Karabakh PM Receives Diaspora-Armenian Organization Representatives

KARABAKH PM RECEIVES DIASPORA-ARMENIAN ORGANIZATION REPRESENTATIVES

June 18, 2014 | 17:14

Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), or Artsakh, Prime Minister Ara
Harutyunyan on Wednesday met with representatives from the Armenian
Interprofessional International Association.

Harutyunyan expressed his willingness to assist in the implementation
of the organization’s projects in NKR, and underscored the Armenian
diaspora’s involvement in the development of Artsakh.

In turn, the Association representatives presented their activities
in Armenia, and primarily in education and information technology (IT).

In their words, for the most part, their projects in NKR will aim at
training high-tech professionals and improving the schoolchildren’s
IT skills.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

AAA: Assembly Interns Raise Armenian American Issues at the 5th Annu

Armenian Assembly of America News
1334 G Street, N.W., Suite 200
Washington, D.C. 20005
Tel: (202) 393-3434
Fax: (202) 638-4904
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

Armenian Assembly Interns Raise Armenian American Issues at the 5th Annual
Middle East Institute Conference on Turkey

By Mariam Pashayan, Crystal Densmore and Lena Krikorian

June 19, 2014

The following questions were raised by Armenian Assembly of America summer
interns Mariam Pashayan and Crystal Densmore at the Middle East Institute’s
5th annual conference on Turkey, held a the National Press Club in
Washington, D.C. on Monday, June 16, 2014:

· Mariam Pashayan to Dr. Saban Kardas, Associate Professor of
International Relations at TOBB University of Economics and Technology
(Ankara, Turkey): `Regarding regional and economic stability, what
is the
status of Turkey’s land blockade on Armenia? When do you think it will be
lifted and please talk about the potential of trade with Armenia for
Turkey’s rural southeastern region?’

o Dr. Kardas: Armenia `did a few things’ in order to
`cause the
blockade to take place,’ therefore `it will not be lifted.’

· Mariam Pashayan to Amanda Sloat, Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Southern Europe and East Mediterranean Affairs, United States Department of
State: `If the U.S. is for Armenia and Turkey to reconcile, then why did
the Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) tell the President of Turkey
Abdullah Gul that Congress has no intention of passing the Armenian
Genocide resolution?

o Sloat: `What John Boehner mentioned to the Turkish President I can
not speak for Congress.’

· Crystal Densmore to Ambassador Rob Ford, former U.S. Ambassador to
Syria: `The Assad government just retook Latakia province which includes
the Armenian town of Kessab, what has been described as the last Armenian
town in the Middle East, and Aleppo continues to be ground zero, with
Armenians again caught in the cross hairs. It is common knowledge that
Turkey assisted the terrorists to enter Latakia and take Kessab, only to
designate the group as a terrorist organization months later. What lessons
have the Turkish government learned in their support of extremist groups
and can we expect them to learn from this?’

o Ambassador Ford: The Turkish government has taken refugees from
Syria and `there were many Armenian refugees in Kessab, but they were not
limited to Armenians.’

Summary:

Although there are differences of opinion on the topic of Turkey and
Armenia relations, it is clear that Turkey and Azerbaijan should lift their
unlawful blockade of Armenia, which has caused regional instability and
impeded economic integration for the last 20 years. Turkey’s blockade on
Armenia, as well as the currently stalled reconciliation efforts between
Turkey and Armenia, are due to Turkey’s inability to stay true to its
commitment as envisioned in the 2009 Protocols signed by the foreign
ministers of Armenia and Turkey. Clearly, the U.S. supports reconciliation
between Armenia and Turkey. However, it was disappointing to hear a former
U.S. Ambassador downplay the plight of Christian Armenians in Syria. It is
well known that Islamic extremists invaded from Turkey the town of Kessab,
which was predominantly Armenian populated. U.S. government officials,
current and former, should not shy away from recognizing that fact.

