ISTANBUL: Armenia’s oligarchy in trouble

Armenia’s oligarchy in trouble
By Mehmet Fatih Oztarsu
March 7, 2015

[Mehmet Fatih Oztarsu is an analyst with the Strategic Outlook Institution.]

In a somewhat predictable move, Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan has
sent a letter to parliament speaker Galust Sahakyan urging that
protocols between Turkey and Armenia be retracted.

Sarksyan, who asserted in his letter that Turkey has not taken the
steps necessary in conjunction with the 2009 protocols — signed to
normalize ties between Turkey and Armenia in Zurich on Oct. 10, 2009,
with the goal of establishing diplomatic relations and opening the two
countries’ land border — and that it is Ankara which bears full
responsibility for this failure, noted also that political will in
Turkey on the Armenian front is sorely lacking.

Sarksyan is, of course, a skilled chess player, and his moves in the
run-up to April 24 — the day on which the Armenian victims who died
at the end of World War I in Ottoman Turkey are commemorated — are a
repeat of past years; he is trying to draw the attention of the
international community to the situation between Yerevan and Ankara.
In the meantime, Sarksyan’s stance never wavers from the principle of
not being the first side to sit down at the table for talks; he is
also now using the lack of political activity in Turkey on the
protocol front in a masterly — and timely — manner.

At work in this latest move from Sarksyan is not just the hasty stance
taken by the Turkish side in inviting him to Canakkale, commemorating
the centenary of the battle of the Canakkale Campaign of World War I,
but also domestic political turbulence at home in Armenia. And this is
the most important symbol of the oligarchic battle that began recently
in Armenia.

The war between Sarksyan and Armenia’s biggest oligarch, the founder
and leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), Gagik Tsarukyan,
might well make Sarksyan even more authoritarian than he already is.
For his part, Tsarukyan has the widely known nickname of “Dodi Gago”
or “Stupid Gago,” and as not only an oligarch but an important
politician he has displayed an anti-Sarksyan stance for a while now,
working in concert with generally anti-Sarksyan blocs in Armenia.

Worsened relations between Tsarukyan and Sarksyan

Recent decisions made by the ruling party to make moves against tax
evasion in Armenia have worsened relations between Tsarukyan and
Sarksyan, with worries over the possibility of the loss of his
enormous empire pushing him to take an even tougher stance. In the
meantime, though, the response from Sarksyan — who is himself a
resilient former soldier — did not take long in coming. Labeling
Tsarukyan a disaster for the state, Sarksyan first announced that the
oligarch had been unceremoniously kicked off the National Security
Council of Armenia, and then noted that people should not expect to be
able to arrive at and depart from such an important council as though
they were “going to the cinema.” As this was playing out, circles
close to Sarksyan began to underscore how vital it was to eliminate
Tsarukyan without wasting time. It is expected that, at any moment
now, Sarksyan will strike a serious blow at Tsarukyan’s chain of
oligarchy. In the meantime, another important Armenian oligarch, Hovik
Abrahamyan, has announced his full-fledged support for Sarksyan, thus
putting Tsarukyan even more in the target position.

As all this unfolds, Robert Kocharyan, who was the second president of
Armenia, and is also one of the most critical fulcrums in the
unshakable Armenian oligarchy, has called on all sides to bring this
war to an end as soon as possible.

Kocharyan, who underscored in his announcement that the oligarchic war
would have negative effects on the country’s economy, the Karabakh
issue and, of course, all the topics related to the 100th anniversary
of the Armenian genocide, has also noted his real fears that the war
might come right to his own doorstep. Following Kocharyan’s
announcement, Sarksyan and Tsarukyan did, in fact, hold a private
meeting in which the war was postponed for the time being. Tsarukyan’s
decision to make peace for now has, in the meantime, greatly
disappointed opposition forces in Armenia, who had been planning large
rallies with this oligarch and politician. While that particular war
has abated for the time being, it does appear that the question of how
Armenian resources are to be distributed looks set to elicit the axes
of war again in the near future. And so this is, for now, the greatest
deadlock in Armenia, where the opposition seems unable to move into
action, one way or the other.

In terms of understanding these latest developments, it is important
to grasp just what a terrible state Armenia is in, and how firmly
rooted the “mafioso” oligarchy that leads it has become. Just one
example in all this can be seen in the considerable assets of former
President Kocharyan, whose worried attempts to intervene in the
unfolding war were notable. Kocharyan single-handedly holds some 80
percent of cellphone imports into Armenia in his hands; he is also the
sole owner of many banks, mines and holiday facilities throughout the
country. But it doesn’t end there; Kocharyan also owns a shopping
center and gambling casinos in Moscow. He is also an “honorary”
partner and board member of countless Armenian companies.

