Armenian young people establish 3D printers

ARMENIAN YOUNG PEOPLE ESTABLISH 3D PRINTERS

10:26, 17 December, 2013

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has made a step to release
its own production in three-dimensional printing (3D). The Armenian
young people have made 3D printing device with 5 kg weight and a
working platform with 20 centimeters length in the center of “Tumo”
creative technologies at the end of November.

Former student of “Tumo” center, now specialist-lecturer and the head
of the draft for the establishment of 3D printers Sergey Isakhanyan
stated in a conversation with “Armenpress” that the course being held
in the center has two drafts: collecting 3D printers and construction
of new electric parts of the computers. “We have already collected
3D printer. We have conducted a test, it works normally,” Isakhanyan
said adding that the weight of the device is about 5 kg.

© 2009 ARMENPRESS.am

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/743997/armenian-young-people-establish-3d-printers.html

ECHR Sustains Appeal Of Turkish Politician Convicted For Denial Of S

ECHR SUSTAINS APPEAL OF TURKISH POLITICIAN CONVICTED FOR DENIAL OF SO-CALLED “ARMENIAN GENOCIDE” IN SWITZERLAND

APA, Azerbaijan
dec 17 2013

[ 17 December 2013 15:16 ]

The decision is regarded as a serious blow to the positions of the
Armenian Diaspora and lobby

Baku – APA. The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) sustained the
appeal of Workers’ Party (İP) Chairman Dogu Perincek convicted for
denial of so-called “Armenian genocide” in Switzerland against this
country, APA reports.

The original case emerged from Perincek’s participation in a number
of conferences in Switzerland in 2005, during which he publicly denied
that the Ottoman Empire had perpetrated the crime of genocide against
the Armenian people in 1915. The Lausanne Police Court found Perincek
guilty of racial discrimination on March 9, 2007, based on the Swiss
Criminal Code, after a complaint filed by the Switzerland-Armenia
Association.

Perincek had complained that Swiss courts had breached his freedom of
expression, based on Article 10 covering freedom of expression. ECHR
sustained the appeal and demanded defense from Switzerland and asked
about the Turkish government’s attitude towards this issue. Finally,
Perincek’s appeal was found justified.

The decision of the European Court of Human Rights will reportedly be
a precedent for the Council of Europe member states. It is a serious
blow to the Armenian Diaspora and lobby. Armenian lobby is trying to
adopt a law criminalizing the denial of so-called “Armenian genocide”
in many countries, including France. Though this kind of law adopted
in France was abolished by the Constitutional Council, the Armenians
want to re-enact this law.

ANKARA: European Court: Denial Of Armenian ‘Genocide’ No Crime

EUROPEAN COURT: DENIAL OF ARMENIAN ‘GENOCIDE’ NO CRIME

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Dec 17 2013

17 December 2013 /TODAY’S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL In a landmark ruling
on Tuesday, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) sustained an
appeal by Turkey’s Workers’ Party (İP) Chairman Dogu Perincek, who was
convicted by Switzerland for denying the so-called “Armenian genocide,”
saying the politician had exercised his right to free speech.

The court’s decision on Perincek sets a precedent that it is against
freedom of expression to criminally charge individuals for expressing
views different than the officially accepted ones.

The ECtHR said in a statement that there has been a violation of
freedom of expression of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)
with regards to the criminal conviction of Perincek for “denying that
the atrocities perpetrated against the Armenian people in 1915 and
years after which constituted genocide.”

In 2008, Perincek, who was convicted by a Swiss court for rejecting
Armenian claims of genocide at a conference he attended in Switzerland,
appealed the ruling with the ECtHR after his appeal at the Swiss
Federal Court failed, arguing his conviction was a violation of the
free speech articles of the ECHR. He also complained of violations
of his right to a fair trial after his lawyer was denied a visa
to Switzerland.

During a conference in Switzerland, Perincek reportedly called the
Armenian claims of genocide an “international lie.”

