Azerbaïdjan : huit jeunes opposants condamnés à de lourdes peines

REVUE DE PRESSE
Azerbaïdjan : huit jeunes opposants condamnés à de lourdes peines

Ce mardi matin, en Azerbaïdjan, huit membres du groupe de jeunesse
NIDA ont été condamnés à de très lourdes peines de prison, de 6 à 8
ans. Ils sont accusés d’avoir organisé du désordre public et d’avoir
détenu des armes. Pour Human Rights Watch, c’est une prétexte pour
écraser une formation bien organisée et critique vis-Ã-vis d’un régime
corrompu et de plus en plus dictatorial.

Avec notre correspondant à Tbilissi, Régis Genté

A considérer les charges invoquées contre les huit activistes de NIDA,
le doute s’impose. Comme souvent dans les régimes dictatoriaux et
autoritaires de l’ex-URSS, les opposants sont accusés d’avoir organisé
du désordre public et d’avoir détenu de la drogue et des armes. Ce qui
est certain, c’est que les armes dont ces jeunes se servaient jusqu’Ã
leur arrestation en mars 2013 n’étaient autre que Facebook, Twitter et
autres site de blogging.

NIDA est un groupe formé en 2010, se présentant comme non affilié Ã
des partis politiques, non-violent et luttant pour la démocratie. Le
mouvement a aussi le tort d’être bien organisé, mené par des jeunes
déterminés, créatifs, souvent formés à l’étranger.

Pour les ONG de défense des droits de l’homme, le pouvoir
azerbaïdjanais veut à la fois envoyer un message à la jeunesse et
couper l’herbe sous le pied du mécontentement qui s’exprime dans le
pays, la manne pétrolière ne profitant guère aux 9 millions
d’Azerbaïdjanais. Après la lecture du verdict, des affrontements ont
eu lieu entre ceux qui les soutiennent et la police.

dimanche 11 mai 2014,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

http://www.rfi.fr/asie-pacifique/20140507-azerbaidjan-nida-huit-jeunes-opposants-condamnes-lourdes-peines-prison/

Borussia Dortmund finit en beauté le championnat d’Allemagne, Henrik

FOOTBALL
Borussia Dortmund finit en beauté le championnat d’Allemagne, Henrikh
Mkhitaryan marque son 9e but en Bundesliga

Au Stade Olympique de Berlin envahi par 76 197 supporters, pour la 34e
et dernière journée du championnat d’Allemagne, le Borussia Dortmund
-vice-champion d’Allemagne- s’est imposé 4-0 face à Herta Berlin. Si
Robert Lewandowski qui quitte le club fut l’homme du match en
inscrivant deux buts, l’international arménien Henrikh Mkhitaryan fit
également un très bon match. A la 82e Henrikh Mkhitaryan marqua le 4e
but du Borussia Dortmund, le 9e de l’Arménien depuis ses débuts en
Bundesliga l’été dernier. Mission remplie avec ce nouveau titre de
vice-champion d’Allemagne pour les hommes de Jürgen Klopp qui
préparent à affronter dans quelques jours le Bayern de Munich lors de
la finale de la Coupe d’Allemagne.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 11 mai 2014,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

L’Arménie termine à la 4ème place de l’Eurovision 2014

EUROVISION 2014
L’Arménie termine à la 4ème place de l’Eurovision 2014

La 59e édition de l’Eurovision vient de se tenir à Copenhague
(Danemark) avec 26 pays engagés dans la finale. L’Arménie avec Aram
MP3 qui était l’une des favorites du concours de l’Eurovision 2014
avec la chanson « Not Alone » se classe 4ème avec 176 points. Le
concours fut remporté par Conchita Wurst pour l’Autriche (290 points)
devant les Pays-Bas (238) et la Suède (218).

