Australian Mossad Agent Interfered In Israeli Intelligence Op – Repo

AUSTRALIAN MOSSAD AGENT INTERFERED IN ISRAELI INTELLIGENCE OP – REPORT

May 7, 2013 – 17:43 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – An Australian emigrant and disgraced Mossad spy
who died in an Israeli jail in 2010 was arrested after interfering
in a secret Israeli intelligence operation to recover the bodies of
soldiers killed in the 1982 Lebanon war, an Australian news report
said on Tuesday, May 7, according to Reuters.

Ben Zygier was arrested in January 2010 and held in secret under
the name of Prisoner X on unspecified security charges. A judicial
inquiry in Israel found Zygier, 34, hanged himself in a high-security
jail cell.

Australian state television said Zygier unwittingly sabotaged a
secret 2007 Mossad mission to exhume the bodies of three Israeli
tank crewmen captured and killed by Syrian forces during Israel’s
invasion of Lebanon. The television report quoted a former commander
in Lebanon’s Bekaa valley as saying that Zygier had revealed his name
and that of a Lebanese agent for Israel to Lebanese intelligence.

Ziad al-Homsi, former mayor of a Lebanese village, told ABC television
that he had been approached by Mossad in 2007 and flown to China on
the pretext of attending a mayoral convention. He was introduced to a
Syrian man who said his brother in Europe was working to return the
bodies of the three Israelis captured during the so-called Battle
of Sultan Yacoub in the Bekaa Valley — Israeli-U.S. citizen Zachary
Baumel and his fellow Israeli crewmen Yehuda Katz and Zvi Feldman.

Al-Homsi told the ABC that he suspected he had been ensnared in a
Mossad operation. He was eventually told by others involved that the
missing men were buried in Lebanon. The mission failed, al-Homsi said,
after he was arrested on May 16, 2009 by Lebanese special forces and
later jailed for 15 years for spying for Mossad. He served three years.

Zygier’s crime was to inadvertently reveal Al-Homsi’s identity to
a Lebanese man he was trying to turn into a double agent, but who
worked for Lebanese intelligence, the ABC said.

We Were Advised Not To Apply To The Municipal Engineering Ministry

WE WERE ADVISED NOT TO APPLY TO THE MUNICIPAL ENGINEERING MINISTRY

Monday, 06 May 2013 14:23

The Hovsepyans fear that the walls of their dining room will not stand
any more, they will split and the family will have to continue living
in a ramshackle house.

“My husband and I have been building this house since our marriage
but in the recent years the walls of the house have begun cracing
especially those of the dining room. There is a 6-centimetre crack
in the wall and it still keeps growing in size,” Iskuhi Hovsepyan,
mother of 4 children states regretfully.

The Hovsepyans live in the village of Mkhitarashen, Askeran region.

The eldest daughter Arina left school last year, the other three
children still go to school. Father Levon is a former liberty soldier
who, as he says, participated in a number of military operations
including the liberation of Shoushi.

Today the head of the family is a craftsman who is hardly able to earn
the family’s living and has no money for the repair of the developing
cracks in the house walls.

As we were told the family had applied to the Municipal Engineering
Ministry for the repair of the cracks the previous year, they sent
an expert who fastened a band to the crack and ordered them to apply
when the band was torn.

The band got torn long ago, moreover the split keeps growing in size
but they have not applied to the Ministry yet. Mrs. Iskuhi explains,
“After we had applied to the Ministry of Municipal Engineering we also
applied the regional administration of Askeran on a relative’s advice
where we were told that there were a great number of poor condition
houses of this kind in turn and we were hardly going to succeed.

That’s why we have lost any hope and have not applied to the Ministry
so far. Yet we only hope for the help of the government as there is
no other way out.”

Tatevik Khachatryan

http://karabakh-open.info/en/societyen/4345-en988

Voice Of America: U.S. Ambassador To UN Is Concerned About Human Rig

VOICE OF AMERICA: U.S. AMBASSADOR TO UN IS CONCERNED ABOUT HUMAN RIGHTS SITUATION IN AZERBAIJAN

17:32 08/05/2013 ” REGION

Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe, U.S. Ambassador to the Human Rights
Council commented on Universal Periodic Review of UPR and expressed
her concern about the human rights situation in Azerbaijan, the Voice
of America reports.

The author reminds that Azerbaijan was one of fourteen countries
examined during the session held in Geneva, on April 30.

“We are concerned by the continued incarceration of some journalists
and democracy activists. These raise concerns about the authorities’
use of the judicial system to limit the rights of individuals to
express themselves freely,” the ambassador said.

She also voiced concern over “undue restrictions on freedom of peaceful
assembly” in Azerbaijan and over “recently enacted legal government
restrictions on funding for civil society and continuing difficulties
for NGO’s seeking to register,” as well as reports of harassment of
human rights lawyers.

