Armenia And Jordan To Cooperate On Culture

ARMENIA AND JORDAN TO COOPERATE ON CULTURE

news.am
June 28, 2012 | 19:20

YEREVAN. – Cooperation agreement is signed between Armenia and Jordan
on culture field. The document was signed between Armenian Minister
of Culture Hasmik Poghosyan and Jordanian Minister of Culture Salah
Jarrar on Thursday.

According to the document, the sides will cooperate on holding
cultural expos, organizing mutual visits of the artists, writers,
poets and musicians. The states will also exchange information on
museums, libraries and archives, as well as increase participation
in conferences, seminars and educations courses in the cultural field.

Armenian Envoy: Int’l Recognition Of Genocide A Universal Issue

ARMENIAN ENVOY: INT’L RECOGNITION OF GENOCIDE A UNIVERSAL ISSUE

PanARMENIAN.Net
June 28, 2012 – 15:44 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – On June 27, Armenian Ambassador to Canada Armen
Yeganyan met with Canada Senate Speaker Noel Kinsella.

At the meeting, the parties focused on Armenia-Canada
interparliamentary relations, giving high assessment to the latters.

The Ambassador further briefed the Senate Speaker on Karabakh
settlement process, thanking Canada for a balanced position on the
issue. The envoy also expressed gratitude to the official Ottawa for
Armenian Genocide recognition, noting that international condemnation
of this crime against humanity to be a universal issue.

The Ambassador also informed the Canadian official on Armenian-Turkish
rapprochement attempt, with Turkish parliament ignoring the Protocols
signed in an attempt to normalize ties.

Jordan, Armenia Sign Cultural Agreement

JORDAN, ARMENIA SIGN CULTURAL AGREEMENT

PETRA NEWS AGENCY
June 28 2012

Amman, June 28 (Petra)–Jordan and Armenia signed on Thursday an
agreement to forge closer cultural cooperation as well as the exchange
of expertise between the two countries.

Under the deal, which was signed by Culture Minister Salah Jarrar and
his Armenian counterpart Hasmik Poghosyan, both sides will cooperate
in holding cultural exhibition and performances in the two countries
and in exchanging visits among artists, writers, poets and musicians.

They will also exchange data and information related to museums,
libraries and archive and encourage participation in conferences and
seminars and training courses in the cultural field.

Energy Projects Should Provide Peace In The Region

ENERGY PROJECTS SHOULD PROVIDE PEACE IN THE REGION

The Messenger
June 28 2012
Georgia

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan stated recently that various energy
projects activated in the region should be targeted not for violating
peace but for creating balance and stability in the South Caucasus.

There is no way that the results of energy projects will be used for
financing new military confrontation, announced Armenia’s president
while meeting in Yerevan with the Austrian president.

Syria-Downed Plane Turkish Provocation, Expert Says

SYRIA-DOWNED PLANE TURKISH PROVOCATION, EXPERT SAYS

PanARMENIAN.Net
June 28, 2012 – 20:54 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The official Ankara was the one to benefit from the
incident with a downed Turkish plane, which could help weaken Syrian
leadership’s position, according to a Turkish Studies expert.

As Levon Hovsepyan told a news conference, the incident may be
construed as a provocation on Turkish side.

“Even though the official Ankara hasn’t declared a war against
Damascus, Turkey is still interfering with Syria affairs through
supporting anti-regime rebels,” the expert said.

According to the expert, Syrian air defenses shot down the aircraft
in response to Turkey’s multiple violations of Syria’s airspace.

A Turkish jet was shot down by Syrian forces while flying solo and
unarmed 13 miles off the coast of Syria in international airspace
last week. However, Syria still maintains the aircraft was in Syrian
airspace when it shot down the plane.

Action In Front Of Court Building

ACTION IN FRONT OF COURT BUILDING

05:25 pm | Today | Social

The court postponed today’s trial for the youth activists of the
Armenian National Congress (HAK) due to the absence of prosecutor Hakob
Martirosyan and the youth activists’ defense attorney Stepan Voskanyan.

Prosecutor Hakob Martirosyan was supposed to read the accusatory speech
and mention how many years of imprisonment each youth would receive.

The next trial will be on July 11.

The HAK youth activists are holding a protest in front of the Kentron
and Nork-Marash general jurisdiction court with signs reading “Serzh’s
Arbitrary Court”, “Freedom to Tigran”, “Is the Court a Plaything for
Bandit Regime Leader?” and screams of “Freedom to Tigran”.

