Oskanian: Financial probe against Civilitas politically motivated

Oskanian: Financial probe against Civilitas politically motivated

Published: Friday June 15, 2012

Vartan Oskanian. Photolure

Recently elected member of Armenia’s National Assembly and former
foreign minister (1998-2008) Vartan Oskanian has been called in for
questioning by Armenia’s National Security Service over a $2 million
donation made to Civilitas Foundation which Oskanian established in
2008.

Oskanian, who resigned from the board of the foundation ahead of the
parliamentary elections, has called the probe as politically
motivated.

The probe was launched on May 25, shortly after the Prosperous Armenia
Party, of which Oskanian is senior member, refused to enter into a
coalition with the governing Republican Party and consequently endorse
that party leader, President Serge Sargsyan, in his anticipated bid
for re-election next February.

In recent days, half a dozen of Western ambassadors based in Yerevan,
including U.S. Ambassador John Heffern, visited Civilitas offices in a
show of support.

Vartan Oskanian issued the following statement on June 11, 2012:

The National Security Service of the Republic of Armenia has summoned
me to offer testimony in relation to a criminal case regarding money
laundering, involving myself and the Civilitas Foundation, which I
founded.

>From the start, the Civilitas Foundation has been transparent, and
operated in accordance with the spirit and the letter of Armenian law.
Since its first days in 2008, the Civilitas Foundation’s programs have
been supported by the governments of the Netherlands and Poland, the
foreign ministries of Norway and Germany, the international
development organizations of Switzerland and the UK, the US Embassy in
Yerevan, the OSCE Yerevan Office, as well as other well-known
organizations, corporations and individuals.

This has been public information. The government agencies of the
Republic of Armenia clearly could not have been ignorant about these
relationships.

I find it strange and astonishing therefore that my work and the work
of Civilitas can in any way be linked to money laundering or illegally
acquired funds. Even more astonishing is that such a question is being
raised at a time when I have entered politics.

It is obvious to me that the criminal case that has been opened is
politically motivated.

The National Security Service issued the following statement on June
12, 2012 (translated into English from the Russian version):

On May 25 of this year, the investigations directorate of Armenia’s
National Security Service open a criminal case based on Article 190,
part 3, paragraph 1 -legalization of funds acquired through criminal
means in particularly large amounts /money laundering/.

The investigation is focused on the sale of the Armenia-registered
company “Huntsman Building Products” owned by “Polymer Materials” and
“Huntsman International” registered in the United States for $2
million. As a result of an improper formulation of the sales agreement
the deal was not reported to tax bodies and as a result relevant tax
obligations were not met. Of the proceeds intended by the American
side to be spent for humanitarian purposes in Armenia, $1,135,000 was
not directed towards humanitarian programs, but transferred to
accounts opened by the founder and chairman of the Civilitas
Foundation Vartan Oskanian and member of the foundation’s board of
trustees Tigran Karapetian, and part of these funds was illegally used
towards personal needs.

Moreover, the Civilitas Foundation, in violation of its own charter
and demands of the law, did not provide reporting about the $2 million
donation from “Polymer Materials” and “Huntsman International”
intended for humanitarian programs.

As part of this criminal case tax inspections and expert analyses are
being conducted and testimonies are being sought, measures are taken
to establish all circumstances of this case as part of an objective
and comprehensive investigation. Investigation is continuing.

Vartan Oskanian issued the following statement on June 12, 2012:

Today the National Security Service issued a statement trying to prove
that the criminal case they have initiated is not politically
motivated.

I repeat that it is clearly politically motivated and I want to say
the following: money laundering, Oskanian, Huntsman are words that
cannot be placed together in one sentence.

In order for there to be money laundering, there must first be dirty
money. In this case, the source of the funds are known, the buyer is
known, the transfer of the funds to me and to Civilitas according to
the donor’s wishes have been transparent and electronic. The attorneys
have said that no tax obligation was created as a result of the
transaction. And the donor’s funds “shall be considered as a donation
and the Recipient has the right to use in its discretion and for the
implementation of its statutory objectives.”

