Armenia Vs Finland

ARMENIA VS FINLAND

AsianHandicap.com, UK
Oct 5 2006

Finland will play with Armenia on away match in Euro 2008 Qualifying.

At the 1st match when they played with Poland they’ve got three
points with win 1-3 on away match, and at 2nd match they play draw
1-1 with Portugal. Finland shown that they will be qualify to Euro
2008. In other side, Armenia that will be host on that match have a
bad performance. They defeated by Belgium on home match with 1-0 score.

I think this match will be dominated by away team, Finland. They
look like hunger for winning and really wanna passed qualify as soon
as possibble. This match will be own by Finland. They will get full
point here. At least they can stuck Armenia with 2-0 goals.

MATCH DATE 2006-10-08

LEAGUE Euro 2008 Qualifying

MATCH Armenia v Finland

HOME 2,08

A/HC 3/4:0

AWAY 1.83

PICK AWAY

Schism: Free Speech Vs. ‘Insulting Turkishness’

SCHISM: FREE SPEECH VS. ‘INSULTING TURKISHNESS’
by Ivan Watson

NPR
Oct 5 2006

All Things Considered, October 4, 2006 · Acclaimed novelist Elif Safak
was acquitted last week after being taking to trial for "insulting
Turkishness" when a fictional character described the Armenian genocide
in her latest book.

Armenian-Turkish newspaper editor Hrant Dink wasn’t so lucky. He
received a six-month suspended sentence for talking about the genocide,
and faces two more trials for similar charges.

It may look like a battle over freedom of speech. In fact,
the defendants say the Armenian Genocide, and the law that bans
"insulting Turkishness," have become a political football between
Turkish ultranationalists and pre-European politicians.

Anti-Turkish European politicians have entered the fray by passing
laws forbidding citizens to deny that a genocide of Armenians took
place in 1915.

p?storyId=6196764

–Boundary_(ID_KpS7WJEWoHi6orxD HPgCaQ)–

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.ph

Iraq’s Christians At Risk Of Annihilation

IRAQ’S CHRISTIANS AT RISK OF ANNIHILATION
By Charles Tannock

The Japan Times, Japan
Oct 5 2006

Ancient Communities Persecuted

LONDON — The world is consumed by fears that Iraq is degenerating
into a civil war between Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds. But in this
looming war of all against all, it is Iraq’s small community of
Assyrian Christians that is at risk of annihilation.

Iraq’s Christian communities are among the world’s most ancient,
practicing their faith in Mesopotamia almost since the time of
Jesus Christ. The Assyrian Apostolic Church, for instance, traces its
foundation back to 34 A.D. and St. Peter. Likewise, the Assyrian Church
of the East dates to 33 A.D. and St. Thomas. The Aramaic that many
of Iraq’s Christians still speak is the language of those apostles —
and of Christ.

When tolerated by their Muslim rulers, Assyrian Christians contributed
much to the societies in which they lived. Their scholars helped usher
in the "Golden Age" of the Arab world by translating important works
into Arabic from Greek and Syriac. But in recent times, toleration
has scarcely existed.

In the Armenian Genocide of 1914-1918, 750,000 Assyrians — roughly
two-thirds of their number at the time — were massacred by the
Ottoman Turks with the help of the Kurds.

Under the Iraqi Hashemite monarchy, the Assyrians faced persecution
for co-operating with the British during World War I. Many fled to the
West, among them the Church’s patriarch. During former Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein’s wars with the Kurds, hundreds of Assyrian villages
were destroyed, their inhabitants rendered homeless, and dozens of
ancient churches were bombed. The teaching of the Syriac language was
prohibited and Assyrians were forced to give their children Arabic
names in an effort to undermine their Christian identity. Those who
wished to hold government jobs had to declare Arab ethnicity.

In 1987, the Iraqi census listed 1.4 million Christians. Today,
only about 600,000 to 800,000 remain in the country, most on the
Nineveh plain.

As many as 60,000, and perhaps even more, have fled since the beginning
of the insurgency that followed the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Their
exodus accelerated in August 2004, after the start of the terrorist
bombing campaign against Christian churches by Islamists who accuse
them of collaboration with the allies by virtue of their faith.

A recent U.N. report states that religious minorities in Iraq "have
become the regular victims of discrimination, harassment, and,
at times, persecution, with incidents ranging from intimidation to
murder," and that "members of the Christian minority appear to be
particularly targeted."