Aram MP3 pour l’Arménie termine à la 4e place de l’Eurovision 2014

La France, l’Autriche et la Géorgie ont donné 12 points à l’Arménie.
Le Belarus, la Lettonie et le Monténégro ont offert 10 points Ã
l’Arménie, la Macédoine et la Russie ont donné 8 points à l’Arménie
(et 10 points à l’Azerbaïdjan qui a toutefois terminé en bas du
tableau à la 21e place avec seulement 33 points). La Grèce, la Hongrie
et la Roumanie 7 points à l’Arménie. L’Allemagne, Israël, Malte et San
Marin ont donné 6 points. Puis viennent l’Estonie (5 points), la
Finlande, le Portugal et l’Espagne (4 points), la Moldavie (3 points),
le Danemark et l’Islande (2 points), la Pologne (1 point).

De son côté l’Arménie a donné 12 points au Monténégro, 10 Ã la Russie,
8 au Bélarus, 7 Ã la Grèce, 6 Ã l’Allemagne, 5 Ã la Suisse, 4 aux
Pays-Bas, 3 Ã San Marin, 2 Ã l’Espagne et 1 au Danemark.

L’Eurovision suivie par près de 200 millions de téléspectateurs reste
l’un des plus grands rendez-vous médiatiques de la chanson en Europe.
Et cela, même si les votes sont les reflets d’affinités politiques,
d’alliances stratégiques, au détriment de la qualité des prestations
artistiques des candidats.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 11 mai 2014,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Budapest: Culture, history explored in series of events, exhibition

Budapest Times, Hungary
May 10 2014

Culture, history explored in series of events, exhibition

10. May 2014 – by BT in Budapest

Inspired by the culture of Central Asia and the Caucasus, The Silk
Road Society, sponsored by The Travel Scientists, will bring the
sights, sounds, tastes and experiences of the Silk Road to Budapest
with its three-day festival, running from Monday to Wednesday 12-14
May at the Brody Studios, to showcase the culture and travel
opportunities of the countries along the historic Silk Road.

The Silk Road Festival will combine a variety of activities, from its
inaugural dinner catered by Hachapuri Georgian Restaurant, to talks
from top academics, food and wine tasting sessions, and exhibitions
focusing on contemporary artists in the region (including paintings
loaned by the Vollnhofer ArtStudio of Budapest along with independent
artists), and travel photography showcasing the places along the Silk
Road.

The festival entwines contemporary culture with history, where a
series of talks from esteemed academics will link up the present-day
countries with their history.

The inaugural dinner (12 May) is a ticketed event, which will include
access to the exhibition, plus talks from the UNESCO Chair of Art
History, Professor Levon Chookaszian, who will open with the subject
of Armenian art history and textiles throughout the centuries,
followed by the Georgian dinner and a talk on Central Asian music by
Dr. János Sipos, a musicology researcher and lecturer from the
Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Liszt Ferenc Academy. The evening
will conclude with a concert by Majda Mária Guessous, whose music will
showcase the sounds of Central Asia.

The following two days are open to the public and require no
reservation. There will be talks on Georgian art, along with a speech
from the Georgian ambassador on the second day of the event, Tuesday,
at 6.30pm. There will also be a Georgian food tasting seminar and
session at 7pm.

The final day, Wednesday, will open with Dr. Matteo Fumagalli from
Central European University at 4pm speaking on the cultural and
economic emergence of Central Asia, followed by a talk from Dr. Ágnes
Birtalan from ELTE at 6pm, on the Mongol civilisation’s effect on the
Silk Road. To conclude the event, there will be a wine tasting session
focusing on the products of the Caucasus at 7pm.

The Silk Road Festival is the first event from the Silk Road Society,
which plans to host more, focusing on other countries along the Silk
Road.
The event is sponsored by Hachapuri and The Travel Scientists, and is
partnered with the Brody Studios and Vollnhofer ArtStudio, with media
sponsorship from the Budapest Times/Budapester Zeitung and
TheDaily.Hu.

