Conflict zones should be included in international environmental projects – Euronest PA adopts report

Categories
Artsakh
Politics
Region

During the plenary session of the Euronest Parliamentary Assembly a report on energy sector entitled “Strengthening cooperation in the field of energy ahead the implementation of the Paris Climate Change Agreement” was adopted. Armenpress reports, the following paragraph is included in article 15 of the report: “The conflict zones should be properly incorporated into international governmental and non-governmental environmental programs regardless of the political situation, so as people’s environmental needs are fully guaranteed. We emphasize that sectoral policy in this direction should be inclusive. ”

Armen Ashotyan, head of the Armenian delegation to the Euronest Parliamentary Assembly, commented on the topic on his Facebook page: “In fact, this is the first time that such international platforms call for the recognition of the environmental rights of the Artsakh people, sectoral internationalization and inclusion. Let us remind that this is the second sphere after the education sphere where this approach is displayed based on the guarantee of fundamental human rights against Azerbaijan’s efforts to internationally isolate Artsakh. I think this is an effective course to ensure the consistent internationalization of Artsakh in these and other spheres. “

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/06/2017

                                        Monday, November 6, 2017
Ruling Party Again Dominates Local Elections In Armenia
 . Karine Simonian
 . Nare Stepanian
 . Anush Muradian
Armenia - Residents of Achajur village vote in local elections,
5Nov2017.
Amid a continuing lack of interest shown by opposition parties, the
ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) dominated local elections
held in 69 communities across the country at the weekend.
More than 30 of those communities were only recently incorporated into
single administrative entities, each of them having previously
consisted of several villages. It was the first election of their new
mayors and local councils.
According to preliminary official results released on Monday, mayoral
candidates nominated or endorsed by the HHK prevailed in at least 37
communities, including more than a dozen towns. They ran unopposed in
several of those towns.
In another town, Goris, the Republican incumbent mayor was only
nominally challenged by a non-partisan candidate, Samvel
Harutiunian. The barely campaigned and did not even cast a ballot on
election day. Speaking to RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am),
Harutiunian called the Goris vote a "charade" and accused the HHK of
again abusing its administrative resources.
The HHK dominance was so strong that in some communities members of
the party headed by President Serzh Sarkisian challenged each other.
The HHK's junior coalition partner, the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), fielded three candidates in the local
polls. Two of them were reportedly elected heads of rural communities.
Armenia's second largest parliamentary force, which is led by
businessman Gagik Tsarukian and claims to be in opposition to
President Sarkisian, had only seven mayoral candidates. Three of them
won in their respective communities.
None of the other Armenian opposition groups chose to join the
electoral race, reflecting their lack of financial resources and
strong regional chapters. Opposition leaders have long claimed that
the outcomes of local elections are essentially decided by vote
buying, use of administrative resources and other irregularities.
The established opposition showed much stronger interest in municipal
elections that were held in Yerevan in April 2017 and Gyumri and
Vanadzor, the country's second and third largest cities, a year ago.
The opposition Yelk bloc monitored Sunday's polls through its
representatives sitting on election commissions. A senior Yelk member,
Davit Khazhakian, claimed on Monday that many voters were pressurized
or bribed into backing various wealthy candidates.
Armenia - A man in Odzun village appears to give guidance to an
elderly voter, 5Nov2017.
An RFE/RL correspondent reported from Odzun, a large village in the
northern Lori province, that many elderly voters were guided by other
individuals as they entered polling booths. Election officials there
said those voters claim to have eye problems and require "assistance."
"I just can't refuse to allow others to help them," said Suren
Papikian, the Yelk-affiliated chairman of one of Odzun's two precinct
commissions.
Barsegh Ayvazian, a non-partisan candidate narrowly defeated by the
incumbent community mayor, on Monday demanded a vote recount.
Tension ran high in the southeastern Vayots Dzor province where
another newly consolidated community comprising several villages
elected its new chief executive. Dozens of local residents blocked a
nearby highway on Monday in protest against the official vote results
that gave victory to an HHK candidate. They charged that the latter
won as a result of vote buying. The protesters were supporters of a
defeated candidate, who has run one of those villages until now.
One of Sunday's most competitive contests was in Achajur, a rural
community in the northern Tavush village. A 39-year-old owner of a
village grocery store representing the HHK defeated Achajur's
incumbent mayor and two other candidates. His rivals appeared to
concede defeat.
"This is a rare election after which there is no talk of vote bribes,
brute force or other coercion," the head of a regional election
commission in Tavush, Gagik Abovian, told RFE/RL's Armenian service.
Government Defends Caps On Social Spending
 . Astghik Bedevian
Armenia - Labor and Social Affairs Minister Artem Asatrian speaks in
the Armenian parliament in Yerevan, 6Nov2017.
Labor and Social Affairs Minister Artem Asatrian defended on Monday
the Armenian government's decision not to raise public sector salaries
and pensions next year despite a planned rise in its overall
expenditures.
The draft state budget approved by the government in late September
calls for over 1.46 trillion drams ($3.1 billion) in total
expenditure, up by 7.6 percent from the government's 2017 spending
target. Most of the extra spending would be channeled into various
infrastructure projects. By contrast, the 2018 budget would
practically not increase public spending on social programs.
Prime Minister Karen Karapetian and other officials have said that
increased spending on capital projects is a better way to ease
socioeconomic hardship as it would stimulate economic activity in the
country.
Asatrian echoed these arguments at a meeting with standing committees