Indeed, there are widespread reports of Christians fleeing the country
as a result of threats being made to their women for not adhering
to strict Islamic dress codes. Christian women are said to have had
acid thrown in their faces. Some have been killed for wearing jeans
or not wearing the veil.

This type of violence is particularly acute in the area around Mosul.

High-ranking clergy there claim that priests in Iraq can no longer
wear their clerical robes in public for fear of being attacked by
Islamists. Last January, coordinated car-bomb attacks were carried
out on six churches in Baghdad and Kirkuk; on another occasion, six
churches were simultaneously bombed in Baghdad and Mosul. Over the
past two years, 27 Assyrian churches have reportedly been attacked
for the sole reason that they were Christian places of worship.

These attacks go beyond targeting physical manifestations of the
faith. Christian-owned small businesses, particularly those selling
alcohol, have been attacked, and many shopkeepers murdered. The
director of the Iraqi Museum, Donny George, a respected Assyrian,
says that he was forced to flee Iraq to Syria in fear of his life,
and that Islamic fundamentalists obstructed all of his work that was
not focused on Islamic artifacts.

Assyrian leaders also complain of deliberate discrimination in the
January 2005 elections. In some cases, they claim, ballot boxes did
not arrive in Assyrian towns and villages, voting officials failed to
show up, or ballot boxes were stolen. They also cite the intimidating
presence of Kurdish militia and secret police near polling stations.

Recently, however, there are signs the Iraqi Kurdish authorities are
being more protective of their Christian communities.

Sadly, the plight of Iraq’s Christians is not an isolated one in the
Middle East. In Iran, the population as a whole has nearly doubled
since the 1979 revolution; but, under a hostile regime, the number of
Christians in the country has fallen from roughly 300,000 to 100,000.

In 1948, Christians accounted for roughly 20 percent of the
population of what was then Palestine; since then, their numbers
have roughly halved. In Egypt, emigration among Coptic Christians is
disproportionately high; many convert to Islam under pressure, and
over the past few years violence perpetrated against the Christian
community has taken many lives.

The persecution of these ancient and unique Christian communities,
in Iraq and in the Middle East as a whole, is deeply disturbing. Last
April, the European Parliament voted virtually unanimously for the
Assyrians to be allowed to establish (on the basis of section 5 of
the Iraqi Constitution) a federal region where they can be free from
outside interference to practice their own way of life. It is high
time now that the West paid more attention, and took forceful action
to secure the future of Iraq’s embattled Christians.

Charles Tannock is vice president of the Human Rights Subcommittee
of the European Parliament and British Conservative foreign affairs
spokesman. Copyright Project Syndicate 2006 ()

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.project-syndicate.org

Expert Questions Blocher Anti-Racism Remarks

EXPERT QUESTIONS BLOCHER ANTI-RACISM REMARKS

Swissinfo, Switzerland
Oct 5 2006

Justice Minister Christoph Blocher should have defended and not
criticised the Swiss anti-racism law during a trip to Turkey, according
to a leading law expert.

Marcel Niggli, professor of law of Fribourg University, told swissinfo
that it was strange that Blocher should have made the comments made
during an official visit abroad.

Blocher unleashed a storm of political and media protest at home after
he remarked on Wednesday that part of the law gave him a "headache". He
referred to a "stress relationship" between anti-racism legislation
and the freedom of speech.

On Thursday Interior Minister Pascal Couchepin said that Blocher’s
remarks were "unacceptable".

For his part, President Moritz Leuenberger said he was surprised,
adding that the cabinet would meet to discuss the issues arising from
Blocher’s comments shortly.

Current Swiss law, dating from 1994, has led to investigations
against two Turks in Switzerland for allegedly denying the 1915
Armenian massacre.

"No one would have imagined that this law would have resulted in
proceedings against a prominent Turkish historian," he said, following
talks with his Turkish counterpart, Cemil Cicek.

Blocher said his ministry would examine ways to prevent a recurrence
of such a situation, adding that it was up to the government and
parliament to decide on any changes.

swissinfo: Christoph Blocher said that the anti-racism law was in some
respects in conflict with freedom of speech in Switzerland? What is
your view on that?

Marcel Niggli: That’s not correct because the European Court of
Human Rights has decided in many cases already that… racism is not
protected by the freedom of speech.

Professor Marcel Niggli (RDB)

swissinfo: How strange is it for a justice minister to say that
article 216 bis of the Swiss penal code gives him a headache?

