24 Hours of Action organized by the Armenian Youth Federation

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Youth Federation
104 N. Belmont St.
#206 Glendale, CA 91206
Tel: 818-507-1933

CONTACT Alik Ourfalian: 818-507-1933

*New Generation Seeks Justice for Denied Genocide*
*Thousands of Protestors to Descend on Turkish Consulate on International
Day of Commemoration of Armenian Genocide*

WHAT: Protest Demanding Turkish and US Recognition of the Armenian Genocide

WHEN: Thursday, April 24, 2014; 4:00 – 6:00 PM

WHERE: Turkish Consulate of Los Angeles (6300 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles,
CA 90048)

WHO: Armenian Youth Federation

BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
April 24 marks the international day of commemoration of the Armenian
Genocide, which was conceived and carried out by the Ottoman Empire
beginning in 1915, resulting in the deportation of nearly 2 million
Armenians, 1.5 million men, women, and children being killed, 500,000
survivors being expelled from their homes, and the elimination of the over
2,500-year presence of Armenians in their historic homeland. On May 24,
1915, the Allied Powers of England, France, and Russia jointly issued a
statement explicitly charging for the first time ever another government of
committing crimes against humanity and civilization. And the actions of
1915 against the Armenians being the basis by Raphael Lemkin and the United
Nationals Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide, recognized the Armenian Genocide as the type of crime the U.N.
should present and punish through the setting of international standards
Less than a month ago, the United States Senate House Affairs Committee
passed a resolution regarding the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
showing that the acts were not that of only a century ago, but relevant
today. April 24 marks the day that all humanity must stand up and fight for
Genocide Prevention.

###

Dr. Raffy Hovanessian Named "Armenian Church Member of the Year"

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Chris Zakian
Tel: (212) 686-0710
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

April 21, 2014

___________________

A Missionary for Our Time
Dr. Raffy Hovanessian Named “Armenian Church Member of the Year”

Dr. Raffy Hovanessian’s ties to the Armenian Church formed early on, when he
was a young boy growing up in the heart of Aleppo’s Christian quarter.

“Religion has always been a part of our life,” he said. “We cherished the
idea of the church being a second home to us.”

This spiritual upbringing would nourish the young man as he left his
hometown for medical school in Beirut, and then took on the even bigger
challenge of pursuing a career in the United States. As he went on to become
a respected internist, establish his own practice, and raise a family, Dr.
Hovanessian never forgot those early lessons learned in Aleppo.

“If you are firm in your faith, there’s nothing you can’t withstand,” he
said. “All my steps, I feel, have been guided by God.”

Dr. Hovanessian will be honored as the 2014 “Armenian Church Member of the
Year” by the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America at its 112th
annual assembly in New York City. The award will be bestowed during the gala
banquet on Friday evening, May 2, at Haik and Alice Kavookjian Auditorium of
the Diocesan Complex in New York.

The oldest of six siblings, he was born to Arakel and Dirouhi Hovanessian,
both survivors of the Armenian Genocide who had settled in Jerusalem. At the
outset of the Arab-Israeli conflict, the family relocated to Aleppo, where
the young Raffy attended Sunday School and went with his family to church on
Sundays.

He describes his father as a pious and hard-working man, who having lost his
family in the Genocide, had the courage to start anew in a foreign land. He
ran a shoe-repair shop in Aleppo, while his wife worked as a nurse and
midwife. His parents’ quiet devotion gave rise to their son’s love of
heritage, and impressed on him the importance of helping others in need.

Raffy began to teach Sunday School in Aleppo, and attended college there
before moving to Lebanon to begin medical studies at the American University
of Beirut. His classes further encouraged his faith in God-“As you study the
human body,” he said, “you see the marvel that God has created”-and he
dreamed of following in the footsteps of Dr. Albert Schweitzer, the German
physician and missionary whose writings about his work in Africa deeply
inspired the young student. Had circumstances unfolded in a different way,
Raffy would have become a missionary in the remote corners of the world.
Instead, that spirit of caring, concern, and service translated into a
lifetime of work in the Armenian community and the broader society.

