BAKU: France Intends To Hold Meeting Between Azerbaijani And Armenia

FRANCE INTENDS TO HOLD MEETING BETWEEN AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARIANS

APA, Azerbaijan
Aug 1 2013

[ 01 August 2013 10:47 ]

Baku. Anakhanum Hidayatova – APA. Chairman of France-Armenia
inter-parliamentary friendship group, Senator Philip Kaltenbach called
on Azerbaijani and Armenian parliamentarians to hold a dialogue for
the settlement of the conflict.

APA reports quoting Nouvelles d’Armenie that Kaltenbach has already
sent invitations to member of France-Armenia inter-parliamentary
friendship group Ara Babloyan and Chairperson of Azerbaijan-France
inter-parliamentary friendship group Mehriban Aliyeva in this regard.

The invitation says: “I want to hold a round table on the situation
in Nagorno Karabakh as a part of the Armenian parliamentarians’
visit to France on November 29. I’m going to invite former French
OSCE Minsk Group co-chair.”

ANKARA: Minorities In Turkey Secretly Categorized In Census Records

MINORITIES IN TURKEY SECRETLY CATEGORIZED IN CENSUS RECORDS

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Aug 1 2013

1 August 2013 /TODAY’S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

Official correspondence sent within the Education Ministry has revealed
that non-Muslim minorities in Turkey are categorized based on their
ethnicity, which is assigned a number, in a practice that dates back
to the establishment of the republic.

According to a report by the Agos daily, since 1923, Armenians, Greeks
and Jews have been assigned code numbers in official correspondence
between government institutions. A letter sent by the İstanbul
Directorate of National Education to its Å~^iÅ~_li branch indicates
that Armenian citizens are given the code number two.

This confidential categorization by the state is normally kept by
census bureaus and revealed only when there is an official request
from another government institution. According to this racial code
system, Greeks are given the number one and Jews the number three.

The secret categorization of minorities was revealed when a parent
asked an Armenian kindergarten for a document proving there is no legal
obstacle to the enrollment there of her child. When the Å~^iÅ~_li
branch of the directorate inquired with the census bureau into the
background of the family, it was seen that religious minorities are
given specific code numbers.

The family is currently waiting for a response from the Education
Ministry stating that they are of Armenian descent. The confusion
in the system stems from the fact that the mother is an Armenian who
converted to her family’s religion after being registered as a Muslim
at birth.

ANKARA: Armenian Soldier Kills Turkish Shepherd

ARMENIAN SOLDIER KILLS TURKISH SHEPHERD

, Turkey
Aug 1 2013

A Turkish shepherd from Turkey’s northeastern province of Kars was
killed when Armenian soldiers opened fire on him after he crossed
the border into Armenia while tending livestock.

World Bulletin / News Desk

A Turkish shepherd from Turkey’s northeastern province of Kars was
killed when Armenian soldiers opened fire on him after he crossed
the border into Armenia while tending livestock.

Governor of Kars, Eyup Tepe, told Anadolu Agency that the 35-year-old
shepherd who went for his livestock, which had crossed the border
into Armenia, was wounded Wednesday evening in Armenian fire and
being withheld in Armenia.

“Our citizen lost his life after being wounded. There is
disproportionate intervention here. They opened fire on him although
he did not have a gun, ” said the governor.

Armenia turns in Turkish shepherd’s body

Body of Turkish shepherd has been brought in Turkey. His body was
sent to Turkey’s eastern province of Erzurum for postmortem.

www.worldbulletin.net

Association Agreement Will Contribute To Solving Migration Issue, MP

ASSOCIATION AGREEMENT WILL CONTRIBUTE TO SOLVING MIGRATION ISSUE, MP THINKS

Mediamax, Armenia
Aug 1 2013

Yerevan/Mediamax/. MP from RPA, Chairman of Financial-Credit and
Budgetary Affairs Committee of National Assembly of Armenia Gagik
Minasyan said that the Association Agreement with the EU may be useful
for Armenia in terms of solving the migration issue.

