Sports: Armenia’s Artur Aleksanyan wins 1st prize at French Grand Prix

PanArmenian, Armenia
Jan 20 2020
– 11:53 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian wrestler, Olympic champion Artur Aleksanyan defeated all his opponents in the 97 kg event of the Grand Prix de France Henri Deglane in the French town of Nice.

A Greco-Roman wrestler, Aleksanyan is an Olympic Champion (2016) and bronze medalist (2012), a three-time World Champion (2014, 2015, 2017), and a four-time European Champion (2012, 2013, 2014, 2018). He is the second Olympic gold medalist of Armenia since regaining independence in 1991 and is the most decorated Olympian of independent Armenia as well. Aleksanyan has been nicknamed the "White Bear" and is one of the most renowned Armenian athletes of the 21st century.

In his final bout, Aleksanyan beat Azerbaijan's Orkhan Nuriyev 3-1 to become the champion.

Armenians Rudik Mkrtchyan (55 kg) and Karapet Chalyan (77kg), meanwhile, took the second spot in their respective categories, while Gevorg Gharibyan (60 kg), Slavik Galstyan (67 kg), Malkhas Amoyan (72 kg) and Ruben Gharibyan (82 kg) came in the third.

Sports: Grand Prix de France Henri Deglane: Armenia’s Aleksanyan beats Azerbaijan opponent in final

News.am, Armenia
Jan 20 2020

By Lusine Shahbazyan

Greco-Roman wrestling Olympic champion, three-time World, four-time European, and European Games champion Arthur Aleksanyan won a gold medal at the United World Wrestling Grand Prix de France Henri Deglane in Nice, France.

In the final of his weight category, Armenia's Aleksanyan beat Azerbaijan's Orkhan Nuriyev 3-1.

This is Artur's first competition since returning from injury.

And Armenia's Karapet Chalyan won a silver medal in the final of the 77kg competition.

Sports: Armenian wrestlers return from Nice with a collection of medals

MediaMax, Armenia
Jan 20 2020
 
 
Armenian wrestlers return from Nice with a collection of medals
 
 
 
The international wrestling tournament in Nice has ended and Armenia’s Greco-Roman team is heading home with a collection of medals.
 
Out of 10 athletes who represented Armenia in Nice, 7 won medals.
 
Olympic, World and European champion Artur Aleksanyan (97kg) took the gold after beating Orkhan Nuriyev (Azerbaijan) in the final.
 
Rudik Mkrtchyan (55kg) and Karapet Chalyan (77kg) won silver medals.
 
Gevorg Gharibyan (60kg), Slavik Galstyan (67kg), Malkhas Amoyan (72kg) and Ruben Gharibyan (82kg) are coming home with bronze medals.
 

Sports: Armenian wrestlers win 1 gold, 2 silver and 4 bronze medals in France

News.am, Armenia
Jan 20 2020

By Lusine Shahbazyan

The Armenian team won one gold, two silver and four bronze medals during the United World Wrestling Grand Prix de France Henri Deglane.

Arthur Aleksanyan (97 kg) won gold medal defeating Azerbaijani wrestler in the final.

Karapety Chalyan (77 kg) and Rudik Mkrtchyan won silved medals.

Slavik Galstyan (67 kg), Gevorg Gharibyan (60 kg), Malkhas Amoyan (72 kg) and Ruben Gharibuan *82 kg) won bronze medals.

The Armenian team will return to Yerevan later in the day.

Azerbaijani press: Hikmet Hajiyev: Int’l community should redouble efforts for soonest resolution of Karabakh conflict

13:16 (UTC+04:00)

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Jan.18

By Leman Zeynalova – Trend:

The international community should redouble their efforts for the soonest resolution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Assistant of the President, Head of Foreign Policy Department of the Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan Hikmet Hajiyev told Radio France Internationale (RFI), Trend reports.

“Security and peace in Caucasus region has been undermined by the existence of Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Short history of the conflict is that simply, Armenia by use of force occupied sovereign territories of Azerbaijan. First it is illegal and it is violation of international law. UN Security Council adopted four resolutions condemning Armenia’s occupation of Azerbaijani territories and demanding withdrawal of Armenian troops from the occupied territories of Azerbaijan. Other international organizations, including European Parliament, OSCE, European Council and some others have also adopted similar resolutions and documents demanding Armenia to stop this conflict and withdraw its troops. But unfortunately, we don’t see any particular breakthrough in the conflict,” he said.

