Sole Armenian-American California Delegate To DNC Is From Glendale

SOLE ARMENIAN-AMERICAN CALIFORNIA DELEGATE TO DNC IS FROM GLENDALE

Glendale News Press
,0,313721.story
Sept 6 2012
CA

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — With hundreds of delegates and alternates in
attendance, the California delegation to the Democratic National
Convention takes up a big piece of real estate inside Time Warner Cable
Arena. Sitting enthusiastically among them Wednesday night was delegate
Juliet Minassian of Glendale, attending her first political convention.

“The convention is very educational,” said Minassian, who came to
Glendale from Iran about 15 years ago. “You can learn very much,
and I have been thrilled to see all these people in here. For me it’s
more than I imagined.”

Minassian, 50, a self-employed accountant, said she is the only
Armenian-American in the state delegation, but is hopeful she can
get others from her community involved.

“They are not as active as they should be,” said Minassian,
vice-president of the Glendale Democratic Club. “I think this comes
from our culture, because we are coming from countries in the Middle
East, and they are not very active in politics in their countries. For
myself, coming from Iran, it was very hard as a woman to get involved
in politics, especially as a Christian. I know this is the same with
other Armenians. This culture has been with us and it will take some
time to get everybody involved with the politics here.”

Wearing a green jacket and wide-brimmed hat covered in Obama buttons,
she carried a handmade sign that read, “Armenian American 4 Obama”
while watching speeches by former President Bill Clinton and
Massachusetts U.S. senate candidate Elizabeth Warren. Minassian said
she was hopeful that she could bring attention there to the plight
of Christian Armenian refugees from Syria and Iraq.

“They have been tremendously under pressure. They have been pushed
out of the country. There is nowhere for them to go. They have been
living on the mountains,” she said. “I was trying to get that as part
of the platform. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to, but I will try to
do my best to get attention to that.”

— Steve Appleford, Times Community News

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/news/election/tn-gnp-sole-armenianamerican-delegate-to-democratic-convention-is-from-glendale-20120906

Armenian Central Bank Leaves Interest Rates Stable As Inflation Reac

ARMENIAN CENTRAL BANK LEAVES INTEREST RATES STABLE AS INFLATION REACHES LOWER END OF TARGET RANGE
by: Venla Sipila

Global Insight
September 5, 2012

The Central Bank of Armenia has announced that it will keep its key
policy interest rate unchanged at 8.0% in August, ARKA News reports.

The refinancing rate has now remained stable since September 2011. The
decision follows August inflation data from the National Statistics
Agency showing that consumer prices last month increased by 2.5%
year-on-year (y/y), the annual inflation rate thus just reaching
the lower boundary of the CBA’s target range. In July, prices had
climbed by 2.3% y/y, following a gain of just 0.7% y/y in June. In
month-on-month (m/m) comparison, prices fell by 0.4% in August. Food
prices, in particular, increased by 1.7% y/y, while they fell by 0.9%
m/m. The CBA noted that inflation pressures continue to be suppressed
by weak global demand, whereas, on the other hand, rising grain prices
have the opposite impact. The central bank expects inflation to remain
within target for the next 12 months.

Significance:Armenian inflation has finally returned to the target
range, set at 2.5 percentage points on either side of the central
rate of 4%. Although food price inflation only returned to positive
territory in annual terms in July, and the cost of food still fell
m/m in August, the clearest inflation risks at present originate
from this source, as is typical in Armenia. Food price inflation
is indeed expected to strengthen in the coming quarters. Regional
harvests play a large role in determining food prices, and weakness
of these marks higher inflation pressures. Armenia also imports food
products, and any major increase in the cost of these would show in
headline inflation rates. Import price developments are subject to
risks also related to exchange rate developments. In particular,
the uncertain outlook for remittance inflows signals significant
exchange rate risks, and any marked dram deprecation would fairly
quickly transfer further to inflation.

Cooperation With Nato Useful For Armenia – President Sargsyan

COOPERATION WITH NATO USEFUL FOR ARMENIA – PRESIDENT SARGSYAN

news.am
September 06, 2012 | 15:12

YEREVAN. – Cooperation with NATO is useful for Armenia, President
Serzh Sargsyan stated Thursday during his joint briefing with NATO
Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

“I believe we are successfully combining the cooperation with CSTO
[Collective Security Treaty Organization] and NATO,” the President
said, and added that he does not consider NATO and CSTO to be competing
organizations.

