Colombian Guerrilla Group Admits To Killing Russian-Armenian Hostage

Huffington Post
Sept 3 2017

NORTHWESTERN JUNGLES, Colombia, Sept 2 (Reuters) – Colombia’s ELN guerrilla group said a Russian-Armenian citizen it held hostage for six months was killed in April while trying to escape, a startling admission that risks throwing current peace talks with the government into jeopardy.

In a rare interview, a commander of the National Liberation Army, Colombia’s last active guerrilla group, said that ransoms from kidnappings were necessary to keep its fighters in the field and that peace would be impossible without state funding to feed and clothe the rebels.

The ELN seized Arsen Voskanyan in November. The group claimed that he was collecting endangered, poisonous frogs in the jungles of the northwestern department of Choco and accused him of wanting to smuggle wildlife overseas.

After his lengthy captivity, Voskanyan was shot when he grabbed a hand grenade in a bid to escape, according to the ELN commander, who would only give his nom-de-guerre Yerson.

“He’s dead,” Yerson told Reuters in a remote area along the banks of a river that sees frequent combat between the leftist rebels, government troops and right-wing paramilitaries.

“The grenade exploded … several of our boys were wounded, the entire unit of five boys. He fled, he was shot and killed … The issue of his body will be negotiated,” he said, adding that the death took place within his unit. Yerson supplied no evidence to back up his assertions.

Another person with knowledge of the matter also subsequently confirmed that Voskanyan had been killed.

Reuters could not independently confirm the circumstances surrounding Voskanyan’s death.

Colombia’s government said it knows nothing of the ELN’s claim and the last it knew was a statement from the ELN that said he had escaped.

“The responsibility is with the ELN,” the senior official said, asking not to be named.

The Russian Embassy in Colombia, Colombia’s High Peace Commissioner and the Foreign Ministry in Moscow did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The ELN’s practice of kidnapping civilians is a key issue at peace talks taking place in the Ecuadorean capital of Quito. The fact that Voskanyan was killed as talks progress and the ELN failed to inform the government may complicate already tricky negotiations to end 53 years of war and make the need to agree a ceasefire more pressing.

“It makes it urgent to get a bilateral, verifiable ceasefire as soon as possible so this doesn’t keep happening,” leftist Senator Antonio Navarro Wolff, who once belonged to now-demobilized urban guerrilla group the M-19, told Reuters.

Yerson and his troops said they are not optimistic a peace agreement can be reached because neither side will give ground on kidnapping.

The ELN has refused to stop taking hostages for ransom, launching bomb attacks and extorting foreign oil and mining companies while talks are ongoing. The government has said it will not move forward on issues like a bilateral ceasefire until it does.

Talks with the ELN are being held as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), until this year the biggest rebel group, has demobilized, formed a new political party and ended its part in a civil war that killed more than 220,000 people and displaced millions over five decades.

ELN HAD SAID HOSTAGE ESCAPED

His face covered by a thin black balaclava and wearing a beret and camouflage fatigues, Yerson, 35, said he has been fighting in Colombia’s jungles and mountains “for many, many years.”

Flanked by two fighters carrying semi-automatic rifles as other rebels watched on, he questioned the government’s willingness to make sufficient concessions but said he would adhere to the wishes of his leadership if a peace deal was reached.

The ELN has sought peace before, holding talks in Cuba and Venezuela between 2002 and 2007, but experts have said those discussions were dogged by lack of will on both sides.

Yerson is the commander of the Ernesto “Che” Guevara Front, that fights under the command of the ELN leader known as Uriel who commands the Western War Block Omar Gomez. He declined to say how

Yerson is the commander of the Ernesto “Che” Guevara Front, that fights under the command of the ELN leader known as Uriel who commands the Western War Block Omar Gomez. He declined to say how many rebels fight in his unit.

The ELN – which has kidnapped hundreds of Colombians and foreigners for economic and political gain – previously said in a statement that Voskanyan escaped injured after a struggle that left several fighters wounded as they tried to release him to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The killing of Voskanyan may turn already dire public perception further against the ELN, analyst Ariel Avila told Reuters.