The ECtHR decision stated that there is a violation of Article 10 of
the ECHR, which deals with freedom of expression. The case concerned
the conviction of Perincek for publicly challenging the occurrence
of the Armenian “genocide.”

In the press statement issued by the ECtHR, the court underlined
that the “free exercise of the right to openly discuss questions of a
sensitive and controversial nature was one of the fundamental aspects
of freedom of expression and distinguished a tolerant and pluralistic
democratic society from a totalitarian or dictatorial regime,” and
that Perincek has not committed an abuse of his rights.

Turkey was a co-plaintiff in the case at the ECtHR regarding Perincek,
since Turkey’s official position on the Armenian claims does not match
Switzerland’s. Ankara categorically denies claims that the events of
1915 amount to genocide, arguing that both Turks and Armenians were
killed when Armenians revolted against the Ottoman Empire during World
War I in collaboration with the Russian army that was then invading
Eastern Anatolia.

Ankara has recognized Armenia since the former Soviet republic gained
independence in 1991, but nevertheless refuses to establish diplomatic
ties because of Armenian efforts to secure international condemnation
of the controversial World War I era killings of Anatolian Armenians
as genocide.

“The decision is in harmony with the views that Turkey shared with
the ECtHR and such a decision is in line with the ECHR articles about
freedom of expression. This is the result we expected,” an official
from the Turkish Foreign Ministry told Today’s Zaman.

The statement about the court’s decision also said the existence of a
“genocide,” which was a precisely defined legal concept, was not easy
to prove.

“The Court doubted that there could be a general consensus as to
events such as those at issue, given that historical research was
by definition open to discussion and a matter of debate, without
necessarily giving rise to final conclusions or to the assertion of
objective and absolute truths,” the statement said.

“The essential ground for Mr Perincek’s conviction by the Swiss
courts was the apparent existence of a general consensus, especially
in the academic community, concerning the legal characterisation of
the events in question. However, the Federal Court itself admitted
that there was no unanimity in the community as a whole concerning the
legal characterisation in question. According to Mr Perincek and the
Turkish Government, a third-party intervener in the case, it would be
very difficult to identify a general consensus. The Court shared that
opinion, pointing out that there were differing views among the Swiss
political organs themselves. It appeared, moreover, that only about
twenty States out of the 190 in the world had officially recognised
the Armenian genocide,” the European court said.

The court also underlined in its decision that countries like
Switzerland which officially recognize the “Armenian genocide” and
impose criminal sanctions on individuals questioning the official
view disregard that “one of the main goals of freedom of expression
was to protect minority views capable of contributing to a debate on
questions of general interest which were not fully settled.”

The ECtHR’s decision would have implications for other countries
which are members of Council of Europe, including France, which has
tried to criminalize the refusal to apply the term “genocide” to the
killings of Armenians during the breakup of the Ottoman Empire.

The French Le Monde daily reported on Tuesday that a new draft law
which requires criminal punishment for individuals who do not recognize
the “Armenian genocide” is on France’s agenda.

According to the report, French President Francois Hollande will
unveil the draft law before his visit to Armenia in May of next year.

Hollande is also expected to visit Turkey in late January. France is
reportedly planning to enact the law on April 24, 2015, the centennial
anniversary of the Armenian “genocide.” Armenians claim that April 24,
1915 marked the beginning of mass killings of Ottoman Armenians and
remember the victims each year on April 24.

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-334196-european-court-denial-of-armenian-genocide-no-crime.html

New Dubai Restaurant Serves Traditional Armenian Dishes Like Grandma

NEW DUBAI RESTAURANT SERVES TRADITIONAL ARMENIAN DISHES LIKE GRANDMA USED TO MAKE

The National, UAE
Dec 7 2013

Nausheen Noor

December 17, 2013

An exceptionally rambunctious child, it seemed the only time Aline
Kamakian slowed down was to help her grandmother, Manouchag, prepare
a weekend Armenian feast for the entire family. In the kitchen,
she and her cousins formed an assembly line, each youngster tasked
with an individual responsibility such as washing parsley, rolling
pastry or chopping onions. The resultant dishes could vary in quality,
but that never bothered Manouchag.

