Turkey: Why are non-Muslim cemeteries attacked?

Attacks against the cemeteries of Christians, Jews and Yazidis have a long history in the country.

 The Istanbul community woke up on July 15 to learn of painful news published on social media: A Jewish cemetery had been subjected to the most cruel and callous attack. Gravestones had been desecrated, and some of the badly damaged graves had even been opened.

The Chief Rabbinate Foundation of Turkey announced on Twitter that the Jewish cemetery in Istanbul’s Haskoy neighborhood was targeted at midnight and 36 gravestones destroyed.

A later investigation revealed that the scope of the attack was even more devastating than earlier thought. The marble stones of 81 graves were broken, according to the newspaper Duvar. Some graves were found to have been excavated.

“After the attack, many people went to the cemetery to check whether the tombstones of their relatives were broken.

“Those who destroyed the graves are allegedly children under the age of 18. The police took five children into custody for the damage they did to the gravestones.

“Beni Yohay went to the cemetery to check the graves of his relatives and said: ‘This is barbaric. This is a burial place. My blood froze when I saw the broken graves. I don’t understand why they are doing this. This is not the first time such an attack has been carried out.’

“Eli Yohani also went to the cemetery after seeing the news on social media. He said: ‘Here are the graves of my father-in-law, grandfather, grandmother, and my father, who died two months ago. … Things like this have also happened a few times before. There is nothing to say. Shame on those who did this.’ ”

Jewish cemetery desecration in Turkey. Source: antisemitism.org.il.

Muhlis Tatlı claimed that the children may have targeted the cemetery upon the instruction of adults. “Kids don’t do such things. An elder may have directed them,” he said. A shopkeeper who works next to the cemetery said that the graves were previously desecrated by those searching for gold.

Garo Paylan, an Armenian Parliament member of the opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), wrote on Twitter:

“The fact that the attack on the Jewish cemetery was carried out by children aged between 11 and 13 does not alleviate the situation; it aggravates it. Who and what mentality have filled those children with hatred towards Jews?”

Attacks against non-Muslim cemeteries are widespread in Turkey. When Assyrian (Syriac) Christians in the city of Mardin, located in southeast Turkey, went to the cemetery of the Mor (Saint) Paul and Peter on June 29—their namesake’s feast day—Christians saw that the graves had been destroyed and the bones thrown out.

David Vergili, a prominent Syriac-Assyrian journalist and editor-in-chief of the Syriac newspaper Sabro, has family roots in Mardin. He has lived in Europe for the past 20 years and written about minorities in Turkey for more than a decade. Vergili told JNS:

“In the past two months, the graves of Syriac and Jewish communities in Turkey have been attacked and destroyed. The graves and holy places of the Armenian community have also experienced similar attacks before. These incidents and especially the attacks on the sacred places, graves and values of non-Muslim communities are not new and they constitute hate crimes. These attacks have racist, religious motives and mostly target groups that are not part of the Turkish-Islamic ideology. These attacks have been happening for years and there has been no improvement in the way the government responds to them. Given the past trauma of and attacks against the Christian and Jewish communities as well as the Turkish government’s denial of its own crimes, it is obvious that even the dead are affected by these violations. The hatred and humiliating discourse towards minority groups in Turkey manifest themselves as direct attacks on minority groups. Not only the living non-Muslim minority communities, but also their sacred places and their dead are not fully recognized and respected by large segments of the society and the government/state of Turkey.”

As Vergili pointed out, Armenian cemeteries in Turkey are also familiar with similar attacks. An Armenian cemetery in the province of Van was reportedly destroyed by bulldozers in August of 2021. A deputy of the HDP, Murat Sarısaç, asked Turkey’s vice president, Fuat Oktay, in a parliamentary motion:

“Has any investigation been initiated regarding the destruction of the Armenian cemetery?

Why are the Armenian cemeteries, cultural and religious structures in Van not protected? If there is a protection measure, why do similar destructions occur frequently?

Will you take any initiative to repair the destroyed cemeteries, cultural and belief structures in Van?

Do you have any plans to protect the many derelict Armenian cemeteries in Van?

