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Group of Armenia citizens ready to defend Syria’s Armenian-populated areas

March 27, 2014 By administrator

March 26, 2014 | 15:13

13424911523_76990d4e1f_bYEREVAN. – There are volunteers in Armenia who have expressed a wish to set up a volunteer detachment and head to Syria to protect the Armenian-populated areas (PHOTOS).

Several dozens of Armenian citizens, who on Wednesday staged a demonstration in front of the UN Office in Armenia, told the aforementioned to reporters.

“We want to form a 20-30 member detachment. We will inform the [Armenian] government about this idea.

“[But] for the most part, this detachment can help the Syrian Armenians emotionally, so they sense that their compatriots stand with them, and they will be with them at the moment of need,” initiative member Arman Mkhitaryan told Armenian-NEWS.am.

In his words, however, the UN’s silence on this matter is strange.

“We want to remind this organization the objectives it is called to serve. We condemn the UN’s silence; this is a crime, a silent acquiescence to Turkey’s actions,” Mkhitaryan added.

Subsequently, the protestors handed a respective letter to the UN Office in Armenia.

In the early morning on March 21, armed militants from the Jabhat al-Nusra Islamic terrorist group infiltrated into northern Syria’s Latakia Governorate, which is predominantly inhabited by Armenians and Alawites, from four directions. Two large groups of terrorists had launched the attack from Turkey. About 600 Kessab-Armenian families are currently sheltered in Latakia city. On March 23, Turkish fighter planes downed a Syrian military aircraft that was conducting a mission against the Islamic terrorists in Kessab. On Monday, a group of Armenian parliament members headed to Latakia.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: #savekessab, Armenia, Syria, Turkey

Turkey shuts off YouTube after ‘Syria invasion plan’ leak #savekessab

March 27, 2014 By administrator

RT Report Published time: March 27, 2014

Access to YouTube has been cut off in Turkey after an explosive leak of audiotapes that appeared to show ministers talking about provoking military intervention in Syria. Other social media have already been blocked ahead of Turkey-Syria-invasion-plan-leaktumultuous local elections.

The latest leaked audio recording, which reportedly led to the ban, appears to show top government officials discussing a potential attack on the tomb of Suleyman Shah, the grandfather of the founder of the Ottoman Empire

The tomb is in Syrian territory, but protected by Turkish soldiers.

On the tape, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu is heard to say that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sees any attack as an “opportunity” to increase Turkish presence in Syria, where it has staunchly supported the anti-Assad rebels. Security chief Hakan Fidan then goes one step further, and suggests staging a fake attack to give Turkey a casus belli to intervene in the conflict.

Turkish officials have recently vowed to protect the tomb as its “national soil.”

The Foreign Ministry in Ankara reacted to the tape by issuing a statement, calling the leak a “wretched attack” on national security. It also claims the tape was “partially manipulated.”

“These treacherous gangs are the enemies of our state and people. The perpetrators of this attack targeting the security of our state and people will be uncovered in the shortest time and will be handed over to justice to be given the heaviest penalty,” the ministry said.

A source inside the office of President Abdullah Gül, who has taken a softer line than Erdoğan over the series of government leaks, told Reuters that access to YouTube may be restored if the sensitive content is removed, even though the original video has been deleted.

Invoking national security and privacy concerns has been the government’s tactic in fighting off a stream of leaks showing top officials engaging in unsavory or downright illegal practices.

Erdoğan has also repeatedly claimed that most of the audio recordings are fakes. He labeled the latest audio revelation “villainous” during a stump speech in Diyabakir.

Twitter, another popular source for leaks, has already been shut down in Turkey since March 20, after a court order.

Since then, the California-based social network and organizations have fought in several courts to have the decision reversed, calling it “disproportionate and illegal.”

A court ruling in Ankara on Wednesday supported the appeal, but the country’s regulator has a month to unblock Twitter, leading to speculation that any such move would only take place after the election.

The incumbent party also enjoys the benefit of robust privacy legislation passed last month, which makes it easy to cut off any website even before any violation has been legally proven.

The US has led the chorus of international condemnation, calling the government’s moves “censorship” tantamount to “21st century book-burning.”

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Syria, Syria invasion plan, Turkey

Several Kurdish students including a son of an official in Iraqi Kurdistan join ihadists ISIS in Syria

March 27, 2014 By administrator

March 27, 2014

state7862ERBIL-Hewlêr, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— A high-level Kurdish source revealed on Thursday, the enrollment of young Kurdish students including the son of a known official to Islamic-jihadists to fight in Syria.

