Syrian Army approaching Idlib Province

The Syrian army and the Lebanese Hezbollah resistance forces are winning back two strategic heights in Lattakia province which will in turn pave their way to capture key areas in neighboring Idlib province, reports.

The strategic al-Ra’yee and al-Qala heights in Lattakia province overlook Idlib province and capturing them will pave the way for the army’s military advances in Idlib province.

If the Syrian government forces and the resistance fighters take full control of these heights, the al-Younsiyeh, al-Tafahiyeh, Ain al-Hoor and Zeitouniya will fall to the Syrian army’s hands. Also, in this case the Syrian army will be only three kilometers away from the Turkish borders.

Earlier today, the Syrian army and National Defense Forces drove the militant groups back from more villages in the mountainous regions of the coastal province of Lattakia near the border with Turkey.

The pro-government forced, after several hours of tough battle, imposed full control over the villages of Ein al-Beidha, Shir al-Dhaba’a and Ruweisat Rasho.

Scores of the militants were killed or wounded in the army attacks.

Republican-ARF cooperation an additional resource for radical changes

 

 

 

Republican MP Lernik Aleksanyan is confident the cooperation between the Republican Party of Armenia and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation will be an additional resource.

Speaking to reporters today, the MP said “the essence of this cooperation is much deeper and is conditioned by both domestic and foreign challenges.” He assured assured the authorities are going to implement radical changes deriving from the new Constitution, and this requires additional resources.

Aleksanyan said the two political forces have identical views on the system of state governance.

Tevan Poghosyan of the Heritage faction said any cooperation between political forces is welcome. He does not believe, however, that the agreement pursues the aim of building a strong country. He considers that there would be more trust had completely new, young people been brought into politics. According to him, it’s a simple political process leading up to the parliamentary elections of 2017.

‘Holy Grail’ Beatles record to be auctioned

Photo: Omega Auctions

 

An extremely rare and valuable Beatles record that was found languishing in a loft is to be auctioned next month, the reports.

Described as “a Holy Grail item”, the 1962 10-inch record of Till There Was You and Hello Little Girl lay forgotten in the home of Les Maguire for decades.

Maguire, the keyboardist in fellow Liverpool act Gerry and the Pacemakers, said it could be seen as the record “that sparked The Beatles’ success”.

The acetate bears the handwriting of the Fab Four’s manager Brian Epstein.

A conservative estimate is that the 78 RPM record – the first Beatles disc to be cut before the band broke through into the national charts in late 1962 – will fetch upwards of £10,000 when it is auctioned, although it is such a rare item it is difficult to predict what the sale price will be.

The record of Til There was You – labelled as being the work of “Paul McCartney & The Beatles” – was made at the HMV store in Oxford Street, London, and presented to future Beatles producer George Martin at the EMI record label in a bid to secure the band a recording contract.

Hello (misspelled by Epstein as “Hullo”) Little Girl, on the other side of the disc, was recorded as being the work of “John Lennon & The Beatles”.

Maguire, 74, of Formby, Merseyside, was given the disc by Epstein in 1963 after it had been returned to him by Martin.

Utah lawmakers criticized for praise of Azerbaijan

Two Utah state lawmakers who took a paid trip to Azerbaijan recently praised the former Soviet republic’s commitment to religious freedom, echoing sentiments frequently heard in U.S. state legislatures and disputed by a half-dozen prominent watchdog organizations, reports.

Last week, Sen. Gene Davis, D-Salt Lake City, and Rep. Lynn Hemingway, D-Millcreek, read the citation in the Senate and House, respectively, before introducing Azerbaijan Consul General Nasimi Aghayev.

Azerbaijan’s government, Davis told senators, “sees diversity as one of the country’s great strengths.”

Aghayev followed by saying it was appropriate that the citation was read in Utah, “one of the most tolerant and harmonious states.”

His remarks met with applause.

But Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, International Christian Concern, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the Pew Research Center and the U.S. State Department have all called into question the policies of Azerbaijan’s government, including those related to religion.

Critics say the resource-rich nation, sandwiched between Russia and Iran and bordered on the west by longtime adversary Armenia, is more dictatorship than democracy, known for jailing activists and journalists and restricting activities of religious minorities.

Davis said he couldn’t pronounce Azerbaijan before his May 2013 visit to Baku, the nation’s capital, where he joined dozens of U.S. lawmakers at a celebration of Azerbaijan’s independence. that trips for members of Congress and their staffs were funded with money funneled to U.S.-based nonprofits by the nation’s state oil company.

Davis and Hemingway said they came away impressed with apparent progress in a region where progress is in short supply.

“All I have done is encourage religious freedom in that country,” Davis said. “Have I taken a stand on their past history? No.”

Nonetheless, a pair of Utah residents with Armenian heritage expressed strong opposition to his citation.

Former state Sen. Bill Barton, whose mother’s family is Armenian, said he thinks Hemingway and Davis, whom he considers a longtime friend, were “wined and dined” into support. Barton said he wrote in an email to several senators that “you didn’t know what was behind this, or you would not have done it.”

Salt Lake City resident Miriam McFadden, who exchanged emails with Davis about her concerns, told The Tribune she was “mortified.”

Even if its scope was narrowed to religious freedoms, she said, at a cemetery in Julfa in 2005, later found to no longer exist after the nation’s government had blocked inspection of the site.

