Vorotan Cascade Deal Ready To Be Signed

VOROTAN CASCADE DEAL READY TO BE SIGNED

Lragir.am
Business – 22 April 2015, 12:31

In today’s meeting of government revisions were made to the 21 November
2013 decree approving the sale of property of Vorotan Cascade.

In particular, the executive approved the property sales agreement
and the agreement on transfer of property rights revised essentially
for more balanced regulation of relations between the parties. The
new government decree authorized the ministry of energy and natural
resources to sign the foregoing agreements on behalf of the government.

Note that the buyer of Vorotan Cascade is Contour Global Hydro
Cascade CJSC.

Note that handover of property did not take place and the deal was
not completed after signing the sales agreement because the parties
resumed talks on some clauses of the agreement. As a result, some
changes were made to the agreement.

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/economy/view/33967

Deutsche Welle: Merkel Comes Out For Using "Genocide" Term

DEUTSCHE WELLE: MERKEL COMES OUT FOR USING “GENOCIDE” TERM

by Marianna Lazarian

Wednesday, April 22, 15:30

German Chancellor Angela Merkel supports the stand advocating the
use of the “genocide” term when describing the mass killings of the
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 100 years ago. Deutsche Welle reports
that Angela Merkel made such a statement at the meeting of the CDU/CSU
on April 21.

In the meantime, the source says that Merkel thinks Berlin’s use of
the term may have a negative impact on normalization between Armenia
and Turkey, the successor state of the Ottoman Empire.

Deutsche Welle reports that the CDU/CSU alliance and the Social
Democratic Party of Germany are going to adopt a resolution on the
occasion of the centenary of the mass killings of Armenians under the
Ottoman rule. The resolution says that “the fate of the Armenians
during World War One serves as an example of the history of mass
murders, ethnic cleansings, expulsions and genocides during the 20th
century.” So, the ruling coalition links the Armenians’ fate with
the “genocide” term but fails to directly describe the killings of
Armenians 100 years ago as genocide.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=0669BA50-E8E3-11E4-BA460EB7C0D21663

"Shame On President Obama, It Is His Shame." Richard Kirakosyan

“SHAME ON PRESIDENT OBAMA, IT IS HIS SHAME.” RICHARD KIRAKOSYAN

April 22 2015

Ankara, Washington, London have a position of not using term “Genocide”
.This opinion has the “Strategic and National Research Center`s”
director Richard Kirakosyan. To our question whether there is a
hope that this year, US President Barrack Obama will say the word
“Genocide”, he replied. -“I cannot answer that question, but I can say
shame on him, shame on President Obama, it is his shame, not ours “.

Asked whether there are conditions that Turkey will make concessions,
the analyst said. That this is not the problem of “if”, but it is
a problem of “when”: when the Turkish government will recognize the
Armenian Genocide. And “when” should be sought in Turkish politics.

-“International pressure on Ankara as a result, I think will
increase.” Referring to the scheduled events on 100th anniversary of
the battle of Gallipoli in Turkey he said. -“It has increased focus on
the events of the Armenian Genocide on April 24, the 100th anniversary
commemoration of the events and weakened the attention of Gallipoli
events. Leading politicians rather inclined toward the arrival to
Armenia than to Turkey.” Asked whether the Armenian-Turkish relations
can have any developments he said. -“The burden of responsibility
falls on Turkey, the issue really is the issue of Turkey. Only after
the elections in Turkey on June 7 will be possible to say something
but the “problem” is on the Turkish side.”

Arpine SIMONYAN

Read more at:

http://en.aravot.am/2015/04/22/169856/

Armenia Turning Into Spearhead Of International Movement Against Gen

ARMENIA TURNING INTO SPEARHEAD OF INTERNATIONAL MOVEMENT AGAINST GENOCIDE – HRANT MELIK-SHAHNAZARYAN

18:00 * 22.04.15

Armenia is turning into spearhead of an international movement against
genocide, which allows it to assume a rather interesting and important
role, political scientist Hrant Melik-Shahnazaryan told Tert.am as
he commented on Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s speech at the
International Social and Political Global Forum against the Crime
of Genocide.

