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Greek president to visit to Armenia next week

September 27, 2014 By administrator

Karolos-papouliasUpon the invitation of his Armenian counterpart, the Greek leader will start a working trip to the country on Monday.

In the course of the visit, Karolos Papoulias is set to have meetings with President Serzh Sargsyan, Speaker of the National Assembly Galust Sahakyan and Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan. He will also visit the Armenian Genocide memorial to pay respect to the victims of the big tragedy.

Bilateral cooperation agreements will be signed between Greece and Armenia at a special ceremony to be held at the Presidential Palace. The two presidents will later hold a joint press conference to sum up the outcomes of the talks, reports the presidential press service.

President Papoulias is also scheduled to take part in an Armenian-Greek business conference together with the Armenian leader.

He will later visit the historical-cultural reserve museum of Garni (Kotayk region).

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Greece, president, visit

Turkish intellectuals slam textbooks spreading ‘hatred towards Armenians’

September 27, 2014 By administrator

182878A group of academics, journalists, artists and intellectuals have released a statement condemning in the harshest terms what they define as expressions that include “open hatred and hostility” towards Armenians in Turkish schoolbooks, which were recently exposed by the newspapers Agos and Taraf.

The two newspapers recently published reports on hateful remarks targeting Armenians in the textbooks used in history classes, according to Today’s Zaman.

A letter accompanying the text of the condemnation, written by historian Taner Akçam, notes that including such expressions as lesson material to teach children is a disgrace.

“Standing with integrity in the face of history is the prerequisite for establishing the future on the foundations of friendship and peace. I do hope that this signature campaign will be taken as a scream from all of us for the publication of textbooks that we would like to see,” Akçam noted.

“The revolutions history and history textbooks should be collected immediately, with an apology issued to everyone and particularly to Armenian students. This is where the path to Turkish-Armenian peace lies, at this time when we are approaching 2015,” the statement reads.

Photo: Today’s Zaman

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, hatred, textbooks, Turkish

Stone Age Weapons-Making Technology Discovered in Armenia

September 27, 2014 By administrator

Levallois-PerretNOR GEGHI, Armenia (OTC Capital)—Thousands of tools from the Paleolithic era have been discovered from a site in Armenia.

The latest discovery gives scientists a better insight into how technological developments evolved and spread in the world. The research teams which included scientists from across the world and a team from Royal Holloway, University of London believe that they have unearthed evidence that the ancient technique of Levallois which is used for making hunting weapons was actually invented in Africa and later spread across the world. Details of the study were published in the journal Science.

The Paleolithic era is a period of human history which is characterized by the development of primitive stone tools which was developed for hunting. The period covers a major portion of human pre historic technology.

The levallois technique is type of stone knapping which was developed by the ancestors of modern humans for making hunting tools. It is a more sophisticated method for making hunting tools. Levallois technique has been named after the discovery of flint tools in the French province of Levallois-Perret

The evidence of the theory that these tools originated in Africa and spread to other parts is available at a site in Armenia. The archaeologist believes that the technology was a part of these Armenian communities which thrived 325,000 to 335,000 years ago.

“The discovery of thousands of stone artefacts preserved at this unique site provides a major new insight into how Stone Age tools developed during a period of profound human behavioural and biological change,” researcher Simon Blockley, from the Royal Holloway geography department of the University of London, said.

Together with fellow researcher Alison MacLeod and an international team from across the United States and Europe, Blockley analysed volcanic material from the site around Nor Geghi, in the Kotayk province of Armenia.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Stone Age, weapons

Turkey: Seized land returned to Armenian community

September 26, 2014 By administrator

turkey-sezed-landA Turkish court ruled against the suit of Zeytinburnu Municipality (Istanbul), leaving in force the decision to return a 42,000 square-meter area to the Holy Savior (Surp Prgich) Armenian hospital.

