Armenian Prime Minister: Further Aggravation Of Russian-Georgian Rel

ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER: FURTHER AGGRAVATION OF RUSSIAN-GEORGIAN RELATIONS MAY CAUSE COMPLETE ISOLATION OF ARMENIA

ARMINFO News Agency
October 4, 2006 Wednesday

Armnfo. Today, Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan stated
in the Parliament that the further aggravation of Russian-Georgian
relations may cause the complete isolation of Armenia.

Markaryan said that he discussed this issue with the US co-chairman
of the OSCE Minsk Group Mathew Bryza and emphasized the creation
of the mechanisms which will help Armenia avoid the results of
further aggravation of Russian- Georgian relations. At the moment
this aggravation has not affected Armenia, particularly, the cargo
transportation. As regards the land transportation to Armenia through
Russia and Georgia, the Prime Minister thinks, this way through
"Upper Lars" customs point closed six months ago. It turns out that
the two states solve their problems on account of Armenia’s interests,
Margaryan says. Transportation from Georgia to Armenia is stable
through the ports of Poti and Batumi. Speaking of the possibility
of Armenia to carry out the mission of a mediator between Russia
and Georgia, Margaryan said that there is no suggestion of that kind
from the sides. If we get such an offer we’ll discuss it, though the
intermediary mission between Russia and Georgia is already on a high
level, he stated. As to the Armenian citizens detained in Georgia for
intruding the state border of Georgia, Margaryan said this question
is being discussed with Tbilisi. "I have discussed the question
of the Armenian citizens’ release with the Georgian Prime Minister
lately and I think he takes a positive view of it", he noted. At the
same time he condemned those citizens of Armenia who, despite the
Armenian government’s request to abstain from trips to Abkhazia and
South Osetia, violated the laws of the neighboring country.

ANKARA: Turkish Minister Urges EU, France Not To "Interfere" In Arme

TURKISH MINISTER URGES EU, FRANCE NOT TO "INTERFERE" IN ARMENIAN ISSUE

Anatolia news agency, Ankara,
4 Oct 06

Brussels, 4 October: Turkish State Minister and Deputy Prime Minister
Abdullatif Sener warned the EU and some other countries not to
interfere in Turkish-Armenian relations.

Sener is in Belgian capital of Brussels to participate in events
organized by the Turkish Industrialists’ & Businessmen’s Association
(TUSIAD) and European Policy Centre to mark the first anniversary of
the start of Turkey-EU negotiations.

In an exclusive interview with the AA [Anatolia] correspondent,
Sener referred to French President Jacques Chirac’s remarks about the
so-called Armenian genocide allegations, and said: "Chirac said that
recognition of so-called Armenian genocide should be a precondition
before Turkey’s EU membership. A resolution is being discussed in
France and it foresees fine and imprisonment for those who deny
Armenian genocide. It is not possible to accept such an attitude.

This is against the cultural atmosphere the EU is trying to create."

"Armenia is not a European country, it is an Asian country. So, it is
a third country for the EU. So, it is meaningless to bring this matter
up within the scope of Turkey’s EU membership process," he stated.

Sener added: "Whether it is an EU member or another country, everybody
who is affecting the Armenian policy from outside should give up his
endeavours. Chirac’s remarks are not sincere, they aim to affect the
domestic policy." [Passage omitted]

Rebel With A Cause And A Simple Strategy

REBEL WITH A CAUSE AND A SIMPLE STRATEGY
by Peter Koven, Financial Post

National Post’s Financial Post & FP Investing (Canada)
October 4, 2006 Wednesday
Toronto Edition

George Armoyan is a tenant. Housing prices in Toronto are outlandish,
he says, so there’s no sense in buying. So each month he hands over
a rent cheque to his landlord, who happens to live next door: Ted
Rogers, CEO of Rogers Communications Inc.

This relationship, however, doesn’t mean the pair would get along in
a boardroom.

Mr. Armoyan has made a name for himself investing in some of the
worst income trusts on the market. Despite his attraction to the ugly,
there’s only two things that turn him off a company, both of which are
trademarks of Mr. Rogers: long-term debt and multiple-voting shares.

"Most of these income trusts, for the people selling them [in initial
public offerings], to get a higher price, they’re trying to put
long-term debt in with the idea that you don’t have to amortize,
you don’t have to pay for it," he says.

"And when you do that — as my late grandmother put it — ‘Ultimately,
son, the ice will melt and the shit will come out.’"

