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Armenia, cradle of wine production back to the fourth millennium

January 31, 2014 By administrator

By: Krikor Amirzayan

Screen Shot 2014-01-31 at 8.04.59 AMPost honored the Armenian Armenia, cradle of wine production by December 28, 2013 issue of a postage stamp. The $ 330 drams, the stamp depicts grapes before planting vineyards and Mount Ararat. A sticker on the stamp is a center of wine production dating back to the fourth millennium recently discovered on the site of Areni 1 in the region of Vayots Dzor in Armenia. The stamp is issued in 40,000 copies.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, cradle of wine production

Armenia, Russia hint at satellite launch

December 6, 2013 By administrator

Armenia and Russia may launch a satellite in three years – a first for Armenia – if they reach an agreement in 2014, Sergey Savelyev, Deputy Director of Roscosmos, the Russian Federal Space SatelliteAgency, told Regnum, Asbarez reported.

“Russia is ready to help Armenia join the club of space-faring nations,” Savelyev said, adding that Armenia has a wealth of experience in the field from Soviet times.

He noted that the historic Byurakan Observatory in Armenia is in fact being revived with the support of Roscosmos. The observatory has been supplied with Russia-made telescopes.

The Armenian and Russian parties have already started preliminary work towards launching a satellite. “We are working actively in that direction. Technical studies are now underway,” Sergey Savelyev said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Russia hint at satellite launch

Armenia, Yerivan: A Street Perspective of Putin’s Armenia Visit

December 5, 2013 By administrator

BY SAMSON MARTIROSYAN
Armenian Weekly

YEREVAN—On Dec. 2, 1920, Armenian Foreign Minister Alexandre Khatisian signed the Alexandropol Treaty between the First Republic of Armenia and Turkey. Pro-Soviet forces took control of Armenia’s government, and the country was declared a Soviet state. Exactly 93 years later, on Dec. 2, Russian President Vladimir Putin visited Armenia to welcome President Serge Sarkisian’s decision to join the Russian-led Custom’s Union, which many argue is an incarnation of the Russian imperialistic appetite and an attempt to create a Soviet Union 2.0.
Despite all odds stacked against Armenian civil society and strong pro-Russian and anti-European Union (EU) propaganda, a very diverse group of more than 1,000 citizens took to the streets of Yerevan to protest Putin’s visit, and the regime’s decision to join the Custom’s Union, and its failure to sign the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (DCFTA) and Association Agreement with the EU.
Early in the morning, prior to Putin’s arrival, large banners reading, “No to Customs Union Colonization” (Ո՛Չ ՄԱՔՍԱՅԻՆ ԳԱՂՈՒԹԱՑՄԱՆԸ), “Sovereign Republic of Armenia” (ԻՆՔՆԻՇԽԱՆ ՀՀ), and “Let’s get rid of the Sergiks” (ԱԶԱՏՎԵ՛ՆՔ ՍԵՐԺԻԿՆԵՐԻՑ) hung above the main streets of Yerevan. Police removed them almost immediately, and detained around six activists, who were released by noon.
While the activists were hanging banners, many others—suspected to be administrative staff of governmental institutions and Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) members—were shipped in on buses and handed Russian flags,  in order to greet Putin and participate in the opening ceremony of a monument that symbolizes Armenian-Russian friendship.
The main protest activity started at 1 p.m. at Freedom Square. I went to the venue earlier than planned as rumors had spread that the authorities were planning to close PutinStreetoff a bigger part of Baghramyan Avenue near the Presidential Palace. Police numbers were overwhelming and the ratio of activists to policemen was approximately one to five. Policemen seemed more hostile than usual, more alert and determined.
Early on, a police car intervened, warning that the protest was not authorized by municipal authorities, and was thus illegal and had to be dispersed. Initially, it was planned that the protest would move from Freedom Square to the Presidential Palace via Northern Avenue and Amiryan Street. Protesters quickly began marching while chanting, “Putin, go home,” “We are the owners of our country,” and “Sergik, go away.”  Police blocked the march halfway through. The protesters reversed direction, but were again blocked off. The then protesters became trapped on Northern Avenue, with no way out. Eventually, after negotiating with the police, they were allowed to move once again. The protesters—numbering around 1,000—moved towards the government building, only to be blocked again.
Young men and women, mostly students, carried a large banner that read, “To the barricades.” Dozens of others held anti-Putin posters. Someone waived a huge anarchist flag. Others carried the Ukrainian and Armenian national flags tied together as a sign of solidarity with the recent Euromaidan events in Kiev. And finally, for the first time, there was the rainbow flag. All of these elements made this protest unique: Diverse backgrounds and sets of values (a bit unusual in Armenia) were represented here, united despite the absence of an organizing body.
The protesters took to Amiryan Street, and were again blocked by police, who started a crackdown. They detained every activist they managed to catch, and confiscated cameras. Simultaneously, a small skirmish took place between an ultra-nationalist group and those carrying the rainbow flag, although it didn’t result in major injuries and both sides avoided each other from then on. Later, after the protest ended, they too were detained.
In the meantime, those activists who separated from the main group to protest near the Presidential Palace on Baghramyan Avenue, where Putin was supposed to arrive, were arrested by the police.