“The impact will be on public opinion and in the questioning of the talks,” he said.

Inspired by the Cuban revolution and established by radical Catholic priests in 1964, the ELN was close to disappearing in the 1970s but steadily gained power again.

By 2002 it had as many as 5,000 fighters, financed by “war taxes” levied on landowners and oil companies. It is now believed to have about 2,000 fighters, but Yerson, who would not confirm the number, said the group is heavily recruiting.

Considered a terrorist group by the United States and the European Union, the ELN has stepped up attacks on economic infrastructure this year, hitting oil pipelines and power lines repeatedly.

President Juan Manuel Santos, who meted out some of the most crushing military blows against the FARC and earned a Nobel Peace Prize last year for his efforts at peace, has had less success with the ELN, which moves in mobile units of four or so fighters.

The ELN has said it may declare a temporary ceasefire to honor Pope Francis during his visit next week to Colombia.

(Additional reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne, Mary Milliken and Bill Trott)


Colombia’s ELN says Russian hostage died

Yahoo! News
Sept 3 2017
Colombia’s ELN says Russian hostage died

Colombia’s ELN guerrilla group says a Russian-Armenian hostage died in April.

Colombia’s ELN guerrilla group says a Russian-Armenian citizen it held hostage for six months was killed in April while trying to escape, a startling admission that risks throwing current peace talks with the government into jeopardy.

In a rare interview, a commander of the National Liberation Army, Colombia’s last active guerrilla group, said that ransoms from kidnappings were necessary to keep its fighters in the field and that peace would be impossible without state funding to feed and clothe the rebels.

The ELN seized Arsen Voskanyan in November. The group claimed that he was collecting endangered, poisonous frogs in the jungles of the northwestern department of Choco and accused him of wanting to smuggle wildlife overseas.

After his lengthy captivity, Voskanyan was shot when he grabbed a hand grenade in a bid to escape, according to the ELN commander, who would only give his nom-de-guerre Yerson.

“He’s dead,” Yerson told Reuters in a remote area along the banks of a river that sees frequent combat between the leftist rebels, government troops and right-wing paramilitaries.

“The grenade exploded … several of our boys were wounded, the entire unit of five boys. He fled, he was shot and killed … The issue of his body will be negotiated,” he said, adding that the death took place within his unit. Yerson supplied no evidence to back up his assertions.

The ELN’s practice of kidnapping civilians is a key issue at peace talks taking place in the Ecuadorean capital of Quito. The fact that Voskanyan was killed as talks progress and the ELN failed to inform the government may complicate already tricky negotiations to end 53 years of war with the Marxist group.

20 Years for Murder, 28 Years for Book on Murder

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
Sept 2 2017

ISTANBUL (Hurriyet) — More than two years after Agos editor Hrant Dink was shot dead, a reporter stands trial for writing about the circumstances surrounding the murder. For his alleged crimes, he faces 28 years in prison, eight years more than what the murder suspect would serve if convicted.

A reporter who wrote a book about the intelligence failures before and after the murder of Dink, the editor-in-chief of Armenian weekly Agos, is facing a prison term of 28 years if found guilty. The chief suspect in the murder case could serve a maximum of 20 years if convicted.

Milliyet daily reporter Nedim Sener’s book, The Dink Murder and Intelligence Lies, focuses on the intelligence deficiencies by security agencies before and after Dink was shot dead, leading to a police officer and three senior Police Department intelligence chiefs filing complaints against him.

Dink, who was prosecuted for insulting Turkishness, was killed in front of the Agos office. The chief suspect, a teenage nationalist, is currently on trial along with several alleged accomplices.

Milliyet daily reported that the complaints have led the Istanbul Prosecutor’s Office to charge Sener with publication of secret information and turning antiterrorism officials into targets. The reporter faces a maximum prison term of 28 years if found guilty.

Sener, speaking to Anatolia news agency on his way to the opening hearing this week, said he is facing a total of 28 years in prison if convicted on two charges, obtaining classified documents and insulting government officials.

