We asses inadmissible all the steps that can be harmful for the country – members of Armenia’s Chess team support Serzh Sargsyan

ArmenPress, Armenia
We asses inadmissible all the steps that can be harmful for the country – members of Armenia’s Chess team support Serzh Sargsyan



YEREVAN, APRIL 20, ARMENPRESS. The chess team members of Armenia have congratulated Serzh Sargsyan on the election to the post of Prime Minister of Armenia by the parliament and expressed support. ARMENPRESS reports the chess players have issued a statement.

“The third President of the Republic of Armenia, President of the chess federation of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan was elected to the post of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia days ago, for which we congratulate Serzh Sargsyan and express our support for him for the welfare of our country and people. Having worked with Serzh Sargsyan for long years we, the chess players, have felt his readiness and devotion more than everyone to do everything for the achievements of Armenia and the Armenian people. All these have been proved numerous times by our achievements for which we have had numerous opportunities to be proud of our country, the creative and intellectual potential of our people. It’s just with the guidance of Serzh Sargsyan that the chess team of Armenia 3 times won the Olympic champion and once won the title of World Champion, in fact becoming the most reputable team. We are convinced that our present and future achievements in the sphere of chess have been obtained also due to our internal belief and confidence that we are all unified in our Motherland and we present one and the same power standing side by side. Today we once again want to reaffirm the conviction that our internal unity and power have been and will be the guarantee of our victories. Considering the developments in our country these days we call on all the sides to remain in the limits of reasonability and faithful to the spirit of the exceptional national solidarity. We assess inadmissible all the steps, calls and actions that can harm our country and any member of our public. We are confident that no right should be restrained, at the same time the implementation of any right should never violate others’ rights and put an end on our achievements. We are convinced that as a chess superpower, we will be able the best solution to the situation with joint efforts”, reads the statement.

Olympic champions, international Grand Masters Levon Aronian, Smbat Lputyan, Vladimir Hakobyan, Artashes Minasyan, Gabriel Sargsyan, Tigran L. Petrosyan, Rafayel Vahanyan and the head coach, international Grand Master Arshak Petrosyan have put their signatures under the statement.

English –translator/editor: Tigran Sirekanyan

Baku chooses the "Polonez"

DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
Friday
BAKU CHOOSES THE “POLONEZ”
 
by Alexandra Jorjevich, Kuala Lumpur; Ivan Safronov, Kirill Krivosheev
 
CIS DEFENSE; No. 1172
Source: Kommersant, N67, April 18, 2018, p. 3
 
 
 
In 2018, Belarus plans to start the implementation of the first export contract for the supply of ten “Polonez” multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS). The probable customer of the system is Azerbaijan. Its minister of defense has already visited Belarus, where he got acquainted with the technology of the MLRS production. “Kommersant” sources say that such a contract will be negatively perceived in Armenia, but “Iskander” tactical systems located there should play a deterrent in Armenian-Azerbaijani relations.
 
The fact that the first export supply of “Polonaises” may take place aa soon as in 2018 was told by a source close to the Ministry of Defense of Belarus. According to him, the first firm contract involves the transfer of ten sets of MLRS (including missiles, transport-charging machines, control stations, radar stations, etc.). Legal documents are at the final stage, and the client “finishes solving its financial problems,” the source stressed, adding that it is not “about the loan from Minsk.” The source refused to disclose the name of the customer, however, two top managers of Russian defense enterprises say that the customer is from Azerbaijan.
 
The “Polonaise” project began to be implemented against the backdrop of the disagreements between Moscow and Minsk, which began in 2012, about the delivery of “Iskander” operational tactical missile systems to the Republic of Belarus. However, Russia agreed to relocate the MLRS to Belarus only together with the combat crews of the Russian Armed Forces. Having not received the desired result, Mr. Lukashenko instructed to create Belarus’s own system, not inferior to Iskander in its capabilities. It was difficult to do this from scratch and quickly, so the Belarusians decided to purchase, and later locate, the Chinese A-200 type missiles (produced by China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology) at the Minsk plant of precise electro-mechanics, installing them on the Belarusian MZKT-7970 chassis. For the parade on May 9, 2015, two “Polonaise” were shown to the public. Subsequently, the system was tested at artillery ranges in China and Belarus, and the check was recognized as successful. According to sources, now the volume of localization of production of the missiles in Belarus is about 30%: the plant expects to master the full assembly cycle, but they admit that so far “it is still too far away”.
 