“The Armenian state’s leader positions himself as leader of universal
struggle against genocide and, in this capacity, presents solutions
to prevent similar crimes in the future. In this respect, it allows
Armenia to assume a rather interesting and important role,” Mr
Melik-Shahnazaryan said.

The best evidence thereof is the support Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary
General of the Council of Europe, and Daniel Feierstein, President of
the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS), expressed
to Armenia in their speeches.

According to Mr Melik-Shahnazaryan, an international movement against
genocide must be based on condemnation of previous genocides and
aimed at preventing new genocides.

“And the Armenian president’s opening speech inaugurated this new
policy. He does not single out the Armenian Genocide. Rather, he
stated that we are seeking to start dealing with other problems after
having the Armenian Genocide internationally recognized and condemned,”
Mr Melik-Shahnazaryan said.

As regards Turkey-related messages, Mr Melik-Shahnazaryan noted that
speaking of panhuman values and universal interests, Armenia’s leader
is forming a partition between Turkey’s denialism and historical
justice.

“And the context of this movement is that it is not only by means of
this speech, but also by the adoption of a Pan-Armenian Resolution
on Genocide, followed by the Pope’s liturgy and statement and the
European Parliament’s resolution, that civilized humanity’s demand
is shaped,” Mr Melik-Shahnazaryan said.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/22/hrantmeliq/1654525

The Souls And Stories That Vanished In The Armenian Genocide Of 1915

THE SOULS AND STORIES THAT VANISHED IN THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE OF 1915

14:37, 22 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Chris Bohjalian
Newsweek

The photo can only be called exotic. It was taken at the end of the
19th century in an Ottoman city southeast of Ankara called Kayseri.

It’s a fraying family portrait of the eight people who comprise the
Bohjalian family, and the toddler sitting in his father’s lap is my
grandfather, Levon Nazareth–or Leo as he would come to be called
when he sailed to the United States decades later with his new bride,
Haigouhi Sherinian. She may already have been pregnant with my father,
the first of their three children.

My brother and my cousins and I all have our stories about Leo and
Haigouhi. There was our demure grandmother’s extraordinary prowess
as a pool player in a Westchester suburb of New York City. There
was the time she took her handbag and practically beat an assailant
senseless with it when he tried to rob her in Washington Heights in
upper Manhattan. There was our grandfather playing his beloved oud,
a stringed instrument a bit like a lute, on Sunday afternoons. He is
wearing a suit because in our memories he is always wearing a suit. (I
once asked his daughter, my Aunt Rose Mary, whether her father had
always worn a suit when she was growing up. She laughed and said,
“Of course, not. I remember one time when he was cleaning the oil
burner, he took off his jacket.”)

But as for Leo’s parents? We knew nothing about his mother and next to
nothing about his father–that fellow on whose lap Leo was sitting
in that old family photo. His name was Nazaret and, supposedly,
he was a tailor. We were told that he might have dabbled as a writer.

This year marks the centennial of the start of the Armenian Genocide:
It was April 24, 1915, when the Armenian intellectuals, professionals,
editors and religious leaders in Constantinople were rounded up by
the Ottoman authorities–and almost all of them executed. During
World War I, the Ottoman Empire would systematically annihilate 1.5
million of its Armenian citizens, or three out of every four living
there. The majority of Armenians alive today are descendants of those
few survivors. It was just this April when Pope Francis acknowledged
the slaughter and called it genocide.

My grandparents rarely spoke about what they had seen or what their
families in the Ottoman Empire or the Middle East had experienced. We
knew only bits and pieces.

We knew, for example, that our grandmother’s father provided
cavalry horses to the Ottoman Army and had for years by 1915. The
horse farm was on the outskirts of Ankara. That spring, instead of
buying the horses legally as they always had in the past, they simply
shot her father to death, confiscated the herd, and then–for good
measure–confiscated the family home. But our grandfather’s family? We
knew almost nothing. Leo had already journeyed to America. We knew he
had three brothers in the Middle East or Anatolia, one of whom may
have been a pharmacist in Cairo in 1915, but all of them were lost
to the mysts of history. Our grandfather either never knew or never
shared what happened to them, and to this day their disappearance
(or death) remains a mystery.