As for Tsarukyan, he worked in Russia during the 1980s as a gendarme,
later going to prison based on what some (widely spread) rumors assert
were rape charges. Tsarukyan’s rapid accumulation of power and assets
came during the era of Kocharyan’s presidency; although he did not
have much in connection with the political sphere, Tsarukyan managed
to acquire factories (cement and alcohol manufacturing), petrol
stations, furniture production facilities and mining companies during
this time. Known now for his luxurious personal abodes, Tsarukyan is
also said to love keeping both lions and predatory birds on the
grounds of his homes.

In order to get a complete picture, though, it is of course also
helpful to take a look at the assets of Sarksyan and his supporters as
well. Sarksyan was a military commander during the era of the Karabakh
war, and was until recently listed as the eighth-richest person in all
of Armenia. Interestingly, Sarksyan is also an avowed gambler, even
facing accusations on this front at the 2013 Parliamentary Assembly of
the Council of Europe (PACE). At the time, Zaruhi Postanjyan, of the
opposition Heritage Party, asked Sarksyan directly whether or not it
was true that he had lost 70 million euros at a European casino. The
line of questioning caused reverberations in the global press at the
time due to the striking nature of the topic. Sarksyan has an enormous
financial empire of his own; this includes many personal homes,
buildings, a holiday resort, a petrol station, cement and alcohol
factories, market chains, a football team and his own bank. He manages
many of these through a variety of different partnerships he has
formed over the years.

In the meantime, Sarksyan’s brother Sashik, who had some serious
clashes with Tsarukyan in previous years, moved to the US, along with
his own considerable fortune; the $30 million he brought with him
remain shrouded in mystery as to their origin.

At the same time, it is also important to remember that the less
prominent figures in Armenian politics sometimes have personal wealth
and assets that far overshadow those that dominate the news with their
warring. For example, the personal financial empire of Prime Minister
Abrahamyan, who has proffered his full support for Sarksyan in this
latest round of clashes with Tsarukyan, far outweighs those of the
oligarchs we have listed thus far. Abrahamyan owns petrol stations,
holiday resorts, mines, countless fields, cement and alcohol
factories, hotels and apartments; he also has family ties through
marriage with Tsarukyan. One of Tsarukyan’s daughters is married to
Abrahamyan’s son. These days, Abrahamyan has become one of the most
hotly debated figures in the Armenian media, as he has chosen to take
sides with Sarksyan despite familial relations with Tsarukyan.

For years now, various groups have managed to plunder and take control
of Armenia’s natural resources, using the protection of their
political ties that give them unhindered access and no risk of
prosecution. It is a giant oligarchic structure, and one whose
enormous accumulation of wealth sometimes triggers arguments over how
to divide assets. The structure is filled with names willing to remain
quiet over internal disputes in order not to trigger public political
fights. At this point, though, it appears that one faction of this
structure is preparing to peel off, and the coming division will
herald the emergence of a new group.

The recent move made by Sarksyan in regard to Turkey — a move that
comes at a time of extraordinary tension at home — has clearly been
made with calculations that have far-reaching implications. The
attempts to strike down Tsarukyan and other chains in the oligarchic
structure can all be interpreted as a reflection of rising
authoritarianism on Sarksyan’s part, and as an attempt to block any
slide in the existing axis of power. As the scene in Armenia appears
more and more like that of a country under complete Russian guidance,
Sarksyan’s unceasing desire to take single-handed control is now
bringing the country face-to-face with even greater problems. One of
which is that the various groups attached to and dependent on the
Kocharyan chain of wealth and oligarchy appear unwilling to remain
silent given all this.