 

Russia, Armenia Agree On Integrated Regional Air Defense System For Collective Security

Defence Monitor Worldwide
Friday
Russia, Armenia Agree On Integrated Regional Air Defense System For Collective Security
 
 
Russia and Armenia have agreed on composition of forces and assets in the United Regional Air Defense System in the Caucasus region for collective security.
 
“The list of troops allocated by Russia and Armenia to the United Regional Air Defense System in the Caucasus region of collective security has been signed,” the chief of the main staff – First Deputy Commander of the Air and Space Forces (RF) of the Russian Federation Lieutenant-General Pavel Kurachenko was quoted as saying by Ria Novosti Tuesday.
 
The document was signed by the chiefs of the general staffs of the armed forces of the Russian Federation and Armenia. The list was sent for approval to the head of the RF Ministry of Defense Sergey Shoigu and the Minister of Defense of Armenia Vigen Sargsyan. A similar list of troops and forces has already been agreed and approved with Kazakhstan.
 
“Coordination of documents on the establishment of joint regional air defense systems of Russia and Kyrgyzstan, as well as Russia and Tajikistan is continuing,” Kurachenko added.
 
In addition, Major-General Igor Golub, commander of the Air Force and air defense forces of Belarus, was appointed commander of the unified regional air defense system of the Russian Federation and Belarus, and Nurlan Karbenov, commander-in-chief of the Kazakh Air Defense Force, is scheduled to be appointed commander of the unified regional air defense system of the Russian Federation and Kazakhstan.
 
The united air defense system of the CIS member states is created on the basis of the agreement of ten countries of the commonwealth, signed on February 10, 1995 in Alma-Ata.
 
At present, Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan are part of the united air defense system of the CIS member states. 2018 Global Data Point.
 
 

Vartkes Mahdessian: Turkey continues denying Armenian Genocide, fears legal consequences will follow

News.am, Armenia
Vartkes Mahdessian: Turkey continues denying Armenian Genocide, fears legal consequences will follow Vartkes Mahdessian: Turkey continues denying Armenian Genocide, fears legal consequences will follow

00:15, 21.04.2018
                  

Turkey continues to stubbornly refuse to acknowledge its blood-stained past and perpetrating the Armenian Genocide, Armenian representative at the Cyprus parliament Vartkes Mahdessian said addressing the House plenary.

Mahdessian thanked Cyprus which was the first European country to pass a parliamentary resolution recognizing the genocide in 1975, Cyprus Mail reported.

“It is truly unthinkable that civilized states, who appear to be protectors of human rights and democracy, continue to yield to the pressure exerted by Turkey, taking advantage of its geostrategic position and purchasing power, which stops them from recognizing the Armenian Genocide,” said Mahdessian.

He said the genocide was a tragedy that shocked the then civilized world and which created deep wounds like no other event in the long course of the Armenian nation.

As to why Turkey has so stubbornly refused to recognize the Armenian Genocide, while Germany has recognized the Holocaust of the Jews, Mahdessian said that the main reasons were the legal consequences of such a move and its impact on Turkish society.

“Turkey is not willing to pay even one cent to the survivors of the Genocide and their offspring, since it would not be only for the Armenians, but also the Greeks, the Assyrians, and perhaps the Kurds, and the Cypriots,” he concluded.

Initial design and lease for Armenian American Museum in Central Park approved

LA Times, CA
APril 20 2018

Genocide: Pallone leads letter calling on President Trump to commemorate the Armenian Genocide

States News Service
Friday
Pallone Leads Letter Calling on President Trump to Commemorate the Armenian Genocide
 
WASHINGTON, D.C.
 
The following information was released by the office of New Jersey Rep. Frank Pallone Jr.:
 
Today, Congressman Frank Pallone Jr. (NJ-06), Co-Chair of the Armenian Issues Caucus, along with 101 members of Congress, sent the following letter to President Trump asking that he commemorate April 24th as a day of American remembrance of the Armenian Genocide. Congressman Pallone helped organize and attended the Armenian Issues Caucus’ commemoration of the Armenian Genocide on Capitol Hill that took place this week and on Sunday he will attend the commemoration in Times Square. Last fall, Pallone traveled to Armenia, where he expressed his long-held belief that the United States should appropriately recognize the Armenian Genocide.
 