In just a few short years, Mr. Armoyan has emerged as the foremost
activist investor in the income trust sector. His strategy is simple:
Buy minority stakes of up to 20% in troubled companies, primarily
trusts that have cut distributions. Start a dialogue with management,
get on the board, and do whatever is necessary to boost shareholder
value. He makes the investments through Clarke Inc., a publically
traded company and until recently private holding company Geosam
Investments.

His success speaks for itself. Whenever he reveals his latest target
company, that firm’s unit price inevitably jumps as other investors
follow him in. They like having a hands-on investor like Mr. Armoyan
in their corner.

And they have been following him a lot lately. In the past couple of
months, Mr. Armoyan has gone on a spending spree, buying stakes in a
wide variety of troubled companies that share little in common other
than that few other investors wanted to touch them until Mr. Armoyan
got involved.

"In just the last while, because there’s been so many failures, so
many cuts in distributions, quite a lot of people have lost faith in
the income trust, especially the business trust," he says.

Mr. Armoyan isn’t necessarily a fan of the income trust structure —
he believes most of these companies should never have gone public
as trusts in the first place, and thinks the sector’s accounting
practices are a joke. But as trusts slash their distributions and
investors turn sour on them, he sees huge opportunities.

Entertainment One is a good example. The wholesale DVD and CD
distributor suspended its monthly distributions in June amid concerns
that it would violate its debt covenants.

As the units plunged and other investors bailed out, Mr. Armoyan
and his team of analysts sat down and took a look. He did the math
and couldn’t understand why the units would be down more than 80%
when the company was doing something he approved of: paying down debt.

"I"m not looking for the distribution. I’m looking for the
fundamentals. If a company stops distributions for the purpose
of paying their debt, that’s fine. That’s building equity for the
unitholders as far as I’m concerned."

His investment has paid off already. Last week, Entertainment One
said it received an unsolicited takeover proposal, and has hired an
investment bank to evaluate a possible sale.

The units shot up 14%. He bought more of it.

Since he buys stakes in so many genuinely troubled companies,
Mr. Armoyan anticipates that some of his investments aren’t going to
pay off. There’s already a stand-out disaster: Hip Interactive Corp.,
a video game maker that declared bankruptcy last year. He was on the
board for less than a month, but was quickly appalled by the practices
of the company and its board.

But the successes greatly outweigh the failures. One of his biggest
triumphs was at Clarke, a Halifax-based trucking company. He bought
into Clarke in 2002, four years after it went public. In that time,
the shares had lost about half their value while management raised
their salaries. He ousted management, but then took another step and
appointed himself as CEO. Why do that? "I guess it was just easy to
get control of." Clarke shares have been on a steadily upward trend
ever since.

Mr. Armoyan is of Armenian descent and was born in Syria. He immigrated
to Halifax when he was a teenager and studied civil engineering
at Dalhousie.

He never got around to earning an MBA but goes to Harvard every year
for about a week as part of an executive program. Once there, he works
on case studies non-stop with 150 other executives from more than 30
different companies. He likes it because it shows him how people with
different cultural backgrounds can approach the same problem. The
Harvard experience can also guide his own investing strategy.

"I like to see what the theme of the year is. Last year it was real
estate. A few years ago it was the Internet. So usually, by the time
Harvard professors get to some cases and they start doing it, that
means it’s time to get the hell out of that business."

[email protected]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Freedom Of Expression Is Non-Negotiable, EU Commissioner Tells Turke

FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IS NON-NEGOTIABLE, EU COMMISSIONER TELLS TURKEY

Agence France Presse — English
October 4, 2006 Wednesday 2:31 PM GMT

Turkey must take steps to ensure freedom of expression if it wants
to join the European Union, European Enlargement Commissioner Ollie
Rehn said Wednesday, adding the issue was non-negotiable.

"This is not a bargaining issue. Freedom of expression is one of
the fundamental values of the EU," Rehn told the NTV television
news channel. "It will be in Turkey’s interest to guarantee freedom
of expression."

Brussels has recently raised concerns over free speech in Turkey after
a string of intellectuals were brought to trial under a much-criticized
article of the penal code.

The code’s Article 301 foresees up to three years imprisonment
for "denigrating Turkish national identity" and "insulting state
institutions."

No one has been jailed yet under the provision. But in July the
appeals court confirmed a suspended six-month sentence handed down
to Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, setting a precedent for
dozens of other pending cases.