M.N.: To me that sounds very strange especially if someone does so
abroad. Basically, if you have a headache about the law you discuss
the law and try to make a proposal nationally to [change it], but as
the law has not been changed it stays as it is.

swissinfo: It strikes me that as justice minister, Blocher should be
defending the law, shouldn’t he?

M.N.: That’s correct because that law has been discussed, voted on
by the [Swiss] people and accepted. The party to which the minister
belongs [Swiss People’s Party] has at different times tried to abolish
the law and always failed in the end, so basically it’s clear that
the prevailing will at the moment in this country is that this is
law and hence he should defend that, yes.

swissinfo: How much do you think that Christoph Blocher was bowing
to the will of Turkey when he said his remarks?

M.N.: I think he did that to a certain extent, as many other people
also do, because Turkey has insisted for many decades that there has
not been a genocide [of Armenians]. Basically the question whether
there has been a genocide or not is ridiculous because [according to]
all the legal criteria we have… it’s apparently evident that this
was a genocide.

swissinfo: What repercussions do you think this will have for Blocher,
if any?

M.N.: I don’t think there will be important consequences because the
federal councillor [Blocher] has behaved in that way many times.

There have always been protests and discussions but there have never
been any consequences.

swissinfo: So you don’t think if there are calls for him to step down
that he will do so?

M.N.: I don’t think so. What he did in Turkey is the same as he’s
done already [before]. He’s representing more the opinion of his
party than of the government as a whole.

swissinfo: Isn’t that a bad situation in Switzerland?

M.N.: If you have a government consisting of seven people it is a very
good idea that if they don’t find consensus, they shouldn’t show this
externally. If the justice minister goes abroad to discuss [Swiss]
national laws, it’s certainly not a very happy situation.

swissinfo-interview: Robert Brookes

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Delay In Announcement Of Nobel In Literature

DELAY IN ANNOUNCEMENT OF NOBEL IN LITERATURE

CBC Canada
Oct 5 2006

This year’s winner of the Nobel Prize for literature will not be
announced until Oct. 12 at the earliest, Swedish Academy officials
said Thursday.

The announcement of the Nobel Laureate in Literature is often revealed
during the same week as the science prizes or in advance of those
prizes in the first week of September.

The Nobel Foundation announces a date a few days in advance to give
journalists time to travel to Sweden, but never sets a firm date for
the announcement.

A note on its website Thursday said the announcement of the literature
prize would be made "at a later date."

The Nobel Prize for Peace is to be announced next week.

Neither the process by which candidates are selected nor the names
of nominees are revealed by the Swedish-based academy, which has been
giving out the prize, named for scientist and inventor Alfred Nobel,
since 1901.

Last year’s winner of the literature prize was British playwright
Harold Pinter.

This year, speculation centres on Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish novelist
who was tried on charges of "insulting the Turkish identity" for
saying that the deaths of Armenians in 1915 was a "genocide."

The official line in Turkey is that the Armenians died at Ottoman
hands in a war situation and writers who suggest otherwise can be
prosecuted under a controversial section of the Turkish penal code.

Also suggested as possible candidates are the Syrian poet Ali Ahmad
Said, U.S. writer Philip Roth and Canadian Margaret Atwood.

Local Elections In Georgia: Defeat Will Prove "Virtuality" Of Armeni

LOCAL ELECTIONS IN GEORGIA: DEFEAT WILL PROVE "VIRTUALITY" OF ARMENIAN LEADERS OF JAVAKHETI

Regnum, Russia
Oct 5 2006

On the eve of the Oct 5 local elections in Georgia, the situation in
Samtskhe-Javakheti (mostly Armenian region of Georgia) seemed to be
calm. Some voters even called it "pacified," thereby, drawing the
observers’ attention to the merciless (till the very last campaign
day) exploitation of strengths and means by the opponent forces. The
atmosphere was tense: some opponents even clashed. The most scandalous
incident – it has even got to the prosecutor’s office – took place
in the Akhalkalaki village of Khorena on Sept 25: representatives
of United National Movement and the Industrialist had a very radical
squabble on that day. As a result, the Akhalkalaki prosecutor’s office
instituted criminal proceedings… Thus, the Oct 4 "pacification" did
not mean that the opponents were exhausted, simply, it is forbidden
to canvass on the eve of elections.

However, the very notion "legal order" can be interpreted quite
differently. Particularly, many people are failing "to find themselves"
in the lists, but, instead, are finding the names of emigrants and
even deceased. The most interesting point is that they can’t complain
of it in "legal order" – the courts are no longer considering such
cases. In any case, for well known reasons, today, the "legal field"
notion in Georgia is specified by the Law On Local Self-government,
whose indisputable advantages over the version of 2001 has become
a bone of contention for the opposing political forces. The law
specifies the legal, economic and financial bases and state guarantees
of local authorities, the procedure of their formation, their powers
and relations with government bodies.