To attend the dinner, RSVP [email protected]. All other
events are open without reservation.

Tickets for the dinner (including talks and concert): HUF 4500
Food tasting/wine tasting events: HUF 1500/HUF 1000 (students and
Brody House members)

For more information:

http://silkroadsociety.org/the-silk-road-festival/
https://www.facebook.com/SilkRoadSociety
http://budapesttimes.hu/2014/05/10/culture-history-explored-in-series-of-events-exhibition/

Manny Gamburyan’s only option is winning versus Nik Lentz at UFC

Glendale News-Press (California)
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
May 9, 2014 Friday

Manny Gamburyan’s only option is winning versus Nik Lentz at UFC Fight Night

Grant Gordon, Glendale News-Press, Calif.

May 09–Manny Gamburyan finds no solace in a no-contest.

When last Gamburyan fought, he was on the wrong end of a unanimous
decision against seventh-ranked Ultimate Fighting Championship
bantamweight Denis Siver.

However, the December bout was overturned and ruled no-contest in
April after Siver tested positive for human chorionic gonadotropin,
which is commonly used as a weight-loss and testosterone aid.

But Gamburyan still refers to the fight as a loss.

And on Saturday, Gamburyan will return to the octagon to face Nik
Lentz in a three-round bantamweight bout as part of UFC Fight Night
from Cincinnati’s U.S. Bank Arena in a fight he looks at as a
must-win.

“He’s a great all-around fighter, he’s a good wrestler. He’s
definitely a grinder,” Gamburyan, 33, said of Lentz. “But I’m not new
to this sport. I don’t care what he has. I’m 100% sure of myself.

“The only option I have is to get the ‘W.'”

The 29-year-old Lentz, ranked No. 9 in the division, is coming off a
loss to No. 1 Chad Mendes, who will challenge Jose Aldo for the title
on Aug. 2 for the second time. It was Lentz’s first loss at 145
pounds, but no matter what happened in his December contest with
Mendes, Lentz is hardly lacking confidence.

“My wrestling is by far better than his and so’s my ground game,”
Lentz said. “But as far as where the fight goes, I’m comfortable
wherever it is.

“I’m always 100% confident.”

Gamburyan, who trains at the Glendale Fighting Club and Team Hayastan
in North Hollywood, is known for his judo background, his heavy top
game and a powerful right hand, which knocked out Mike Thomas Brown in
a World Extreme Cagefighting bout in 2010 and earned him a title shot
against Aldo.

However, Lentz said there isn’t really anything all that dangerous
that Gamburyan brings to the cage.

“Not in particular,” Lentz said. “But, he’s been around a long time.
He’s a veteran of the game, so nothing’s going to surprise him.”

In his biggest victories, Lentz has used his wrestling to grind down
opponents, an approach often used by Gamburyan.

“My mindset is better than ever,” said Lentz, who added that his time
training with American Top Team in Coconut Springs, Fla. has paid huge
dividends. “I’m really looking forward to this fight.”

The two of have gone to the judges in 23 of their combined 54 fights
and their last eight in a row combined, further evidence of their
grind-it-out nature.

In the common opponent department, both combatants have previously
fought Robert Emerson, Tyson Griffin, Diego Nunes and Thiago Taveres.
Lentz went 3-0-1 against the foursome, with a draw against Tavares and
decision wins over the others. Gamburyan is 0-4 against the quartet,
with three decision losses and a knockout defeat against Emerson.

For Lentz, it is an opportunity to maintain his standing in the top
10, while Gamburyan has one more chance against an elite opponent.

“Now I’m off a loss to Denis Siver and now I’m fighting another top-10
guy,” Gamburyan said. “I’m looking forward to this fight.”

For Gamburyan to seize the day, he believes he’ll have to be better
than he was against Siver. In the bout, Siver, known for his
kickboxing skill set, took Gamburyan down, which the Armenian admitted
surprised him and also injured him during the course of the fight.