Only those with political motivations will attempt to reduce a good
man’s good work to political currency.

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-06-15-oskanian-financial-probe-against-civilitas-politically-motivated

Premier débat à la Knesset sur le génocide arménien

L’Orient-Le Jour , Liban
13 juin 2012

Premier débat à la Knesset sur le génocide arménien

13/06/2012

HISTOIRE Le Parlement israélien a débattu hier, pour la première fois
en séance plénière, de la reconnaissance du génocide perpétré contre
les Arméniens en Turquie au début du XXe siècle. Le président du
Parlement Reuven Rivlin a ouvert le débat en affirmant que les juifs
qui vivaient en Palestine en 1915 à l’époque du mandat britannique
étaient parfaitement au courant de ce que subissaient les Arméniens. «
Les habitants de Jérusalem les ont vus arriver affamés par milliers.
Les témoignages de l’époque sur le massacre étaient clairs et nets »,
a déclaré M. Rivlin.

M. Rivlin, membre du Likoud, la formation du Premier ministre Benjamin
Netanyahu, a toutefois souligné que reconnaître cette tragédie ne
signifiait pas qu’il fallait en faire porter la responsabilité sur le
gouvernement turc actuel. « Peut-être que le gouvernement d’Israël va
enfin reconnaître, comme 27 autres pays dans le monde, le massacre du
peuple arménien », a déclaré la députée d’opposition de gauche Zehava
Galon, à l’origine du débat en séance plénière.

Les relations entre Israël et la Turquie traversent une période de
crise depuis la mort en 2010 de neufs passagers turcs tués par des
soldats israéliens alors qu’ils tentaient, à bord d’une flottille
d’activistes propalestiniens, de forcer le blocus imposé par l’État
hébreu sur la bande de Gaza.
(Source : AFP)

http://www.lorientlejour.com/category/Moyen+Orient+et+Monde/article/763550/_Premier_debat_a_la_Knesset_sur_le_genocide_armenien.html

Conférence de l’Université dans la ville sur l’Arménie à Beausoleil

Nice-Matin, France
13 juin 2012

Conférence de l’Université dans la ville sur l’Arménie à Beausoleil

Publié le mercredi 13 juin 2012 à 07h15

L’Université Dans La Ville de Beausoleil (UDLVB), soutenue par la
revue France-Arménie, a fait salle comble pour sa causerie « Les
Arméniens, de l’Antiquité jusqu’en 1375 ».

Ainsi, Mady Bellone, présidente et organisatrice de l’événement,
pouvait se réjouir de l’initiative de Me Christiane Kevorkian.

La conférencière, Gisèle Hugues, arménophile, s’est plue à faire
découvrir à un public novice l’histoire de ce peuple méconnu mais ô
combien important et emblématique à travers les millénaires : son
origine, le premier peuple indo-européen arrivé en Asie Mineure, sa
langue avec une graphie spécifique, l’une des plus vieilles au monde,
l’importance de la religion dans la vie de ce peuple, ses églises dont
le style architectural inspirera largement l’art roman et les églises
dites « lombardes », ses confrontations avec les envahisseurs, les
modifications de son territoire et les variations de ses frontières,
son implication internationale notamment lors des Croisades avec son
Roi Léon V, noble d’origine française venu directement d’Aquitaine et
enterré avec les Rois de France dans la basilique de Saint-Denis.