Back downtown, as police began acting violently, protesters ran to another street to avoid being detained. Police announced that people had been warned that the march was unauthorized, and that they were now taking steps to detain them. Activists responded by chanting, “We are not slaves.”
Meanwhile in Gyumri—Armenia’s second largest city, where authorities had frantically prepared for Putin’s arrival—Putin announced during a joint Armenian-Russian forum that “As for the South Caucasus, Russia has no plans of ever leaving it.”  The decision to join the Custom’s Union “was a sovereign decision,” said Putin in the presence of his Armenian counterpart and the Armenian political leadership. After the forum, both presidents went to the Russian military base in Gyumri, then headed to Yerevan.
Putinstreet2A few hours later, protesters—whose numbers had drastically decreased due to the numerous detentions—were finally allowed to leave the street. Several of them attempted to cross over to Baghramyan Avenue, but were unsuccessful. I, too, tried to make my way to Baghramyan via the metro, but it turned out that “due to technical reasons” the metro did not stop at Baghramyan Avenue. By 6 p.m., the area near the Presidential Palace was closed. Almost all police departments available were dispatched there. Even parents were not allowed to pick up their kids from the school in that vicinity. It appeared as though there was a state of emergency rather than a visit by the president of a foreign country.
The outcome of the visit was an agreement that would sell the last 20 percent of shares belonging to the Armenian ArmRosGazprom Company to the Russian Gazprom Company, thus making Armenia even more dependent on Russia. Putin left later that night. His visit resulted in a record number of arrests: 110 in total.
There are several conclusions to be made after the events that happened in Armenia on Dec. 2.
Time is ticking. During his two terms as president, Serge Sarkisian’s legitimacy has been questioned by many in Armenia. The more time goes by, the stronger the dissent and anger of the Armenian population. This was not solely an anti-Putin protest, but also an anti-regime protest, which was led mostly by young people: the “independence generation.” The majority of those who took to the streets consider it their duty to stay and fight against impunity, injustice, and hypocrisy. They hope to eventually build and live in their desired country—an economically and politically independent state. They do not wish to flee the country, but boost a change instead. If things go on this way with Sarkisian pushing deeper “cooperation” with Putin, while at the same time ignoring the urgent problems of unemployment, emigration, poverty, and human rights, the situation might easily get out of hand. Putin’s Russia, which appears to be chipping away at Armenia’s sovereignty and independence, can be a solid reason to unite groups that would normally find very little in common.
The regime is afraid. The very fact that protests, civil disobedience, and other events aimed at expressing dissent are met with heavy and overwhelming police response is more proof that the language of brutal force, threats, and provocation is seen as the only effective way of silencing citizens. The police have lost credibility in the eyes of many. They are no longer perceived as guarantors of the security of citizens, but as a brute force employed by the regime. This was clear in the number of detentions.
Protesters are no longer alone. The protest attracted the attention of major news media, including EuroNews, Human Rights House, Global Post, BBC, and Reuters. The protests attracted more attention than Putin’s visit, an encouraging feat. Of course, such media coverage is connected to recent developments surrounding the Custom’s Union, especially the events in Ukraine. Still, it is the activists who benefited most from this. Now that Sarkisian has turned his back to the EU and the West in general while considering Russia as a main and high-priority partner and ally, it will be more difficult to safeguard his legitimacy in the international arena. The EU hopefully learned its lessons, namely, that trusting rulers with questionable legitimacy is not useful in the long term. It is possible that, moving forward, human rights violations and other pressing issues will get more attention from the EU. Civil society institutions will hopefully come to replace Sarkisian’s administration as a main partner of the EU.