While still in medical school, Raffy noticed the absence of a student
Christian association on campus. The problem irked him for some years, and
after graduation he approached a local clergyman about the possibility of
establishing such an organization. The group-which was founded in 1963, and
is active to this day-led to the beginning of a lifelong friendship between
the young doctor and the priest who helped him, the Very Rev. Fr. Karekin
Sarkissian-the future Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin I.

“In 1995 when he became the Catholicos of All Armenians, we were all
elated,” Dr. Hovanessian recalled. “He was always a good teacher, and I
learned from him every moment that I spent with him.”

Two years later, Bishop Sarkissian officiated at his friend’s wedding in
Beirut. Dr. Hovanessian met his future bride, Vicki Shoghag, at church on
Sts. Vartanantz Day, and sensed in her the same drive to reach out to others
that he felt in himself. The couple moved to the United States so he could
continue his medical education. Dr. Hovanessian began sub-specialization at
Hackensack University Medical Center in New Jersey, and later continued his
work at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Maryland.

Conflict in the Middle East prevented the Hovanessians from returning to
Beirut, and they decided to settle permanently in the United States. But
here, too, a crisis was brewing, and at the height of the Vietnam War, Dr.
Hovanessian was drafted into the U.S. Army, where he served as chief of the
army hospital at Fort Knox, Ky.

Throughout their early years in the United States, the Hovanessians did
their best to keep connected to their faith and culture. But it was not
until they settled in northwest Indiana that the family became anchored in
the local Armenian community-the Sts. Joachim and Anne Church of Palos
Heights, Ill.

“The parishioners were very receptive and kind to us,” Mrs. Hovanessian
recalled. “It was a small community, but everyone contributed.”

At the time of their arrival, the parish was in the process of building a
new house of worship, and the Hovanessians were instrumental in the
completion of the project. The newly built Hovanessian Cultural Hall, named
in their honor, was used for worship services until the sanctuary was
completed and consecrated in 1983. That year, Sts. Joachim and Anne Church
hosted the Diocesan Assembly, and Dr. Hovanessian chaired the organizing
committee. Dr. Hovanessian also served as the Diocesan delegate from the
parish for two decades.

As the decade progressed, the Hovanessians’ service extended beyond the
Midwest to aid the people of Armenia in the wake of the devastating
earthquake that struck Spitak and Gyumri. The couple still recalls hearing
the terrible news on the radio as they drove home on the evening of December
7, 1988.

“Both of us are children of Genocide survivors. My family grew up poor, and
I know what it means for people to be in need,” Dr. Hovanessian said. “There
was no way we could sit on the sidelines and do nothing.”

Mobilizing the Chicago-area relief effort, Mrs. Hovanessian raised $1.6
million through the Chicago chapter of the Armenian General Benevolent
Union. In addition, she raised money for fuel and helped collect rice and
bulgur to send to the homeland at the start of the Nagorno-Karabagh war, and
shipped $1 million in clothing to help struggling families.

An ardent art collector, Mrs. Hovanessian was also inspired to help Armenian
artists. Impressed with their tenacity in the face of hardship, she has
worked to promote their work abroad through shows and exhibitions. Dr.
Hovanessian, meanwhile, organized medical help to the young republic,
sending money and equipment, and helping to bring Armenia’s doctors to the
United States for training.

In 1993, Catholicos Vasken I bestowed the “St. Nersess Shnorhali” medal on
Dr. Hovanessian. The following year his story was entered into the
Congressional Record by Congressman Peter Visclosky.

In 1995, and again in 1999, Dr. Hovanessian traveled to Holy Etchmiadzin,
where he served as the vice chair of the National Ecclesiastical Council
during the elections of Catholicos Karekin I and Catholicos Karekin II. “It
was unbelievable to be part of those elections,” he said. “It was doubly
exciting because we had an independent Armenia, something we could not have
imagined only a decade earlier.”