Has an inventory of Armenian monasteries, churches and cultural structures in Van been prepared?” 

Oktay is yet to answer the questions.

Sarısaç also pointed out these sorts of incidents are often reported in Van. “In 2017, a public toilet, some sort of dressing room and a carpark were built on Dilkaya Tumulus and the Armenian cemetery in Van,” he continued. “Because of treasure hunters and the negligence of the authorities, precious historical and cultural patrimony in and surrounding Van are damaged.”

Attacks by Muslims against non-Muslim cemeteries—the cemeteries of Christians, Jews and Yazidis—have a long history in Turkey. Ottoman Turkey committed genocide against Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks from 1913 to 1923. This crime is also recognized as genocide by the International Association of Genocide Scholars. Following the genocide, cultural and religious heritage belonging to those communities including their cemeteries were targeted, and in many cases, destroyed, across Turkey.

Even after the founding of Turkey in 1923, such attacks continued. During the pogrom that targeted Greeks, Armenians and Jews in Istanbul on Sept. 6-7, 1955, cemeteries were violently attacked. According to an article by Speros Vryonis Jr., a historian who specialized in Byzantine, Balkan and Greek history, Turks “profaned and soiled the Greek Orthodox religious vessels; they smashed and dug up the graves in Greek cemeteries, throwing out the bones and remains of the dead; they affected circumcisions on some elderly priests on the streets during the pogrom.”

Yazidis, a non-Muslim community native to the Middle East, are also victims of such assaults. Subsequent Turkish governments and Muslim citizens of Turkey have made varied efforts to Islamize the Yazidis. Author Yasar Batman writes that Yazidi temples were destroyed, and Yezidi graves were defaced in Turkey.

According to Batman, Yazidis lay their dead in graves on their backs facing the sun. But many Yazidi graves were opened, and the dead bodies were placed according to Islamic rules—this time facing the Qibla, the direction of the Kaaba in Mecca.

Sadly, Turkey has transported this destructive tradition to Cyprus. Christian and Jewish cemeteries have been destroyed in the Turkish-occupied northern part of the Republic of Cyprus since the 1974 Turkish military invasion. According to a 2012 report,

“Even the cemeteries in occupied Cyprus became a target for the mania for the destruction of the Turkish invaders and their associates.

“British journalist John Fielding reported (The Guardian, May 6, 1976) that he and his TV crew had visited 26 villages in occupied Cyprus where Greek Cypriots used to live and did not find a single cemetery which had not been desecrated.

“In another report from Cyprus The Observer (March 29, 1987) states that vandals desecrated a great number of British graves in occupied Cyprus, some of them belonging to soldiers who fought in the First World War. According to the article, in the British cemetery at Famagusta all the crosses have been smashed, while at a cemetery in Kyrenia, the graves had been opened and the headstones smashed to pieces.”

Among the desecrated and destroyed cemeteries in the occupied north of Cyprus is the historic Margo Jewish Cemetery in southeast Nicosia.

Why are attacks against non-Muslim graves so commonly committed by many Turks, and why is there so much apathy towards these abuses? Ayse Gunaysu, a member of the Commission Against Racism and Discrimination of the Human Rights Association (IHD), told JNS:

“Turkey is a land of genocide. After the 1913-23 genocide against Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians, hatred against non-Muslims has been encouraged by the state’s anti-minority policies ever since the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923, and this hatred has dominated the societal climate. The destruction of cemeteries is the destruction of the memory closely linked to the genocide.

“Photographs of the looting of the stores and businesses during the Sept. 6-7, 1955 pogrom in Istanbul are often shared, creating a perception as if this pogrom stemmed from “hostility towards the wealth of non-Muslims.

“However, the Sept. 6-7 pogrom showed a particularly terrible face in the attacks on churches and the graves of saints in churchyards. Graves were destroyed, and bones were scattered. Even a newly buried dead body was hung from a tree and a Turkish flag was stuck in its stomach. Photographs by Dimitros Kalumenos, the official photographer of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, published in two books by Istos publications, recorded the devastating images of attacks on churches and cemeteries during the pogrom. Hatred of non-Muslims is a state of existence that dominates large sections of Turkish society. As long as this hatred continues in Turkey, the destruction of non-Muslim graves will continue.”