Hajiyev went on to add that Armenia continues to preserve the status quo based on occupation, keeps Azerbaijani IDPs and refugees out from these territories that are under occupation.

“In Azerbaijan, we have 1 million refugees and IDPs, who have the right to return back to these territories. Therefore, our appeal to the international community, including the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair countries is that they should redouble their efforts for the soonest resolution of the conflict based on the norms and principles of the international law and also bearing in mind the fundamental principle of justice. Of course, they are doing their work and we appreciate that Minsk Group co-chair countries are engaged in the resolution of the conflict in the status of mediators. But of course, more needs to be done. We, of course, always support substantive negotiations. What we see is that Armenia always tries to run away from the substance. What is the substance of the conflict? For the substance of the conflict there are fundamental root causes of the conflict. The fundamental root cause is the occupation of Azerbaijani territories,” noted Hajiyev.

He pointed out that there should be strong demand, political diplomatic pressure by co-chairing countries and they should demand from Armenia to fulfill its obligations under the international law.

“Everything should start from de-occupation. We have also UN Security Council resolutions and they must be respected and fulfilled by all countries,” added Hajiyev.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts.


Slain Armenian journalist Hrant Dink commemorated in Istanbul

AHVAL News
Jan 19 2020

Thousands of protesters marked the 13th anniversary of a Turkish-Armenian journalist's murder on Sunday as outrage continues to grow over a trial which failed to shed light on alleged official negligence or even collusion, Bianet reported.

Hrant Dink, the editor in chief of Agos newspaper and an advocate of reconciliation between Turks and Armenians, was shot dead outside his office by then-teenager Ogün Samast who defines himself as Turkish nationalist. More than 100,000 people marched in the funeral procession for Dink.

Jan. 19 marks the 13th anniversary of his murder. 

"Hrant Dink was the symbol of brotherhood that our country needed most. I think that was the biggest reason why he was taken from us. Because the country's dark-hearted ones need separation rather than unity," Social Memory Platform lawyer Sertaç Ekinci said.

Protesters and human rights activists placed red carnations on the spot where Dink was gunned down in daylight by a teenage gunman in Istanbul, outside of his minority Agos newspaper, Bianet said.

"As we could not manage to live together and respect other cultures, we have not been ashamed of the drought we have created. Ours is not hatred against evil. An endless struggle. We want people not to give rein to the normality of evil, bow to power. We want them to struggle for their rights," human rights defender Şebnem Korur Financı said during her commemoration speech.

Many carried black banners that read "We are all Hrant, we are all Armenian" and "We want justice", as they did in the previous twelve commemorations, according to Bianet.

Dink was outspoken about Armenian issues and he was prosecuted three times for violating Article 301 of the Turkish penal code, which makes it a crime to insult Turkishness, the Turkish nation, or Turkish institutions. He spent his career challenging the intolerance behind such statutes, becoming a champion of minority rights in a country where such causes are punishable.

His murder instantly became a symbol of the racism and ultranationalism grinding at the core of Turkish society, a war against freedom of _expression_, and the complacency of Turkey’s intellectuals.

Since Dink’s murder, the movement called "We Want Justice" which demands a fair trial for Dink's murder case, has grown and become more complex, bringing together Turkish liberals, Armenians, journalists, Kurds and Alevis, and women and members of the LGBTI community—basically all marginalised minorities in Turkey. 

Turkish Press: Agos Newspaper: Hrant Dink, Your Hope and Dreams is Our Legacy

BIA News Desk, Turkey
Jan 19 2020
Agos Newspaper: Hrant Dink, Your Hope and Dreams is Our Legacy
On the 13th anniversary of journalist Hrant Dink’s assassination, the headline of Agos newspaper reads, “Your hope and dreams is our legacy.” Selahattin Demirtaş, Osman Kavala and Ahmet Altan have also written for the late journalist from prison.
İstanbul – BIA News Desk

To mark the 13th anniversary of the assassination of its founder and Editor-in-Chief Hrant Dink on January 19, Agos newspaper has come out with the headline "Your hope and dreams is our legacy."