“To be honest, I’ve never talked about this … but the worst part was
I wasn’t expecting him to take me down. He hit my knee with his head
and it really hurt me and it felt like my knee wasn’t there,”
Gamburyan said. “Besides the steroids … or whatever it is, I still
could’ve done better. I’m a better fighter than that. I guess it just
wasn’t my night.”

The Gamburyan-Lentz bout is slated to be the third of a 13-contest
card and will stream live on the UFC Fight Pass portion of the
preliminaries, which begin at 3:30 p.m. PDT. The remainder of the card
will air on Fox Sports 1, headlined by a welterweight tilt between No.
7 Matt Brown and No. 14 Erick Silva.

A week before his bout, Gamburyan completed his latest camp and
proclaimed himself ready, with a successful camp in hand. But that’s
all old fare for the veteran, who consistently has good training
camps, but knows he needs to have consistently successful fights.

“I always train hard, I’m always prepared,” Gamburyan said. “It’s all
about May 10th when I get into that cage. It’s go-time, that’s when it
matters.”

After 2 yrs, thousands return home to Homs

Bangalore Mirror, India
May 10 2014

After 2 yrs, thousands return home to Homs

AFP | May 10, 2014, 08.51 PM IST

HOMS Syrians streamed back into the ruins of the Old City of Homs on
Saturday, picking through the remains of their homes and trying to
come to terms with the destruction.

Thousands of people walked through the devastated streets of their
former neighbourhoods, some appearing shellshocked by the scale of the
damage.

The influx came a day after the last rebel holdouts left the area
under an evacuation deal that handed the Old City back to the
government, granting it a symbolic victory.

The pullout leaves the rebels confined to a single district on the
outskirts of the central city, once dubbed “the capital of the
revolution” against President Bashar al-Assad.

On Saturday, Homs provincial governor Talal Barazi declared the
evacuated areas safe, after troops swept for explosives. “Governor
Talal Barazi announced that the Old City of Homs is safe and free of
weapons and insurgents thanks to the sacrifices of the Syrian army,”
state news agency SANA said. Residents quickly returned to see what
remained of their homes, and retrieve whatever was left behind.

Many were visibly distressed by the scale of destruction, with rubble
strewn across streets and every building bearing signs of the conflict
that wracked the city.

Rebel forces in the Old City were under government siege for nearly
two years before the deal to evacuate, and regime troops shelled the
area almost daily throughout. “The destruction is just horrible,” said
37-year-old Rima Battah, in the Hamidiyeh district of the Old City.

“My husband went to our house yesterday and found it destroyed. We
came back together today to get our things,” she added, gesturing to
the five large bags of possession surrounding her. Dozens of families
were doing the same, gathering whatever clothes and keepsakes could be
salvaged.

Nawal al-Masri (51) had worked in the Old City as a seamstress and
returned to check on her former workshop. “Everything is destroyed,
all the sewing machines have been stolen, the fridge has been stolen,
even the generator,” she said.

“I’ve worked here for 30 years,” she added. “There’s nothing left
except one basket, in which I found a single pair of scissors.” She
said she planned to file a request for compensation from a $588,000
fund set up by the local chamber of industry.

Barazi told SANA he was forming committees of local residents to
assess the damage. The evacuation of the Old City by the rebels has
been a symbolic coup for the regime.

State media broadcast live footage from inside the Old City,
interviewing returning residents who expressed their gratitude to the
army and Assad. They filmed inside an Armenian church compound part of
which the rebels has used as a headquarters and field hospital, with a
room filled with hospital beds and medicines.

In the courtyard, rebel graffiti remained, reading “Down with Assad”
and “the days are numbered, the end is coming.” Outside, damage was
visible to the compound’s facade, and opposite a wall had been painted
with the flag of the Syrian uprising.