http://www.todayszaman.com/op-ed_armenias-oligarchy-in-trouble_374489.html

The Artsakh soprano to shine in the contest

The Artsakh soprano to shine in the contest

March 7 2015

National Opera music director and chief conductor Karen Durgaryan
about the gifted Armenians and his work Recently, the festival “Opera
Without Borders” was launched in Krasnodar for the second time. On the
opening day, February 20, Leonkavalo’s “Pagliacci” opera was staged at
the local musical theater in participation of soloists from the
Mariinsky Theatre, Saint Petersburg. Under the festival, a sumptuous
gala concert was held on the occasion of the 175th anniversary of
Tchaikovsky, in participation of Yuri Grigorovich Ballet Theatre and
the Moscow Bolshoi Theatre dancers. The “Opera Without Borders”
international contest of young singers was also conducted for the
second time. The festival was closed with Verdi’s “Traviata” conducted
by Honored Artist of Armenia, the National Opera music director and
chief conductor Karen Durgaryan (in the photo). The founder of this
large-scale project and the constant president of the jury is Larisa
Gergiev, People’s Artist of Russia and the artistic director of the
Mariinsky Theatre Academy of young opera singers. Karen Durgaryan was
invited to participate also in the jury works. In the conversation
with “Aravot”, Mr. Durgaryan said that 70 young opera singer from
different countries participated in the competition. According to him,
the Armenians prevailed – 8 of them from other countries and 4 of them
from Armenia supported by the Ministry of Culture of Armenia. “35
singers passed to the second round and 18 of them – to the 3rd round,
of which 4 Armenian young people – 2 from Armenia and 2 from abroad.
The prestigious Jury of the competition was impressed by soprano Mary
Movsisyan’s and Marianna Martirossyan’s plays. I would like to make a
specific emphasis on Marianna from Artsakh, as all of them univocally
were saying that she is an opera emerging celebrity. Once, in a
conversation with “Aravot” newspaper, famous Valery Gergiev said that
any known artist should achieve two highest degrees in his activities:
one is his own creative way, and the other is opening a career for
young people. We asked our interlocutor that it is good that the
Artsakh voice Marianna Martirosyan is described in this way, but
specifically you as the musical face of our opera theater, how you are
going to support her. “I give much importance for the your opera
singer to participate in the competitions and master classes, which
always keeps them to be in the “shape”. Thanks to it, the young people
already make comparison of their own between representatives of
different vocal schools. I give much importance to the contacts and
exchange of opinions … One important factor too. Eventually, the
gifted are noticed by foreign specialists..,” informed Mr. Durgaryan.
Recently, Karen Durgaryan gained the reputation of multi-busy
conductor, particularly in terms of frequent tours. We inquired about
his upcoming tour for one-two weeks. “Soon, I will be the conducting
Rachmaninoff’s Symphony No. 2at the Opera in Trieste (Italy),
Khacatruyan’s “Spartacus” at the Mariinsky Theatre in April, and
Leonid Klinichev’s “Bela” opera, whose libretto is written based on
Lermontov’s novel “The Hero of Our Time”. On April 21, at the Moscow
House of Music, together with the local state Philharmonic Orchestra,
in participation of my colleagues, including cellist Narek
Hakhnazaryan and our theater soloists, including Perch Karazyan,
Artsvik Demurchyan and Hovhannes Nersisyan, we will come out with a
concert dedicated to the centennial of the Genocide. The program is
called from Narekatsi to Babajanyan. To the point, for the first time,
on April 23, at midnight, our Opera Theater will host a commemoration
ceremony for the Genocide victims, and on April 26, the presentation
of renowned artist and conductor Alexander Siranosyan’s book will be
held, which includes 560 operas of the Western European composers,
which underlies the Armenian themes. This is a wonderful opportunity
to once again tell the world that the European composers have referred
to Armenians and our history at different times,” informed the
conductor.

Samvel DANIELYAN
Read more at:

http://en.aravot.am/2015/03/07/169152/

Three Azerbaijani saboteurs’ names known

Three Azerbaijani saboteurs’ names known

13:30, 7 March, 2015

YEREVAN, MARCH 7, ARMENPRESS: The names of the three of seven
Azerbaijani saboteurs, who were eliminated at night on March 6 by the
Defense Army of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, are known. Armenpress
reports, citing the own sources that they are the servicemen Zamin
Aminov, Alekper Abasov and Shalal Hasanov.
Earlier Armenpress reported that the rival continues violating the
ceasefire regime on the line of contact of the Karabakh-Azerbaijani
opposing armies using small arms of various calibers. At the same
time, the rival tries to carry out sabotage and reconnaissance acts
with involvement of special task forces.
The Press Service of the Defense Army of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic
informed Armenpress that in the night of March 5-6 the Azerbaijani
Armed Forces violated the ceasefire regime in different parts of the
frontline over 80 times in the direction of the Armenian troops using
60 and 80 mm mortars, Istiglal, AGS-17, DShK, RPK and others.
Also, rival used ZSU-23-2 in the Northern (Shahumyan) direction. The
front units of the Defense Army took relevant steps to render the
aforesaid weapon emplacement harmless, due to which at least 3
soldiers of the rival and ZSU-23-2 have been crippled.
During the same period, the units of the Martakert direction of the
Armed Forces of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic carried out preventive
actions in the North-Eastern part of the line of contact of the
opposing armies. According to the confirmed data, 4 servicemen of the
Azerbaijani special task forces, who entered the area of the
operation, were eliminated during the combats.
The Armenian side had no casualties during the abovementioned operations.
The front units of the Defense Army continue confidently carrying out
their military objective along the entire line of contact and imposing
their will on the rival.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/796762/three-azerbaijani-saboteurs%E2%80%99-names-known.html