Available online at:

http://armenianassembly.tumblr.com/
http://bit.ly/1nlIvTi

Armenian Transport And Communications Minister Visits The Dariali Go

ARMENIAN TRANSPORT AND COMMUNICATIONS MINISTER VISITS THE DARIALI GORGE

The Messenger, Georgia
June 17 2014

Tuesday, June 17 Gagik Beglaryan, Minister of Transport and
Communications of Armenia visited the Dariali gorge. Gagik Beglaryan
was hosted by Mikheil Janelidze, Deputy Minister of Economy and
Sustainable Development of Georgia and Elguja Khokrishvili, Minister of
Regional Development and Infrastructure of Georgia. After the visited
the works in the Dariali gorge, the Armenian delegation together with
20 Armenian journalists visited the Larsi border checkpoint. According
to the Minister of Transport and Communications of Armenia, it is very
important that the Larsi border checkpoint is open and the transport
road is open in the two directions.

“The opening of this road is very important for us, because this is the
only connecting way of Armenia to Russia. We have seen how intensively
the cars are moving both from Georgian and Russia. Due to the landslide
about 200 cars suspended in Armenia. We welcome the opening the Larsi
border checkpoint after the intensive work” – Gagik Beglaryan said.

According to Mikheil Janelidze, Deputy Minister of Economy and
Sustainable Development of Georgia, the Armenian Minister visited
the Dariali gorge and got familiar with the work being conducted for
a month. According to the Deputy Minister, the road is open.

“The Larsi border checkpoint was opened today. The transit is open
both for trucks from Georgian, as well as for trucks from Russia.

There are no lines at the checkpoint. Cars, as well as truck can
cross the border without any obstacles” – Mikheil Janelidze said.

According to the Minister of Regional Development and Infrastructure,
24 hour reconstructing work is being conducted in the Dariali gorge.

The works for the main road will start in the near future.

(economy.ge)

Meet The Man Who Dresses The Politicians

MEET THE MAN WHO DRESSES THE POLITICIANS

Sacramento Business Journal
June 17 2014

Ed Goldman

John Boghossian is a tailor, a clothier and a walking United Nations.

He speaks Arabic, Turkish, French, Armenian and English (though with
the latter, he leaves out the occasional conjunction, preposition
or modifier). On top of this, Boghossian — the founder and owner of
Vanini European Clothier, the downtown men’s store that’s specialized
in Italian-made attire since opening in 1997 — was born in Lebanon.

“People think I’m Italian when they come in store,” he says, despite
his Armenian surname and thick accent. Boghossian knows he has only
himself to blame. When he opened Vanini on L Street, directly across
from the State Capitol, he knew he’d be selling Italian clothes and
wanted the store to have an Italian name. “It was a little joke,”
he says. “There is a big lake in eastern Turkey, Lake Van. I add the
‘ini’ (eeny) and what do you know, we’re Italian!”

We’re sitting in comfortable chairs next to the wall of windows that
affords Boghossian and his clients a lively view of the big dome
and the bustling by of lobbyists, attorneys, legislative staffers
and tourists. Boghossian shows me a tiny, crinkly old photo of his
late father, who also was a tailor and also had a store next to a
capitol — in this instance, the parliament building in Beirut. “We
both dress the politicians,” he says in his low, warm voice.

One of the more notable politicians that Boghossian helped keep in
style for many years was former Assemblyman Willie Brown, who famously
went on to become the equally dapper mayor of San Francisco — where,
Boghossian shrugs, Brown now buys his clothes (Brown is an acknowledged
Wilkes Bashford guy). Boghossian recalls meeting the take-no-prisoners
Brown one morning years ago when he came into the store, accompanied
by his bodyguard.

“He was wearing nice suit but I tell him, ‘Take that tie off your
neck. It doesn’t go with your suit.’ He says to me, ‘Do you know who
I am? I’m the speaker of the Assembly.’ And I say, ‘Well, do you know
who I am? I’m the king of this shop. And I say it’s a bad tie.’

“So Willie Brown says, ‘Already I like you, you son-of-a-bitch!'”
Boghossian says that Brown used to drop by “when there was tension
in the Capitol — so some years he came by a lot. He’d walk through
the door and say, ‘John! Where’s my scotch?'”