The MP expressed the opinion that signing of the Agreement will
contribute to attracting investments and creating new workplaces in
Armenia, Mediamax reports.

Noting that the European integration is still an important political
direction for Armenia, Gagik Minasyan recalled at the same time that
“Armenia has clear military-political orientation toward the CSTO”. He
added that from the viewpoint of ensuring Armenia’s security, CSTO
hardly can be replaced by any military-political alliance in the
foreseeable future.

Armenian Jewelers Assc. Partners With Education Ministry In Jewelry

ARMENIAN JEWELERS ASSOCIATION PARTNERS WITH EDUCATION MINISTRY IN JEWELRY TRAINING

TACY, Israel
Aug 1 2013

28 July 2013

In an effort to boost the number of young, skilled workers in Armenia’s
jewelry industry, the chairman of Armenian Jewelers Association,
Gagik Gevorgyan, and the Armenian education and science minister,
Armen Ashotyan, have signed a memorandum to cooperate in the training
of professional jewelers.

While the signed memorandum lays the legal ground and direction for
the joint venture, it also signifies future employment opportunities
for young jewelers, the minister told the Arka News Agency.

Under this cooperation agreement, both sides will provide support
for the training process in which advanced technologies will be
introduced. Moreover, students will be involved in world jewelry
exhibitions.

According to Gevorgyan, the final goal of the cooperative effort
with the ministry is to create a free economic zone for Armenia’s
jewelry industry in order to attract international investors and
foreign companies.

Gevorgyan said that the Armenian Jewelers Association is currently
implementing a program to create 1,000-1,500 jobs within the jewelry
industry.

http://www.diamondintelligence.com/magazine/magazine.aspx?id=12016

Armenia’s Second Largest City To Host Sculptors’ Symposium

Armenia’s second largest city to host sculptors’ symposium

17:15 01.08.13

An international symposium of sculptors will be held in Gyumri this
September as part of the cultural events scheduled in the second
largest city in the frameworks of the CIS Cultural Capital program.

The event, entitled Life-giving Spring, will cost the organizers an
estimated 20 million Drams (approx. $48,800), the program’s manager,
Arthur Gevorgyan has told Tert.am, adding that they now have only 8
million Drams (less than $19,550) which has been received from the
Government’s reserve fund.

The Gyumri City Hall has made an investment in the amount of 3 million
Drams ($ 7,320). The money will be directed to the reconstruction
of pedestals.

“We are now busy with organizational issues and concluding agreements
with participant sculptors,” Gevorgyan said.

He regretted to note that the shortage of funds caused them to reduce
the participants number from 19 to nine. “We are going to turn to
ambassadors, organizations and businessmen for assistance. With
the scare resources we have. we can ensure only nine sculptors’
participation. But given that this is an international symposium,
I want to increase the participants’ number to at least 15,” he added

Three sculptors from abroad – Russia, Ukraine and Belarus – are going
to attend the symposium. All the participants will be offered a 45-day
stay in Gyumri for purchasing necessary items, publishing booklets
and producing films featuring the process of their work.

The completed pieces will be placed next to a morning memorial erected
in Gyumri after the 1988 disastrous earthquake.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Levon Aronyan Still Second World Chess Player

LEVON ARONYAN STILL SECOND WORLD CHESS PLAYER

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

12:14, 1 August, 2013

YEREVAN, AUGUST 1, ARMENPRESS: The leader of the Armenian National
Chess Men team, the triple Olympic Chess Champion Levon Aronyan
continues being the second chess player of the world.

As reported by Armenpress, FIDE presented its rating list, where the
Armenian chess player again occupies the second place.

In his actives Levon Aronyan has 2813 points. The leader of the
rating is the Norwegian Magnus Carlsen. The Grand Master has 2862
points. Fabiano Caruana, Alexander Grischuk and Vladimir Kramnik are
in the top five.

