Anna Aghadjanian, Ambassadrice d’Arménie auprès de l’ASEAN a présent

DIPLOMATIE-ARMENIE
Anna Aghadjanian, Ambassadrice d’Arménie auprès de l’ASEAN a présenté
à Djakarta ses lettres de créances

Le 14 janvier à Djakarta (Indonésie), la nouvelle Ambassadrice
d’Arménie dans les pays de l’ASEAN, Anna Aghadjanian, a présenté ses
lettres de créances au Secrétaire General de l’organisation, Le Luong
Minh. Information communiquée à Erévan par le ministère arménien des
Affaires étrangères. Madame Anna Aghadjanian est ainsi la première
Ambassadrice d’Arménie auprès de l’ASEAN. L’Association des nations de
l’Asie du Sud-Est (ASEAN) est une organisation politique, économique
et culturelle regroupant dix pays d’Asie du Sud-Est. Elle a été fondée
en 1967 à Bangkok (Thaïlande). Aujourd’hui elle regroupe une dizaine
de pays – Brunei, Birmanie, Cambodge, Indonésie, Laos, Malaisie,
Philippines, Singapour, Thaïlande et Viêt Nam- avec une population
totale de 560 millions d’habitants.

Krikor Amirzayan

samedi 17 janvier 2015,
Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=107065

L’Arménie a donné 502 autorisations d’exploitation des ressources mi

ECONOMIE
L’Arménie a donné 502 autorisations d’exploitation des ressources minières

Le ministre de l’Energie et des Ressources naturelles, Yervant
Zakharian a informé le 14 janvier lors d’une conférence de presse à
Erévan que l’Arménie a délivré à ce jour 502 autorisations
d’exploitation des ressources minières. 28 de ces autorisations
concernaient l’exploitation des mines de métal, 29 pour l’extraction
des eaux minérales, le reste pour l’extraction de minerais
non-ferreux. Aujourd’hui 84 licences de recherches géologiques sont
délivrés dont 62 pour la recherche de minerais ferreux, 22 pour des
minerais non-ferreux et 3 pour les recherches de gaz et de pétrole.

Krikor Amirzayan

samedi 17 janvier 2015,
Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

Les hackers Azéris auraient atteint en 2014 un meilleur professionna

ARMENIE-INTERNET
Les hackers Azéris auraient atteint en 2014 un meilleur
professionnalisme affirme un spécialiste Arménien

Lors d’une conférence de presse le 13 janvier à Erévan un spécialiste
de la sécurité de l’information sur les réseaux numériques, Samvel
Mardirossian a affirmé qu’en 2014 les attaques des hackers Azéris sur
les sites arméniens étaient .

Armenia seeks Russian permission over Permyakov case

Haykakan Zhamanak: Armenia seeks Russian permission over Permyakov case

09:43 * 17.01.15

The paper says it has learned from “well-informed sources” that
Prosecutor General Gevorg Kostanyan has sought his Russian
counterpart’s permission over organizing Valery Permyakov’s
interrogation in Armneia.

But the Armenian inquest bodies did not reportedly have a chance to
question or even meet with the Russian serviceman on Friday. The
proceeding over the January 12 brutal murder in Gyumri is conducted by
the Investigative Committee’s department tasked with handling cases of
special importance, says the paper, adding that a investigative group
of regional prosecutors has now been set up to get the case under way.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/01/17/hz/1561935

UCLA: Turkish Cultural Club appeals against ASA resolution to divest

Daily Bruin: University of California – Los Angeles
January 14, 2015 Wednesday

Turkish Cultural Club appeals against ASA resolution to divest from Turkey

by: Hannah Rosson

The Turkish Cultural Club appealed to the undergraduate student
government Tuesday to vote against a resolution drafted by the
Armenian Students’ Association calling for the University of
California to divest from the Republic of Turkey.

The resolution calls for the UC’s divestment from the Republic of
Turkey because the Republic does not recognize and has not given
reparations for the Armenian Genocide, which resulted in the deaths of
1.5 million Armenians in the early 20th century and the displacement
of the Armenian community.

The Armenian Genocide has been recognized by 42 U.S. states and 22
countries, as well as by the United Nations SubCommission on
Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities.

In their presentation, Gülnaz Kiper, president of the Turkish Cultural
Club, and Mark Bhaskar, a member of the Olive Tree Initiative at UCLA,
said they think the language of the resolution creates a divide
between the Armenian and Turkish communities.

“(This resolution is) clearly a racist attempt to drive a wedge
between the Turkish and Armenian communities here at UCLA,” said
Bhaskar, a second-year political science and Middle Eastern studies
student, during public comments.

Members of the Turkish Cultural Club also said they think the
existence of an Armenian Genocide has been debated by scholars. Some
of the students also said they would not call the killing of 1.5
million Armenians a genocide because no one debating the issue could
witness events that occurred in the past.

“This is not a fact,” said Selene Sari, a member of the Turkish
Cultural Club, during public comments. “In Turkey and many other
nations, scholars are debating (the existence of the Armenian
Genocide).”

Kiper, a third-year psychology student and an international student
from Istanbul, Turkey, contradicted herself several times during and
after the Undergraduate Students Association Council meeting. When
asked, she said she did not think she was in a position to say whether
the Armenian Genocide could be called a genocide.

