Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy To Maintain Armenian Heritage Park

ROSE KENNEDY GREENWAY CONSERVANCY TO MAINTAIN ARMENIAN HERITAGE PARK

Boston Globe
June 10 2013

By Jeremy C. Fox, Town Correspondent

The Armenian Heritage Foundation has selected the Rose Fitzgerald
Kennedy Greenway Conservancy to maintain the Armenian Heritage Park
on the Greenway under a new three-year contract, the conservancy
announced Monday.

Opened in May 2012, the park sits between Faneuil Hall Marketplace and
Christopher Columbus Park and is intended to celebrate the immigrants
who have made Massachusetts their home and contributed to American
society and culture.

It features a circular labyrinth walking path of granite set into
grass, meant to symbolize life’s journey, and an abstract sculpture
consisting of a split 12-sided shape atop a reflecting pool, meant
to symbolize the immigrant experience.

James Kalustian, president of the Armenian Heritage Foundation,
said in a statement released by the conservancy that he believed the
conservancy would be a appropriate steward for the park’s maintenance.

“Since our community first conceived of Armenian Heritage Park as
our gift to the Commonwealth and the city, we have been focused on
providing an engaging experience and green open park space of the
highest quality,” Kalustian said.

“Having seen what an excellent job the conservancy has done in
maintaining those same standards of excellence on the Greenway,
we are confident that the conservancy will be the ideal maintenance
partner for us,” he said.

Last year the conservancy lost out in a bid to maintain the park,
Commonwealth Magazine reported. The new three-year contract between
the organizations will begin July 1.

Mayor Thomas M. Menino recently presented the conservancy with
a Greenovate Boston Business Award in recognition of its efforts
in sustainably maintaining the Greenway. The conservancy says the
Greenway is the only organically maintained public park in Boston
and among only a few across the country.

Jesse Brackenbury, chief operating officer of the conservancy,
said the labyrinth and sculpture have been popular additions to the
Greenway since the Armenian Heritage Park opened in May 2012.

“We are looking forward to putting our best maintenance practices to
work in the park so that people who come from near and far continue
to enjoy the experience,” Brackenbury said in the statement.

Massachusetts Secretary of Transportation Richard A. Davey offered
congratulations to the conservancy.

“The conservancy has a demonstrated record of success in maintaining
open space for all of the city’s residents and visitors to enjoy, and
I have no doubt they will do the same with this important tribute,”
Davey said in the statement.

For more information on the Greenway, visit

For more information on the Armenian Heritage Park, visit

http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/downtown/2013/06/rose_kennedy_greenway_conserva.html
www.rosekennedygreenway.org.
www.armenianheritagepark.org.

Erdogan’s Fateful Moment

ERDOGAN’S FATEFUL MOMENT

Mideast Mirror
June 10, 2013 Monday

Faced with growing domestic challenges Turkey’s PM may now have to
pursue a more cautious Syrian policy, says Salim Nassar in pan-Arab
daily al-Hayat

When President Barack Obama wished to address the 325 million
inhabitants of the Arab world [in June 2009], he chose Cairo, recalls
veteran Lebanese commentator Salim Nassar in the Saudi-owned pan-Arab
daily al-Hayat.

WHERE EAST MEETS WEST: When he wished to address the world’s 1.5
billion Muslims, however, he chose to do so from Ankara, the capital
of the country he described as the place where east meets west.

Yet this meeting-place has been wracked over the last few days by
vociferous demonstrations that spread to many Turkish cities–nominally
against the planned development of Istanbul’s Gezi Park.

The environmental issue was however merely an excuse to mobilize
thousands of young men and women in public squares in cities such as
Ankara, Istanbul, and Izmir.

The opposition Republican People’s Party CHP) exploited the mass
protests to incite demonstrators into chanting support for a ‘Turkish
Spring’ that has found its way across the border from Syria.

That was the reason why Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused
external circles of trying to undermine the security and prosperity
his Justice and Development Party (AKP) brought to Turkey.