According to the article in its latest annual human rights report on
Azerbaijan, the U.S. Department of State noted similar problems,
including “restrictions on freedom of expression, including
intimidation, arrest and use of force against journalists and human
rights and democracy activists.”

Among other violations of freedom of expression, including imprisonment
of journalists, the State Department report cited the case of
investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova who works at Radio
Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Thus Ms. Ismayilova, who has exposed
official corruption in Azerbaijan, was the victim of attempted
blackmail. Although the Azerbaijani Presidential Administration
criticized the invasion of her privacy, an official investigation
has not led to any arrests.

Ambassador Donahoe called on the Azerbaijani authorities to release
individuals incarcerated for publicly expressing their opinions and
ensure due process for other detainees, permit peaceful protest to
be held in Baku city center, and work with domestic and international
organizations, to amend legislation in order to promote a flourishing
civil society.

U.S. State Department strongly criticized Azerbaijan in the report for
violation of human rights, including freedom of speech and the press.

According to international human rights organization “Committee to
Protect Journalists” (CPJ), there are at least 6 imprisoned journalists
in Azerbaijan, thus this republic is now among the top ten countries
in the world by the number of press workers’ arrests.

Source: Panorama.am

Armenia’s Theatrical Organizations Earned Less In 2012

ARMENIA’S THEATRICAL ORGANIZATIONS EARNED LESS IN 2012

YEREVAN, May 8. /ARKA/. Income of theatres from performances in
Armenia totalled 327.2 million drams over 2012, a reduction of 17.5%
compared to 2011, the country’s national statistical service reported.

According to the report, 0.9% of theatre revenues come from
performances in rural communities, 15.3% from musical performances
and 16.3% from puppet shows.

Average ticket revenue was 118,400 drams per performance in towns
and 47,300 in villages.

In 2012, receipts of theatrical organizations amounted to 2.9
billion drams (reduction of 3.7%), including about 2.2bln drams
(76.4%) received from government or community budgets. Theatres’
expenditures were 2.8bln drams (6% reduction).

A total of 440,500 people attended theatres in the period. Of them,
18.4% attended puppet theatres and 16.0% musical theatres. Theatrical
organizations staged a total of 2,764 performances (31.8% puppet and
12.5% musical).

Of 28 theatrical organizations, 25 staged performances, two others had
no operations and had neither receipts nor expenditures and another
organization staged no performance but had financial receipts and
expenditures.

There were 28 theatrical organizations operating in Armenia as
of 2012, of them 17 were dramatic theatres, 4 musical, 5 puppet,
a Theatre of Young Spectators and the Circus. Of the total number,
16 theatres fall under the jurisdiction of the ministry of culture, 11
theatres belong to communities and one theatre to a legal entity. -0-

Foreign Debt Is 3,74 Billion USD As Of 31.12.2012

FOREIGN DEBT IS 3,74 BILLION USD AS OF 31.12.2012

On May 29 the Standing Committees of the National Assembly will start
discussing the annual report on state budget performance in 2012.

According to the schedule confirmed by Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan,
joint discussions with government will last till June 5. Discussions
of the performance report will be finalized by June 7. The draft
report will be included on the agenda of the meeting of parliament
on June 10 for plenary discussions.

According to the draft report, in 2012 actual income totaled 946.2
billion drams. Performance was 100.14%. Performance on revenues,
state levies and mandatory social security payments was 100.04%. Other
income exceeded the adjusted rate by 11.3%, performance of official
grants totaled 82.2% or 4 billion below the estimate.

In 2012, actual costs totaled 1,006.1 billion drams, performance
was 93.4%, there was some saving, as well as deferment of payments
relating to procurement under some programs.

In 2012 the budget deficit was 59.9 billion drams, which is 45.3%
of 132.2 billion drams estimated under the adjusted plan. The fiscal
deficit to GDP ratio was 1.5% in 2012 against the estimated 3.1%.

As of 31 December 2012 the foreign debt of the Republic of Armenia was
1,508.7 billion drams drams (3,738.3 million USD) or 37.9% of the GDP.

The bulk of the debt – 3,143.7 million USD – is direct lending to
the RA government, 594.6 million USD is the loan obligations of the
Central Bank.

In the accounting year the service of foreign debt was 239.4 million
USD of which 114.8 million USD under the line of government’s
commitments, and 124.6 million USD under the line of the Central Bank.

The ratio of foreign debt service to export was 9.6%.

