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Armenia ready to send more troops to help the United Nations in Lebanon

August 27, 2015 By administrator

arton115440-480x270Armenia is ready to increase the number of its soldiers serving in the mission of the United Nations peacekeeping in Lebanon, announced yesterday Ohanian, the defense minister. The mission is led at present by the Italian army.
Ohanian has offered the deployment of additional troops at a meeting with the Italian Ambassador to Armenia, Giovanni Ricciulli and his military attaché based in Moscow, Brigadier General Massimo Fogari. In a statement

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, Lebanon, troops, UN

UN Security Council unanimously endorses Iran nuclear deal

July 20, 2015 By administrator

UN-endorse-iranThe U.N. Security Council has unanimously endorsed the landmark nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers.

The resolution, co-sponsored by all 15 council members and adopted Monday morning, also authorizes a series of measures leading to the end of U.N. sanctions that have hurt Iran’s economy, Associated Press said.

But the measure also provides a mechanism for U.N. sanctions to “snap back” in place if Iran fails to meet its obligations.
The resolution had been agreed to by the five veto-wielding council members, who along with Germany negotiated the nuclear deal with Iran.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: deal, endorses, Iran, nuclear, UN

Genocide Prevention Resolution adopted by UN Human Rights Council message to entire world – experts

March 29, 2015 By administrator

f5517aab1042a9_5517aab1042cb.thumbThe Armenia-submitted Genocide Prevention Resolution, which was adopted at the 28th session of the UN Human Rights Council, proves that Armenia is struggling not only for recognition of the Armenian Genocide, but also for preventing further genocides, Director of the Institute of Oriental Studies Ruben Safrastyan told Tert.am.

This most important initiative succeeded. Armenia is thus not only showing its concern, but is also taking specific steps.
“This way of action must become one of our diplomatic priorities,” Mr Safaryan said.

As regards the importance of the resolution in the context of international recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide, the scholar stressed that the entire civilized world is well aware Armenia’s initiative is no coincidence.

Expert in Turkic studies Ruben Melkonyan says that genocide prevention is a panhuman task, and the resolution adopted by the UN Human Rights Council is evidence that the organization is responsible for dealing with the humankind’s problems in the right way.

Armenia’s initiative must be considered within context of the Armenian Genocide centennial.

“We can suppose that the adoption of the resolution is at least a political ‘message’ to the entire world, particularly to Turkey. We can regard the resolution as silent support for the opinions on the Armenian Genocide. That is, without placing any emphasis, the UN is condemning Turkey, urging it to admit the Armenian Genocide.”

The entire civilized world is well aware that Armenia is champion of international recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and this is one of Armenia’s foreign policy priorities.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: #armenianGenocide, Armenian, council, Human rights, UN

Copy of Pan-Armenian Declaration handed over to UN chief

March 12, 2015 By administrator

189269Permanent Representative of Armenia to UN Zohrab Mnatsakanyan handed over the text of the Pan-Armenian Declaration on Armenian Genocide centennial translated into all UN official languages to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Mediamax reports.

Mnatsakanyan noted that the Declaration aims to strengthen and develop the universal struggle against the crime of genocide. The Secretary General hailed Armenia’s active involvement in versatile international processes as well as its support to the activities of the UN office.

Mnatsakanyan informed Ban about the Armenian Genocide centennial events, stressing their importance in terms of pointing to the inadmissibility of atrocities and reinforcing consistent steps aimed at genocide prevention.

The Armenian ambassador also briefed on Aurora Humanitarian Award officially launched on March 10, as part of the 100 LIVES initiative launched in New York to express gratitude to the individuals and institutions whose heroic actions saved Armenian lives during the Genocide 100 years ago..

Besides, the exchanged views on the peaceful settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict. The UN Secretary General reaffirmed the ongoing support to the resolution of the conflict within the OSCE Minsk Group, in accordance with their proposals.

The Armenian Genocide

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths reaching 1.5 million.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the Genocide survivors.