It was only natural of Erdogan to accuse the Syrian regime of fomenting
the latest unrest. For was it not the Syrians who devastated the
border town of Reyhanli only last month when they exploded a car bomb
and killed more than fifty people?

At the time, the Turkish government dispatched units of Special Forces
to encircle Reyhanli in order to defuse the anger of its (mostly
Arabic-speaking Sunni, Kurdish and Alawite) inhabitants. For despite
the attempts of successive Turkish governments to assimilate them,
the inhabitants of southwestern Turkey still consider the province
of Iskenderun to be a part of Syria that the Turks illegally annexed
in 1939.

After the regimes in Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya fell in the Arab Spring,
Syria’s Bashar al-Assad was shocked to hear his erstwhile friend
Erdogan call on him to stand down. Turkey subsequently began to back
the Syrian rebels, host their conferences, and host Syrian refugees
in specially constructed camps near the border. Istanbul became a
permanent forum that the opposition Syrian National Coalition (SNC),
the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and other opposition groups used to make
their case.

In trying to explain Erdogan’s about-face, the Turkish press said
that the PM’s position has its roots nearly fifty years ago. At the
time, Turkey was an ally of the United States, while Syria was seen
as ‘the Cuba of the Middle East’ because of its strong alliance with
Moscow during the Cold War. While Syria was close to the Warsaw Pact,
Turkey was one of the most important members of NATO.

It was therefore quite logical that the two neighbors should fall out
on many issues, chiefly water resources, border disputes, and Syria’s
support for the secessionist Kurdish (Kurdistan Workers Party) PKK. In
fact, the two countries would have come to blows in 1998 had it not
been for the intervention of Egypt’s former president Husni Mubarak.

In 2002, the Islamist-oriented AKP won its first general election.

Erdogan thus began to address his country’s severe political and
economic problems. In a fairly short period of time, he succeeded in
turning the Turkish economy around and achieving unprecedented growth.

He also utilized his political victory to revive the idea of the
Islamic caliphate that Ataturk consigned to history back in 1924. In
order to facilitate this process, Erdogan weakened and marginalized
the generals, who Ataturk saw as the guardians of the secular Turkish
state.

With Erdogan at the pinnacle of his political and economic power, it
was shocking to observers to see last week’s demonstrations overwhelm
Turkey’s cities and provinces. In fact, Erdogan himself was taken by
surprise when he saw his people denigrate his economic achievements
and the political stability that came with it. After all, had he not
led Turkey to become seventeenth on the list of developing nations
with a growth rate of 8 percent? Had Turkey not managed to achieve
growth while the EU was floundering? Turkish President Abdullah Gul
tried to dissuade Erdogan from traveling to North Africa soon after
the protests broke out, arguing that he should instead try to defuse
tensions and assuage public anger. Gul also ordered Deputy PM Bulent
Arinc to talk to the protestors and apologize for the high-handed
manner the police used to break up demonstrations.

Erdogan’s supporters attacked Gul for showing too much leniency to the
demonstrators in order to win public sympathy and for exploiting the
protests to appear as if he opposed the Prime Minister’s policies. For
his part, the mayor of Istanbul sided with Gul. He admitted being
negligent because of his failure to properly explain the Gezi Park
development project to the people of Istanbul before the bulldozers
moved in.

It is interesting to note that the ‘Turkish Spring’ began when four
young men wanted to protest against the uprooting of trees in Gezi
Park. They set up tents to encourage artists, actors and writers to
join in their protest. When the police came, the protestors merely
set fire to their tents and fled. Yet correspondents believe that the
Gezi Park issue was nothing more than a minor item on a long list
of grievances against the government and Recep Tayyip Erdogan in
particular. Demonstrators carried banners criticizing his tendency
to horde power as well as his party’s policies, which they saw as
too authoritarian. They particularly resented Erdogan’s ambition to
change the constitution so as to increase the powers of the President.