In early 2014, Turkey’s Directorate General of Foundations made a decision to return to the Holy Savior Armenian hospital, in the Zeytinburnu district, a 42,000 square-meter land. The area includes a sports complex, a football stadium and a parking lot. The Zeytinburnu Municipality appealed against the decision.

According to Turkish newspaper Milliyet, President of the Board of Trustees of Surp Prgich Hospital Foundation Bedros Sirinoglu said that the returned land is worth about 338 million liras (about USD 180 million).

In his words, in all likelihood, a business center, a trade center or a hospital will be built in this area, with the proceeds to go to the hospital and the Armenian community.

The land was confiscated from the Armenian community in 1964.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, seized land, Turkey

Armenian President at UN called ISIS barbarians not related to faith

September 25, 2014 By administrator

president-sarkissianNEW YORK. – What is happening in Syria and Iraq should be viewed as a crime against humanity, said Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan in his speech in the UN General Assembly’s 69th session.

President Sargsyan in his speech once again voiced the commitment to join international efforts against ISIS terrorists. In his speech Armenian leader stressed:

“Today in front of all of us terrible events are taking place in Syria and Iraq, where religious and ethnic minorities become targets of groups committed to hatred. Two days ago terrorists blowed up the Der Zor of the Holy Martyrs Armenian Church, which was a grave of many martyrs who died during Armenian Genocide. Such barbarism is a crime that has no relation to any faith.

In Syria and Northern Iraq there is a catastrophic situation that is constantly deteriorating, and today it is a direct threat to hundreds of thousands of innocent people, including tens of thousands of Armenians in Aleppo. This is a very dangerous situation that must be considered to prevent crimes against humanity. Armenia voices the need to protect the Syrian people and the Iraqi Kurdish population in the north-west and we are encouraged to see the international community stand united on this issue.”

Armenia News – NEWS.am

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, ISIS, president, UN

Sarkisian Says Yerevan Considering Recall of Turkey-Armenia Protocols

September 24, 2014 By administrator

SerzhatUNUNITED NATIONS—Speaking at the UN General Assembly Wednesday, President Serzh Sarkisian hinted that official Yerevan is considering the recall of the Turkey-Armenia Protocols since Turkey continues to insist on the resolution of the Karabakh conflict in favor of Azerbaijan as a precondition for ratifying the documents.

“Ankara declares publicly that it will ratify those Protocols only if Armenians cede Nagorno-Karabakh—Independent Artsakh–to Azerbaijan. In Armenia and Artsakh ordinary people often just retort to such preconditions: ‘To hell with your ratification,’” said Sarkisian. “This vernacular phrase concentrates the age-old struggle of the entire nation, and it unequivocally explains to those who attempt to bargain the others’ homeland that the motherland is sacrosanct, and they had better stay away from us with their bargain. It is in these circumstances that currently the official Yerevan is seriously considering the issue of recalling the Armenian-Turkish Protocols from the parliament.”

In his remarks, Sarkisian also addressed the international crisis posed by ISIS, and remarked that on Armenia’s Independence Day, ISIS forces destroyed the St. Mary’s Armenian Church in Der Zor, which served as a memorial to the 1.5 victims of the Armenian Genocide.

He also chastised the international community for allowing Azerbaijan to advance its anti-Armenian and war rhetoric.

“The failure of an adequate international characterization of the bellicose declarations and various threats put forth at the highest level in Azerbaijan has resulted in all-out permissiveness. The President of Azerbaijan designates the entire Armenian nation as the ‘the enemy number one,’ and what is considered in the rest of the world to be a crime, is considered to be a glorious deed in Azerbaijan,” said Sarkisian.

Below is the complete text of Sarkisian’s statement at the UN.

Distinguished President of the General Assembly,
Distinguished Secretary General,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Mr. President,

We conduct this meeting in a symbolically significant period between the centennial of World War I and the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, the two turning points in the history of humanity. The United Nations Organization was established almost seventy years ago at the end of World War II, and its mission was to form new civilizational environment and culture of preventing the repetition of the past tragic pages.

