Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

16 000 Syrian Armenians return to their ancestral land

September 17, 2015 By administrator

arton116272-480x270More than 2,000 Syrian Armenians have found refuge in Armenia since May, announced yesterday the Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan.

Their arrival is around 16,000 official total number of Armenians from Syria currently living in their ancestral homeland.

Syria was home to up to 80,000 Armenians, mostly descendants of survivors of the 1915 genocide, before they can trigger the bloody civil war four years ago. Most of them have fled the country since.

Hakobian estimated that only about 15 thousand Armenians are still in Syria today. She commented on their fate during the question and answer session of the Armenian government in Parliament. “Unfortunately, the situation in Syria is deteriorating day by day,” she was sorry. “A total of 2500 Armenians from Syria came to Armenia since the events of May”, she added.

Nazaret Aroyan, who owned several carpet stores in Aleppo, is one of these refugees. He arrived in Yerevan with his family a month ago. He expressed concern for the safety of his sister and her husband, imprisoned in a battered city of Syria. He explained that she works in a local public hospital and therefore needs government permission to leave the country.

“She asked permission. Four months ago, they sent his papers to Damascus, “he told Aroyan, adding that she is still waiting for a response.

“The situation there is really bad,” summed Kuyumjian Nazaret, a young refugee. “Yesterday they bombed a school and there were children there.”

Mikael Garabed, another former resident of Aleppo, said he still has not convinced his brothers to move to Armenia. “There is no electricity and running water out there,” he explains. “The living conditions continue to deteriorate.”

According to Syrian Armenians now living in Yerevan, many relatives would flee Aleppo to take refuge in Armenia, but they can not afford the expensive trips. Some are probably also aware of the lack of economic opportunities in Armenia. Many refugees are struggling to make ends meet in the country devastated by unemployment.

“Refugees are beginning to realize that there is no way back and integrate rapidly into the socio-economic life of Armenia”, welcomed Hakobyan in the National Assembly yesterday. “Each of us must help them find jobs and accommodation.”

Firdus Zakarian, head of a working group that aims to care for Syrian Armenians, warned the government in this regard, which would be run out of money to provide substantial material assistance to refugees. He hopes to obtain funding from foreign states and international organizations.

Thursday, September 17, 2015,
Claire © armenews.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, refugees, return, Syria

EU considers Turkey unsafe for refugees

September 16, 2015 By administrator

Luxembourg's Minister of European and Foreign Affairs Jean Asselborn arrives for a news conference after an European Union interior and justice ministers emergency meeting on the migrants situation in Brussels on Sept. 14. (Photo: Reuters)

Luxembourg’s Minister of European and Foreign Affairs Jean Asselborn arrives for a news conference after an European Union interior and justice ministers emergency meeting on the migrants situation in Brussels on Sept. 14. (Photo: Reuters)

The EU has categorized Turkey as not safe for refugees, citing the recent escalation of clashes between security forces and the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Speaking at a press conference following a meeting of EU interior ministers on Tuesday, Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn announced that the categorization of Turkey had been officially changed, as it can no longer be considered a safe country for refugees, the Milliyet daily reported on Wednesday.

In order to aid in the swift processing of applications from asylum seekers, the EU categorizes the countries from which candidates arrive as safe or unsafe. For a country to be considered safe by the EU, it has to fulfill the Copenhagen criteria at a basic level, including guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for and protection of minorities.

Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Kosovo, Serbia and Montenegro are included in the list of countries and territories deemed safe by the EU.

A Prime Ministry Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) report released early in May indicates that the number of Syrian refugees in Turkey is 1.6 million, but the actual figure is thought to be around 2 million. The government has said it has spent $6.5 billion in humanitarian aid since 2011, when the civil war in Syria broke out.

Turkey has been the scene of an unprecedented surge of violence since July, when the government halted a settlement process it had initiated with the PKK in 2012. At least 130 members of the police force and soldiers have been killed in nearly daily PKK attacks.