16:45 08/05/2013 Story from Lragir.am News:

http://www.lragir.am/index.php/eng/0/economy/view/29833

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator: Armenian Orphans Became A Source Of E

THE ARMENIAN MIRROR-SPECTATOR: ARMENIAN ORPHANS BECAME A SOURCE OF ENRICHING GENETIC POOL FOR TURKISH NATION

12:54 08/05/2013 ” SOCIETY

Below, we present an article by Raffi Bedrosyan published in The
Armenian Mirror-Spectator.

During the endless Turkish arguments and Armenian/international counter
arguments about the number of massacred Armenians in 1915, Hrant
Dink would repeatedly remind both sides about a more critical topic:
“We keep talking about the gone dead, let’s start talking about the
remaining living…” The remaining living meant the unknown number
of Armenians remaining in Anatolia, remaining not as Armenians, but
as Turks, Kurds, Alewis, Moslems and other identities. Ninety eight
years after the attempted destruction of a nation, it is time to talk
more about the hidden Armenians, mostly orphans of 1915 assimilated
into identities other than their own Armenianness.

Hrant had the courage to reveal the real identity of one of the
best-known Turkish heroes as an Armenian orphan. Sabiha Gokcen, the
first female military pilot and Ataturk’s adopted daughter, was in
reality Hatun Sebilciyan, an Armenian girl orphaned in Bursa in 1915.

This revelation was the beginning of the end for Hrant, triggering a
massive hate and threat campaign against him by the government, the
military and the media, resulting in his assassination three years
later. But Sebilciyan/Gokcen was only one of tens of thousands of
Armenian girls and boys torn away from their parents during the 1915
events. What happened to these orphans? How many were there? This
article will cite some examples from different parts of Anatolia.

It is a well-documented fact that during the deportation of the
Armenian population from all corners of Anatolia to the Syrian desert,
as the convoys approached their towns or villages, local Turks and
Kurds snatched Armenian children from their parents to take them home
as servants or wives. Many children were sold as slaves by them or
the gendarmes escorting the convoys. There were also a few children
entrusted by their parents to Kurdish and Turkish neighbors before
starting on the deportation route. There were some children initially
rescued by European/American missionaries or Pontian Greek religious
leaders, but inevitably they were also later seized and sent away
or murdered. We can cite one of many documented tragic incidents in
Trabzon, where 600 Armenian orphan children were taken to the Greek
monastery with the government’s permission after their parents were
massacred by drowning in the Black Sea. But after three months, by
the order of the Trabzon governor Djemal Azmi, the police forcefully
removed the orphans from the monastery and handed them over to a
Turkish boat captain, Rahman Bayraktaroglu, who placed each child in a
flour sack, securely tied the top and dropped each into the Black Sea.

It is documented that Governor Jemal later joked, “The harvest of
smelt (hamsi) will be plentiful this season with all the drowned as
fish feed.”

Trabzon Governor Djemal Azmi selected about 450 of the best-looking
girls from the Armenian community of Trabzon and converted the local
Red Crescent Hospital to a whorehouse for the Turkish elite and
visiting dignitaries, even sending some of the girls as treats to
his superiors in Istanbul. The supply of the orphans got replenished
as needed. He kept a supply of 15 Armenian girls for himself but
also gave one to his 14-year-old son, Ekmel, as a present. Most of
the girls were forcefully Islamicized; a few eventually escaped or
committed suicide. These experiences came to light from witnesses
during the trials of the Ittihat ve Terakki leaders after the war,
but also were told in 1921 by Djemal Azmi’s son himself to his close
friend, known to him as Mehmet Ali. The friend, however, happened to
be an Armenian named Hratch Papazian, disguised and even circumcised
as a Moslem, who had succeeded infiltrating the Ittihad ve Terakki
circles hiding in Berlin, in preparation for assassinating the Turkish
leaders as part of Operation Nemesis (Djemal Azmi and Bahattin Shakir,
head of the Special Organization [Teskilat-i Mahsusa] who was the
chief organizer of the deportation massacres, were both assassinated
in Berlin on April 17, 1922, right in front of the bewildered widow
of Talat Pasha, a year after Talat himself was brought to justice).

The Ittihat ve Terakki government had special plans for the surviving
orphans. In an organized operation, while there was a world war
going on, most of the surviving orphans were rounded up and sent
to orphanages set up in multiple locations, with the objective of
converting them to Islam and to be assimilated as Turks. One of these
special Turkification orphanages was in Ayn Tura, near Zouk, an hour’s
drive from Beirut, where 1,000 Armenian orphans were kept, between
the ages of 3 to 15. By the orders of Djemal Pasha, governor of Syria
and Lebanon, and under the supervision of Turkish intellectuals and
teachers, including the newly-appointed principal, Turkish novelist
Halide Edip Adivar, these orphans were converted to Islam and
Turkified. The boys were circumcised, and were given Turkish names,
but preserving the initials of their Armenian names and surnames, so
that Haroutiun Najarian became Hamid Nazim, Boghos Merdanian became
Bekim Muhammed, Sarkis Sarafian became Saffet Suleyman. The orphanage
was converted from a Christian school after expelling the Lazarist
Catholic priests. While famine prevailed everywhere in Lebanon and
Syria during the war, abundant food was provided to the orphanage,
with the objective of raising well-fed and healthy newly Turkified
children. Based on the memoirs of one of the orphans, Harutiun
Alboyajian, the children were expected to speak Turkish only; if
the supervisors heard any Armenian spoken, the boys would be beaten
severely. They were dressed as Turkish children and were taught Islam.