2015 bears particular significance for Armenians all over the world. On April 24 Armenians around the globe will commemorate the most tragic page of the nation’s history – the centennial of the Armenian Genocide. It was an unprecedented crime aimed at eliminating the nation and depriving it of its homeland: a crime that continues to be an unhealed scar for each Armenian. The 1915 Genocide was a crime against civilization and humanity, and its inadequate condemnation paved the way for similar crimes of mass murder in the future.

Addressing the Assembly ahead of that centennial year of the Armenian Genocide from this prominent podium, which I would call the podium of Honor and Responsibility, I declare vociferously:

Thank you Uruguay, France, and Russia!

Thank you Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Sweden!

Thank you Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Greece, Slovakia, and Cyprus!

Thank you Lebanon, Argentina, Venezuela, Chile, Canada, and Vatican!

Thank you for the recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide regardless of the format and language adopted. I thank the U.S.A., European Union, and all those personalities, state bodies, territorial units and organizations in numerous countries, who publicly called things by their proper names. That is indeed extremely important since denial is a phase of the crime of genocide.

For a whole century now Armenians around the globe as well as the entire progressive international community expects Turkey to demonstrate the courage and face its own history by recognizing the Armenian Genocide, thus relieving next generations of this heavy burden of the past. Alas instead, we continue to hear ambiguous and ulterior messages, in which the victim and the slaughterer are equalized, and the history is falsified.

Armenia has never conditioned the normalization of the bilateral relations with Turkey by recognition of the Armenian Genocide. In fact, Armenia was the party that initiated such a process which culminated in the signing of the Zurich Protocols in 2009. However, those Protocols have been shelved for years now awaiting ratification in the Turkish Parliament. Ankara declares publicly that it will ratify those Protocols only if Armenians cede Nagorno- Karabakh, the free Artsakh, to Azerbaijan. In Armenia and Artsakh ordinary people often just retort to such preconditions: “To hell with your ratification.” This vernacular phrase concentrates the age-old struggle of the entire nation, and it unequivocally explains to those who attempt to bargain the others’ homeland that the motherland is sacrosanct, and they had better stay away from us with their bargain. It is in these circumstances that currently the official Yerevan is seriously considering the issue of recalling the Armenian-Turkish Protocols from the parliament.

The tragic events in Syria and Iraq, which we are currently witnessing, demonstrate how the groups whose creed is hatred are targeting religious and national minorities. Two days ago, on Independence Day of the Republic of Armenia, the Church of All Saint Martyrs in Deir-ez-Zor, Syria, dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide, where their remains were housed, was mined and blown up by terrorists. Such a barbarity is a criminal Godlessness in no way or shape related to any faith. The catastrophic situation in Syria and the north of Iraq continuously deteriorates, and today hundreds of thousands of peaceful people are directly imperiled. Among them are tens of thousands of Armenians of Aleppo. This is an instance of a peril to consider in the context of our joint commitments to preventing the crimes against humanity. Armenia has voiced on numerous occasions the necessity to defend the Armenian population of Syria and the Yezidi population of north-western Iraq, and we are encouraged by the unified stance of the international community in this regard.

The very essence of our organization is the preservation of world peace and security. In recent years, Armenia has consistently consolidated its peacekeeping capabilities thus preparing ourselves for a more proactive engagement in that field. Armenian peacekeepers will very soon be dispatched to the south of Lebanon within the framework of the UNIFIL mission under the auspices of the United Nations. It became possible due to close collaboration we enjoy with our Italian colleagues. I strongly believe that our servicemen will fulfill their mission with dignity and high professionalism also utilizing the extensive experience they have garnered in the last decade in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Distinguished colleagues,
It has been more than twenty years our neighbor aborts the efforts of the international community directed at the just and peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict by its unconstructive and maximalist stance. The failure of an adequate international characterization of the bellicose declarations and various threats put forth at the highest level in Azerbaijan has resulted in all-out permissiveness. The President of Azerbaijan designates the entire Armenian nation as the “the enemy number one”, and what is considered in the rest of the world to be a crime, is considered to be a glorious deed in Azerbaijan.