We remind that the youth HAK members are charged with clashing with
police officers near Swan Lake on 9 August 2011 and showing resistance.

Out the four activists, imprisonment as a measure of constraint has
been chosen for only Tigran Arakelyan.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/social/2012/06/28/dataran

Former Milano Store Owner To Take Eminent Domain Case To European Co

FORMER MILANO STORE OWNER TO TAKE EMINENT DOMAIN CASE TO EUROPEAN COURT

news.am
14:00, June 27, 2012

Hovhannes Ghoukasyan, former owner of the Milano store in Yerevan,
says he will take his eminent domain case regarding the seizure of
is property by the government to the European Court of Human Rights.

Ghoukasyan says the government seized his property in 2009 but has
failed to construct anything of public value on the site since.

“Tell me what public value has been built there in the past four
years. They have done nothing with the property. The building has
collapsed, that’s all,” says Ghoukasyan who adds that he has given
up on defending his rights in the Armenian courts.

The law states that if the new property owners fail to begin work on
the project for which the land was appropriated in the first place,
the site must be returned to the original owner.

Existence Of Syrian Armenians Under Threat, Official Yerevan Must Ta

EXISTENCE OF SYRIAN ARMENIANS UNDER THREAT, OFFICIAL YEREVAN MUST TAKE ACTION – FORMER FM

news.am
June 27, 2012 | 14:09

YEREVAN.- Former Armenian FM, member of Prosperous Armenia Party Vartan
Oskanian considers existence of Syrian Armenians is under threat.

“Sixty thousand Armenians live in Syria, 45 thousand of them in
Aleppo. The community in Aleppo was the first Armenian community
formed after the Genocide, later its branches spread throughout the
Middle East,” he wrote on his Facebook.

On Tuesday Bashar al-Assad admitted Syria is in a state of war,
Oskanian said, adding that given the ethnic and religious system of
Syria, the country may be involved in a large-scale civil war.

“Being an Aleppo Armenian I am in touch with my friends and relatives.

Yesterday I learnt that not a single Armenian official visited Syria
within at least eight months,” he said, adding that the locals do
not feel support of the Motherland.

He called on official Yerevan to make certain moves to help Syrian
Armenians. Oskanian considers a representative of the Armenian
government must visit Aleppo to consolidate the local Armenian
organizations and elaborate a program on further steps.

Communities: Armenians In Egypt Recount Rich History

COMMUNITIES: ARMENIANS IN EGYPT RECOUNT RICH HISTORY

Alison Tahmizian Meuse
Wed, 27/06/2012 – 12:15

Photographed by Alison Tahmizian Meuse
Prev Next Pause Play

At a time when the citizenship of a candidate’s mother can disqualify
him from the presidency, it is nearly impossible to imagine an Armenian
holding the post of Egyptian prime minister.

However, Armenians made many important historical contributions
to Egyptian society. Ottoman-era Khedive Mohamed Ali hired them as
diplomats, commercial agents and technicians. Armenians and other
Ottoman citizens flocked to Egypt for opportunities under the ambitious
new ruler.

“Egypt was like the Gulf is today as far as traveling there to work,”
says Thomas Zakarian, a teacher in Heliopolis’ Nubarian School.

The reign of Mohamed Ali was not a unique chapter of diversity in
Egyptian history. Like the Ottoman period, the Fatimid and Mamluk eras
involved significant contributions of foreign peoples. Armenians were
builders of Bab Zuweila and seamstresses of the Kiswah (the Kaaba’s
covering), court photographers for Mohamed Ali and jewelers to King
Farouk. Today, they are a tight-knit community, integrated into the
fabric of Egypt.

Under Ali’s auspices, Armenians founded colleges of accounting,
engineering and translation during the mid-19th century. Mastery
of Ottoman Turkish and European languages made Armenians suitable
intermediaries to the West and favored by Ali as chief translators.

“Armenians were viewed as outsiders, but not as Europeans,” says
historian Mahmoud Sabit, who is of Armenian ancestry. They had a
knack for diplomacy and warfare; Fatimid and Mamluk armies employed
Armenians as heavy-armored cavalry.

Others were expert stonemasons. Armenian Muslim Badr al-Jamali, one
of seven Armenian Fatimid viziers, commissioned his kin to build Bab
al-Futuh, Bab al-Nasr and Bab Zuweila.