Present-day Turkey denies the fact of the Armenian Genocide, justifying the atrocities as “deportation to secure Armenians”. Only a few Turkish intellectuals, including Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and scholar Taner Akcam, speak openly about the necessity to recognize this crime against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide was recognized by Uruguay, Russia, France, Lithuania, the Italian Chamber of Deputies, majority of U.S. states, parliaments of Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, Belgium and Wales, National Council of Switzerland, Chamber of Commons of Canada, Polish Sejm, Vatican, European Parliament and the World Council of Churches.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: declaration, pan armenian, UN

Urgent Message from Zeynep Tozduman human right activist? “Kidnapped Syrian, Assyrian women”

March 4, 2015 By administrator

Zeynep Tozduman

Dear friends,   please go to  www.change.org (see bellow the English version)

TYtwHcIIuHmdcUr-800x450-noPadIRAK/HABUR’DAKİ SÜRYANİ SOYKIRIMINA VE KAÇIRILAN KADINLARIN BULUNMASI İÇİN BM KADIN ÖRGÜTÜNÜ VE DÜNYA KADIN ÖRGÜTLERİNİ GÖREVE ÇAĞIRIYORUZ !!!

”Birleşmiş Milletler (BM) barış ve güvenliğin korunması, sürdürülebilir kalkınmanın desteklenmesi ve insan haklarının güvence altına alınmasını içeren Türkiye dâhil 51 ülke tarafından dünya barışını, güvenliğini korumak ve uluslar arasında ekonomik, toplumsal ve kültürel bir iş birliği oluşturmak için kurulan uluslararası bir örgüttür. Silahsızlanma ve silah denetimi konusunda önerilerde bulunmak. Barış ve güvenliği etkileyecek görüşmeler yapmak, her konuda önerilerde bulunmak. Ülkeler arasındaki iyi ilişkileri bozucu sorunların, barışcıl yollarla çözümü için önerilerde bulunmak. Birleşmiş Milletler,

-Kadınlar ve kız çocuklarına karşı şiddeti sonlandırmak;
– Barış ve güvenlik sürecinin her alanına kadınların katılımını sağlamak en temel görevidir ”.

Dünya 8 Mart Dünya Emekçi Kadınlar gününe yaklaştığımız bu günlerde, Habur’da Süryani soykırımı yaşayan Süryani kadınlarının çığlıklarını görünür kılmak ve BM Kadın Örgütlerini ve uluslararası Kadın örgütlerini, biz aşağıda imzası bulunan kişi ve kurumlar olarak göreve çağırıyoruz.

23 Şubat 2014’de Irak / Habur’da İŞİD ( İsis ) terör örgütü; Asur/ Süryani/ Keldani ( Doğu Hristiyanları) halkına karşı, etno- dinsel- kültürel soykırım yapılmakta, yaklaşık 3000 insan yerinden, yurdundan edilerek 400 kadın, çoluk çocuk, yaşlı demeden İŞİD militanlarının elinde rehin olarak tutulmakta, bu halka ait binlerce yıllık tarihi eserleri dünyanın gözü önünde yıkılmaktadır. Hala kaçırılan Kadın ve çocuklardan bu güne değin bir haber alınamamıştır. 2014 Haziran ayında Şengal’de kaçırılan Ezidi kadınlarını Köle pazarlarında pazarlayan, fuhuş sektöründe kullanan İŞİD terör örgütü şimdi de Süryani kadınlarına aynı şeyi yaşatmadan BM Kadın Örgütlerini ve Dünya kadın örgütlerini imzaladıkları sözleşmeler doğrultusunda göreve çağırıyoruz.

Ayrıca, bu 8 Mart’ı tüm dünya kadın örgütleri olarak Soykırımlarda, katliamlarda hayatlarını kaybeden Süryani kadınlarına ve Özgecan şahsında Şiddete ve Tecavüze uğrayan tüm kadınlara ithaf edilmesini istiyoruz.