Dozens of protests have been held nationwide, responding particularly to a PKK ambush in early September that killed 16 members of the military. In response to the PKK’s attacks, protesters attacked the homes of Kurds and set their vehicles on fire.

Local branches of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) were also subjected to violence, with over 150 HDP headquarters being attacked by protesters hurling stones and draping the buildings with Turkish flags.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: refugees, Turkey, unsafe

Tovmassian family from Syria’s Kobani is granted refugee status in Armenia

September 12, 2015 By administrator

Armenian-refugees-kobaniYEREVAN. – A refugee status has been granted to all members of the Tovmassian family, which had moved from Syria to Armenia.

Sosi Tovmassian told about the aforementioned to Armenian News-NEWS.am. She added, however, that they now need to rent a home.

“When we find a home, we will resolve the matter of sending the children to school,” said Tovmassian. “We want the school to be close to the house.”

With the support of General Vicar of the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople, Archbishop Aram Ateşyan, the seventeen-member—including eleven children—Tovmassian family, which had fled from Kobani city in Syria to Turkey, was relocated to Armenia on September 2. The family is temporarily living in a social home in capital city Yerevan.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, kobani, refugees

Germany says it could take 500,000 refugees a year

September 8, 2015 By administrator

Refugees from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Iran wait to be registered at Moria Camp in Lesbos. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Refugees from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Iran wait to be registered at Moria Camp in Lesbos. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Reporting Helena Smith in Athens, Mark Tran in London
Refugees from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Iran wait to be registered at Moria Camp in Lesbos. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Helena Smith in Athens, Mark Tran in London and agencies

German vice-chancellor repeats call for EU countries to take their fair share of refugees, as violence flares on Greek island of Lesbos

Germany could take 500,000 refugees each year for “several years”, the country’s vice-chancellor, Sigmar Gabriel, has said, as fresh clashes broke out overnight between police and refugees on the Greek island of Lesbos and thousands of people gathered amid chaotic scenes on the Greek border with Macedonia.

“I believe we could surely deal with something in the order of half a million for several years,” he told ZDF public television. “I have no doubt about that, maybe more.” Germany expects to receive 800,000 asylum seekers this year, four times the total for 2014.

Gabriel also stressed that other European countries must also accept their fair share as refugees flee war and poverty in the Middle East and Africa and head for the EU.

As Greece struggled to cope with an influx of refugees – many from war-ravaged Syria – Donald Tusk, the EU president, warned that the refugee “exodus” could last for years. “The wave of migration is not a one-time incident but the beginning of a real exodus, which only means that we will have to deal with this problem for many years to come,” he said.

In Lesbos, where tens of thousands of refugees are stranded, about a dozen coastguards and riot police armed with batons struggled overnight to control about 2,500 migrants in the island’s main port as crowds surged towards a government-chartered ferry bound for Athens.

The UN’s refugee agency, UNHCR, said Europe must offer guaranteed relocation for Syrian refugees. About 30,000 refugees are on Greek islands, with 20,000 on Lesbos alone, it said. The island has a population of about 85,000.

Melissa Fleming, a UNHCR spokeswoman, told a news briefing in Geneva: “Discussions in Europe this week are taking on even greater urgency because it obviously cannot be a German solution to a European problem.”

She welcomed announcements by Britain and France that they would take in Syrian refugees, but said reception centres must be set up in countries including Hungary and Greece.

“Those can only work if there is a guaranteed relocation system whereby European countries saying yes will take X number. We believe it should be 200,000 – that’s the number we believe need relocating in Europe countries,” Fleming said.

German chancellor Angela Merkel reiterated her support for quotas for distributing refugees, telling a news conference in Berlin: “This joint European asylum system cannot just exist on paper but must also exist in practice – I say that because it lays out minimum standards for accommodating refugees and the task of registering refugees.”