The text of the letter is below:
 
 
President Donald J. Trump
 
The White House
 
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
 
Washington, DC 20500
 
Dear President Trump:
 
We are writing to urge you to properly commemorate the 103rd Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide on April 24th.
 
In leading an honest and accurate American remembrance of this known case of genocide, you will stand with President Reagan, who recognized the Armenian Genocide in 1981, and the Eisenhower Administration, which did the same in a 1951 submission to the International Court of Justice. The House of Representatives has also commemorated the Armenian Genocide, through H.J.Res.148 in 1975 and H.J.Res.247 in 1984.
 
Armenia remains deeply committed to expanding the bonds of friendship that have long connected the American and Armenian peoples. Among the proudest chapters in our shared history is America’s remarkable record of protesting the Genocide and in caring for the survivors of this crime. The United States Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire in 1915, Henry Morgenthau, helped to chronicle the brutal extermination of the Armenian people through a campaign of mass murder and violent expulsion.
 
In the years after the genocide, Ambassador Morgenthau and other concerned Americans launched the Near East Relief, a congressionally chartered humanitarian organization, which raised $116 million (over $2.7 billion in 2018 dollars) to aid the victims of the Ottoman Empire’s mass murder of millions of Armenians, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Greeks, Syriacs, and other persecuted peoples. The generosity of the American people saved countless lives and helped to ensure the continued survival of the Armenian culture.
 
The Armenian Genocide continues to stand as an important reminder that crimes against humanity must not go without recognition and condemnation. Through recognition of the Armenian Genocide we pay tribute to the perseverance and determination of those who survived, as well as to the Americans of Armenian descent who continue to strengthen our country to this day. It is our duty to honor those contributions with an honest statement of history recognizing the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians as the 20th century’s first genocide. By commemorating the Armenian Genocide, we renew our commitment to prevent future atrocities.
 
In the spirit of honoring the victims and redoubling our commitment to prevent genocide, we ask you to appropriately mark April 24th as a day of American remembrance of the Armenian Genocide.
 
Thank you for taking our views into consideration.
 
Sincerely,

Genocide: Nicosia: Parliament calls on international community to recognise Armenian genocide

Cyprus News Agency
Friday
Parliament calls on international community to recognise Armenian genocide
 
The Cypriot parliament has called on the international community to recognise and condemn the Armenian genocide.
 
Addressing the plenary before its legislative work here, today, House of Representatives President Demetris Syllouris marked the anniversary of April 24th.
 
Even today, he said, “Turkey continues to be provocative, describing the murder of one and a half million of Armenians as displacement and continues without remorse a policy of ethnic minority cleansing with its criminal actions against the Kurds in Syria.”
 
Cypriot MPs have declared April 24th as the National Day of Commemorating the Armenian genocide since 1990 and have passed relevant resolutions to that effect.
 
Today, he noted, “we would like to once more condemn Turkey`s policy of ethnic cleansing and of expansion and to express our full support to our friends, the people of Armenia as well as to reiterate once more our call to the international community to globally recongise and condemn the Armenian genocide.”
 
“It is indeed inconceivable that civilised states, which appear as protectors of human rights and of democracy, continue to give in to the pressure exerted by Turkey, who takes advantage of its geostrategic position and its purchasing power, deterring them from recognising the Armenian genocide,” Vartkes Mahtesian, Armenian Representative to the House of Representatives said addressing the plenary.
 
He described the Armenian genocide as “a tragedy which shook the civilised world at the time and which has caused the deepest wounds in the history of the Armenian nation.”
 
According to Mahtesian, between 1915 and 1923 more than 1,5 million innocent Armenians suffered torture, were put to death, slaughtered or forced to walk to their death in the inhospitable Deir ez-Zor desert, while more than 800,000 Armenians became refugees and had to flee to many different parts of the world, shaping the Armenian Diaspora as it is known today.

Genocide: Columnist Andrea Ayvazian: Wants U.S. to acknowledge Armenian genocide

Daily Hampshire Gazette

Friday,
   In 1995, my sister Leslie wrote a play called “Nine Armenians,” which opened in New York City to rave reviews and then toured to some of the finest regional theaters in the country.