Tomorrow, Boghossian recalls his years working in Beverly Hills as a
tailor — and sometimes a manners consultant — to the stars. Please
join us. Business attire is suggested.

http://www.bizjournals.com/sacramento/blog/ed-goldman/2014/06/ed-goldman-meet-the-man-who-dresses-the.html

NATO Representatives Tired Of Azeri Provocative Behavior At Alliance

NATO REPRESENTATIVES TIRED OF AZERI PROVOCATIVE BEHAVIOR AT ALLIANCE PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY SEMINAR

19:11, 17 June, 2014

YEREVAN, JUNE 17, ARMENPRESS. The second-day discussions of the seminar
of NATO Parliamentary Assembly ongoing in Baku again took place in
hot environment. According to the traditional provocative style,
the Azerbaijani side again expressed accusations. The delegation of
Armenia gave corresponding response to them. In NATO Parliamentary
Assembly the member of NA delegation of the Republic of Armenia
Tevan Poghosyan introduced Armenpress the details of “Rose Route”
seminar ongoing in Azerbaijan.

“The regional issues were in the focus of discussion today-the issue of
Ukraine, issues related to Georgia’s energy security, military reforms
of Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijani side again expressed accusations to
which the Armenian side responded expressing ourviews on all the
accusations,” Tevan Poghosyan noted in a conversation with Armenpress.

Comparing Genocide: Jews And Ottoman Greeks

COMPARING GENOCIDE: JEWS AND OTTOMAN GREEKS

Greek men in Smyrna guarded by Turkish troops for deportation to the
interior (September 1922)

We are all familiar with the mass extermination of Jews during the
Second World War. But are we familiar with the extermination of 1.5
million Greeks during the period 1914-1923 in the Ottoman Empire
(today’s Turkey)? How can one genocide be so well known, yet another
go virtually unnoticed? Genocide has a lasting effect, not only on
survivors, but also on their families. It is for that reason that
genocide should not go unpunished. Unfortunately for the genocide
of the Ottoman Greeks, it has received little recognition, let alone
coverage in media and inclusion in school curricula.

Certain cultures have done everything in their power to bring to light
the genocide of their people regardless of how long ago it occurred.

Take for example the Armenians who were co-victims in genocide along
with the Greeks in the Ottoman Empire during the period 1914-1923. The
Armenian Genocide is synonymous to many people. A plethora of books
are available in English on the Armenian Genocide and subsequently
it has been recognized by over 20 countries worldwide.

In Australia, we are all familiar with the legend of the ANZACS through
the education system. We’ve heard about those brave Aussie soldiers
who fought courageously alongside the New Zealanders on the Allies’
side against the Germans and Turks at Gallipoli. The name Gallipoli by
the way comes from the Greek ‘Î~ZαΔΔίÏ~@οΔη’ which means ‘good
city’. It should be no surprise then, that Gallipoli was inhabited
by some 30,000 Greeks prior to the ANZACS landing in April 19151. But
when the ANZACS landed, those Greeks had already been eliminated. They
were given a few hours notice to vacate their homes.

They were placed in steamers and then sent to the interior, to Turkish
villages where they were given the choice of Islam or death. Their
men were conscripted into the notorious Labour Battalions where most
perished due to a lack of food and water. The Greek Genocide had
already begun.

But why is the Greek Genocide so unknown to most? Let’s for one moment
compare it to the Jewish Holocaust, a genocide most are familiar with.

In doing so, we will be able to see that the genocide of the Greeks
of the former Ottoman Empire, had many similarities with the Jewish
Holocaust which was to happen some 20 years later (1933-1945).

There are at least 14 similarities between the two genocides in
question. It should be noted that in 2007, the Greek Genocide was
formally recognised by one of the foremost groups of genocide scholars,
the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS).

It is however unrecognised by nations worldwide, including Australia.

The following are the most obvious similarities between the Jewish
Holocaust and the Greek Genocide:

Timing: As mentioned above, both genocides occurred around the time
of a world war. This allowed the mass slaughter to happen while the
world’s attention was focussed on the war itself. Both genocides
were perpetrated over several years; the Holocaust over 12 years
(1933-1945) and the Greek Genocide over 9 years (1914-1923).

Death Toll: The total number of Jews exterminated was 6 million,
out of a total of 9 million, which accounted to 66% of the Jewish
population in Europe at the time. If we look at the genocide of the
Greeks, 1.5 million were exterminated out of a total of 2.7 million
who were living in the Ottoman Empire, or 55%2. While four times the
number of Jews were exterminated, the percentage is comparable.