of the Armenian parliament that focused on the draft 2018
budget. Their opposition members strongly criticized the government's
reluctance to spend more on salaries, pensions and poverty benefits,
which were most recently raised in 2015.
Asatrian insisted that the government cannot opt for more such rises
for now without additional borrowing that would only add to Armenia's
mounting public debt. "Raising pensions by just 1,000 drams would
require an extra 5 billion drams in spending," he said.
The opposition lawmakers were unconvinced, however. Nikol Pashinian, a
leader of the Yelk alliance, said stagnant pensions and salaries mean
lower living standards and greater poverty.
"The biggest impact on poverty reduction comes from economic growth,"
said Asatrian.
"This budget will not reduce poverty," countered Pashinian.
"The people's social plight is worsening," Gevorg Petrosian of the
Tsarukian Bloc said for his part.
Deputy Finance Minister Atom Janjughazian denied Petrosian's claim. He
said that unemployment in Armenia fell from 19 percent to 17.8 percent
in the first half of this year.
According to government projections, economic growth, which all but
ground to a half in 2016, will reach 4.3 percent this year and 4.5
percent in 2018.
Education Minister Hails Scrapping Of Draft Deferments
 . Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Education Minister Levon Mkrtchian at a news conference in
Yerevan, 22Sep2017.
The upcoming abolition of most remaining military draft deferments
enjoyed by university students is fair and will not harm higher
education in Armenia, Education Minister Levon Mkrtchian said on
Monday.
Mkrtchian said the measure will also reduce corruption among officials
in and outside state-run universities who are in a position to make
male students eligible for government scholarships.
Such students have until now been allowed to perform two-year military
service, compulsory in Armenia, after completing their undergraduate,
graduate or post-graduate studies.
A government bill passed by the Armenian parliament in the first
reading late last month will largely scrap these temporary
exemptions. It will grant draft deferments only to those students who
will agree to undergo parallel military training and serve in the army
as officers for three years after graduation.
The measure was strongly criticized by the opposition Yelk
alliance. Lawmakers representing the bloc claimed that it will prevent
many students from becoming scientists or scholars. They said it will
also not stop the sons of many senior government officials,
pro-government politicians and wealthy businesspeople from dodging
military service.
The main official rationale for the bill drafted by the Armenian
Defense Ministry is that it will close a key loophole for evading
military service and reduce "corruption risks" among military and
university officials.
"This law will greatly eliminate the risk of corruption," agreed
Mkrtchian.
Mkrtchian also insisted that it will not hamper the development of
science and scholarship in the country. In an apparent reference to
Israel, he argued that science and technology has "peaked" in other
countries that have not had draft deferments.
Besides, he told reporters, "if we look at who has pursued and
obtained doctoral degrees [in Armenia] and how many of them have
stayed in science, we won't see a nice picture."
The minister also asserted that drafting some students and letting
others continue their studies uninterrupted is inherently unfair. He
argued that more than 80 percent of 18-year-old Armenian men enrolled
in state universities are already drafted to the armed forces just
because they have to pay tuition fees.
Critics say that students who have wealthy or influential parents will
find other ways of evading draft.
The bill will likely be debated in the second and final reading next
week. If passed, it will come into effect in January 2021, meaning
that it will not apply to students who have already been granted
deferments.
Press Review
(Saturday, November 4)
"Zhoghovurd" is unimpressed by President Serzh Sarkisian's calls for
Indian companies to invest in Armenia and take advantage of the
country's membership in the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU),
which he made during a working visit to New Delhi. The paper argues
that EEU member states like Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are
geographically closer to India than Armenia. "Besides, there are no
transport routes to Armenia," it says.
"Haykakan Zhamanak" looks at implications of the November 1 meeting of
the Iranian, Russian and Azerbaijani presidents held in Tehran. The
three leaders reaffirmed their commitment to a North-South corridor
that will boost rail communication between them. The paper alleges
that this corridor is "rendering meaningless" Armenia's ambition to
serve as a transit link for cargo shipments from the Persian Gulf to
the Black Sea. It says the Armenian highways stretching from the
Iranian to the Georgian borders, which are now undergoing major
repairs, will be underused. "Most of the traffic will pass through
Azerbaijan's territory,"
"Zhamanak" quotes Vartan Yeghiazarian, a deputy chief of the national
police service, as saying that that the law-enforcement agency will be
directly subordinate to Armenia's prime minister after the country
completes its transition to the parliamentary system of government in
April. The paper wonders whether that statement made on Friday was
coordinated with President Serzh Sarkisian. It says that a prime
minister directly controlling the Armenian police would have greater
political clout. "For which prime minister is that [change of
subordination] being done?" it asks.
"Aravot" carries an editorial on upcoming local elections to be held
in mostly rural communities across Armenia. "Hardly anyone doubts who
will win those elections," writes the paper. "Opposition parties
decided not to enter the fray. `Good guys' from [Gagik Tsarukian's]
BHK will win in several communities, while Republican `good guys' will
make up the vast majority of town and village mayors. The names of
parties are absolutely unimportant # Even so, the opposition's
non-participation is weird. That fact testifies to not only a lack of
money or regional chapters but the laziness and indifference [of
opposition groups.] Yes, it is almost impossible to achieve success
[in Armenian local elections] but not trying to do that, not
communicating with citizens is a wrong tactic."
(Elen Chilingarian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2017 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Azerbaijani Press: Azeri NGO urges US chef to edit Karabakh footage out of cooking show

