BREAKING: US Marshals Arrest Two In Turkish Embassy Brawl

Daily Caller
Chuck Ross
Reporter

U.S. Marshals have arrested two Turkish men living in U.S. for their role in beating peaceful protesters outside of the Turkish embassy in Washington, D.C. last month, a source with knowledge of the matter tells The Daily Caller.

The State Department confirmed in a statement to TheDC that arrests have been, and the Washington, D.C. Metro police department identified the two men as Eyup Yildirim and Sinan Narin.

“Now that charges have been filed, the Department will weigh additional actions for the named individuals, as appropriate under relevant laws and regulations. Any further steps will be responsive and proportional to the charges,” a State Department official said.

Yildirim, a 50-year-old construction company owner from New Jersey, faces charges of assault with significant bodily injury and aggravated assault. Narin, from Virginia, faces an aggravated assault charge.

The Washington-based Turkish news website Washington Hatti first reported on Wednesday that Yildirim was one of the men arrested.

The DC first reported last month that Yildirim is the man seen in videos of the brawl kicking a female protester while she was on the ground.

President of France got acquainted with the situation on Artsakh

A1 Plus, Armenia

The issue of closure of OSCE Yerevan Office is being discussed in Vienna.

OSCE Minsk Group French Co-Chair Stephane Visconti said in an interview with “Artsakhpress”.

The newly-elected President of France Emmanuel Macron got acquainted with the situation.

“It is a pleasure for me to be in Artsakh and get acquainted with the situation. We attach great importance to issues relating to security and peaceful settlement process. France, US and Russia make all efforts to record progress on this issue”, the French Co-Chair said.

The progress in Armenia-NATO relations is significant – top NATO official

Panorama, Armenia

“When touching upon Armenia-NATO relations, I want to cite a passage from my recent conversation with the defense minister: We have a perfect cooperation in numerous spheres; the progress is significant,” James Appathurai, NATO Secretary General's Special Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia, said at a press conference held at NATO Information Center in Armenia.

The official thanked Armenia for its contribution in the Alliance’s operations held in Afghanistan and Kosovo. In Mr.Appathurai’s words, a meeting of the defense ministers of the respective countries having military units in Afghanistan is to set to be held in Brussels, with the attendance of Armenia’s defense minister. He informed that among numerous issues, the meeting will also address the issue of slightly increasing the peacekeeping troops in Afghanistan.

“In many spheres Armenia-NATO cooperation is in line with a broader fretwork agreement,” the official added.

‘Our statements were targeted’: Russian Co-Chair Igor Popov

Panorama, Armenia

“Our statements are aimed at preventing the tension on the frontline,” OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Igor Popov (Russia) said at the briefing with journalists following the meeting with Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan, as reported by “Artsakhpress”.

“Our statements were targeted, which aimed at keeping the procedure of peaceful negotiations for the settlement of the conflict,” Mr. Popov said.

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Richard Hoagland (U.S.) told the reporters that during the meeting with President Bako Sahakyan they discussed issues related to Karabakh conflict settlement, as well as various sectors of the economy, the financial sphere and many other issues.

To note, Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan received today the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs Igor Popov (Russian Federation), Stephane Visconti (France) and Richard Hoagland (USA), personal representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk and officials accompanying them.

Before departing for Artsakh, the Co-Chairs visited Yerevan, met with Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan, as well as Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and Defense Minister Vigen Sargsyan.

Armenia’s Yenokavan community to have recreation and entertainment place in French atmosphere

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
June 6, 2017 Tuesday


Armenia's Yenokavan community to have recreation and entertainment
place in French atmosphere



YEREVAN, JUNE 6, ARMENPRESS. Recreation and entertainment place in
French atmosphere will be created soon in Yenokavan community of
Armenia’s Tavush province, reports Armenpress.

The author of the initiative is French philanthropist Bernard Zhanen
who visited Armenia during the 1988 earthquake as a rescuer.

Within the frames of journalists’ tour in Yenokavan, Bernard Zhanen
said his regular visits to Yenovakan community resulted in the idea to
implement business program at this place. “Later I was joined by my
son and Armenian businessman of Russia Felix Margaryan. The complex
will be in the village, adjacent to the Church from where a beautiful
view towards the river and forests opens”, he said.

The program launched in 2015. It is expected that the restaurant to
operate in the complex will only serve French dishes. “While
conducting the construction works a special attention was paid on not
damaging the Armenian village’s environment. Later we plan to acquire
some part of consumed food from Yenokavan residents”, Bernard Zhanen
said.