“She’d say: ‘Just put your heart in it and it will be great.’ Even
the worst things we made, my grandmother would proudly put them on
the dinner table,” says Kamakian.

Now, using her grandmother’s recipes, Kamakian and her cousin Serge
Maacaron have opened the UAE’s first Armenian restaurant in Dubai,
Mayrig (meaning “mother” in Armenian). With her shock of curly red
hair and warm smile, the insurance broker has become something of
an ambassador for Armenian food, introducing the formerly homebound
cuisine to a wider audience and also writing a book on the subject.

Though Manouchag died in 1984, the routine of a Sunday dinner with
the family has continued. It was during one such gathering in 2003
that Kamakian and Maacaron, disappointed with Beirut’s dining scene,
decided that the Armenian food made in their homes was better than
any restaurant’s and it was time other people knew it, too.

The following Wednesday they found their first location in Beirut,
opening the restaurant a mere four months later. For the first six
years Kamakian worked in the kitchen, alongside Maacaron and a staff
of 30, while simultaneously running her insurance brokerage, Insurance
Investment Consultants.

“I would take calls on my earpiece while I was cooking. Sometimes
I’d say: ‘Pass me the salt,’ and the client would say: ‘What?’ My
insurance clients never knew that I had this other job,” she says.

Building on their early experiences in Manouchag’s kitchen, Maacaron
and Kamakian formed a symbiotic partnership. She shone at preparing
savoury foods and managing the restaurant’s operations. Maacaron
excelled at presentation and crafting desserts.

The success of the Beirut location prompted the pair to open Mayrig
Jeddah in 2011, followed by Dubai in October this year. With quirky
decor and family photographs adorning the walls, each restaurant
retains the intimacy of a home.

If the food tastes homemade, that’s because it is. Everything is made
from scratch with natural ingredients. The dishes that require more
handwork such as “manti” (lamb dumplings) and “su beureg” (noodle-like
pastry layered with cheese) are still made in the Beirut kitchen by
a staff of “mamas”, Armenian women in their 50s and 60s, many of whom
were previously homemakers or domestic helpers.

Kamakian’s unusual choice in staffing is simple: “Because I wanted
to taste the motherhood love in the food,” she says.

The intertwined concepts of motherhood, food and love are Manouchag’s
legacy. Those weekend family gatherings were especially precious when
compared with her own childhood as a survivor of the Armenian genocide.

In the beginning of the 20th century, the majority of Armenians
lived within the Ottoman Empire. The reformist government of Young
Turks, in an effort to unify the disintegrating empire, began the
systematic expulsion of Christian minorities including Armenians,
Assyrians and Greeks.

It is estimated that between 1 and 1.5 million Armenians were killed.

Tens of thousands more were displaced, many of whom resettled in the
Levant. For most, it continues to be the most traumatic period in
Armenian history.

Manouchag was seven in 1915, the year of the genocide, one of countless
children orphaned by the conflict. Rescued by French allied warships,
she grew up in an orphanage in Cyprus before relocating to Beirut in
1932 to teach at the Armenian school. Food played an essential role
in Manouchag’s memories of Armenia.

“She left at such a young age, so she would tell us stories of where
she would play. She described the house, what she remembers of the
food and the smell of the house. It was very emotional. Food and
emotion are so much linked,” Kamakian recollects.

The Armenia of Manouchag’s childhood was a place that her grandchildren
would never visit. More than just a shared family meal, those weekend
gatherings in Manouchag’s Beirut home were a way of preserving the
history and culture of a homeland that no longer existed. The borders
had long been redrawn, with the Mediterranean portion of Armenia
incorporated into Turkey and the rest into the Soviet Union.