Belarus diplomat accuses Azerbaijan of violating Armenians’ rights i

Belarus diplomat accuses Azerbaijan of violating Armenians’ rights in Karabakh

13:28, 07.03.2015

General Consul of Belarus in Daugavpils (Latvia) Vladimir Klimov
accused Azerbaijan of violating the Armenian’s rights in former
Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous region of Azerbaijan where he was carrying
his military service.

The people in Karabakh were deprived of a possibility to exercise
their right to self-determination, he said in an interview with
SeyChas ( СейЧаÑ?) newspaper, Ð`Ñани.lv reported.

The diplomat said that Armenians made majority of population in
Karabakh when it was an autonomous region within Soviet Azerbaijan.

`When a child was born in an Armenian family of Malumyans, he was
registered as Malumyanov, in Azerbaijani style,’ Klimov said when
asked whether situation in Ukraine’s South-East resembles conflict in
Nagorno-Karabakh.

National traditions were not encouraged, besides there were
disagreements on religious grounds, he said, adding that the conflict
broke out when someone provoked the situation.

http://news.am/eng/news/255919.html

Minister Yervand Zakharyan Met With Heads Of "Lydian International",

MINISTER YERVAND ZAKHARYAN MET WITH HEADS OF “LYDIAN INTERNATIONAL”, “DUNDEE PRECIOUS METALS”, “CENTERRA GOLD INC” COMPANIES IN TORONTO

16:40 March 05, 2015

EcoLur

Energy and Natural Resources Minister Yervand Zakharyan had a meeting
with the heads of “Lydian International”, “Dundee Precious Metals”,
“Centerra Gold Inc” companies carrying out mining activities in
Armenia, where they discussed the attraction of investments in the
mining field of Armenia and expansion of these activities. Under the
official website of Energy and Natural Resources Ministry, the meeting
was held in the period of his attendance to annual international
conference on mining in Toronto from 1 to 3 March.

Reminder: in Armenia “Lydian International” Company is implementing
Amulsar gold mining project in Armenia, while “Dundee Precious
Metals” Company is developing Shahumyan gold and polymetallic mine
and “Centerra Gold Inc” Company is developing Kumtor gold mine in
Kyrgyzstan and Barui gold mine in Mongolia. It’s rather interesting
which mine this company is interested in Armenia.

Having a speech in the conference Minister Yervand Zakharyan
presented the mining policy in Armenia, legislation, the status quo
and development perspectives.

http://ecolur.org/en/news/officials/minister-yervand-zakharyan-met-with-heads-of-quotlydian-internationalquot-quotdundee-precious-metalsquot-quotcenterra-gold-incquot-companies-in-toronto/7090/

Douleur Et Humiliation : L’exigence De Reparations, Par Alexis Kriko

DOULEUR ET HUMILIATION : L’EXIGENCE DE REPARATIONS, PAR ALEXIS KRIKORIAN

OPINION

C’est loin d’etre la première fois que je viens a Istanbul en ces
belles journees de fevrier 2015. J’y suis alle peut-etre 15 ou 20 fois
depuis ce jour de decembre 2003 où j’etais venu soutenir l’editeur
Ragip Zarakolu qui etait poursuivi par une cour de surete de l’Etat,
comme un vulgaire terroriste, pour avoir ose publier un livre sur les
violations des droits de l’homme du regime issu du coup d’etat de 1980.

J’aime cette ville, la Bolis des Armeniens. Elle est sublime. Je
m’y sens comme un etranger chez lui. Etranger car je ne parle pas la
langue ou les langues. Chez lui car, bien que je n’y ai jamais vecu,
tout me rappelle mon enfance, les goûts, les couleurs ou encore
les mots. Je m’y sens naturellement bien. Mais pas que. Car etre
ici renvoie aussi a une perte a jamais, a une tristesse insondable,
a une terrible douleur. La douleur de ce qui aurait pu etre si le
genocide n’avait pas eu lieu. Cette douleur se niche dans les moments
les plus incongrus.

Ce peut etre a Ortakoy en voyant un groupe de jeunes hommes attables
jouant au backgammon.