APA, Azerbaijan
Nov 3 2017
Azeri NGO urges US chef to edit Karabakh footage out of cooking show
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from the Azeri edition of APA]
An Azerbaijani NGO has urged a US celebrity chef to edit footage
filmed in the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh out of his show,
Baku-based APA news agency reported.
The letter, signed by the NGO called the Azeri community of
Nagorno-Karabakh and also by women who survived a 1990s deadly
military attack on an Azerbaijani town, was addressed to Anthony
Bourdain. The latter had travelled to the disputed region while
filming an episode devoted to Armenian cuisine for CNN's Parts
Unknown. Baku blacklisted Bourdain for the trip, which was made
without its consent. Azerbaijan says that those wishing to visit the
breakaway region must receive official permission from Baku; those who
fail to do so are declared personae non gratae.
The letter, a summary of which APA published, said that Armenian
troops attacked the town of Khojaly with the support of a Soviet
military unit during the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The
troops destroyed the town and killed a total of 613 civilians,
including 106 women, 63 children and 70 elderly people. Another 1,000
residents were injured, 1,275 were taken hostage and 150 went missing,
the letter said.
The signatories to the letter said they respected Bourdain's
professionality and programmes about international cuisines. However,
the letter said, although culinary exchanges bring people together in
peacetime, a "cultural programme like this one at a time of war may be
understood by people like us, who are victims of war crimes and lost
their loved ones and native lands, as support for a policy of ethnic
cleaning and forcible seizure of land".
The letter urged Bourdain to "take into account the sensitivity of the
situation and the suffering that many of us went through". "Also, we
call on you to revise your decision to include on your show the part
filmed in Azerbaijan's occupied territories which were subjected to
ethnic cleaning," it said.
The letter added: "Please, understand that we are even deprived of a
possibility to visit the graves of our parents and our other loved
ones in the occupied lands." It added that the people who wrote the
letter had for the past 25 years longed to go back to their native
lands, build their homes again and cook rice gruel, "which is an
Azerbaijani national meal" again for their children in the town of
Shusha, "in which Armenians hosted you".
APA news agency carried a summary of the address on its website. On
the right-hand side of the webpage, it placed an image of an
English-language version of the text of the address.