Particularly, local self-government in Georgia has authority to
appoint executives in its territories through electoral municipal
assembly and also:

a) to manage and dispose of the property it owns;

b) to manage and dispose of the land resource it owns;

c) to consider and approve and to amend its draft budget;

d) to impose and collect local taxes, to fix their rates within
admissible limits;

e) to collect local payments;

f) to plan land tenure, to delimitate territories, to establish and
change borders;

g) to regulate local passenger operations;

h) to regulate trade;

i) to plan local traffic except on roads of international and
inter-state significance;

j) to regulate problems related to the conduct of assemblies, rallies,
demonstrations;

k) to name streets and squares.

The above (small) part of local self-government’s powers already show
the indisputable advantages of the new version of the law and are
especially valuable in administrative-territorial units like the mostly
Armenian (in particular) districts of Samtskhe-Javakheti and Tsalka
district of the neighboring Kvemo-Kartli region. We would like to
remind you that the Armenian population makes up half of the region’s
demography. Many voters say that it was due exactly to the advantages
of the law that none of the candidates mention in their programs the
traditional demand for "Armenian cultural autonomy" within Georgia.

Nevertheless, the law has lots of discriminative deficiencies.

Particularly, Akhalkalaki district, which has 65 villages (electoral
areas), has been divided into 22 constituencies (sakrebulo) in quite an
interesting "proportion": if 5 Georgian villages have 5 sakrebulos,
50 Armenians villages have only 17 sakrebulos. The imbalance is
not only quantitative but also demographic: the Georgian village of
Brtena, which has 204 voters and the Armenian village of Kartikama –
2,446 voters – have each one vote in the municipal assembly.

One more novelty of the law is that the Municipal Sakrebulo should
have 10 party-list members. The ruling party of Mikhail Saakashvili,
United National Movement, has quite big share in this list.

Particularly, in Akhalkalaki district it is represented by economist
Gagik Mahtessyan, present governor Artur Yeremyan, director of the
radio center Khachik Ayvazyan, director of the B/P Association LTD
Alexan Torossyan, director of the Agricultural Water Supply Agency
Lyova Kazaryan, director of the Akhalalaki Resource Center Nartsiss
Karapetyan and others – a total of 19 candidates.

The party has no less big a share in the single-mandate lists. In some
districts of Samtskhe-Javakheti it even has no rivals – in Ninotsminda
district it has no single opponent. In other mostly Armenian districts
the situation is different: in Akhaltsikh district UNM’s opponents
are the Road of Georgia party and the Conservatives, while in Tsalka
district of Kvemo-Kartli region – the Industrialists.

Nevertheless, most observers say that the rivalry will be just a
formality. The only district where one can expect some struggle
is Akhalkalaki, where UNM will be opposed by United Javakh, led by
Vahagn Chakhalyan.

It should be noted that the movement figures in the lists of the
Industrialists as "national parties" are denied registration in
Georgia. Unlike its opponent, United Javakh (Industrialists) has
almost no administrative resources: all 12 candidates are unemployed.

"At the same time, we have strong representation and firm ideological
positions in single-mandate districts," says Chakhalyan. "At first,
we thought about boycotting the elections as, today, you can’t even
imagine free and fair voting in Georgia. We discussed this question
with representatives of Armenian organizations and tried to convince
them that it is dangerous to get involved in this game.

The danger is of ideological nature as the defeat will prove
virtuality of the demands of the Armenian population and their very
leaders. Unfortunately, we have failed to come to terms – the servants
of the present authorities have got into a dangerous game and we had
no other way but to accept this challenge."

Observers say that the most severe struggle will be exactly in
Akhalkalaki.

Romanian President In Yerevan: No Country Should Join The EU Having

ROMANIAN PRESIDENT IN YEREVAN: NO COUNTRY SHOULD JOIN THE EU HAVING NATIONAL PROBLEM

Regnum, Russia
Oct 5 2006

Armenia is going fully to use opportunties envisaged by NATO Individual
Partnership Action Plan, which was approved in December 2005;
Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan stated during his meeting
with Romanian President Trajan Basescu in Yerevan. According to him,
Armenia is ready to consider Romanian contribution and participation
in the program’s fulfillment in such context.