“It was through food and through our language that we kept our
history. Despite all the difficulties of our people, through the food
we kept our traditions gathered together and then got the memory of
Armenia,” Kamakian says.

In the diaspora, Armenian cuisine has evolved and adapted over time,
picking up ingredients and cooking styles from each host country. Many
dishes refer to regions in their former homeland, the “Urfa kebab”,
named after the town in south-eastern Turkey or “Musa Dagh harissa”,
the site of the Armenian resistance now part of the Turkish Hatay
province near the Syrian border. The resilience of Armenian culture
in the diaspora despite statelessness can be credited, in part,
to Armenian mothers and grandmothers who have handed down recipes,
along with stories of survival, to the next generation.

This is what inspired Kamakian to write Armenian Cuisine. Published
last year, part cookbook and part ethnography, it archives a tapestry
of regional recipes and documents some families’ oral history. Each
chapter chronicles a woman from a different part of Armenia, including
a narrative of her family’s escape and recipes that have been handed
down to her.

To research the book, Kamakian teamed up with the anthropologist
Barbara Dreskens, backpacking through regions that were known as the
“Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia” in the Middle Ages, now the southeastern
coast of Turkey.

“When I first asked about Armenians it was as if I was asking a taboo
question. Many no longer speak Armenian. Or, their name has changed.

And, at first they refused to acknowledge they could be Armenian,”
Kamakian says.

The trip was an emotional experience for Kamakian. The knowledge of
the violence that had transpired there haunted her. Witnessing the
obliteration of her heritage and its replacement with a revisionist
history made the pain more acute.

She writes in her book: “We saw beautiful churches, deserted and
in decay, used as stables for cows or left to the carelessness of
birds on an isolated island… The signs in English and Turkish do
not mention the Armenians.”

During this trip, she was also able to visit the site of Manouchag’s
home, piecing together a destination based on recollections of snippets
of conversation. “To see her home was a confusion of emotions. I felt
anger and bitterness, but in the most beautiful location. The first
thing I wished is that I could have brought my grandmother,” she says.

As the centennial of the genocide draws closer, the book and the
restaurant are emblematic of Kamakian’s generation, the third to have
been raised in the diaspora, eager to reclaim their culture. “The first
generation’s aim was to survive. The second generation’s aim was to
adapt and learn the language. We are looking for our tradition. We
want to show people who we are,” she says.

Itch, bulgur and tomato salad

>From Aline Kamakian’s cookbook Armenian Cuisine

“In the early summer we used to gather with friends and family to
prepare itch. To make this salad, you really need good sun-ripened
tomatoes and fresh, young vine leaves. The first itch of the year is
eaten with cabbage. Instead, we use the vine leaves to grab a bite with
our fingers. The first itch gathering of summer was always a feast.”

Ingredients

3 ripe tomatoes, peeled and diced

1 onion, finely chopped

¼ green bell pepper

½ cup medium white bulgur

1 cup water

2-4 tbsp olive oil

1 tsp salt

1 tbsp hot red pepper paste

½ tsp seven spices (mix of allspice, cinnamon, cloves, coriander,
nutmeg, white pepper, black pepper)

2 tbsp chopped parsley

2 spring onions

3 fresh mint leaves, finely chopped

Preparation

Fry the onion in two tablespoons of olive oil for one minute.

Add the green pepper and fry for another four minutes.

Stir the tomatoes into the mixture and simmer.

After two minutes, add the pepper paste, the water, the seven-spice
mixture and the salt. Simmer for 10 minutes.

Stir the bulgur through the tomato mixture, remove from heat and let
it rest for 10 minutes.

Combine with one tablespoon of lemon juice and let it cool further.

When the mixture is cold, stir in the parsley, mint and the spring
onions as well as some extra olive oil, according to taste.

Serve with white cabbage or fresh, young vine leaves.