Despite the fact that each conflict is unique, fundamental human rights and freedoms, including the right of peoples to free expression of will and self-determination, continue to evolve as a determinant to their resolution. The vote held a few days ago in Scotland, once again proved that nowadays the institute of referendum is more and more widely perceived as a legal model for peaceful settlement of ethnic conflicts. It was no coincidence that the right to govern one’s own fate through referendum is in the core of the proposal put forward by the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group for the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Ladies and gentlemen,

While discussing the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement I cannot but address the four UN Security Council resolutions, which were adopted during the war, that every so often are exploited by Azerbaijani authorities in order to justify their obstructive policy.

It is about those four Resolutions that demanded unconditionally as a matter of priority cessation of all military hostilities. Azerbaijan failed to comply. Azerbaijan’s own non-compliance with the fundamental demands of these Resolutions made their full implementation impossible. The Resolutions contained calls upon the parties to cease bombardments and air strikes targeting peaceful civilian populations, to refrain from violating the principles of international humanitarian law but instead Azerbaijan continued its indiscriminate bombardments of civilian populations. Azerbaijan did not spare children, women and old men thus gravely violating all legal and moral norms of international humanitarian law.

Now Azerbaijan cynically refers to these Resolutions – refers selectively, pulling them out of context as a prerequisite for the settlement of the problem. The adequate interpretation of the UN Security Council Resolutions is not possible without correctly understanding the hierarchy of the demands set therein.

The Resolutions inter alia request the restoration of economic, transport and energy links in the region (UN SC Resolution 853) and removal of all obstacles to communications and transportation (UN SC Resolution 874). It is no secret that Azerbaijan and Turkey imposed blockade on Nagorno-Karabakh and the Republic of Armenia from the outset of the conflict. The Azerbaijani President in his statements even takes pride in this fact promising his own public that direction would remain the priority of Azerbaijan’s foreign policy.

The abovementioned UN Security Council Resolutions called upon Azerbaijan to establish direct contacts with Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan refused to establish any direct contact with Nagorno-Karabakh, which was a legally equal party to the Ceasefire Agreement concluded in 1994, as well as to a number of other international agreements. Moreover, Azerbaijan preaches hatred towards people it claims it wants to see as a part of their state.

None of the UN SC Resolutions identifies Armenia as a conflicting party. Our country is only called upon “to continue to exert its influence” over the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians (UN SC Resolutions 853, 884) in order to cease the conflict. Armenia fully complied, and partly owing to its efforts a ceasefire agreement was concluded in 1994. All the UN SC Resolutions have clearly recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as a party to the conflict.

Azerbaijani authorities have failed to implement the fundamental demands of the Security Council resolutions, including abiding and sticking by humanitarian norms. Incidentally, Azerbaijan has been gravely violating this demand every now and then. Azerbaijan’s cruel and inhumane treatment of the Armenian civilian prisoners of war regularly resulted in their deaths. Although, I think, one shall not be surprised about it because it is the same state that suppresses and exercises the most inhumane treatment of its own people. A clear proof of it was the decision of the UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture to suspend its visit to Azerbaijan due to the obstructions it encountered in the conduct of the official Baku.

The Co-Chairmanship of the OSCE Minsk Group is the only specialized structure that has been dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh issue according to the mandate granted by the international community. While Azerbaijan is very well aware that it could not possibly deceive or misinform the Minsk Group, which is very-well immersed in the essence of the problem, it attempts to transpose the conflict settlement to other platforms trying to depict it as a territorial dispute or exploiting the factor of religious solidarity. That is ironic, since Armenia traditionally enjoys very warm relations with the Islamic states both in the Arab world or, for instance, with our immediate neighbor Iran.