In his turn, Mr. Basescu assured; being friendly country, Romania
will contribute to Armenia in all situations, assisting to it, as
far as possible, to approach to the European Union. According to the
Romanian president, no one country should join the EU, having national
problem. He reminded of problems between Romanians and Hungarians,
appeared several years ago, as a result of which, Romania was being
isolated for two years. "Europe should not reconcile itself to such
contradictions because it is multinational organization," the Romanian
president said.

As REGNUM was informed at the Armenian presidential press office,
the parties also discussed regional problems, prospects, and current
state of Armenia’s relations with neighbors, including Turkey, as
well as last developments in process of Nagorno Karabakh conflict
settlement. Trajan Basescu assured; Romania would continue to hold
neutral position on Karabakh problem.

ANKARA: OSCE Brokers New Round Of Nagorno-Karabakh Talks

OSCE BROKERS NEW ROUND OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH TALKS

The New Anatolian
Oct 5 2006

Envoys from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) on Tuesday brokered a new round of talks between
foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia on the conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Yuri Merzlyakov, a Russian diplomat who co-chairs the so-called Minsk
group of the OSCE dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, said
the two nations’ foreign ministers were to meet Friday in Moscow. He
said a time and venue for a meeting of presidents of Armenia and
Azerbaijan remain to be negotiated.

The foreign ministers’ meeting would restart bilateral talks which
have been interrupted recently due to the lack of progress.

OSCE envoys held talks in Armenia Tuesday a day after visiting
Azerbaijan.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a region in Azerbaijan that has been under the
control of Armenian and ethnic-Armenian Karabakh forces since a 1994
cease-fire ended a separatist war. The region’s final status has
not been worked out, and years of talks under the auspices of OSCE
mediators have brought little visible result.

ANKARA: =?unknown?q?Sabanc=FD=3A?= Turkish Economy May Become Growth

SABANCý: TURKISH ECONOMY MAY BECOME GROWTH ENGINE OF EUROPE

The New Anatolian
Oct 5 2006

Turkish Industrialists & Businessmen Association (TUSÝAD) Chairman
Omer Sabancý has stated that Turkey could not be a member of the
European Union without convincing the European public opinion, and
added "Truths about Turkey should be told. A fair evaluation should
be made. Turkey’s membership in EU is an additional value for all.

Turkish economy may become growth engine of Europe. " TUSÝAD Chairman
delivered a speech in Paris, France at a panel titled ‘Global
Challenges of Europe and Turkey’ within the scope of Turkish Week.

Reminding that the TUSÝAD demanded the abolition of article 301 of
the Turkish Penal Code within the context of freedom of _expression,
Sabancý went on to say, "When we make steps toward more freedom
of _expression, I cannot comprehend the attitude on freedom of
_expression in France", referring to recent attempts in France
to legislate a prohibition on any speech against alleged Armenian
Genocide issue. Sabancý added he thinks such an attitude befitted a
country fearing the truths.

Minister Tuzmen’s speech At the same panel State Minister for Foreign
Trade Kurþat Tuzmen also delivered a speech.

Regarding Turkish economy, Tuzmen said, "Turkey made more than half
of its foreign trade (which will exceed 200 billion USD in 2006 in
grand total) with Europe this year, and France is very important in
this regard."

"Our economic performance is better than many EU countries especially
the new EU members. We are the fastest growing country of Europe in
the last three years. We catch the highest speed in export increase
not only in Europe but also in OECD. Turkey’s EU membership will be
for the interest of both our country and the EU," Tuzmen noted.

He said that Turkey will have important contributions to increase EU
economy’s competitive power as well as dynamism.

–Boundary_(ID_+wDnQ/bsuUGMgYJkttKsaw)- –

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Unfavorable Weather Conditions Prevented The OSCE MG Co-Chairs’ Visi

UNFAVORABLE WEATHER CONDITIONS PREVENTED THE OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS’ VISIT TO STEPANAKERT

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 5 2006

The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs did not visit Stepanakert because of
unfavorable weather conditions.

ArmInfo correspondent reports from Stepanakert that the US, French
and Russian Co-Chairs had to arrive in Nagorno Karabakh October 4,
but the visit was hindered because of thick fog. The mediators were
due to meet with Arkady Ghukasyan.

The Co-Chairs have already left Yerevan for Moscow, where the Foreign
Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan Vardan Oskanian and Elmar
Mammadyarov are scheduled to meet on October 6. Today RA Foreign
Minister will leave for Moscow.