~U Mayrig is located in Downtown Dubai on Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid
Boulevard. Call 056 364 9794. Kamakian’s cookbook Armenian Cuisine
can be purchased at the restaurant or Kinokuniya in The Dubai Mall

http://www.thenational.ae/lifestyle/food/new-dubai-restaurant-serves-traditional-armenian-dishes-like-grandma-used-to-make

UN Discussions Reflect On Centennial Commemoration Of Armenian Genoc

UN DISCUSSIONS REFLECT ON CENTENNIAL COMMEMORATION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

December 13, 2013 | 15:51

Discussions, which were devoted to the 65th anniversary of the
adoption of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide, were held on Monday and Thursday at the United
Nations (UN) Headquarters.

Addressing at the event, Armenia’s Permanent Representative to UN,
Ambassador Garen Nazarian, highly appreciated lawyer Raphael Lemkin’s
contribution to the preparation of the Convention and his indispensable
role in the legal definition of the crime of genocide.

Recalling to the audience that Lemkin’s study of the Armenian Genocide
had become instrumental in his choosing of his profession, the Armenian
ambassador noted that Lemkin had devoted the rest of his life to the
exposure of the truth of the genocide and its prevention.

Ambassador Nazarian added that Armenia continues to take steps toward
the prevention and condemnation of the grave crimes against humanity,
and express its unconditional support to the UN offices’ activities
toward genocide prevention.

The discussants and the speakers also reflected on the forthcoming
centennial commemoration of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

http://news.am/eng/news/185292.html

Iran, Armenia Discuss Deepening Relations

IRAN, ARMENIA DISCUSS DEEPENING RELATIONS

Monday, December 16th, 2013

Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan (left) and Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif met in Tehran. Dec. 15, 2013.

(Photo: IRNA)

TEHRAN (FNA)-Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and
Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan exchanged views
on the latest regional and international developments, and discussed
ways of bolstering the bilateral ties between Tehran an Yerevan.

Speaking at a meeting in Tehran on Sunday, the Iranian top diplomat
hailed “longstanding” and “friendly” relations between Iran and
neighboring Armenia.

“Iran’s new administration attaches special significance to the
expansion of ties with neighbors and we are willing to bolster these
relations more than before,” said Zarif.

He further stated that Iran and Armenia enjoy great economic and
commercial grounds for cooperation, stressing that frequent visits
by officials of the two countries can “play an effective role in the
expansion of bilateral ties”.

Kocharyan, for his part, expressed hope that reciprocal visits by
senior Armenian and Iranian officials would pave the way for further
enhancement of Tehran-Yerevan relations in all areas.

Early in November, Iranian Energy Minister Hamid Chitchian and his
Armenian counterpart Ara Simonian, in a meeting in Tehran, called for
the further expansion of mutual cooperation between the two countries,
specially in electricity fields.

During the meeting, the Iranian energy minister pointed to the current
status of Iran-Armenia relations, and said, “The two countries enjoy
very close cooperation in the fields of energy and electricity.”

He underlined that the two sides have also agreed to create a joint
venture to run a new power transfer line.

The Armenian energy minister, for his part, said that Armenia supports
the construction of the third line for transfer of high-voltage
electricity and Aras Hydroelectric Power Station.

In a similar meeting in Moscow last week, Chitchian and Simonian
underlined the need for boosting bilateral energy relations in the
near future.

Chitchian pointed to the high level of political relations between
the two countries, and said, “We believe that under the current
circumstances cooperation between the two countries can be further
developed in the fields of oil, gas and electricity.”

The Armenian energy minister, for his part, said that Iran and
Armenia enjoy very close cooperation, adding that Yerevan attaches
great significance to its ties with Tehran.

