Russian Armenians Send Humanitarian Aid To Flood-Ravaged City

RUSSIAN ARMENIANS SEND HUMANITARIAN AID TO FLOOD-RAVAGED CITY

news.am
July 16, 2012 | 10:35

The “Armenian Community of Nizhegorod [Oblast (Region) of Russia]”
regional organization has sent humanitarian assistance to residents of
the country’s Krasnodar Krai (federal subject), which was devastated
by floods.

A truck loaded with humanitarian aid headed from Nizhny Novgorod city
to Krymsk city on July 12.

“We wish for our modest assistance to warm the spirits of disaster
victims, so they may know that we-and the country entire-are with
them with all our hearts.

Let us remember how the entire [ex-] Soviet Union and the whole world
responded to the devastating 1988 earthquake in Armenia.

We mourn for the fatalities in the Krasnodar Krai and extend our
condolences to their relatives and friends.

We are confident that everything that is destroyed will be restored,
[and] life will go on. [We] Must remain strong,” the organization’s
respective statement reads in particular.

As Armenian News-NEWS.am informed earlier, the July 7 floods inundated
close to 5,000 homes in the Krai’s three cities-Gelendzhik, Krymsk,
and Novorossiysk-and several villages. And there were eight Armenians
among the flood fatalities.

HAAF carries out construction of potable-water network in Hadrut Cit

PRESS RELEASE
Hayastan All-Armenian Fund
Governmental Building 3, Yerevan, RA
Contact: Hasmik Grigoryan
Tel:? +(3741) 56 01 06? ext. 105
Fax: +(3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

Yerevan, July 17, 2012

Hayastan All-Armenian Fund carries out construction of potable-water network
in Artsakh’s Hadrut City

The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund’s U.S. Western Region is building a
potable-water network in Artsakh’s Hadrut City, the administrative center of
the Hadrut Region. The project is being realized through a major
contribution by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald and Patricia Turpanjian of Los Angeles,
with additional support from the government of Artsakh. The Turpanjians were
also the main sponsors of the construction of Stepanakert’s No. 11 (V.
Jhangiryan) School, completed in 2010.

“Currently the city continues to do with a water network that was built in
the 1970s,” said Edik Davtyan, deputy head of the Hadrut Regional
Administration. “The corroded pipes often give out, resulting in several
days of service interruption.”

Since the launch of the project in January 2012, almost half of a planned
33-kilometer distribution network has been built. Today, while work
continues on the network, crews are also building water-distribution and
-regulation wells. The final phase of the project will comprise the
construction of a pump station and two reservoirs. When construction is
completed, in Spring 2013, the more than 3,200 residents of Hadrut City will
have around-the-clock access to drinking water.

“In 2008, with the construction of the 22-kilometer Arjaghbyur-Hadrut
potable-water pipeline, the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund started the
large-scale endeavor of modernizing Hadrut City’s water infrastructure,”
said Ara Vardanyan, the fund’s executive director. “Last year, the
continuation of the project was secured when benefactors Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
and Patricia Turpanjian undertook to sponsor the construction of the
internal water-distribution network.”

Located on the southern border of Artsakh, the Hadrut Region is among the
republic’s driest and hottest areas. Vardanyan stated that although the
residents of Hadrut City still grapple with a host of infrastructure and
economic issues, a fundamental solution such as the provision of regular
access to potable water will significantly improve their lives.

Other major projects implemented in the Hadrut Region by the Hayastan
All-Armenian Fund include the construction, in 2009, of the 20-kilometer
Togh-Hadrut gas pipeline, which supplies natural gas to the close to 5,200
residents of Hadrut City and seven nearby villages; and the reconstruction,
in 2008, of the Hadrut Regional Hospital, which serves the entire population
of the region, totaling over 12,000 residents.

http://www.himnadram.org/

AGBU YP Montreal Joins Forces with ANC PN to Tackle Assimilation Iss

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Monday, July 16, 2012

AGBU Young Professionals of Montreal Joins Forces with ANC
Professional Network to Tackle Assimilation Issues

Questions of assimilation have long dominated the public discourse
within the Armenian diaspora. At a recent May 3, 2012 panel discussion
co-hosted by the AGBU Young Professionals of Montreal (YP Montreal)
and the Armenian National Committee Professional Network (ANC PN), new
answers were considered by the very leaders who will help turn these
ideas into a reality. The event named, “What’s Next: Assimilation?,”
prompted young professionals to strongly consider their roles and
responsibilities in the preservation of Armenian culture and
language. An emphasis was also placed on the importance of activism
among today’s young generation to ensure public representation and
visibility of the Armenian diaspora community.