The play is loosely based on our extended family, and the genocide of the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turks during World War I. The play weaves glimpses of every-day Armenian life in this country with stories of the genocide, which began in 1915.

My father, a genocide survivor, features prominently in the play, as do our grandparents, aunts and uncles. “Nine Armenians” also tells of my journey, as a young adult, to Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, to listen, experience, and observe for myself what life is like in Armenia today.

Part of the reason that Leslie wrote the play is so that Armenians “would be counted.” Our father, who called the genocide “the massacres,” spent his entire life — as have so many other Armenians — working to have the United States and Turkey acknowledge the genocide.

Numbers matter to Armenians. We want it known that 1.5 million Armenians were killed during the genocide — a number that represents half of the Armenian population then living in Turkey. Forty-eight states in the U.S. and 29 countries around the world formally acknowledge the genocide. But the U.S. government and Turkey, denying history and distorting facts, refuse to acknowledge the genocide.

The Armenian Genocide began on April 24, 1915, when an estimated 250 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople (now Istanbul) were rounded up by Ottoman authorities, arrested, and deported to the region of Ankara, in the interior. The majority of these men were eventually murdered.

Armenians care about numbers and being counted, which is why “Nine Armenians” tells the story of nine members of one family — and at the same time tells the story of millions of others.

Because Armenians like numbers, we are grateful to know that 135 memorials, spread across 25 countries, commemorate the Armenian genocide. Our genocide may be denied, but we will not forget.

This April 24, on Armenian Martyrs’ Day, the Armenian community in the Pioneer Valley and our allies will again, for the 22nd consecutive year, mark the genocide by gathering to reflect, mourn, and demand that our genocide be acknowledged. Led by my sister Gina, we will meet at the E.J. Gare Parking Garage in Northampton and walk together, in a solemn procession, to Memorial Hall, where we will hold a vigil and service.

For the first time in the 22 years of holding this commemoration on Armenian Martyrs’ Day, our mayor will come with a proclamation and read it aloud. Although Mayor David Narkewicz has stood with us for many years, witnessing to our pain and supporting our community, this year will be different. We are deeply grateful for the Armenian Martyrs’ Day Proclamation that will be delivered.

The proclamation contains appropriately strong language and names and condemns the massacres, which for too long were overlooked. “Whereas on April 24, 1915, a mass genocide of the Armenian population began in the Ottoman Turkish Empire, the first genocide in the twentieth century…” the proclamation begins. It continues, “Whereas Americans of Armenian descent have contributed to the quality of life in the United States and Massachusetts in the best traditions of our nation and states, in times of war and peace; and Whereas the Armenian citizens around the world and of the Commonwealth are dedicated to honoring the memory of the brave men and women who died; and Whereas our thoughts, offered in memory of the 1.5 million Armenians lost during the genocide, will serve to remind everyone that persecution, torture, and killing must cease.”

Armenians like numbers and we are grateful that Northampton can now be counted among the long list of towns and cities throughout the world that formally and publicly acknowledge the Armenian genocide and our painful history, which remains an open wound.

When the centennial of the beginning of the genocide was commemorated in 2015, Armenians throughout the diaspora demanded that it be recognized by the governments of the U.S. and Turkey. Our cries were not heard.

My father, who has now passed on, did not live to see the genocide that slaughtered members of his own family acknowledged by Turkey and America. My sisters and I, now in our 60s, wonder if the genocide will be acknowledged in our lifetimes.

We believe Armenians count. And we are still counting.

The Rev. Dr. Andrea Ayvazian, of Northampton, is part of the ministerial team of the Alden Baptist Church in Springfield. She is the founder and director of the Sojourner Truth School for Social Change Leadership, which offers free movement-building classes from Greenfield to Springfield. She writes a monthly column on the intersection of faith, culture, and politics, and can be reached at .

Genocide: 102 US lawmakers press Trump to properly commemorate Armenian Genocide

News.am, Armenia
 
 
102 US lawmakers press Trump to properly commemorate Armenian Genocide
 
 
WASHINGTON—One hundred and two U.S. Representatives – including the Chairmen of the House Foreign Affairs and Intelligence Committees—have called on President Donald Trump to reject Turkey’s gag-rule by honestly and accurately commemorating the Armenian Genocide this April 24, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).
 