Ce peut etre a Dolmabahce lorsque le guide officiel affirme que
l’architecte du palais est le Sultan lui-meme et non pas l’architecte
Balyan. La douleur se transforme alors en frustration, voire en
colère. Ce peut etre face a Haydarpasha, la gare neo-renaissance de la
rive asiatique d’Istanbul d’où sont partis vers leur funeste destin
les centaines d’intellectuels armeniens arretes le 24 avril 1915,
marquant ainsi le debut du genocide armenien. Comme a Ani, la capitale
armenienne de l’an 1000, la ville au 1001 eglises, pas une plaque
pour rappeler le passe armenien ou la realite de ce qui s’y est passe.

Aujourd’hui, a Haydarpasha, des couples de jeunes maries viennent s’y
faire prendre en photo dans la gaite et l’ignorance la plus complète.

La douleur y devient ecoeurement.

Ce peut etre encore face a un intellectuel armenien d’Istanbul auquel
on souhaite communiquer un message important, mais avec lequel il n’est
pas possible d’echanger car je ne parle pas armenien. La douleur, la
gene, l’absurdite meme de se retrouver face a cet homme et ne pas etre
capable de communiquer autrement qu’avec des mots d’enfants empruntes
a toutes les langues connues : francais, anglais, allemand, turc,
armenien meme. C’etait meme plus que cela : c’en etait humiliant. Pour
lui, comme pour moi. La gene etait plus que palpable.

Incapables que nous etions de nous regarder les yeux dans les yeux.

L’intelligence de deux hommes issus de la meme terre, du meme peuple
et pourtant incapables de communiquer intelligemment. Plus meme qu’a
Haydarpasha, c’est a ce moment-la, face a cet intellectuel armenien,
que j’ai ressenti toute la douleur de l’heritage du genocide armenien
consistant en l’occurrence en l’effacement d’une nation et de sa
culture. Cet intellectuel armenien est l’un des editeurs de la maison
d’edition armenienne Aras, la dernière maison d’edition armenienne de
Turquie. Cette dernière publie essentiellement des titres en turc et,
accessoirement, des titres en armenien. Tout comme le journal Agos
fonde par feu Hrant Dink, assassine le 19 janvier 2007 par l’Etat
profond, publie majoritairement des pages en turc et minoritairement
des pages en armenien. Alors qu’avant le genocide armenien, l’edition
armenienne a Constantinople etait preponderante. Alors que le premier
livre publie en armenien l’a ete en 1512. Quand le premier livre
publie en turc ne l’a ete qu’a la fin du 18ème siècle. Le genocide
armenien a detruit des vies. Il a detruit un peuple et une presence
millenaire sur ses terres ancestrales. Ce faisant, il a detruit une
culture. Sans le genocide la culture armenienne aurait continue de
prosperer. Elle est aujourd’hui condamnee a survivre.

A moins que, pour reparer en partie la terrible injustice, parmi
les reparations que le gouvernement turc devra finir par prendre a
l’egard de l’Armenie et des Armeniens ne se trouvent, au-dela des
compensations financières et symboliques (une rue du 24 avril, une
rue Hrant Dink, le deplacement de la toute recente commemoration de
Gallipoli du 24 avril au 18 mars, etc.), au-dela des restitutions
de proprietes spoliees, des mesures de soutien a la culture et a la
langue armenienne en Turquie meme. L’une de ces mesures pourrait etre
de cesser de faire de la Turquie un Etat officiellement unilingue et de
donner un statut officiel a un certain nombre de langues de Turquie,
comme l’armenien. A minima, la Turquie devrait signer et ratifier La
Charte europeenne des langues regionales ou minoritaires de 1992.

vendredi 6 mars 2015, Ara (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=108754

Vahan Babayan Replaces Tigran Urikhanyan As BHK Spokesman

VAHAN BABAYAN REPLACES TIGRAN URIKHANYAN AS BHK SPOKESMAN

14:07 | March 6,2015 | Politics

Lawmaker of the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) Vahan Babayan has
issued a statement saying he has been entrusted with the position of
BHK Spokesman.

“As you know my colleague Tigran Urikhanyan has resigned as Spokesman
for the Prosperous Armenia Party. The party’s new leadership
has temporarily entrusted me with the position. I understand the
responsibility of the job I am assuming at this difficult period for
the party, but I am ready to work. I want to thank Naira Zohrabyan and
my colleagues for the trust and Tigran Urikhanyan for the extensive
work he has done.