The situation in Armenia can often be depressing, and while I am writing this report, there is another protest at Baghramyan 26, near the Presidential Palace. This one is against the new pension law, and again the police are there to face the protesters. But there is hope as long as there is a group of young, energetic citizens who, instead of taking the emigration route, choose to stay on our land and strive for a future we want and deserve. On Dec. 2, I saw hundreds of such people, hundreds who are not ready to sell their future, hundreds who are ready to struggle for this worthy cause.

Samson Martirosyan is The Armenian Weekly’s correspondent in Gyumri. He received his B.A. in international affairs from the Russian-Armenian (Slavonic) University in Yerevan. A resident of Gyumri, Martirosyan has interned at the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan and has volunteered his time with various organizations. He is currently a Board member of the European Youth Parliament of Armenia.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Yerivan: A Street Perspective of Putin’s Armenia Visit

Armenia, Artsakh to participate in World Travel Market exhibition

November 4, 2013 By administrator

The National Competitiveness Foundation of Armenia, along with 10 Armenian travel agencies, will represent Armenia at World Travel Market annual exhibition, which world travelwill take place in London on November 4-7.

Armenia and Artsakh will share a joint booth.

This year, 5,000 travel agencies from around 184 countries and more than 47,000 global travel professionals are expected to take part in the exhibition.

With the aim of formulating the attractive and multifaceted tourism image of Armenia and Artsakh, visitors will be offered travel guides and maps in English.

Within the framework of the Silk Road program, Armenia as a travel destination will be featured in a special presentation, reported the Public Relations Office of the National Competitiveness Foundation of Armenia.

 

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Artsakh to participate in World Travel Market exhibition

Armenia, Georgia and Moldova join Eastern Europe Energy Efficiency and Environment Partnership

October 22, 2013 By administrator

October 22, 2013 | 14:04

Armenia, Georgia and Moldova have joined the Eastern Europe Energy Efficiency and Environment Partnership (E5P) in a move to significantly boost their support for 177125energy efficiency and the reduction of harmful emissions.

During a pledging conference held on Monday at the European Investment Bank (EIB) in Luxembourg, the international donor community raised an additional €60 million to enable expansion of the activities of the E5P Fund, the European Commission said in a statement.

Štefan Füle, EU Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy and responsible for EU’s policy also towards these partner countries said: “With this funding we are able to support Ukrainian municipalities to provide sustainable and affordable heating to the population and to improve water quality. I am delighted that Armenia, Georgia and Moldova have decided to join the partnership. The European Commission, as the main donor of the fund, is ready to provide up to €30 million for the three countries that are joining the facility, in order to co-finance energy efficiency and environmental projects in municipalities.”

The establishment of the E5P Fund was first proposed in 2009, under Sweden’s presidency of the European Union, with the aim of improving energy efficiency and environmental protection in the Eastern Partnership region. While the intensiveness of these countries is a serious burden for businesses and households, it also represents huge potential for investment in the reduction of CO2 emissions, sustainable energy use, enhanced energy security and affordability, and greater economic competitiveness.

The E5P Fund merges contributions from the EU and donor countries (Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Sweden, Ukraine and the USA, and new donors Armenia, Czech Republic, Georgia, Moldova, Romania, and Slovak Republic), which are then used to leverage national funds and loans from international financial institutions.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Georgia and Moldova join Eastern Europe Energy Efficiency and Environment Partnership

Armenia: DigiTec Expo opens in Yerevan: Three-day event puts on display products, services by Armenian, foreign companies

October 6, 2013 By administrator

The ninth annual DigiTec Expo opened in the Armenian capital Yerevan on Friday, with a number of leading local and foreign companies showcasing their products and digitec-2013-armenia-it-technologyservices.

The display hosted by the exhibition hall of the Yerevan Institute of Mathematical Machines will be held till Monday.