Co-victims: Many people believe that the Holocaust involved just the
mass slaughter of Jews. In fact the Nazis did not only exterminate
the Jews. They also exterminated the disabled, homosexuals, Romani
(Gypsies), Jehovah’s witnesses and others. In the case of the genocide
in the Ottoman Empire, it wasn’t only Greeks who were massacred.

Armenians, Assyrians, Yezidis, Jews and other groups were victims too.

Perpetrators/regimes: In the case of the Holocaust, the Nazis (or the
Nationalist Socialist German Worker’s Party) came to power in 1933
and almost immediately set about in persecuting Jews and others. The
Committee of Union and Progress (C.U.P), otherwise known as the Young
Turks came to power in 1913 and immediately began implementing their
plan to eradicate Greeks and other minorities.

Leading figures: The leader of the Nazi party was Adolf Hitler. He was
to become one of the most ruthless dictators in the world. If we put
aside the triumvirate of the Young Turks (Enver, Djemal and Talaat)
who were in control of the C.U.P from 1913-1918, the man who rose to
power in what is referred to as the Kemalist phase of the genocide,
was Mustafa Kemal. He emerged in May 1919 to complete the genocide
his predecessors – the triumvirate – had initiated. The difference
being, that Mustafa Kemal was to remain a leader/dictator well after
the genocide was complete, hence his title ‘Ataturk’ (meaning father
of the Turks).

Paramilitary (Death squads): The main three paramilitary groups used
by the Nazi’s to complete the Holocaust were the SA (Storm Troups),
the SS (Elite Echelon) and the Gestapo (Secret police). The SS,
also referred to as Hitler’s ‘Death’s Head Unit’ was responsible
for the mass murder of the Jews. The paramilitary unit which was
responsible for the genocide of Greeks was the TeÅ~_kilât-ı Mahsusa
otherwise known as the Special Organisation (S.O). This organisation
was made up of current and former convicts, religious order groups,
volunteer groups (Lazes and Kurds etc) as well as armed irregulars
(cetecelier/brigands)3.

Ideology: The ideology in both genocides was based on myth. The Nazis
were under the illusion that the Jews wanted to control the world,
hence they had to be exterminated (The Final Solution). The Nazis also
believed that the Aryans, a Nordic race who exhibited blonde hair and
blue eyes, were the first to live in Germany and therefore all others
were inferior. With the outbreak of WW1, the Turks believed that the
Greeks living within the empire were disloyal or were supplying the
enemy with goods. As a result, their ideology was to turn to one of
‘Turkey for the Turks’ and the eradication of all its ‘non-Turkish’
citizens had to be carried out.

Boycotting: The Nazis seized power in January of 1933. Within
two months they carried out the first nationwide boycott of Jewish
businesses. Storm Troops were to stand outside Jewish businesses and
offices of professionals, and paint the Star of David across their
doorways with signs saying ‘Don’t buy from the Jews’. Comparably
the start of the Greek Genocide occurred on April 6, 1914 when the
Turks boycotted Greek businesses in Eastern Thrace and later along
the western shoreline of Asia Minor and the Black Sea. In both cases,
boycotting was the first sign the genocides had begun.

Hate speech: Hitler outwardly spoke of his hatred of Jews. He referred
to them as a plague, an epidemic, germ carriers, harmful bacillus,
a cancer and as maggots. With the outbreak of WW1 in the Ottoman
Empire, the Sultan issued a declaration of war effectively a Jihad
against the people of the countries who it was fighting against (ie
everyone except Germans and Austrians). A secret paper which was being
distributed, wrote: “The world of Islam sinks down and goes backward
and the Christian world goes forward and is more and more exalted.

Take them and kill them whenever you find them. He who kills even one
unbeliever of those who rule over us, whether he does it secretly or
openly, shall be rewarded by God.”4

Disarming: Hitler was able to disarm the Jews by enacting the 1938
German Weapons Act which prohibited Jews from possessing any dangerous
weapon including guns. Jews were also forbidden from the manufacture
or dealing of firearms and ammunition. In comparison, at the outbreak
of WW1, the C.U.P was able to disarm the Greeks by forcing them into
Labour Battallions, or Amele Taburu as they were called. The death
toll in these battalions was as high as 90%, as men were sent into
the interior of Asia Minor and made to do back breaking work with
little food or water.5

Deportations/Death marches: The majority of deportations of Jews
occurred towards the end of WW2 when the allies were closing in
on the Nazis, and Jews were deported away from the extermination
camps and into the interior by train and by foot. The major method
of extermination of the Jews was by the use of gas chambers, so
deportation was not relied upon to exterminate them en masse. On the
other hand, the Turks deported Greeks from virtually every region
of Asia Minor and Eastern Thrace, usually to the interior, by foot,
without food and water, and in many cases during the peak of winter,
with intent to bring about their physical destruction without the
need for bullets or other means.