While the protests were going on in earnest against the AKP’s
authoritarianism, writer Mohammad Nureddin (author of ‘Turkey in an
Era of Change’) wrote an article about the plans to build a third
bridge over the Bosphorus in Istanbul (called the Yawuz Sultan Selim
Bridge). In that article, Nureddin criticized the AKP for alienating
the country’s twenty million Alawites (who are different from their
Syrian co-religionists) by naming the new bridge thus. Sultan Selim
inaugurated his reign by slaughtering over forty thousand Alawites,
who he accused of plotting with Persia’s Shah Isma’il to spread Shiism
in the Ottoman Empire. Nureddin said that the bridge should be given
another name, one that neither increases sectarian tensions nor hints
at any pretensions to revive Turkey’s Ottoman heritage.

Leaders of the opposition Republican People’s Party say that the
protests were meant to let off steam. The Gezi Park issue, they say,
was merely the trigger for the explosion of pent up feelings of anger
and frustration at a PM who has monopolized power for far too long.

The ten years Erdogan has been in power were enough to stoke up enough
domestic anger, which, when allied with external forces keen to exploit
the state of lawlessness to express their dissatisfaction through local
forces, resulted in the riots we saw. Indeed, pro-Assad circles were
the first to join the protest movement through Turkish opposition
parties and factions. This was merely revenge for Erdogan’s siding
with Syria’s Sunni majority against that country’s ruling Alawites.

Early last December, Russia’s Vladimir Putin paid a surprise visit to
Ankara. Its purpose: To try to change Turkey’s position vis-a-vis
Syria. It was said at the time that Putin objected to Turkey’s
provocative actions, such as its insistence on inspecting a Syrian
plane traveling from Moscow to Damascus and confiscating its cargo,
as well as its decision to deploy a U.S. missile shield and Patriot
missiles on its borders with Syria.

Russian Foreign minister Lavrov lambasted Erdogan for allowing NATO
to expand its influence to Russia’s borders when he threatened to use
NATO troops to help defend missiles aimed at Moscow. Although he has
publicly disavowed Marxism, Putin expressed satisfaction at the fact
that 13 communist factions (and 250 thousand leftists) took part in
the demonstrations in Turkey.

For its part, the Israeli press printed a series of articles, all of
which attacked Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Israeli newspapers said that what
was happening on Turkish streets was nothing more than a spontaneous
expression of public exasperation at Erdogan’s contradictory policies
(not forgetting to remind their readers that it was President Obama
who succeeded in reconciling Erdogan with Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu after relations between them were fractured after the
[Gaza flotilla] Mavi Marmara incident in 2010).

Two weeks before the reconciliation, Erdogan was invited to address
an UN-hosted forum in Vienna. Attendees at that forum were shocked to
hear the Turkish Prime Minister describe Zionism as a ‘crime against
humanity.’ Netanyahu responded by calling his Turkish counterpart a
‘liar’ and ‘anti-Semite.’ Meanwhile, Pinchas Goldschmidt, Chief Rabbi
and President of the Conference of European Rabbis, issued a statement
in which he said that, ‘The irony of these comments will not be lost
on the families of those slaughtered during the Armenian genocide,
a crime still not recognized by the Turkish government.’ It was
because of that statement that the Turkish Jewish community joined
forces with the protestors.

According to Turkish newspapers, half of the protestors were women.

The reason for the high female participation was laid at the door of
negative statements made by Erdogan about abortion, which he equated
with premeditated murder. The Turkish Prime Minister also criticized
working women, saying that the proper place for veiled Muslim women
was the kitchen.

As to the ‘invisible party’ that Erdogan’s supporters accused of
encouraging the protests, it refers to the 400,000 strong Turkish
army that was marginalized and emasculated by the AKP. It is said in
Ankara that the Generals were content to see the situation unfold
without even intervening to prevent the riots spreading to crowded
neighborhoods. The opposition warned that the generals would not
stand idly by if security worsens or if the Syrian regime succeeds
in supplying its Turkish allies with bombs.

During his recent North African tour, Erdogan tried to defend his
policies rather than accomplish the mission he set out for, viz.

reconciling those Arab leaders who were shaken by the Libyan
revolution. But President Gul insisted that he return to Turkey in
order to consider the options tabled by the opposition and to try to
steer the AKP away from potential damage.