Part lecture and part interactive forum, the discussion was moderated
by Lalai Manjikian, a PhD candidate at McGill University, and featured
speakers Chahé Tanachian of the AGBU Alex Manoogian School and Apraham
Niziblian, former Government Affairs Director of the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA). Following their presentations, the
audience, who filled the seats of the AGBU Montreal Alex Manoogian
Center, raised important issues concerning the challenges now facing
the Armenian diaspora. The question and answer portion of the night
quickly turned into a constructive debate on ways young Armenian
professionals could work in solidarity to increase participation in
both the public and private sectors. YP Montreal Chair Sarine
Chitilian and ANC PN Chair Hrag Darakdjian were very satisfied with
the outcome of the event. Chitilian commented, “It was a pleasure to
watch and listen to the young audience members engage with each other,
and brainstorm how to become more active in the community. Many shared
personal anecdotes on the ways they have successfully assimilated: by
embracing the local culture while maintaining their Armenian identity
and heritage; stories that were inspiring to all.”

Before opening the floor to the audience, Tanachian cited facts and
figures that set Armenian culture and history apart, notably that the
Armenian alphabet is one of only twenty-one alphabets in the
world. Turning to Armenians’ contributions to the arts, he reminded
the audience that 2012 marks the 500 year anniversary of the Armenian
printing press. Niziblian then took the podium educating attendees on
the significant of peaceful activism and discussing how effective
advocacy has led to the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by
several nations.

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. The AGBU Young Professionals
() is a growing network of groups and supporters around
the world who are committed to preserving and promoting the Armenian
identity and heritage through educational, cultural and humanitarian
programs for young Armenians between the ages of 22 to 40. To learn
more about YP Montreal and its upcoming events, please email
[email protected].

www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org/yp

Communities: Armenians in Egypt recount rich history.

Communities: Armenians in Egypt recount rich history – July 11, 2012
Photographed by Alison Tahmizian Meuse

By Alison Tahmizian Meuse
Egyptindependent.com

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. 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.

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.

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.’

It ended with the Ottomans Integrating but not assimilating To stay or
to go

http://www.armenianlife.com/2012/07/11/communities-armenians-in-egypt-recount-rich-history/

Le Pelerinage De Saint-Thaddee

LE PELERINAGE DE SAINT-THADDEE
Jean Eckian

Comme chaque annee, du 23 au 26 juillet, les Armeniens, Assyriens,
catholiques d’Iran et d’autres pays participeront a l’evenement annuel
dans le cadre de leur pèlerinage le Jour de la Saint-Thaddee.

A cette occasion, des ceremonies speciales auront lieu dans le
monastère Khara Kelissa -situe au nord de l’Iran a 2000 mètres
d’altitude- particulièrement le bapteme de jeunes enfants.

Selon la tradition, les Armeniens estiment que Khara Kelissa, ou
Ghareh keliseh, est la toute première eglise au monde construite en
l’an 68 par l’un des apôtres de Jesus, Saint Thaddeus.

Voyageant en Armenie, qui faisait alors partie de l’Empire perse
Sassanide, Thaddee a preche les enseignements du Christ, après qu’il
eut gueri le roi armenien Sanatroces (Sanatruk). Mais ce dernier
voyant d’un mauvais oeil l’extension du christianisme fit massacrer
des milliers de fidèles, dont Saint-Thaddee, decapite, et sa propre
fille Sandusht sur le lieu où se trouve actuellement le monastère.

Khara Kelissa, qui signifie litteralement “Eglise Noire”, a ete
enregistree neuvième patrimoine historico-culturel iranien par l’UNESCO
dans la Liste du patrimoine mondial, le 6 juillet 2008.

L’eglise est composee de deux parties : une structure noire, bâtiment
original de l’eglise d’où il tire son nom et une structure en blanc,
eglise principale, qui a ete ajoute a l’aile ouest du bâtiment
d’origine en 1810.

Une ancienne chapelle, a deux kilomètres au nord-ouest de l’eglise,
est selon la legende, l’endroit où la première femme chretienne,
Sandokh (fille du roi Sanatroces), a ete martyrisee. La chapelle est
censee etre de la meme epoque que Khara Kelissa.

En 1329, l’eglise a ete reconstruite sous ce qui est maintenant
sa forme actuelle après qu’un tremblement de terre eut detruit sa
structure en 1319.