At the Diocesan level, Dr. Hovanessian served on the boards of directors of
the Armenian Church Endowment Fund and St. Nersess Armenian Seminary, and
was a member of the Diocesan Council for 16 years. Mrs. Hovanessian has
organized art exhibitions, concerts, and other cultural events at St. Vartan
Armenian Cathedral in New York, showcasing the Armenian heritage to a global
audience. Thanks to her fundraising efforts in the mid-1990s, St. Nersess
Seminary was able to establish a $1 million endowment.

The Hovanessians said they have been inspired by the leadership of Diocesan
Primate Archbishop Khajag Barsamian. “Khajag Srpazan has always been close
to our family,” Dr. Hovanessian said, “and we have always admired his
spiritual character.”

Outside the Armenian Church, the Hovanessians have been active in the AGBU,
Knights of Vartan, National Association for Armenian Studies and Research,
Armenian Missionary Association, and the Armenian Assembly of America, among
other organizations. They are both recipients of the “Ellis Island Medal of
Honor,” which is bestowed on individuals whose achievements have benefited
their communities and helped build bridges between their ethnic groups and
the broader society.

Today Dr. Hovanessian continues to serve on the St. Nersess Seminary board,
and is also on the Diocesan Board of Trustees. Looking back on a life filled
with accomplishment, he said he is most proud of his family-his children
Armen, Ani, and Aileen-and his grandchildren. Together with Mrs.
Hovanessian, he has instilled in them a love of the Armenian culture and
faith.

“Everything I have been able to accomplish for my people and for the church,
we have done by working together,” Dr. Hovanessian said of his wife. “I have
been blessed with her friendship and her unwavering support.”

Of all the lessons life has taught him, one of the earliest he learned has
made the most lasting impact. “With faith anything is possible,” Dr.
Hovanessian insists. “I have no regrets. I feel that my life has been
fulfilled, and I am grateful to God for His abundant blessings.”

The Eastern Diocese is proud to name Dr. Raffy Hovanessian as its 2014
“Armenian Church Member of the Year.” He will be presented with the award at
the 112th Diocesan Assembly in New York City. The presentation will be made
during the assembly’s gala banquet on Friday evening, May 2, starting at 7
p.m., at Haik and Alice Kavookjian Auditorium of the Diocesan Complex. For
information on the banquet, contact Lorraine Marootian at (201) 560-1482.

###

Photo attached: Dr. Raffy Hovanessian and Mrs. Vicki Shoghag Hovanessian.

http://www.armenianchurch-ed.net

Montebello City Council Recognizes Musician Greg Hosharian

MONTEBELLO CITY COUNCIL RECOGNIZES MUSICIAN GREG HOSHARIAN

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2014

Greg Hosharian with the Montebello City Council

MONTEBELLO, Calif.–On April 9th, the Montebello City Council
presented a Proclamation to musician, conductor and resident Gregory
Hosharian for his successful symphonic concert event to benefit the
“Edward Hosharian Scholarship Fund.” The concert included works by
some of history’s most revered composers, and featured an orchestral
arrangement of traditional folk melodies from the Armenian Highlands.

Also featured was the inspiring voice of soloist mezzo-soprano Talin
Nalbandian, a recipient of the Edward Hosharian Fund Scholarship.

Trumpeter, Tom Woo, performed the prolific Alexander Arutiunian
Trumpet Concerto in A-Flat Major.

During his presentation to his childhood friend, Montebello Mayor
Pro-Tem Jack Hadjinian stated, “Greg and I go back to the days
of diapers, years later we started college together, then of
course he continued his education to earn a Master’s Degree in
Music Composition. Greg has an enormous amount of talent, but what
impresses me most is the fact that he is putting his talent to good
use by honoring his father’s legacy with a scholarship fund to help
the less fortunate attend music schools.”

Hadjinian also stated that as community leaders “we must promote the
arts, because that’s the only way some people can express themselves.”