L’assistance a également pu apprécier la présence de l’éminent Pr
Mahé, membre de l’Institut de France, section Académie des
Inscriptions et Belles Lettres dont il est le président, et notamment
directeur d’études à l’École Pratique des Hautes Études, pour une
séance de dédicace de son livre « Ll’Arménie à l’épreuve des siècles »
au profit de l’ oeuvre des Chrétiens d’Orient. Ce conférencier émérite
a captivé, le soir même, un autre auditoire lors de sa conférence sur
l’Église d’Arménie : « Arménie, la foi des montagnes » à la cathédrale
de Monaco.

http://www.nicematin.com/societe/conference-de-luniversite-dans-la-ville-sur-larmenie-a-beausoleil.898386.html

Book: Born in Jerusalem, Born Palestinian: A Memoir

Kirkus Reviews
June 15, 2012, Friday

BORN IN JERUSALEM, BORN PALESTINIAN;
A Memoir

A Palestinian-American remembers an idyllic pre-1948 childhood in
Palestine. Because of restrictions on economic opportunity, Nammar was
forced to leave his beloved homeland at age 23. Here, he looks back at
this bittersweet era of his youth. “Balance” marked the community he
knew as a child, where the three Abrahamic religions resided in
harmony, socializing and patronizing each other’s businesses within a
curious mixture of Turkish, Armenian, Arab and Jewish customs. Born to
an old, well-established family in the Haret al-Nammareh
neighborhood–his father was a tour guide, and his mother was an
educated refugee of the Armenian genocide–Nammar generally enjoyed a
bountiful, bucolic first six years of life in Palestine. All changed
abruptly when Zionist agitation broke out, marked by such events as a
machine gun attack on his school bus and the bombing of the King David
Hotel in 1946, where Nammar’s older brother, Mihran, worked at the
front desk. After Israeli independence, the Palestinian neighborhoods
were inhabited by Israelis in what Nammar describes as a deliberate
Zionist policy of nikayon, or ethnic cleansing.

Herded into a military zone, Nammar’s father and Mihran were detained
in prison without explanation. Eventually, the family was reunited but
without employment or prospects. The author writes movingly of his
education by the nuns and his refuge at the Jerusalem YMCA, where he
was both embraced for his athleticism and eventually marginalized,
rejected for Israel’s national basketball team because of his
nationality. An authentic, matter-of-fact, nonpolemical depiction of
Palestinian life

Publication Date: 2012-07-25
Publisher: Olive Branch/Interlink
Stage: Adult
ISBN: 978-1-56656-886-9
Price: $15.00
Author: Nammar, Jacob J.

Captured Azerbaijani soldier goes from Armenia to a third party

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
June 15 2012

Captured Azerbaijani soldier goes from Armenia to a third party

Captured Azerbaijani soldier Mamedbagir Akhundzadeh has been
transferred to a third party, APA reports.

The head of the working group under the Azerbaijani State Commission
on Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons, Firudin Sadigov,
confirmed this information, adding that Azerbaijan had officially been
informed about this: “He was captured, abandoned his country and
selected a different country.”

The father of the captured soldier, Talib Akhundzadeh, told APA that
he does not have any information about this: “The last letter from our
son was delivered a few days ago. But we have still not received it.”

Sergeant of the Azerbaijani Army Mamedbagir Talib oglu Akhundzadeh
(born 1990) was captured by Armenians at the contact line of
Azerbaijani and Armenian troops near the village of Yukhari Chayli in
the Terter district of Azerbaijan.

Victor Elice again to chair the jury in Golden Apricot Film Festival

Victor Elice again to chair the jury in Golden Apricot International
Film Festival

19:51 . 15/06

The 9th Golden Apricot International Film Festival will start on July
8 in Yerevan. More than 1,100 applications were received from 70
countries this year. Spanish well-known film director Victor Erice
will be chair the jury.

The 4 traditional competitions will be retained: they are feature,
documentary, `Armenian Panorama’ and `Stone’. On the occasion of
declaring Armenia a capital of book a new project titled `Book and
Film’ was introduced, which will include movies based on Armenian and
world classic works.

Once again the forum Directors Without Borders will be organized. It
is planned to organize a course called Cinema Journalists Without
Borders. The organizers of the festival again face difficulties
because of the lack of cinema houses and halls like in the previous
years.