On Monday more than 3,000 newcomers, most brought in on cruise ships from Lesbos, arrived in the port of Piraeus in Athens. The Red Cross has set up medical facilities in a central square in the capital where it handed out food and water to the arrivals.

Angeliki Fanaki, who is coordinating the relief programme, said every effort was being made to ensure refugees were received with a level of dignity they may not have experienced so far.

The vast majority of refugees and migrants in Lesbos have been forced to live out in the open, or at best in tents, with almost no access to running water or public toilets, and conditions have become increasingly squalid.

The migration minister, Yiannis Mouzalas, a physician with Doctors of the World, described conditions as miserable after visiting the island on Sunday. Thousands of Syrians, Afghans, Iraqis, Iranians, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis have converged on the island’s capital, Mytilini, home to 27,000 locals.

“It is an intolerable situation,” said the island’s mayor, Spyros Galanos, who has appealed to residents to boycott the country’s upcoming general election and threatened to close schools later this week if relief measures and emergency action are not taken quickly. On Tuesday morning locals told Greek TV that after several days of street clashes between refugees and riot police they had reached a point where they were afraid to leave their homes.

The government has responded by opening a second reception centre to speed up processing of the newcomers, and laying on more ships to transit them to the mainland. But with more new arrivals coming from Turkey, no amount of emergency action appears to be adequate.

The Greek government has appealed to the EU commission for €2.5bn in emergency funding – usually reserved for natural disasters – to deal with the crisis, which has also affected Greece’s northern border.

Tensions are high on the border with Macedonia, where at least 8,000 people were waiting to enter the former Yugoslav republic after 2,000 made the crossing on Monday. With the first light of day, police continued a search and rescue operation in the hope of finding a 23-year-old Syrian father last seen struggling in the fast-moving waters of the Axios river that separates the two states.

In Hungary, scores of migrants broke through a police line near a refugee centre and marched towards Budapest on Monday before agreeing to turn back. In Denmark, police closed a motorway in the south of the country as crowds headed towards the Swedish border.

Germany would keep accepting “a greatly disproportionate share” among EU members “because we are an economically strong country, without doubt”, vice-chancellor Gabriel said.

Britain, France and even Latin American countries have pledged to accept tens of thousands of refugees between them. Venezuela said it would accept 20,000, the same number that Britain has promised to take over five years. Dilma Rousseff, the Brazilian president, declared migrants would be welcomed with “open arms”, and Chile’s leader, Michelle Bachelet, said it was “working to take a large number”. Canada’s Quebec province said it would take 3,650 this year.

Source: TheGuardian

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, refugees

Video Vancouver: Thousands Rally Welcome Refugees and remembering “Kurdish boy Alan Kurdi”

September 6, 2015 By administrator

Vancouver, welcome refugees Rally

Vancouver, welcome refugees Rally

Thousands have turned out in Downtown Vancouver to lend their voices to world-wide calls of support for Syrian refugees fleeing the crisis in their homeland.

The Syrian refugee crisis became personal for many last week when a moving photograph of a drowned Syrian boy face down in the sand of a Turkish beach circulated on social media.

On Sunday, the Pope pledged that each parish in the Vatican would take in a refugee family and called on European Catholic parishes and other religious institutions to do the same. Immigration Minister Chris Alexander said last week the government has already resettled nearly 2,300 Syrians and 22,000 Iraqis and has further plans to accept 23,000 Iraqi and 11,300 Syrian refugees.

The rally in Vancouver is one of several happening across the country this weekend.

 

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: demonstration, refugees, Vancouver, welcome

Pope urges Catholic parishes to take in refugees

September 6, 2015 By administrator

f55ec24fe4f347_55ec24fe4f37e.thumbPope Francis is asking faithful throughout Europe to shelter refugees fleeing “death from war and hunger.”

Francis said that the Vatican’s two parishes are taking in two families of refugees. He gave no details as he addressed tens of thousands of people in St Peter’s Square.