Washington think-tanks advised Turkey to get out of the Syrian morass,
especially after bombs began to go off in Turkish cities. They believe
that the supine policies of the Obama administration could cost the
AKP a large part of its popularity, especially as Obama frankly told
Erdogan that the U.S. would not intervene militarily in Syria.

With all this in mind, observers believe that Erdogan will be more
cautious in dealing with the Syrian opposition and the FSA in the
future–especially as President Gul is seemingly determined to devise
a new strategy designed to save the AKP from the threats it faces,
as well as to help Turkey avoid sliding into an abyss.

Exam Time: School Graduates In Armenia Score Lower In Language And L

EXAM TIME: SCHOOL GRADUATES IN ARMENIA SCORE LOWER IN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE TESTS THAN LAST YEAR

EDUCATION | 10.06.13 | 16:53

Photolure

By Gohar Abrahamian
ArmeniaNow reporter

The average grade scored by school graduates for the common test in
Armenian language and literature taken last week in Armenia is lower
than last year’s, so is the number of students with the highest score.

This year there are a total of around 15,000 applicants for common
(graduation and university entrance) tests, 8,975 had applied to take
the Armenian language and literature test and 8,648 actually took it.

While last year the total number of applicants was 18,105, and
11,419 applicants out of the 11,795 took the Armenian language and
literature test.

On Monday the Evaluation and Testing Center (ATC) published the test
results, by which the average score is 13.25 versus last year’s 13.9
(the highest score is 20).

ATC told ArmeniaNow that this year 788 students failed to pass the
test, which makes nine percent of the total, while last year it was
only 5.6 percent.

Only 80 applicants have scored the highest 20 versus last year’s
200 applicants.

Among the common tests the one for the Armenian language and literature
is the most controversial with parents, applicants and returning
applicants (who failed to pass it before) complaining that the tests
remind complicated puzzles and there is mismatch with the sample
tests in the practice books serving as the exam preparation guidelines.

On the day of the test Education and Science Minister Armen Ashotyan
said that a number of controversial tasks had been removed from the
practice books and that the test authors had given assurances on the
absence of tasks implying ambiguous or two possible answers.

Philologist David Gyurjinyan says the testing system has been distorted
in Armenia – initially good ideas have been lost and the accepted
test building principles violated.

“For years now ATC relies on the same people and these tests are
a disgrace to both our schools and Armenian language teaching,
they evoke disgust among the applicants, hundreds of mistakes and
shortcomings have been pointed out, the mistakes get corrected,
but the test-makers do not get replaced,” he says.

Earlier this month 1,139 students took the Russian language test with
an average score of 11.8, and only 15 percent failed to pass.

Armenia’s Natural Gas And Electricity Price Hikes Will Create Additi

ARMENIA’S NATURAL GAS AND ELECTRICITY PRICE HIKES WILL CREATE ADDITIONAL 2.5% INFLATION – CENTRAL BANK

June 10, 2013 | 13:07

YEREVAN. – The increase in the prices of natural gas and electricity
and the recent hailstorm will create an additional 2-2.5-percent
inflation in Armenia.

Central Bank (CBA) Chairman Arthur Javadyan noted the aforesaid during
Monday’s National Assembly discussions.

In his words, they opt for a tough monetary policy under these
conditions, but it is still too early to say whether the refinancing
interest rate will increase.

As per Javadyan, the main challenge of the CPA is the maintenance
of price stability; but if this conflicts with other challenges,
they need to choose the main challenge.

The CBA head added that they are not pursuing a policy of a strong
Armenian national currency (dram), and they intervene in the exchange
rates solely in the case of sharp fluctuations.

To note, pursuant to Armenia’s Law on State Budget, the allowable level
of inflation in the country is in the 4+-1.5-percent range. As of May
2013, the twelve-month inflation constituted 5.2 percent in Armenia.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

More Karabakh War Heroes Joining Protest To Defend Violated Rights

MORE KARABAKH WAR HEROES JOINING PROTEST TO DEFEND VIOLATED RIGHTS

13:11 ~U 10.06.13

Veteran heroes of the Nagorno-Karabakh war will meet next Sunday in
Yerevan’s Liberty Square for a protest- demonstration in defense of
their rights, Tert.am has learned from an activist.