Jews in Brody, Ukraine detained by German Nazis and awaiting
deportation (circa 1942-1943).

Concentration Camps and Ghettos: While Jews had been living in ghettos
for centuries in Europe, the Nazis enforced a ghetto system for the
Jews in order to isolate them for the purpose of persecution. When the
‘Final Solution’ was to take effect in 1942, these ghettos were closed
and Jews were sent to concentration, labour and extermination camps.

In the Ottoman Empire, the Greeks were deported usually to
destinations in the interior. On the 21st of April 1916, a New York
Times article with the headline ‘Turks Deporting Greeks’ wrote:
“Civilian concentration camp victims attacked and despoiled. The
Turkish authorities on the Black Sea regions are acting toward the
Greeks in the same fashion as the Germans have done with regard to the
civil populations of the occupied portions of north-eastern France.”

So not only were Greeks sent to concentration camps and attacked
and despoiled along the way, a German involvement also existed. It’s
interesting to note that Germany who allied itself with the Ottoman
Empire was in control of the Ottoman military and was therefore
complicit in the Greek Genocide6.

Extermination methods: The major method of exterminating Jews was via
lethal gas in extermination camps. In these camps, several hundred
Jews at a time were locked into chambers and the lethal gas Zyclon-B
was released. Tens of thousands of Jews were exterminated each day in
this manner. While the Turks were not as advanced in their methods of
exterminating Greeks, they were nonetheless effective. As mentioned,
deportation was an effective way to exterminate the Greeks. Another
common method was locking hundreds of Greeks in churches and burning
them alive. Newspaper reports also point to lethal injections7 being
used, parboiling8, and dumping Greeks into the sea9 amongst others.

Resistance: Although the 1938 German Weapons Act prevented Jews from
owning guns, the Jews did offer some resistance during the Holocaust.

There were in fact over a hundred armed Jewish uprisings. One of the
most notable groups was the Bielski partisans who armed themselves
and spent more than two years living in the forests. They were to
save many lives. Most are familiar with the resistance of the Greeks
of the Pontus. By arming themselves, these Greeks were able to defend
themselves and in the process save thousands of Pontic Greeks from
extermination. Many however are not so familiar with the Greeks of
Nicomedia (today Izmit) who likewise offered armed resistance.

By comparing all the above, we can see that the Greek Genocide has
many parallels with that of the Jewish Holocaust, yet it remains
largely forgotten and unrecognised. The German state has officially
recognised the Holocaust and has to date paid some $90 billion in
compensation to the victims. On the other hand, Turkey has continued
to deny that the events of 1914-1923 were an act of genocide, instead
labelling them as the result of civil war.

The crime of genocide has no place in society. Genocides should be
punished regardless of when they occurred, in order to bring closure
and justice to all survivors and their families, and to also act as a
deterrent for those considering committing genocide in the future. The
Greek Genocide is one such genocide which awaits recognition.

References

1. John Williams, The ethnic cleansing of Greeks from Gallipoli,
April 1915. Quadrant online.

2. Haris Tsirkinidis, The concise history of the Greeks of Anatolia.

Kyriakides publishers, 2009. p199.

3. Racho Donef, The role of TeÅ~_kilât-ı Mahsusa. The Genocide of
the Ottoman Greeks. Caratzas, 2011. p187.

4. Henry Morgenthau Snr, Ambassador Morgenthau’s story. Cosimo Inc,
2010. p114.

5. Efthimios N. Couzinos, Twenty-three years in Asia Minor.

Publishers’ Graphics, LLC, IL. p54.