Levon Aronyan is an Armenian chess Grandmaster. On the May 2012 FIDE
list, he had an Elo rating of 2825, making him number two in the
world and third highest of all time.

Aronyan won the Chess World Cup 2005. He led the Armenian national
team to the Gold medals in the 2006 (Turin), 2008 (Dresden) and 2012
(Istanbul) Chess Olympics and at the World Team Chess Championship
in Ningbo 2011. He won the FIDE Grand Prix 2008-2010, qualifying
him for the Candidates tournament for the World Chess Championship
2012, where he was knocked out in the first round. He was also World
Chess960 Champion in 2006 and 2007, World Rapid Chess Champion in 2009,
and World Blitz Chess Champion in 2010.

Aronyan was declared the best sportsman of Armenia in 2005 and was
awarded the title of “Honored Master of Sport of the Republic of
Armenia” in 2009.

Aronyan was born on 6 October 1982 in Yerevan, Armenia. He was taught
to play chess by his sister Lilit at the age of nine. His first coach
was the Grand Master Melikset Khachiyan. An early sign of his ability
came when he won the 1994 World Youth Chess Championship (under-12)
in Szeged with 8/9, ahead of future luminaries Etienne Bacrot, Ruslan
Ponomariov, Francisco Vallejo Pons, and Alexander Grischuk.

Aronyan holds a diploma from the Armenian State Institute of Physical
Culture.

Aronyan played for Armenia in the Chess Olympiads of 1996, 2004,
2006, 2008, and 2010. He took team bronze medal in 2004 and team
gold medal in 2006, 2008 and 2012. In the 2010 Chess Olympiad he won
the silver medal for his individual performance on board one. He was
a member of the gold-medal winning Armenian team at the World Team
Chess Championship in 2011.

By July 1 2013 Levon Aronyan is the second world chess player (2813).

Currently the member of the Armenian National Chess Men team is
preparing for the World Chess Cup to be held on August 10 in Norway.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/727933/levon-aronyan-still-second-world-chess-player.html

Karen Grigoryan Takes First Prize At Sitges Open

KAREN GRIGORYAN TAKES FIRST PRIZE AT SITGES OPEN

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

13:15, 1 August, 2013

YEREVAN, AUGUST 1, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian chess player Karen
Grigoryan has become the champion of the Spanish Sitges Open. As
Armenpress was reported by the Armenian Chess Federation, the Grand
Master Karen Grigoryan has scored 7,5 points out of 9 and solely took
the first prize at the open that was held in Sitges, Spain.

The Grand Master Karen Movsziszian had 6,5 and the Grand Master Hovik
Hayrapetyan – 6 points.

The Tournament is attended by 91 chess players and was launched on
July 22.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/727938/karen-grigoryan-takes-first-prize-at-sitges-open.html

Kasbarian: The Lessons Of Lisbon

KASBARIAN: THE LESSONS OF LISBON
By Antranig Kasbarian

August 1, 2013

Lisbon reminds me that we must avoid lapsing back into conformism.

On July 27, 1983, five young Armenians-Sarkis Abrahamian, Setrak
Ajemian, Vatche Daghlian, Ara Kuhrjlian, and Simon Yahniyan-stormed
the Turkish Embassy in Lisbon, Portugal, seeking to occupy it in an
effort to publicize Turkey’s ongoing denial of the Armenian Genocide.

While the attempt ultimately failed-the five became trapped inside
the Embassy and eventually committed suicide-it is worth looking at
the Lisbon incident, and more broadly, the years of armed struggle in
the 1970s and ’80s, to evaluate the impact of those years and where
we’ve come since that time.