“The world then was not based on ethnicity, which is why outsiders
could have easily integrated in it,” Sabit said.

Primary school children attend the Sisvan School in the Port Said
refugee camp

It ended with the Ottomans

In the second half of the 19th century, the “Armenian Question”
was raised as Armenians in Ottoman Turkey demanded reforms. Sultan
Abdel Hamid II, fearing rising nationalism and European encroachment,
ordered pogroms against the minority.

When Istanbul’s mufti issued a fatwa supporting the massacres, labeling
Armenians as enemies of Islam, a counter-fatwa was issued by Al-Azhar.

Mohamed Refaat al-Imam, a local expert on the community and author
of “The Armenians in Egypt,” notes that this episode caused tension
between Istanbul and Ottoman Cairo.

In 1915, Ottoman authorities began a genocidal campaign against the
Armenians. Those who survived the massacres sought asylum in Syria,
Palestine and Egypt.

What Egypt had that other countries lacked was a pre-established
community able to aid, advocate for and employ the influx of refugees.

Average Armenians donated medicine and clothing to the survivors,
while industrial leaders provided employment – Armenian cigarette
factories alone hired thousands. The destitute newcomers were often
skilled craftsmen: jewelers, cobblers and tailors, who began anew in
the workshops of fellow Armenians.

The Armenian General Benevolent Union, founded in Cairo in 1906 with
Boghos Nubar at its helm, aided Armenians across the region. In
1915, it founded a school for 1,000 children in Port Said refugee
camp, which sheltered more than 4,200 refugees. Nubar and the union
headquarters later moved to Paris, where he advocated for Armenian
statehood at the 1919 Peace Conference. However, the betrayal of the
Allied Powers, the formation of modern Turkey, and the Soviet takeover
of the short-lived Armenian republic dashed lingering hopes for return.

Their exile would be permanent.

A community once composed of elite statesmen and merchants absorbed
thousands of refugees, whose presence made Armenian identity more
salient than ever. In cosmopolitan Alexandria and Cairo, lives were
rebuilt around schools, churches and clubs.

Rival Armenian political parties with divergent views on the newly
formed Soviet Armenia published daily newspapers and fought fiercely
for seats on the community council.

Refugees, who spoke Turkish in their native provinces, attended
Armenian schools. Plays, once performed in Turkish, were now strictly
in Armenian, Imam says. Armenian theater, dance troupes and music
thrived, while individuals such as portrait photographer Van Leo and
caricaturist Saroukhan rose to national prominence.

The overall prosperity of Egypt’s Armenians made them less
susceptible than other diaspora communities to a 1946 campaign
encouraging resettlement in Soviet Armenia. Of the 150,000 from the
Middle East who went, only 4,000 came from Egypt. Saroukhan, who
instructed a friend to send word on life behind the iron curtain,
received a glowing report – but it was written in red, the color
they had agreed would indicate distress. Stalin deported nationalist
Dashnak party members to Siberia on arrival.

As Armenians secured a foothold in the Egyptian economy, they left
their original neighborhoods of Bayn al-Surein and Dahir for upscale
downtown and Heliopolis. The community peaked at 17,188 people in
1917, according to government figures; church data puts their number
at 40,000 in 1947.

Constitutive Assembly of the AGBU, 1906, by caricaturist Saroukhan

To stay or to go

The 1961 nationalization program of President Gamal Abdel Nasser jolted
the community, the majority of which was engaged in the private sector.

The size of the community dwindled in that period, but not all felt
compelled to leave, choosing instead to adapt to the new landscape.

Among them was Joseph Matossian, then the chairman of Egypt’s Chamber
of Tobacco. Nasser greeted Matossian with a hug at a cigarette
exposition in 1961. Nasser, an ardent smoker of illegally smuggled
Kents, said if Matossian could make him a similar cigarette, he would
be their best client.

“Mr. President, your wishes are our orders,” he replied, creating
what is still Egypt’s most-consumed cheap cigarette, The Cleopatra.

“All the people who stayed here succeeded, and succeeded brilliantly –
especially after 1975, when the country opened,” says Hratch Mikaelian,
whose family business, the Reader’s Corner, evolved from a publications
distributor to a framing shop.

“The ones who left still have nostalgia for Egypt,” says Armen
Mazloumian, a physician. “They even have an Association of
Armenian-Egyptians in Canada and celebrate Sham al-Nessim.”