Azerbaijani Press: Azerbaijan will make protest to CNN, says Foreign Ministry

Trend News Agency (Baku, Azerbaijan)
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency
November 4, 2017 Saturday
Azerbaijan will make protest to CNN, says Foreign Ministry
by Leman Zeynalova, Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan
Nov. 04--Trend's interview with spokesperson of Azerbaijan's Foreign
Ministry, Hikmat Hajiyev
Q: CNN Greece has presented a story from Azerbaijan's occupied
territories. How would you comment on this?
A: As it can be seen, the story is one-sided and biased. It propagates
the illegal regime created in Azerbaijani territories occupied by
Armenian armed forces and distorts the essence of the conflict. It is
also obvious that the story was prepared on commercial conditions at
the request of Armenian Defense Ministry and is of political
advertising nature. Regretfully, CNN Greece fulfills non-objective and
biased political orders. We will convey our objection to CNN on this
issue.
Q: In the mentioned CNN story, Armenia's defense minister touches upon
the UN Security Council's resolutions. What's your opinion on that?
A: The UN Security Council has adopted 822 (1993), 853 (1993), 854
(1993) and 884 (1993) resolutions on Armenia-Azerbaijan
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, condemning the occupation of Azerbaijani
lands, confirming Azerbaijan's territorial integrity, sovereignty and
inviolability of its borders, and demands immediate, absolute and
unconditional withdrawal of the occupying forces from Azerbaijan's
territories.
The resolution 874 welcomes and commends the adjusted timetable of
urgent steps to implement Security Council resolutions 822 and 853 set
out by OSCE Minsk Group and all its members. The document, prepared in
accordance with the mandate of the resolution 853, envisages
stage-by-stage withdrawal of Armenian troops from Azerbaijan's
occupied lands within a concrete schedule.
In his SG/SM/5469 speech, dated October 31, 1994, the UN secretary
general openly said the UN position is based on four principles which
are reflected in different resolutions of the UN Security Council. The
first principle is Azerbaijan's territorial integrity. The second
principle is the inviolability of international borders. The third
principle is the unacceptability of the use of force for acquisition
of territory, and the fourth principle is the immediate and
unconditional withdrawal of all foreign troops from occupied
territories of Azerbaijan.
Instead of preparing the Armenian people for peace in accordance with
the international law, Armenia's defense minister illiterately tries
to explain the occupation of Azerbaijani lands by Armenia.
At the same time, he distorts the UN Security Council's resolutions in
a ridiculous way and thereby tries to deceive the Armenian people and
the international community. Such a distorting action undermines the
peace process for the conflict's settlement.
Q: Armenia's defense minister also touches upon the issues related to
the European Union and Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
How would you comment on that?
A: The European Union expressed its decisive and unequivocal position
on the developments in Spain's Catalonia. As it said, there should be
respect to territorial integrity, sovereignty and inviolability of
borders of states, and territorial integrity of states can't be
violated against the will of the central government and people.
Respect to territorial integrity and sovereignty of EU and non-EU
states has also been indicated in the EU Global Strategy as the main
principle.
What makes the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict different
is that Armenia has occupied Azerbaijani lands using force and has
carried out ethnic cleansing in the occupied territories. Violation
and occupation, from which Europe suffered during the Second World
War, stand at the core of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict.
The adoption of 1975 Helsinki Final Act once again reaffirmed the
inadmissibility of attempts to change internationally recognized
borders of states by using force and the principle of inviolability of
borders.