Businessperson and human rights defender Osman Kavala, the only arrested defendant of Gezi trial; Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) imprisoned former Co-Chair Selahattin Demirtaş; and arrested journalist Ahmet Altan have also written a piece in memory of the late journalist.

Having lost his life in an armed attack in front of Agos newspaper in Şişli, İstanbul on January 19, 2007, founder and Editor-in-Chief of Agos newspaper Hrant Dink will be commemorated in several cities and countries on the 13th anniversary of his assassination this Sunday.

Next to his picture taken by Sebati Karakurt, the newspaper has commemorated Hrant Dink in following words:

"It has been 13 years since Hrant Dink, the founder and Editor-in-Chief of our newspaper, passed away in a racist murder. These 13 years passed and are still passing with a search and request for justice, especially in the murder case.

"Over these 13 years, there has, unfortunately, happened no significant development that would reveal the ones who planned this dark murder, especially the ones within the state.

"It was only nine years after the murder that public officers were put on trial. Though some relations have been uncovered and the curtain of mystery has parted even a little in the case that continued for almost four years, there are still no effective investigations and the ones who paved the way for his murder and caused himto be targeted are not put on trial. The state is still resisting.

"However, the words and dreams of Hrant Dink are growing with each passing day. For the past 13 years, more and more people in Turkey and abroad have been attentively listening to the words of Hrant, they come to know his world and feel the same with him by visiting the Memory Site, which was opened last year. The hope and dreams of Hrant are guiding us."

Addressing the readers of Agos newspaper from Silivri Prison in İstanbul, Osman Kavala has indicated that he cannot be in Şişli on January 19 to commemorate Hrant Dink this year, as was also the case in the previous two years. Kavala has added the following in brief:

"I will commemorate Dear Hrant by thinking of his picture captured with seagulls and by looking at the seagulls flying over me.

"Commemorating Hrant makes us face the harsh reality of how easy it is for a human to do such evil to another human being, to his or her fellow citizens, to their brothers and sisters.

"But, thinking about Hrant gives us more strength to bear what we go through and to cherish hope. I and the ones who have been unjustly put behind bars have lost our freedom for a while; Hrant has lost his life because of what he wrote and said.

"As long as we live, we will have the opportunity to demand justice and to be hopeful, on our own and with others… On our own and with others, we will keep demanding justice for Hrant, for the honorable people of this country and for everyone. I wish that 2020 would be a year raising our hopes."

Arrested in Edirne Type F Prison, HDP former Co-Chair Selahattin Demirtaş has also addressed a letter to Agos in memory of Hrant Dink.

"We also hear things raising hopes behind bars", Selahattin Demirtaş has said and added, "Wherever there is persecution, there is resistance. If there is resistance, there is hope."

Demirtaş has also shared an anecdote from the year 2001. He has recounted how Dink came to a conference in Diyarbakır briefly as follows:

"My dear friend, I don't know whether you remember it or not… You came to Diyarbakır for a conference in 2001. The State of Emergency was still in effect, it had not yet been lifted. It was very difficult to get a permission for a panel or conference. But, a permission could still be obtained for that conference. We could hardly persuade you.

"Back then, one had to give the identity register copies, residence certificates and criminal records of all speakers to the security directorate before the conference. I was attending to the bureaucratic procedures. We called you and asked for these documents. You were puzzled at first. 'That cannot be right', you said at first. We could hardly persuade you. Because we really wanted that you be our guest in Diyarbakır and attend the conference.

"When the documents of all speakers arrived, we went to the security directorate for the application. The police commander looked at the documents and said, 'So, you are also inviting an Armenian, right?'

"I had always forgotten to tell you after that day. At that time, I realized that some people did not see your humanity, they troubled themselves that you were Armenian."

Arrested in Silivri Prison in İstanbul, writer and journalist Ahmet Altan has also penned an article in memory of the late journalist.