“I don’t consider that the member countries should not cooperate. On
the contrary, we should achieve stability by this cooperation. Our
actions should not result in damaging relations. And our cooperation
with NATO is useful for us, and cooperation with NATO is important
for us. And cooperation with NATO stems from our country’s interest,”
Armenia’s President stated.

In his turn, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen noted that
there is no competition between NATO and Russia, and, what is more,
NATO cooperates with Russia.

Milan Cabrnoch Expresses His Deep Concern About Azerbaijani Presiden

MILAN CABRNOCH EXPRESSES HIS DEEP CONCERN ABOUT AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENT’S DECISION TO PARDON SAFAROV

armradio.am
06.09.2012 18:24

The European Union-Armenia Parliamentary Cooperation Committee (PCC)
Co-Chair Milan Cabrnoch released a statement on Ramil Safarov release,
which reads, in part:

“In my capacity as Chairman of the European Parliament Delegation to
the EU-Armenia, EU-Azerbaijan and EU-Georgia Parliamentary Cooperation
Committees, I express my deep concern about the Azerbaijani President’s
decision to pardon Ramil Safarov, who was supposed to serve a life
sentence for brutally murdering Gurgen Margaryan, an Armenian military
officer, in Hungary in 2004.

For a number of years, the Members of our Delegation have redoubled
their efforts in order to contribute to the improvement of relations
between Armenia and Azerbaijan through the parliamentary dialogue and,
most recently, also through the Euronest PA.

Moreover, we have intensified the bilateral contacts with Armenia
and Azerbaijan, by making use of the instruments of parliamentary
diplomacy, in the hope to reduce regional tensions, promote
reconciliation and contribute to finding a viable solution to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Our Delegation has made it clear to its Armenian and Azerbaijani
counterparts that respect for human rights, the rule of law and
European values should always be at the heart of their European
integration aspirations. In this context, the decision of Mr Aliyev
might be seen as a dangerous misuse of judicial proceedings.

I urge the authorities of Azerbaijan to show their commitment to the
values I mentioned and strongly encourage Azerbaijan and Armenia to
remain engaged in a reconciliation process.”

Politician: Armenia Should Start Intn’l Campaign For Artsakh Recogni

POLITICIAN: ARMENIA SHOULD START INTN’L CAMPAIGN FOR ARTSAKH RECOGNITION

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 6, 2012 – 17:21 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenia has gained nothing from Azeri assassin Ramil
Safarov extradition, but now is the time to use the incident to restore
Artsakh people’s right to self-determination, ARF Dashnaktsutyun’s
Armenian Cause Political Affairs Office Director said.

“Armenia shouldn’t halt Karabakh settlement talks, instead announcing
the start of a campaign for international recognition of Artsakh,”
Kiro Manoyan said.

La OTAN Dice Que Indulto A Oficial Azerbaiyano Socava La Confianza E

LA OTAN DICE QUE INDULTO A OFICIAL AZERBAIYANO SOCAVA LA CONFIANZA EN LA REGION
Vladimir Fedorenko

Secretario general de al OTAN, Anders Fogh Rasmussen

RIA Novosti
06/09/2012

El secretario general de al OTAN, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, declaro
hoy que el indulto del oficial azerbaiyano Ramil Safarov, hecho que
provoco la ruptura de relaciones entre Armenia y Hungría, perjudica
la confianza en la region.

“Esta decision de Azerbaiyan (indultar a Safarov) perjudica la
confianza y el proceso de paz. Es la postura de la OTAN que yo
expreso”, dijo Rasmussen en una reunion con estudiantes y profesores
de la Universidad de Erevan.

El viernes pasado, Armenia suspendio las relaciones diplomaticas con
Hungría tras la polemica extradicion del teniente azerbaiyano Ramil
Safarov, sentenciado a cadena perpetua por el asesinato del militar
armenio Gurguen Margarian, en 2004, e indultado nada mas pisar el
suelo patrio.

El presidente de Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, califico de “grave error”
la decision de Hungría y la acuso de pactar una componenda con
Azerbaiyan. Según la prensa, Azerbaiyan planea invertir hasta 3.000
millones de euros en la compra de bonos soberanos de Hungría.