                                          

Sener has two trials pending as a result of the complaints. This trial at the Istanbul Second Court was for revealing official secrets. Sener, who faces up to eight years in jail on this charge, defended himself by saying that the information in his book was from phone conversations that were made public in the media months before his book was printed. “These conversations are also on the Internet and can be found when one searches Google,” he said.

Sener said the trial aimed to prevent the public from learning the facts about Dink’s murder and the status of press freedom. He asked the court to find him not guilty. The judge decided to postpone the trial to another date in order for the defendant’s lawyers to prepare for the prosecutor’s case.

Milliyet Editor-in-Chief Sedat Ergin told the Anatolia news agency that his presence at court was to support not only Sener but also press freedom in Turkey.

“We are showing this solidarity in order to ensure press freedom in respected,” he said.

The Turkish Journalists’ Association, or TGC, released a statement on the case, saying it was “worrying” and a problem for democracy. It said it was necessary to reassess a law that prosecuted a journalist for trying to uncover the facts behind Dink’s murder, reported Milliyet. “Expert journalists like Nedim Sener uncovering crimes and making the facts public is a service to address the public’s anger about such crimes,” said the TGC. On the issue, Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review’s Editor-in-Chief David Judson said: “Institutions of free _expression_ and individuals expressing themselves freely have collectively made great strides in recent years. That some institutions of the state lag behind in understanding the nature of these important democratic concepts in unfortunate. But we are confident at the Daily News that they will mature along with the rest of society.”

After the book’s release in January of this year, Muhittin Zenit, a police officer working at the intelligence division at Trabzon when Dink was assassinated, filed a criminal complaint about Sener for “targeting personnel in service of fighting terrorism, obtaining secret documents, disclosing secret documents, violating the secrecy of  communication and attempting to influence fair trial” through his book.

Case for Other Accusations

At the end of the investigation, Prosecutor Selim Berna Altay charged Sener with “making targets of the personnel in service of fighting terrorism, and obtaining and declaring secret information that is forbidden to be declared,” asking for a prison term of 20 years.

Since they do not fall under his authority, Altay sent the dossier on “violation of the secrecy of communication” and “attempting to influence fair trial” to the Istanbul Second Court. In the meantime, it was also claimed the book contained the offense of “insulting governmental institutions,” and that too was added to the second investigation. Prosecutor Ismail Onaran handled this investigation and filed a second case against Sener asking for his imprisonment for three to eight years.

There is another case ongoing in a Trabzon court against eight personnel from the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command who are accused of neglecting their duties regarding Dink’s death. The accused are facing up to two years in prison if found guilty.

“Some of the security personnel that sued me are under investigation for neglecting their duty for Dink’s murder. They want to punish the journalist writing about the responsibilities of those people,” said Sener.


Historic Anniversary of Hope and Despondence

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
Sept 2 2017
Historic Anniversary of Hope and Despondence

By Edmond Y. Azadian

On August 5, a bell rang in Hiroshima exactly at the hour when 65 years ago the first atomic bomb was dropped, scorching to death 145,000 people in a brief moment. The tolling of the bell reverberated around the globe through the electronic media, reminding the world of the anniversary of a great human tragedy of historic dimensions.

The same day, another anniversary came and passed, almost unnoticed, even by Armenians whose lives it had impacted irreversibly. Only the state TV channel in Armenia broadcast a three-minute footage remembering the 90th anniversary of a political act to restore home rule in Cilicia, now called Chukur Ova, situated on the Mediterranean Sea Coast of the present Republic of Turkey.

Indeed, August 4 and 5 were eventful days in Cilicia, raising hopes of achieving home rule by the Armenians, who were promised by the Allies, especially as a  compensation for Armenian participation in World War I on their side.

What happened on August 4 and 5, 1920, has a long and sometimes intricate background.

Armenians had inhabited Cilicia many centuries before Seljuk Turks appeared in that region. An Armenian kingdom even ruled that territory between the 10th and 14th centuries, when the Memluks deposed the last king, Levon VI Lousignan, and took over the country, in 1375 AD.