He said it’s not enough to say “have courage, hang in there” to the hundreds of thousands of refugees who are on the march toward what he called “life’s hope.”

He called on every Catholic parish, convent, monastery and sanctuary in Europe to shelter a family, and asked bishops throughout Europe to urge their dioceses to do the same.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: help, helping, Pope, refugees

Armenia to host more than 100 Syria refugees per week – UN envoy

September 5, 2015 By administrator

f55eab851e4c60_55eab851e4c97.thumbA UN representative who was following the opening of a tentative refugee camp in Yerevan’s Nubarashen district on Saturday said she doesn’t expect an increased immigration flow into the country in the wake of the Syrian crisis.
Speaking to reporters at the event, which was being held as part of the military drills “Shant-2015”, UNHCR Officer-in-Charge in Armenia Kate Pochapsky said that they expect the current dynamics to be maintained (no more than about 3,000 migrants) despite the EU’s tougher rules on immigrants. She noted that migrants prefer mostly developed countries, where they are more likely to live in comfort.

Pochapsky added that migrants’ flow from Syria and Turkey will be no more than an estimated 100 people a week.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, refugees, Syrian

Social media users slam PG Arab rulers siding with Turkey’ & inaction on refugee crisis

September 4, 2015 By administrator

Indian artist Sudarsan Pattnaik works on a sand sculpture depicting drowned Syrian boy Aylan Kurdi at Puri beach on September 4, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

Indian artist Sudarsan Pattnaik works on a sand sculpture depicting drowned Syrian boy Aylan Kurdi at Puri beach on September 4, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

As an unprecedented refugee crisis is unfolding across Europe, with the foreign-backed crisis in Syria to blame for the bulk of it, many are asking why the oil-rich Arab monarchies in the Persian Gulf region are shirking responsibility.

Social media users in the Middle East and other Muslim countries began a campaign Friday to take the Persian Gulf Arab states to task for their lack of contribution to the resettlement of a rising number of refugees fleeing the violence in Syria and elsewhere in the troubled region.

More than 12,000 users in Pakistan tweeted the hot hashtag #ShameOnArabRulers, asking why the rich members of the [Persian] Gulf Cooperation Council ([P]GCC) are refusing to open their borders to the exodus.

The campaign came after the image of a dead Syrian child, Aylan Kurdi, washed up along a beach in Turkey’s Bodrum region, circulated in media on Thursday, prompting huge anger across the world. The three-year-old, along with his brother and mother, had drowned a day earlier when they were trying to reach European shores in Greece.

The six-member [P]GCC – which includes Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, the UAE, Oman and Qatar – have accepted a total of only 33 people from Syria since the outbreak of violence there in 2011.

In a report last year, the Amnesty International described as shocking the [P]GCC’s lack of assistance to the case. The report said the six countries should make a significant contribution to the resettlement of Syrian refugees “due to their geographical proximity, historical links with Syria and relative integration potential (due to common language and religion).”

The failure in receiving the desperate refugees comes as most of the [P]GCC member states have relentlessly backed the Takfiri militancy against the Syrian government over the past years.

There have been numerous reports of direct assistance provided by governments of Saudi Arabia and Qatar to the extremist militants in Syria. Damascus insists that if it were not for the foreign support, the militants would not have been able to increase their terror activities in the Arab state.

People in other parts of the Muslim world have also heaped scorn on the Arab rulers’ inaction on the refugee crisis.

Sultan al-Qassemi, a commentator in the United Arab Emirates, where no single refugee has arrived since the crisis in Syria began four years ago, said Friday that Arabs have a “moral responsibility” to accept the refugees from Syria.

He said such inaction could recreate a crisis like the one which has existed for decades in the Palestinian refugee camps, adding, “We have a moral responsibility … We have to open our homes as well as our wallets.”