Greg Hosharian was born and raised in Montebello, began playing piano
at the age of four, when his father became his first music teacher. He
holds a bachelor’s degree in composition from the California Institute
of the Arts and a master’s degree in composition and orchestration
from California State University, Northridge. He is active in
orchestration and teaching, in addition to composing soundtracks for
film, television, animation and video-game projects. Hosharian has
also formed three bands of his own: Vendetta, Hosharian Brothers Band
and Armenian Space Station. In 2009 Armenian Space Station performed
to an enthusiastic audience in Yerevan, Armenia. As keyboardist for
Redemption, Greg has toured Europe and North America.

http://asbarez.com/122200/montebello-city-council-recognizes-musician-greg-hosharian/

CSTO To Create Cyber Security Center

CSTO TO CREATE CYBER SECURITY CENTER

CSTO Secretary General Nikolai Bordyuzha

© RIA Novosti. Ð~[идиÑ~O Ð~XÑ~Aамова
17:21 22/04/2014

YEKATERINBURG, April 22 (RIA Novosti) – An international center to
combat cyber threats will be created in the near future under the
Collective Security Treaty Organization, a military alliance of former
Soviet states, CSTO Secretary General Nikolai Bordyuzha said Tuesday.

“Today, information activities are a weapon. The situation can be
destabilized without the use of the armed forces, almost entirely
through IT solutions, and in some places it could lead to a violent
regime change,” Bordyuzha explained at the opening of the Eurasian
Youth Economic Forum in Yekaterinburg.

“On this basis, the CSTO is taking steps to provide better IT
security. I can say that as of today, information warfare and security
are becoming a priority for the CSTO,” he added.

The meeting of the Eurasian Youth Economic Forum (EYEF) began Tuesday
at the Ural State University of Economics in Yekaterinburg. The
participants signed a memorandum on the establishment of the University
League of the CSTO, which is supposed to become a new platform for
consolidation of the CSTO’s young intellectuals.

The first Youth Forum of the CSTO countries and the International
School of Journalists FSUE Rossiya Segodnya sessions are also held
as part of the EYEF for young professionals in the field of media,
with participants from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Transnistria.

http://en.ria.ru/russia/20140422/189311312/CSTO-to-Create-Cyber-Security-Center.html

The Hallway Of The Armenian Brandy Tasting Club Wins 2014 Wood Floor

THE HALLWAY OF THE ARMENIAN BRANDY TASTING CLUB WINS 2014 WOOD FLOOR OF THE YEAR AWARD

13:47 22.04.2014

The floor at the Armenian brandy tasting club has been named winner
of the 2014 Wood Floor of the Year Award, the website of the National
Wood Floor Association reports

President and CEO of the National Wood Floor Association (NWFA) Michael
Martin announced the 2014 Wood Floor of the Year winners during the
Awards Dinner at the NWFA Wood Flooring Expo in Nashville, Tenn.,
on April 18.

The coveted Members’ Choice award went to Ourada Designs for its
residential wood floor, and repeat winner Wood Floor of the Year
winner Precision Floorcrafters Inc. took home two awards.

Here are photos and brief descriptions of all the winners:

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/04/22/the-hallway-of-the-armenian-brandy-tasting-club-wins-2014-wood-floor-of-the-year-award/

ATP Kicks Off 20th Anniv Year with Tree Plantings All Over Armenia a

ARMENIA TREE PROJECT
65 Main Street
Watertown, MA 02472 USA
Tel: (617) 926-TREE
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
April 23, 2014

ATP Kicks Off 20th Anniversary Year with Tree Plantings All Over Armenia and
Artsakh

YEREVAN–Spring is in the air and Armenia Tree Project has already
beautified 110 communities by planting 22,000 trees through its Community
Tree Planting (CTP) program. The first project took place in Artsakh where
Syrian-Armenian refugees planted ATP fruit trees in Kovsakan. Each year
hundreds of communities are given fruit and decorative trees through the CTP
program. This year, seeking to provide fruit to soldiers in Artsakh, the
program included plantings at six military bases.

A second component of ATP’s work is forestry. In a bittersweet launch of
this year’s forestry planting, hundreds of volunteers joined forces in
Stepanavan to plant the first seedlings in a memorial forest for Sose
Thomassian and Allen Yekikian. Friends and family of the young couple, whose
lives were tragically cut short last year, joined with volunteers from
Birthright Armenia and Armenian Volunteer Corps to plant the initial 20,000
trees in the forest.