“It’s time to end America’s ‘Turkey First’ approach to the Armenian Genocide,” said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA.  “Erdogan’s traditional apologists have abandoned him—and rightfully so. Devoid of allies across the American political landscape—from left to right, hawk to dove—he’s turning to the White House as his last line of defense against the truth. The choice rests with President Trump, to put America first or to enforce a foreign gag rule.”
 
The letter to President Trump, led by Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), David Trott (R-Mich.), Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) and David Valadao (R-Calif.) as well as Vice-Chairs Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.) explained that: “The Armenian Genocide continues to stand as an important reminder that crimes against humanity must not go without recognition and condemnation. Through recognition of the Armenian Genocide, we pay tribute to the perseverance and determination of those who survived, as well as to the Americans of Armenian descent who continue to strengthen our country to this day. It is our duty to honor those contributions with an honest statement of history recognizing the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians as the 20th century’s first genocide. By commemorating the Armenian Genocide, we renew our commitment to prevent future atrocities.” They closed by asking that the President: “Appropriately mark April 24th as a day of American remembrance of the Armenian Genocide.”

Genocide: Local Armenians mark genocide anniversary in Lowell

Lowell Sun, MA
By Scott Shurtleff, Sun Correspondent

Updated:   04/21/2018 02:03:57 PM EDT

Richard Juknavorian, commander of the Armenian American Veterans of Lowell, lowers his head as speakers share their stories during Lowell’s annual Armenian Genocide remembrance at City Hall. SUN/JEFF PORTER

Sun staff photos can be ordered by visiting our SmugMug site.

LOWELL — The quarter mile from John Street to City Hall is a short walk and a century long. It was the route traveled Saturday morning by more than 50 Armenian Americans in commemoration of the anniversary of the Armenian genocide 103 years ago.

Although April 24, 1915, is recognized as the official starting date of Armenia’s horrors, the relentless campaign of eradication actually lasted some eight years. The procession down Merrimack Street was a symbolic reflection of that dark period and the many generations of Armenians in attendance all knew why they were there.

The march culminated in a flag-raising ceremony at City Hall, where clergy, politicians and ancestrally-linked survivors of the genocide spoke, sang and saluted both a flag and a people.

The annual procession is held throughout the country on the Saturday morning before April 24.

Steve Dulgarian, 84, of Chelmsford, and carries with him the passed-down stories of his mother’s and father’s escape from the genocide. He still marches alongside the great-grandchildren of his countrymen. He estimates that there are about 3,000 Armenians living in the Merrimack Valley and as many as 1 million in the United States.

“About 2 million Armenians were murdered by the Ottomans,” he said.

His anger has been replaced by ethnic pride. Not only has he not forgotten myriad tragic stories he heard from his parents, but he has assigned himself the informal role of passing along those tales to subsequent generations.

But more than DNA and familial legacy have been passed forward to the younger Armenians. The language from the old country is just as vibrant as the culture itself, youngsters recite prayers in the language and sing their national anthem in Armenian. Each generation is eager to keep alive the voice of their ancestors and many study the history of their lineage.

Samantha Oldham is a 14-year-old from Arlington who stepped up to mic at the reception Saturday. She told of her, and her family’s, visit to Armenia last year, and what she saw and learned about her heritage — at least from that epoch.

“I saw the vivid pictures and images of people slaughtered and starved, children abandoned and families lost,” she spoke of both horror and hope.

The solemnity of the moment was punctuated by prayers and faith as each speaker was flanked by local clergy and dignitaries.

Hayk Demoyan is the director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, which is located in the Armenia’s capital, Yerevan. Demoyan is a temporary Lowellian and visiting scholar.

“It has been more than a century but it is a new beginning. By honoring our fallen compatriots,” he said, “we bring justice to the perpetrators.”

The flag was raised by the youngest people in the group. Six children hoisted the rope that ran the red, blue, and orange banner up the pole. The colors are signifiers of the people and their place. The red represents the blood of the victims and the resisters, the blue is a trope to the people’s will and resolve while the orange is an homage to the toil and the fruits of hardwork; orange in color to resemble the country’s signature crop, the apricot.

Armenians are, according to Dulgarian, Apostolic Christians for the most part. Armenia itself, which has seen an array of various empires and armies pass through its mountainous terrain over the centuries, was the first country to officially adopt Christianity as its national religion, in 301 AD.