It was Djemal Pasha’s firm belief that the Armenians had superior
intellect and capabilities, which would help the Turkish nation
immensely. Despite efforts to keep the orphanage sanitary, about 300
Armenian orphans died from leprosy and other diseases until 1918. Some
of the orphans were placed with families in towns where there were
no Armenians left, and some were distributed to other orphanages. At
the end of the war, when Near East Relief took over the orphanage,
there were 670 orphans, 470 boys and 200 girls, who still remembered
their Armenian names.

Another example of Turkification experiment was in Eastern Anatolia,
successfully implemented by Eastern Front commander Kazim Karabekir.

He estimated that there were about 50,000 desperate orphans after
the war in his regional area of operations. It is documented that
about 30,000 of them were circumcised and Turkified. He rounded up
about 6,000 Armenian children in Erzurum, 2,000 girls and 4,000 boys,
and placed them in an army camp. Some were given training similar to a
military school; others were taught trades essential for army supplies
such as sewing and boot-making. These orphans had become completely
Turkified and named “The Healthy Children Army.” The talented ones
among these boys were later sent to higher military academies in Bursa
and Istanbul. Without going into the psychology of the assimilations
and conversions, it is alleged that these converted military officers
became the most fanatical ultranationalists in the Turkish army,
with some of them participating in the May 1960 military coup which
toppled the civilian government of Adnan Menderes.

Apart from the orphanages, tens of thousands of young girls and boys
became slaves after 1915, bought and sold in bazaars and markets.

Although slavery was officially abolished in the Ottoman Empire in
1909, slavery markets re-opened after 1915 in order to trade Armenian
women and children. Kidnapping Armenian children from the deportation
convoys not only supplied the Turks and Kurds with servants, free labor
or sex objects in their own homes, but also a marketable commodity that
could be sold for profit in these markets. The markets were set up in
Aleppo, Diyarbakir, Cizre, Urfa and Mardin. It is reported that the
Mardin market had the lowest prices. After being branded and tattooed
as a slave, Armenian children aged 5-7 found buyers for 20 cents,
similar to the price of a lamb. Girls or boys aged 14-15 went for 50
cents, whereas an adult Christian woman was worth about one Turkish
lira. But if the slave came from a well-known wealthy family, the
price went up significantly, as owning the slave could also bring the
future potential of claiming the wealth of the slave’s family. There
are several documented cases from the later Turkish Republic era when
Kurdish and Turkish families attempted to legalize the ownership of
many real estate properties, previously owned by their “wives” or
“daughters.”

There are also documented cases when kind-hearted Assyrian priests or
European/American missionaries purchased several Armenian children from
these markets, with the objective of rescuing them. Assyrian Archbishop
Tappuni of Mardin purchased and saved nearly 2,000 Armenian children
in 1916. While some Moslems treated the Armenian slaves humanely,
most owners savagely beat them, as they believed “Christians only
deserve beatings.” The women and girls ended up being second wives
for the Moslem owners, who received harsh treatment not only from
their husbands but also from the other wives of their husbands.

But eventually, they all got absorbed into the Moslem households,
bearing children, learning the Quran, praying piously as Moslem women.

According to a post-war report of the League of Nations Rescue
Commission for Armenian Women and Children, at least 30,000 Armenian
girls were sold in the markets to be placed in harems, or to be used
as slave labor. Documented histories of some 2,000 Armenian girls,
boys and young women rescued from Turkish and Kurdish households
after the war are archived in the League of Nations offices in Geneva.

Rescuing the Armenian orphans became one of the first tasks of the
League of Nations after the armistice in 1918. Following the pleas of
the Istanbul Armenian Patriarchate, the Allied Forces and the League
of Nations representatives organized the transfer of most Armenian
orphans from Anatolia and Syria to Istanbul, and started searches
of Armenian orphans in Moslem homes. As there was no room to place
all the orphans in existing orphanages in Istanbul, several schools
were used to house the Armenian children, including the French Notre
Dame de Sion, St. Joseph, the Italian school, the Russian monastery,
and Turkish Kuleli Military Academy.