I am hopeful that my colleagues will only spread reliable information
[about the party] after verifying the details with me and other
responsible people in order to ensure efficiency and productivity of
our work.”

http://en.a1plus.am/1207382.html

Ukrainian Female Nationalist Confesses To The Guardian Having Partic

UKRAINIAN FEMALE NATIONALIST CONFESSES TO THE GUARDIAN HAVING PARTICIPATED IN KARABAKH WAR ON AZERBAIJANI SIDE

15:59 06/03/2015 >> IN THE WORLD

The Ukrainian volunteer battalions have a reputation for fierce
nationalism and far-right views. One of these units is the assault
battalion Aidar, whose members have been accused of human rights
abuses by Amnesty International. The volunteers include several
women among their ranks. One of them, nicknamed Mama Tanya, used to
live in Azerbaijan and took part in Karabakh war, British outlet The
Guardian writes.

According to the article, she said that in the 1990’s she was living
with her husband in Azerbaijan and served as a medic during the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Her experience and committed nationalism
has drawn her into yet another war in eastern Ukraine, where her
task is to administer first aid and pull wounded soldiers out of
battlefields during special operations.

It is necessary to highlight that the Ukrainian nationalists have more
than once confessed having fought on the Azerbaijani side in Nagorno
Karabakh and alongside with other mercenaries tried to back Azerbaijan
in its aggression against Nagorno Karabakh Republic in the 1990’s.

Recently Colonel Roman Kulik, the military commissar of the province
Volynsky, Ukraine, has also confessed that the Ukrainian tank crewmen
remained to serve in the Azerbaijani army after the collapse of the
USSR and nationalization of the tank regiment. They not only fought
for Azerbaijan, but also taught recruits. The help of the mercenaries
from the former Soviet army, Afghan mujahideens, Chechen and Ukrainian
fighters did not save the Azerbaijani army. Despite the multiple
advantages in manpower and techniques, as well as the thousands of
mercenaries, the Azerbaijani army was defeated and thrown far away
from the initial borders.

See also: BigCaucasus about how Armenian volunteers defeated Chechen
mercenaries in Karabakh who fought for Azerbaijan

http://www.panorama.am/en/analytics/2013/05/17/bigcaucasus
http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/03/06/mama-tanya-guardian/
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/mar/05/ukraine-women-fighting-frontline

Syrian Exodus Evokes A Flight Full Of History: Many Refugees Are Des

SYRIAN EXODUS EVOKES A FLIGHT FULL OF HISTORY: MANY REFUGEES ARE DESCENDANTS OF THOSE WHO FLED ARMENIA — AND HORRORS OF 1915

The Baltimore Sun
March 4, 2015 Wednesday
FINAL EDITION

By Glen Johnson Tribune Newspapers’ Patrick J. McDonnell in Beirut
contributed., Special to Tribune Newspapers YEREVAN, Armenia

YEREVAN, Armenia — Snare drums rustle and trumpets blare. Chocolates
from a famed confectioner in Syria are handed out among the crowd. The
hall falls silent. A minute of remembrance is observed for the more
than 200,000 killed during almost four years of civil war in Syria.

Hundreds of ethnic Armenians from Syria, among the thousands who’ve
fled the fighting, gathered recently in downtown Yerevan. They came
together to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Armenian Central
High School in Aleppo, a cornerstone of Armenian identity in a Syrian
city now devastated by war.

“Armenian schools keep Armenian identity alive,” said a woman who
fled Aleppo as rebels rolled into the city in July 2012 and who,
like others interviewed, did not want to be identified for security
reasons. “My parents went there, I went there, the school is like …”

“A treasure for Armenians,” another young woman chimed in.

The attendees had left their homes and businesses, schools and
farmlands, fleeing to Armenia’s capital as Syria descended into chaos.

Many are descendants of people who had gone to Syria to escape the
Armenian genocide of 1915 to 1918 under the Ottoman Empire, which
became the modern republic of Turkey. The Turkish government disputes
that a genocide took place.

The current exodus is one of the most significant movements of ethnic
Armenians since then.

“We are the descendants of those who survived the genocide,” said
Lena Halajian, who heads the Center for the Coordination of Syrian
Armenians’ Issues, a nongovernmental group here helping refugees
adapt. “I fear history is repeating itself.”

Participants at the celebration read Armenian poetry as a video
of the Aleppo school — showing a modest library and students,
their hands stretched upward, fingers twitching as a teacher asked
a question — flashed on a screen. A quartet including well-known
Aleppo violinist Hovhannes Moubayed plays “Dance of the Rose Maidens,”
by Aram Khachaturian, the late Soviet Armenian composer.

The violinist, 44, fled Aleppo more than two years ago, and, like
others, he said he had embarked on a new life after leaving most of
his belongings behind.

“Now I try to work as a music teacher,” said Moubayed, who directed a
state music school in Aleppo. “I’ve started (in Armenia) at the very
bottom. But step by step, maybe I can survive.”