Uzay Bulut is a Turkish journalist and political analyst formerly based in Ankara.

https://www.jns.org/opinion/turkey-why-are-non-muslim-cemeteries-attacked/

CivilNet: UN official deletes Armenian Genocide post after Turkish outcry

CIVILNET.AM

28 Jul, 2022 10:07

  • Azerbaijani forces opened fire on Armenian positions along the eastern section of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border, as well as on Nagorno-Karabakh’s Taghavard and Karmir Shuka communities.
  • Opposition activist Avetik Chalabyan was released from detention.
  • United Nations General Assembly President Abdulla Shahid deleted a tweet about visiting the Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan after complaints from Turkey.

Credits: Ruptly

ECOS launches 60MW cryptomine at Armenian power plant

DATA CENTER DYNAMICS

Company can expand up to 200MW at Hrazdan natural gas plant

Cryptomining firm ECOS has launched a new cryptomine data center at a power plant in Armenia.

The company said this week that a 60MW mining center has been launched at the Hrazdan Power Plant across a 22,000 sqm (236,800 sq ft) site. According to ECOS’ website the mining facility consists of 12 mining containers alongside a main ECOS building.


Founded in 2017, ECOS has permission from the Armenian government to create and manage a Free Economic Zone to support the development of a blockchain industry in the country. The FEZ zone offers a number of tax benefits for mining activities.

The Hrazdan site, located in central Armenia in Kotayk Province, can reportedly accommodate more than 20,000 mining devices, with the potential to expand to an additional 200MW.

“We have come a long way from legalizing mining in Armenia to launching our own energy infrastructure that is ready for scaling. We want to offer our partners simplicity in everything: from launching your mining business on our data center to daily monitoring of the result in the application without leaving your home,” said Ilya Goldberg, managing partner of ECOS.

Hrazdan Power Plant is a natural gas-fired power plant. Built between 1963–1974, and the first unit became operational in 1966. A new unit was added in 2013. Four older units of the plant are owned and operated by the Hrazdan Power Company, a subsidiary of Tashir Capital. The new fifth unit is owned and operated by Gazprom Armenia. The four original units have a total capacity of 1,110MW, while the fifth unit offers 480MW.

Report on Azerbaijani Crimes Submitted to the UN





07/26/2022 Azerbaijan (International Christian Concern) – This month, a report submitted to the United Nations by a nonprofit human rights organization indicted Azerbaijan for crimes against historically Christian Armenians. The report documented recent Azerbaijani violations of an international treaty against racial discrimination. The Center for Truth and Justice (CFTJ), which assembled and submitted the report, compiled the testimonies of returned Armenian prisoners of war, provocative comments by top Azerbaijani officials, accounts of forceable Armenian displacement, and other violations. Miriam Nazaretyan, a lawyer and board member for CFTJ, told CivilNet that the evidence demonstrates that Azerbaijan has continued “to treat Armenian detainees in the most depraved and inhuman ways, incite racial hatred against Armenians, and destroy, demolish, and vandalize Armenian cultural sites including churches and cemeteries.” These human rights abuses are direct breaches of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, a treaty to which Azerbaijan is a signatory. The UN committee in charge of overseeing the implementation of the treaty will review Azerbaijan’s compliance next month.

These ongoing concerns over human rights abuses come as Azerbaijan and Armenia approach the two-year anniversary of skirmishes that escalated into the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War, fought between the two beginning in September of that year. Unfortunately, in the post-war period, levels of animosity between the two sides have remained high, and human rights violations have continued. The International Court of Justice already explicitly mandated Azerbaijan’s compliance with international law in a December 2021 ruling, but no enforcement mechanism exists to ensure Azerbaijan commits to change. Despite the lack of practical international enforcement, CFTJ hopes that reports like the one it submitted this month will serve to establish an impactful public record of human rights abuses. Haig Ter-Ghevondian, head of CFTJ’s translation team, explained their goals to CivilNet, “It’s like throwing pebbles in a pond. It’s not noticeable at first, but at some point, you’re going to notice that there’s a mound in the middle of the lake, and that’s what this is about.” While change is slow in coming, the efforts of organizations like CFTJ are indeed critical to bringing ongoing violations of human rights into the light.