According to Kurdish sources spoke previously for Shafaq news, eight young Kurds from Kurdistan Region have been killed so far in fighting in Syria.

The source, who asked for anonymity said that “7 Kurdish students at the Islamic Institute of the Ministry of Endowment joined fight in Syria after joining Islamic-jihadists from the ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Sham) linked to al-Qaeda terrorist organization.

According to the obtained information, one of the students is the son of a senior official in Kurdistan Ministry of Endowments.

He added that these students are all from Erbil province.

Since the intensification of the civil war in Syria, reports talk about enrollment of young Kurds from the cities of Kurdistan to Nusrah front and the ISIS to fight the Syrian government forces.

The Ministry of Endowment in Kurdistan Regional Government has accused the regional intelligence of recruiting young Kurds and urging them to go to fight in Syria.

The ministry also issued instructions to the imams and preachers in the region, calling to advise young people not to go to any place under the name of “jihad”.
Source: shafaaq.com | Ekurd.net 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ihadists ISIS, Iraq, Kurdistan, Syria, Turkey

Davutoglu defends Syria policy calling Media “evil-minded”

March 27, 2014 By administrator

 By Tulin Daloglu Posted March 26, 2014 for Al-Monitor.

These two incidents show just how dark the situation has become along the Turkey-Syria border. Since March 16, Turkish government authorities have expressed concern that the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) threatens to lower Turkey’s flag at the Tomb of Suleiman Shah in Syria — the only sovereign Turkish territory outside its borders. They say the Turkish military is fully authorized to defend the tomb. Then, Turkey shot down a Syrian fighter jet on March 23, claiming it violated Turkish airspace.

While Turkish political commentators raised doubts over whether there is any link between these two events and the local elections on March 30, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on March 25 that the event cannot be seen as an “election maneuver.” Davutoglu blamed the media for “being a spokesperson for [Syrian President Bashar al-] Assad’s regime,” calling them “evil-minded.”

Davutoglu could be using these fear-mongering tactics to rally people behind his Syria policy. A December 2013 public opinion poll conducted by Kadir Has University found that almost 50% of the Turkish people believe Turkey’s Syria policy has been a failure. If this figure is applied to the constituency of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), it may also show that the country is direly divided along political leanings, even on key foreign policy issues that could drag the country into conflict. Furthermore, Davutoglu’s description of all those dissenting as “evil-minded” is no different than Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accusing people who have different views on Syria of “treason.”

This kind of overblown and unsubstantiated narrative unfortunately kills the opportunity to rethink the country’s Syria policy. Meanwhile, the AKP government fails to admit its failed policy to topple the Assad regime.

There certainly is an ambiguity surrounding the Turkish government’s decision to shoot down the Syrian jet fighter. “It looks like Turkey has deliberately brought down that [MiG-23],” a NATO source, who did not want to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue, told Al-Monitor. “We doubt that there was any threat to Turkey. It looks like Turkey took down this Syrian jet to help the radical groups.”

The Syrian MiG-23 was shot down near the Syrian border town of Kassab when it violated Turkish airspace by 1 kilometer (0.6 miles). “It is highly likely that those radical Islamic groups, like Jabhat al-Nusra and others, entered Syria through Turkey to take control of Kassab, very close to the Turkish border,” Yasin Atlioglu, an assistant professor at Nigde University who specializes in Syrian affairs, told Al-Monitor. “The Syrian army and the local militia fired back at these radical groups. The Syrian regime and Armenian publications directly blamed Turkey for these radical groups’ attack on Kassab. While Turkey may become the target of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), it is also, on the other hand, helping facilitate the attacks of these radical groups at the border.”

On March 25, the Armenian Bar Association sent a letter to US President Barack Obama urging him to take concrete steps for the safety of the Armenian people in Syria. “The fate of Armenians and other Christians in Syria should never be deemed or accepted as collateral damage of the rebels, who have and continue to receive the support of our government,” they wrote. “The incursion from Turkey into the town and villages of Kassab in Syria, and the ensuing carnage, the reported killings and the taking of Armenians as hostages, should be met with your condemnation and strategic plan of recovery, restitution and return.”

There certainly is a real debate outside Turkey’s borders about its Syria policy. “Turkey has done [its] best to encourage this chaotic situation,” one European source, who asked not to be identified, told Al-Monitor. “Turkey picked up the strategy of helping these radicals [because they considered it a helpful tool to bring about Assad’s end.] This cannot be reversed now. It’s been a stupid move by the Turkish side, as that prevented the United States from acting in Syria.”