"We need to see some steps being taken to amend the notorious Article
301 so that freedom of expression can be fully guaranteed in Turkey,"
Rehn told NTV.

"There is no charge in European penal codes about insulting Finnishness
or Britishness," he said. "And when we look at the implementation in
Turkey, we see that Article 301 is interpreted by prosecutors, courts
and lawyers in a way that very much limits freedom of expression."

The Turkish government has said it is committed to pursue democratic
reforms to ease its entry into the EU and said it is open to proposals
to amend Article 301.

Rehn’s remarks came ahead of a crucial annual report that the EU’s
executive arm — the European Commission — will issue on November
8 on Turkey’s progress in its membership talks with the EU, which
began in October 2005.

Apart from human rights concerns, the talks have also been clouded by
Turkey’s refusal to open its air and sea ports to Cyprus, an EU-member
state Ankara does not recognize.

The EU has warned Turkey that the talks could be suspended if it
refuses to grant trade privileges to Cyprus under a customs union
agreement with the 25-nation bloc.

Ankara insists that Cypriot ships and planes will remain barred from
Turkish ports unless the EU unless delivers on its promise to ease
trade restrictions on the island’s breakaway Turkish Cypriot state,
recognized only by Turkey.

The Finnish presidency of the bloc has proposed a formula to help
resolve the stalemate.

Rehn is scheduled to leave Turkey Thursday after talks with Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul.

Freedom Of Speech Prize To Editor Of Turkish-Armenian Journal

FREEDOM OF SPEECH PRIZE TO EDITOR OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN JOURNAL

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
October 4, 2006 Wednesday 2:57 PM EST

DPA CULTURE, ENTERTAINMENT Norway Culture Freedom of speech prize to
editor of Turkish-Armenian journal Oslo

The editor of a Turkish-Armenian magazine was Wednesday awarded the
Norwegian Bjornson prize, worth 100,000 kroner (15,200 dollars),
for highlighting massacres of the Armenian minority by Ottoman Turks
in 1915.

Agos’ editor Hrant Dink has frequently written on the subject that
continues to generate controversy in Turkey today, and has had frequent
run-ins with Turkish authorities.

Ankara has refused to accept blame for the massacres that many
historians and several countries have said constituted a genocide.

The prize was to be handed out at a November 24 ceremony in the
Norwegian west coast city Molde, the Norwegian news agency NTB
reported.

The prize is awarded by the Bjornson Academy, established in 2003 to
protect freedom of expression. Members include researchers from Norway
and other countries as well as authors, journalists and politicians
including two former Norwegian prime ministers, Kare Willoch and
Kjell Magne Bondevik.

Academy president Knut Odegard said the November 24 seminar would
focus on Armenians.

The prize was named after Norwegian poet, author and dramatist
Bjornstjerne Bjornson (1832-1910).

Previous winners were Vivian Fouad and Samir Morcos from Egypt for
their efforts to promote ties between Muslims and Christians, and
Esma Redzepova from Macedonia who has championed the rights of the
Roma people.

Most Converts In Turkey Seek Spiritual Peace, Others Tickets West

MOST CONVERTS IN TURKEY SEEK SPIRITUAL PEACE, OTHERS TICKETS WEST
By Nicolas Cheviron

Agence France Presse — English
October 4, 2006 Wednesday 2:31 PM GMT

Turkey’s few Muslim converts to Christianity, of which the hijacker
Tuesday of a Turkish airliner claimed to be one, are a motley,
marginal group that includes people on personal spiritual quests,
as well as those in search of more material benefits.

Hakan Ekinci, 28, who hijacked a Turkish Airlines Tirana-Istanbul
flight to Italy on Tuesday, presented himself in an internet blog
adressed to Pope Benedict XVI as one such convert who did not want
to serve in "a Muslim army."

Whether he actually belongs to any of Turkey’s Christian churches,
however, has come under doubt with the appearance of several articles
in the Turkish press Wednesday saying he has a criminal record for
fraud, in addition to two spells in the stockade for desertion.

Most of Turkey’s "new Christians" — who only number about 1,000 in
a population of 73 million that is more than 99 percent Muslim —
belong to a score of evangelical parishes scattered across Turkey.

"We have about a thousand followers in our churches, mostly Turks,
but also a few foreigners and, when there is only one church in town,
some Armenian Orthodox and Catholics as well," explained Sait Cakir
of the Ankara Evangelical Community.