“I don’t think it’s a big deal if we do or do not call it a genocide,”
Kiper said in response to questions from councilmembers during her
presentation. “If you want me to call it a genocide, I will.”

Kiper and Bhaskar said in their presentation that they do not think
divestment is a fair decision because they said they think Turkey has
a history of supporting human rights. They also said they think the
Republic of Turkey, formed in 1923, did not carry out the genocide and
that the Ottoman Empire was solely responsible.

“Divestment is an unfair punishment for Turkey,” Kiper said.

Kiper added that she thinks the resolution inaccurately portrays the
Republic of Turkey as a country that actively silences speech on the
Armenian Genocide.

Some councilmembers voiced concerns about the Turkish students not
using the word “genocide” when referring to the Armenian Genocide.

Community Service Commissioner Savannah Badalich said she was
concerned some of the comments in the presentation were
microagressions against some Muslim communities. Badalich also
addressed Kiper’s and Bhaksar’s claim that Turkey did not want to
recognize the genocide because it was committed by the Ottoman Empire
before Turkey became a nation.

Badalich said Turkey should be more willing to acknowledge the
genocide if it believes the Ottoman Empire was responsible instead of
the nation itself.

Last quarter, the Armenian Students’ Association announced its plan to
bring the resolution to the council table, and has since held two town
halls to receive feedback on and educate students about the
resolution.

Natalie Kalbakian, external vice president of the Armenian Students’
Association, said the club reached out to Turkish students and tried
to listen to their concerns. She also said the resolution is not meant
to target Turkish students, but rather to criticize the Turkish
government for not acknowledging the Armenian Genocide.

“It is upsetting to see that the University of California would be
invested in such a government,” said Kalbakian, a third-year political
science student.

During a town hall last Thursday, the Armenian Students’ Association
invited members of the Turkish Cultural Club and Muslim Students
Association to discuss and potentially alter the resolution to
accommodate students’ concerns.

Mikael Matossian, a fourth-year environmental science student and
president of the Armenian Students’ Association, said that some
members of the Turkish Cultural Club and Muslim Students Association
left the town hall early before discussing the resolution because they
did not feel comfortable at the event.

USAC is set to vote on the resolution next Tuesday at its weekly meeting.

Armenians celebrate Christmas in West Bank town of Bethlehem

EuroNews, EU
Jan 18 2015

Armenians celebrate Christmas in West Bank town of Bethlehem

18/01 16:45 CET

Christmas has been and gone for many, but not for members of the
Armenian community in the West Bank town of Bethlehem.

The community uses a different calendar.

The Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem led ceremonies in the Church of
the Nativity, believed to be the birthplace of Jesus.

Christmas is celebrated three times in Bethlehem every year.

Many Christians mark the date on December 25, based on the Gregorian
calendar, while several Orthodox Christians commemorate the event to
recognise the birth of Jesus on January 7.

Some Armenian churches celebrate on January 19, making them the last
of the Eastern Churches to mark the event.

watch video at

http://www.euronews.com/2015/01/18/armenians-celebrate-christmas-in-west-bank-town-of-bethlehem/

The Syrian Ambassador’s Complaint

Consortium News
Jan 18 2015

The Syrian Ambassador’s Complaint

January 18, 2015

The Western news media calls itself “objective,” but many foreign
crises are reported in a biased way, fawning over one side and
hammering the other. To provide a sense of the “other side” in the
Syrian civil war, we are reposting an interview with Syria’s UN
ambassador by Eva Bartlett for a Lebanese newspaper.

By Eva Bartlett

On Jan. 8, in his sparsely-furnished New York City office, the Syrian
Arab Republic Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United
Nations, Dr. Bashar al-Ja’afari, sat down with Al-Akhbar for an
interview. The veteran diplomat, who has held his position at the UN
since 2006, and lives restricted to a 25-mile radius of New York City,
has much more to say than the half hour allowed. Defiant as always, he
discussed the challenges he faces at the UN, explained why he thinks
the organization has lost its way, and censured Western states and
media for their hostility toward the Syrian government.

First, however, we discussed the exhibition of Aleppo-based Syrian
photographer Hagop Vanesian, titled “My Homeland,” which opened the
same day at the United Nations headquarters.

Al-Akhbar: How did this exhibition come about?

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: This is the first breakthrough we’ve had at
the level of the United Nations since the beginning of what is
commonly called “the Syrian crisis.” For four years, I have been
trying very hard to do something inside the UN. Every time we
attempted to do something, we were confronted by a huge amount of
bureaucracy, excuses, apologies (sometimes), denial of our rights
(sometimes), negligence, etc.

I’m very glad that we finally succeeded in organizing this exhibition
— which doesn’t address the whole, dramatic picture of the Syrian
crisis, but only focuses on what happened to and in Aleppo, the
second-largest city in Syria, after the capital, Damascus. It’s about
Syria, it’s about the Syrian people. It’s not about the Syrian
government or the Syrian opposition or the Syrian coalition thugs or
Da’esh (ISIS). It’s about Syria, about what happened in Aleppo,
through undeniable photos.

