Copies of Armenian Jamanak daily not kept in Turkish archives

The copies of Jamanak – one of the oldest Armenian papers in Turkey have not been preserved in Turkish state archives. MP Selina Dogan, who is of Armenian descent, raised the issue at Turkey’s Grand National Assembly, Ermenihaber.am reports, quoting Demokrathaber.com.

Selina Dogan from the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) first addressed the leadership of the Turkish national archives, and redirected her inquiry to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism after receiving a negative response.

The MP stated that the paper could be an important source of information for researchers.

“Jamanak is the longest continuously running Armenian language daily published in Turkey. It is a witness of both the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey. From this point of view it’s extremely important to keep the copies of it archives,” Dogan said.

The first issue appeared on October 28, 1908 with Misak Kocunyan as the editor.

Plane debrils probed for MH370 link

Photo: ATSB

 

Malaysia’s transport minister has said there is a “high possibility” that debris found in Mozambique came from a Boeing 777, the same model as missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.

Australia said the location was consistent with models of where ocean drifts could carry debris.

The 1m-long piece of metal was found on a sandbank at the weekend.

MH370 disappeared in March 2014 while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, carrying 239 passengers.

Despite an extensive deep water search, led by Australia, the plane and all its passengers remain missing.

Istanbul Governor meets Armenian Patriarch, other minority leaders

Istanbul Governor Vasip Sahin has met with leading figures from the three main religions in the metropolis to obtain information on the activities of Turkey’s Jewish, Christian and Muslim communities, the state-run Anadolu Agency has reported.

The meeting was held in the Istanbul Governor’s Office late March 1 as part of a series of meetings Şahin has been holding to engage more in the activities of civil society organizations and advocate groups.

Attending the meeting were Armenian Patriarch and Archbishop Aram Atesyan, Fener Rum Patriarch Dimitri Bartholomeos, Keldani Catholic Community Spiritual Leader Francois Yakan, Turkish Assyrian Orthodox Metropolitan Bishop Yusuf Cetin, Turkish Jewish Community Chief Rabbi İshak Haleva, Syrian Catholic Church Patriarchal Vicar Yusuf Sağ and Istanbul Mufti Rahmi Yaran.

Underscoring that he had been very glad for the meeting, Sahin told the leaders that Istanbul had always been an archaic city embracing different religions and also that all religious communities were living in peace in what he described as a city of harmony and fellowship.

The governor had previously held a meeting with museum administration officials, theology experts and representatives from non-governmental organizations in Istanbul.