Ladies and gentlemen,
We highly value the indispensable role of the United Nations in the adjustment and implementation of the development goals. I strongly believe that through the new “Post-2015” development agenda we will continue our efforts at seeking solutions and responding to challenges of global nature stemming from the Millennium Development Goals.

In conclusion, I would like to underline that we have passed the substantial part of the road leading to shaping the “Post-2015 Development Agenda” and we will continue our endeavors in this regard by displaying necessary flexibility in order to bring this process to its logical conclusion.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, protocol, recall

Kurdish and Armenian voices in one of the sufferer

September 15, 2014 By administrator

Veterans, and Leyla, the representative of that tradition, as are alike. Never leave each other’s hands, always with two women facing each other’s eyes, their hard work during the break in tempo talked. They can listen in tonight ITU Mustafa Kemal Auditorium.

nm_berge_photo_dengbes_1410Dengbêj veterans (left) and Aşuğ Leyla (right) Photo: Arabian BERGER

MEHMET AKIN
My akinmehmet34@gmail.co

Anadolu Kultur, by the European Union funded ‘Armenia-Turkey Normalization Process Support Programme’ scope, peoples unity and friendship messages in order to give his woman dengbêj and aşuğ project, the final concert this week in Istanbul will be moved. Kurdish people aşuğluk tradition in culture, the culture of the Armenian people in the Dengbêjlik on similarities between the Armenian and the Van Aşuğ Leyla Dengbêj of veterans, first in Yerevan, then gave a concert in Van partners.

Veterans, and Leyla, the representative of that tradition, as are alike. Never leave each other’s hands, always with two women facing each other’s eyes, their hard work during the break in tempo talked. Both history tells the sad story, both for the future is waiting for a life full of peace and music. Stated wishes for the future for us, especially the “Summer of them,” said ITU veterans, and Leyla Mustafa Kemal Auditorium this Friday evening you can listen to.

‘I understand the spirit of grief in the heart of Leyla’

Dengbêj was born into the tradition and women struggling to transfer future dengbêj Dengbêj brings together veterans, Kurds and Armenians have always been aware of the similarities between; it was also decided to do this project.

  • How the project started?

I had heard stories since I was little. One falls in love with a Muslim Armenians, were kavuşamaz because of the language difference. Our culture is close, we can do a common thing in Armenia with dengbêj I thought he did not know how to do it. Anatolian Cultures Van came to another program, I told them my project. Accepted and in Yerevan, Van, concerts will be held in Istanbul, I was very happy to hear. It was like a dream. Then we went to Armenia together.

  • Leyla How did you meet with?

When we went to Armenia particular, the traditions of the people close to our tradition we investigated, we found four or five people. Leyli’y in love with the interior of the larynx was most closely resembles me. We met in the morning at the hotel in Yerevan Leyli’yl. I was very excited when I first saw it, I was very happy.

  • Do you understand each other’s songs then?

Armenian understand that I may know him. Van, Erzurum, I know you’re talking about. I see the sadness in your heart.

  • Klamer describes Does the Armenians and the genocide?

My great Armenian klam I’ve heard many of the stories described. I am also doing research about it. I went to several villages, genocide, I asked, they told us they did not archive. Many women and children were massacred. All wars are forced to take the burden of all women. Now the arrival of peace, women want to get rid of this burden.

  • Dengbêj do not see many women in their homes. What is the place of women in the tradition of Deng-bêjlik?

The first was filed in Van dengbêj house. I was the only woman there. I called male bards. They then opened in Diyarbakır and Muş dengbêj homes. 50-60 were men. Them, I asked women whether they know dengbêj. After three, five saying we grew up. Women’s difficult to progress in this area, but we also opened the way for the Kurdish movement.