The same European source added, “The United States was clear on Jabhat al-Nusra from the beginning; it labeled it as a terrorist group from early on. That, however, did not prevent the Turkish side from doing what they’re doing. The bombing of the Syrian [MiG-23] was for helping these radicals.”

NATO sources told Al-Monitor that, in an unofficial setting, NATO member countries expressed concern over the Turkish action at the Turkey-Syria border to Fatih Ceylan, Turkey’s permanent representative to NATO ambassador. “In next week’s NATO foreign ministers meeting [April 1-2] …, I assume that people will directly share their concern with Minister Davutoglu over Turkish behavior. They will probably give the message that they do not want to be dragged into the Syrian quagmire while the Ukraine issue is keeping them busy at this stage,” a NATO source told Al-Monitor. “Unless Turkey brings this issue to the agenda, these issues will not be discussed in an official setting.”

European sources told Al-Monitor that when Turkey called NATO for an emergency session in October 2012, after a cross-border incident with Syrian mortar fire left five dead in the Turkish border village of Akcakale, Turkey briefed NATO member countries about the Tomb of Suleiman Shah. Turkish authorities said that beginning March 16, the tomb has received threats from ISIS. Turkish media reports even claim that special forces are positioned at the border in case of an attack on the tomb.

A YouTube clip, uploaded on March 21, shows four men in front of the ISIS flag giving Turkey three days to lower its flag at the tomb, or else they will raze it. “We don’t know who these people are, exactly,” the European source told Al-Monitor. “All I can tell is that Turkey does not need to brief us each time about the Suleiman Shah Tomb. They did it in October 2012. But if there is a direct threat, they should tell NATO members. In the absence of it, we really do not believe that this threat is a serious one.” This supposed deadline extended by ISIS ended on March 24, and the tomb has not been attacked.

NATO has deployed Patriot missiles to Turkey to help strengthen its security in case of a potential Syrian attack on its territory. NATO sources say that Turkey is acting as if it does not appreciate the support. It is, however, clear that NATO and EU member countries are doubtful of Turkey’s Syria approach, and they don’t find Turkey innocent with regard to allowing these radical groups to exploit its borders and turn the situation in Syria to carnage.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenians, calling Media "evil-minded", Kessab, Syria, Turkey

Syria: Rebels on the offensive with new weapons

March 27, 2014 By administrator

PRESS REVIEW

Featuring ground-to-air missiles, Islamist insurgents advancing in Aleppo, Idlib and in the province of Latakia, the stronghold of Assad.

We expected a rebel attack from the south, via Jordan, with logistical support Saudi. But after losing last week Yabroud and Krak des Chevaliers, the response of the anti-Assad finally came from northern Syria through Turkey and with new weapons supplied by Qatar.

Against the attack spans three provinces. First that of Aleppo, where the regime has lost neighborhoods Layramoun and Mount Chwayhné, which dominates the west of the city, and saved many casualties. This weakens the insurgents advanced Zahra government district in north-west of Aleppo, where the center formidable intelligence services of the air force, the rebels seek to take for months. To the west, in Idlib province, the army has given fifteen checkpoints near Khan Cheikhoun, and the regime has no more as military bases and Wadi al-Deif Hamadiyé, surrounded and supplied by air. Finally, last week, three Islamist groups – the al-Front Nosra, Cham al-Islam and Ansar al-Islam – attack the province of Latakia, hitherto relatively untouched by the fighting. This region, Alawite majority, confession of President Bashar al-Assad, is one of the main strongholds of the regime.

The scheme not yet threatened Monday, insurgents captured the station Kassab, one of the last official crossing points still in the hands of the regime along the border with Turkey. They also took control of the Armenian village of Kassab six kilometers from the border, and fighting is still raging in neighboring hamlets. In response, the Air Force launches explosive barrels in the area near the Jabal Turkman, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, based in London, which has recorded at least 170 deaths on both else. Damascus accuses Turkey of having lent a hand to the jihadists. Sunday Ankara aviation shot a Syrian plane, which had violated Turkish airspace, according to the Turkish authorities, was denied by Damascus. “The rebels want to cut the road between the Armenian enclave Kassab in Latakia, where a calm reigns three years since the conflict began,” decrypts the researcher Fabrice Balanche.