President Serzh Sargsyan attended the opening of the exhibition. He reportedly visited a number of pavilions at the exhibition, talked to participants, got acquainted with innovations offered by participating companies.

Economy Minister Vahram Avanesyan, Diaspora Minister Hranush Hakobyan, US Ambassador to Armenia John Heffern, other officials and heads of foreign missions also attended the opening ceremony.

A total of 120 companies representing Armenia, as well as Canada, Singapore, Russia and the United States are taking part in this year’s DigiTec Expo in Yerevan.

The number of visitors this year is expected to exceed last year’s, which stood at 24,000.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, DigiTec Expo opens in Yerevan: Three-day event puts on display products, foreign companies, services by Armenian

Lawyer claims MİT gave order to kill Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Cyrillic

September 10, 2013 By administrator

9 September 2013 /TODAY’S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

Fethiye Çetin, one of the lawyers of the family of murdered Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, claimed in her newly published book that the order to kill Dink Hrant Dinkwas given by the National Intelligence Organization (MİT) via an encrypted message written in Cyrillic, the Milliyet daily reported on Monday.

Çetin based her claims on explanations and documents from Ramazan Dündar, a cryptology expert at MİT.

The late editor-in-chief of the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, Dink was shot dead in broad daylight on Jan. 19, 2007, by an ultranationalist teenager outside the offices of his newspaper in İstanbul. The gunman, Ogün Samast, and 18 others were brought to trial. The investigation into his murder was stalled but the suspected perpetrator and his accomplices were put on trial. However, the final ruling issued by the İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court last year failed to appease those expecting justice to be served.

In her book, titled “Utanç Duyuyorum-Hrant Dink Cinayeti’nin Yargısı” (I am ashamed — Trial of Hrant Dink’s Murder), Çetin says she received a phone call on March 16, 2010, from a man who called himself “Ramazan” and said he works as a cryptology expert at MİT’s East Anatolia regional office. He said he had an important document regarding Dink’s murder and would give the document to Çetin if she went to the French Consulate in Aleppo to collect it.

Çetin said her friend in Gaziantep agreed to go to Aleppo on her behalf to collect the document. In the meantime, she said she continued to communicate with Ramazan over Skype and the man showed her some encrypted documents about Dink’s murder.

“I did not understand anything. I asked the man what those documents had to do with Dink’s murder,” Çetin said.

In response, Ramazan said: “The documents that I have are encrypted. In correspondence, no state office says, ‘Go and kill Dink’.”

Çetin said the encrypted messages were deciphered with the help of Dündar to reveal the execution order given by MİT for Dink.

In her book, Çetin also included MİT’s response to her allegation. She said she went to the prosecutor’s office and asked several questions that were directed at MİT. In response, MİT denied the allegations of giving an execution order for Dink, saying that MİT does not have an employee named Ramazan Dündar and that the document provided by Dündar does not belong to MİT.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenia, Lawyer claims MİT gave order to kill Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Cyrillic, Turkey

Armenia, NKR must be protected from Azeri encroachment: Russian activist

August 27, 2013 By administrator

August 27, 2013 – 17:04 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenia and Artsakh must be protected from Azeri encroachment, a Russian human rights activist said.

169099As Sergei Karnaukhov, who was a part of a Russian delegation traveling to Artsakh, told PanARMENIAN.Net his visit aimed to contribute to protecting Armenia and NKR from Azeri and the U.S. encroachment.

“Armenia must be on its guard – in terms of American geopolitics, it’s an easy-to-strike target,” he noted.

According to the activist, both Armenia and Russia need consolidation of a strong society to oppose to he development of events based on American scenario.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, NKR must be protected from Azeri encroachment: Russian activist

Turkish Armenians are beginning to celebrate—and commemorate—their past

August 24, 2013 By administrator

The Economist: Aug 24th 2013 | DIYARBAKIR

A DAINTY silver slipper, a hand-engraved copper bowl. Silva Ozyerli, an ethnic Armenian, runs a loving finger over these and other family treasures strewn across 20130824_BKP004_0her dinner table in Istanbul. They are due to go on display at a new museum of Armenian culture in Ms Ozyerli’s native city of Diyarbakir at the end of 2013.