With an increase in the number of women dengbêj, wanted to open a place in our name, and founded the Society of Women Dengbêj. Women in Diyarbakır and Silopi dengbêj there, we have an example to them. But we have financial problems. Dengbêj woman next to me and went to the newly opened another association, we had four people. To promote this culture, I want to increase the number of women dengbêj. Reveals that women already. Zeynıkê’n Evdalê the ‘Gula’ work, for example, is very important. Now that our own children, I want to teach our own daughter.

  • You have learned how to dengue-bêjlig?

I opened my eyes, I found myself in. At the age of seven I was saying even explain. Klam was beaten as a child to say. My grandmother’s name was Gule’y, everyone in our family ‘Gula’ reads klamer were asked the meaning of curiosity. Gülen’s Muslims attempted learned that an Armenian. This story made an impression on me.

  • What did you feel at the concert in Yerevan?

I was very happy. People in the villages we visited were accompanied by songs. Bitlis, Erzurum, Van, there were people who were forced to migrate. Their hearts were burning people. For example, an elderly woman came in after the concert, hugged me and cried. I cried. The way over, y see in our response because we are Kurdish girls See you wonder if she was thinking. Very scared. But everything was very nice, everyone was very welcoming.

‘These are live in peace in heaven’

Aşuğ of Leyla, “I’m coming,” he came to Turkey for the first time with this project and ‘love’ was. Armenia and Turkey Leyla mention of the similarities between cultures, the opening of borders and the wish of the people are living together.

  • What did you feel when you meet Gazîn’l?

I was in Russia, one day, the director of the School of Civ Prof. NEW Aşuğ Dr. Tovmas Poghosian phoned. This project was mentioned, “In fact, they met with another aşuğ but insisted they want to meet you,” he said. I know one was when I first saw it years seemed. We always like our songs heartbroken, sad, is troubled; Veterans of the songs had the same problem. Already veterans of the spirit of the song is similar to how I knew. Singing, singing moments of the case. We may be of different nationalities are, but it is important music.

  • Are you able to understand the klamer veterans?

When he read, reading everything I understand format. Come to my heart, touches. Someone else can touch my heart like that though. Ahtamar Church tells the story of veterans. This story is also there with us. To me, the most essential feature of veterans, in recitation sincerity. That’s why when I see him I miss.

  • Passes on the Kurds things in your songs yet?

Me and my wife in school when teachers ‘and Kei by Siamanto Zare’ were playing. Keen as I was going Zare, he Siamanto. He’s part of the game is Kurdish. In the song “Armenian is not my daughter like” There are words.

  • Aşuğ follows in the tradition of the Armenian Genocide is there?

My family was originally from Erzurum. My grandfather, my mother tells stories of genocide, I’m listening. Because I grew up listening to these stories. They were also very impressed that I wrote the song.

  • What are you talking about in your songs?

In Soviet times, just because I’m a student would write love songs. We’ve heard all these stories of genocide, the memory on the past, I’ve become an overwrite aşug. But when I try to write something about my own nation, my pen again is connected to the word of love and affection.

  • Are there many women in Armenia, in the tradition of aşuğ?

Women aşuğ there but very few. In Armenia, the first woman I’ve aşuğ title. If you graduated from the School of Civ NEW Aşuğ can be aşuğ only. I am a graduate of the first female ratio. Our girls out there looking beautiful voice.

  • What did you feel at the concert in Van?

This is the hometown of our ancestors. Air even different for me. But to come here “to go to that country,” he said. When I arrived, I thought I saw something completely different. Culture and loving, very comfortable place. Van region is a paradise, such a country, not available anywhere else. Everyone happy in heaven, you’d like to live in peace. Music, culture and thumbs together. That our borders are opened to anyone living in this country can come together. I ask that the world’s territory, does not feed all of us to live?