The evangelical churches, which are not recognised by the strictly
secular laws of Turkey, are mainly in the three biggest cities —
Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir — but have recently begun to soread east
to such localities as Sivas and Diyarbakir, he said.

"The fact that we are open to everyone means that we get some strange
followers," said Ihsan Ozbek, the evangelical pastor for Ankara.

"Some come looking for women, others for money, yet others for visas
to the west."

But not all of Turkey’s converts are con men looking for a ticket to
Europe rather than heaven.

Bulent, who works for an international organisation in the Turkish
capital and will not reveal his last name, said his conversion was
the result of an arduous quest for his roots.

"My father always said we were descendents of Turkmens from Central
Asia," he said. "But one day, I learned that we were in fact a family
of Jews who had converted to Islam."

After mulling this over for a while, he finally opted in 1993 to join
the Syriac church, in memory of the many tales his grandmother used
to tell him of the Christians of southeast Anatolia, where her family
originated from.

Ferda, who also did not want to give her family name, said she too
felt uncomfortable with her identity as a Muslim and a Turk.

She was raised in a community of Muslim Greeks who were deported to
Turkey during the population exchanges of 1923.

"But when I went to high school," she said, "I suddenly realised what a
stranger I was to Turkish culture" — so she converted to Catholicism.

But conversions to the Roman church, as to the other mainstream
churches in Turkey — mostly Armenian and Greek orthodox — remain
the exception.

Still, the Armenian patriarchate in Istanbul reports about 20
conversions a year — mostly of Armenians who "lived as Muslims"
to escape the aftermath of the 1915-1917 massacres of their kinsmen
under the Ottoman Empire and want to return to their religious roots
before they die.

Saudi Doctors Battle For Hearts And Minds In Lebanon

SAUDI DOCTORS BATTLE FOR HEARTS AND MINDS IN LEBANON
by Haro Chakmakjian

Agence France Presse — English
October 4, 2006 Wednesday

On the edge of Beirut racetrack, a horseshoe-shaped field hospital
is dispensing free medical care, as Saudi Arabia tries once again to
bankroll a Lebanese revival with hundreds of millions of dollars.

"I like horse-racing but we barely have time to call our families,"
said Saud al-Omani, a British-trained trauma surgeon from Riyadh
who heads a team of 115 doctors and nurses as well as 40 Lebanese
medical staff.

"We are all paid of course," he said, from the petrodollars aplenty
of the Saudi government.

Groups of patients waited in shaded areas complete with seats in
front of 18 air-conditioned containers built as clinics on wheels,
painted in white and with the sign of the Saudi Red Crescent Society.

The medics have been operational since August 5, three weeks into
Israel’s 34-day war on the Shiite group Hezbollah that wrought
destruction mostly in south Lebanon and the Shiite southern suburbs
of Beirut, barely a few kilometres (miles) from the hospital.

The Saudi kingdom has been the single biggest aid donor to Lebanon,
comprising a one-billion-dollar deposit with the central bank to
shore up the currency and a grant of 500 million dollars.

It also sponsored the 1989 Taif accord which ended Lebanon’s
15-year civil war and gave massive financial support for post-war
reconstruction, especially during the five-time premiership of the
late Rafiq Hariri, a dual Saudi-Lebanese national.

On Tuesday in Saudi Arabia, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
urged Washington’s allies to help "young governments in places like
Lebanon … against the extremist forces", partly in reference to
Hezbollah.

In a hearts and minds campaign open to all religions, the Saudi doctors
in their fluorescent orange and turquoise outfits have seen more than
50,000 patients, with a maximum treatment time of 24 hours each that
they aim to extend to three days.

"We don’t ask where they come from. We ask their name, age, and sex.

Most of the time, we know, by looking at them, the last part," said
Omani, who was trained in Edinburgh and has also been involved in
relief operations in Kosovo, Iran and Iraq.

"We have no time-limit on humanitarian care," he said, asked when
the operation would wind down.

"Our patients may be indirectly sick from the war, or it may be a
follow-up. Don’t forget the infrastructure has gone in this country
and medicine is expensive," said Omani, 47, who wears a hearing aid
due to a 1991 Gulf War injury.

But the team does face some problems in terms of local habits. "The
trouble is convincing people to queue for registration and triage to
be able to classify patients," explained Omani.