Azerbaijani Press: Baku says Yerevan may join new rail after pullout from Karabakh

APA, Azerbaijan
Nov 2 2017
Baku says Yerevan may join new rail after pullout from Karabakh
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from the Azeri edition of APA]
Azerbaijan has said that neighbouring Armenia may start using the
newly-inaugurated Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway after the long-standing
conflict over breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh is resolved.
"Our precondition for Armenia's joining this project is that first of
all the [Nagorno-Karabakh] conflict must be resolved and [Armenian]
troops must withdraw from our territory. After that it will be
possible to use every opportunity for cooperation and neighbourly
relations. Azerbaijan has not invaded any lands," APA quoted Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov as saying on 2 November. Mammadyarov was
speaking at a news conference with visiting Montenegrin Foreign
Minister Srdjan Darmanovic.
The Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway linking Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey
was put into operation on 30 October. The railway bypasses Armenia,
which has been locked in a largely frozen conflict with Azerbaijan
over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region since the late 1980s. Many
in Armenia view the new rail route as a tool used by Azerbaijan and
Turkey to deepen the country's isolation; Armenia is a landlocked
country that shares borders with Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey and Iran.

Azerbaijani Press: Appeal of Euronest PA Bureau reflects single approach to Karabakh issue, Azerbaijan says

4 November 2017 17:48 (UTC+04:00) 
            

Baku, Azerbaijan, Nov. 4

By Ilhama Isabalayeva – Trend:

An appeal adopted by the Euronest Parliamentary Assembly (PA) Bureau, which includes heads of the delegations of the European Parliament and the parliaments of Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine, to the heads of state and government, who will participate in the Eastern Partnership summit, reflects a single approach to the issue of occupied lands, Fuad Muradov, head of the Azerbaijani delegation to the Euronest PA, told Trend Nov. 4.

Recalling that the fifth summit of the Eastern Partnership will be held Nov. 24 in Brussels, Muradov said that in anticipation of such a summit, all European international structures send an appeal to the heads of state and government of the participating countries.

“The appeal covers many issues,” the head of the Azerbaijani delegation said. “There is a single approach regarding occupied territories, including those occupied in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The appeal says that peace must be restored in the occupied territories of any country.”

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts.

Tekeyan Cultural Association: four dates for your diary till the New Year

Dear Tekeyan Members, Supporters and Mailing List,

Please find below details of the following 4 events for your diary:

– Friday 17 November 2017, 7:30pm – 70th Anniversary of the Tekeyan Cultural Association
Kensington United Reformed Church, Allen Street, Kensington, London W8 6BL

– Sunday 19 November 2017, 3:00pm – Literary Encounter with poet and writer Anoush Nakashian of Jerusalem
Nvart Gulbenkian Hall, St Sarkis Church, Iverna Gardens, Kensington, London W8 6TP

– Tuesday 5 December 2017 – See the Komitas Chamber Choir perform at the annual HART Carol ConcertSt Cyprian’s Church, Glentworth St, Marylebone, London NW1 6AX

– Sunday 31 December 2017, 7pm – 2am – New Year’s Eve Dinner Dance
Copthorne Tara Hotel, Kensington, London W8 5SY