As some of the orphans already had Turkish names, there started heated
discussions between the Armenian Patriarchate and the government
authorities as to the real identity of the children. In fact, some
of the orphans were already transferred to Turkish homes in Istanbul
as maids and servants; among them, 50 orphans sent to the farm of
Ittihad ve Terakki leader Enver Pasha. The children were conditioned
and intimidated not to speak Armenian, nor to reveal their Armenian
identities during the war years.

Documents show that between 1920 and 1922, there were about 3,800
Armenian children brought to Istanbul, 3,000 sent to Cyprus, 15,600
taken to Greece, and 12,000 transferred to Syria from Marash, Urfa,
Antep, Malatya and Harput. Significantly, the Istanbul Patriarchate
records indicated that there were still at least 63,000 Armenian
orphans documented as “Not Rescued” in Turkish and Kurdish households.

In recent years, genocide scholars have stated that the perpetrators
not only aim at the “destruction” of the oppressed group but also
the “construction” of the oppressor group. The 1915 events and the
consequences clearly show that the Armenian orphans became a source
of pro-creation for the Turkish nation by enriching their genetic pool.

There are now tens of thousands of Turkish and Kurdish families, with
a hidden Armenian grandmother. It is remarkable that, even ninety
eight years after attempts of forced Turkification, assimilation
and conversion, there are signs of hidden Armenian identity in
various places in Anatolia starting to emerge. There is a somewhat
graphic term defining these people in Turkey, “remnants of the sword”
(kilic artigi).

Hrant Dink’s lawyer, Fethiye Cetin, in her book My Grandmother, and
the follow-up, The Grandchildren, co-written with Aysegul Altinay,
and many other books, documentaries and movies have come out in recent
years, describing the existence and emergence of the hidden Armenians
in Turkey, carried from one generation to the next, all originating
from the 1915 Armenian orphans.

It is of course very difficult to estimate the number of hidden
Armenians in Turkey today. One can assume that perhaps up to
100,000 Armenian orphans survived but got Turkified, converted and
assimilated. Scholars estimate another 200,000 adult Armenians avoided
deportation in various Anatolian villages by converting to Islam. It
is therefore conceivable that 300,000 Armenian souls survived the
1915 events. The population of Turkey increased seven fold since then.

Using the same multiple, one can extrapolate that there may exist 2
million people with Armenian roots in Turkey today.

I would like to share one of my own personal experiences with a
hidden Armenian, albeit indirectly. When I was in Armenia in 1995 as
a voluntary engineer inspecting Hayastan All Armenian Fund-financed
construction projects, I also visited Spitak where the church
destroyed in the 1989 earthquake was being rebuilt. I was informed
that the financing came from Turkey from a still confidential donor,
as specified in the will of a grandmother of a very wealthy Turkish
family, who had only revealed her Armenian roots at her deathbed. In
recent years and especially after the reconstruction of the Surp
Giragos Armenian Church in Diyarbakir, there has been a resurgence of
the hidden Armenians in revealing their identities. It is hoped that
the Turkish government sees this as a positive consequence of the
recent steps of liberalization and not as a threat, and eventually
finds the courage to face its past.

http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2013/05/08/the-mirror-spectator/

Anatomy of Wasted Victory

ANATOMY OF WASTED VICTORY

In Karabakh people joke that more people received medals for the
liberation of Shushi than participated in the liberation action while
most participants of the action have never been awarded.

A joke is a joke but there is a huge truth in it. Usually history is
falsified before it is written on paper. Zori Balayan, for instance,
described different stories and heroes in his different books on the
war in Karabakh depending on the conjuncture. A lot of books have
been written with the financial assistance of one “hero” or another
and one understands in what “light”.

When one of such authors dedicated his book to the founder of the
Karabakh movement Igor Muradyan, the latter asked him what he wrote
in his book. The author said “the truth”. Igor Muradyan asked if he
knows the truth to write about it. The author did not answer.

We do not even know what is happening here and now so how can we trust
historians of the past centuries, their books and their heroes? Igor
Muradyan says if the real history of the Karabakh movement were
written down, it would be a history of the greatest human ignominy.

Muradyan does not mean those few passionate groups who carried the
movement and the war on their shoulders but a larger circle of people
who warmed their hands on fire and satisfied their different ambitions
and complexes.

Maybe it is the same thing everywhere but in Armenia it was more
obvious. Another founder of the Karabakh movement tells that when they
organized an action in one of the cities of Armenia, people asked if
the criminal-in-law of the city knew about it. They participated in
the action only if they made sure that the criminal-in-law knows.

While notwithstanding these circumstances the real heroes built up
the victory, the other kind felt the war was a chance to bring their
“status” higher. Karabakh Committee we all know used the Karabakh
movement to come to power in Armenia. During and after the war the
“veterans” of war gradually took over the political and economic
resource of the country by the war law and eventually the government.