`We are limited in terms of premises, the halls are few, we are even
trying not to increase the number of the films. If it increases
independent of us, we appear in a difficult situation. It is also
natural, no spectator can watch 150 films in 7 days. Therefore, we are
trying to organize everything so that anyone can find something
corresponding to his/her taste and preferences,’ the Festival Program
Director Mikayel Stamboltsyan said.

http://www.yerkirmedia.am/?act=news&lan=en&id=7863

Human Rights Lawyer Geoffrey Robertson Speaks at AUA

Human Rights Lawyer Geoffrey Robertson Speaks at AUA

Posted by Contributor

15, 2012

By Laura Boghosian

YEREVAN – In a wide-ranging lecture at the American University of
Armenia (AUA), international human rights lawyer Geoffrey Robertson QC
accused Turkey’s Minister for European Union Affairs of lying,
endorsed Armenian calls for reparations and restitution, and declared
that the Armenian Genocide is not a subject for historians, but a
matter for legal judgment.

Robertson, whose specialties include constitutional, international, human
rights, civil liberties, and media law, is founder and head of Doughty
Street Chambers, a leading human rights law practice in London. Robertson
also served as a judge and president of the United Nations Special Court
for war crimes in Sierra Leone. In 2008, the Secretary General appointed
him as Distinguished Jurist on the United Nations Internal Justice Council.

Invited to Armenia by AUA, Robertson spoke April 23 on `Why Armenian
Genocide Deniers Are Wrong.’ A panel discussion, moderated by the dean of
AUA’s law department, Thomas Samuelian, followed his address. Panelists
were Robertson; Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Director Dr. Hayk
Demoyan; and Dr. Yeghishe Kirakosyan, a founding member of the
Yerevan-based International and Comparative Law Center.

`Thinking about Thinking’

The event, entitled `A Legal Lens on Genocide,’ was the third in the
`Thinking about Thinking’ lecture series co-sponsored by AUA and the Luys
Foundation.

In his opening remarks, AUA President Bruce Boghosian explained that the
purpose of `Thinking about Thinking’ is to propose new ways of thinking
about various topics, even the Armenian Genocide.

Discussion about the genocide is moving away from appeals to morality and
toward the realm of law, he said, with lawsuits in recent years focusing on
insurance
claimsand
the return of property such as churches and land.

Boghosian stated that as genocide deniers persist in their arguments
against objective reality, Armenians must study their evolving tactics,
which he compared to the methods used by those who deny climate change or
evolution.

`Another way in which discourse about the Armenian Genocide is changing,’
said Boghosian, `is the movement away from regarding it as an isolated
historical event, and toward understanding it as a historical process.’

Boghosian observed that the Armenian Genocide `began many years before
1915, intensifying with the massacres, economic deprivations and
depopulation strategies of the 19th century.’ And since genocide scholars
characterize denial as the eighth and final stage of genocide, `it is
ongoing,’ since Turkey continues to deny the genocide.

The Armenian Genocide, therefore, `has the dubious distinction of being one
of the longest ongoing genocidal processes in human history,’ said
Boghosian. `The Armenian Genocide is therefore not an event, but a
process – a process fueled, as genocides are, by racial hatred and designed
to rid the historical Armenian homeland of Armenians.’

This genocidal policy continues to the present, he charged, with the
Turkish blockade of Armenia’s borders `in an attempt to further strangle it
and induce emigration.’

`We are no longer simply asking for genocide recognition,’ he concluded.
`We’re demanding that the genocide stop.’

Turkish minister’s lies

Robertson began his talk by sharing an indirect connection to the Armenian
Genocide. An Australian by birth, Robertson’s great uncle William was one
of the thousands of Australians killed at the battle of Gallipoli.

