
States agreed unanimously that:

“issues relating to human rights, fundamental freedoms, democracy
and the rule of law are of international concern, as respect for
these rights and freedoms constitutes one of the foundations of the
international order. They categorically and irrevocably declare that
the commitments undertaken in the field of the human dimension of the
OSCE are matters of direct and legitimate concern to all participating
States and do not belong exclusively to the internal affairs of the
State concerned.”

This concept linking respect for human rights within states to lasting
security among states is reflected in our multilateral interactions
and in our bilateral relationships with all OSCE participating States,
including Azerbaijan. It forms the basis on which the United States
continues to support efforts to advance democracy worldwide. In
Azerbaijan, this constitutes one of three equally important core goals,
which Deputy Assistant Secretary Rubin has just spoken to. U.S.

officials at all levels in Baku and Washington regularly highlight
the importance of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms,
rule of law, and other basic building blocks of democracy, publicly
and privately. U.S. officials regularly meet with a variety of
Azerbaijanis, ranging from government officials to civil society
activists and opposition political party representatives.

While serving as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, I have visited
Azerbaijan three times, holding valuable meetings with leading
government officials, including President Ilham Aliyev, as well as with
opposition political leaders, civil society actors, and journalists. I
have been joined on these missions to Azerbaijan, as well as to other
countries, by senior colleagues from the Department of State’s European
and Eurasian Affairs Bureau, USAID, and the Department of Justice. I
believe these are important opportunities to listen to Azerbaijanis
inside and outside of government, to share with them our thoughts,
and to demonstrate that we do care about all three dimensions of the
relationship. Indeed, I would like to visit Azerbaijan again soon to
continue these conversations.

The United States also provides assistance to support Azerbaijan’s
democratic development efforts, with an emphasis on support for civil
society, independent media, and rule of law. The largest part of this
assistance is provided by our colleagues at USAID, and we in the State
Department work very closely with them to ensure that these programs
are neatly lined up with our overall policy priorities. Similarly, we
work closely in Washington and Baku with the legal experts provided by
the Department of Justice in the Overseas Prosecutorial Development
Assistance and Training program. Our inter-agency partnership is
working very well.

Just two weeks ago, on May 28, Azerbaijan celebrated the 96th
anniversary of the day in 1918 on which it became the first majority
Muslim, democratic republic in the world. The Azerbaijan Democratic
Republic lasted only 23 months, until it was invaded by the Soviet Red
Army and forcibly incorporated into the nascent Soviet Union, where
it remained captive for more than seven decades. Since Azerbaijan
regained its independence in 1991, it has begun to modernize, and
its people have become more integrated into the wider world.

With regard to building democratic institutions and developing
democratic norms, Azerbaijan has taken some positive steps. For
example, it established six administrative government service centers
in Baku and the regions (known as “ASAN,” which means “easy” in
Azeri) intended to eliminate corruption by public officials at the
local level. More broadly, however, we have been seeing increasing
constraints on fundamental freedoms that increase the risk of domestic
instability, undermine confidence the rule of law will be respected,
and prevent Azerbaijanis from reaching their full potential.

Five years ago, it was already difficult for advocates of democratic
reform – especially opposition political parties – to participate in
the political life of the country, but it was still possible for NGOs
and independent activists to operate. The environment has worsened
significantly since then, beginning with the 2009 incarceration of
young democracy activists Emin Milli and Adnan Hajizade. Although they
were released in 2010, the suppression of peaceful dissent increased
in 2011, with the arrests of young Azerbaijani activists who sought
to organize peaceful pro-democracy rallies in Baku. The Milli Mejlis
(Azerbaijan’s parliament) passed legislation significantly increasing
fines on participants and organizers of unauthorized protests in
November 2012, which resulted in the detention of numerous peaceful
pro-democracy activists for baseless administrative violations. Since
early 2013, the space for peaceful dissent has narrowed more
dramatically, and the exercise of fundamental freedoms has become still
more tenuous. A number of leading peaceful democracy advocates, civil
society activists, and journalists have been incarcerated, including
presidential candidate and chairman of the democratic reform-oriented
REAL Movement, Ilgar Mammadov; opposition journalist and Musavat Party
Deputy Chairman Tofig Yagublu; members of democratic youth movements;
blogger Abdul Abilov; religious scholar and activist Taleh Bagirzade;
Khural Editor Avaz Zeynalli; and the chairman of NDI’s local election
monitoring partner, the Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies
Center (EMDS), Anar Mammadli.