The Armenian museum, the first of its kind in Anatolia, will be part of the newly restored Surp Giragos church complex (pictured). Its aim is to chronicle Armenian life in Diyarbakir, in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish south-east, before 1915. That was the year when Ottoman troops and their Kurdish accomplices began slaughtering over 1m Armenians and other Christians across the country during what many historians say was the first genocide of the 20th century.

Turkey denies that mass killings took place, insisting that the Armenians had perished from hunger and disease during their forced march to the deserts of Syria. (The Ottoman government deported the Armenians, notionally for their safety, as the empire collapsed. Yet thousands were massacred as they marched, and countless others were killed before they set off.) Local school textbooks perpetuate this myth.

Granting permission to restore Surp Giragos is seen as part of a larger government campaign to placate diaspora Armenians, who have been lobbying governments around the world to recognise the genocide. When Surp Giragos reopened in 2011, after lying in ruins for more than 20 years, it became Turkey’s first church to be revived as a permanent place of worship.

“The museum is a way of showing that thousands of Armenians contributed to the city’s wealth and culture,” explains Ergun Ayik of the Surp Giragos Foundation, which runs the church. “People will look at the photographs, the objects, and wonder where did all these people go?”

  • Around 2m Armenians are believed to have lived in Turkey before the genocide. Now there are about 70,000. Survivors are scattered across the Middle East, Europe, America and Australia. Many more converted to Islam to carry on, but their numbers remain unknown. Osman Koker, a Turkish historian, reckons that more than half of Diyarbakir’s population used to be non-Muslim, mainly Armenian Orthodox, but also Catholic, Syrian Orthodox and Jewish. “Now”, says Mr Koker, “there is practically none.”

Yet a growing number of Turkish Armenians are reclaiming their heritage. In 2010 hundreds flocked to the island of Akdamar in the eastern province of Van to attend an inaugural mass at the newly restored Church of the Holy Cross. (The church is now a museum, but holds mass on religious holidays.) Turkey’s culture ministry has obliged with a list of other ancient churches that it plans to restore, says Osman Kavala, a Turkish philanthropist who is helping to promote Turkish-Armenian reconciliation. And Armenian-language lessons, available since last year in Diyarbakir’s historic Sur district, are increasingly popular among Turkey’s so-called “invisible Armenians” who had abandoned their culture in order to survive. Abdullah Demirbas, the district’s mayor, argues that the Kurds must also make amends for their complicity in the genocide.

Armenians applaud these efforts, even as they note a persistent strain of Turkish nationalism that perceives non-Muslim minorities as suspect. The government’s conversion of several Greek Orthodox churches into mosques, together with its recent espousal of unabashedly Islamist rhetoric, heightens some concerns that efforts to appease Armenians are cynical and short-sighted.

But such worries were pleasantly absent during a recent afternoon in Surp Giragos, as tourists gazed at the church’s repaired altars and onion-domed belfry (which had been destroyed by the Ottomans in 1916 because it dwarfed surrounding minarets). The church is drawing hundreds of people every day. “Many of them are Islamised Armenians like me,” laughs Gafur Turkay of the Surp Giragos Foundation. “The truth about 1915 cannot be concealed,” says Mr Ayik’s daughter Pelin. “But as a young Armenian I don’t want to be pitied as a victim. I am the proud torchbearer of a rich civilisation that not only has survived but continues to thrive.”

Source: The Economist

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenia, armenian genocide, Turkey, Turkish Armenians are beginning to celebrate—and commemorate—their past

Self-critical attitude to history good precondition for making right decisions – Bundestag President

March 7, 2013 By administrator

March 06, 2013 | 17:21

YEREVAN.143298– President of German Bundestag Norbert Lammert visited Memorial to the Armenian Genocide victims (photos).

Norbert Lammert laid a wreath at the memorial and visited Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, the Armenian News-NEWS.am correspondent reported.

“My visit is one of the moving parts of my visit to Armenia. There are similar places in Germany and around the globe,” he noted.

He stressed that the German Bundestag in 2005 made a decision in connection with the 1915 events.

“We have taken this decision with a view to our past and realizing that self-critical attitude to someone’s own history is the important precondition, which should help to adopt such decisions for the better common future,” he said.

Lammert also expressed hope that Turkey and Armenia will finally normalize relations.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, Germany

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