The deal to evacuate the Old City involved the release of hostages
being held by rebels elsewhere in Syria, and the entry of aid to two
towns under opposition siege.

A dispute over the aid delivery held up the deal half-way through, but
on Friday assistance entered Nubol and Zahraa, and the final rebels
left Homs.

The rebels were allowed to leave with some weapons and granted safe
passage to opposition-held territory elsewhere in Homs province. But
the government has claimed the deal as a victory, less than a month
before a presidential election that is expected to return Assad to
office.

http://www.bangaloremirror.com/news/world/After-2-yrs-thousands-return-home-to-Homs/articleshow/34935646.cms

Vladimir Putin Holds Meeting with President of Armenia

Information Agency Oreanda, Russia
May 9, 2014 Friday

Vladimir Putin Holds Meeting with President of Armenia

Moscow. OREANDA-NEWS . Vladimir Putin and President of Armenia Serzh
Sargsyan discussed pressing issues of bilateral cooperation.

PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA VLADIMIR PUTIN: Mr Sargsyan, welcome to Moscow and
thank you for coming here on the eve of May 9. Congratulations once
again to you and to the people of Armenia on the coming Victory Day.

Since my visit to Armenia, a great deal has been done to implement the
agreements we reached then. I am happy to have the opportunity to
compare notes today, to see what else needs to be done and in what
areas we should speed up our efforts.

In any case, I am happy to say that Russia remains Armenias leading
trade and economic partner, and last year our trade went up by 11
percent compared to 2012 (10.6%). This year we are maintaining the
growth rate, and Russia has retained its position as the leading
investor in Armenias economy.

I am very happy to see you. Welcome once again.

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA SERZH SARGSYAN: Thank you, Mr Putin. Allow me to
thank you for your invitation to visit Moscow within the framework of
the CSTO summit meeting, for this opportunity to discuss with you the
pressing issues in our relations. Once again, I would like to
congratulate you and the people of Russia on the Great Victory.

I am happy that RussianArmenian strategic relations and our
partnership are developing dynamically. We will continue to make every
effort to further expand these relations.

The agreements reached during your state visit and during our meeting
in Moscow on September 3 have undoubtedly enriched our agenda.

The implementation of these agreements will undoubtedly create new
opportunities for close cooperation in all spheres: in foreign policy,
in military technology and the economy.

We are prepared to work actively. I believe this is in line with the
historical traditions of friendship between our nations and our
peoples will.

I am happy to be in Moscow today. Thank you for the invitation and for
the conversation we had. Thank you.

Unique Architectural Treasure Under Threat In Central Tbilisi

UNIQUE ARCHITECTURAL TREASURE UNDER THREAT IN CENTRAL TBILISI

Georgia Today, Georgia
May 9 2014

Print version

Tbilisi’s State Academy of Arts building on Griboedov Street houses
a series of unique 19th Century Persian-inspired interiors, but
the Academy’s artistic treasures face destruction unless urgent
conservation works are carried out.

Lecturer Nino Kvrivishvili shows me around the building. From a dark
mirrored hallway, a carved wooden door opens into an enormous domed
ballroom, the ceiling of which is dripping with ornate mirror-inlaid
stucco work. Every spare inch is painted in exquisite detail –
partridges and swallows nestle under scarlet roses and peach-coloured
tulips – as the light glints off gilded chrysanthemums set among
shards of mirror. Under the dome, a bucket sits beneath an ominous,
swollen bloom of damp and on the floor nearby, a pile of plaster
rubble and broken mirror lies under a gaping hole in the roof.

The building which houses Tbilisi’s State Academy of Arts was built as
the palace of the wealthy Armenian trader Arshakunian who commissioned
the architect Grigol Ivanov to construct the sprawling complex in
1850. Believing that he had partly Iranian blood, Arshakunian invited
Persian master craftsmen to decorate the interior in the contemporary
Qajar style, complete with several ornate mirror-halls and extensive
use of painted concave plaster-work.