Others point out that those who left never returned, and emigration
slowed but never stopped. Of a 40-person choir from the late 1980s,
pianist Gassia Deuvletian says, “Now more than half are not here.”

Gerald Papazian, an Armenian-Egyptian living in Paris, argues this
nostalgia has nothing to do with modern Egypt.

“It was their Egypt, their clubs, and the way Egypt was at that time,”
Papazian says.

Boghos Nubar, the diplomat, the philanthropist and the businessman

Integrating but not assimilating

The most important tradition Armenians keep is their language,
its biggest guarantor of identity. Many parents urge their children
to marry an Armenian – whether from Egypt, the Levant or Armenia –
but intermarriage with Christian Egyptians is generally accepted.

“The Egyptian community evolved also. There is a very cool, open
Egyptian youth, and they integrate very easily with us, Mikaelian
says. “That’s why the risk of having mixed marriages increases.”

Children of such unions can and do learn Armenian through community
institutions. Sirarpi, a kindergarten teacher, points out that children
who don’t come from Armenian-speaking homes anxiously strive to catch
up with their peers.

With the emergence of independent Armenia and the Internet, many
Egyptian-Armenians find it easier to reconnect with their roots.

Today, half a century after Armenians’ mass exodus from the country,
the community is again taking stock of its place in a changing Egypt.

“Although we will not say it out loud, we are whispering about the
elusive ‘Plan B’ for leaving,” Aline Kazanjian blogs. She says her
decision will not be based on alcohol or dress codes, but opportunities
for her children.

“It’s important for Egyptian-Armenians to stay in Egypt. … It’s
part of our identity,” says Arto Kalishian, one of a handful of young
Armenians involved in political campaigns, whether for liberals or
moderate Islamists.

“To be public and active is tough for Armenians because we are a
small community. It’s up to the individual,” he says.

The community generally avoids politics, an aversion stemming not
only from previous persecution, but also gratefulness to the countries
that welcomed them. Parsegh Kezelian, a jeweler, recalls his father’s
advice: “Never be against the government – any government.” During
parliamentary elections, some Armenians were shocked their peers
didn’t know they were citizens.

Many say the double-edged sword of being foreign keeps the community
intact.

“We are born in Egypt, we have the identity cards, we serve in
the military – nothing remains. But how you feel matters,” says
Zaven Lylozian, editor of an Armenian newspaper. “I am not Ahmed or
George – I am Zaven. The name is the address of your identity. You
are not Egyptian.”

Turkish-born Nubar Pasha, Sabit’s ancestor, after serving five
Egyptian rulers over five decades, spent his final years between
Paris and Cairo, ever a foreigner to the Egyptian people.

Yet the final passage of his 1842-1879 memoirs strikes a chord,
perhaps now more than ever:

“Whatever future awaits Egypt – whether it gains independence or
continues as a colony – justice will remain standing between the
ruler and subjects … [The peasant’s] country is not one of slavery
and his house is no longer that of a slave.”

http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/communities-armenians-egypt-recount-rich-history

Experts On ECHR Verdicts Against Armenia

EXPERTS ON ECHR VERDICTS AGAINST ARMENIA

tert.am
27.06.12

The end justified the means. Judges pursuing their interests or
executing political orders do not at all think of further rulings by
the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

The lawyers Vahe Grigoryan and Hovik Arsenyan, as well as the human
rights activist Vardan Harutyunyan, are of the unanimous opinion that
lawyers point to violations of law during trials and warn of their
intention to apply to the ECHR. However, courts go on “doing justice.”

“This is our judges’ working style,” Grigoryan said. “The compensations
are paid at the expense of pensioners, from taxes paid by ordinary
citizens,” he added.

In returning verdicts, Armenia’s courts are guided by their “everyday
interests” rather than by European standards. “They are well aware
of the fact that they violate human rights and that verdicts not in
Armenia’s favor will later be returned, at the expense of taxpayers,”
he added.

According to him, Armenian judges will only be concerned over this
if they themselves pay the compensations.

Grigoryan believes that the ECHR verdicts do not largely arouse
concern, because they are only consequences. Justice must be done in
Armenia as only individual cases reach the ECHR.

“In violating human rights, both judges and the government reckon on
people’s inability to apply to the European Court. See the residents of
Byuzand Street. Thousands of families were kicked out of their homes,
their property was misappropriated, but only a dozen applied to the
European Court,” Grigoryan said.

Since 2005, the ECHR has returned about 30 verdicts against Armenia.