Bölgede İŞİD terörünü durdurmak, rehin alınan Süryani Kadınlarını sağ- salim teslim almak, kadın katliamlarını durdurmak ve bölgede kalıcı bir barışı sağlamak için BM Kadın örgütünü ve Dünya kadın örgütlerini göreve davet ediyoruz.

ENGLİSH VERSİON 

IRAQ / THE ASSYRİAN GENOCİDE İN HABUR AND MISSED FOR THE PRESENCE OF WOMEN’S ORGANIZATIONS AND WORLD WOMEN’S ORGANIZATIONS THE UN WOMEN WE CALL A DUTY !!! ”

The United Nations (UN), the preservation of peace and security, sustainable development, the promotion and protection of human rights safeguarding containing the world peace by 51 countries, including Turkey, to protect the security and among nations economically, is an international organization established to create a social culturall cooperation.

Advising on disarmament and arms control. Peace and discussions will affect the security, advising on everything. Good relations between the countries disruptive problems, make suggestions for the solution by peaceful means.

United Nations, to end the violence against -Women and girls; – Ensure the participation of women in all areas of peace and security is the most basic task process’. World these days we approach the March 8 International Working Women’s day, in habur appear screams of Syriac genocide living Syrian women make to the UN Women’s Organization and international women’s organizations, we urge you to act as individuals and institutions who have signed below.

February 23, 2014 in Iraq / Habur Isidor (Isis), a terrorist organization; Assyrian / Syriac / Chaldean (Eastern Christians) against the people, ethno-religious-cultural genocide carried out, about 3,000 people displaced, 400 women by the dorm, children, is being held as a hostage in the hands of elderly Isidor militants, thousands of years of historical monuments in the world of this ring are collapsed into consideration. Still abducted women and children could not be news until this day.

2014 The markets in missed Ezidi women slave market in Sengal in June, Isidor terrorist organization uses in prostitution without dictating the same thing is now the Syrian Women UN Women Organization and we urge you to work in agreement with the direction they signed the world women’s organizations. In addition, in this March 8 women’s organizations all over the world as genocide in the massacre in Syrian women who lost their lives and Ozgecan person we want to be dedicated to all women subjected to violence and rape. Isidor stop terrorism in the region,

Syrian women to receive right- taken hostage unharmed, to stop the massacre of women and to ensure a lasting peace in the UN women’s organizations and women’s organizations in the world are invited to task.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Assyrian, change, help, UN, woman

UN envoy in solidarity visit to Syria’s Assyrians

March 1, 2015 By administrator

DAMASCUS – Agence France-Presse

UN special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura (R) AFP Photo

UN special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura (R)
AFP Photo

UN envoy Staffan de Mistura paid a surprise visit on March 1 to a church near war-wracked Syria’s capital in a show of solidarity with the country’s Christian minority targeted by jihadists.

An AFP photographer said de Mistura travelled in a two-car UN convoy to a Greek Catholic church in Jaramana, southeast of Damascus, and met with priest Toma Asitivo Kaka.

The church has been used as a place of refuge for Assyrian Christians fleeing the chaos of Iraq after the 2003 US-led invasion of that country.

His visit coincided with a mass of solidarity with the scores of Syrian Assyrians kidnapped by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Hassakeh province of northeast Syria.

Last week, ISIL kidnapped 220 Assyrians in the Tal Tamr area where the extremist Islamist group has seized control of 10 Christian villages, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Almost 5,000 people have since fled to Kurdish- and government-controlled areas.

The monitoring group reported that an ISIL “court” has ordered the release of 28 of the abducted Assyrians.

De Mistura, who left for Lebanon after visiting the church, on Saturday held talks in the Syrian capital to try to finalise a deal to freeze fighting in the war-ravaged second city of Aleppo.

He met Foreign Minister Walid Muallem and agreed to send a delegation from his Damascus office to Aleppo on a fact-finding mission, state news agency SANA said, without giving a date.

The Swedish-Italian diplomat “hopes to set in motion as soon as possible his project” to halt fighting in Aleppo for six weeks, said a member of his delegation.