“The planting of these 42,000 trees this spring has brought the total number
of trees planted by ATP to 4,497,869 since 1994,” reported ATP Managing
Director Tom Garabedian. Reflecting on the organization’s milestone
anniversary this year, he continued: “Throughout our 20 years of planting,
ATP has forged invaluable partnerships with people along with dozens of
organizations, businesses, and institutions to advance projects that
beautify the environment.”

Collaboration with KPMG Armenia helped to green the Kentavr hippotherapy
center in Ushi village this season, Byblos Bank facilitated planting at Poqr
Mher military educational center for children, and the Ararat Cultural
Center joined ATP to conduct a planting adjacent to Zvartnots Temple. As in
previous years, ATP provided trees for the Paros Foundation that supports
mothers and children, orphans, and needy families.

Plantings at schools included Yerevan State University and the State
Engineering University of Armenia and in a partnership with the Foundation
for the Preservation of Wildlife and Cultural Assets (FPWC), a planting at
their new Eco-Training Center in Urtsador.

In a relaunch of a program designed to restore trees and create new jobs,
ATP hired 35 residents from Gyumri and Azatan to conduct coppicing, a
traditional method of woodland management to regenerate tree stumps. ATP has
joined with the local governments to distribute the wood cuttings to needy
families for fuel.

“I am extremely proud to see the coppicing project reinitiated,” stated
Garabedian. “It represents a collaboration between ATP and two local
communities, provides income to 35 seasonal workers in those communities,
beautifies and strengthens the trees that are coppiced, and delivers
renewable energy supplies to low income families. Everyone benefits.”

A third component of ATP initiatives is to provide environmental education
to students, local residents, and partner organizations. The Michael and
Virginia Ohanian Center for Environmental Studies, which sits at the foot of
ATP’s Hrant Dink Memorial Forest in Margahovit, houses classrooms and
conference space, along with a small dormitory that can accommodate people
for multiday conferences on the environment.

Last month, the Ohanian Center opened its doors to a two week training on
waste management organized by the German Society for International
Cooperation (GIZ) and conducted by environmental expert Martin Gabriel.
ATP’s environmental education staff members Nvard Gevorgyan and Gayane
Margaryan supported the training with breakout sessions and presentations.
More than 60 people participated in the conference activities.

ATP’s mission is to assist the Armenian people in using trees to improve
their standard of living and protect the environment, guided by the desire
to promote self-sufficiency, aid those with the fewest resources first, and
conserve the indigenous ecosystem. ATP’s three major programs are tree
planting, environmental education, and sustainable development initiatives.
For more information, please visit the website

PHOTO CAPTION

Vache Thomassian (standing left) joined dozens of volunteers on April 18 to
plant the first trees in the Sose and Allen Memorial Forest, part of a
successful social media campaign between ATP and Sose and Allen’s Legacy
Foundation

www.armeniatree.org
www.armeniatree.org.

Malatya Massacre: Seven Years Later Justice is Still Waiting "We Won

Malatya Massacre: Seven Years Later Justice is Still Waiting “We Won’t
Forget, We Won’t Let It Be Forgotten”

International Christian Concern

2020 Pennsylvania Ave. NW #241, Washington, D.C. 20006
  | E-mail: [email protected]

Media Contact:
William Stark, Regional Manager for Africa
[email protected]
4/19/2014