“The building is one of only three extant Qajar interiors in Georgia,”
says Gogi Gegechkori, a former student at the academy and advisor to
Culture Minister Guram Odisharia, “the others being the small Firuza
Palace in Borjomi (recently restored) and the former Iranian Embassy
(now a private house) on Chonkadze Street. But the Academy of Arts
is by far the most extensive and exquisite example of this style.”

In 1922, the building passed into the possession of the state, and
became the headquarters of the State Academy of Arts, one of only
three such institutions in the early Soviet Union (the other two
being in Riga and Leningrad).

According to Gegechkori, the Academy of Arts has faced destruction
before. When Nikita Khrushchev learnt that none of the three Soviet
Academies of Art were located in Moscow, he ordered the immediate
levelling of all three existing academies and the construction of an
academy in the Soviet capital.

A story has since circulated at the Academy, that the then-rector
Apolon Kutateladze – after whom the Academy is now named – undertook
a three-hour, closed-door alcoholic-fueled meeting with the Soviet
Leader. When the doors of the meeting room swung open, Kutateladze
was seen embracing the slightly tipsy Soviet Leader, who decreed
not only that the Academy in Tbilisi should be spared destruction,
but that it should be enlarged and expanded.

Now, according to the rector Tina Kldiashvili, this unique
architectural treasure is under threat from the more mundane problems
of damp and structural damage. The building was constructed without
laying deep foundations, which has left it vulnerable to earthquakes
and other environmental damage. There is also a problem with rising
damp from the basement, and run-off from the haphazard and decrepit
roofing, which has led to water-damage in most rooms. As a result,
chunks of plaster regularly fall through, leaving the painted interiors
exposed to the elements.

In order to tackle the problem, the Academy has established a special
fund to raise money for a comprehensive rehabilitation of the building,
a goal which has so far remained elusive. Relying largely on the
personal contacts of the fashion designer and fund president Sopho
Chkonia, the fund is trying to raise the 8 million Lari ($5 million)
required to carry out the three-and-a-half year renovation project.

During its ten-year existence, the Academy’s Chancellor Kakha Trapaidze
says, the fund has attracted “only promises.”

For Gegechkori, one of the founders of the fund, the physical decline
of the Academy building is symbolic of the deterioration of artistic
education and the classical master-apprentice academy system on which
the Tbilisi Academy was founded. “The fund must be devoted to saving
this system of artistic education first,” says Gegechkori, “and then we
can save the building. We don’t want it to be just another monument.”

Whether this ambitious project can be realized is under doubt. Last
November, the Ministry of Culture signed a memorandum of collaboration
with the fund which says that in principle, the state should support
rehabilitation works. Currently, of the Ministry’s total annual budget
of 80 million Lari, around 6-7 million is spent on the upkeep of 10
000 registered national monuments.

Still, Gegechkori is optimistic that after local elections in Tbilisi
in June, the City Assembly and City Hall will be able to better
coordinate efforts to raise funds for the restoration of the Academy.

Both the Ministry of Finance and the American Embassy have committed
to provide funding, and Chkonia is planning an exhibition in France
in July, which will bring the Academy’s unique heritage to an
international audience. Meanwhile, holding a large chunk of original
Qajar plasterwork in her hands, Nino says she only hopes the Academy’s
treasures can be saved in time.

By Joseph Alexander Smith

9.05.2014

http://www.georgiatoday.ge/article_details.php?id=12216

Cairo: Remember The Armenians

REMEMBER THE ARMENIANS

al-Ahram Weekly, Egypt
May 9 2014

Lubna Abdel Aziz

‘Outrage’ seems to be the word of the day! With a slightly artificial
tone, voices were raised in outrage at the death sentence of 528
vicious, lawless criminals, murderers, terrorists, butchers and
assassins. Not even as a token of taste did they exert any effort to
inquire about the reasons behind the Egyptian courts’ decision—how
many heinous crimes had they committed, how many human lives have
they taken, how savage, how truculent were their deeds!

