Sunday 25 March 2012

Armenian News

Armenian Patriarchate's Bold Move To Sue the Turkish Government

By Harut Sassounian

Publisher, The California Courier

We must commend Acting Patriarch Aram Ateshian and the Armenian

Patriarchate of Istanbul for making the bold move of suing the Turkish

government for the return of historically significant Armenian

properties.

Turkish officials normally view such legal actions with hostility and

exertgreat pressure on judges to reject property claims filed by minorities,

making it extremely difficult if not impossible to win similar

lawsuits. Nevertheless, this is a necessary first step in order to be

able to appeal the Turkish court's expected negative ruling to the

European Court of Human

Rights, where a plaintiff has a much better chance of a fair hearing.

The lawsuit filed by the Patriarchate on March 14 seeks the return of

Armenian properties belonging to Sanasarian College in Garin

(Erzeroum) which were confiscated by the Turkish authorities following

the Genocide of 1915. The College's extensive properties, now worth

tens of millions of dollars, include nine plots of land in Garin, a

garden house and vast farmland in the village o fAghveren, two plots in

the village of Gez, and a large commercial property(khan) in the

center of Constantinople (Istanbul).

Sanasarian College was founded in 1881 by a major endowment from

Mgrdich Sanasarian, a wealthy businessman from Georgia,who had settled

in St. Petersburg, Russia. The generous benefactor donated additional

properties to the College in the late1800's.

Prior to 1915, Sanasarian College played a prominent role as a

modernizing force during the Armenian national awakening. It was a

European-style liberal arts school with the specific purpose of

preparing teachers and professionals in various fields to assist

therapid development of Western Armenia's economy. During its brief

existence, the College produced hundreds of graduates, including many

who rose to prominent positions. Armen Garo, the Armenian

Republic's first ambassador to the United States in 1918, was an alumnus

of Sanasarian College.

Garin was an important base of operations for the Armenian

Revolutionary Federation (Dashnagtsoutyoun) and its leaders who had

taken residence there before 1915. One of ARF's founders, Rostom, was

appointed as superintendent of Garin's school system, which included

Sanasarian College.

Some meetings of the momentous ARF8th World Congress were held in

1914 at Sanasarian College buildings. The Congress was interrupted by the

start of the First World War. The Young Turk government had dispatched

to Garin a high level delegation headed by Behaeddin Shakir, one of the

masterminds of the Armenian Genocide, to pressure the ARF into collaborating

with the Turkish government's wartime efforts. The ARF Congress turned down

the request. The College closed down in early 1915 and its entire faculty

and many of its students were killed during the Genocide. Shakir was

assassinated by Armenian avengers in 1922 in Berlin.

Ironically, a few years later, Garin was converted from a hotbed of

Armenian activism to a center of Turkish nationalism with the convening

of the historic Erzeroum Congress by Kemal Ataturk in 1919. Currently,

the Sanasarian College complex is a Turkish museum.

Commenting on the lawsuit, Ali Elbeyoglu, the Armenian Patriarchate's

lawyer, told Hurriyet newspaper:"The Sanasarian Foundation was granted

to the Patriarchate by philanthropist Mgrdich Sanasarian in the

1800's. The administration and management of the Sanasarian Foundation

legally belongs to the Patriarchate....We are not going to content

ourselves with the mere return of historical buildings. We are also

going to demand compensation from the government's General Directorate

of Foundations for all material losses incurred by the

Patriarchate since 1936."

Earlier this year, the Armenian Patriarchate filed a separate lawsuit

against the Directorate General of Foundations seeking the return of

the Sanasarian Shopping Center (khan) in Istanbul. Even though the court

imposed a temporary injunction, freezing all transactions involving

the building's disposition, the Directorate General of Foundations

declared that it will not

abide by the court's order. The Patriarchate's lawyer Elbeyoglu reacted

by declaring: "This runs counter to all international legal[norms] as

well as the Treaty of Lausanne. The Patriarchate is still in possession

of the title deed," Hurriyet reported.

In the past, when I criticized the Patriarchate for making public

statements against Armenian national interests, I was accused of not

fully appreciating the special circumstances under which Armenians live

in Turkey, and was told to show more sensitivity to the fact that they

are basically hostages in

the hands of the Turkish government. Since this article commends the

Patriarchate's bold legal action, I am concerned that my words of

praise might make some Armenians in Turkey just as uncomfortable. I

am simply trying

to be fair and even-handed, offering criticism or praise, as

the occasion merits.