`He had no idea that that landing would be used as an excuse, as a trigger,
for the roundup of Armenian teachers and lawyers, poets, and intellectuals
in Constantinople to begin a murderous operation so much more heinous than
the crimes committed in ordinary warfare,’ he said.

`Genocide is different,’ Robertson stated, and it `cannot and should
not be
forgiven unless and until the nation that is responsible for it
acknowledges that responsibility for the worst of all crimes and makes
amends, as Germany has by now made amends for the Holocaust.’

Unlike the judgment at Nuremberg, `We have had no judgment on the Armenian
Genocide, and perhaps it is time that we did judge it, because the nation
responsible for it can not bring itself to own up, cannot recognize that
what it did to the Armenian community in 1915 was not just mass murder, not
just a crime against humanity, but was motivated by a desire to extinguish
a race.’

Rather than acknowledging the Armenian Genocide, Robertson reported that
just the week before, Turkish Minister for European Union Affairs Egemen
Bagis told `a shocking lie,’ when he claimed that Turkish officials were
acquitted of massacring Armenians by a British judge in Malta.

`This is a lie, a pack of lies that must be unpacked.’ There was `no
difficulty at all in proving their guilt,’ Robertson said, but `as
international law then stood in 1919, a government and its officials could
not be prosecuted for ordering the deaths and deportations that killed at
least a million Armenians=85 They were not acquitted, they just couldn’t
be
tried.’ The Turkish prisoners were eventually exchanged for British
hostages captured by Kemal Ataturk’s nationalist forces.

It was not until the 1945 Nuremberg trials and the United Nations Genocide
Convention of 1948 that a legal framework emerged for prosecuting
government officials accused of slaughtering their own people, Robertson
explained.

`The very idea that the Armenian massacres didn’t amount to genocide would
have amazed Raphael Lemkin, the architect of the Genocide Convention,’ said
Robertson. In fact, it was because no one was punished for these massacres
that Lemkin, who later coined the word `genocide,’ began advocating for
such a law.

`He studied the Malta proceedings and he realized that the law needed a new
crime to cover the mass murdering of their own people by military and
political officials,’ said Robertson. `In his crusade for the crime of
genocide from 1933 onward, it was always the Armenians that he used as the
example for why we needed a law.’

`There is no doubt among lawyers today that the Genocide Convention was
written on the backs and through the blood of those million or so Armenians
who died,’ he added.

The Armenian Genocide

In 2008, Robertson was asked by the London-based Armenian Centre to
determine whether the Turkish deportations and massacres of Armenians
beginning in 1915 constituted genocide under the standards of international
law. The United Kingdom, like the United States, refuses to officially
recognize the Armenian Genocide.

`I came to the conclusion that, beyond any shadow of doubt, the events of
1915 would be characterized as genocide today,’ he said. `The evidence
was
overwhelming.’

Unless it acknowledges the Armenian Genocide, Robertson declared, `Turkey
must not, and I hope will not, be allowed to join the European Union.’

Robertson then described how genocide law is evolving. `Genocide courts
have been developing international criminal law in the last 10 years=85we
have been refining, defining, and developing the law of genocide in ways
that bear directly on the issue of whether you can characterize the events
of 1915 as genocide.’

Specifically, rulings interpreting the Genocide Convention by the
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) are relevant to the
Armenian deportations, particularly the convention’s Article 2-c that
defines genocide as `deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of
life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in
part.’

`The other issue that we’ve dealt with in The Hague,’ said Robertson, `is
the question of what amounts to genocidal intent.’

Genocide deniers and `proof’

Robertson skewered genocide-denying historians Justin McCarthy, Bernard
Lewis, and Heath Lowry for their argument that there are no documents that
`prove’ the Armenian Genocide.

`They have this concept of genocide being proved, of genocidal intent,
being proved by an order that is written down. `Where is the order for
destroying the Armenians?’ they say. There is no order written down by
Hitler for destroying the Jews. There was no order written down by the
Hutus for destroying the Tutsis. This is ludicrous. This is a ridiculous
idea that is at the heart of a lot of the arguments of the genocide
deniers. The courts in The Hague over the last few years have constantly
ruled that the intention necessary for genocide can be inferred from other
factors,’ he stated.