With a decidedly serious bias, they challenged the Egyptian legal
system and its modus operandi, revealing a total ignorance of its
procedures. Nothing was expressed but outrage, outrage, outrage!

Following due process the number of death sentences was reduced to 39.

The reaction was total silence.

Another group of killers were sentenced by the same legal procedures
pertaining to the code of justice of this land, resulting in
more outrage. Some may find it a harsh decision it is a just one
nonetheless.

When hundreds of men, women and children were slaughtered by these
terrorists, there was no outrage.

When 21 Egyptian soldiers were kidnapped, hands tied behind their
backs, outstretched on the naked ground and shot through the head
more than once, where was the outrage?

When every member of the ‘Kirdassa’ police force were shot, then
slain, then dragged through the streets of the town, as the natives
hid behind closed doors, no one was outraged. These are only a few
incidents out of hundreds of horrific acts by those same criminals,
what punishment would you suggest?

Can those ‘outraged’ explain to judge and jury their attitude towards
the merciless killings of the innocents of a peaceful people overcome
with terror?

In very sentence pronounced by a judge in the name of a sovereign
nation, dwells the whole majesty of Justice! To the august character
of justice, all should bow!

The irony lies in those most outraged. The loud voices came from
Germany, yet the memory of the holocaust is still alive and well.

Another loud voice was that of the self-righteous Americans, bastions
of human rights! Are those rights reserved only for criminals? The
sight of the Ku Klux Klan cannot be forgotten. Racial discrimination
still lingers, despite a black president and his attorney general. Is
this sinister, ironic, sardonic or simply ludicrous?

The loudest voice expressing outrage came from Turkey, in which case
one can only call it laughable!

Remember the Armenians? Last week the Armenians commemorated the 99th
anniversary of the massacre of their race by the Turks in 1915.

It was called Red Sunday–April 24, 1915. Slowly, silently, in the
dark of night, all the Armenian intellectuals and community leaders
were rounded up and executed en masse. The date is known as ‘Genocide
Remembrance Day’, and that was only the beginning.

While the Turkish government offered its condolences to the Armenians
of this painful tragedy of mammoth proportions, the Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan dared to reject the charges of an Armenian
Genocide. In his rigid immobility he appeared hardly human as
he described it ‘as exaggerated accounts’ of those ‘enemies of
the Ottoman Empire’ and ‘casualties of a world war’ that did not
exceed 500,000… as if that were a trifling number of humans. Is
he ever conscious of his lack of humanity. “We are a people who
think genocide is a crime against humanity”, said the Turkish PM,
“and we would never turn an eye to such blind action”. Is there a
magic to vice that is irresistible? Who should be outraged now?

MEDZ YEGHERN, the Armenian name for’ Great Crime’, started during
WW1, as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart. It was the systematic
extermination of the minority population of Armenians from their
pre-historic homeland. Their only guilt is that of being different.

The able-bodied male population was forced into hard labour or outright
massacre. Women, children, the elderly, the sick were escorted by armed
Ottoman soldiers and marched through roads that led only to the Syrian
desert, hundreds of miles away. Deprived of food and water, subjected
to rape and robbery, hundreds of thousands perished. The New York
Times reported that: “the roads are strewn with the corpses of exiles.”

Every means of extermination was used against the Armenians. The
shortest method of disposing of women and children was to burn them.

Whole villages were burned to ashes, and Russians recall the odour of
burning human flesh permeated the air for days. Physicians, sworn to
save lives, were directly involved in the massacre, injecting those
slated for deportation with active blood of typhoid fever. Children
were sent to classrooms infused with toxic gas, or injected with
morphine. The purpose was to annihilate the Armenian race.