The exhibition is the work of a highly-professional Syrian
photographer of Armenian origin, who is himself a citizen of Aleppo.
He is an eyewitness to the terrorist rampage that hit this beautiful
city, Aleppo, which has always been a cradle of civilization. He is
suffering greatly. He lost his home, his family. He will show only 26
photos, but he has an archive of thousands of photos. He has complete
archives of Aleppo, before and after, building by building, how it was
before and how it became.

AA: Why do you think that the UN has allowed this exhibition now? You
mentioned you’d wanted to sponsor exhibitions in the past but hadn’t
been allowed.

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: The Saudi mission, the French mission, the
Danish mission, the British mission, the German mission… they have
countered Syrian government activities in the UN. Every time we
complained about it they said, “You can do the same.” Today we said,
“We have an exhibition.” They were cornered. They couldn’t say no
(chuckles), because they kept telling me “You can do the same.” We are
not attacking Germany or France or others, we are showing the reality
in our country.

AA: An Associated Press article that has been running in the
mainstream papers slammed this exhibit; citing an official in the
opposition Syrian National Coalition calling the photographer a
“propagandist.”

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: This is what they are good at. They don’t look
at the picture in its entirety, in its comprehensiveness. They don’t
address what the photographs are talking about objectively. They have
prejudices, wrong preconceived ideas about what’s taking place in
Syria. They start with wrong ideas and end with wrong ideas. It’s
really unfortunate, because here we are not talking about just some
gallery in New York. We are talking about the United Nations
headquarters!

We are speaking the language of the UN: territorial integrity of
states, political independence of states, sovereignty of states, equal
membership of states. All these sacrosanct terms are enshrined in the
Charter of the United Nations. We are not starting from scratch or
re-inventing new language. We are in full harmony with the UN language
and the UN provisions of the Charter.

Others are not, because they don’t belong to the UN world. They [the
media] are, of course, against the Syrian government. They are against
anything that might explain positively, or objectively speaking [the
Syrian crisis], to the so-called “international community” — I don’t
believe in this word. They have been falsifying facts, spreading
rumours, making propaganda against the Syrian government for years.
And they are living off this criticism, it has become a source of
their livelihood, their own welfare. The more you criticize the Syrian
government, the more money you get from the petrodollar countries, the
more visas you get from Western world, the more you go to five-star
hotels, the more you appear on TV screens as dignitaries of the Syrian
people, as representatives — exclusive representatives — of the Syrian
people.

Anybody who opposes this exhibition belongs to a political current
opposing the truth. Any honest, objective Syrian who loves his
homeland, who says he feels sick because of what is going on in Syria,
should have a great interest in showing what is going on in Syria. All
Syrians should push for organizing more exhibitions, not only at the
United Nations but all over the world, to explain what Da’esh and
al-Nusra Front and the other terrorist groups sponsored by Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, are doing. The Turkish intelligence is deeply
involved in sponsoring Da’esh, and in stealing our plants and
factories.

AA: You are the representative of the Syrian Arab Republic at the
United Nations, and Syria is an important subject in the news. Are you
asked to appear on major TV channels?

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: Mainly, I address the media at the UN, at the
stakeout, which is the podium for diplomats, for ambassadors. I also
go on TV from time to time. But to be honest, when they record
interviews, I speak for 20 minutes, then they show only 20 seconds, 10
seconds, whatever fits their agenda. You saw what happened with
Anderson Cooper, Christiane Amanpour, and others. They always try to
manipulate the facts, and they do their best to deviate from the
direction of the conversation into little, negative, details, so that
the audience will have a negative idea of what I am saying.
Simultaneously, as I am speaking, they show a negative video clip on
what’s going on in Syria, accusing the government of doing so and so.
Which means that they are indirectly telling viewers that this
ambassador is not telling the truth. You see how they manipulate?

Christiane Amanpour was lying when she was interviewing me on the
so-called chemical weapons. She was lying, not telling the truth at
all! This is why I told her, “You know what? You also may be a weapon
of mass destruction, because you are poisoning public opinion and
deviating from the main points I’m making.”

AA: You are now under a 25-mile travel ban, how did they justify
imposing this restriction on you?

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: Yes. They didn’t give me any reason, they
didn’t explain anything. They just notified me that from now on, you
won’t be able to go beyond 25 miles [of New York City’s Columbus
Circle]. It’s an American sovereign decision. I’m an ambassador to the
United Nations, not to the United States, so maybe they are taking
advantage of that nuance. Of course, it is not justifiable. I have the
right to move according to the Vienna Diplomatic Convention. But if
they want it this way, let it be.

AA: Prior to this, had you been traveling in the US or elsewhere?

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: Yes. Maybe my activism caused me this trouble.

AA: Your activism consisted of meeting with members of the
Syrian-American community?

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: Yes, meeting with them, explaining to them
what’s going on in Syria. They needed information, they needed to be
briefed about what’s going on in their homeland. They are all
extremely worried, they have families there.

AA: Speaking of traveling, recently, there were reports that you
launched an official complaint at the UN regarding US Senator John
McCain and other heads of states traveling illegally to Syria and
meeting with anti-government fighters.