Safarov y Margarian asistían en Budapest a un curso de ingles en
el marco del programa Asociacion para la Paz de la OTAN. En febrero
de 2004, el militar azerbaiyano mato a hachazos a su colega armenio
mientras dormía. En el juicio se puso de manifiesto la connotacion
política del crimen: el odio que azerbaiyanos y armenios mantienen a
raíz del antiguo conflicto de Alto Karabaj. Safarov fue condenado en
Hungría a cadena perpetua sin derecho al indulto durante 30 años. Sin
embargo, el presidente de Azerbaiyan, Ilham Aliev, lo indulto
inmediatamente despues de la repatriacion; mas aún, lo ascendio al
grado de mayor.

“Me preocupa sobremanera la actitud de Azerbaiyan y mañana (viernes),
durante mi visita a Bakú, hare llegar mi mensaje a Azerbaiyan de la
misma manera que lo hice hoy en Erevan”, manifesto Rasmussen citado
por la agencia Novosti-Armenia.

Armenia y Azerbaiyan llevan mas de dos decadas enfrentadas por Alto
Karabaj, zona de poblacion mayoritariamente armenia que en 1988 se
separo de la entonces República Socialista Sovietica de Azerbaiyan
para proclamar tres años mas tarde la independencia.

La secesion dio origen a una guerra entre Bakú y Erevan que se prolongo
hasta el mes de mayo de 1994 y a raíz de la cual Azerbaiyan perdio
el control sobre Alto Karabaj y siete distritos adyacentes.

Desde 1992, el arreglo en Karabaj es objeto de negociaciones en el
marco del Grupo de Minsk de la OSCE copresidido por EEUU, Francia
y Rusia. Azerbaiyan insiste en recuperar su integridad territorial
y Armenia defiende los intereses de la república rebelde de Karabaj
que no es parte del proceso negociador.

Former Prime Minister Of Hungary Criticizes Current Hungarian Author

FORMER PRIME MINISTER OF HUNGARY CRITICIZES CURRENT HUNGARIAN AUTHORITIES FOR THEIR DECISION TO EXTRADITE RAMIL SAFAROV

arminfo
Wednesday, September 5, 19:51

I was sorry to hear about the Hungarian government’s decision on the
repatriation of a perpetrator to Azerbaijan who brutally murdered an
Armenian officer in Budapest, former Prime Minister of Hungary Ferenc
Gyurcsany said in his letter to President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan.

“In relation to this issue let me share with you my views that
the decision that has been taken by the Hungarian authorities is
unacceptable, humiliating, tactless against the Armenia people, and
seriously misunderstands the regional sensitivities. Let me also inform
you that the repatriation and the decision has provoked widespread
outrage in the Hungarian public opinion which led to demonstrations
in Budapest protesting the decision,” Gyurcsany said.

He said that the Azeri authorities have already requested informally
Hungary for the repatriation of the perpetrator many times during his
term. “However, in the absence of appropriate guarantees impeding
the release of the perpetrator, my government then decided not
to accommodate the Azeri request. I must acknowledge that the
current decision of the Hungarian authorities may limit the speed
of development of the Armenian-Azeri relationship, and may inflict
significant moral harms to the Armenian-Hungarian relations, too,”
the ex Hungarian PM said.

As former Prime Minister of Hungary he assured Sargsyan and the
Armenian people that, in contrast to the decision of the current
Hungarian government, many in Hungary share the concerns raised by
the Armenian side vis-a-vis the repatriation of the Azeri perpetrator
and the Azeri decision to release the murderer.

“Having said that let me assure the Armenian people of my solidarity
and express my sympathy to the family and relatives of Gurgen
Margaryan, the Armenian officer murdered. I hope that the friendly
relationship between the peoples of Armenia and Hungary will continue
to strengthen in the future,” Gyurcsany concluded.

Ramil Safarov, an Azeri officer sentenced by a Hungarian court to
life in jail for brutally killing an Armenian officer in Budapest
in 2004, was extradited to Azerbaijan on Aug 31 and pardoned by the
Azeri President once back home.