After centuries of subjugation, a historic opportunity was presented in the 20th century, right before the signing of the Sevres Treaty of August 10, 1920, to restore home rule in Cilicia.

The Armenian National Delegation, headed by Boghos Nubar Pasha, was negotiating with the victorious Allies the future of Armenia. Before the war ended, the Allies requested from the Armenians to form a legion and fight against Turkish-German forces, under the Allied command.

In 1916, the French government under President Aristide Briand, had promised home rule for Armenians in Cilicia, during negotiations leading to the formation of the Armenian Legion.

Victory has many parents, while defeat is always orphan. After the failure of the Cilician dream, some historians, including Armenian ones, claim that there was no formal document signed by the Allies to that effect.

After the French government pledge, Armenians demonstrated a rare _expression_ of unity. Indeed, Nubar Pasha commissioned a delegation comprising the representatives of three political parties and dispatched them to the US to recruit volunteers to fight in the legion. In 1917, Mihran Damadian (Ramgavar), Stepan Sabahgulian (Hunchak) and Ardavazt Hanemian (Armenian Revolutionary Federation) headed to the US to raise funds and to recruit volunteers. (At that time Constitutional Ramgavars and
Reformed Hunchaks had not united yet; therefore four parties combined their forces to achieve the mission.)

Despite the tensions of traditional Armenian disunity, the mission was accomplished. Twelve hundred volunteers, survivors of the Genocide, who had already achieved security and comfort in this land of opportunity, returned to the Middle East in cargo ships, defying German gunboats in the Atlantic. They were joined in Cyprus, by the survivors of the battle of Musa Dagh. They were trained and armed and joined the Allied forces in Palestine, numbering about 4,000. By comparison, today, one would not venture to guess how many volunteers from the diaspora joined the Karabagh forces to fight the Azeris.

At that time, patriotic fervor and the sense of revenge were overwhelming.

The Armenian Legion spearheaded the assault on unified Ottoman and German forces, fortifying a hilltop in Palestine called Arara. Armenians made history by breaking the backbone of the enemies on September 19, 1918, turning the tide of World War I in the region.

It was agreed that the volunteer legion would become the nucleus of the Armenian Army after autonomy was granted under a French mandate in Cilicia.

After the Legion entered Cilicia victoriously, 150,000 Genocide survivors returned to their homes there. Nubar Pasha appointed Mihran Damadian as the Cilician  representative vis-à-vis occupying forces.

Euphoric optimism reigned throughout Cilicia, as Armenians prepared to achieve their dreams.

It was a historic moment. The Allies were forcing on the defeated Germans and Ottomans the Treaty of Sevres, which included an independent Armenia crafted by President Woodrow Wilson. Yet Cilicia, where Armenians had been reassembled, was not part of the deal. An elusive historic opportunity was to be missed had the Armenians failed to act.

The defeated Turks had already regrouped on the ground, under Mustafa Kemal and were planning a comeback. Damadian assembled all the minorities — Armenian, Greek, Arab, Assyrian and others, and a declaration was drafted to be submitted to the French Commander Bremon. They were trying to create a fait accompli, like the Turks had done, six days before the signing of Sevres Treaty. The next day, on August 5, a delegation headed by Damadian occupied the government office and announced the formation of the Armenian government in Cilicia under a French mandate.

Damadian named himself prime minister and formed a cabinet to reflect the ethnic diversity of the region, which the French statesman George Picot had defined as a “purely Armenian territory” and where 100,000 other Christian ethnic groups had joined the 150,000 Armenians.

At the dramatic moment of achieving statehood, the French commander dispatched a battalion who forced the Armenians out of the government House at the butt of bayonets and then later in October and November evacuated their forces secretly from Cilicia, leaving the Armenians unarmed and defenseless before marauding Kemalist forces, who came to finish the grizzly mission which the Ittihadists had began during the war, by exterminating Armenians.

