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Showing posts with label Armenians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Armenians. Show all posts

Armenians begin arriving in Akdamar Island for ritual

Written By THA on Sunday, 9 September 2012 | 09:46

Armenians from all corners of the world began arriving in Akdamar Island in Lake Van to attend an annual ritual at the Akdamar Church.

September 9, 2012 - Armenians from all corners of the world began arriving in Akdamar Island in Lake Van to attend an annual ritual at the Akdamar Church.

Sunday's ritual would be the third one in a row.

Many Armenians came to Gevas town of the eastern province of Van early in the morning on Sunday by minibuses or buses and were taken to the Akdamar Island in boats. They arrived in Akdamar Island after a boat journey of 20 minutes.

Armenians began lighting candles and praying in the south of the church. They said that they were praying for global peace and brotherhood. They also said that the residents of Van hosted them in a warm fashion and they were very happy to be present in a region where their ancestors lived.

The ritual at the Akdamar Church will begin at 11.00 hours on Sunday morning.

Tight security measures have been taken in and around the Akdamar Island.

A 40-member team of health experts, a helicopter, and four ambulances are waiting in and around the Akdamar Island.

Culture and Tourism Department in Van and the Chamber of Trade and Industry of Van have set up tents on the Akdamar Island and are distributing brochures to promote Van. -VAN (AA)

Clinton visits Azerbaijan amid border clashes

Written By THA on Wednesday, 6 June 2012 | 12:45

Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev, right, and US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton walk to meetings at the presidential Zagulba residence in Baku, Azerbaijan on Wednesday June 6, 2012. AP photo

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Azerbaijan on Wednesday for talks aimed at strengthening relations with the oil-rich state, amid a flare-up of violence on its border with enemy Armenia.

Clinton arrived after gunbattles on the ex-Soviet states' mutual border this week killed eight soldiers -- five Azerbaijanis and three Armenians -- in one of the deadliest outbursts of violence in months.

The neighbours are locked in a bitter unresolved conflict over Nagorny Karabakh, an Armenian-controlled enclave inside Azerbaijan that was the focus of a bloody war in the 1990s.

Although this week's clashes erupted well to the north of the disputed region, Clinton was expected to reiterate a call for both sides to end the violence.

"The use of force will not resolve the Nagorny Karabakh conflict and therefore force must not be used," she said during a visit to Yerevan on Monday, pledging to deliver the same message to Azerbaijani leaders in Baku.

Local media in both Azerbaijan and Armenia however said there had been further exchanges of fire on Tuesday night, although no casualties were reported.

After arriving in Baku, Clinton immediately went into talks with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev at his palatial residence overlooking the Caspian Sea.

The United States is a co-chair with Russia and France of the OSCE Minsk Group, which was set up after the 1994 Karabakh ceasefire to help bring about a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

But the conflict has remained unresolved for nearly two decades, leaving Armenia suffering economically due to closed borders with Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey, while Baku has grown richer on its Caspian Sea oil deposits.

The United States has sought to balance its relationship with both countries, pressed on one side by the large American Armenian community and Washington's strategic interests in the Caspian basin on the other.

Clinton planned to visit an oil and gas trade exposition being held in Baku, highlighting the $8 billion that US energy companies have invested in Azerbaijan since independence following the break-up of the Soviet Union.

Also expected to come up in her talks is Iran, which shares a border with Azerbaijan.

Although both countries are predominantly Shiite Muslim, there are political tensions between Azerbaijan's secular leadership and Iran's Islamic regime. (BAKU - Agence France-Presse)

UK News

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