NY Times: A hero’s eelcome for a convicted killer reignites tensions

NY TIMES: A HERO’S EELCOME FOR A CONVICTED KILLER REIGNITES TENSIONS

tert.am
05.09.12

By Ellen Barry

Ramil Safarov stepped uncertainly off the plane in his native
Azerbaijan last Friday, returning home after spending eight years in a
Hungarian prison for a gruesome murder. But it took only a few minutes
for the celebrations to begin. There was a pardon, a new apartment,
eight years of back pay, a promotion to the rank of major and the
status of a national hero.

Mr Safarov, 35, was already famous because of his crime. Eight years
ago, carrying an ax, he crept into a dormitory room in Hungary where
an Armenian serviceman, a fellow student in a NATO-sponsored English
class, slept, and nearly decapitated him.

But now Mr Safarov will almost certainly go down in history for
the way he was freed, an episode people have started to call “The
Safarov Affair.”

The backlash has embarrassed Hungary, which agreed to extradite Mr
Safarov on the assumption that he would serve at least 25 years of
a life sentence. It has set off protests in Budapest and enraged
Armenia, where activists pelted the Hungarian Embassy with eggs and
burned Hungarian flags.

And it threatens to end the lengthy peace process that has kept
Azerbaijan and Armenia from sliding back into bloody conflict over
the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. Mr. Safarov, who was a
boy during the war with Armenia, embodies the hatred that has pooled
deeply in the public as leaders have sat through rounds of faltering
negotiations.

“If we have no process, what’s left is a vacuum, which gets filled
with an escalation toward war; we’ll see how the Armenian side reacts,
but that’s my fear,” said Thomas de Waal, a Caucasus specialist at
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. “It’s
suddenly more dangerous.”

Mr Safarov, then a lieutenant, and his victim, Lt. Gurgen Markarian,
got to know each other in Budapest as members of an English-language
course organized by NATO’s Partnership for Peace, which was developed
to build ties with former Soviet allies in Eastern Europe.

Mr Safarov told the police that his Armenian classmates had insulted
him and that he had grown increasingly angry, finally buying an ax and
waiting until before dawn one day to carry out his plan. He passed
those hours by finishing his English homework and taking a bath,
according to a transcript of the interview published by Armenian
activists.

After Mr Safarov was arrested, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry released
a statement describing his family’s losses during the war with Armenia,
and suggesting that Lieutenant Markarian had goaded him.

“There are indications that the Armenian servicemen repeatedly insulted
the honor and dignity of the Azerbaijani officer and citizen,”
the statement said. “All this would have inevitably influenced the
suspect’s emotional state.”

Oil-rich Azerbaijan carried out a sustained lobbying effort to
extradite Mr. Safarov from Hungary, over the protests of Armenian
officials. The Hungarian government, under pressure to explain its
decision to turn over Mr. Safarov, has said it received written
assurance from Azerbaijan that he would not be paroled until he had
served 25 years in Lieutenant Markarian’s murder.

On Friday, though, he was pardoned by Azerbaijan’s president, Illham
H. Aliyev. Mr. Safarov’s presence so electrified citizens that all
day strangers congratulated one another on the streets of Baku.

It is not clear how the Armenian government will respond to Mr.

Safarov’s release. “The Armenians must not be underestimated,”
President Serzh Sargsyan warned on Sunday. “We don’t want a war, but
if we have to, we will fight and win,” he said. “We are not afraid
of murderers, even those who enjoy the highest patronage.”

Richard Giragosian, an analyst based in Yerevan, Armenia, said that
he doubted that either side was seeking a war, but that unfolding
events risked “a war by accident.”

An Armenian opposition party on Tuesday proposed formally recognizing
Nagorno-Karabakh as independent – a step that would signal the final
collapse of peace talks that have long been encouraged by Russia
and the West. Armenia could ratchet up the confrontation by opening
an airport in Stepanakert, the capital of the disputed territory,
or by responding overwhelmingly to cease-fire violations.

“Each side is escalating,” Mr. Giragosian said. “It’s almost like a
matter of physics. For every action there is a reaction.”

Mr. Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s president, has invested vast sums in his
country’s international standing, most recently serving as host of
the Eurovision Song Contest, but waves of condemnation have emerged
since Friday – most swiftly from the United States, which issued
statements saying officials in Washington were “extremely troubled”
and “deeply concerned.” On Monday, Russia’s Foreign Ministry expressed
“deep concern, noting the case’s “extreme atrocity.”