“Cilicia is destined to become Armenia’s future window open to the sea, to Europe and to civilization,” wrote Damadian in his memoirs — a dream that never realized.

The August 5 act may have been a last-ditch desperate initiative, but it was a historic necessity, which any prudent leader, with a sense of history, would and should have taken, regardless of the consequences. The French betrayed their formal pledge, because they had negotiated a secret deal with the Turks, not realizing that the Kemalist Milli nationalist movement was also financed, supported and armed by the newly-rising Lenin’s communist forces.

Damadian has a sad yet realistic commentary about this act of betrayal: “The conscience of diplomacy is broad and very flexible. If need be, it can level with rebels and rascals, and can even sit down to negotiate with people like Mustafa Kemal and his cohorts, vile thugs and blood hungry killers and sign armistices.”

The Cilician home rule was a dream so close to being realized, but it was sacrificed by the treachery of the French government. The Cilician dream may be lost forever, but valuable political lessons are learned which can be implemented today in the Karabagh conflict. Muster your forces and don’t trust even the closest allies, because they may sell you down the river for their selfish interests.

Sebu of Capital Cities & Sirusho Partner with PicsArt

Business Wire
September 1, 2017 Friday
Sebu of Capital Cities & Sirusho Partner with PicsArt
"Vuy Aman" song-inspired creative sticker and frame packages are now
free to use for the PicsArt Community!
SAN FRANCISCO
Sebu, a leading voice in the American pop scene, and part of the
popular duo Capital Cities that went platinum with their breakout hit
"Safe and Sound," plus Sirusho , Armenia's most celebrated musical
diva, are excited to announce an exclusive partnership with the
world's leading photo editing app and creative social network, PicsArt
. The partnership celebrates the launch of exclusive sticker and frame
packs made by PicsArt for the viral hit " Vuy Aman " (translation: Oh
My).
Starting today, PicsArt's global community of 90 million monthly
active users will have free access to exclusive Vuy Aman stickers and
Vuy Aman frame packs featuring stylish accessories, hair and head
attributes, travel frames and more, all inspired by Sirusho & Sebu
viral hit "Vuy Aman" . Anyone with the PicsArt app, available to
download for free to iOS , Android and Windows devices, can download
and use the packages to add a special "Vuy Aman" flair to their
images. All Sebu and Sirusho fans are now invited to follow and
co-create with @SirushoOfficial and @CapitalCities on PicsArt by using
the Vuy Aman free sticker and frame packs.
The best image(s) will get a prize from the artists themselves!
In March 2017, PicsArt and Sirusho came together to introduce Sirusho
Style stickers and Armat frame packages, inspired by Armenian ethnic
ornaments, which went viral globally. Now, you can download the Vuy
Aman sticker and frame packages to continue the fun. The Sebu, Sirusho
and PicsArt collaboration announcement video is available at Sirusho's
YouTube channel . Watch the video on how to use Vuy Aman stickers at
PicsArt's YouTube channel .
PicsArt is the leading image editing app and creative social network.
PicsArt makes it easy to edit photos, remix pictures with friends,
make stickers and share your creations with the world. It's the one
free app that lets you be truly creative with over 3,000 editing
features, over 10 million #freetoedit images, and over 2 million
#freetoedit stickers. With more than 400 million installs and 90
million monthly active users, PicsArt spans the globe and is available
in 20 languages.
com: 

Every child is entitled to quality inclusive education: Henrikh Mkhitaryan’s UNICEF message