Additionally, two rounds of legislative amendments since March 2013
have restricted NGO funding and activity. Officials have pressured
Azerbaijani and international NGOs, including some USAID implementing
partners, which in some cases have been subject to investigations
by the tax and justice ministries. Authorities also launched a
criminal investigation of EMDS – which has been a recipient of
USAID and European assistance – and another election monitoring NGO,
the International Cooperation of Volunteers (ICV) Public Union, soon
after the flawed October 2013 presidential election. Such actions have
resulted in an increasingly hostile operating environment for civil
society, especially for those activists and groups advocating respect
for human rights, fundamental freedoms, and government accountability;
thereby depriving citizens the open channels through which they
can voice their concerns. Pressure on independent defense lawyers
has resulted in a decreasing number of such lawyers ready to defend
individuals in sensitive cases.

Restrictions on the ability of selected Azerbaijani activists to travel
outside of the country are also a problem, calling into question
the extent of the government’s commitment to freedom of movement, a
founding tenet of the OSCE. For example, since 2006, the government
has prevented the foreign travel of opposition Popular Front Party
Chairman Ali Karimli by refusing to renew his passport.

Today in Bern, the OSCE’s Office for Democratic Institutions and Human
Rights is discussing the important role of human rights defenders
in OSCE participating States. Sadly, one of Azerbaijan’s leading
human rights defenders, Leyla Yunus, was unable to attend the event,
because Azerbaijan’s authorities confiscated her passport – as well as
her husband’s – in April. This confiscation occurred in the context
of the April 19 arrest of well-known journalist Rauf Mirkadirov,
the subsequent questioning of Leyla Yunus and her husband about
Mirkadirov, and their poor treatment by police authorities. All three
have been strong proponents of people-to-people diplomacy, which helps
build ties between Azerbaijanis and Armenians and is crucial to the
peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The peaceful
resolution of this conflict will open borders, increase security,
and create new opportunities to trade, travel, and engage across the
region. Authorities also have prevented some in the international
human rights community from visiting or returning to Azerbaijan.

These are not the kinds of actions the United States or the broader
international community wants to see from a partner, an OSCE
participating State, and currently the chair of the Committee of
Ministers of the Council of Europe.

When President Obama spoke last month at the West Point commencement,
he explained that:

“America’s support for democracy and human rights goes beyond idealism
— it is a matter of national security. Democracies are our closest
friends and are far less likely to go to war. Economies based on free
and open markets perform better and become markets for our goods.

Respect for human rights is an antidote to instability and the
grievances that fuel violence and terror.

And he noted that,

“In capitals around the globe — including, unfortunately, some of
America’s partners — there has been a crackdown on civil society.”

We recognize that Azerbaijan lives in a very difficult neighborhood
and that its government seeks stability. The United States strongly
supports Azerbaijan’s long-term stability, security, and prosperity.

The best way to guarantee such a future is to strengthen democratic
processes and institutions to buttress respect for the rule of law
and fundamental freedoms. Doing so will foster long-term internal
stability, create the most inviting environment for economic investment
and growth, and make Azerbaijan the very best that it can be, by
giving every citizen the freedom and space to achieve his or her
full potential, thereby maximizing the contributions of all of its
people. We consider this to be in both the short-term and the long-term
interests of both the people and the government of Azerbaijan. The
U.S. Embassy in Baku and we in Washington have been active on these
issues and have made these points. For example, Ambassador Morningstar
has been doing an outstanding job in advocating publicly as well as
privately for an environment conducive to a vibrant civil society
and in raising specific impediments to such an environment.

The United States believes that Azerbaijan will have greater stability
and prosperity, and will more quickly reach its full potential, by
allowing a more open society. We therefore will continue to support
Azerbaijani efforts to advance the country’s democratic potential,
including respect for rule of law, human rights, and fundamental
freedoms. We will continue to urge Azerbaijan to live up to its OSCE
commitments and other international human rights obligations. We will
also encourage Azerbaijan to take advantage of its chairmanship of
the Council of Europe to take concrete steps on important democracy
and human rights issues. The positive changes we advocate would
benefit both the people and the government of Azerbaijan. Such changes
would also make it easier for us to expand and deepen our bilateral
relationship, since our strongest relationships are with democratic
states that respect the full range of human rights of all of their
citizens.

As President Obama indicated in his recent message marking Azerbaijan’s
National Day, and to return to where I began, we encourage Azerbaijan
to reclaim the leadership role on human rights and fundamental freedoms
that its people and government demonstrated 96 years ago.