Royce-Sherman letter calls on Obama to press Aliyev on Karabakh peace

In anticipation of President Aliyev’s visit to Washington for a Nuclear Summit at the end of March, leaders of the House Foreign Affairs Committee are calling upon President Obama to use this opportunity to personally press the Azerbaijan leader to stop obstructing the implementation of the life-saving Royce-Engel peace proposals for Nagorno Karabakh.
The letter, authored by Chairman Ed Royce (R-CA) and Representative Brad Sherman (D-CA), a senior member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, builds upon an earlier Congressional letter, sent by 85 U.S. Representatives to the State Department last December, in support of three practical peacekeeping measures, known collectively as the Royce-Engel proposals:
— An agreement from all sides not to deploy snipers, heavy arms, or new weaponry along the line of contact.
— The placement of OSCE-monitored, advanced gunfire-locator systems and sound-ranging equipment to determine the source of attacks along the line of contact.
— The deployment of additional OSCE observers along the line of contact to better monitor cease-fire violations.
In response to this earlier letter, the Obama Administration voiced support for the Royce-Engel proposals, specifically commenting that: “…the urgency of implementing such measures has never been greater.”  Despite this rhetorical support from the Obama Administration – and the longtime backing for these measures by the OSCE Minsk Group, Armenia, and Nagorno Karabakh – their implementation has, to date, been blocked by the Azerbaijani government.  The authors of the Royce-Sherman letter seek to overcome this impasse by encouraging President Obama to work on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit with all the key stakeholders in a Nagorno-Karabakh settlement to implement the concrete, common-sense peace-keeping measures that have been proposed by Members of Congress and previously supported by his Administration.
“We join with Chairman Ed Royce and Congressman Brad Sherman in calling upon President Obama not to miss this unique opportunity to call out Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s obstruction of the life-saving Royce-Engel peace proposals for Nagorno Karabakh,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.  “Please encourage your U.S. Representative to sign the Royce-Sherman letter by visiting.”
The full text of the Royce-Sherman letter is provided below.
To support this pro-peace initiative, visit:
#####
Royce-Sherman Letter to President Obama
Mr. President:
We are writing in advance of planned visits to Washington, DC by the Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia for the 4th Nuclear Security Summit, to underscore the importance the United States attaches to ending threats and acts of aggression, deterring a renewed outbreak of war, and creating the conditions for a fair and enduring peace in and around Nagorno-Karabakh.
As supporters of a non-violent, negotiated peace, we appreciated the Department of State’s letter of November 12, 2015 voicing the Administration’s support for our bipartisan appeal, dated October 26, 2015, which was endorsed by 85 Members of the U.S. House of Representatives, recommending specific steps to reduce violence, save lives, and keep the peace process moving forward.  As you know, this State Department letter reaffirmed the Administration’s support for “proposals to withdraw snipers, expand OSCE’s role via an OSCE investigative mechanism, and deploy sensors along the Line of Contact and the Armenia-Azerbaijan international border.”  We welcome Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh’s support for these peace-keeping measures, and remain hopeful that Azerbaijan will lift its objections and allow for their timely implementation.
It is in this spirit that we urge you to work on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit with all the key stakeholders in a Nagorno-Karabakh settlement to implement concrete, common-sense peace-keeping measures that have been proposed by Members of Congress and supported by your Administration:
— An agreement from all sides not to deploy snipers – or, for that matter, any escalation of heavy arms or new weaponry – along the line of contact.
— The placement of OSCE-monitored, advanced gunfire-locator systems and sound-ranging equipment to determine the source of attacks along the line of contact.
— The deployment of additional OSCE observers along the line of contact to better monitor cease-fire violations.
Thank you for your consideration of our request. We will continue to support your Administration’s efforts within the OSCE Minsk Group to reach a fair and durable resolution of status and security issues related to Nagorno-Karabakh, and look forward to hearing of your actions in this regard.

Whole of Syria without electricity

Syria’s electricity network is down across the whole of the country for unknown reasons, state media say, the BBC reports.

They cited sources as saying power had been cut in all provinces and teams were trying to determine the cause.

In most parts of war-torn Syria, electricity is already available only two to four hours a day, if at all.

North Korea ‘fires projectiles’ into sea hours after UN vote

Photo: AP

 

North Korea has fired several short-range projectiles into the sea, South Korea’s defence ministry said, the BBC reports.

It comes hours after the UN Security Council unanimously voted to impose some of its strongest ever sanctions against North Korea.

A South Korean spokesman told the Yonhap news agency the projectiles were fired at about 10:00 local time (01:00 GMT) from Wonsan on the east coast.

He said they were still trying to determine exactly what was fired.

Yonhap quoted officials as saying all the objects fell into the sea.

The new UN measures are a response to North Korea’s recent nuclear test and satellite launch, both of which violated existing sanctions.

They will result in all cargo going to and from the country being inspected, while 16 new individuals and 12 organisations have been blacklisted.

Perspectives of Armenia-NATO cooperation discussed in Yerevan

 

 

 

Issues related to Armenia-NATO relations and perspectives of cooperation were discussed at a conference in Yerevan co-organized by the Armenian Institute of International and Security Affairs, the Armenian Center for National and International Studies with the support of the NATO Office in Tbilisi and the Embassy of Poland in Armenia.

Armenia-NATO relations are seen by many as ‘exceptional,’ as Armenia continues the effective cooperation with the North-Atlantic Council despite being part of a different security bloc.