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
September 1, 2017 Friday
Every child is entitled to quality inclusive education: Henrikh
Mkhitaryan's UNICEF message
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s Henrikh Mkhitaryan, the
midfielder of Manchester United, who is also a goodwill Ambassador of
UNICEF, made an online address on the occasion of the new academic
year, September 1, calling on the society to welcome children with
disabilities in educational institutions and communities, emphasizing
the significance of inclusive education for vulnerable children.
The video shows Mkhitaryan’s June meeting with a group of children,
who tell the football superstar about their education, dreams and
problems.
“Every child regardless of his or her abilities has the right for
quality inclusive education”, Mkhitaryan says in the video. “It is the
abilities of the child, and not the inability, that decide what
achievements the child can have in life”.
UNICEF Armenia representative Tanja Radocaj mentioned that Armenia has
reached remarkable results in expanding inclusive education.
Nevertheless, there are still many things to be done in increasing the
training of schools, parents and communities in this regard.
“In UNICEF, we know that children with disabilities can do wonderful
things, is they are given a chance. Like anyone else, they too have
the same right to education”, she said.
As of 2017, there are 208 inclusive schools in Armenia, and this
number is gradually growing.

Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian welcome daughter

PanArmenian, Armenia
Sept 2 2017
Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian welcome daughter

Tennis legend Serena Williams and her fiancé, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, welcomed their first child into the world on Friday, September 1, according to reports.

Williams holds the most Grand Slam titles in singles, doubles, and mixed doubles combined amongst active players. Her record of 39 Grand Slam titles puts her third on the all-time list and second in the open era.

Ohanian is an Internet entrepreneur and investor. He was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Chris Ohanian, an Armenian-American whose grandparents came to the US as refugees after the Armenian Genocide, and a German-born mother, Anke.

Chris Shepherd, a senior producer at West Palm Beach’s WPBF first broke the news on Twitter, saying that Williams had given birth to a baby girl weighing 6 pounds and 13 ounces. Additionally, Laura Wagner of Deadspin tweeted that before her match at the U.S. Open, Venus Williams confirmed her sister had given birth to a baby girl.

Beyoncé even took to Instagram to congratulate her friend on the birth, Mashable says.

Serena Williams welcomes baby girl with fiance Alexis Ohanian

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2017

Serena Williams has given birth to a baby girl. The 23 Grand Slam title winner Serena Williams welcomed the new arrival on Friday afternoon, Metro reported, reminding that Serena was induced at St. Mary’s Medical Centre in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Thursday.

Local news producer Chris Shepherd announced the news on his Twitter page, saying that the baby weighed 6lbs 13oz and adding: ‘Mom and baby doing well.’

According to the source, the baby is Serena’s first child with her fiance, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian – with the tennis ace revealing news of her pregnancy in April on Snapchat.

Local resident collaborates on picture book promoting Armenian culture in Japan

Los Angeles Times
Sept 2 2017
Local resident collaborates on picture book promoting Armenian culture in Japan

Cher: ‘Kim Kardashian did us proud with her magazine cover’

Music Mag
Sept 1 2017
Cher: ‘Kim Kardashian did us proud with her magazine cover’

Cher has saluted Kim Kardashian for emulating the singer on a new magazine cover.

The Keeping Up with the Kardashians star recently covered Harper’s Bazaar Arabia sporting long, straight, black hair to mimic her pop idol Cher’s 1970s style.

“September Cover channeling my style icon Cher #HarpersBazaarArabia,” Kim wrote on Instagram alongside a picture of the cover.

After Kim revealed the cover and Cher saw other images inspired by her old photoshoots, the Believe singer heaped praise on Kardashian, writing: “My Little Armenian Sister did us both Proud.”

“I love you!!!!” Kim responded.

Kim has been a longtime fan of Cher’s, telling the magazine, “I always look up to other Armenian women. Cher is literally my fashion icon. She’s always had the sickest style. I’m obsessed with her. To think that she was wearing sheer dresses in the 1970s and just what people must have thought back then.”

In 2015, Kardashian paid homage to her fashion icon at the Met Gala in New York. Posting a shot of Cher at the Met Gala in the 1970s on social media, Kim wrote: “Tonight’s inspiration! Cher at the 1st ever Met Gala! I just met her and told her this photo was my inspiration for my dress tonight! She is so beautiful! So happy I met her!”

She later posted a shot of herself with Cher at the bash, and added: “This beauty, this icon! I’m so so happy I met her!!!! We spoke about our amazing Armenian journeys! And that Bob Mackie gown she wore to the Met (in) 1974.”