Thank you again, Mr. Chairman, for this opportunity to discuss
democracy and human rights trends in Azerbaijan and our overall
bilateral relationship.

The Activist Will Bring An Action Against The Policemen. "They Have

THE ACTIVIST WILL BRING AN ACTION AGAINST THE POLICEMEN. “THEY HAVE CONFISCATED EVERYTHING, MY PHONE, MY MONEY, AND MY BANK CARDS.”

June 11 2014

As we had informed, yesterday, in the evening, the police apprehended
10 civil activists dismantling the gates of the Afrikyan’s building.

Sipan Pashinyan was among the detainees, who generally was not
associated with the gates of the Afrikyan’s building and had not
participated in any protest on that day. He just had gone to the
police station to learn some news about his friends, but the police
had immediately arrested him, and had seized the phone from his hands,
the wallet, bank cards, the whole money and had filed a criminal
case by Article 185 of the Criminal Code. In the conversation with
Aravot.am, Sipan Pashinyan told what had happened, “After being
apprehended near the Kentron Police station, the policemen did
not justify their behavior in any way and did not say why they had
apprehended him. They confiscated everything, my driver’s license,
bank cards, business cards, everything that I had with me, 12 thousand
drams. They left nothing with me.” Sipan Pashinyan said that the
police did not use impose brute force specifically to him, he did
not let them to apprehend him by beating. “My friends are injured,
Artak’s arm is broken and scratched. I do not know whether they are
seriously injured, or not.” To our question of whether he is planning
to make a complaint against the police, he responded, “Of course, I was
apprehended completely unsubstantiated. I regret for not participating
in the protest, I was just busy. Then I was called and told that my
friends were apprehended, I went to the police station. Three minutes
later after I got off the car, I was apprehended and without saying a
word they got me. Only 2 hours later, after long fights and quarreling,
they allowed me to call home and let them know that I am in the police
station. They wanted to take my fingerprints, we refused, they took our
photos, and wrote down a protocol, I do not know why. Now, I am in the
status of a suspect for intentional damaging of someone’s property.”

Read more at:

http://en.aravot.am/2014/06/11/165614/

Prof. Ashot Chilingarian’s Accomplishments Commemorated

PROF. ASHOT CHILINGARIAN’S ACCOMPLISHMENTS COMMEMORATED

Wednesday, June 11th, 2014

L. to r.: Dr. Razmik Mirzoyan from the Max-Planck-Institute for Physics
in Munich, Germany; Dr. Hartmut Gemmeke from the Forshchum Centrum
Physics Institute in Karlsruhe, Germany; Prof. Ashot Chilingarian,
director of the Yerevan Physics Institute; and Dr.

Johannes Knapp, astrophysicist from the University of Leeds in England
and DESY in Germany

YEREVAN–Within the international physics community significant
accomplishments of famous scientists are often recognized in symposiums
honoring them. On Tuesday, May 20, a symposium at the Nor Ambert
Cosmic Ray Research Station on Mt. Aragats commemorated Dr.

Ashot Chilingarian’s decades of achievement. Dr. Ashot Chilingarian
is the director of the Yerevan Physics Institute (YerPhI) and head
of its Cosmic Ray Division (CRD).

Dr. Razmik Mirzoyan of the Max Planck Institute in Germany opened
the symposium and introduced Dr. Johannes Knapp, astrophysicist from
the University of Leeds in England and DESY in Germany. Dr. Knapp
chronicled Prof. Chilingarian’s career from his first published paper
in 1975 to his appointment as head of the CRD in 1993 and, 11 years
later, to the directorship of the entire physics institute. Not only
did Dr. Knapp iterate many of Chilingarian’s contributions in the
fields of physics, mathematics, and neural networks, but he stressed
Chilingarian’s organizational ability and his support of bright young
Armenian students, some of whom were in the audience.

The next speaker, Dr. Hartmut Gemmeke, who recently retired from the
Forshchum Centrum physics institute in Karlsruhe, Germany, related
early collaborations with Prof. Chilingarian when he (Gemmeke) was a
post-doctoral scholar. He cited Chilingarian’s contributions to space
weather research. He concluded with a couple of poems he authored
about Prof. Chilingarian’s career.

Dr. Razmik Mirzoyan from the Max-Planck-Institute for Physics
in Munich, Germany concluded the talks with a description of the
development of Cherenkov Radiation telescopes and the contributions
Prof. Chilingarian has made to this technology. Mirzoyan is the
chairman of the MAGIC collaboration for a large telescope in the
Canary Islands.