“Some objective and subjective factors have somehow affected the relations over the past years, but the cooperation continues to develop dynamically,” said Styopa Safaryan, founder of the Armenian Center for National and International Studies.

Poland’s Ambassador to Armenia Jerzy Marek Nowakowski noted that there is will on both sides to implement different programs of cooperation.

“There are broad opportunities for cooperation and the North-Atlantic Alliance is ready to provide necessary assistance for the development of comprehensive relations. The cooperation must not be necessarily military, since the Alliance is not just a security organization, but also a system of values. I’m confident that the deepening of cooperation between Armenia and NATO will continue, since Armenia’s interests ties it to democratic states,” the Ambassador stated.

Political dialogue has always had an important place in the Armenia-NATO relations ever since 1992, said Gagik Hovhannisyan, Head of Foreign Ministry’s NATO Division. He briefed on a number joint programs.

Emirates A380 from Dubai to NZ makes longest non-stop flight

Photo: AFP

 

An Emirates Airbus A380 jet has made what is believed to be the current longest non-stop scheduled commercial flight by distance, the reports.

The plane covered about 14,200km when it touched down in Auckland, New Zealand on Wednesday.

It was expected to be the world’s longest non-stop commercial flight by duration as well, but landed too early.

The return flight to Dubai left around 22:20 local time (15:20 GMT), according to New Zealand media.

The Auckland-Dubai portion was estimated to take around 17 hours and 15 minutes, but in the end took only 16 hours and 24 minutes, according to the New Zealand Herald.

The new route reportedly reduces the current travel time by three hours.

The inaugural flight was made by an A380, but the route will normally be operated by a Boeing 777-200LR.

Emirates said it expects “high demand” for the new route.

Georgia State Senate adopts Armenian Genocide resolution

The Georgia State Senate has passed S.R.991,  resolution marking April 2016 as Genocide Prevention and Awareness Month, the Armenian Assembly of America reports.

The full text of the resolution is provided below: 

1 Recognizing the month of April, 2016, as Genocide Prevention and Awareness Month at the

2 Capitol; and for other purposes.

3 WHEREAS, the goal of Genocide Prevention and Awareness Month is to educate the public

4 about the history of previous and contemporary genocides; how to advocate against future

5 genocides; to focus attention on the specter of genocide so that policies, strategies, and

6 programs geared toward combating the evils of genocide can be developed; and to

7 commemorate the victims of genocide; and

8 WHEREAS, during World War II, a Polish lawyer of Jewish decent, Raphael Lemkin,

9 coined the term “genocide” to describe the coordinated plan of actions aimed at the

10 destruction of essential foundations of the life of certain groups with the aim of annihilating

11 a group itself by disintegrating a group’s social institutions, culture, language, national or

12 ethnic identities, religion, and economic existence while also destroying the personal

13 security, liberty, health, and dignity, as well as the lives, of individuals belonging to the

14 group; and

15 WHEREAS, throughout history, numerous genocides originated or stemmed from events that

16 occurred in April, and as a result, many institutions around the world have designated April

17 to be a month of genocide prevention and awareness; and

18 WHEREAS, when coining the term “genocide,” Raphael Lemkin was moved to investigate

19 the forced assimilation, deportation, and near eradication of the Armenian population and

20 other Christian communities, beginning in April, 1915, prompting Adolf Hitler to remark in

21 1939, “Who after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”; and

22 WHEREAS, in April of 1933, the Nazis issued a decree preparing the way for the “Final

23 Solution” defining non-Aryans as “anyone descended from non-Aryan, especially Jewish,

24 parents or grandparents”; and

25 WHEREAS, in 1975, Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge took power in Cambodia, conducting

26 widespread killings of people belonging to specific groups, as well as an involuntary

27 relocation of all city dwellers to the countryside for forced labor in squalid conditions,

28 resulting in famine and starvation which turned the countryside into killing fields; these acts