"We also have psychiatric cases, especially for children, and illnesses
due to the war," said Omani.

The heaviest demand is for general practitioners but the clinic
also provides orthopaedic care, obstetrics, cardiology, psychiatric
treatment, paediatric, ultrasound and X-rays, as well as a laboratory.

It is equipped with an intensive care unit, recovery room, pharmacy,
an area for Muslim prayers, five ambulances, a sterilisation unit,
computers, in short all the latest in short-term medical care.

"We can handle 100 emergencies a day and more than 700 operations
have been carried out," said Omani, although the number of patients
has eased from the normal 1,300-a-day, and hours have been curtailed
for the dawn-to-dusk fasting month of Ramadan.

Alongside aging Druze men in their white caps, black clothes and
traditional baggy pants, veiled Sunni and Shiite women milled around
with their children in tow.

Others, untroubled by the Ramadan fast, helped themselves from cooled
water dispensers.

"Thank God, they are looking after us, not like the government. Even
if you are dying, our government will not let you in hospital for
treatment if you don’t have the money," said Majida Habash, 32,
a Shiite woman from the bombed-out suburbs.

"We have also had no help from Hezbollah, maybe because our house was
not damaged," she said, referring to the 12,000-dollar cash handouts
being offered by the Shiite group backed by Tehran and Damascus.

Others were also impressed by the largesse of the oil-rich Saudi
government.

"I heard from the people that the Saudis have good doctors and are
giving free medicine. The people are saying good things," said Nazih
Allwan, a Sunni from west Beirut, who had been waiting two hours to
be seen for a stomach infection.

Berdjouhi Nazarian, 52, from the Armenian Christian district of Bourj
Hammoud in east Beirut, said her husband needs heart surgery for a
blocked artery.

"Bravo to them (the Saudis) for helping the people. We can’t even
afford the medicine," she said.

Saudi King Abdullah has also decided to pay all fees for state
school students in Lebanon for the delayed academic year, while
neighbouring United Arab Emirates is footing the bill to repair
schools and provide textbooks.

Monitoring Held On Territories Neighboring Nagorno Karabakh

MONITORING HELD ON TERRITORIES NEIGHBORING NAGORNO KARABAKH

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 4 2006

Monitoring of the international expert mission headed by Bernard Snoy,
Coordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental Activities, to assess
the impact of fires on the environment started in Nagorno Karabakh
and the neighboring territories. The monitoring will continue for 11
days. In Snoy’s words, the mandate of the mission is the evaluation
of short-term and long-term impact of fires on the environment and
elaboration of instructions for eradication of fire consequences. "We
shall develop instructions to prevent reoccurrence of fires,"
the coordinator said. He added that for full and exact evaluation,
the mission intends to investigate the fire zones, as well as the
contact line.

Mayor Of Paris 9th Arrondissement Jacques Bravo Visited Tsitsernakab

MAYOR OF PARIS 9TH ARRONDISSEMENT JACQUES BRAVO VISITED TSITSERNAKABERD

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 4 2006

Accompanied by Head of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF)
Bureau’s Hay Dat and Political Affairs Office Kiro Manoyan, Mayor of
Paris 9th arrondissement, representative of the Socialist Party of
France Jacques Bravo visited the Armenian Genocide memorial to pay
a tribute to the memory of 1.5 million innocent victims.

In the Museum-Institute of Genocide Jacques Bravo familiarized himself
with the evidences of atrocities carried out in Ottoman Turkey. "This
morning I bear the excitement of Paris people. A people that does
not want die, will never die," he wrote in the book.

Jacques Bravo expressed the hope that in the end the Armenian
Genocide will be recognized all over the world. "Twenty years ago I
was also participating in rallies condemning the Armenian Genocide,"
he said, adding that he will do his best to promote the international
recognition of the Genocide.

Armenian MP To File A Protest To The Central Electoral Commission Of

ARMENIAN MP TO FILE A PROTEST TO THE CENTRAL ELECTORAL COMMISSION OF GEORGIA

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 4 2006

Member of the Georgian Parliament elected from Tsalka region
Hayk Meltonyan is going to file a protest to the Central Electoral
Commission of Georgia. The reason of the protest is the obvious fraud
of the voters’ lists.

The number of voters in the list compiled by the Regional Central
Electoral Commission of Tsalka was artificially increased. However,
parallel to this the number of Armenian voters was reduced.