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
actually held that the existence of a plan or policy is not a legal
ingredient of the crime, according to Robertson.

To illustrate how historians are ignorant of the legalities of genocide,
Robertson read from the writings of Justin McCarthy, who admits that half a
million Armenians died, but argues that Armenians died from sickness,
exhaustion, and attacks of marauders on `rich convoys.’

`ICTY jurisprudence makes it absolutely crystal clear that any government
that orders deportations knowing that people will die from sickness,
exhaustion following long marches, etc., will be guilty of genocide,’ said
Robertson. `McCarthy just doesn’t understand the laws of genocide.’

`But notice the language=85the rich convoys=85 What is he trying to say?
That
these people died because they were rich and they had all their rich
objects on their backs? It’s very distasteful, disgusting, I think. And it
does show the extent to which Professor McCarthy has become a propagandist,
and a vey unattractive one=85 As far as McCarthy is concerned, I think we can
see him as a rather perverse propagandist for the Turkish government.’

Governments like that of Turkey, the United States, and the United Kingdom
that call for the matter to be decided by historians are wrong, stated
Robertson. `They say this is a matter for historians. It’s not.
Historians=85are utterly ignorant of what genocide is in law. It’s not a
matter for historians. Genocide is a matter for judges. But we hear time
and again, this is a matter for historians.’

The Armenian government is right to reject calls for the genocide to be
studied by a panel of historians as described in the protocols, said
Robertson.

Genocide equivocating governments

Robertson called governments like that of the United States and the United
Kingdom that do not recognize the Armenian Genocide for political and
commercial reasons `genocide equivocators.’ He then described how the
`genocide equivocating’ British government claimed that the evidence was
not `sufficiently unequivocal’ to characterize the Armenian massacres as
genocide.

Secret government documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act
during his legal examination of the Armenian Genocide revealed the true
reasons for the UK’s position: Memoranda clearly stated that political and
commercial relations with Turkey were the reasons for the government’s
admittedly unethical policy, given Turkey’s `neuralgic’ reaction to charges
of genocide.

`So there it is, in black and white. We’re lying, we’re being unethical,’
admonished Robertson, `but we need Turkey [which] is crazed, insane, when
it comes to allegations of genocide.’

In his 2009 report, Robertson accused the Foreign Office of misleading
parliament on the Armenian Genocide.

Reparations and restitution

Robertson next discussed legal tools, such as the U.S. Alien Tort Claims
Act or the European Court of Human Rights, which Armenians might employ for
reparations and restitution of property taken by the Turkish government
during the genocide.

`The laws that confiscated and appropriated Armenian property, they’re
still available today for actions for restitution,’ he said.

`The issue of the Armenian Genocide can no longer be left to history. It
certainly can’t be left to historians,’ he concluded. `It is a matter for
judgment, applying the developed law of genocide to the evidence. And in my
judgment, there can only be one outcome.’

Panel discussion

Hayk Demoyan opened the discussion by pointing out that Turkey began its
genocide denial as early as 1915-16, when it published books with photos of
Armenian victims re-captioned as Muslim dead.

Turkey, he said, is preparing for 2015 with new skills and more
sophisticated approaches to deny `the historical and legal facts of the
Armenian Genocide,’ such as hiring and paying new academics, establishing
new chairs, and restoring Armenian monuments as part of the general plan.

Yet despite the favorable international publicity reaped by Turkey with the
restoration of Akhtamar, other Armenian cultural monuments are being
systematically destroyed.

Demoyan said that metal detectors are being openly sold in Turkey with
written instructions, in Turkish, that say if you want to find treasure,
you should search for it in the foundations of Armenian churches or on the
land of former Armenian cemeteries. In Ani last year, an Armenian queen’s
burial site was desecrated, khatchkars were broken to pieces, and
tombstones crushed, he said, yet `no one is punished.’