For 20 years the only mechanism of forming government has been the war
law. Recently Galust Sahakyan has stated that the Republicans will
continue to rule unless Armenia is at war. In fact, the “cream of
the war” is here to stay, including feudal generals, weapon dealers,
veterans, “slush funds” and plunderers of war. So the history is
wasted because those who achieved it were modest people of virtue
and dignity who never claimed their share and rights.

God, let this kind be in the next big war.

Haik Aramyan 14:13 08/05/2013 Story from Lragir.am News:

http://www.lragir.am/index.php/eng/0/comments/view/29829

Armenia Must Make Difficult Decisions

ARMENIA MUST MAKE DIFFICULT DECISIONS

In an exclusive interview with Lragir.am the ambassador of the UK to
Armenia John Aves explained the growing interest of the UK officials
in Armenia by dynamics of relations between Armenia and the EU. The UK
supports enlargement of the EU and Eastern Partnership. We are pleased
to see progress towards the signing of the Association Agreement with
the EU, the ambassador said.

As a second reason, he notes that the new UK government, unlike the
former government which focused on general issues, supports development
of bilateral relations. The main component of bilateral relations is
trade relations, he said.

Ambassador Aves said in November of last year British entrepreneurs
visited Armenia but there are no commitments yet. Ten days later
another group interested in Armenia will arrive.

The UK succeeds in trade relations with those countries with which
it has historical relations but now the country is trying to enter
markets where traditionally it has not been present. However, the
Armenian government must also work towards making Armenia more
attractive for investors, and the first step should be ensuring
the rule of law and independent courts. There are problems in the
tax and customs services, the ambassador said, noting the need for
simplification in these spheres.

As to changes in the business climate, Ambassador Aves thinks there
is confusion because the World Banks’ Doing Business report noted
progress in Armenia, whereas reforms apparently need a continuation
in the spheres which interest foreign investors.

As a more attractive branch of economy for the UK the ambassador
pointed out mining industries. We support Lydian International which
will produce gold in Amulsar. This organization, according to him,
goes for financial openness and sustainable development. Success
of this company’s projects could be a good signal for other British
companies, Jonathan Aves said.

Banks and the financial sector are also attractive, he said,
highlighting the activities of HSBC. He noted the distributors of the
UK brands in Armenia, including Next, Debenhams, Marks and Spenser,
as well as willingness to work in the sphere of IT.

Answering the question on protests of environmentalists against
producing ore at Amulsar, the ambassador said he does not have enough
information but as far as he knows, the government is satisfied with
the company.

Answering the question on the choice between the EU and the Eurasian
Union, Ambassador Aves said the UK is for the “both” option, not
“either … or”. He notes that Britain supports the signing of the
DCFTA with the EU but Armenia has good relations with Eurasian states,
notably Russia. It is a choice to be made by Armenia, the ambassador
said, noting that everyone understands that Armenia must maintain its
relations with Russia, although he adds that there are technical and
legal issues which are incompatible. Two customs systems cannot be
connected to each other, the ambassador said.

He noted that it will be an asset for Armenia because the foreign
companies working in Armenia can use the good relations of Armenia and
enlarge their business. Armenia is not an apple of discord between
Russia and the EU, he notes. Armenia has succeeded in developing a
multi-vector policy, which is good.

In answer to the question what the UK, EU and NATO can do to ensure
the security of Armenia, Ambassador Aves said Armenia has already
set up good relations with Russia and Western countries, Armenia is
a CSTO member and has good relations with NATO, as well as bilateral
relations between Armenia and the UK in security.

As to the relations between Armenia and Iran, the ambassador said the
UK is thankful to Yerevan for its stance on international sanctions
against Iran, however, bilateral relations are Armenia’s business.

Although, he said, Armenia must be concerned about Iran’s nuclear
program no less than the UK because Iran is Armenia’s neighbor.

In regard to the Karabakh issue and the Armenian-Turkish relations,
Ambassador Aves said the UK supports the Minsk Group efforts for a
peace settlement. The UK supports normalization of Armenian-Turkish
relations and calls for ratification of protocols pending since 2009.

In answer to the question what difficult decisions facing Armenia were
made in the congratulatory note of Prime Minister Cameron on Serzh
Sargsyan’s reelection were meant, Ambassador Aves said his country is
thankful to Armenia for freezing the Armenian-Turkish protocols. We
understand than the Armenian side had to make compromises, and it
was a difficult decision. Now the protocols need to be promoted.

The second difficult decision must be related to compromise regarding
the Karabakh settlement. Both sides must make concessions. Besides,
economic reforms need to be carried out in regard to which complicated
decisions must be made because someone may lose something and will
resist, the ambassador said.