In the mid-1920s, my grandfather journeyed to Paris to meet Haigouhi,
and there they would fall in love and marry. In 1927 he brought her
to New York City, and the next year he built the beautiful brick
monolith in Tuckahoe, New York, where they would raise their children
and reside for 40 years.

Which brings me back to my great-grandfather in Kayseri–the fellow
in that antique photograph whose name was Nazaret.

This spring I unearthed a book that has been in my attic for nearly a
quarter of a century. It’s a volume from an old Armenian encyclopedia
of sorts about the notables from Kayseri. My Aunt Rose Mary gave it
to me when she and her husband sold their house in 1992. I understood
it had mattered to my aunt and, before her, to my grandparents. She
said as a young writer I should have it, but I didn’t know why and
I still can’t read Armenian.

When I was thumbing through it this spring, however, I came across a
photograph of my great-grandfather. There he was, the man from that
antique family portrait. And so I shared the encyclopedia with my
friend, Khatchig Mouradian, a genocide scholar who speaks and reads
Armenian, asking him to translate the sections around the image of
Nazaret Bohjalian.

Nazaret Bohjalian had 5 pages dedicated to him in a little-known book
on Armenian history. CHRIS BOHJALIAN

It seems that my great-grandfather was not merely a tailor who may
have dabbled as a writer. He was a poet. He was, as a matter of fact,
a troubadour: He sang as well as wrote. In the five-page entry about
him in that book, he is described as a prodigy. At 14, he was brought
from Kayseri to Jerusalem to perform. He was writing and singing in
Constantinople as a teenager and throughout his 20s. Only at the age
of 30 did he return to Kayseri to marry and start a family. But he
continued to write.

The old Armenian encyclopedia about the notables from Kayseri. CHRIS
BOHJALIAN

His poems taught morals and values, and were cheerful celebrations
of the people around him and the beauty in life. Think Walt Whitman.

In 1896, however, the tone of his work changed. As a prologue of sorts
to the Armenian Genocide, roughly a quarter of a million Armenians in
the Ottoman Empire were butchered between 1894 and 1896 in what have
come to be called the Hamidian Massacres–named after Sultan Abdul
Hamid II. On November 18, 1895, the slaughter came to Kayseri. My
great-grandfather was there. A few months later, he wrote a 70-quatrain
epic about what he saw. Among the couplets?

“They killed infidels with axes, daggers, and didn’t ask who you were,
whether merchant or coolie.”

“They took the babies out of the wombs of their mothers, and those
who witnessed lost their minds.”

It’s a wrenching, eyewitness testimonial.

I will never know precisely why my grandfather never spoke of his
father’s renown. Perhaps he didn’t realize the extent of Nazaret’s
accomplishments. Levon was the youngest child, born only years before
his father would die in 1902 from natural causes. Moreover, we can
only conjecture how the family was scattered first by the Hamidian
Massacres and then by the Armenian Genocide.

When we discuss genocide, we always begin with the numbers: the six
million. The 1.5 million. But it’s not just the souls that we lose,
it’s the stories.

My novel of the Armenian Genocide, The Sandcastle Girls, was published
in 2012, and I assumed at the time that I was the first Bohjalian to
try and make sense of this cataclysmic crime through art. It was only
this spring, however, that I understood I was but the second.

Chris Bohjalian is the author of 18 books, including his novel of
the Armenian Genocide, The Sandcastle Girls.

http://www.newsweek.com/souls-vanished-armenian-genocide-1915-and-so-did-stories-323851
http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/22/the-souls-and-stories-that-vanished-in-the-armenian-genocide-of-1915/

Christian Churches Offer Support To Nations Ubjected To Genocide

CHRISTIAN CHURCHES OFFER SUPPORT TO NATIONS UBJECTED TO GENOCIDE

20:26, 22 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

A common declaration was adopted at the ecumenical session of the
global Forum “Against the Crime of Genocide” held under the auspices
of the Mother See of Holy

“Churches Against Genocides – Human Life as a Gift of God” April 21-22,
2015 Yerevan, Armenia

By the mercy of God and in glorification to the All Holy Trinity,
Father, Son and Holy Spirit, we, the leaders, the representatives of
the Christian Churches and ecumenical organizations, participating
in the Ecumenical Session of the Forum in the land of Biblical Mount
Ararat – Armenia, which has been evangelized by the apostles Sts.