Entitled "A Murder, A Funeral", the article of Ahmet Altan has focused on the role assumed by Turkey in killing of Hrant Dink:

"Some people in secret rooms decided that he was 'guilty'.The first biggest crime of Hrant was that he told Turkey that an Armenian was a human and an Armenian was as desirable as a Turk". (HA/SD)


http://m.bianet.org/english/human-rights/218777-agos-newspaper-hrant-dink-your-hope-and-dreams-is-our-legacy?fbclid=IwAR3ism6u-9DbEYWaktU5jGemQr75SS-jGzPHOJyNz59Fn01-0nb3XS73kfA

Slain Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink commemorated in Istanbul

Deccan Herald, India
Jan 19 2020
 
 
 
 
Hundreds of people gathered on Sunday outside the former offices of Agos newspaper in Istanbul where Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was murdered 13 years ago, a killing which sent shockwaves across the country. Dink was shot dead with two bul…
 
Dink was shot dead with two bullets to the head in broad daylight in central Istanbul on January 19, 2007, by a then 17-year-old jobless high-school dropout. The 52-year-old Dink was editor-in-chief of Turkish-Armenian bilingual weekly Agos and a fi…
 
His death became a wider scandal after it was discovered that security forces were aware of the murder plot, but failed to act.
 
"For Hrant, for justice," the crowds chanted. "We have not forgotten and we will not let it be forgotten." A giant picture of Dink was hanging outside the former building of Agos weekly, embellished with slogans reading: "It is not late to be ashamed and "This case will not be over before we say it is over." Hakan, one of the supporters who joined the mourning, lamented that the murder had remained unsolved for 13 years.

 "Hrant was killed here 13 years ago. For 13 years they haven't shed light on his death," he told AFP. "We won't stop following Hrant's murderers. Whether they shed light on this or not, as Hrant's brothers, we will continue to be here."

 Another supporter, Seyit Dogan, said: "There are courthouses in this country but there is nothing in the name of justice." Turkish police heightened security and blocked the street where the commemoration was being held to traffic. After the ceremony, carnations were laid on the sidewalk where Dink was shot dead.

 

https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/slain-turkish-armenian-journalist-hrant-dink-commemorated-in-istanbul-796177.html
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Armenia Negotiating Long-Term Gas Contract With Gazprom

Tsarizm
Jan 19 2020

                  

Russia – Armenia gas pipeline
Image by franek2

Russia continues to develop its gas exports as Armenia looks to sign long-term contract with Gazprom.

Armenia is negotiating mechanisms of fixed gas pricing for a ten-year period with Gazprom’s subsidiary Gazprom Armenia should the company announce an increase in the gas tariff, chairman of Armenia’s Public Services Regulatory Commission Garegin Baghramyan told reporters on Saturday, reported Russian state news agency TASS.

“Today’s talks are aimed at fixing gas pricing mechanisms for a ten-year period if Gazprom Armenia submits an application on gas tariff change. That will, of course, be connected both with investments and the results of those investments,” he said.

Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink’s office reopens as memorial 13 years after his murder

AHVAL News
Jan 19 2020
Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink's office reopens as memorial 13 years after his murder

Thirteen years since his assassination on the steps of an Istanbul-based newspaper he once ran, Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink’s office has at long last been reopened to the public as a memorial, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Founder and editor of the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, Dink was gunned down in broad daylight in front of his Istanbul office in 2007 on Jan. 19.

The final result of Dink’s murder case has long been awaited, with his family and friends continuing on the quest for justice. A total of 76 suspects are on trial as part of the case.

Every year on Jan. 19, thousands gather in front of the building, where Dink was killed to commemorate the slain journalist.

Due to the “symbolic significance of the site and its place in the collective memory,” the Hrant Dink Foundation — founded after his assassination — turned the building into the 23.5 Hrant Dink Site of Memory, named after an article penned by Dink in Agos on April 23, 1996.

Agos continues to circulate in Turkey in both languages, albeit from a different location where it moved in 2015.

“We gave this name [to the site] inspired by Hrant’s article, in which he talked about April 23 and 24 and said: ‘I wish we could combine these two days and promise a future encouraging hope at the end of these two days’,” Sibel Asna, a board member at Hrant Dink Foundation, said.

“April 23 is a holiday for sovereignty and April 24 is a tragedy for us all,” Asna said, adding: “The site was opened between these two days, and is called 23.5, which promises hope and kindness.”

Hrant Dink was repeatedly prosecuted for “denigrating Turkish-ness” over articles he wrote about Armenian identity and mass deportations of Armenians in 1915.

A plaque that reads: “Hrant Dink was murdered here, January 19, 2007, at 15:05” was embedded in the sidewalk in front of the building where Dink was killed, serving as a stark reminder for visitors and passers-by alike in Istanbul’s teeming Sisli district.

*This article was originally published in the Public Radio of Armenia Website.