Armed struggle was carried out largely by two groups-the Armenian
Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) and the Justice
Commandos of the Armenian Genocide (JCAG)-and their offshoots. While
the groups varied considerably in tactics and allegiances, they came
out of the same period of ferment, marked by civil rights activism,
anti-colonial movements, the rise of national liberation struggles
in the Third World, and a broad tendency toward radicalism among the
youth. Far from being a band of hotheads or quixotic adventurers, many
of the young avengers were part of this broader, worldwide tendency,
and thus reflected the spirit of their times: Conventional political
means had yielded little results, and the Great Powers-both US and
USSR-despite their professed idealism and concern for human rights,
were seen as part of the problem rather than part of the solution;
in the US’s case especially, viewed no longer as the bastion of the
free world but rather as an imperialist power that backed dictatorships
and other criminal states, including modern Turkey.

Bearing these trends in mind, we must view the rise of armed struggle
for what it was: A movement that, frustrated by the seeming impotence
of mainstream advocacy, began to call for more extreme actions
(such as targeted assassinations of high-ranking Turkish diplomats)
that could shake the system’s foundations. The effort was designed
essentially as a wake-up call, and on two fronts:

Aiming to send shock waves through Turkey, as well as international
public opinion.

Seeking to repoliticize Armenian communities worldwide, replacing
conventional notions of democracy and human rights with bolder,
ideologically sharper notions of self-sacrifice, liberation, and
revolutionary zeal in pursuit of our cause.

On the first front, the wave of political assassinations did indeed
wake up Turkey. In fact, in the early years Turkish opinionmakers
were frankly startled, having grown accustomed to seeing Armenians as
modest and unthreatening, hardly a bold or formidable adversary. It
took a few years, but by the late 1970s Turkey’s elite had regained
its balance: At first, Ankara sought quick remedies to defuse its
“Armenian problem”: Recall then-Foreign Minister Caglayangil, who
invited the leaders of the Armenian political parties-ARF, Hunchak and
ADL-to meet secretly in Switzerland. The Foreign Minister expressed
his country’s dismay over the rise in political violence, and sought
the Armenian groups’ assistance, but was kindly rebuffed. He was told
that while the parties did not condone such violence per se, a) the
cessation of hostilities was beyond their means; and b) nothing short
of justice would cause the assassins to lay down their arms. Soon
thereafter, Turkey evaluated these results and decided to drop the
possibility of subsequent meetings.

Soon thereafter, Turkey became more pro-active. Both directly and
indirectly, it began to pressure Armenian leaders and community
institutions inside Turkey. More ominously, it began to pour millions
of dollars into organized denial efforts, creating a political machine
that has continued to grow till this day.

We may look upon this today as cause for concern, but at the time
Armenians believed that armed struggle had made headway in a limited
sense: It had forced Turkey to blink, and it had drawn widespread
reaction-both positive and negative-from international public opinion,
as mainstream media voraciously devoured news of every assassination.

For a period, it seemed that the Armenian Cause had gone from being
yesterday’s news to emerging as a serious matter of contemporary
relevance.

However, the armed struggle did not have staying power. Some believe
that by the 1980s it had gone too far, particularly in the wanton
destruction of Paris’s Orly Airport and other cases where innocent
bystanders were recklessly killed. This likely caused a decline in
support from many Armenians, especially in Europe where the avengers
had won widespread sympathy. And yet, others say the decline in
political violence came because it perhaps did not go far enough:
As long as politicized Armenians did not have presence on the ground
inside Turkey, the assassination attempts were increasingly cast as
isolated incidents staged by the diaspora, which had no foothold on
its historic lands, and was not part of any organic struggle inside
Turkey. (It would have been interesting to see such organic struggle,
but of course the tentative openings inside Turkish society were still
over 20 years away.) Still others rightly point to another factor:
ASALA and JCAG also didn’t have staying power because another organic
struggle on the ground-Karabagh-soon emerged to occupy Armenians’
attention.