Thaddeus and Bartholomew under the stewardship of the Armenian Holy
Apostolic Church, on the occasion of the commemoration of the 100th
Anniversary and the Canonization of the Martyrs of the Armenian
Genocide, solemnly declare:

Guided by the Christian truth and God-given commandments on the
sacredness and inviolability of life that it is created by and belongs
to God; (Genesis.1:27; Exodus 20:13, John 1:4);

Believing in the sacred mission of the Church of Christ aimed at
establishing peace in the world and solidarity amongst people;

Bearing witness that the Church is called to the salvation of souls
and to the mission of protecting life on earth;

1. we reaffirm that the violence and killings based on national,
religious, ethnic and racial discrimination have no justification and
statute of limitations; 2. we condemn the genocides and all crimes,
which endanger peace and human security, being the manifestation
of evil and sin against humanity; 3. we condemn the ongoing ethnic
and religious violence in the world, especially in the Middle East,
which cause painful human losses and irreversible destruction of
spiritual and cultural values and heritage; 4. we are convinced that
to prevent the similar crimes in the future is of utmost importance
to recognize and condemn all crimes of genocide, absolutely reject
the denial and to pursuit the claim for reparation; 5. we offer
our support to nations who have been subjected to genocide and are
committed to stand for defending human dignity and peace among the
nations; 6. we call upon the leaders of the nations, individuals
and the people of good will to join forces in creating a just and
harmonious world free from suffering and violence; 7. we pray for
the souls of the martyrs of the Armenian Genocide and all victims of
crimes against humanity and ask the Almighty God to strengthen us in
our pursuit for establishing peace and justice in the world.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/22/christian-churches-offer-support-to-nations-ubjected-to-genocide/

Cyber Security Expert Warns Of Expected Hacker Attacks From Azerbaij

CYBER SECURITY EXPERT WARNS OF EXPECTED HACKER ATTACKS FROM AZERBAIJAN AND TURKEY

YEREVAN, April 21. / ARKA /. Websites providing extensive coverage of
the centenary of the Armenian genocide will be targeted by Azerbaijani
and Turkish hackers on April 23-24, cyber security expert Samvel
Martirosyan warned today.

Speaking at a news conference he said the number of hacker attacks
has declined a little at the moment, most likely because “renowned>>
Turkish and Azerbaijani hackers, who have been suspiciously inactive
these days are preparing for a major attack against the Armenian
websites.

According to him, this repeats actually every year when Turkish and
Azerbaijani hackers attack Armenian websites on April 24 trying to
“drown” them, ‘because stories about the Armenian genocide trigger
the interest of people in other countries and they begin to search
relating information from other sources,” said Martirosyan.

He emphasized that heads of media outlets must not ignore this
‘practice’ and take care of the security of their sites by involving
professionals. M.V.-0-

http://telecom.arka.am/en/news/internet/cyber_security_expert_warns_of_expected_hacker_attacks_from_azerbaijan_and_turkey/

Nalbandian: Armenia Welcomes Austrian Parliament’s Statement

NALBANDIAN: ARMENIA WELCOMES AUSTRIAN PARLIAMENT’S STATEMENT

15:13 22/04/2015 >> POLITICS

Armenia welcomes the statement of the Austrian parliament on the
100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire,
Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said in a statement.

“The parliament of Austria stresses that due to the historical
responsibility (the Austrian-Hungarian Empire was allied in the First
World War with the Ottoman Empire) it is their duty to recognize
the terrible events as genocide and condemn it. The parliament of
Austria in its statement stresses that it is also the duty of Turkey
to acknowledge the crimes committed against the Armenians as genocide.

“With this step Austria made an important contribution to the noble
cause of prevention of genocides and crimes against humanity,”
Nalbandian said.

http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/04/22/nalbandyan/

Davutoglu Beschwert Sich Personlich Bei Merkel

DAVUTOGLU BESCHWERT SICH PERSONLICH BEI MERKEL

Die Bundestagsresolution uber den Volkermord an den Armeniern erzurnt
die Turkei: Der Ministerprasident hat sich bei der Kanzlerin personlich
daruber beschwert. Er fuhrte ein historisches Argument an.