He has met government officials and opposition chiefs in recent weeks to promote his plan for a temporary truce in Aleppo in order to move aid into the northern city.

Once Syria’s commercial hub, Aleppo has been devastated by fighting that began in mid-2012, and the city is now split between loyalist forces and rebels.

About 220,000 people have been killed in Syria since its conflict began in March 2011 with anti-government protests that spiralled into a multi-sided civil war drawing foreign jihadists.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Assyrian, envoy, jihadists, Syria, UN

Israeli President recognizes the Armenian genocide at the UN

January 29, 2015 By administrator

arton107536-480x278Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said Wednesday before the General Assembly of the United Nations as “cynical” accusations against Israel of genocide and war crimes detrimental to the world body’s ability to fight against the real thing.

Speaking to mark the International Day of Holocaust Remembrance before the assembly, Reuven Rivlin mentioned the Armenian genocide of 1915 – killed more than a million Armenian citizens of Turkey – which is nevertheless not recognized as a genocide by Israel says Haaretz.

Rivlin said: “In 1915, the days of the Armenian Genocide, Avshalom Feinberg of the underground NILI [A Jewish spy network in Ottoman Palestine] wrote the following:” My teeth were clenched in anger, which is the next? I stepped on the holy and sacred land, on the road to Jerusalem, and wondered if this time we were living in 1915 or in the days of Titus or Nebuchadnezzar? And I wondered if I could weep for the hurt of the daughter of my people and if Jeremiah would not have shed tears of blood as for Armenians? “

Rivlin added, “Feinberg wrote that there are exactly 100 years. 100 years of hesitation and denial. In the Land of Israel of that time, on which I was born, no one has denied the murder occurred. The inhabitants of Jerusalem, my parents saw them coming by the thousands, hungry, burning like sticks snatched from the fire. In Jerusalem, they found refuge and their descendants live there to this day. “

Reuven Rivlin called on the United Nations to set red lines beyond which the international community should intervene to stop the genocide. He then said: “At the same time we must remember that the fixing of red lines forces us to stop diluting and cynically exploit them in the name of pseudo-objectivity, as is done in the rhetoric of rights Man with the use of terms such as “genocide” for political purposes. “

Citing the “shameful” UN resolution later invalidated, on Zionism as “his greatest enemy” racism, Reuven Rivlin continued:

“Nevertheless, the absurd comparisons such as this that we Israelis are exposed constantly … not only confuse allied with the enemy, but they undermine the ability of this House to fight effectively against the genocide phenomenon.”

In his introduction, delivered in English, Reuven Rivlin called attention to the current fighting in the north, saying they represented Israel’s struggle against the global challenge of “terrorism.”

“I am here at a time of great tension in our region. My heart and my thoughts are with my people Israel. Terrorism does not distinguish between the blood. In this war, all of us, all the United Nations, the countries of the free world, must form a united front, “said Rivlin.

He delivered the body of his speech in Hebrew – “the same language in which my Jewish colleagues shouted” Shema Israel “as they marched to the gas chambers. The language of my brothers and sisters, we honor today. “.

Thursday, January 29, 2015,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Israeli, president, Recognizes, UN

Aleppo Photographer Brings Syrian Reality to the United Nations

January 22, 2015 By administrator

dscn6768Hagop Vanesian’s exhibition, “My Homeland,” ran at the United Nations Headquarters from January 8-16.

by Eva Bartlett,

Twenty-six distinct photos, in black and white. Scenes of a ravaged city and the human beings within struggling to exist, let alone to find hope for the future. Gravestones of rubble. Homes looted, trashed. Civilians defending their country. Children aged beyond their years by the horrors they’ve lived.

Hagop Vanesian, a 44 year old Syrian-Armenian photographer from Syria’s second-largest city, Aleppo (Halab), was meticulous in his choice of photographs for the exhibition, “My Homeland,” which opened at the United Nations Headquarters on January 8 and runs until January 16.

“I chose the photographs showing the destruction, and children. I have many photographs of children, maybe 25-30 percent are of children, these little angels suffering. They are innocent, they don’t understand about politics, they suffer a lot.”