On the second front, the movement did often repoliticize Armenian
communities. But it also generated controversies, especially in the US,
where Armenian-Americans had grown up for decades seeking to integrate
with their host societies, not by challenging the mainstream but by
accepting it. The image of the ‘peaceful Armenian’ had been tarnished,
if not shattered, by the armed struggle, and people reacted in
different ways to this. For those who viewed their Armenian identity in
simple or conservative terms, the wave of political violence was often
too much too handle: “Good Armenians” sought to distance themselves not
just from so-called “terrorism,” but from activism of any kind, often
avoiding the faintest mention or involvement with the Armenian Cause.

But for others who were more reflective, the years of armed struggle
gave important meaning to being Armenian. Now, all of a sudden, being
Armenian involved making choices, often difficult choices, tied to
one’s belief system. I can recall the numerous examples when newspaper
reporters and federal investigators began questioning our community
leadership, who by and large stood together, saying that while we do
not condone such violence, we understand the causes behind it, and
that fundamental solutions require justice for the crime of Genocide.

For many of us, there was a maturation process involved, as such
pressures caused us to think more deeply and clearly about what we
did and didn’t believe in.

Meanwhile for those-fewer in number-who were even more politicized,
the years of armed struggle offered existential shifts. The old
narratives, alliances, even worldviews were all challenged by the new
order that was seemingly upon us: Armenians as the US’s “little ally”
was replaced for me by a horizontal view where our most natural,
nourishing alliances came not from the Great Powers but from other
struggling, dispossessed peoples such as the Kurds, Basques, and
Palestinians. I recall being moved by an influential article in the
New York Times by a Columbia University professor (I believe it was
Steele Commager) who pointed to the hypocrisy of condemning such
acts of “terrorism” when the greatest, most lethal violence against
innocent people comes from the large, ostensibly democratic states
we reside in (and the military-industrial complexes that sustain them).

“What do you expect?” was his question, reminding that “terrorism”
is the obvious weapon-of-the-weak, used by those who do not have a
state apparatus to legitimize their use of violence. Either condemn
violence across the board, he seemed to say, or don’t condemn it at
all. In such a milieu, being Armenian was no longer something you
simply wore on your skin; it was a choice, an attitude, a stance on
life-writ-large. And for some of us, being Armenian became a choice
increasingly not to conform to dominant values, but to stand by our
principles even if those principles aren’t always fashionable.

In this spirit, I would affirm that the incident in Lisbon-and the
five martyrs who gave their lives there-was not reckless, merely
destructive or without purpose. If anything, it reminds me that
we must avoid lapsing back into conformism. Lisbon reminds us to
be creative, demanding, and to push the envelope-remaining aware of
‘inside strategies’ as well as ‘outside strategies’ in pursuit of our
goals. More plainly, we must remain ready to work, when necessary,
through established institutions in pursuit of our cause; but we must
also stand ready to question the foundations, and the legitimacy, of
such institutions, rather than simply accepting them as the natural
order of things.

This article is adapted from an address delivered at a July 28, 2013
commemoration organized by the ARF “Soghomon Tehlirian” gomideh in
Fresno, Calif. The author is a member of the ARF Central Committee,
Eastern United States.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/08/01/kasbarian-the-lessons-of-lisbon/

Armenia’s Aronian Still World No. 2

ARMENIA’S ARONIAN STILL WORLD NO. 2

August 1, 2013

The World Chess Federation (FIDE) has announced its new rankings, and
Grandmaster (GM) Magnus Carlsen of Norway continues to top the list.

GM Levon Aronian, who plays first board for the three-time World Chess
Olympiad champion Armenian national team, is still ranked second
in the FIDE ratings. His rating is unchanged at 2813. Just as the
previous rankings, GM Fabiano Caruana of Italy is ranked third.

The Armenian national squad has four more representatives in the
world top 100 rankings: Sergei Movsesian (49th), Vladimir Akopian
(60th), Gabriel Sargissian (73rd), and Armenia’s reigning champion,
Tigran Petrosian (89th).

NEWS.am Sport