Co-author of the program Zinavor Meghryan told reporters that at the
moment the guesthouse of the complex is completely constructed,
consisting of three floors, having rooms both for corporate and family
groups, as well as a restaurant and reception. Currently the
administrative building is at construction stage. Over 35 workers were
engaged in construction works, with 200.000 AMD average monthly
salary. Nearly 600.000 USD was spend for construction of the
guesthouse. “The hotel will consist of 4 two-storey buildings where 16
rooms will be located. Later the number of rooms is expected to reach
28. The complex will also have SPA center, as well as outdoor heated
pool”, Meghryan said, adding that the opening ceremony of the complex
will be held on September 21, 2017.

Culture: Kricorian: Stories from the Armenian Quarter

Armenian Weekly
June 1 2017


 

The following piece by New York-based novelist, essayist, and activist Nancy Kricorian will be published in the upcoming anthology This Is Not a Border: Reportage and Reflection from the Palestine Festival of Literature.

A ceramics shop in the Armenian Quarter (Photo: JHistory)

***

G tells me that a few months after the Israelis conquered East Jerusalem, he asked his father what he thought life would be like; would it be better or worse than under the Ottomans, the British, or the Jordanians, all of whom his father had known? The old man told him that only the week before, an American Jewish dentist had offered free dental care to all the kindergarten children at the Holy Translators School. They can’t be all bad, his father said, if they want to look after our children’s teeth.

Later G met the dentist himself, and thanked him for his good offices. Yes, the dentist said, there was some discussion in the upper echelons of the Israeli government about whether the Armenians had intermarried with the Arabs. I went, he said, to inspect the children’s teeth—you can tell from the jaw structure—and I was able to report that the Armenians were 100% pure.

*

B, a priest I meet at a church supper in Virginia during my book tour, tells me that when he was a seminarian in Jerusalem in the early 70’s, the Haredi Jews spat on the Armenian priests on a daily basis – and on the seminary students. He says: “One day I just got fed up with it. I called the other seminarians together—there were five of us—and we agreed that we’d undo our belts and keep the belts and our hands inside our cassocks. We walked out of the church and a man spat on us, and we pulled out our belts and gave him a thrashing. It might not have been the Christian thing to do, but I was young then and it was satisfying.

I say to B they still spit on the priests on a daily basis in the Armenian Quarter. Yes, he tells me, I know. I couldn’t stay there. I might have risen higher in the church if I had stayed, and the spitting I could have learned to tolerate, but watching the way they degraded the Palestinians was too much for me.

*

N says that everything is a problem in the Armenian Quarter. Getting a building permit is a problem. Having a regular travel document is a problem. Even finding a place to park your car is a problem.

The Patriarch signed a 99-year-lease with an Israeli company that wanted to build a parking lot on Armenian Patriarchate land, she says. They built the parking lot, and we could park there—although we had to pay more than the Israelis did. And then one day they decided it was a “Jews Only” parking lot, and we could no longer park there because we’re Armenian even though it was on land belonging to the Armenian Church.

N says, They don’t want us here, that’s clear. They want the churches, they want the houses, the land, and they want the money from the Christian pilgrims and tourists. I think ideally they would like all the Christians to disappear, and then Jews could dress up as Christians like characters in Disney World.

*

K’s family has been in Jerusalem for several generations. He outlines their entire trajectory—where his grandparents lived when they first arrived after the Genocide, where they took their children during the war in 1948, the house they returned to in 1950, how they managed in 1967, and how they live today with ever greater difficulty.  K says, Just because I’m Armenian doesn’t mean that I’m treated differently from other Palestinians. I think of myself as a Palestinian who is an ethnic Armenian. We breathe the same tear gas.

*

It takes some prodding, but S, the owner of a ceramics shop, finally tells me what he thinks of the occupation. They are chopping us like salad, he says. Everyone who has any means is leaving. They are slicing us like salami. First Gaza, then the West Bank. We are only hoping the machine breaks down before they get to us.

 

***

The cover of This Is Not a Border (Photo: Bloomsbury USA)

The Palestine Festival of Literature was established in 2008 by authors Ahdaf Soueif, Brigid Keenan, Victoria Brittain, and Omar Robert Hamilton. Bringing writers to Palestine from all corners of the globe, it aimed to break the cultural siege imposed by the Israeli military occupation, to strengthen artistic links with the rest of the world, and to reaffirm, in the words of Edward Said, “the power of culture over the culture of power.”

Celebrating the tenth anniversary of PalFest, This Is Not a Border is a collection of essays, poems, and sketches from some of the world’s most distinguished artists, responding to their experiences at this unique festival. Both heartbreaking and hopeful, their gathered work is a testament to the power of literature to promote solidarity and hope in the most desperate of situations.