Source: presstv.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: PG Arab, refugees, Turkey

Syria blames Turkey for pushing refugees to Europe

September 3, 2015 By administrator

This is Turkish Crime against Humanity

This is Turkish Crime against Humanity

A senior Syrian official has blamed Turkey for the flood of Syrian refugees heading toward Europe amid growing concerns over the failure of the international community to do enough to protect stranded Syrian asylum-seekers.

Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Miqdad said Thursday that Turkey has been encouraging the Syrians on its soil to seek refuge in Europe despite claims by Ankara that it is bearing the huge costs of Syrian refugees.

“The…issue, some people may not be aware is that the Turkish government which declares to have a lot of these refugees is itself encouraging those refugees to go to Western Europe,” Miqdad said during a joint briefing to reporters with his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amir-Abdollahian in Damascus.

The senior diplomat said, however, that Syria is doing its best to urge Syrians not to leave the country.

“Under the present circumstances the best thing we can do is to encourage Syrians to stay here,” Miqdad said, adding, “We are calling on all Syrians to come back to their country because this is their rightful place of existence.”

The comments came a few hours after the United Nations denounced the international community for its failure to protect Syrians fleeing war at home.

Urgent action needed

A 24-page report by the UN Commission of Inquiry released Thursday called for “urgent action” by the international community to protect civilians fleeing the ongoing crisis in Syria.

The commission stated that the responsibility to protect Syrian refugees “is not being adequately shared or shouldered.”

“The global failure to protect Syrian refugees is now translating into a crisis in southern Europe,” the report said.

The commission’s chief chair, Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, said civilians have been bearing the brunt of the ongoing militancy and crisis in Syria. “Civilians are suffering the unimaginable as the world stands witness.”

The report is to be presented to the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) on September 21.

According to the report, more than 2,000 Syrians have also drowned in the Mediterranean while trying to reach Europe since 2011. The figures are based on 335 interviews with witnesses and victims and collected from January to July 2015.

In the latest shocking sign of the migrants’ plight, a three-year-old Syrian boy, identified as Aylan Kurdi, was among 13 Syrian people, including his five-year-old brother, who drowned and were washed up on a beach near the resort town of Bodrum, some 400 kilometers (250 miles) west of the city of Antalya, on Turkey’s idyllic ‘Turquoise Coast’ on Wednesday.

Hundreds of ill-fated Syrians, fleeing the violence perpetrated by the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group and trying to seek refuge on the Greek soil, have lost their lives during unfortunate boat travels where the vessels overturned.

The UN report also highlights abuses being committed by militant groups such as Daesh and the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front that are wreaking havoc across Syria. It also said militants have adopted new tactics such as hit-and-run attacks and car bombings following recent battlefield losses to Kurdish fighters in Syria.

The report says the militant groups used tactics like encircling populated areas, which has caused malnutrition, starvation and chronic illness among the besieged residents.

The UN says the militancy in Syria has internally displaced more than 7.6 million people, and compelled over four million others to take refuge in neighboring countries, including Jordan and Lebanon.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: blame, refugees, Syria, Turkey

161 Syrian Armenians in Yerevan refugee students received school bags and supplies offered by the city of Yerevan

August 30, 2015 By administrator

arton115505-380x285On the eve of the new school year, the Municipality of Yerevan has done a nice gesture to Armenians refugees from Syria. The city of Yerevan has offered 161 Syrian refugee students from 1st to 4th grade school bags and school supplies. The head of public relations of the municipality of Yerevan, Gayane Soghomonian gave these gifts in the company responsible for the education of the city of Yerevan, Samvel Mertandjian. The delivery took place at a ceremony in the town hall of Yerevan. The students were accompanied by their parents. Samvel Mertandjian assured them that the municipal authorities in Yerevan in support of aid projects Armenian families Syrian refugees.

Krikor Amirzayan (Գրիգոր Ամիրզայեան)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, refugees, Schools, Syrian

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in