Hakob Badalyan 12:27 08/05/2013 Story from Lragir.am News:

http://www.lragir.am/index.php/eng/0/interview/view/29827

A New Revelation: The Ballots Put In A Ballot Box For The Republican

A NEW REVELATION: THE BALLOTS PUT IN A BALLOT BOX FOR THE REPUBLICAN PARTY OF ARMENIA (RPA) WERE UNSTAMPED

May 7 2013

The commission of electoral district no. 8 has finished the vote
recount in polling place no. 8/18, at the request of the Mission
Party and the Hello Yerevan Coalition. The commission put 10 out of 33
spoiled ballots to a vote to determine their validity. One ballot cast
for the RPA was found valid. Two other ballots were without a stamp,
and the commission secretary suggested that they consider them to be
invalid. However, Oleg Grigoryan, the commission chairman, did not
agree that one of the unstamped ballots was spoiled and put it to a
vote, and the commission members voted for finding the ballot valid.

“The voter is not to blame. Being guided by the principles of
humanity, we don’t have a right to lose the person’s vote,” the
commission chairman said. 98 votes of the Prosperous Armenia Party
(PAP), 4 votes of the Mission Party, 67 votes of the Hello Yerevan
Coalition, 33 votes of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF),
and 19 votes of the Rule of Law Party (RLP) corresponded to the
numbers written by the polling place commission. By the way, there
was a ballot among the spoiled ones, on which the voter had written
“legalize marixuana.” Talking about the two unstamped ballots, the
chairman of polling place no. 8/18, Bagrat Andreasyan, a member of the
Armenian National Congress (ANC), explained: “You are tired. You might
physically not be able to notice that there was no stamp. If I had
noticed, it would surely have been void. “All votes were stamped one
by one; it means that those two ballots were brought from outside….

Three people stamp. One stamp might not be visible at most, but
it is impossible that all three stamps are not visible.” “Maybe,
the ink has evaporated,” the electoral district commission chairman
added. Arpine SIMONYAN

Read more at:

© 1998 – 2013 Aravot – News from Armenia

http://en.aravot.am/2013/05/07/154172/

Azerbaijan Urged To Stop Forced Evictions

AZERBAIJAN URGED TO STOP FORCED EVICTIONS

Tuesday, May 7th, 2013

A building in Baku that was forcibly demolished and its residents
evicted

BERLIN-The Azerbaijani authorities should immediately stop its
campaign of forced evictions and demolitions in the capital, Baku,
Human Rights Watch said Tuesday. The government should also guarantee
fair compensation to homeowners and residents, including those
already evicted.

The controversial Winter Garden opens the week of May 6, 2013, in
central Baku, where hundreds of residents were evicted to make way
for the park, shops, and a parking lot. The authorities have planned
a week of celebrations and events, including a speech by President
Ilham Aliyev on May 10, marking the birthday of his late father,
former President Heydar Aliyev.

“The opening of the Winter Garden is unfortunately far from a
celebration for those forcibly evicted to make way for it,” said Jane
Buchanan, associate Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights
Watch. “The authorities should never have undertaken its sweeping
program of illegal evictions, which displaced hundreds of families
and left many of them in extremely difficult circumstances.”

Human Rights Watch has been documenting the illegal expropriations,
forced evictions, and house demolitions in the Winter Garden area
behind the Heydar Aliyev Hall and in other parts of Baku since April
2011, including in a February 2012 report, “They Took Everything
from Me.”

The evictions and demolitions began in 2009 and have displaced
hundreds- if not thousands- of families. Human Rights Watch has found
that some people are evicted without warning or in the middle of
the night. The authorities often cut off services to houses slated
for demolition, making them uninhabitable and compelling residents
to leave. Then the homes are demolished, sometimes with residents’
possessions inside. The government has refused to provide homeowners
with fair compensation for the properties, many of which are in highly
desirable locations.

Homeowners continued to face forced eviction in the lead-up to the
park’s opening. On March 28, Baku city authorities forcibly evicted a
family of five from their home in the Winter Garden area. The owner,
“Shahla,” told Human Rights Watch that officials from the Baku
Mayor’s office verbally informed her in November that they planned to
expropriate her apartment and evict her family by May in advance of the
Winter Garden opening. She received no official written notification
and is not aware of any court order authorizing the eviction.

The authorities offered her 1,500 Azeri manat (US$1,900) per square
meter for her apartment, which she believed was low, particularly
given the central location of her home. Independent evaluations priced
Shahla’s apartment at no less than 2,500 manat (US$3,185) per square
meter. She repeatedly appealed to the authorities, sending letters
and meeting with Baku mayor’s office officials for a review of her
compensation, without success.

Workers dismantled parts of the building beginning in January.