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: Yes, this is what transpired in the media. I
didn’t ask to circulate the letter, I wanted it to be shared only by
the members of the Security Council, but it was somehow leaked. But I
would like to confirm that, yes, I sent a letter drawing the kind
attention of the secretary-general and the members of the Security
Council to this flagrant and blatant interference in domestic affairs,
this violation of our sovereignty, the illegal crossing of our
borders. Whenever one of those who cross illegally into Syria gets
killed by the terrorists, then the Syrian government is blamed for not
protecting him, although they entered Syria illegally. Many
journalists have been killed, unfortunately. It is unfortunate, but
they are responsible for their own fate. They didn’t enter Syria via
the Syrian government. We would have protected them. We would have
shown them where to go and where not to go. But they had bad
intentions. So, many of them got killed, beheaded, kidnapped.

So, indeed, I forwarded this letter with some specific names, even
though there are thousands, but we gave just some names. John McCain,
an American senator, goes and meets with Da’esh (ISIS) in Aleppo. In
one picture, he was with a man from ISIS. And the other “moderate”
criminals. The American weapons delivered to them ended up in the
hands of al-Nusra Front and Da’esh. All these people are “moderate,”
as you know. Bernard Kouchner, the former French Foreign Minister,
entered Syria illegally, too. Can you imagine that? A senator from the
USA, a former minister from France, Turkish intelligence… and then
they tell you that, “you know what, we are extremely worried about the
spread of terrorism.”

AA: In UN sessions, your microphone has repeatedly had suddenly
“technical difficulties” and been cut, or the video feed has had
sudden inexplicable “technical difficulties”…

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: Many times, many times. I have been the only
Ambassador at the United Nations since 1945 whose speeches were cut
off, or not recorded at all. It has never happened otherwise in UN
meetings. Never. Two of my speeches were not recorded. One, under the
Chairmanship of the former Qatari ambassador… of course, Qatar. But
what adds insult to injury was that Ban Ki-moon himself was at sitting
at the podium, and he supported the move taken by the President of the
General Assembly. That triggered a very negative reaction from many
ambassadors who intervened. The biased position of the
Secretary-General and the President of the General Assembly was
obvious from the very first days, thanks to these wrongdoings.

This has been a phenomenon related exclusively to me. Let me
elaborate. Every time I speak, for instance, at the Security Council,
they choose a bad interpreter who is unable to fully interpret what I
am saying. So the people do not get my message. They do it on purpose.
One day, I was invited to address the Security Council. I saw one of
the Security Council staff members addressing the interpreters. He
gave them a hand signal: change. I saw it with my own eyes. So they
changed the good interpreter with a poor one, thus ensuring that my
political message does not transpire fully.

They do the same things in the General Assembly. The British
ambassador cut me off one time while I was speaking. He said “you have
exceeded four minutes.” I said, “Who gave you the right to fix four
minutes? I am a member of a concerned party, and I have the right to
explain.” To justify his wrongdoing, he also cut off the Iraqi
ambassador after me. We were the only two ambassadors speaking at that
session, and it was on Syria and Iraq. The issue was on terrorism in
Syria and Iraq, and he cut off both of us after four minutes!

The UN has lost its credibility. The UN has lost a lot of the
principles of its founding fathers. The UN of today has nothing to do
with the UN of the Charter. This is why everybody has forgotten about
the Charter; people do not speak of the Charter. They don’t speak
about sovereignty, territorial integrity, political independence,
equality among members. Now they speak about the rule of law, human
rights, the environment — because this is very dear to the heart of
the private sector: money — partnerships. Now the Secretary-General is
focused on partnerships, because he wants to privatize the United
Nations.

The budget of peacekeeping operations is three times higher than the
regular budget! Rather than extinguishing the conflicts, and
decreasing the number of peacekeeping operations, we have increased
the peace-keeping operations. We have right now 36 special political
missions, aside from 15 peacekeeping operations. Twenty years ago, we
didn’t have any special political missions. This is a new phenomenon.
By the way, the special political missions and the peace-keeping
operations are not in the Charter. These are some of the ways they are
deviating from the Charter itself. Together they consume $7.9 billion
per year. And they are solving nothing.

When one of the peacekeeping operations, such as the United Nations
Disengagement Observer Force Zone (UNDOF) on the Syrian occupied Golan
makes mistakes, they hide it, they don’t share the information with
the Security Council. For instance, Israel is dealing with Jabhat
al-Nusra (the Nusra Front) right now in the Golan, helping the
terrorists and treating their wounded in Israeli hospitals. Israeli TV
shows Netanyahu visiting them. Still, the report of the
secretary-general denies this fact, and the report of the
Secretary-General does not address this fact, does not acknowledge
that there is cooperation between Israel and the terrorists in the
Golan.

AA: The media accuses President al-Assad of being responsible for
Da’esh, and other terrorists. Who do you blame for the proliferation
of terrorists in Syria?

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: I’m sure you’re aware of the alarming reports
of Da’esh coming from Camp Bucca in Iraq, the famous American prison
in Iraq. Al-Baghdadi, the caliph of Da’esh, was at Bucca. He was
released by the Americans, not by the Syrian president. The men who
committed the massacre in Paris, they were fighting in Syria and came
back to France. France allowed them to go to Syria, where they killed
scores of people, and in Iraq. Then they came back, normally, and the
French police let them in. The same terrorists. They are good when
they kill Syrians, and they are bad when they kill the French.