Vanesian, a silversmith by trade, started taking photos twelve years ago, and very early on started documenting his city, building by building.

“Before the war, I was doing documentary photography all over Aleppo. Everyday, I took my camera and photographed people, how they were living,” Vanesian said. “When the war started, I decided to document it. It was very hard at first. For the first couple of days, I couldn’t take a single photograph. This was my birth place, where I grew up. I have memories there, but even my memories were destroyed, especially in Old Aleppo.”

Iman Tahan, from Aleppo, spoke of her feelings after seeing the photos. “These photos, I wish they weren’t real, I wish nothing like this had happened to my country. I remember every street in these photos. I feel so sad, a lot of memories there.”

One of the memories she spoke of was the murder of her father, in his home, by terrorists.

“We have a well in our house, and since there’s no water—because the ‘rebels’ broke the pipes—my father was giving water to neighbours. He was in his house when a sniper entered the garden and shot him, killed him. Those ‘rebels’ don’t represent the Syrian people. Syrian soldiers aren’t fighting against normal people, they’re fighting against people equipped with the most advanced weapons and trained just to come to Syria. They destroy our homes, churches, mosques. But what makes me happy, our people, because they love Syria so much, decided not to leave. Even my dad, he knew he lived in a very dangerous area, but he decided not to leave, and he paid for it with his life.”

Narrating to those around him, Vanesian explained the significance of and story behind each photo. Of one photo, a smiling woman holding a photo of a young man, he said: “When she saw me photographing, she started to cry. She said, ‘please, don’t photograph this, let us remember Aleppo as it was.’ Then she asked me to photograph she and her son. From her purse she took a photograph of her son, with a big, proud smile. Her son was martyred. Brave woman, Syrian woman.”

For Vanesian, the stories behind the photos need to be told. “Some photographers have come and taken photos, stayed one week, two weeks… They photographed the camps, photographed the war from the other side. Maybe they got more powerful photographs than me. But what I got, I got the stories of the people. Because I lived there, I suffered like them. As they were living, I was living. Without water, without electricity.”

Until about eight months ago, Vanesian was living the life of an average Syrian in Aleppo, except that he was also documenting it.

“One day, I was walking in the Old City, drinking sahlab (made of milk, with cinnamon),” he said. “After I finished, I threw my cup on the ground… there was no trash can. I saw a child, maybe four years old, pick up the cup and start licking the remainders of the sahlab. I couldn’t bring myself to photograph him. When I saw this child licking my cup, I thought, ‘where is the humanity?’ I can’t forget him.”

Pointing at his photographs, he noted two “residential graveyard” photos: one, a group of children and women sitting amongst the gravestones, and the second, a young girl standing near a tombstone.

“Residential areas in Aleppo, and children’s playgrounds, have turned into graveyards. The tombstones of these graves are made from stones from collapsed buildings. I asked the girl in the second photo, ‘What are you doing?’ It was a snowy day. She said she wanted to know where they were going to put the body of her aunt, she wanted to see the place.”

Regarding the photo of a sombre-faced boy, dressed in a suit jacket for ‘Eid holiday, he commented: “That boy, his father is kidnapped, his mother killed. He’s living with his aunt, near the front line of the fighting. Did you see his eyes? I didn’t find any children smiling. They’ve lost their smiles.”

Other photographs show the expected bullet-ridden walls and bullet-shredded metal doors, including one photo with two children, likewise sombre-faced, standing next to a warped metal door.

“If you look closely at the children’s eyes, you see the anger. They’re not smiling, they’re like adults. They grew up, they saw what adults see. They’re around 10 and 13 years old. Before, children in Syria were smiling, but these last few years, you don’t see that. They will need psychological treatment in the future. The psychological damage is worse than the physical damage.”

One particularly poignant photograph—a man with one leg missing, on crutches, gun slung over shoulder—shows the determination of the man, reflects the determination of Syria, to fight back and survive.