Simonian also expressed hope that Iran-Armenia ties would gain momentum
during the presidency of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

http://asbarez.com/117451/iran-armenia-discuss-deepening-relations/

Huffington Post includes Vardavar in 8 most probable water festivals

Huffington Post includes Vardavar in 8 most probable water festivals of world

20:55, 27 November, 2013

The American Huffington Post periodical introduced the 8 most probable
water festivals of the world which includes Armenian Vardavar, as
well, `Armenpress’ reports. Celebrated in Armenia, Vardavar is a water
festival derived from both Christian and pagan roots. According to
tradition, the pagan goddess Astghik would spread love and rosewater
around the country while the God Vahagn would protect the people.
Similar to other water festivals, Armenians go onto the streets and
spray one another with water during Vardavar. However, they also have
a tradition of releasing pigeons or doves into the air.

This New Year’s event is one of the most popular festivals in
Thailand, which says quite a lot. Observed in mid-April, Songkran
originally stemmed from a Hindu celebration. Now it is considered to
be an enormous water fight party, cooling people off during Thailand’s
hottest time of the year.

This past summer, Seattle Party Camp launched an event called,
appropriately, “The World’s Largest Water Fight.” The all-day festival
was an attempt to break the Guinness World Record for water fights
while raising money for charity. Although they fell short of the world
record, more than $55,000 was fundraised for Camp Korey, a
recreational organization for kids with life-threatening medical
conditions.

Although Thingyan is also a mid-April New Year’s celebration, this
water festival has very different traditions than Songkran. Thingyan
stems from Buddhist tradition, and still holds a significant amount of
cultural significance in Myanmar. Between throwing buckets of water
onto anyone in their path, villagers also take this time to focus on
doing good deeds for one another.

This festival is very important for the Dai ethnic minority of China.
Similar to Songkran, the Dai Water Splashing Festival is three days
long. On the first day, villagers shop at a special outdoor
marketplace. On the second day, they float lanterns down the Lancang
River, which is said to ward off bad spirits. The climax of the
festival is on the third day, when participants dress up in their
finest clothes, gather at a Buddhist temple and engage in a deliberate
water-splashing ritual.

Also known as the “Water and Ham Festival, Fiesta del Agua y del Jamon
is a celebration of San Juan Batista, known in English as John the
Baptist. Once the clock strikes midnight on June 23rd, a crazy water
fight commences. After everyone is watered-out, the town parties with
beer and fireworks.

Also known as the Cambodian New Year, Chaul Chnam Thmey shares similar
elements with Songkran and Thingyan. However, this festival is more
focused on spiritual cleansing and good deeds, with crafts, music and
dance performances integral to the holiday. Participants bathe
themselves with holy water, and sprinkle perfumed water on monks and
statues of Buddha.

The good people at NYC4nerds.com knew that the Big Apple deserved a
big water fight. On June 29th, 2013, the group organized a monstrous
water fight on the Great Lawn in Central Park, attracting thousands of
participants and the media’s intrigued eye.

© 2009 ARMENPRESS.am

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/741717/huffington-post-includes-vardavar-in-8-most-probable-water-festivals-of-world.html

Orthodox Christians from 23 countries call for freeing nuns abducted

ITAR-TASS, Russia
December 11, 2013 Wednesday 06:10 PM GMT+4

Orthodox Christians from 23 countries call for freeing nuns abducted in Syria

MOSCOW December 11

– Interparliamentary Assembly of Orthodoxy (IAO) that unites the
Eastern Orthodox Christian communities from 23 countries has condemned
as brutal barbarianism the abduction of nuns from the world-famous St
Thekla convent in the Syrian village of Ma’aloula and has asked the
governments of Christian countries to lend a helping hand to the
efforts to free the hostages.

A statement the interparliamentary body issued Wednesday expresses
deep concern and indignation over a new cruel act of barbarianism and
makes a demand for universal respect for religious shrines, religious
institutes and Syrian Christians.