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=81156

Deputy Speaker Of Azerbaijani Parliament: "the Osce Minsk Group Does

DEPUTY SPEAKER OF AZERBAIJANI PARLIAMENT: “THE OSCE MINSK GROUP DOESN’T USE ITS OPPORTUNITIES FOR SETTLEMENT OF THE NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT”

APA
July 16 2012
Azerbaijan

Baku. Rashad Suleymanov – APA. The OSCE Minsk Group has great
opportunities for settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict, but it
doesn’t use these opportunities, Deputy Speaker of the Azerbaijani
Parliament Bahar Muradova said in the interview to the website of
the New Azerbaijan Party, APA reports.

Muradova said that the activity of this organization engendered
discontent in the society because no pressure is exerted on occupier
Armenia: “in his recent previous to the region, OSCE Secretary General
announced that they don’t intend exert pressure on any party. Such
approaches engender discontent in the Azerbaijani society”.

According to Muradova, following Hillary Clinton’s visit to the region,
the US officials announced their interest in rapid settlement of
Nagorno Karabakh conflict: “The intensification is observed in the
negotiations process after the incidents in the contact line. The
OSCE functionaries consider foreground not the settlement of the
conflict, but inadmissibility of resumption of hostilities. Many
say that inadmissibility of resumption of hostilities is a great
success. But we cant consider it as success. It is necessary not to
let this intensification be extinguished and attempt to direct it to
the problem’s solution”.

Muradova considers that the intensification in the negotiations depends
not only on Azerbaijan’s efforts, but the intention of the co-chairs
to settle the conflict till the end. According to her, the initiatives
of one co-chairing country irritate the activity of the rest.

Social Issues High On Agenda As Karabakh Votes

SOCIAL ISSUES HIGH ON AGENDA AS KARABAKH VOTES

Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR
CRS Issue 651
UK
July 16 2012

Facebook becomes leading campaign medium, though not all voters have
internet access.

By Anahit Danielyan, Lusine Musaelyan – Caucasus CRS Issue 651,
16 Jul 12

This week’s presidential election in Nagorny Karabakh looks like
being the closest-run contest in years, and all the signs are that
voters will be swayed by pledges to fix the local economy and improve
welfare provision.

The July 19 ballot has provoked unusual amounts of electioneering and
debate, with social networking media coming to the fore as a platform
for candidates to seek votes.

Nagorny Karabakh has been run by an Armenian administration since 1994,
when the war with Azerbaijan came to a close. With no peace deal or
agreement in its future in place, Karabakh’s claim to independence
remains unrecognised, even by neighbour and ally Armenia, as Azerbaijan
continues to assert its sovereignty.

Karabakh’s status is a unifying factor for its Armenian residents,
and there is little internal disagreement on the subject.

In this election, candidates have insisted they will seek international
recognition and promised the electorate general prosperity and a much
improved health service.

As in previous polls, voters have been questioning candidates on the
frozen conflict, but it is clear they also want to hear what a new
president will do to address their welfare and economic problems. Many
have used the public meetings to complain about low wages and pensions,
and the difficulty of obtaining and repaying a bank loan.

“The standard of living hasn’t improved in the last five years,”
Armine Hayrapetyan, a voter from Stepanakert, said. “Although there are
various kinds of loans on offered, they’ve become a sort of burden and
many people now have outstanding debts to the banks. The authorities
say these loans are designed for younger people, but only a few young
families can currently afford them. The interest rate is too high and
[mortgage] deposits are large, so that many families are forced to
rent their apartments.”

The incumbent president, Bako Sahakyan, has had to field some hard
questions at public meetings.

“I am a disabled mother with many children, and one of them is
disabled, too. Although I am incapacitated, I still sweep the streets
just to earn a little money and support my kids,” said Karine,
who attended a meeting with Sahakyan in the town of Shusha. “Can we
survive on my [monthly] income of 30,000 drams [73 US dollars]? Please
answer me that.”

In the last presidential election held in 2007, public support for
Sahakyan’s leading challenger Masis Mayilyan was muted, but this
time round many voters are open about backing parliamentarian Vitaly
Balasanyan, seen as the main challenger. (See Two Main Candidates
Square up for Karabakh Election.)

After Valery Khachatryan withdrew from the race on July 10, there is
only one other candidate, agricultural specialist Arkady Soghomonyan.

Balasanyan has pioneered the use of Facebook campaigning, constantly
updating his page and responding to questions posted there.

In answer to one question about what he would do to improve social
conditions, he promised “an unrelenting struggle against the unlawful
interference in the economy by state officials, the accretion of
power and business, protectionism and embezzlement”.