Demoyan charged that current Turkish officials continue the genocide by not
punishing, for example, the policemen who posed with Hrant Dink’s assassin
and by blockading the border. When a country imposes a military blockade,
he said, the next step is a declaration of war.

`Armenian statehood for Turkish leadership always was anathema,’ said
Demoyan, adding that he believes the border is closed not due to
Azerbaijan, but rather by a fear of the existence of Armenians on
ethnically cleansed Armenian territories.

Later, in the question and answer period, Demoyan said Armenians must be
ready if Turkey decides to recognize the genocide.

If Turkey accepts the historical facts, it would have to accept the `legal
responsibilities for crimes committed,’ said Demoyan. The challenge will
be
for Armenians to agree on what we want, he said.

`We cannot speak with different languages. We cannot claim different
things. We have to claim a common thing,’ he concluded. `Genocide is a
crime and there are still consequences of this crime. And these
consequences must be eliminated=85 We have to be ready=85with a common agenda.
State and diaspora structures must [work] together in order to develop one
language, one claim.’

Yeghishe Kirakosyan began his remarks by examining recent scholarship on
the concepts of state responsibility and state succession as determined by
the Permanent Court of International Justice and other international
tribunals.

Modern Turkey could be held responsible, he said, for violations that took
place at the beginning of the 20th century and could be brought to justice.
Kirakosyan explored the various avenues open to Armenians to pursue claims
against Turkey, such as state claims commissions and international courts.

Moderator Tom Samuelian observed that many countries have benefitted from
the Armenian Genocide and its denial, and asked, `Why not make them all
pay?’

The discussion was concluded by Geoffrey Robertson, who declared, `There
has to be restitution=85 We all want reconciliation=85 But you cannot have
reconciliation without truth and acknowledgment of truth.’

Visit to Genocide Memorial

Earlier in the day, Boghosian and AUA’s leadership team escorted Robertson
to the Armenian Genocide Memorial, where he laid flowers. In a televised
joint press conference, Demoyan presented Robertson with the Fridtjof
Nansen Medal for his legal examination of the Armenian Genocide. The medal
is named in honor of Nansen, a Norwegian humanitarian and Nobel Peace Prize
laureate who aided Armenian refugees following the genocide. Also receiving
a medal was Jussi Bjorn, who recently discovered memoirs describing the
1915 Moush massacres handwritten by his grandmother, Norwegian missionary
Bodil Katharine Bjorn.

Geoffrey Robertson

One of Robertson’s many books is Crimes Against Humanity: The Struggle for
Global Justice, which analyzes the development and application of
international human rights law and opens with Hitler’s quote dismissing the
Armenian Genocide as a forgotten event.

Robertson has argued cases before the European Court of Human Rights, the
Privy Council, and the House of Lords, and has appeared in cases in
countries around the world, including Hong Kong, Malawi, Fiji, Singapore,
New Zealand, and Australia. He has led numerous human rights missions to
countries such as South Africa and Vietnam on behalf of Amnesty
International and is visiting professor in human rights at Queen Mary
College, University of London.

Over 20 years ago, Robertson successfully defended author Salman Rushdie
when British Muslims brought a suit alleging blasphemous libel following
the publication of The Satanic Verses. Robertson also hid Rushie in his
home after Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini called for Rushie’s assassination.

Today, Robertson, who holds dual British and Australian citizenship,
represents fellow Australian Julian Assange, the editor-in-chief of
Wikileaks.

Additional information

To view the entire lecture and panel discussion, visit
To read Robertson’s report `Was There An Armenian Genocide?’ visit

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/06/15/human-rights-lawyer-geoffrey-robertson-speaks-at-aua/June
http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/06/15/human-rights-lawyer-geoffrey-robertson-speaks-at-aua/#
http://webcam.aua.am.
http://www.doughtystreet.co.uk/files/Armenian%20genocide1.pdf.