Turkish Press: Turkey sees Nusra Front as main ‘issue’ in post-IS Syria

Hurriyet, Turkey
Nov 2 2017
Turkey sees Nusra Front as main 'issue' in post-IS Syria
The al-Nusra terror group will be the main issue to deal with in Syria
in the post-Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (IS) period, Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said, stressing that targeting
al-Nusra constitutes the "real pillar" of the ongoing Turkish-Russian
operation in rebel-held Idlib.
"After Daesh [an Arabic acronym for Islamic State militant group, IS],
the real issue will be local terror organisations such as al-Nusra.
Some [local groups] will recede while others [IS] will go away
entirely. We want locals to return to their lands in Iraq and Syria.
We encourage moderate opposition groups, the Free Syrian Army [FSA],
to stake a claim on their lands," Erdogan told reporters while
returning from a trip to Azerbaijan late on 31 October.
"This is the fact lying behind the operations we are carrying out with
Russia," Erdogan said.
Ankara and Moscow are co-operating to monitor the ceasefire between
the Syrian regime and opposition groups in the Idlib province of Syria
as part of the Astana Process. Much of Idlib has been under the
control of al-Nusra-linked groups since July.
Recalling that IS had to remove its forces to Deir al-Zour, an
oil-rich region in southern Syria, after leaving Raqqa, Erdogan said
"Deir al-Zour must be cleared of Daesh."
"There are currently around 2,000 Daesh members in Iraq and it
controls only 10 percent of the territory. It is nearly finished and
is running away from there. We will see whether its members will
escape to Africa, the United States, or Europe," he added.
'Solidarity between Turkey and Russia'
As part of the deal in Astana, Turkey is monitoring the ceasefire
inside Idlib and Russia outside the province, and Erdogan said Turkey
is "in solidarity with Russia on Idlib."
"This will also cover Afrin province. Because Afrin could present
threats to us at any moment. Members of the separatist terror
organisation may try to reach the Mediterranean through the north by
occupying Idlib," he added, referring to the People's Protection Units
(YPG), which controls the Afrin canton along the Turkish border.
Turkey designates the YPG as a terror organisation that is the Syrian
branch of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).
Turkey will "never allow the YPG to expand its influence in the
region," Erdogan vowed.
Recalling that Turkey has troops inside Syria even though it has not
been invited by the Syrian state, he noted that the Russians have five
bases in Syria while the U.S. has "five aerial and eight other bases"
there at present.
"I always tell this to those who ask why we are there: There are
terror organisations harassing us from [inside Syria]. We may stage
cross-border operations against them any moment. Manbij, for example,
is fully under the control [of the YPG]," he said.
Talks with Abadi
Erdogan also touched on his talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider
al-Abadi in Ankara last week, stressing that the fight against the PKK
was among the issues discussed.
"Armed action against the PKK by the Iraqi central government is out
of the question at the moment. Its priority is Daesh and it does not
want to engage in such a thing before Daesh is fully cleared. But they
have assured us that they will do whatever is necessary to disarm the
separatist terror organisation," he said, adding that Turkey "will not
have to wait for the central Iraqi government in operations against
the PKK.
"We can launch cross border operations if anything negative happens
toward our country, or in the event of a provocation. I have also
explained what needs to be done so that we do not feel obliged to
act," he said.
With the handover of the Ibrahim Khalil border gate to the control of
the Baghdad government from the KRG, Turkey will be able to deliver
humanitarian aid to northern Iraq, Erdogan said, hinting that the aid
may also be sent through Iran, which currently has five border gates
with Iraq.
"Both Iran and Iraq have told us this is possible. We are leaning
toward delivering aid through the central government, since we don't
regard the KRG as our counterpart," he added.
On KRG President Masoud Barzani's recent decision to step down as
leader after the KRG independence attempt failed, Erdogan stressed the
importance of Iraq remaining a "federal entity."
"We think that such integration will benefit all Iraqi people. You see
the recent developments with Catalonia in Spain. Where did the person
who attempted to divide Spain flee? To Belgium," he said.
'Turkmens should return to Telafer'
President Erdogan also stressed the importance of seeing the return of
Iraqi Turkmens to Tel Afar, a northern Iraqi town that was liberated
from IS in early 2017.
"There are around 400,000 Turkmens in Tal Afar. Half of them are
Shiites, half of them Sunnis. Around 100,000 of them fled to Turkey
and the rest are in nearby regions. Our aim is to let them return to
their homes," he said.
Erdogan also addressed his talks with Azerbaijan President Ilham
Aliyev in Baku, noting that the two countries will co-commemorate the
centennial foundation of the Caucasus Islamic Army in 2018.
"Our Azerbaijani brothers wish to build a monument in Gallipoli, so we
have issued necessary instructions to our ministry for the allocation
of a proper site in Gallipoli. Necessary works are now underway," he
said.
Gallipoli on Turkey's northwestern coast was the scene of a major
battle between the Ottoman Empire and the British-led allied forces
during the First World War, which resulted in the defeat of the
latter. The site hosts a number of memorials and monuments in memory
of Turkish, British, French and Anzac soldiers who fought in the
Dardanelles in 1915 and 1916.
Meeting with Putin
The Turkish president said he also discussed the decades-old
Nagorno-Karabakh issue with Aliyev, pledging that Turkey will continue
to stand with Azerbaijan on this issue.
"I will discuss this issue directly with [Russian President Vladimir]
Putin either next week or the week after next. It seems a result on
this issue will be facilitated if Putin really engages with it," he
added.