He has promised to raise the minimum pension and disabled benefits,
and to peg child benefits to inflation.

Sahakyan has tried to catch up by opening his own Facebook. He too
has a Q & A section, but so far the questions posted there have
gone unanswered.

He has, however, secured the backing of all three parliamentary parties
– Free Homeland, the Democratic Party of Artsakh and Dashnaktsutyun –
as well as of the Communists, who hold no seats.

Balasanyan is backed by a number of politicians who have contested a
series of local and national elections, including Mayilyan, a former
foreign minister.

Internet access has improved and become cheaper in the last year,
but for many Karabakh voters, election news is still accessible only
on the sole TV channel and a number of radio stations. The candidates
have been allotted a 30 minutes’ free airtime on TV and radio, and
can buy more.

One of the questions posed to Sahakyan come from a young man from a
village in Hadrut region.

“Mr. President, we are completely isolated from the rest of the world.

Please provide us with internet,” he said.

Anahit Danielyan is editor of Karabakh-open.info. Lusine Musaelyan
reports for Radio Liberty in Stepanakert.

Armenian Women’s Spartakiade Celebrates Iaaf Centenary

ARMENIAN WOMEN’S SPARTAKIADE CELEBRATES IAAF CENTENARY

European Athletics

July 16 2012

The Armenian women’s Spartakiade, aimed at celebrating the IAAF
Centenary and promoting women’s athletics, took place at the end of
June at the Hayastan Sport Union in Yerevan.

Approximately 100 participants from across Armenia took part in
the event organised by the Armenian athletics federation’s women’s
committee.

Chair of the women’s committee is Satenik Ghazaryan (2009 winner of
the European Athletics Women’s Leadership Award).

The programme of 9 events ( 100m, 200m, 400m, 800m, LJ, TJ, HJ, Shot
put, Discus throw) included high jump, which was possible because of
a new landing mat – the first time the event was held in the country
in at least five years.

The top three in each event received certificates and flowers. Lusine
Karayan was a standout performer in winning the 100m and 200m.

The following day about 70 athletes and coaches hiked to the top of
Mount Teghenis (2819m) with the flag of the IAAF.

The Armenian women’s Spartakiade was established in 1998.

The Armenian athletics federation is currently working on a project
to build a new track in Yerevan. The new project envisages maintenance
and construction of high level athletic facilities of an international
standard in the country.

– Reported by Meri Havhannisyan

http://www.european-athletics.org/news/latest-news/496-general/11279-armenian-women-s-spartakiade-celebrates-iaaf-centenary.html

Professional Chess Too Hard, Says Armenian GM

PROFESSIONAL CHESS TOO HARD, SAYS ARMENIAN GM

Gulf Today

July 16 2012
UAE

TIANJIN: Chess is too “hard” to be taken as a career, says leading
Armenian Grand Master (GM) Vladimir Akopian.

“I don’t want my boys to be professional chess players, because it’s
too hard,” Akopian was quoted as saying by Xinhua, after he swept
a clean victory against Wei Yi, a 13-year-old boy who is one year
younger than his oldest son Valeri, in the 10th round of the 2012
Chinese Chess League Division A.

When he was 14 in 1986, Akopian was crowned the World Under-16
champion. Three years ago, he was named “Honoured Master of Sport of
the Republic of Armenia”.

“Besides, if you want to become a top 10 chess player, you have to
work very hard, thinking about nothing but the game,” said Akopian.

Indo-Asian News Services

http://gulftoday.ae/portal/16c6e6ba-88a8-4a38-a62f-0c4a6819e574.aspx

Initiative On Extraordinary Parliament Sitting Failed By Prosperous

INITIATIVE ON EXTRAORDINARY PARLIAMENT SITTING FAILED BY PROSPEROUS ARMENIA – OPPOSITION

news.am
July 16, 2012 | 20:12

YEREVAN.- Prosperous Armenia Party has never been considered and will
never be an opposition political force, said head of the opposition
Democratic Motherland Party Petros Makeyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am
on the recent initiative to convene an extraordinary parliament
sitting on the Harsnaqar incident which claimed a life of military
doctor Vahe Avetyan.

Only seven MPs of Prosperous Armenia joined the initiative. Asked why
the opposition’s initiative was a failure, Makeyan said the opposition
wanted Prosperous Armenia to join them but in vain. As regards future
cooperation of Prosperous Armenia with the opposition forces, Makeyan
said everything is possible.

“One can expect everything in politics, especially in Armenian
politics. Nevertheless, my answer is more negative, in my personal
opinion,” he concluded.