6. First hun held for atrocities, The evening independent, Mar 15,
1919.

7. Turkish atrocities, Western Mail, W.A. October 26, 1922.

8. Turks parboiled 250,000. New York Times, July 31, 1919.

9. 1,000,000 Greeks are put to death by Turco-Teuton forces in Asia
Minor. The Washington Post, January 1, 1918.

http://greek-genocide.net/index.php/overview/documentation/201-comparing-genocide-jews-and-ottoman-greeks

Armenia Authorities And Opposition Are Governed By Kremlin – Newspap

ARMENIA AUTHORITIES AND OPPOSITION ARE GOVERNED BY KREMLIN – NEWSPAPER

June 17, 2014 | 07:36

YEREVAN. – The Armenian authorities and the opposition are governed
from one foreign center: the Kremlin.

The “ArmenianCenter for Democracy and Security Development” NGO
Chairman Andranik Kocharyan told the aforesaid to 168 Zham daily
speaking about the solidarity between Armenia’s halls of power and
the non-ruling forces when it comes to foreign policy issues.

“And being governed from one center does not bring cooperation in
the domestic life, but rather an opportunity to conduct a more open
and public trade.

“At this point, there is a positional battle between the authorities
and ‘non-authorities’ as to the agreements with which they need
to approach the 2017/18 parliamentary and presidential elections
[in Armenia].

“These processes may lead to [the fact] that it is determined, by
the end of this year, how they will share power come 2017,” 168 Zham
quoted Kocharyan as saying.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Artsakh Startup To Participate In EuroScience Open Forum

ARTSAKH STARTUP TO PARTICIPATE IN EUROSCIENCE OPEN FORUM

June 17, 2014 | 11:53

The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), or Artsakh, likewise will be
represented, with the startup Woodpeckers brand, in the EuroScience
Open Forum which will be held from June 20 to 28 in the Danish capital
city Copenhagen.

Woodpeckers is a social and educational project where children’s
toys are made with ideas. And the proceeds from the sale of these
toys are used for social and educational programs in Artsakh.

Woodpeckers received an invitation from Denmark to participate in
the forum as an innovative educational program.

As a result, thousands of forum participants from around seventy
countries will get familiarized with wooden toys with the label:
Made in Artsakh.

Ashot Margaryan, who is the person behind this innovative project,
expressed the hope that, by way of the EuroScience Open Forum,
the NKR will present itself to the world not as a conflict zone,
but rather an established and a peaceful country where new avenues
for a new educational description are created.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Army Bravery Depicts Epic In Kassab

ARMY BRAVERY DEPICTS EPIC IN KASSAB

Jun 16, 2014

Lattakia, (SANA) Another victory is added to the record of the brave
Syrian army, having restored stability and security to Kassab and its
surrounding in Lattakia countryside, expelling Takfiri terrorists and
their dark mentality out of the mountainous bewitching coastal town.

Army units carried out several successful operations against the
armed terrorist groups in many areas, eliminating a huge number of
terrorists and destroying their weapons.

The army confiscated weapons, ammunition and vehicles that were left
behind the terrorists who escaped the strikes of the army units.

The scenes of destruction narrate the crimes committed by armed Takfiri
groups and their dark mentality that seek to undermine culture of
life and devastate the infrastructure and different life facilities.

Minas Gergirian, a 64 old year man from Kassab told journalists about
his suffering and the epic of his firmness when he stayed in a room in
his house, saying “I rejected to leave my room…I stayed here for more
than two months, eating bread crumbs only. I was waiting for the great
Syrian army to come because I believe that this day will come soon.”

R. Milhem / Ghossoun

http://sana.sy/eng/337/2014/06/16/550471.htm

Al-Nusra Terrorists Pull out of Syria’s Kassab City Seized in March

Fars News Agency, Iran
June 15 2014

Al-Nusra Terrorists Pull out of Syria’s Kassab City Seized in March

TEHRAN (FNA)- Fighters from the terrorist Al-Nusra Front and Syrian
insurgents have withdrawn from the city of Kassab on the border with
Turkey, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The majority of the fighters and rebels have left the city, the
monitoring group said Saturday, AFP reported.

As of now, the Syrian army advanced on the nearby villages.

The terrorist Al-Nusra Front and Syrian militants seized Kassab, an
Armenian town, in March.

It is a strategically important city because it is located near the
only border crossing with Turkey in Lattakia province.

http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13930325000653