Von Robin Alexander,Claudia Kade Foto: dpaDer Ministerprasident der
Turkei, Ahmet Davutoglu, und Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel (CDU)
bei ihrem Treffen im Januar 2015

Der Ministerprasident der Turkei, Ahmet Davutoglu, hat personlich bei
Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel (CDU) gegen die Verwendung des Begriffes
“Volkermord” in einer Resolution des Bundestages interveniert.

Am Dienstagnachmittag telefonierten die beiden Regierungschefs nach
Informationen der “Welt” uber dieses Thema. Demnach argumentierte
Davutoglu dabei, die Verwendung des Begriffes “Volkermord” fur die
Massaker an den armenischen Einwohnern des Osmanischen Reiches im Jahr
1915 sei nicht zulassig, da dieser Terminus erst nach dem Zweiten
Weltkrieg ins Volkerrecht aufgenommen wurde. In der Turkei gehort
die Leugnung des Volkermordes nach wie vor zur Staatsrason.

Am Freitag wird der Bundestag uber einen Antrag der
Regierungsfraktionen abstimmen, in dem es heißt, die “planmaßige
Vertreibung und Vernichtung von uber einer Million ethnischer Armenier”
stehe “beispielhaft fur die Geschichte der Massenvernichtungen,
der ethnischen Sauberungen, der Vertreibungen, ja der Volkermorde,
von denen das 20. Jahrhundert auf so schreckliche Weise gezeichnet
ist. Dabei wissen wir um die Einzigartigkeit des Holocaust, fur den
Deutschland Schuld und Verantwortung tragt.”

Die Bundesregierung hatte zuerst darauf gedrungen, den Begriff
“Volkermord” aus diplomatischer Rucksicht auf die Turkei nicht zu
verwenden. Nachdem Papst Franziskus jedoch den Begriff verwendet hatte
und dafur vom turkischen Staatsprasidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan scharf
gerugt worden war, rebellierten Abgeordnete und fuhrende Politiker
der Union gegen diese Sprachregelung.

Da auch Bundesprasident Joachim Gauck angedeutet hatte, seinerseits
auf einer Veranstaltung am Donnerstag den Volkermord beim Namen zu
nennen, gaben die Fraktionsspitzen nach.

Turkische Vereine lehnen Begriff scharf ab

Fuhrende Vertreter turkischer Verbande warnten die schwarz-rote
Koalition ebenfalls davor, das deutsch-turkische Verhaltnis mit dem
Volkermord-Vorwurf schwer zu belasten. Außerdem werde die Aussohnung
zwischen der Turkei und Armenien erschwert, lautete der Vorwurf. Auch
gegen den Papst und das Europaische Parlament, die die Geschehnisse
von damals ebenfalls als Volkermord eingestuft haben, teilen sie
kraftig aus.

Wenn der Bundesprasident von Volkermord spricht, uberschreitet er
seine Kompetenzen

Ali Soylemezoglu Vorsitzender des turkischen Vereins Dialog und Frieden

“Wenn das EU-Parlament, der Papst und der Bundesprasident dazu
beitragen wollen, dass das Problem gelost wird, sollten sie darauf
hinwirken, dass sich beide Seiten an einen Tisch setzen”, sagt Bekir
Yilmaz, Prasident der Turkischen Gemeinde in Berlin. “Alles andere
fuhrt nur dazu, dass sich die Fronten verharten.” Die Wahrheitsfindung
sollte nicht in Parlamenten stattfinden, sondern in Gerichtssalen.

“Ein Volkermord ist die schwerste Straftat, die die Weltgemeinschaft
kennt”, sagte Ali Soylemezoglu, Vorsitzender des turkischen Vereins
Dialog und Frieden. Nur ein Gericht habe die Befugnis, einen Volkermord
festzustellen. “Wenn der Bundesprasident von Volkermord spricht,
uberschreitet er seine Kompetenzen.” Dies sei eine Anmaßung und
bedauerlich.