In 2012, Laurent Fabius, the French minister of foreign affairs, said
himself that the jihadists — he didn’t call them terrorists then —
were doing well. The French minister! A permanent member of the
Security Council in charge of maintaining international peace and
security. He described their dirty actions by saying that they are
doing well. The French minister of the interior, who is now the prime
minister of France — the one who was crying over the bodies of the
people killed in Paris — what did he say? At that time, the French
ministers were competing to see who could go furthest in their
animosity towards President al-Assad. “He should step down; he should
go; he should resign.” It was à la mode then. The French minister of
the interior said at the time, “I cannot do anything to prevent and
stop French jihadists from going to make jihad in Syria.” He cannot,
as minister of the interior, stop the terrorists coming from France
from going to Syria to kill Syrians! Through Turkey, of course. Why?
Because freedom of speech, freedom of what… freedom of lies. He
“cannot stop them.”

Now, he can. Now, he knows the outcome of what he did. We warned him,
in our statements: don’t play with the terrorists, they will come back
to you. They thought they were big powers and exempt, immune against
this terrorist disease.

It is said publicly today that the Americans with the Turks will start
training the terrorists in Turkey in spring. It has become public, no
shame whatsoever. The Jordanians are doing the same, in secret camps
in the northern part of Jordan, run by the French and the British and
the Americans. The same thing in Saudi Arabia. The same thing in Doha
and Qatar. This is scandalous behaviour.

That’s why I say, there’s no United Nations anymore, it’s over.
Multilateral diplomacy is not working, it’s being manipulated by the
powerful. This is why they want to privatize the United Nations, so
that the influential donors can control the decision-making
mechanisms, without giving a damn about the provisions of the Charter.

We are member states, and we are here based on this famous concept and
principle of equal sovereignty. All that has disappeared, it’s about
business now. Can you believe that Saudi Arabia is sponsoring the
United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre? Can you believe for a second
that Qatar is sponsoring the committee for alliance amongst
civilizations, the dialogue among cultures and civilizations and
religions? They are buying the UN with dirty money.

AA: In reference to Syria’s destroyed heritage, US Secretary of State
John Kerry has implied that it is America’s duty to protect Syria’s
heritage. What is your take on his statement in light of the US’
involvement in the Syrian war?

Ambassador al-Ja’afari: This man is disconnected from reality, totally
disconnected. I heard this from an American man who fought with him in
Vietnam. He told me, “This man has always been disconnected.” But,
he’s not the only one.

On the other hand, there are many honest senators and genuine people
in Congress who opposed the American administration’s plan to attack
Syria. There are genuine people, and the American constitution is
based on beautiful values. Once applied, that is.

Eva Bartlett is a Canadian freelance journalist and activist who has
lived in and written from the Gaza Strip, Syria, and Lebanon. [This
interview was published originally in the English-language edition of
Al-Akhbar, a daily newspaper in Beirut.]

https://consortiumnews.com/2015/01/18/the-syrian-ambassadors-complaint/

Glendale: Students Begin Events In Memory Of Armenian Genocide

STUDENTS BEGIN EVENTS IN MEMORY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Glendale News Press, CA
Jan 15 2015

A 100-year-old survivor of the Armenian Genocide appears at Glendale
Unified board room.

By Kelly Corrigan, [email protected]

January 15, 2015 | 8:13 p.m.

In the presence of an Armenian Genocide survivor, Glendale students on
Wednesday night kicked off commemoration events in a continued effort
to honor those lost in the genocide and have the tragedy officially
recognized by the Turkish government.

>From 1915 to 1918, the Ottoman Turks killed an estimated 1.5 million
Armenians, and its occurrence is still denied by modern-day Turkey.

On Tuesday night in the Glendale Unified board room, several students
belonging to the Armenian clubs at Glendale’s four high schools vowed
to fight for recognition.

“When our ancestors were so brutally massacred, they couldn’t lean on
anyone else… they persevered and they survived, and they made sure
that their culture and their stories lived on to future generations,”
said Mary Agajanian, a senior at Clark Magnet High School.

“The same perseverance that allowed those Armenians to survive the
genocide 100 years ago now flows in our veins. We are their blood,
and we will not stop until we have achieved the recognition they
deserve,” she added.

Fellow student Ara Mandjikian, a junior at Crescenta Valley High
School, said today’s young people must forge ahead.

“We have to be motivated by our obligation to honor and promote our
culture publicly and privately,” he said. “The end of these 100 years
is the beginning of the next, so let us make a name for ourselves in
this world. Not for any other reason than our personal duty to uphold
our nation above ourselves.”

In their presence was 100-year-old Armenian Genocide survivor Madeleine
Salibian, a Glendale resident and mother of Clark Magnet High School
counselor Susan Howe.

Salibian, born in Aintab, now known as Gaziantep, Turkey, was only
a few months old when her father’s Turkish friend ushered her family
to safety by giving them his donkeys to escape.

“A friend of my father who was Turkish — he loved him so much that
when he heard that we were there, he came by midnight and took us
out to his home,” Salibian said. “He kept us there, and the next day,
he gave us three donkeys.”

The family traveled on the donkeys until they reached Syria, settling
in a rural village, and eventually, Aleppo.

Also on Tuesday, Greg Krikorian, president of the Glendale Unified
school board, shared his grandmother’s story of survival, and her
harrowing experience losing her family and watching her father die.