 

ERO Los Angeles removes an Armenian with multiple prior removals

LOS ANGELES — U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement’s (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Los Angeles field office removed an Armenian citizen with two prior removals. Deportation officers transferred custody of Vigen Patatanyan, 59, to Armenian authorities at the Zvartnots International Airport in Yerevan, Armenia, without incident, May 7.

Patatanyan, who was unlawfully present, first entered the U.S. Feb. 19, 2000, at a Los Angeles airport on a nonimmigrant visa with authorization to remain in the United States for six months. An immigration judge in San Francisco ordered Patatanyan removed from the U.S. in April 2001.

Patatanyan filed a motion to reopen his case with the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). His motion was denied and Patatanyan was removed from the U.S. to Armenia in March 2004.

On Sept. 15, 2004, Patatanyan applied for admission into the U.S. at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry in Otay Mesa. An immigration judge in San Diego ordered the Armenian removed in February 2005. Patatanyan exercised his due process and filed another appeal with the BIA March 16, 2005. The appeal was dismissed June 20, 2005, and he was removed a second time from the U.S. to Armenia Oct. 5, 2005.

Patatanyan was again encountered by U.S. Border Patrol agents Feb. 9, 2016 in San Diego and he was referred for prosecution for illegal reentry to the U.S. The U.S. District Court, Southern District of California convicted Patatanyan of illegal entry into the U.S. on Feb. 23. On May 12, he filed a third appeal with the BIA and was denied the motion on the same day. He filed a fourth appeal to the BIA and was denied June 20, 2016.

Patatanyan filed a petition with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and was denied Feb. 19, 2019.

ERO Los Angeles deportation officers arrested Patatanyan in the community March 29, 2022, and placed him in custody until his removal to Armenia could be completed.

Regardless of nationality, ICE makes custody determinations on a case-by-case basis, in accordance with U.S. law and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) policy.

Members of the public who have information about foreign fugitives are urged to contact ICE by calling the ICE Tip Line at 1-866-DHS-2-ICE or internationally at 001-1802-872-6199. They can also file a tip online by completing ICE’s online tip form.

 

What is the United States after from Azerbaijan and Armenia?

The U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke on the phone with Azeri President İlham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan separately on Monday.

U.S. top diplomat’s holding phone calls with both leaders on the same day is “noteworthy,” according to Azeri political scientist Turan Rzayev.

Washington is aiming to provide Azeri gas for Europe and to pull Armenia out of Russia’s orbit to integrate it with the West, Rzayev told Jam News on Tuesday.

Blinken discussed “Azerbaijan and Armenia’s historic opportunity to achieve peace in the region,” reiterating Washington’s offer of assistance in helping to facilitate the opening of regional transportation and communication linkages, U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said in two separate statements released after the phone conversations on Monday.

Encouraging continued bilateral dialogue between the two countries that have fought a war over disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region in late 2020, Blinken also reaffirmed that the United States

“stands ready to engage bilaterally and with likeminded partners to help Armenia and Azerbaijan find a long-term comprehensive peace,” Price said.

Urging Aliyev to release all remaining Armenian detainees, Blinken also praised Pashinyan for the bilateral efforts have been made with Turkey to normalise relations, Price said.

The United States is currently interested in normalising ties between Yerevan and Ankara, “in the context of providing Europe with energy from Azerbaijan,” according to Rzayev. “Washington understands that Azerbaijan is Ankara’s red line,” the analyst said.

Now the United States is trying to pull Armenia out of Russia’s orbit and integrate it with the West, and for this reason, “the normalisation of relations between Yerevan and Ankara is of utmost importance,” he said.

Turkish and Armenian officials held four rounds of exploratory talks since January, aimed at normalising diplomatic relations, frozen for almost three decades, amid Armenia’s conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia handed back territories in the region to Azerbaijan as part of a truce agreement signed by the warring sides in November 2020, after six-weeks of clashes. Turkey sided with Azerbaijan in the conflict.