DO NOT PROVIDE ARMENIAN JUDGES WITH US ENTRY VISA, 
SAYS HUMAN RIGHTS GROUP
epress.am
03.20.2012
 
The Yerevan-based Helsinki Association for Human Rights has appealed
to US Ambassador to Armenia John Heffern in writing, requesting
that several Armenian judges not be granted entry visas to the
United States. Helsinki Association president Mikael Danielyan and
attorney Gayane Khachatryan informed Epress.am that these judges and
prosecutors have permitted numerous gross procedural violations in
several criminal cases in recent years, the victims of which to whom
the Association was providing legal assistance.
 
In the letter to Ambassador Heffern, the Helsinki Association notes
that the courts and state prosecutors are not objective and through
their indifference and inaction, ignore the many complaints of clearly
trumped-up charges that allow for longer prison sentences.
 
"This proves that reform of Armenia's judicial system is [merely]
a formality. Republic of Armenia judges, though from time to time
undergo training in such juridical countries as the United States,
continue to fulfill the orders of the prosecution and operate according
to the unwritten rule 'the prosecution always knows best' and are
not guided by the principles of the RA Constitution, criminal law and
procedure," said Khachatryan, presenting an extract from the letter,
copies of which were sent to RA Prosecutor General Aghvan Hovsepyan
and the RA Council of Justice.
 
According to Danielyan, considering the fact that the US government
has large investments in the reforms carried out in Armenia's judicial
system, a question arises: Do these funds serve their purpose?
 
"The Helsinki Association has repeatedly raised the need for
various sanctions against the Armenian authorities. That is why, as
a precautionary measure, we are suggesting that the following judges
be refused an entry visa to the US, who directly through their actions
damage and hinder the implementation of democratic reforms in Armenia,"
reads the letter, which lists the names of the following judges:
 
Mesrop Makyan, Court of General Jurisdiction of Kotayk Region; Suren
Kostanyan, Court of General Jurisdiction of Shengavit Administrative
District of Yerevan; Artur Mkrtchyan, Court of General Jurisdiction
of Arabkir and Kanaker-Zeytun Administrative Districts of Yerevan;
and Criminal Court of Appeal judges Grisha Melik-Sargsyan, Henrik
Adamyan, Gagik Avetisyan, Eva Darbinyan and Sergei Chichoyan.
 
 
POLICEMAN WHO POSED WITH TURKISH-ARMENIAN 
JOURNALIST'S KILLER PROMOTED
Hurriyet Daily News
March 19 2012
Turkey
 
A police officer that was photographed posing with Hrant Dink murderer
Ogün Samast behind a Turkish flag immediately after the assassination
has been promoted, daily Radikal reported today.
 
Yakup Kurtaran, who was a fourth-class police officer in the Black Sea
province of Samsun at the time of the murder, has been appointed as
the public security deputy manager in the eastern province of Malatya.
 
The controversial photo was taken on Jan. 20, 2007, after Samast was
detained and taken to the anti-terror office in Samsun.
 
Kurtaran and other officers were suspended after the photo was
revealed; initially, Kurtaran was docked one day~Rs pay for his role
in the photo, but the penalty was later rescinded by a Samsun court.
 
Authorities launched an investigation into the unidentified people
who leaked the photo on charges of "breaching an investigation's
secrecy by featuring photos and videos in the visual and print media."
 
Samast was sentenced to over 22 years in prison last year for the Jan.
19, 2007, murder of Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist.
 
 
RFE/RL Report
Armenian Inflation Relatively Modest In 2012
Emil Danielyan
23.03.2012
 
Consumer price inflation in Armenia has remained below the
government's maximum target rate so far this year after steadily
decreasing in the second half of 2011, according to official
statistics.
 
The National Statistical Service (NSS) recorded a year-on-year
inflation rate of 3 percent last month, sharply down from 12.4 percent
in the year-earlier period.
 
According to the government agency, consumer prices steadily fell
after February 2011, bringing the inflation rate down to 4.7 percent
in December. The figure was within the Armenian authorities' 2011
target band of 4 percent (±1.5 percentage points).
 
The government and the Central Bank of Armenia set the same inflation
target for 2012. In a statement issued after a January meeting of its
governing board, the Central Bank noted that external inflationary
pressures on the Armenian economy will remain `weak' in the months
ahead because of sluggish global growth.
 
Nevertheless, the bank avoided cutting its benchmark refinancing rate,
which has stood at 8 percent since September. As part of its earlier
anti-inflationary measures, it raised the minimum cost of borrowing in
Armenia by a total of 1.25 percentage points in February-April.
 
The NSS data shows that food prices rose more slowly than the cost of
other goods in February. The food price index, which has increased
markedly in recent years, was down by almost 2 percent from the
January 2012 level.
 
Still, the prices of some foodstuffs such as meat have risen by over
10 percent year on year. NSS reported even steeper rises in fuel
prices.
 
 

1 comment:

Deniz said...
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