“He’s defending his neighbourhood in Aleppo, but actually he was displaced from Nubool, the village where he lost his leg during fighting. He is still fighting, even with one leg. He will fight to the end,” said Vanesian.

Two photos of homes looted and destroyed, one Christian, one Muslim, speak of Syria’s multi-religious fabric, that most Syrians I’ve spoken with maintain was never sectarian.

“I intentionally put these photos side-by-side. It’s not only Muslim houses that are looted, Christian homes are too. They don’t differentiate, doesn’t matter whose house, they’re going to loot it.”

Unsurprisingly, the anti-Syrian group, the so-called “National Syrian Coalition” issued a letter accusing the exhibition as being propaganda, and calling for the display to be shut down.

Syrians attending the exhibition felt otherwise.

Rana Nasrallah, a Syrian from the predominantly Druze city of Sweida, now living in New Jersey, was among Syrian expats attending the exhibition.

“Each picture talks, speaks of the different problems in Syria. These photos show the truth exactly as it is in Syria. I was in Syria a month and a half ago, I saw with my eyes. I had a good life there. I feel broken for what has happened to my country.”

Fadi, from Midan, what he describes as a mixed Armenian-Muslim area of Aleppo near the front line of the fighting, agreed that the exhibition was representative of the reality.

“One hundred percent, the photos tell the truth. I’m Muslim. We never had any sectarian problems. We lived together, doesn’t matter what you believe, who you pray to. Now…”

Al-Akhbar and al-Mayadeen correspondent Nizar Abboud attended, reporting on the exhibition but also pointing out the need for such an exhibition. “The world is hearing one point of view on Syria, and this is not by coincidence. I think this is premeditated. Also, there is self-censorship in the media, including my colleagues who work at the United Nations. They like to play the tunes those who pay them would like to hear. “

Earlier, in a private interview, the Syrian Ambassador to the UN, Dr. Bashar al-Ja’afari—who organized and attended the exhibition—told me: “For four years I have been trying very hard to do something inside the UN. Every time we attempted to do something, we were confronted by a huge amount of bureaucracy and excuses.” He, too, said the intent of the exhibition was not political. “It’s about Syria and the Syrian people. It’s about what happened in Aleppo, through undeniable photos. Any honest, objective Syrian who loves his homeland should have a great interest in showing what is going on in Syria. All Syrians should push for organizing more exhibitions, not only at the United Nations but all over the world.”

One of the accusations thrown at Vanesian is that he had photographed only from areas where the Syrian army was present.

“I photograph the front lines, so I need protection, like most photojournalists in areas of war. Transportation is no longer safe in Syria. Some of my friends and relatives have been kidnapped and we haven’t heard about them for over a year.”

That said, Vanesian took risks with many of his photos, including one shot from the side of the terrorists, unbeknownst to their snipers.

“Most front line lanes are covered with fabric, to block the view of snipers and prevent them from shooting the other side. When I took this photo, my back was to the snipers, but I was hiding behind a stone. The other side of the fabric is the safe area, but I came to this side to take the photo. If I had moved my head, I would have gotten shot. If you put your finger up, they’ll shoot right away.”

While the photographs and the issue of Syria under war from the NATO-Gulf-Turkish-Zionist alliance are inherently political, Vanesian maintains that his objective is solely humanitarian.

“I’m not doing this for political reasons, I just take the photos to let people see what is happening. With my photographs, I just want one thing: for people to remember there are people suffering in Syria. Just let them think, for a moment, about the suffering. I can’t bring back Aleppo as it was. I lost it, as I lost friends, relatives… I can’t bring my city back. The market in Aleppo was the longest enclosed market (in the world). It is burned completely. The destruction of Aleppo is a shame for humanity. The heritage has been destroyed; it belongs to all the world.

All those people in my photos, I didn’t just click the shutter, didn’t just take their photographs, I got their stories. I didn’t make money from their photos. I wanted to show these photos for humanitarian reasons, nothing else.”