Speaking to our correspondent, a participant of the Karabakh war,
Khachatur Tovmasyan, said they expect to gather together around
300-400 freedom fighters at the meeting.

Several war heroes last month started a series of protests under the
leadership of Colonel Volodya Avetisyan, urging for government efforts
to revise their social guarantees and pension calculation mechanisms.

The group later submitted a letter to the government, which they say
hasn’t received a proper attention to date.

Avetisyan had earlier told Tert.am that the premier had promised to
meet them again to talk over concrete proposals.

But Tovmasyan said the meeting held subsequently had not left them
content.

“It’s common for them to see people off with good words, lulling them
into a false sense of security. We do not believe the prime minister.

One has to practice what he preaches. It is a long time we have been
believing [the authorities]; more than 20 years,” he said, adding
that they have no more time to wait.

Asked whether any representatives of political forces have contacted
them to express a willingness to attend the upcoming event, Tovmasyan
answered that they haven’t yet received any call. But he said they
would be happy to see an increasing number of supporters joining them.

“Today, however, we do not see the forces who would protect our
interests in their speeches. All take a neutral position,” he added.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/06/10/meeting-jun16/

Mikhail Zhvanetsky To Grant A Two-Hour Smile To Armenian Audience

MIKHAIL ZHVANETSKY TO GRANT A TWO-HOUR SMILE TO ARMENIAN AUDIENCE

11:11, 10 June, 2013

YEREVAN, JUNE 10, ARMENPRESS. “Stage Production” company will introduce
an evening with Mikhail Zhvanetsky in “Aram Khachaturian” Concert
Hall on June 15. “Stage Production” Company informed “Armenpress”
that the program titled “120 Minutes with Mikhail Zhvanetsky” will
grant a two-hour smile and laughter to the Armenian audience. The
evening with Mikhail Zhvanetsky will be held within the framework
of the program titled “Everybody Goes to Yerevan” introduced by
“Democratic Diplomacy” mission.

Mikhail Mikhaylovich Zhvanetsky was born 6 March 1934, Odessa,
Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union. Mikhail Zhvanetsky is best known for
his shows targeting different aspects of the Soviet and post-Soviet
everyday life. Mikhail Zhvanetsky’s monologues and sketches were
performed by Arkady Raikin, Roman Kartsev and Viktor Ilchenko.

He joined the Union of Soviet Writers in 1978 and has authoredseveral
books of humor and satire.

‘Everything’s Wrong Way Round’ – Opposition Armenian MP

‘EVERYTHING’S WRONG WAY ROUND’ – OPPOSITION ARMENIAN MP

19:31 ~U 11.06.13

Zaruhi Postanjyan, an MP from the Heritage party, stated in parliament
on Tuesday that Armenia’s government appears to be acting against
public order and morals.

Specifically, she addressed a report on the deadly incident in Goris
on the night of June 2, posted on the government’s website.

“This is our government’s image. The government is acting against
citizens, the judicial system is acting against citizens. Everything’s
the wrong way round with us,” Postanjyan said.

Local government bodies headed by the Yerevan Municipality are acting
against citizens as well.

“Moral values are changing day by day, and it is only money that is
the basis for everything now,” she said.

With respect to lawyers’ strike, Postanjyan said that they are
struggling against unlawful actions by Armenia’s judicial system.

“People have to block roads because they cannot defend their rights in
a legal way. Others leave the country,” she said.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/06/11/backward-postanjyan/

Opposition MP Inquires About Armenian PM’s ‘Offshore Business’

OPPOSITION MP INQUIRES ABOUT ARMENIAN PM’S ‘OFFSHORE BUSINESS’

18:45 ~U 11.06.13

Nikol Pashinyan, an MP from the opposition Armenian National Congress
(ANC) party, inquired about Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan’s
absence from Parliament on Tuesday.