Zerdusht Alizadeh, an opposition politician and analyst at the Helsinki
Citizens’ Assembly, said Mr. Aliyev was looking ahead to elections
next year, and had little to show for the drawn-out efforts to mediate
the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. Mr. Safarov’s homecoming, he said,
was a far simpler way to declare victory.

“Giving so much support to a hero – a person who killed an Armenian –
makes the president a hero, too,” he said.

By Tuesday, though, the backlash was dominating the day’s news
coverage, and Mr. Safarov had made no further public appearances.

The episode, Mr. Giragosian said, was a reminder of the depth and
force of the ethnic grievances left behind as the Soviet empire
receded across Europe.

“It’s almost like the Balkans was – we had no idea of the barbarity
of these people,” he said. “Holding a grudge for 100 years is nothing.

It’s like a blood vendetta. At the same time, there are wider
implications; it increases an already worrisome trend toward possible
renewed conflict here.”

Armenian, Azerbaijani Hackers Stop Cyber Attacks – Expert

ARMENIAN, AZERBAIJANI HACKERS STOP CYBER ATTACKS – EXPERT

tert.am
05.09.12

The hacker attacks following the extradition Ramil Safarov, the
Azerbaijani axe-murderer who was serving a life sentence in Hungary,
have been slowly fading out since September 3, an information security
expert has said.

“Once that person was rendered to Baku, a big Azerbaijani group
launched an attack against the Armenian websites. They hacked 20
sites in three days, posting his image and the decree on granting
him a pardon,” Samvel Martirosyan told reporters on Wednesday.

The Azerbaijanis’ most notable success, according to the expert, was
that they managed to hack the website of an organization assisting
the children with cancer, and of a foundation dealing with orphanages.

“Our main target was the Azerbaijani presidential and ministerial
websites and the media outlets. The Armenian hackers targeted few
sites, as they had a specific goal. Only once was the server of
entertainment websites hacked,” he added.

Martirosyan said the hacking attempts included both the posting of
images and DDoS attacks.

“The DDoS attacks were powerful from both sides, but the Azerbaijanis
did not manage to stop our websites from operating. But some of their
very serious news websites went out of operation,” he added.

The expert noted that the hacker attacks by the Azerbaijanis bear a
permanent nature. “It looks as though the Azerbaijani hackers have
targets to meet,” he said.

Martirosyan added that the society often complains in such situations
as to why the Armenian hackers fail to respond to the attacks. “I am
hopeful the operations carried out this week proved that if something
is needed it’s done.”

Considering cyber attacks hooliganism, the expert recommended against
engaging in such practices. He said the attack against the Azerbaijani
president’s website was just an opportunity to turn the international
media’s attention to the topic.

Turkey’s Armenian Community Urges Changes To Schools Regulations

TURKEY’S ARMENIAN COMMUNITY URGES CHANGES TO SCHOOLS REGULATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 5, 2012 – 11:45 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Armenian community is preparing to submit
a report to the Turkish education minister, requesting certain
modifications to the regulations at minority schools, Hurriyet Daily
News reports.

In a report to Education Minister Omer Dincer, the Armenian community
will demand the abolition of the practice of appointing Turkish deputy
principals to minority schools. The report will also demand that the
terms of offices of Turkish language and Turkish history teachers be
determined by the schools themselves.

Karekin Barsamyan, the elementary school principal of Private Pangalti
(Mihitaryan) Armenian High School in Istanbul’s NiÅ~_antaÅ~_ı
neighborhood, said they had taken important steps to resolving the
problems, as a result of a series of negotiations they had so far
held with Ankara.

Barsamyan said the difference of opinions between Armenian principals
and Turkish deputy principals had caused some major problems in the
past. “Actually, according to the current regulations, we are able
to choose our own deputy principals and teachers. We only want to
legalize this regulation,” he said.

Silva Kuyumcuyan, the principal of the Armenian School in Karaköy,
also contributed to the report. “It is true that we are not currently
experiencing the problems that we faced in past. We only demand
equal citizenship. We demand that the regulations of other schools
are practiced in our schools,” he said.

In Istanbul, there are 14 elementary schools, five high schools and
one kindergarten belonging to the Armenian community. There were 3,000
students registered in these schools during the last school year,
HDN says.