Hagop Vanesian’s website is: http://www.hagopvanesian.com

Eva Bartlett is a Canadian freelance journalist and activist who has lived in and written from the Gaza Strip, Syria, and Lebanon. Her blog is https://ingaza.wordpress.com/

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: atrocity, fsa, photos, Syrian-reality, UN

Syria wants UN action against Turkey over Paris attacks suspect

January 22, 2015 By administrator

202847_newsdetailSyria has called on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to take action against Turkey for allowing a French woman linked to militant attacks in Paris to illegally enter Syria along with other foreign fighters.

France launched a search for 26-year-old Hayat Boumeddiene after police killed her partner, Amedy Coulibaly, while storming a Jewish supermarket where he had taken hostages earlier this month. Authorities described her as armed and dangerous.

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu has said Boumeddiene arrived in İstanbul from Madrid on Jan. 2 and that Paris had not asked that she be denied access. Boumeddiene crossed into Syria on Jan. 8, he said.

“That statement is a formal admission of a point that we have repeatedly made … that Turkey remains the main channel to smuggle foreign terrorists and mercenaries from around the world into Syria,” Syria’s UN Ambassador Bashar al-Ja’afari wrote in a letter to the UNSC and UN chief Ban Ki-moon.

“The country is also a route through which they return to their countries or travel to third states,” Ja’afari wrote in the Jan. 12 letter made public on Wednesday.

Damascus has repeatedly accused Turkey of supporting militants during its nearly four-year civil war. Turkey denies enabling the passage of foreign fighters who have swollen the ranks of al-Qaeda-linked groups, but has faced widespread criticism for allowing thousands of them to cross into Syria.

Any action is unlikely as the 15-member council has been largely deadlocked on how to end the Syrian conflict, with Damascus ally Russia, backed by China, pitted against the United States, Britain, France and other Western and Arab states.

Coulibaly said he carried out the Jewish supermarket attack in the name of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a militant group that has seized swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria. His siege came after two gunmen attacked satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo. Seventeen people were killed in three days of violence.

Ja’afari said Turkey, by allowing foreign fighters to pass through the country and into Syria, was violating UNSC counterterrorism resolutions.

“The Syrian Arab Republic therefore calls on the [UNSC] and the international community to take effective action to condemn and curb the Turkish regime’s policies,” Ja’afari wrote. “The Turkish regime must be held accountable for those policies, which endanger international peace and security.”

Turkey’s mission to the United Nations was not immediately available for comment on the accusations by Ja’afari.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, France, ISIL, jaafari, Syria, UN

Syria urges UN to sanction Israel over Damascus airstrikes

December 8, 2014 By administrator

syria_un_damascus_air_strike.thumbSyrian officials demanded that UN impose sanctions on Israel after Tel Aviv conducted airstrikes near Damascus Airport. They say the attack was a heinous crime against their sovereignty by a country which doesn’t hide its policy of supporting terrorism, Russia Today reported.

Tel Aviv committed a heinous crime against Syria’s sovereignty, said Syrian Foreign and Expatriates Ministry in two identical letters to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and to the Chair of the UN Security Council, SANA news agency reported.

The attack aimed to support armed terrorist groups in Syria, especially after Damascus made some progress in the cities of Deir Ezzor, Aleppo and Daraa, say Syrian officials.

The Syrian Foreign Ministry called for UN officials to impose sanctions on Israel, whose authorities“don’t hide their policies in supporting terrorism.” Damascus also urged UN to take all necessary procedures to prevent Israel from repeating such attacks in accord with UN Charter.
The letter asserts that Israel is trying to divert the world’s attention from the collapse of its own coalition government, which continues “its occupation of the Arab territories and violates the international legitimacy.”

Despite the Israeli attacks, Damascus will not stop its efforts to combat terrorism in all its forms, types and tools and on Syrian soil, added the letter

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: airstrike, Israel, Syria, UN

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  • 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.
  • Chronological: How Pashinyan Misled the Armenian People and Handed Artsakh to Azerbaijan — Step by Step
  • Enjoy the stench of “Real Armenia”: Hayk Demoyan

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

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