“The last day I know my grandmother saw her father on was on the
horse they hung him on. Picture your kids going through that and
knowing that she was only one of 13 children left, that she lost all
12 brothers and sisters,” Krikorian said. “She came to Cleveland,
Ohio, all by herself, at 8 years of age.”

Commemorating the Armenian Genocide each year has been an important
focus for school officials and students, who produce an assembly each
April that draws hundreds of people to Glendale High School.

Over the next few months, students will also be writing essays and
creating art projects to commemorate the genocide, leading up to a
student-produced assembly at Glendale High School on April 21. The
100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will be on April 24.

“It’s very important, being the educational branch, that we do a good
job of educating, not only our students, but also our community,”
said Glendale Unified Supt. Dick Sheehan.

,0,4973648.story

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/news/tn-gnp-students-begin-events-in-memory-of-genocide-20150115

Outrage Over Massacre Should Not Blind Us To The Hurt Muslims Feel

OUTRAGE OVER MASSACRE SHOULD NOT BLIND US TO THE HURT MUSLIMS FEEL

Middle East Eye
Jan 16 2015

Robert James Parsons, Writer
Friday 16 January 2015 01:34 GMT

False conclusions are being drawn that ignore a history of humiliation
and Western double standards over free expression

The Charlie Hebdo massacre, as it is appropriately termed, has
triggered a plethora of reactions – most of them facile and shallow.

Apart from adding another indisputably horrible act of violence to
a world already saturated with it, the killing spree has dug yet
further the divide between Muslim and Christian communities.

The assertion most often voiced is that freedom of expression must
be preserved. Yet, rare are those in the West who have considered
the situation – or even tried to – from the perspective of the
Muslim world.

The caricatures that were the object of such wrath were – to say the
least – tasteless. Beyond that, one could reasonably label them crude
reductionist images of Muslim heritage, reflecting nothing ordinary to
which Muslims relate, mere echoes of other crude reductionist images
– already caricatures – purveyed so often by Western media. It was
not surprising then, that so many Westerners could relate to them
and even find humour in them, and that so many Muslims would find
them repellent.

That huge numbers of “mainstream” or “moderate” Muslims as well as
non-Muslims were deeply offended by the first cartoons, published
in Denmark in 2005 (and reprinted by Charlie Hebdo in 2007), then by
the later ones from Charlie Hebdo, seems irrelevant. Freedom of the
press must prevail.

Obviously, we are told, Muslims just can’t take a joke. As proof
of Muslims’ refusal to accept “democratic” norms, one often hears
of the repeated effort of several Muslim countries to mobilise the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights, then its successor, the
Human Rights Council, for a resolution denouncing the defamation of
religion. This is a red herring. Even before it got underway, the idea
was denounced by innumerable Muslims and non-Muslims alike as stupid.

Such an approach supposes a single, coherent definition of
religion that almost everybody agrees with. Even the doctrinally
straight-jacketed Roman Catholics cannot manage this. But the futility
of the effort does not excuse insensitivity to what others might
consider sacred.

The caricatures, both Danish and French, bespoke an appalling ignorance
of the Muslim world, its complexity, its subtleties, its anguish in the
face of over two centuries of pillage and domination by the West and
its suffering at the hands of various “coalitions of the willing” as
its great, centuries-old centres of culture and learning are smashed,
its peoples turned into beggars and refugees, its resources stolen,
all by means of unspeakable violence visited upon them in the name
of a certain superpower’s scheme of “creative destruction”.

The much disputed international law doctrine of the right to protect
(“R2P”) has its origins in Western Europe’s nineteenth century
machinations to humiliate and dismantle the Ottoman Empire – in
the name of protecting Christian communities, many of whom over the
centuries had prospered side by side with Muslims within the empire.

First came Greece, then Serbia, Romania and Bulgaria; all “protected”,
then detached. The last remaining major Christian community – on
strategically situated land moreover – was the Armenians. According to
Professor Taner Akcam, who has spent the better part of 30 years in the
archives of the Ottoman Empire studying the massacre of the Armenians,
the Armenians were the pretext for major French- and British-backed
Russian demands on the Sultan. By the summer of 1914, the Sublime
Porte had been forced to accept autonomy for the Armenians that would
have shortly been converted into independence under Russian oversight.

In reaction, the Ottoman government launched a programme to displace –
and, when deemed necessary, kill outright – the Armenians in order
to eliminate the justification for the intervention. We know what
happened.

As horrible as it was, apparently, it is just another brutal example
of the reasons of state trumping human rights, in this case triggered
by the threat of more humiliation and dismemberment at the hands of
the West. The war’s end in 1918 saw further loss of huge territories,
assigned to the British and the French as “protectorates”.

Today, of the great centres of Muslim culture, Baghdad is mostly in
ruins, one of the most dangerous places on earth to live, and Iraq’s
other cities fare no better. Fallujah has been used as a testing
ground for advanced uranium-based weaponry, its population suffering
a rate of cancer and congenital malformations unknown elsewhere in
the world and in medical history.