Culture: Piano Recital at Tehran University

Iran News
November 4, 2017 Saturday
Piano Recital at Tehran University
Iranian-Armenian pianist Arpineh Israyelian will perform a recital of
classical and romantic pieces at Tehran University.
Slated for November 22, the recital will be held at Avini Hall of the
varsity's Faculty of Fine Arts, according to the website of Tiwall
(Tiwall.com) where tickets are available.
Repertoire includes compositions by Polish composer and virtuoso
pianist Frederic Chopin (1810-1849); French impressionist composer
Claude Debussy (1862-1918); French classical composer and conductor
Pierre Boulez (1925-2016); and Martin Israyelian, one of the
well-known contemporary classical composers from Armenia.
The recital starts at 7 pm. The venue is located near Enqelab Square.

Culture: Maestro Loris Tjeknavorian donates all scores to Music Museum of Iran

Tehran Times
November 1, 2017 Wednesday
Maestro Loris Tjeknavorian donates all scores to Music Museum of Iran
TEHRAN – Maestro Loris Tjeknavorian donated his entire collection of
scores to the Music Museum of Iran in Tehran on Tuesday.
The donation was made in a special ceremony that was attended by
Deputy Culture Minister for Artistic Affairs Ali Moradkhani and
several top musicians, including Shahram Nazeri, Farhad Fakhreddini,
Shahin Farhat and Kambiz Roshanravan.
At the ceremony, Moradkhani said that the collection will help provide
a rich and valuable source for the researchers and students.
He called Tjeknavorian a great man and promised that the collection
would be preserved in the best possible condition.
"All Iranian people have a share in my works since an artwork does not
belong just to its creator; it is a blessing from God," Tjeknavorian
said for his part.
He added that all his compositions have been inspired by God and
called himself "a music chef".
Tjeknavorian was born in 1937 in Borujerd in the southwestern Iranian
province of Lorestan and was educated in Tehran.
After he studied violin and piano at the Tehran Conservatory of Music,
he studied composition at the Vienna Music Academy, where he graduated
with honors in 1961.
Tjeknavorian has performed throughout the world, having conducted
international orchestras in Austria, Britain, the United States,
Canada, Hungary, Iran, Finland, the former Soviet Union, Armenia,
Thailand, Hong Kong, South Africa and Denmark.
His own compositions have been performed by major orchestras,
including the London Symphony Orchestra, the Helsinki Philharmonic
Orchestra, the American Symphony Orchestra in New York and the Tehran
Symphony Orchestra.
He also has tried his hand at painting and held an exhibition of his
works at the Iranian Artists Forum in Tehran in April 2016.
In addition, his book "Kharestan" (The Land of Donkeys), containing
short comic stories on donkeys, was published in March 2017.
Photo: Maestro Loris Tjeknavorian delivers a speech at the Music
Museum of Iran on October 31, 2017 after donating his entire
collection of scores to the museum. (Mehr/Mehran Riazi)
RM/MMS/YAW