“For us in Utah, where we claim that individual rights are so important … to endorse a country so suppressive and corrupt, it just appalled me,” McFadden said.

Davis said he has not heard of the Julfa incident.

The ANCA formally rebuked the citation. The letter’s author, Western Region executive director Elen Asatryan, said by phone this week that such legislation has become common even though “all it takes is really to just Google ‘Azerbaijan’ ” to see that the lawmakers have been duped.

Asatryan said citations like Utah’s are propaganda fodder for Azerbaijan’s highly controlled media — the Committee to Protect Journalists most recently ranked Azerbaijan as the world’s fifth-most-censored press — to burnish Aliyev’s image.

Days before Davis and Hemingway read their citation in Utah, ANCA said Idaho Rep. Thomas Dayley withdrew a similarly worded resolution because it mobilized 90 local activists to share concerns.

UEFA Europa League: Dortmund edge past Posrto into last 16

Iker Casillas’s own goal earned Borussia Dortmund a 1-0 win over Porto and confirmed their UEFA Europa League round of 16 place, according to UEFA’s official website.

Trailing 2-0 from the first leg, the home side started at breakneck speed, but as the heavens opened in northern Portugal, their hopes of progressing were all but extinguished. Casillas produced a wonderful save from Marco Reus’s volley, yet the ball cannoned off him and into the net after Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang’s follow-up had crashed off the crossbar.

Away goal secured, Dortmund sat back. Evandro fired wide following a mazy run before Silvestre Varela’s header forced visiting keeper Roman Bürki into a full-length save just before the break. Vincent Aboubakar’s impish flick was well smothered by Bürki as Porto continued where they left off, though Dortmund menaced on the counter, Aubameyang and Henrikh Mkhitaryan both having efforts disallowed for offside.

Bürki produced another smart stop late on to deny Porto a consolation before home substitute Yacine Brahimi rattled the crossbar and Mkhitaryan saw his attempt smash against the post.

Gianni Infantino succeeds Sepp Blatter as FIFA President

Switzerland’s Gianni Infantino has succeeded countryman Sepp Blatter as Fifa president, the BBC reports.

The Uefa secretary general polled 115 votes in round two, 27 more than closest rival Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa.

Prince Ali bin al-Hussein was third with four, while Jerome Champagne failed to get any. Tokyo Sexwale withdrew before voting began in Zurich.

The first round of voting had failed to determine an outright winner.

“I accept the result of this election, thank you,” said Infantino.

“I went through an exceptional journey, met many fantastic people who love football, who breathe football.

“I want to be the president of all of you, of all 209 nations.

“I want to work with all of you to work together and build a new era where we can put football at the centre of the stage.”

A simple majority of more than 50 per cent – 104 votes – was sufficient for victory in the second round.

Infantino is a 45-year-old lawyer from Brig in the Valais region of Switzerland, less than six miles from Blatter’s hometown of Visp.

Blatter, who led world football’s governing body since 1998, stood down last year and was later banned from football for six years.

Karabakh reports tension at the line of contact

Tensions were high at the line of contact between the armed forces of Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan last night, the NKR Defense ministry reports.

The rival used artillery weapons of different caliber as it fired more than 2,000 shots in the direction of the Armenian positions.

“The front divisions of the NKR Defense Army keep control of the situation at the state border and resort to retaliatory measures if necessary,” the Ministry said in a statement.

Perspectives of Armenian-Austrian cooperation discussed at the President’s Office

President Serzh Sargsyan held consultations today on Armenian-Austrian relations, the ongoing programs and the perspectives of development. Arman Kirakosyan, Armenia’s Ambassador to Austria and the country’s representative to a number of international organizations accredited to Vienna, presented a report.

“Austria is a friendly country, a developed country and we are building our relations, taking note of the joint historic path., i.e. we develop our relations on the basis of firm historic grounds,” he said. The President reminded that Austria was one of the first to respond after the devastating earthquake of 1988.

President Sargsyan said Austria is extremely important to us for its rich experience of development in the fields of information technologies, medicine, tourism and infrastructures.

“I think we have good chances of increasing the Austrian investments in Armenia, especially in the field of industry, as there are a number of powerful companies in Austria investing in different countries of the world, and Armenia could provide wide opportunities as a member of the Eurasian Economic Union,” the President said, adding that “we are ready to create favorable conditions for any serious investor.”

EU High Representative Federica‪ Mogherini to visit Armenia

High Representative of the ‪‎European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice-President of the European Commission Federica‪ Mogherini will visit Armenia on March 1 at the invitation of Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

Federica‪ Mogherini is expected to have meetings with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

Nearly 100 rebel groups will respect Syria truce

Photo: AFP

 

Almost 100 rebel factions have agreed to respect an imminent cessation of hostilities in Syria, the main Syrian opposition group has said, the BBC reports.

The High Negotiations Committee said Free Syrian Army factions and the armed opposition had signed up to the temporary truce from midnight Saturday.

World powers agreed on 12 February that a truce would start within a week but that deadline passed and scepticism had lingered over the new plan.

Warring parties in Syria were meant to make their intentions known by midday (10:00 GMT) Friday ahead of the pause in fighting.

Announcing the intentions of rebel factions, the HNC said the Syrian government and its allies must not use the “proposed text to continue the hostile operations against the opposition factions under the excuse of fighting terrorism”.