Tuesday, the rebels would have seized the port Samra, at the Turkish border. This would allow them to have their own point of maritime supplies. This offensive, which does not threaten the regime owes nothing to chance. “We received weapons that Qatar had promised including surface to air missiles,” says an official of the opposition. Through recent deliveries, Doha seeks to strengthen the capacity of action groups that are close to him, to the detriment of those sponsored by rival Saudi. It is also to show that when the Arab summit held in Kuwait, dedicated to the Syrian drama, rebellion is far from having said its last word. And a few days after the bittersweet about Robert Ford, “Mr. Syria” at the State Department, who just resign. “Assad will remain in power in the medium term, and the opposition has failed to reassure the minority Alawite Assad to loose it” regretted Mr. Ford on his return to the United States.

Georges Malbrunot

LE FIGARO

Thursday, March 27, 2014,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Kessab, Rebel, Syria

Armenian MPs meet with Syria’s Assad in Damascus

March 27, 2014 By administrator

The Armenian parliamentary delegation, headed by Republican lawmaker Samvel Farmanyan, met on Thursday with the Syrian president in Damascus.

20140327-150133_h535625Bashar al-Assad warned, during the talks, of the terrorism and extremism threats which he said receives backing from the West and several countries in the region, the SANA News Agency reported.
He told the Armenian MPs that the extremist ideology is a serious challenge to the region which has been historically known for its cultural and social diversity.

Mr Farmanyan conveyed to the Syrian leader a message from President Serzh Sargsyan in which the latter condemned Turkey-backed terrorist groups’ attacks against the Armenian populated town of Kassab.

“We have discussed the situation at the meetings, as well as the condition of our compatriots. After the return to Yerevan, we will share more details of both the outcomes of the fact-finding mission and the impressions with the president, prime minister and the National Assembly,” said the Republican MP.

For his part, President al-Assad appreciated the Armenian leader’s objective position on Syria, considering it supportive of the country’s stability. He highlighted parliamentarians’ role in revealing threats of terrorism and extremism.

At the end, the Armenian lawmakers expressed solidarity with the Syrian government, underling that the country will manage to resume its reputation as a crossroad of different cultures.

The delegation headed to Syria on a fact-finding mission Wednesday. They had plans to visit other Armenian-populated areas but weren’t recommended to for security considerations.

#savekessab

#kessab

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Damascus., Kessab, Syria

Demokrat Haber: Looters of Armenian houses in Kessab spoke Turkish

March 27, 2014 By administrator

Turkish lootersOpposition Turkish media actively cover the events in the Armenian-populated town of Kessab in Syria neighboring with the Turkish province of Hatay and in nearby districts.

Citing information received from Syrian Armenians, Demokrat Haber reports that looters of Armenian houses in Kessab speak Turkish.

When Kessab resident Ani Boymushakyan called the office of the Armenian Evangelical Church in Kessab, jihadists fighting against Assad answered in Turkish. According to another Armenian, when he called his apartment after moving to Latakia, rebels answered, who he said also spoke Turkish.

On March 21, the Armenian-populated town of Kessab in Syria was attacked by armed bands from three points in Turkey. The Armenian residents were forced to abandon the town and were evacuated to neighboring Latakia.

#kessab

#savekessab

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: #savekessab, Armenian, Syria, Turkish

Azerbaijani mercenaries are among rebels who penetrated into Syria – Armenian MP

March 27, 2014 By administrator

#savekessab

Kessab Azerbaijan“Speaker of Syrian People’s Assembly Mohammad Jihad al-Laham has confirmed that there are Azerbaijani mercenaries among the armed rebels who penetrated into Syria,” member of Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) parliamentary faction Samvel Farmanyan wrote on his Facebook page.

A delegation of Armenian MPs plans to meet with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus today.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Azerbaijani mercenaries, Kessab, Syria

Turkish Activists Condemn Ongoing Offences in Kessab

March 27, 2014 By administrator

turkish-writersPublisher Sait Cetinoglu (left) and author Ragip Zarakolu, two of Turkey’s most prominent intellectuals

YEREVAN (Armenpress)—The attacks against the Armenian-populated Syrian town of Kessab and Turkey’s support to the terrorists carrying out the attacks has angered some Turkish intellectuals. As Turkey’s DemokratHaber.net reports, prominent Turkish publisher and author Ragip Zarakolu and publicist Sait Cetinoglu have voiced their concerns.

“Al-Qaeda’s group easily crossed the border with Antakya and attacked the magnificent region of Kessab, situated right on the opposite side of the border. Among the other peculiarities of Kessab is that it is an Armenian-populated town. But now Kessab is totally empty. The local population has again had to migrate after 1915 and then 1939. They have currently fled to Latakia,” Ragip Zarakolu underscored.

