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Javakhk Community Leader Holds Talks At European Parliament

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  • Javakhk Community Leader Holds Talks At European Parliament

    JAVAKHK COMMUNITY LEADER HOLDS TALKS AT EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

    ASBAREZ
    Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

    JAVAKHK (A-Info)--The coordinator of the Council of Armenian
    Organizations (NGOs) of Samtskhe-Javakheti (Javakhk) and director
    of the A-Info news agency Artak Gabrielyan traveled to Brussels
    earlier this month and held meetings with key members of the European
    Parliament and other European Union officials.

    Artak Gabrielyan and Andrey Kovachev

    During his visit to Brussels, Gabrielyan met with Euro-Parliament
    Vice-Speaker Yorghos Papastamakos (member of the Euro-Parliament South
    Caucasus delegation), Traian Ungureanu, member of the Euro-Parliament
    Committee of Foreign Relations and Andrey Kovachev, Vice-Chairman of
    Euro-Parliament Committee of Foreign Relations, Charles Tannock, member
    of the Euro-Parliament Committee on Foreign Relations and Human Rights
    and Jiri Mastalka, member of the Euro-Parliament Bureau and Euronest.

    At these meetings, Gabrielyan introduced the plight of the Armenian
    community Javakhk, highlighting that his visit to Brussels comes
    as a result of the refusal of Georgian authorities to meet with
    representatives of the Javakhk Armenian community.

    He also presented each person with a Memorandum to the European
    Parliament, which details the issues facing Javakhk and highlights
    demands that have been put forth by the Council of Armenian
    Organizations (NGOs) of Samtskhe-Javakhk.

    Charles Tannock with Artak Gabrielyan

    The demands Samtskhe-Javakheti Armenians include: 1. Granting of
    autonomous territorial status (with its own directly elected assembly)
    to Samtskhe-Javakheti and the adjacent Armenian majority Tsalka
    district within a federal Georgia; 2. Allowing the use of the Armenian
    language in public administration in those municipalities--such as
    Akhalkalaki and Ninotsminda--in which Armenians make up a majority;
    an unfulfilled accession commitment Georgia undertook when it joined
    the Council of Europe in 1999, namely the signing of the European
    Charter for Regional and Minority Languages; 3. Social and economic
    development projects for the region to bring it up to par with the
    rest of the country; 4. Improved Armenian representation in local
    and state institutions; and 5. An end to social engineering by the
    settlement of ethnic non-Armenians from other parts of the country
    in Samtskhe-Javakheti.

    >From l to r: Kaspar Karapetian, Artak Gabrielyan and Jiri Mastalka

    Gabrielyan also stressed that the Council wanted the European Union
    and Europe, in general, to be engaged in this process and to urge its
    ally, Georgia, to properly address the issues pertaining to Javakhk.

    Gabrielyan was accompanied by members of the Armenian National
    Committee of Belgium Kaspar Karapetian and Bedo Demirdjian.

    Read the entire Memorandum to the European Parliament and European
    Institutions.

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