The MP asked Minister of Finance David Sargsyan, who presented the
2012 budget report, if Armenia’s premier, as well as Archbishop
Navasard Kchoyan and businessman Ashot Sukiasyan, is a shareholder
of the WLISPERA HOLDINGS LIMITED offshore company registered in Cyprus.

Minister Sargsyan advised the MP to inquire about the government’s
official position. He noted that the rumor was refuted, and the
premier applied to the Prosecutor’s Office.

In response, Pashinyan said that “the public wants an answer from
the premier himself.”

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/06/11/nikol-pashinyan-davit-sargsyan/

The Fifth International Pharmaceutical Competitiveness Conference To

THE FIFTH INTERNATIONAL PHARMACEUTICAL COMPETITIVENESS CONFERENCE TO TAKE PLACE IN YEREVAN

16:00, June 11, 2013

On June 14, the fifth international Pharmaceutical Competitiveness
Conference will take place in Yerevan at the State Medical University
after Heratsi. The conference will provide a platform for private and
public stakeholders in the pharmaceutical sector to become acquainted
with the latest achievements in the Armenian industry, discuss common
issues and new projects, and explore new partnership opportunities.

The conference will have two sessions. The first one, entitled
“Pharmaceutical Achievements of Armenia,” will focus on the latest
achievements in the Armenian pharmaceutical market, new developments,
ongoing reforms and development strategies. During the second
session of the conference, “The Best Achievements in International
Pharmaceutics,” participants will hear from the representatives of
foreign pharmaceutical companies about their activities, latest
achievements, products, as well as technological and scientific
discoveries and innovative approaches.

Pharma Armenia EXPO, the annual specialized exhibition of
pharmaceutics, will be held in parallel with the conference. The EXPO
is an opportunity for local and foreign pharmaceutical companies to
present their products and recent achievements.

The conference is organized by the Medicine Producers and Importers
Union (MPIU) of Armenia with the support of the USAID-funded
Enterprise Development and Market Competitiveness (EDMC) Project
and the Industrial Development Fund of Armenia. The conference is
also supported by the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Economy,
the Scientific Centre of Drug and Medical Technology Expertise,
the Armenian Development Agency, and the State Medical University.

Participants will include over 500 doctors, representatives of
pharmacies, local and international pharmaceutical companies,
scientists, and experts.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/27298/the-fifth-international-pharmaceutical-competitiveness-conference-to-take-place-in-yerevan.html

Another Successful Syrian-Armenian Businessman Settled In Armenia

ANOTHER SUCCESSFUL SYRIAN-ARMENIAN BUSINESSMAN SETTLED IN ARMENIA

14:34, 11 June, 2013

YEREVAN, JUNE 11, ARMENPRESS. Petros Balulyan, who has moved from
Armenian-populated Aleppo to Yerevan, settled in the motherland
and established his own business and tries to provide job to the
Lebanese-Armenians and professionals from Yerevan as well. In a
conversation with “Armenpress” the Syrian-Armenian businessmen stated
that it took him a long time to focus and made up his mind. Finally
he has chosen the idea of opening a unique beauty salon. “After long
contemplations I decided to establish a beauty salon in Yerevan,
which will differ from the rest salons. The employees are not
Syrian-Armenians. There are professionals working in the salon,
who are very experienced and passed requalification in a row of
European countries. Thus they can provide high level of services to
the clients,” Petros Balulyan stated.

The Syrian-Armenian entrepreneur has moved to Armenia 8 years ago.

After solving a row of business and daily issues, he brought his
family to Armenia as well.

Later on, Petros Balulyan’s parents also moved to Armenia from Aleppo
alongside with several relatives, because of the intense political
situation in Syria. The mere fact that the rest of the family members
have also moved to Armenia, compelled Petros Balulyan to make a final
decision and not to think about going back to Syria ever again.

(THE FULL VERSION OF THE ARTICLE IS AVAILABLE IN ARMENIAN)

Article by Ruzanna Movsisyan Photos by Samvel Berkibekyan

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/722137/another-successful-syrian-armenian-businessman-settled-in-armenia.html
http://armenpress.am/arm/news/722137/another-successful-syrian-armenian-businessman-settled-in-armenia.html