Some refugees had been targeted by militants.

“They handcuffed and blindfolded me once they knew I was Armenian,”
said a Syrian Armenian who gave his name as Krikor. “Then they whipped
and burned me.”

Gnarled scars stretch up his forearms now, and he shuffles uneasily.

In summer 2013, Krikor said, fighters with al-Qaida-linked Nusra
Front abducted him from a shuttle bus in northwestern Syria’s Idlib
province. He escaped hours later and made his way to a government
checkpoint — and safety. The experience convinced him it was time
to leave.

Other Syrian Armenians have been kidnapped for their perceived wealth
or killed in the crossfire or for sectarian reasons.

Syrian Armenians, part of the country’s 10 percent Christian minority,
have been targeted by militant Sunni Muslims, who have become the
dominant part of the opposition.

Most Syrian Armenians speak Arabic and Armenian, a fact that has
helped speed their assimilation in Yerevan.

Armenian schools play an integral role in preserving cultural roots
among the massive Armenian diaspora. The Armenian General Benevolent
Union, a nonprofit group promoting Armenian identity globally,
provides funds for the Aleppo school. The high school remains open,
but the population has plummeted.

“The problem is that it can be dangerous for students to travel there,”
said Hagop Mikayelian, 71, a former administrator at the school who
was kidnapped by a rebel group and held for ransom in 2013.

In September, Islamic State militants reportedly bombed an iconic
Armenian church and museum in the eastern Syrian city of Deir el-Zour
that memorializes victims of the Turks. Lost were rare documents
detailing the mass killings, say community members, who also note that
the bones of some of those who perished were laid in the foundations
of the now-destroyed monument.

“The memorial was living proof of what happened to Armenians,”
Halajian said. “They want to erase our history.”

As Armenians worldwide prepare for centennial memorials in April,
Turkish backing for Syrian insurgents is further fueling Armenian
outrage. The government has supported sundry rebel factions, including
radical Islamic fighters, as it pursues its goal of ousting Syrian
President Bashar Assad.

And last March, extremist fighters poured into the Syrian Armenian
town of Kassab from across the border in Turkey. Most of the town’s
population fled south to territory still under control of the Syrian
government. Kassab is celebrated among Armenians as a refuge from
those who fled Turkey a century ago.

At the school anniversary gathering, a choir sings Armenian hymns as
ceremonies come to a close.

Generations of graduates flood the stage, embracing while a
photographer clicks away.

Tribune Newspapers’ Patrick J. McDonnell in Beirut contributed.

Clara Barton: A Life Of Compassion & Service

CLARA BARTON: A LIFE OF COMPASSION & SERVICE

Biography
March 5 2015

To celebrate Women’s History Month and Red Cross Month, we’re taking
a look at the inspiring life of Clara Barton, the founder of the
American Red Cross, who made it her mission to serve humanity in
troubled spots around the world.

One of the world’s greatest humanitarians was born on Christmas
Day in 1821, in the town of North Oxford, Massachusetts. Clarissa
“Clara” Harlowe Barton was the youngest of five children born to Sarah
(Stone) and Captain Stephen Barton. A teacher, a nurse, a civil rights
activist and a suffragist, this founder of the American Red Cross
opened paths to the new field of volunteer service through the force
of her personal example. She dedicated her life to helping people by
“offering a hand up, not a handout.”

A Shy Student

Homeschooled by her family, Barton, a bit of a tomboy, suffered from
acute shyness as a child. She gained her first experience in nursing
when she was 11 years old: Her brother David became seriously ill
following an accident, and she cared for him for two years. She
then went on to attend a private boarding school. Though she kept
up academically, her reticence affected her health, and she returned
home. With encouragement from her parents, she overcame her shyness
and became a teacher. This pattern would repeat itself during her
lifetime, as she suffered from periods of severe depression, yet
always managed to rally when a crisis called for her services.

Clara Barton – Mini Biography (TV-PG; 03:00) Clara Barton’s many jobs
included teaching, working at the U.S. Parent Office, and caring for
soldiers during the Civil War. She is best remembered as the founder
of the American Red Cross.

A Gifted Teacher

While still a teenager, Barton passed the teacher’s exam and began
instructing classes in May 1838 in North Oxford. She enthralled her
students and refused to discipline them physically (even though that
was common practice at the time). Six years later, she opened her
own school.

In 1850, Barton enrolled at New York’s Clinton Liberal Institute to
further her own education. After a year of study, she moved with a
friend to Bordentown, New Jersey, where she enlisted support from
the local community to open a free public school. By the end of the
year, she had about 200 pupils. Her project was such a success that
the community built a new school. However, she was shocked that they
hired a man to run it–at twice her salary–so she resigned.