Uber das Gedenken an die Verbrechen gegen die Armenier gibt es seit
Jahren Streit. Wahrend die Bundesregierung den Begriff aus Rucksicht
auf die diplomatischen Beziehungen zur Turkei lange vermied, sehen
Historiker den Begriff angesichts der systematischen Vernichtung der
Armenier mit bis zu 1,5 Millionen Toten als gerechtfertigt an.

Worte des Papstes? Fur die Vereine unwichtig

Die neue Formulierung der Koalitionsfraktionen wollen die turkischen
Verbande nicht widerstandslos hinnehmen: Die Historiker seien sich
keineswegs einig in der Einstufung der Massaker, und da auch viele
Muslime ums Leben gekommen seien, musse eher von einer Art Burgerkrieg
gesprochen werden oder auch von einer fehlerhaften Umsiedlungspolitik
der damaligen osmanischen Fuhrung, argumentieren sie.

Dass der Papst das anders sieht, habe kein Gewicht. “Der Papst war
noch nie ein Verkunder von Wahrheiten”, sagt Soylemezoglu. “Fur die
Wahrheitsfindung sind die Worte des Papstes noch nie geeignet gewesen.”

Die Bundesregierung habe bislang die Position vertreten, dass die
einschlagige UN-Konvention uber die Verhutung und Bestrafung von
Volkermord aus dem Jahr 1948 fur die Bundesrepublik erst seit 1955 in
Kraft sei und nicht ruckwirkend gelte. Nun werfe die Bundesregierung
plotzlich ihre eigenen Grundsatze uber Bord. Es werde mit zweierlei
Maß gemessen, wenn es um die Turkei gehe, kritisiert Soylemezoglu.

Sollten Bundesprasident, Regierung und Parlament bei ihrer Einschatzung
bleiben, werde ihr Ansehen Schaden nehmen.

“Eine einseitige Darstellung der Geschichte schadet der Freundschaft
zwischen Deutschland, der Turkei und Armenien”, warnt Niyazi Oncel
vom Verein Gedankengut Ataturks. Und Yilmaz mahnt: Die knapp drei
Millionen hier lebenden Turken litten ohnehin schon unter der
Debatte uber Integration, Islamfeindlichkeit und Pegida. Sollten
die Bundestagsabgeordneten die geplante Resolution beschließen,
legten sie damit “noch eine Schippe drauf”. Fur Samstag ist eine
Protestkundgebung in Berlin geplant.

http://www.welt.de/politik/deutschland/article139918236/Davutoglu-beschwert-sich-persoenlich-bei-Merkel.html

French MEP: Turkey Must Stop The Denial

FRENCH MEP: TURKEY MUST STOP THE DENIAL

02:55, 22.04.2015
Region:World News, Armenia, Turkey
Theme: Politics

Turkey must finally use the term ‘genocide’ and stop the denial:
one century later, this insult must stop, French MEP Michèle Rivasi
told Armenian News -NEWS.am.

According to the MEP, the adoption og the resolution commemorating
the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide was an important
step for many reasons. “First, it’s a call to the European countries
to recognize the Armenian genocide at their own level, what the EU
Parliament already did in 1987, and what France did in 2001 under my
fierce lobbying when I was a Member of the French Parliament. Second,
it’s a call to Turkey to finally use the term ‘genocide’ and stop
the denial: one century later, this insult must stop. Turkey will
only find advantages in finally recognizing the Armenian Genocide and
step into History. Third, it’s a call to both Armenia and Turkey for
a genuine reconciliation, passing also by the renewal of diplomatic
relations and the opening of their common border,” the MEP said.

According to Michèle Rivasi, it’s in the interest of both countries
and also for the European Union.

“After the Pope Francis on April 12, now we learn that Germany is
ready to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Let’s hope more countries
will follow, it is our duty to pay tribute to the one-and-a-half
million innocent Armenian victims. And this is thanks to this many
new recognitions that we will be able to counterbalance Turkish denial
policy,” Ms Rivasi concluded.

On April 15, the European Parliament adopted a resolution by a majority
vote. The resolution calls on Turkey to recognize the atrocities of
1915 as genocide confront its past and make efforts in the direction
of actual reconciliation between the Armenian and Turkish people.

http://news.am/eng/news/263178.html