Armenians are descendants of a branch of the Indo-Europeans related to
the Phrygians who entered Asia Minor from Thrace. They call themselves
the Hayks and their country Hayasdan. The first state of Armenia was
established in the 6th Century BC, which extended from the Caucasus
to the present day Turkey, Lebanon and northern Iran. It succumbed
to several invasions and was part of the Roman Empire, and later the
Mameluks in the 16th Century. They formed the Alphabet in 405 which
ushered in the Golden Age of Armenia. The ancient Armenian culture
excelled in painting, sculpture and architecture. Around 11 million
in number worldwide, Armenians have preserved their culture, language,
religion and traditions to this day, despite their Diaspora and their
martyrdom at the hands of their fellow man!

“If you start throwing hedgehogs under me, I shall throw a couple of
porcupines at you”

Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1972)

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/6128/44/Remember-the-Armenians-.aspx

Glendale Demographics Report: White Workers Drop, Armenians Increase

GLENDALE DEMOGRAPHICS REPORT: WHITE WORKERS DROP, ARMENIANS INCREASE AT CITY HALL

Glendale News Press, CA
May 9 2014

Armenians made up 17% of city’s workforce in 2013, up from 11% in 2004,
according to a report.

By Brittany Levine, [email protected]

May 9, 2014 | 10:04 a.m.

In looking at racial and ethnic groups tracked by the city, the number
of white workers at City Hall has seen the most drastic change over
the past decade, making up 39% of Glendale’s workforce last year,
down from 49% in 2004, according to a recently released city report.

The percentage of white workers was heavily impacted by the city’s
reorganization last year, which cut about 11% of employees through
early-retirement incentives. The number of white workers dropped about
14% to 792 in 2013 compared to the prior year, according to the report.

At the same time, Armenian workers have been steadily increasing.

Armenians made up 17% of the city’s workforce in 2013, up from 11%
in 2004. In 2013, the city had 343 Armenian workers, compared to 251
in 2004.

Although Armenians consider themselves to be racially white, the city
counts the ethnic group in a distinct category. Glendale City Council
members have long encouraged city officials to hire more employees that
reflect Glendale’s overall demographics. About a third of Glendale’s
population is Armenian.

“The trends noted have been and will continue to be gradual as
evidenced by the large number of employees who have been with the
city for over 10 years,” according to the March demographics report.

Changing the composition of the city’s workforce will depend on
employees retiring, separating from the city and new positions opening,
the report stated.

Glendale officials may undergo another round of retirement incentives
in order to improve Glendale’s long-term fiscal health. The biggest
burden on the city is the cost of salaries and benefits, officials
have said.

As officials forecast deficits — ranging from $1.7 million to $5.5
million — over the next seven years, officials may consider trimming
the workforce again.

The total number of city workers in 2013, including salaried and
hourly, was 2,010. Glendale officials have used a much smaller
figure of 1,588 during city budget discussions, but that reflects
authorized positions and the city does not include hourly workers in
that headcount.

Other minority groups also saw gains in employee numbers.

Asian/Pacific Islanders in 2013 made up 9.5% of city employees, a jump
from about 8% in 2004. Blacks mostly remained steady, accounting for
3.6% of the workforce last year. Latinos increased slightly to about
30% of the workforce in 2013, compared to nearly 27% in 2004.

Of the 266 executive and management employees in 2013, 56% were white
and 13% were Armenian. Of the 256 who held top jobs in 2004, about 69%
were white and approximately 5% were Armenian.

While the racial and ethnic composition at City Hall has changed
significantly over the past decade, gender composition has remained
relatively constant with males making up roughly 70% of the workforce
both in 2013 and 2004, according to the city report.

The high percentage of males, according to the report, is due to women
not historically applying for positions in the Fire, Police, Public
Works, Information Services and Glendale Water & Power departments.

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http://www.glendalenewspress.com/tn-gnp-me-glendale-demographics-report-white-workers-drop-armenians-increase-at-city-hall-20140509