Armenian FM brands Aliyev’s NK settlement statement ‘absurd’

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
 Tuesday


Armenian FM brands Aliyev's NK settlement statement 'absurd'



YEREVAN, MAY 30, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has always been in favor of
meetings with Azerbaijan on both foreign ministerial and presidential
levels, and if the condition matures and works are done for
organization, a meeting will be possible to be held, Armenia’s foreign
minister Edward Nalbandian told a joint press conference with OSCE
Secretary General Lamberto Zannier.

The Armenian FM reminded that the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs will
visit the region during the next ten days. “If the necessity and
proposal happen, perhaps we will also discuss the issue of further
meetings. I believe currently we can speak only about a ministerial
meeting, in order for relevant work to be carried out for organizing a
presidential meeting in the future also”, Naldandian said.

Edward Nalbandian also commented on the recent statement of
Azerbaijani president, when Aliyev said the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
should be settled ‘based on the principle of territorial integrity’.

“I treat this kind of statements the same way I treat other claims
stating that supposedly Azerbaijan is a global multicultural center,
which respects all fundamental freedoms, human rights and is a
tolerant country, which can serve as an example to other countries and
other similar absurd claims”, Nalbandian said.

Nalbandian reminded that the international community and the Co-Chairs
have numerously said that the issue must be solved based on the three
well-known principles, which are one whole: non-use of force or threat
of force, self-determination right and territorial integrity, as well
as the elements which are in the well-known five statements of the
presidents of Co-Chairing countries.

BAKU: Baku criticises mediators’ comments on ceasefire violations

APA, Azerbaijan



Baku criticises mediators' comments on ceasefire violations

[Armenian News note: the below is translated from the Russian edition of APA]

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman has accused the OSCE Minsk
Group co-chairmen of demonstrating unfair and non-objective approach
in their recent statement concerning the latest ceasefire violation
incidents in the Karabakh conflict zone.

He also described as "symptomatic" that the co-chairs' "standard
statement" spoke only about ceasefire violations but did not mentioned
that 18 May marked the 25th anniversary of Azerbaijan's Lacin District
coming under control of Armenian troops.

"Some 80,000 residents of Lacin became refugees and IDPs, just like
residents of other occupied districts of Azerbaijan. Although on that
day [18 May when the co-chairs' statement was issued] 25 years turned
since the occupation of Lacin District, the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs
did not mention that in their statement which is unfair and
non-objective approach," APA news agency quoted Hikmat Haciyev as
saying on 19 May.

Haciyev said that the Minsk Group co-chairs did not mention that
Armenian troops are present on Azerbaijan's territory and that
Armenian troops recently shelled Azeri residential areas in the
vicinity of the frontline.

"Unfortunately, being concerned about ceasefire violations, in their
statement the Minsk Group co-chairs turned a blind eye to the fact
that hardware and troops of Armenia's armed forces are present
illegally on the sovereign territories of Azerbaijan," Haciyev said.

"The Armenian armed forces's illegal presence in the occupied
territories of Azerbaijan is the major reason for escalation of
tension on the frontline and violations of ceasefire," he said.

"The armed forces of the Azerbaijan Republic are present on the
sovereign territory of Azerbaijan and are defending the country and
ensuring the safety of its civilian population in circumstances when
the Azerbaijani territories are occupied by Armenia," he added.

Haciyev said that the Minsk Group co-chairs should have called for the
withdrawal of Armenian troops of Azerbaijani soil and should have
urged the conflicting parties to continue talks to find a political
solution to the Karabakh conflict.

In their 18 May statement, the Minsk Group co-chairs criticised both
the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides for "significant violations of the
ceasefire" in mid-May. They said that "there are contradictory reports
regarding the targets of these recent strikes, as well as about
casualties sustained and damages inflicted". The co-chairs urged the
sides "to take all necessary measures to prevent any further
escalation in the conflict zone".

Canada commemorates 102 anniversary of 1915 Armenian genocide

Thousands of Canadian Armenians marked the 102 anniversary of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey with public gatherings and marches in cities across the country, reports.

The largest event was held in Ottawa where several hundred people gathered at a ceremony on Parliament Hill and then walked down the streets of the national capital to the Turkish embassy to demand that Turkish authorities stop their campaign of denial of the genocide.

Simon Izmirian, an executive member of the Armenian National Committee of Canada and one of the organizers of the march in Ottawa, said as a great-grandchild of a genocide survivor he felt compelled to participate in the commemoration not only to pay tribute to his ancestors but also to demand justice.

“The reason why we are here today and the reason why it’s important for us to be here today is to stand collectively together to fight for a political cause,” Izmirian said in a phone interview from Ottawa.

“That cause is the cause of solidarity where we’re going to stand together to voice our desire for justice and for the perpetrators to be held accountable for what they’ve done in 1915.”