Damascus holds on by a thread, Aleppo shares the fate of Baghdad,
while much of the rest of Syria has been lost to the (clandestinely)
Western-supported Islamic State. Cairo, under a US-backed dictatorship
for over 40 years, steadily moves toward becoming another almost
unlivable super-city as Egypt groans under economic regression and
spiralling poverty. Palestine, where it has not been simply confiscated
and ethnically purified, is under military occupation, its population,
dispossessed, humiliated and killed outright, subjected to a slow
genocide. Somalia is considered a classic “failed state”.

Lebanon is straining under a load of refugees that no Western country
would ever tolerate – much less try to help.

Libya, not long ago the most advanced and best developed country in
Africa, has been smashed beyond recognition, its almost 150 billion
dollars in gold reserves disappeared, its people prey to warlords and
their incessant feuds, fuelled by Western arms and manipulated by the
string-pullers of Western intelligence services. Afghanistan shares its
fate. Pakistan, destabilised by the great “jihad” against the Soviet
Union and its record-breaking flood of refugees and illegal drugs, is
still hanging on but suffering badly, humiliated by repeated assaults
on is sovereignty. Yemen is slowly disintegrating, its population,
like that of Pakistan and Afghanistan, victims of repeated drone
attacks emanating from the Nobel Peace Laureate’s “kill Tuesday”
lottery sessions.

Across northern Africa at almost every airport in the region, the US
superpower’s “Africa Command” has built military bases that do not
officially exist, to be activated when needed for “missions”.

Everywhere, one finds the superpower’s footprint, with the French
and the British willing accomplices as the West proclaims the right
to interfere in the gangrenous disorder created by its “creative
destruction”.

The despair and suffering, physical and mental, among the peoples
of this region are beyond words. Little wonder then, that so many
– especially the young – turn to those who promise validation and
self-assertion through the only apparent way possible within such
dispossession, death and destruction.

Notwithstanding the West’s claim to secularism, it and its mentality
have been thoroughly fashioned by the Western Christianity that arose
in the fourth century with the forced Christianisation of the Roman
Empire. It is this religious heritage that is the connecting thread
of the cultural identity of “Western Civilisation”, even now.

It is no different in the Muslim world, except that their identity
is threatened – and with it the very survival of tens of millions of
human beings. Their hypersensitivity to the current assault on their
lands, their culture, their religion, even their languages, is logical.

Turning the source of their religious tradition into a crude cartoon
character could only offend them deeply and provoke a sense of outrage
that the alienated youth would feel particularly acutely. In a piece
published in Time after the fire-bombing of Charlie Hebdo’s offices,
in November 2011, Bruce Crumley remarked: “Charlie Hebdo has cultivated
its insolence proudly as a kind of public duty – pushing the limits of
freedom of speech, come what may. But that seems more self-indulgent
and wilfully injurious when it amounts to defending the right to scream
“fire” in an increasingly over-heated theatre.”

His was one of the few voices to speak out in sympathy with the outrage
felt by Muslims all over the world, one of the few voices to question
absolute freedom of expression.

In Saint Paul’s letter to the Colossians, Chapter 3, Verse 18, one
reads: “Wives, submit yourselves to your husbands, as is appropriate
for those who belong to the Lord.”

Suppose Charlie Hebdo were to use that as a basis of caricatures to
demonstrate the “truth” about Christianity in the United States.

Picture a battered woman bleeding and bruised, with a sanctimonious
Oral Roberts or Billy Graham looming over her, shaking his finger at
her and saying, most emphatically, “That’s what you get for not doing
what you’re told! Saint Paul would be ashamed of you! Look at you!

Lucky for you, your husband’s a righteous man. He’ll forgive you –
at least this time… But don’t let it happen again!”

The outcry against the idea that this is a legitimate representation of
Christianity, much less how the United States practices Christianity,
would echo around the world. The talking heads would mobilise as they
have not since France refused to join the 2003 coalition of the willing
to invade Iraq, and Fact-Free Fox and Chicken Noodle Network would
once again show French wine flowing down the gutters of US cities in
celebratory contempt for the depraved “Frogs” and their degenerate
“free” press.

The Psalms in the Old Testament are attributed to King David, a figure
of literally mythic proportions whose legendary capital was Jerusalem
(the basis of the Zionist claims to it) and the founder of the dynasty
that produced Jesus. In Psalm 137, one reads: “O daughter of Babylon,
you devastator! Happy shall he be who requites you with what you have
done to us! Happy shall he be who takes your little ones and dashes
them against the rock!”

Imagine the outrage if that were caricatured in a Muslim publication.

Picture King David, in his regalia surrounded by his troops: “All
right men! Who’s up for a little baby-bashing today? Let’s go, men!

It’s great fun, once you get in the swing of it! God wills it! C’mon
guys! Bash a Babylon baby for God!”

Even “centrist” Jews would be screaming “anti-Semitism!”, and their
minions in the US Congress would be threatening hellfire and damnation
of the worst sort for those who had dared defame the sacred house of
David. The authors would be threatened with the same fate inflicted
upon those who question the official version of the Holocaust.

Thus, there is an undeniable double standard in assessing what is
acceptable in public.