Source: Agos.com

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Kurd, sufferer

90% of Armenian citizens trust the Armenian Army by Gallup International

September 14, 2014 By administrator

103277-480x258According to a survey by Gallup International, 56% of citizens of Armenia are convinced that the armed forces of Armenia and the Nagorno Karabakh gave an appropriate response to the attacks of Azerbaijan. Information communicated by Aram Navasartian, director of Gallup International Association in Armenia. According to the last survey was conducted from August 8 to 17 on a representative sample of 1067 people in Yerevan but also in all regions of Armenia.

When asked “what is the most important issue that needs to Armenian state face today? “Respondents answer first” war situation “40% and” unemployment “and 35% as reported by Aram Navasartian. On the issue of violations of the cease-fire and clashes in Nagorno Karabakh, 24% of respondents believe that Azerbaijan desires revive the conflict. While 24% also say that this state of conflict is driven by foreign powers. But according to 18% of respondents, the latest events are undertaken by Baku to forget the internal problems of the country. Finally 13% believe that Azerbaijan takes advantage of the internal political crisis in Armenia to attack the border line Armenian-Azeri. Finally in general, 90% of Armenian citizens trust the Armenian Army.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Army, poll, trust

Armenian digital project ‘CityBugs’ wins European Youth Award

September 13, 2014 By administrator

182435The Armenian project ‘CityBugs’ was named among the winners of Europe’s unique “Digital Creativity for Social Good” contest. Prof. Peter A. Bruck, honorary chairman of the International Center for New Media and initiator of the European Youth Award (EYA), has announced the EYA winners 2014 selected by an international expert jury.

‘CityBugs’ stood out of 130 submissions from 49 European countries. The project was developed by young and smart social entrepreneurs from Armenia who bundled their forces to set new creativity and innovation standards in the digital world. ‘CityBugs’ is a social platform to enable solutions for critical issues affecting the environment, health, education, public services and more. Committed citizens can access CityBugs using the web platform or a mobile application, reporting any relevant issue (whether garbage removal, health care problems, missing zebras and street lighting, or infrastructure for the disabled) to municipal authorities.

This year’s competition focused on European challenges and priorities as defined by the EU strategy 2020 and the Council of Europe. How these can be achieved by the creative use of IT and Mobiles, has been demonstrated by Europe’s cunning digital natives. “To know that there are so many young people who are caring to change the future, is awesome! They really inspired me with their innovative projects!” says juror Dušica Birovljević, founder and owner of Nomcentar in Serbia.

The winning projects origin from eleven different countries – Armenia, Austria (2),the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany (2), Portugal, Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. The young bright minds behind the projects are invited to the EYA Festival in Graz, Austria, from November 19-22, as reward for their great achievements. There they will participate in an interactive conference with international creative thinkers, ICT experts, business and opinion leaders. During this three-days knowledge-event they will present their inspiring high-impact projects in front of a high-level audience. Based on their presentations, the EYA Festival Grand Jury will select one overall winner.

Called into life by Prof. Peter A. Bruck, honorary chairman of the International Center for New Media, in 2012, the European Youth Award (EYA) is a leading European competition honoring excellence in the use of Internet and mobile applications for social empowerment. Conducted under the patronage of the Council of Europe, UNESCO and Unido, EYA as annual contest seeks to motivate young people under the age of thirty to produce socially-valuable digital projects that address the goals defined by the Council of Europe and Europe 2020.

Source: PanARMENIAN.Net

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, citybugs, digital

Tashkent: Armenia’s Arsen Julfalakyan wins world championship

September 12, 2014 By administrator

By Shushanik Hakobyan

46607TASHKENT. – Arsen Julfalakyan (Armenia) won world champion’s title at the 2014 Greco-Roman Wrestling World Championships held in Tashkent, the capital city of Uzbekistan.

In the finals, he defeated Neven Žugaj from Croatia by a score of 4-0 in the 75 kg competition. 

The information above comes to you with support by Devin Port Company.

 

 

Source: news.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, arsen, Sport, wins

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