Washington D.C. (International Christian Concern) – Friday, April 18th
marked the seventh anniversary of the brutal murders of three
Christians at the Zirve Publishing house in Malatya, Turkey. On April
18, 2007, two Turkish men, Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel, and one
German national, Tillman Geske, were brutally tortured and killed at
the Christian publishing house in eastern Turkey. The five men
responsible for their murders have not been convicted and are
currently out of prison. The trial of the five suspects – Emre
Günaydın, Abuzer Yıldırım, Cuma Ã-zdemir, Hamit Çeker and Salih Gürler
– started November 22, 2007. The five men were caught at the scene of
the crime and have confessed to their role in the murders. The Malatya
killings have been linked to an investigation into an alleged coup
plot that has complicated the proceedings. “In the case the
prosecutors and judges have changed two times,” Umut Sahin, General
Secretary of the Association of Protestant Churches in Turkey, told
ICC. “New defendants have been added to the case, and some of them
have pursued a strategy to extend the case,” Sahin continued. Despite
92 hearings and more than 100,000 pages of court documents, the five
men responsible for the killing of the three Christians have not been
convicted, and, in a remarkable twist, are currently out of prison. A
change to the Turkish legal structure resulted in the five men being
released from prison on March 7, 2014 pending completion of the trial,
Today's Zaman reported. This strange twist has further weakened
the trust of the Turkish Christian community in the justice system.
“Three Christians in Malatya were killed. Three fathers, three men,
three husbands …and today, the number one perpetrators of the
incident,[who were] caught red-handed, with bloody hands, [these]
murderers are on the street,” Gokhan Talas wrote in Agos, a Turkish
newspaper. “I was a little shocked,” Lukas Geske, son of Tilman Geske,
told International Christian Concern (ICC) about hearing that the give
men were released from prison. “But I wasn’t afraid and I wasn’t angry
because I have already forgiven them seven years ago.” The Geske
family still lives in Malatya, “We weren’t afraid of what happened, we
just were totally sad,” Geske said. “We stayed because God called us
to stay here and that is why we stayed.” The 93rd hearing in the case
was scheduled for April 10, 2014 but was delayed until June 23 and
“has been transferred to Malatya’s First High Criminal Court, where a
completely new panel of judges and prosecutors are assigned to the
case,” according to World Watch Monitor. “The trial is just
punishing the guilty, in my opinion the important thing is to forgive
them from what they did,”Geske said when asked about the endless
delays in the trial. Seven years on from the brutal murders, these
events continue to cast a shadow over the Christian community in
Turkey, though the level of hostility towards Christians has gradually
decreased. “There has not been much change legally [regarding the
rights of Christians],” Sahin said, “However, there is an increase in
tolerance of Christians in the state. Christianity has become more
visible and anti-Christian publications in major media outlets also
greatly reduced,” Sahin told ICC. Yet the memory of the Malatya
Massacre is still fresh in the minds of many Christians. As a number
of Christians posted on their social media profiles: “We Won’t Forget
…We Won’t Let It Be Forgotten…” On Friday, celebrations including
a memorial gathering to mark the anniversary of the death of these
three Christians and the opening service of the first registered
church in Malatya took place. Todd Daniels, ICC Regional Manager for
the Middle East, said, “Following the seventh anniversary of the
tragic events at the Zirve Publishing House, we continue the call for
justice to be handed down by the courts for those responsible for
these killings. We continue to pray for the friends and families of
those who were killed that day. We urge the Turkish government to send
a clear message that the rights and freedoms for Christians and other
religious minorities in Turkey will be upheld and protected. It is
important for Turks, of all religious and ethnic identity to fully
enjoy the benefits of Turkish citizenship.”

www.persecution.org

Hrant Vardanyan, le propriétaire de « Grand Kendy » et « Grant Tobac

ARMENIE-ECONOMIE
Hrant Vardanyan, le propriétaire de « Grand Kendy » et « Grant Tobacco » est mort

L’un des plus grands hommes d’affaire d’Arménie, Hrant Vardanyan, le
propriétaire des célèbres marques de confiserie « Grand Kendy » et des
tabacs « Grant Tobacco » vient de disparaître. Il avait 65 ans. Hier
soir à 22h45 suite à un arrêt cardiaque, il était conduit d’urgence Ã
l’hôpital « Naïri » d’Erévan. Les médecins l’opérèrent et luttèrent
durent plus d’une heure à le réanimer. En vain. Loussiné Aghababian la
directrice du centre hospitalier « Naïri » a indiqué qu’Hrant
Vardanyan souffrait du cÅ`ur ainsi que d’autres problèmes « chroniques
» de santé. « Grand Kendy » et « Grant Tobacco » sont parmi les plus
importants exportateurs de l’Arménie.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 20 avril 2014,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=99169

UK ambassador speaks on Armenia ex-PM’s resignation

Zhamanak: UK ambassador speaks on Armenia ex-PM’s resignation

April 17, 2014

YEREVAN. ` Zhamanak daily spoke with Katherine (Kathy) Leach, the
Ambassador of Great Britain to Armenia. Below is an excerpt from the
interview.