Another Turkish intellectual Sait Cetinoglu stated that the houses of the Armenians are being robbed. Among other things Sait Cetinoglu emphasized: “I have friends in Kessab. Historian Hakob Cholakian from Musa Dagh also lives in Kessab. I am concerned with the situation my friends appeared in. Kessab was a real paradise on earth. What a pity that nothing will be left from that beauty. There are testimonies saying that the looting is coordinated from Turkey.”

The armed incursion began on Friday, March 21, with rebels associated with Al-Qaeda’s al-Nusra Front, Sham al-Islam and Ansar al-Sham crossing the Turkish border and attacking the Armenian civilian population of Kessab. The attackers immediately seized two guard posts overlooking Kessab, including a strategic hill known as Observatory 45 and later took over the border crossing point with Turkey. Snipers targeted the civilian population and launched mortar attacks on the town and the surrounding villages.

According to eyewitness accounts, the attackers crossed the Turkish border with Syria openly passing through Turkish military barracks. According to Turkish media reports, the attackers carried their injured back to Turkey for treatment in the town of Yayladagi.

Some 670 Armenian families, the majority of the population of Kessab, were evacuated by the local Armenian community leadership to safer areas in neighboring Basit and Latakia. Ten to fifteen families with relations too elderly to move were either unable to leave or chose to stay in their homes.

On Saturday, March 22, Syrian troops launched a counteroffensive in an attempt to regain the border crossing point, eye-witnesses and state media reported. However, on Sunday, March 23, the extremist groups once again entered the town of Kessab, took the remaining Armenian families hostage, desecrated the town’s three Armenian churches, pillaging local residences and occupying the town and surrounding villages.

Located in the northwestern corner of Syria, near the border with Turkey, Kessab had, until very recently, evaded major battles in the Syrian conflict. The local Armenian population had increased in recent years with the city serving as safe-haven for those fleeing from the war-torn cities of Yacubiye, Rakka and Aleppo.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: #savekessab, Armenia, Syria, Turkey, Turkish Activists

ANC of Europe Appeals to EU Leaders for Action on Kessab

March 27, 2014 By administrator

#savekessab

BRUSSELS—The President of the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy (ANC of Europe) Kaspar Karampetian has sent a letter to the President of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, the EAFJD1President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, and the President of the European Parliament, Martin Schulz. The letter reads:

“In the last days, we are very much concerned with what’s happening in Syria, particularly in the region of Kessab, at the north-westernmost border of Syria with Turkey, where Al-Qaeda affiliated extremists attacked the region from Turkey, and drove the civilian population out of their homes.

“We would like to draw your attention on this matter, and ask you to intervene and stop the organized attacks on the Armenian population, a region that is since centuries predominantly inhabited by Armenians. The civilian population had to be evacuated south to safer regions along the coastline. They are being hosted by their relatives and the Armenian community in Latakia, in churches and communal areas. Armenians all over the world are supporting them, especially European-Armenian communities, which have strong ties to Kessab.

“In Syria, where the largest Armenian community of the Middle East exists, and since the conflict in the country, Armenians are very aware of Turkey’s role in assisting the extremists. For us, Turkey is continuing her genocidal policy against the Armenians, against the Armenian community in Syria. What was not wiped out in the deserts of Syria in 1915 is now being annihilated by the current Turkish state.

“You, Presidents of EU Institutions – the EU, a Nobel peace prize holder – have the authority today to stop Turkey’s aggression against the Armenians of Kessab, and stop the uprooting of a minority group, which already twice has been the target of Turkey’s intolerance. Giving ground, assistance and intelligence for cross-border attacks to Al-Qaeda extremists, to target a civilian population should not be tolerated.

‘In the past, EU countries have given considerable humanitarian aid to Armenians fleeing Ottoman Turkish persecutions. Today, they are being persecuted anew. We urge you to immediately call on Turkey to stop assisting these extremist groups in attacking the Armenian population of the region, and in cooperation with Kristalina Georgieva, EU Commissioner for International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Response, to direct immediate humanitarian assistance to the displaced population of Kessab, currently sheltered in Latakia. What they need now is assistance and support – until they get on their feet again, and rebuild their villages, something that they already have done twice.

‘Given the urgency of the matter, we are ready to meet you, or other EU senior officials, at any given moment, to discuss matters of humanitarian aid for Kessab residents and Syrian Armenians in general.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: #savekessab, Armenia, Syria

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