Kyrgyzstan, China to deepen military cooperation

Kyrgyzstan, China to deepen military cooperation

June 15, 2012 – 13:51 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Kyrgyzstan is looking to deepen its military
cooperation with China, Kyrgyz President said on Friday, June 15.

“We have received evidence that China is a country which earnestly
wants to see the stability and economic development of Kyrgyzstan,”
President Almazbek Atambayev said following talks in Bishkek with Ma
Xiaotian, deputy chief of the general staff of China’s People’s
Liberation Army.

“We are determined to develop our relations in all spheres. I hope the
Chinese People’s Liberation Army will expand cooperation with our
army.”

Emphasis will be laid on fighting “terrorism, extremism and
separatism,” Atambayev said, RIA Novosti reported.

Orinats Yerkir distributed invalid plastic cards as electoral bribe

Orinats Yerkir distributed invalid plastic cards as electoral bribe – paper

June 15, 2012 – 13:56 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – According to Haykakan Zhamanak daily, during
parliamentary elections, Orinats Yerkir party distributed plastic
cards, which turned out to be unusable, among voters.

`The plastic cards were supposed to provide a 20% discount at Yervan
medical center. Factually, those who accepted the cards, voted for
Orinats Yerkir. The voters were refused treatment at medical center
which denied signing any contract for service provision,’ the daily
said.

`In a conversation with Haykakan Zhamanak reporter, Orinats Yerkir
spokesman Harutyun Amiryan denied any knowledge of either cards or
Hayasa Foundation, although the charity foundation name was indicated
on plastic cards, and the foundation HQ are located in the same
building with Orinats Yerkir,’ the daily said.

OSCE condemns Azerbaijani authorities

OSCE condemns Azerbaijani authorities

18:33, 15 June, 2012

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS: The OSCE Representative on Freedom of
the Media, Dunja MijatoviÄ?, has expressed her concern over the
persistent intimidation of journalists and attempts to restrict access
to information in Azerbaijan, Armenpress reports citing the OSCE
official website.`Only a week ago, I welcomed the release of social
media activist Bakhtiyar Hajiyev, expressing hope that more good news
would come from Azerbaijan,’ she said. `Unfortunately, today I have to
bring recent negative developments to the attention of the
authorities,’ she said. In a letter sent to Azerbaijan’s Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov yesterday, MijatoviÄ? raised the case of
photo blogger Mehman Hüseynov, who faces up to five years in prison on
hooliganism charges over an argument he reportedly had with law
enforcement officers while covering a demonstration in Baku. In the
letter, MijatoviÄ? also raised the case of Anar Bayramli, a journalist
working for Iranian media outlets, who was sentenced on 11 June to two
years in prison on drug possession charges which he denies. `I hope
that the charges against Hüseynov will be dropped, and that all
imprisoned journalists will be released soon, including Zaur Quliyev
and Vüqar Qonaqov of the Khayal TV channel,’ MjatoviÄ? said.
`Imprisoning reporters is never the right answer to critical
journalism. The media should be free to play their essential role in
society,’ she stressed. Mijatovic also expressed concern over the
adoption by the parliament (Milli Mejlis) on 12 June of amendments to
the laws `On Receiving Information,’ `On the State Registry and the
State Registration of Juridical Persons,’ and `On Commercial Secrets’.
The changes will make certain types of information no longer
accessible to the public. `These amendments could have a very
negative, long-term impact on media freedom and access to information.
This is all the more regrettable given that Azerbaijan’s legislation
on access to information used to be one of the best in the OSCE
region,’ MijatoviÄ? said. `I call on the authorities to do their utmost
to reverse these recent negative developments. My Office stands ready
to assist Azerbaijan in better fulfilling its media freedom
commitments,’ MijatoviÄ? stressed.