Prof. Chilingarian has more than 380 scientific publications and has
won more than 20 research grants totaling more than 2.5M USD from
foundations such as the International Science and Technology Center
(ISTC), the International Technology and Science foundation (INTAS)
and other sources.

He is the author of the ANI (Analysis and Nonparametric Inference)
computer code library, which has been extensively used by the
international cosmic ray physics community during the last few
decades for multidimensional analysis of data from modern cosmic
ray detectors. He also introduced the “multidimensional nonlinear
cuts” method for analyzing data from the Atmospheric Cherenkov
Telescopes (ACT) and event-by-event analysis for Extensive Air Shower
experiments. The Data Visualization Interactive Network (DVIN) was
developed under his supervision. This project won a UN World Summit
on Information Society award in Geneva in 2003.

He is the founder of the Aragats Space Environmental Center (ASEC)
and the Space Environmental Viewing and Analysis Network (SEVAN),
multinational scientific collaborations let by Armenia. In turn Prof.

Chilingarian is Armenia’s representative in other international
collaborations such as the world wide neutron detector network led
by Japan, The Space Weather Initiative led by NASA, the International
Commission on Space Research (COSPAR) and many others.

Other guests at the symposium and the subsequent dinner honoring Prof.

Ashot Chilingarian included Dr. Bruce Boghosian, a physicist from
Tufts University who is concluding his 4th year as president of the
American University of Armenia, Dr Michel Davudian from France and
the president and CEO of OZONE internet service company in the Shirak
Marz, and founders of the Support Committee for Armenia’s Cosmic Ray
Division Anahid Yeremian and Joseph Dagdigian. Besides YerPhI staff
members, also in attendance were graduate students studying at CRD.

http://asbarez.com/123989/prof-ashot-chilingarian%E2%80%99s-accomplishments-commemorated/

Russian Foreign Minister To Pay An Official Visit To Armenia

RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER TO PAY AN OFFICIAL VISIT TO ARMENIA

21:39 11.06.2014

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will arrive in Armenia on June
22 for a two-day official visit at the invitation of Armenian Foreign
Minister Edward Nalbandian.

Sergey Lavrov will meet with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

During the meetings reference will be made to the process of
implementation of the agreements reached within the framework of
the Russian President’s state visit to Armenia in December, 2013,
the steps taken in the direction of the further deepening of the
Armenian-Russian allied relations and strategic partnership, the
process of Armenia’s accession to the Eurasian Economic Union.

Issues related to the expansion of trade relations, the deepening of
decentralized cooperation will also be on the agenda of the meetings.

During the negotiations reference will be made to the OSCE Minsk Group
Co-Chairs’ efforts aimed at solving the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. A
number of issues on regional and international agenda will also
be discussed.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/06/11/russian-foreign-minister-to-pay-an-official-visit-to-armenia/

Le Livre << Le Genocide Armenien Du Debut A La Fin >> Par L’Historie

LE LIVRE > PAR L’HISTORIEN DANOIS MATTHIAS BJORNLUND A ETE PUBLIE

ARMENIE

Le livre > (Det armenske
folkedrab fra begyndelsen til enden ) par l’historien danois et expert
des comparaisons sur les genocides Matthias Bjørnlund a ete publie
au Danemark et presente aux lecteurs danois des preuves irrefutables
et des materiaux sur le genocide perpetre contre les Armeniens en
Turquie entre 1915 et 1923 .

Le livre > a ete publie
par Kristeligt Dagblads Forlag en Avril 2013 . Le livre couvre
toute l’histoire de la question armenienne et le genocide armenien ,
les reformes et les massacres du 19e siècle aux annees 1920 et au
lendemain du genocide.

Base sur une multitude de sources d’archives , de publications
contemporaines, et la plus recente recherche internationale, c’est
une tentative ambitieuse d’ecrire l’histoire de la destruction
des Armeniens ottomans comme l’histoire du monde , comme une
serie d’evenements qui ont affecte une generation de politiciens
, d’intellectuels, et de gens ordinaires , de la Scandinavie a
l’Australie. Le livre a ete bien accueilli par la presse danoise , avec
un journaliste l’appelant >.

mercredi 11 juin 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=94884

Des Militants Arretes Alors Qu’ils Manifestaient Contre Une Demoliti

DES MILITANTS ARRETES ALORS QU’ILS MANIFESTAIENT CONTRE UNE DEMOLITION

Patrimoine

Onze jeunes militants ont ete arretes par la police dans la nuit de
lundi a mardi alors qu’ils tentaient de contrecarrer la demolition
d’un vieux bâtiment a Erevan avec des dizaines d’autres manifestants.