Shahla’s family, including her 93-year-old mother who suffers from
Parkinson’s disease, remained in their apartment building when workers
began to dismantle it on March 24. Soon, electricity, water, and gas
services were cut off and workers used bulldozers to bring down parts
of the building.

“I resisted the eviction,” she told Human Rights Watch. “I was alone
in the whole building. The workers tried to enter my apartment from
the balcony and then damaged the roof. Others tried to damage the
floor from the empty apartment below. …Water seeped in from the
ceiling from the holes they made.” Ultimately, Shahla felt no option
but to leave. The mayor’s office provided a truck to relocate her
belongings, but she was forced to abandon some furniture and other
possessions, since she did not have alternative housing immediately
available. After many appeals to the mayor’s office, Shahla later
secured a temporary apartment, with its financial support.

“The already painful experience of being evicted was made that much
worse for Shahla and her family by the authorities’ indifference
to her appeals for help and fair treatment,” Buchanan said. “The
authorities should ensure that families like Shahla’s don’t suffer
needlessly for the government’s decision to transform central Baku.

All residents facing eviction need to be treated with dignity and
their rights should be respected.”

In 2013, the authorities extended the demolition area related to the
Winter Garden to include many additional streets beyond the initial
plans for development of the park. In one striking case documented in
the Human Rights Watch report, a homeowner forcibly evicted from her
home in late 2011 in the heart of the Winter Garden area, is now facing
eviction for a second time. In an interview with Human Rights Watch,
Bashkhanum Abbasova, a 63-year-old retired university lecturerwho
lives with her two sons, daughter-in-law, and two grandchildren,
told Human Rights Watch that, using her savings and the compensation
she was awarded for her previous apartment, she purchased a four-room
apartment several streets away from the Winter Garden. She renovated
it before moving in. In late 2012, officials from the mayor’s office
verbally informed Abbasova that her new home would be demolished
by mid-2013. Abbasova has received no written notification about
the expropriation.

“Officials from the Baku mayor’s office warned us to pack up for
eviction,” she told Human Rights Watch. “They said that these houses
spoil the good view of the Winter Park and so they’ll be destroyed.”

She has been offered 1,500 manat ($1,900) per square meter for
her second apartment. Abbasova saidthat market prices in apartment
buildings near hers are between 2,500 and 3,500 manat ($3,185 and
$5,240).

Baku city officials have not made public their plans for demolitions
and reconstruction. When selecting a new location to buy an apartment
after her eviction, Abbasova specifically sought information about
the city’s plans and was assured that the neighborhood she selected
would not be affected.

“Prior to purchasing the house, I double-checked with the Baku mayor’s
office to see if there were any plans to demolish the houses where I
planned to buy,” she said. “Senior officials assured me that the area
… would not be destroyed. The houses were not in the city plan list
[of houses to be demolished].”

“The homeowners in Winter Garden’s shadow have been completely subject
to the whim of the authorities, unable to plan for major life decisions
such as renting or buying a home,” Buchanan said. “At the very least,
the authorities should immediately make all city development plans
public and hold regular, well-publicized public hearings where
residents can receive accurate information and share their views.”

In a 2012 meeting with Human Rights Watch, Azerbaijani government
officials denied that the forced evictions in Baku were unlawful. A
letter sent to President Ilham Aliyev in June 2011 regarding the
demolitions remains unanswered. Governments have the right to
expropriate private property and evict homeowners and residents in
certain limited circumstances: solely to promote the general welfare
and only in accordance with national law and international standards.

There is no basis for the Baku expropriations and evictions in
Azerbaijani law, which guarantees the right to private property and
allows the government to expropriate property only in limited cases,
such as for national defense, roads, or communications infrastructure.

A court order is required to expropriate property. National law
requires the government to purchase at market value any properties
it expropriates and pay an additional 20 percent of the market value
of the home as compensation for the owner’s trouble.

The expropriation and demolition of properties in central Baku also
violates Azerbaijan’s obligations under the European Convention on
Human Rights, which explicitly protects against unlawful expropriation
of property. According to the jurisprudence of the European Court
of Human Rights (ECtHR), any deprivation of property, including by
expropriation, must comply with the principle of lawfulness, be in the
public interest, and pursue a legitimate aim in a proportionate manner.

The ECtHR has also held that failing to pay compensation reasonably
related to the value of the property is an excessive interference with
an individual’s rights. In addition, in many cases of expropriation,
the only appropriate sum deemed to be “reasonably related to the
value of the property” will in fact be full compensation- that is
the market price of the property, plus costs or losses incurred as
a result of the expropriation.

The ongoing expropriation and demolition of properties in central
Baku violates both Azerbaijani law and Azerbaijan’s international
human rights commitments, Human Rights Watch said.

http://asbarez.com/109852/azerbaijan-urged-to-stop-forced-evictions/