Sports: Otubanjo fires Armenian club ahead in UEFA Champions League qualifiers

Nigeria –

Former Nigeria U17 international Yusuf Otubanjo scored twice for Armenian club Pyunik to beat F91 Dudelarge 4-1 to qualify them to the next round of UEFA Champions League qualifiers 4-2 on aggregate.

Otubanjo equalised for his side 1-1 in the 24th minute.

He then made it 3-1 in the 76th minute.

Otubanjo lasted for 87 minutes when he was replaced with Gevorg Najaryan.

The forward has played in Austria for LASK, Red Bull Salzburg, FC Blau WieB Linz and Rheinorf Altach.

He also played for Atletico Madrid (Spain), MSK Zilina (Slovakia) and Ararat Armenia (Armenia).

https://scorenigeria.com.ng/otubanjo-fires-armenian-club-ahead-in-uefa-champions-league-qualifiers/

Turkish Press: Türkiye-Armenia normalization: People of border city of Kars want crossings to reopen

Turkey –


Türkiye-Armenia normalization: People of border city of Kars want crossings to reopen

"Mine clearance is of course valuable, but the people don't use the mined area and don't pass through the mine area, anyway. Border crossings, the railway and the airways should be opened as soon as possible," says the former mayor of Kars.

The normalization process between Türkiye and Ermenistan has led to concrete steps.

On July 11, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan spoke over the phone.

After consultations between the two countries, mine clearance work started on July 14 in the countryside of the İbiş village district on the border with Armenia in the Akyaka district of the eastern Kars province.

What does this mean and what will its contribution to Kars be?

Naif Alibeyoğlu, who served as the mayor of Kars between 1999 and 2009, commented on the normalization process for bianet.

The most important gain was the reopening of the border crossings, he said, adding, "Mine clearance is a bit of formality."

Recalling that they had launched a petition for the reopening of the border crossings in 2001, when he was the mayor, Alibeyoğlu said they had collected 50,000 signatures and nearly all the people in the city wanted the crossings to open.

"Today, the people expect with great hope the opening of the border crossings as well," he said.

"It shouldn't be viewed only as a trade issue, the purpose should be to ensure regional peace. The people need peace now. Activities in many fields, such as trade, culture, and sports, will be steps taken towards the establishment of peace. Effort is needed to take these steps.

"Mine clearance is of course valuable, but the people don't use the mined area and don't pass through the mine area, anyway. Border crossings, the railway and the airways should be opened for use as soon as possible. These steps must be taken to demonstrate the seriousness of the normalization."

Kars has been a migrant-sending province for many years due to tensions with Armenia, Alibeyoğlu said, adding, "The population of Kars was 325,000 until 1999. Today, the population of Kars dropped to 225,000. The number drops despite fertility. It's sending migrants because nothing but animal husbandry can be done in the region."

"However, if the problem with Armenia were to be resolved, Kars, and thus Türkiye, will make a huge economic gain. Factories left because border crossings and the railway are closed. If the 'Doğukapı' and 'Alican' border crossings are reopened, the economy will revive again."

Peoples of Armenia and Kars want peace, Alibeyoğlu underlined, recalling a memory from 1999: "A delegation from Armenia's Gümrü city had come to Kars and they had invited us to Gümrü. As a delegation from Erzurum, Kars and Iğdır, we went to Gümrü. They showed great interest in us.

"We attended a live broadcast on a TV channel and the Armenian officials had told us that we should look to the future and build a common future.

"When we went out on the street, the people told us that the suffering should be left behind and peace should be established. So, the people want peace but the status quos on both sides don't want peace because they benefit from this situation and the people pay the price."

There are many disagreements between the two countries, most notably the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

Armenia describes what happened in 1915 as a genocide and says one and a half million Armenians were massacred, whereas Türkiye says the Armenians died in the conflict during the World War I.

Türkiye also opposes the figures stated by Armenia, saying that the exodus order was not systematically implemented and its intention was not to commit a genocide.

The two countries decided to normalize the relations after Azerbaijan won the Nagorno-Karabakh war in 2020.