29 resulted in the deaths of 2 million people; and

30 WHEREAS, the 1992-1995 siege of Sarajevo, Srebrenica, and other cities in Bosnia and

31 Herzegovina, which ultimately led to the deaths of more than 200,000 Bosniaks, or Bosnian

32 Muslims; and

33 WHEREAS, the Al-Anfal Campaign (1984-1988), under the leadership of Saddam Hussein,

34 sought to destroy and depopulate the Kurdistan region in northern Iraq and notoriously used

35 chemical weapons to that end, which caused the deaths of over 180,000 Kurds and others,

36 the destruction of more than 4,500 villages (90 percent of villages in the region), and resulted

37 in creating millions of refugees and internally displaced persons; and

38 WHEREAS, in April of 1994, the Rwandan president’s airplane was shot down, which led

39 to the slaying of 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus by the Interhamwe over the next three

40 months; and

41 WHEREAS, in April of 2003, the displacement and killing of Darfurians began by the

42 government of Sudan, and led to hundreds of thousands of deaths and the displacement of

43 millions, which continues unabated to this day; and

44 WHEREAS, DAESH, the so-called Islamic State, has forcefully caused the civilian

45 population of the Ezidi-Kurdhish religious minority in Iraq and Syria, beginning in 2014

46 through the present day, to flee from their ancestral towns, villages, and holy sites as a result

47 of forced conversion, killing, kidnapping, and enslaving of their population–particularly

48 women and children. According to their records, this is the 74th genocide throughout that

49 population’s history; and

50 WHEREAS, the Genocide Prevention Task Force released its report on December of 2008

51 to spotlight genocide prevention as a national priority; and

52 WHEREAS, in 2011, the President of the United States declared the prevention of mass

53 atrocities and genocide to be a “core national security interest and core moral responsibility”

54 of the United States and ordered the creation of the Atrocities Prevention Board in 2012; and

16 LC 111 0198

55 WHEREAS, the Georgia Commission on the Holocaust is a state agency whose mission is

56 to use the lessons of the Holocaust to educate the citizens of Georgia on the consequences

57 of unchecked hate and the need for social justice, and to encourage strong moral character

58 and citizenship; and

59 WHEREAS, the Georgia Coalition to Prevent Genocide operates as a proactive group with

60 a mission to develop a permanent antigenocide constituency in Georgia, and it depends on

61 citizen support to engage elected officials at the state and national levels through advocacy

62 and action and by creating awareness within the community; and

63 WHEREAS, it is abundantly fitting and proper to recognize the contributions of the Georgia

64 Coalition to Prevent Genocide, Am Yisrael Chai, Eternal-Life Hemshech of Holocaust

65 Survivors, the Georgia Commission on the Holocaust, the Jewish Community Relations

66 Council of Atlanta, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, the American Jewish

67 Committee (AJC) Atlanta Regional Office, and AJC’s ACCESS Atlanta in their efforts to

68 enhance the security and dignity of minority populations across the globe.

69 NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE that the members of this body

70 recognize the month of April, 2016, as Genocide Prevention and Awareness Month at the

71 Capitol and commend the Georgia Coalition to Prevent Genocide for its dedicated efforts in

72 preventing genocide.

73 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Secretary of the Senate is authorized and directed

74 to make appropriate copies of this resolution available for distribution to the Georgia

75 Coalition to Prevent Genocide.

S.R. 991 was sponsored by State Senators Elena Parent, David Shafer, Renee Unterman, Joshua McKoon, Nan Orrock, and Harold Jones II.

 

Armenia on the up in FIFA World Ranking

Armenia is placed 116th (up from 123rd) in the March edition of the FIFA World Ranking.

At the table’s summit Belgium continue to dominate, while Argentina, Spain, Germany and Chile stay closely pressed to the leaders. Four-time world champions Italy (14, plus 1) meanwhile, recorded the only positive movement in the top 20 this month.

The most impressive movers for March were Venezuela and Armenia. The South Americans climbed 6 places and gained 57 points to rise to 75th position, thanks to an impressive 1-0 victory over Costa Rica in Barinas on 2 February.

Armenia, meanwhile, enjoyed the biggest climb of the month (116, up 7).