The cruelty of the abduction is intensified further if one considers
the absence of any guilt on the part of nuns, the historic
significance of the convent, the social servicing exercised there, and
the fact that the nuns were kidnapped seven months after the abduction
of the Antioch Orthodox Metropolitan of Aleppo, Paul, and Metropolitan
Mar Gregory of the Syriac Orthodox Church..

The assembly says that the two metropolitans were conducted by the same forces.

Members of the IAO urge the deputies of parliaments and government
officials of the IAO member-states to condemn the act, which puts the
Christians still present in the spacious region of the Middle East at
risk of total disappearance, and ask them to do everything in their
power to free the people who have been kidnapped.

Nuns of the Eastern Orthodox convent of St Thekla with Abbess Pelagia
at the head were forcibly moved out of the village of Ma’aloula, one
of the world’s most ancient Christian sites, by members of Syrian
extremist opposition groupings calling themselves the Free Qalamoun
Brigades and the Nusra Front, which is believed to be tightly
affiliated with Al-Qaeda.

They said in a video address that was aired by Al Jazeera December 6
that the abductors promised to set them free within 48 hours, but a
field commander who introduced himself as Mohannad Abu Fida said later
the women would remain hostage until the Syrian government fulfilled
the terms the militants had handed to it via the Vatican’s ambassador
in Damascus.

Their main demand is the freeing of a thousand women from the families
of militants, who are kept in jails at present. Also, the militants
demand that the government forces lift the siege of Maloula and the
town of Yabrud – a move that will let them to trickle away to the
mountains.

The IAO consists of parliamentary delegations of Albania, Armenia,
Belarus, Bulgaria, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland,
Georgia, Greece, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland,
Romania, the Russian Federation, Serbia, Montenegro, Slovakia, and
Ukraine, as well as groups of Members of Parliaments from Australia,
Asia, Africa, and the U.S.

RIA Novosti, Voice of Russia to be absorbed into new media conglomer

RIA Novosti, Voice of Russia to be absorbed into new media conglomerate

14:06 09.12.2013

The Kremlin announced Monday the dissolution of RIA Novosti, the
country’s major state-run news agency, amid a significant
reorganization of state-owned media assets.

News agency RIA Novosti and the state-owned Voice of Russia radio will
be scrapped and absorbed into a new media conglomerate called Rossiya
Segodnya, according to a decree signed by President Vladimir Putin.

In a separate decree published Monday, the Kremlin appointed Dmitry
Kiselyov, a prominent Russian television presenter and media manager
to head Rossiya Segodnya.

Head of the presidential administration Sergei Ivanov said the changes
were about saving money and making state media more effective.

`Russia has its own independent politics and strongly defends its
national interests: it’s difficult to explain this to the world but we
can do this, and we must do this,’ Ivanov told reporters.

The direct translation of Rossiya Segodnya is Russia Today, but the
new body will apparently be separate from RT, the Kremlin-funded
English-language television channel originally known as Russia Today,
RIA Novosti reports.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/12/09/ria-novosti-voice-of-russia-to-be-absorbed-into-new-media-conglomerate/

Iranian, Armenian officials discuss ties

Iranian, Armenian officials discuss ties

Political Desk

On Line: 15 December 2013 17:28
In Print: Monday 16 December 2013

TEHRAN – Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif held a meeting
with Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan in Tehran on
Sunday.

During the meeting, Zarif described the relationship between the two
countries as `friendly’, saying, `The new Iranian administration puts
special emphasis on the expansion of relations with the neighbors.’

There is no obstacle in the way of the enhancement of cooperation
between the two countries, the Iranian foreign minister said.

`The continuation of mutual visits and follow-ups by the two
countries’ officials will have a great role in the process of the
expansion of ties.’

Kocharyan, for his part, expressed hope that relations between the two
countries would be further strengthened.

He also stated that Armenia supports the recent historic nuclear deal
reached between Iran and world powers, according to which Tehran will
offer some concessions in exchange for limited relief from the
sanctions imposed on the country.

http://www.tehrantimes.com/component/content/article/112829