Special envoys of Türkiye and Armenia, which had not had diplomatic and commercial relations for nearly 30 years, met in February for the first time since 2009, when the two countries initiated a normalization process that was eventually terminated.

The border crossings between Türkiye and Armenia were closed following the first Nagorno-Karabakh war in 1993.

Before the closure of the border crossings, the railway between the countries was open for both travel and commerce. (RT/VK)

Russia sends monkeypox test kits to Armenia

PanARMENIAN
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net - Russia has transferred test kits for the detection of monkeypox to Armenia and several other countries, the press service of Rospotrebnadzor reports.

The department revealed earlier that the State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology VECTOR had developed test kits to identify cases of the disease, and that testing was available throughout Russia.

"Russian test kits were transferred by Rospotrebnadzor to Armenia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. In addition, the specialists of Rospotrebnadzor organize special seminars for colleagues from partner countries on methods of laboratory diagnosis of monkeypox," the agency said Wednesday, July 27.

On Saturday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus declared the spread of the virus to be a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC), the organization’s highest level of alert. WHO assessed the risk posed to public health by Monkeypox in the European region as high, but at the global level as moderate.

Attacks on journalists on the rise in Armenia



  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Eleven journalists in Armenia were victims of physical violence from April to June 2022. During the same period, 24 cases of violation of the right to information were recorded. Ashot Melikyan, Chairman of the Committee for the Protection of Freedom of Speech, gave these figures while presenting a new report on violations of freedom of speech and the rights of journalists. He also pointed out that no one had been held accountable for any of these violations.


  • International Freedom House group appeals to Armenian PM to hold in-person press talks
  • Will Armenia follow Russia’s example in controlling and censoring publications on the internet?
  • Armenia decriminalizes “grave insults”

Melikyan further said that from January to March, one case of physical violence against journalists was on record, while in April—June of last year there had been eight.

In Melikyan’s view, these attacks arise from the tense socio-political situation in the country. He believes it no coincidence that the number of attacks on journalists increased sharply in the second quarter of 2022, for it was during those months the opposition and its supporters took to the streets demanding the resignation of the prime minister:

“The period from April to June 2022 was quite busy. The radical opposition organized agitation. And ten out of eleven attacks on journalists were committed during this period. Another incident occurred in the country’s parliament.”

According to Melikyan, during scuffles between protesters and the police, both journalists and cameramen had been injured. Yet there were cases of targeted attacks against representatives of media.

He also elaborated on incidents of non-physical pressure on media and their employees. From January to March of this year twelve such incidents had occurred, and eleven from April to May. In the same period last year, 44 cases of pressure on journalists were filed.

“When the number of attacks rises, other types of pressure decrease,” the expert observed.

Freedom House report on Armenia: Armenia is still far from democracy, despite the fact that “it has taken steps to strengthen it”

According to the committee, from April to June of this year, 24 violations of the right to information had occurred, but a court case was opened for just one of them.

Ashot Melikyan explains that media consider going to court a waste of time.

Furthermore, from January to March 2022, there were 45 violations of the right to information. Melikyan acknowledges that this indicator is thus going down, but emphasizes that the situation remains alarming, as it is still difficult for journalists to receive information from government agencies:

“The situation is really very bad. There are times when the answer is delayed, so they refuse to provide information without any justification or with strange justifications. Not to mention vague answers that do not correspond to the issues.”

Ashot Melikyan brought up an amendment made in early June to the law “On Freedom of Information”. According to this amendment, state bodies that unreasonably refuse to provide information subject to publication face administrative punishment, a fine of 30 to 70 thousand drams (approximately $75-170).

He believes that if even a few of those committing these offenses are punished, it will have a chilling effect.

Regarding the spread of disinformation, the chairman of the Committee for the Protection of Freedom of Speech stated:

“If the authorities deal with the issue of disinformation, there will be much less of it in the media. Very often it is the lack of official information that makes some journalists or the media publish something based on assumptions or rumors. True, often this is done on purpose.”

https://jam-news.net/attacks-on-journalists-on-the-rise-in-armenia/