The earliest known photograph of Clara Barton, which was probably
taken in Clinton, New York in 1850 or 1851 while she was a student
at the Clinton Liberal Institute. She was about 29 years old. (Photo:
National Park Service)

A Patent Clerk and a Civil War Nurse

Barton’s next move was to Washington, D.C. where she became the first
female clerk at the U.S. Patent Office. But upon the outbreak of
the Civil War, she independently organized relief for the wounded,
often bringing her own supplies to front lines. She recognized the
need for an efficient organization apart from the War Department’s
bureaucracy to distribute food and medical supplies to the troops. She
began soliciting supplies from her friends, distributing them and
staying to nurse and nourish the wounded, often very close to the
actual fighting. In fact, while tending the wounded at the Battle of
Antietam, she worked so close to the battlefield that a bullet once
tore through her sleeve and killed the man she was treating.

By June of 1864, the army had put her in charge of diet and nursing at
X Corps. It was dubbed the “flying hospital” because of its frequent
moves to be close enough to the battle to help the wounded, but not
so close as to be overrun.

An Advocate for the Wounded and the Missing

On March 11, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln appointed Barton to
search for missing prisoners of war. With assistance from several
volunteers, including her sister Sally, Barton used her own money to
set up Friends of the Missing Men of the United States Army. They
put the name of every soldier for whom they received an inquiry
on their lists, which were organized by state and published in
local newspapers, displayed in post offices, and reviewed by various
organizations. Veterans seeing the list could then provide Barton with
information. She and her assistants received and answered more than
63,000 letters and identified over 22,000 missing men. Years later,
the Red Cross established a tracing service, which remains one of
the organization’s most valued activities today.

Clara Barton photographed by Mathew Brady in 1865 from the Civil War
period of her life. (Photo: National Archives/Wikiemedia Commons)

A Suffrage Supporter

In 1866, Barton went on a lecture tour throughout the Northeast and
Midwest to describe her Civil War experiences. During this time,
in November 1867, she met and befriended women’s suffrage leaders
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Although her own cause
took precedence, Barton aligned herself with the suffrage movement
and once hosted a party for 400 feminists. She also gave many lectures
in support of suffrage.

First President of the American Red Cross

Ordered to Europe by her doctor for a rest cure in 1869, Barton met
with the International Committee of the Red Cross. She participated
in relief efforts during the Franco-Prussian War in 1870-1871, but
was forced into temporary retirement by ill health in 1872. After
recovering, she campaigned to establish an American branch of the
Red Cross, despite government resistance due to fears of foreign
entanglements. The U.S. Senate finally ratified the Geneva Convention
in 1882 and formed the American Association of the Red Cross. Barton
became its president.

The newly formed organization sprang into action in the fall of 1881
when forest fires ripped through Michigan. It provided relief during
many other natural disasters and epidemics in the U.S., including
the Johnstown, PA, flood in 1889. Clara directed many of the relief
operations herself. The American Red Cross also provided international
relief, including helping victims of the Russian famine of 1892 and
providing relief to Armenians living in Turkish-controlled Armenia
in 1896.

Clara Barton working in the National Headquarters office of the
American Red Cross in Glen Echo, Maryland in 1902. (Photo: National
Park Service)

In 1898, at age 76, Barton traveled with nurses to Cuba during the
Spanish-American War to nurse the wounded and provide supplies and
food. In 1900, after several contentious attempts, the U.S. Congress
granted the American Red Cross a charter, making the independent,
non-profit organization responsible for fulfilling the provisions of
the Geneva Conventions, providing family and other support to the U.S.

military, and providing a system for disaster relief. However, Barton’s
unwillingness to delegate responsibility had created dissent within the
ranks of the Red Cross and, in 1904, she resigned from the organization
she had founded and built.

Rather than retire, in 1905, Barton established the National First Aid
Association of America, which emphasized basic first aid instruction
and emergency preparedness, and served as its honorary president for
five years. She published several books about the beginnings of the
American Red Cross and the global Red Cross network. She died on April
12, 1912, at her home in Glen Echo, Maryland. She was 90 years old.

Barton’s family donated her papers and awards, along with numerous
mementoes, to the Library of Congress. The National Park Service
manages what is now the Clara Barton National Historic Site in Glen
Echo. Barton’s legacy to the nation–service to humanity–is reflected
in the services provided daily by the employees and volunteers of
the American Red Cross throughout the nation and in troubled spots
around the world.

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