La foule s’est rassemblee dans le centre-ville dans une dernière
tentative pour sauver le bâtiment historique communement appele
“Afrikians’ House” de la destruction voulue par les autorites
municipales.

La structure de deux etages a ete construite a la fin du 19e siècle
par une des familles les plus riches et les plus influentes dans ce
qui etait alors une ville de province dans l’Empire russe. Elle a ete
un club prive de l’elite locale et a ete transforme en un immeuble
lorsque l’Armenie a rejoint l’Union sovietique.

Le bâtiment a ete inclus en 2006 sur une liste gouvernementale des
biens soumis a la demolition dans le cadre d’un reamenagement massif
de centre d’Erevan. Ses habitants ont progressivement demenage depuis,
grâce a une compensation financière versee par le nouveau proprietaire
des biens : une entreprise privee qui aurait l’intention de construire
un hôtel a sa place.

Le projet de reamenagement a suscite un tolle auprès des membres
de la societe civile preoccupes par ce qu’ils considèrent comme une
destruction methodique du patrimoine culturel et historique d’Erevan.

Le bureau du maire leur a assure que la facade complexe du bâtiment
et les murs exterieurs seront rassembles dans une autre partie du
centre-ville. Les gouvernements municipaux et centraux se sont engages
a recreer un “vieux quartier” constitue de structures du 19e siècle
demolies au cours de la dernière decennie.

Les travaux sur ce district n’ont pas encore commence. Les critiques au
gouvernement disent que ce fait prouve seulement que la “Afrikians’
House” sera perdue de manière irreversible si les autorites sont
autorisees a la demolir.

Les quelques dizaines de militants qui se sont mobilises lundi soir
ont demantele une clôture d’etain de protection qui etait placee autour
de la maison depuis le debut de l’annee en vue de sa demolition. L’un
d’eux a ete arrete par la police anti-emeute sur la place, tandis
que dix autres ont ete places en detention après leur rassemblement
devant un poste de police pour demander sa liberation.

Tous les jeunes hommes ont ete liberes sans inculpation quelques
heures plus tard. L’un d’eux, Babken Der-Grigorian, a affirme avoir
ete agresse verbalement et menace par des policiers.

Un porte-parole de la police a dit que celle-ci soupconnait les
manifestants d’avoir endommager la propriete privee. Il a declare
que les policiers procèdent a une enquete preliminaire pour decider
s’il fallait lancer des procedures penales ou administratives a
leur encontre.

mercredi 11 juin 2014, Claire (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=100659

Armenian Genocide Museum To Be Built In Buenos Aires

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM TO BE BUILT IN BUENOS AIRES

09:53, 11 June, 2014

BUENOS AIRES, JUNE 11, ARMENPRESS. In the capital of Argentina, Buenos
Aires, upon the initiative of the Armenian Diocese of Argentina, and
the Armenian Center, in the “Siranuysh” Hall adjacent to the Prelacy,
on June 11, an event took place dedicated to the construction of the
Armenian Genocide Museum in Buenos Aires. As reports “Armenpress”,
Buenos Aires autonomous municipal government, ahead of the 100th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, provided the Armenian community
with a piece of land for the construction of the museum.

On behalf of Buenos Aires City Mayor Mauricio Macri, the City Cabinet
Chief Horacio Rodríguez Larreta delivered a speech.

The latter spoke of the important role and usefulness of the Armenian
community, pointing out a number of peculiarities of the strong and
growing community.

After the necessary documents were handed over, a thank you speech
was delivered by the Diocesan Council Chairman of Argentina the
Primate of the Armenian Diocese of Argentina, President of Argentina’s
Armenian Center, Mr. Alberto Jerejian. He thanked the Mayor Mauricio
Macri, and all the staff of the Municipality for the donated land,
stressing that during the World Congress on the 100th anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide, held recently in Armenia, the President
of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan and His Holiness Karekin
II, Catholicos of All Armenians, highly appreciated this important
achievement of the Armenian community of Argentina.

The audience was addressed to by Deputy Secretary of Buenos Aires
City Council for Human Rights and Cultural Diversity Claudio Avruj,
the Armenian Genocide Memorial Foundation President Carlos Tufeksian
and the Foundation member Nelida Bolgurjian.

The event was attended by senior leaders of various community
development organizations, members and hundreds of believers.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/765288/armenian-genocide-museum-to-be-built-in-buenos-aires.html