When the Danish caricatures were published in 2005, it was repeatedly
pointed out that the Pope is often caricatured, and nobody is the
worse for it. Lampooning the Pope may be outrageous to some, but
he is a head of state, a political figure, overseeing an elaborate
state bureaucracy, receiving ambassadors and travelling the world
with all the diplomatic immunity and privilege of a head of state. His
office and title, Pontifex Maximus, come straight from pagan imperial
Rome, where the pontiff ruled side by side with the emperor as the
super-intercessor with the gods (later, simply the super-intercessor
with God), the guarantor of power’s divine legitimacy who conferred
that legitimacy upon the emperor.

Another point often raised is that the film The Life of Brian
harmlessly caricatured Jesus. It is true that Jesus was caricatured,
but indirectly (he was adroitly confused with Brian, born next
door to Jesus on the same day and subject to a case of mistaken
identity). But it was Christians, not outsiders – much less foreigners
from a colonising culture – doing the caricaturing in an officially
Christian country with an official Christian church.

Even then, there was considerable righteous fury against the liberties
taken by Monty Python, and all expressions of outrage were treated as
unquestionably legitimate – from repeated choruses of “Blasphemy!” to
the film’s being effectively banned in the UK and formally banned
in Ireland and Norway. (One recalls the advertising pitch: “So funny
it was banned in Norway!”). One can only imagine the dimension that
the outcry would have taken on – even today – if the film had been
a Pakistani, Indian or Iranian production.

As the current outrage against the killings continues and the
reactionaries set to work devising ways to exploit the latest
abomination attributable to Muslims, journalist Bruce Crumley’s closing
words resonate with a succinctness that eclipses all the chatter.

“Defending freedom of expression in the face of oppression is one
thing; insisting on the right to be obnoxious and offensive just
because you can is infantile. Baiting extremists isn’t bravely defiant
when your manner of doing so is more significant in offending millions
of moderate people as well. And within a climate where violent response
– however illegitimate – is a real risk, taking a goading stand on
a principle virtually no one contests is worse than pointless: it’s
pointlessly all about you.”

-Robert James Parsons is a freelance journalist based in Geneva and
a long-time Middle East observer. He writes regularly for the Geneva
newspaper Le Courrier, the last independent daily in Switzerland.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not
necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

http://www.middleeasteye.net/columns/outrage-over-massacre-should-not-blind-us-hurt-muslims-feel-119640672

BAKU: Azerbaijani, EU Officials Discuss Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

AZERBAIJANI, EU OFFICIALS DISCUSS NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Jan 15 2015

15 January 2015, 12:04 (GMT+04:00)
By Sara Rajabova

Finding a solution to the decades-old Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was
the main topic of discussion during a meeting of Azerbaijani foreign
policy head and European Union official.

Elmar Mammadyarov and Herbert Salber, EU Special Representative for
the South Caucasus exchanged view on the negotiation process towards
the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, which emerged in
1988 after Armenia’s territorial claims against Azerbaijan, during
their meeting on January 14, Foreign Ministry said.

Referring to Armenia’s actions to destabilize the situation in the
region and to resort to the sabotage, Mammadyarov said first and
foremost, the Armenian armed forces must withdraw from the occupied
territories of Azerbaijan for peaceful resolution of the conflict.

Armenia occupied over 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally
recognized territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent
regions in the early 1990s. As a result of the military aggression
of Armenia, over 20,000 Azerbaijanis were killed, 4,866 are reported
missing and almost 100,000 were injured, and 50,000 were disabled.

Large-scale hostilities ended with a Russia-brokered ceasefire in
1994 but Armenia continued the occupation in defiance of four UN
Security Council resolutions calling for immediate and unconditional
withdrawal.Long-standing efforts by U.S., Russian and French mediators
have been largely fruitless so far.

Mammadyarov and Salber further discussed the issues connected with
the further promotion of cooperation between Azerbaijan and the EU.

The strategic partnership in the energy sphere between Azerbaijan
and the EU, the prospects for development of bilateral cooperation
were also discussed during the meeting.

Salber emphasized Azerbaijan’s important role in energy security
of Europe.

On the same day, Salber met with Colonel-General Zakir
Hasanov,Azerbaijan’s Defense Minister. During the meeting, the
sidesfocused on the military-political situation in the region,
as well as the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Earlier in the day, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev received Salber,
who is on a three-day visit to Azerbaijan to meet with the officials
of the country.The sides widely discussed the issues related to
settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

President Aliyev expressed Azerbaijan’s interest in the fast settlement
of the conflict, adding the country spares no efforts towards
liberating its internationally recognized lands from occupation.

The EU and Azerbaijan are maintaining relations under the Partnership
and Cooperation Agreement, which was signed in 1996 and came into
force in 1999.

PCA has provided the legal framework for bilateral relations in the
areas of political dialogue, trade, investment, economic, legislative
and cultural cooperation.

Azerbaijan is also included in the EU program on “Eastern Partnership”
adopted on the initiative of Poland and Sweden and approved at the
EU summit in Brussels in 2008.

European Parliament in 2013 adopted a resolution which confirmed that
Armenian troops have occupied Azerbaijani territories and called for
resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict on the basis of UN Security
Council resolutions and the L’Aquila statement of the mediating
countries’ leaders in 2009.

According to changes to the resolution, the European parliament
recalled its position that the occupation of the territory of an
Eastern Partnership member by another member state violates the
fundamental principles and objectives of the EU program.

http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/76049.html