`How would you comment on the resignation of [PM Tigran] Sargsyan,
with whom you have worked closely during his tenure?

`From the viewpoint of the West, being in the position of the PM for
six years is quite a long time. I assume that a number of events took
place which dictated that the time has come to move forward. Of
course, PM Sargsyan has been a great advocate of Armenia’s EU
association talks.

`Even though it was decided on September 3 [, 2013] to end these talks
and, now, he [Sargsyan] was the advocate of [Armenia’s accession to]
the [Russia-led] Customs Union?

`It is hard for us to understand the change in this decision. [But] I
know that our EU partners appreciated his approach in Armenia’s EU
negotiations, and considered him a constructive figure.

`In your view, what should be the priorities of the newly appointed PM
[Hovik Abrahamyan]?

`I believe President [Serzh] Sargsyan himself stressed that they are
the economic issues. You need to ensure economic growth. [But] there
are technical issues [, too]. In President Sargsyan’s observations,
following the PM’s resignation, I was gladdened by the importance of a
fresh vision, and the formation of a government which the people will
trust. I hope that this too will be a priority for the new PM, and the
new ministers’ cabinet he will form.’

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

BAKU: DM: "We will soon avenge the blood of our martyrs and liberate

APA, Azerbaijan
April 19 2014

Azerbaijani Defense Minister: “We will soon avenge the blood of our
martyrs and liberate the occupied territories” – PHOTOSESSION
PHOTOSESSION

[ 19 April 2014 12:36 ]

Baku. Mubariz Aslanov – APA. Military Lyceum named after Jamshid
Nakhchivanski hosted an event called “Day of Military Lyceum”.

The event was attended by Defense Minister, Colonel General Zakir
Hasanov, Chief of the General Staff Najmeddin Sadikov, Assistant to
President on defense, Deputy Head of the Azerbaijani Presidential
Administration, Colonel General Vahid Aliyev, generals and other
guests.

First, the memorial plague reflecting the establishment of the
Military Lyceum by Heydar aliyev in 1971 was unveiled, the national
anthem of Azerbaijan was played. It was stated that Defense Ministry
Zakir Hasanov has issued an order to annually celebrate April 19 as
“Day of Military Lyceum named after Jamshid Nakhchivanski”. Recall
that this day Heydar Aliyev met with the personnel of the Military
Lyceum and handed a flag to the institution. Under the minister’s
another order, the Organizing Committee was established in connection
with the 40th anniversary of the first graduates from the Military
Lyceum, relevant action plans were developed and approved.

Addressing the event, Hasanov told about Heydar Aliyev’s important
role in the establishment of the lyceum, army build-up and I Karabakh
war:

“When Azerbaijan was attacked by Armenian armed forces, first, the
educatees of Military Lyceum named after Jamshid Nakhchivanski came to
the call of the motherland. A lot of officers were killed. I bow
before the memory of our martyrs and am confident that the will soon
avenge the blood of our martyrs and liberate our occupied territories
under the leadership of our Supreme Commander-in-chief, who
successfully continues Heydar Aliyev’s policy.”

In his speech, Vahid Aliyev said that when nationwide leader Heydar
Aliyev created this lyceum in 1971, nobody else knew about his final
objective: “But Aliyev knew and as he later said, his dream came true.
The foundation of a strong army was laid in Azerbaijan.”

Under Zakir Hasanov’s order, a group of servicemen and teachers were
awarded diplomas and received valuable gifts.