NATO Bloc Intends to Expand Obligations

PanARMENIAN.Net

NATO Bloc Intends to Expand Obligations
25.11.2006 15:00 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The NATO bloc intends to include
struggle against terrorism and ensuring security of
deposits of natural fossil resources in its future
obligations, the Financial Times reported referring to
a confidential document to be discussed at the coming
Alliance summit in Riga. According to the newspaper,
NATO defense ministers have already approved of the
concept, which is called to attribute political
dimension to the bloc’s reform for the coming 10-15
years. The NATO should be able to simultaneously hold
several foreign operations in the future, the document
says, reports Deutsche Welle.

The NATO summit in Riga is scheduled November 28-29.

Armenian Genocide One of Reasons of Loss of Dutch Labor Party

PanARMENIAN.Net

Armenian Genocide One of Reasons of Loss of Dutch Labor Party
25.11.2006 15:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Genocide was one of reasons
of loss of the Dutch Labor Party (PvdA), the
Federation of the Armenian Organizations of
Netherlands (FAON) told PanARMENIAN.Net. On the one
hand many Turks did no appreciate the sending away of
Turkish genocide denier Sacan to place 53 of the PvdA
candidate list, but neither they like the tuning
around position which leader of the Dutch Labour Party
Wouter Bos took later. `We may call it genocide, but
we have to watch our word. We don’t know whether it
matches the juridical sense of the word genocide yet,
like in genocide treaties. But also Armenians (of
course) and many Dutch voted for other parties, like
Christian Union (who launched the genocide recognition
motion in 2004)," he said.

ANDU Concerned with Amendments in Election Code

Panorama.am

15:19 25/11/06

ANDU CONCERNED WITH AMENDMENTS IN ELECTION CODE

Seiran Avagyan, adviser to the president of the
republican, and his co-party fellows are very
concerned with the amendments in the Election Code
which say that any party must have 5% of votes to
enter into the parliament. The combination of two
parties must overcome 7% limit and an alliance of more
than 3 parties must collect 10% and more votes.
Armenian National Democratic Union (ANDU) called a
press conference today to share the concerns.

Vice chairman of ANDU, Vahram Lazarian, is concerned
that many out-of-parliament forces cannot overcome the
5% limit and `representatives of lot of people will
not appear in 2007 parliament.’

Arthur Levonyan from the same party says it is clear
that the coalition wants to reproduce itself. He said
the disposition of the opposition is unclear. The
party came to a conclusion that `the opposition wants
to settle issues in post-election tense situation like
in Georgia.’ ANDU deputy chairman thinks it
unacceptable that the coalition has stated that the
next parliament will comprise only them. `If the
Georgia scenario is repeated, they will be responsible
for that,’ he said. /Panorama.am/

New film pokes the Borat

New Zealand Herald, New Zealand
Nov 26 2006

New film pokes the Borat

Sunday November 26, 2006
By Peter Calder

The Russian Club, around the back of a restaurant in Newmarket,
Auckland, is the kind of place Borat Sagdiyev would be very much at
home. Lurid light bounces off a mirror ball and plays on the couches
and curtains.

On the dance floor, a tall, moustachioed man could very easily make a
fool of himself by disco-jiving extravagantly in a too-small,
blue-grey suit.

Borat might be welcome at the club, where immigrants from the
countries of the former Soviet Union gather and converse in Russian.
But Borat’s alter-ego and creator, English comedian Sacha Baron
Cohen, would surely have a bit of explaining to do.

His film, Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit
Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan, which opened in theatres this week,
has launched the gangly television character’s big-screen career. But
it has offended at least some of the more than 16 million natives of
Kazakhstan, the massive central Asian republic that the title
character ostensibly hails from.

Borat – a cringe-inducing mixture of racism, sexism, homophobia and
social ineptitude – is intended as a parody, of course, and also as a
sort of comic guerrilla who tricks his targets into revealing the
hideous attributes he pretends to embody. But not everybody’s
laughing.

The Kazakh Government went so far as to take out advertisements in
the New York Times condemning Borat as "a concoction of bad taste and
ill manners which is incompatible with the ethics and civilised
behaviour of Kazakhstan’s people".

In the Russian club, over glasses of robust Georgian red wine, Andrei
Goubarev and Vadim Novikov tell me they actually found the film quite
funny. They liked the naked wrestling scene – surely the most
appalling moment in a film full of them – and Goubarev assures me
Kazakhs are very good wrestlers. The bits where Borat gets stuck into
mothers-in-law and feminists particularly tickled them.

Goubarev, 27, and Novikov, 31, regard Kazakhstan as home. Even though
they are ethnically Russian, they grew up in the world’s
ninth-biggest country that stretches across all of Central Asia.
"It’s our motherland," says Novikov.

They reckon the only truly offensive moments in the film come near
the beginning, when Borat ridicules his mother and kisses a young
woman called Natalya before introducing her as his sister and "number
four prostitute in all of Kazakhstan".

"Saying his sister is a prostitute," he says, "in any nation you
would find this really offensive."

I suggest to him that most New Zealanders would regard bestiality as
pretty poor form but never get offended when Australians make cracks
about sheep-shagging.

"Well, maybe it is because Kazakhstan is a mainly Muslim culture and
respect for mothers and sisters is stronger than in other cultures,"
says Novikov.

Cohen has said that he made Borat Kazakh "because it was a country no
one had heard anything about, so we could essentially play on
stereotypes they might have. The joke is not on Kazakhstan. The joke
is on people who can think that the Kazakhstan I describe can exist."

Goubarev and Novikov take the point, noting that the country depicted
in the film’s opening scenes looks nothing like theirs (it was shot
in Romania) and none of the characters speaks Kazakh: Borat’s
greeting is in Croatian, he speaks in snatches of Polish, Hebrew and
Yiddish and his offsider Azamat speaks in Armenan.

"But why choose Kazakhstan?" Novikov asks. "Why didn’t he make it
about a non-existent country and call it Berbistan or something like
that."

He detects a geopolitical conspiracy here because Kazakhstan has
stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Russia against George W Bush. But
since the film’s most obvious target is actually America, that’s hard
to argue.

The pair happily offer assurances that Kazakh cars aren’t horse-drawn
like Borat’s. "You can find more Mercs there than in Auckland,"
Goubarev says. And no, he says, he is not in the habit of giving his
sister deep tongue kisses. "I kiss her as my sister," he says.
"That’s it."

Armenia has to clarify itself in what region to live: Heritage Party

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Nov 24 2006

ARMENIA HAS TO CLARIFY ITSELF IN WHAT REGION TO LIVE: LEADER OF
"HERITAGE" OPPOSITIONAL PARTY RAFFI HOVANNISIAN

"Geopolitical and regional challenges, set to Armenia, can be
generally called a challenge of the region transformation that is
actual for all the Caucasian countries", a secret leader of the
"Heritage" non-parliamentary oppositional party, the first Foreign
Minster of Armenia, Raffi Hovannisian, said in an interview to
ArmInfo.

According to him, the interest of power centers of the world to the
South-Caucasian region continuously increases. In particular, the EU
gets more and more interested in a stability, steady development and
security of states, covered by the policy of the new European
neighborhood. The USA, Russia, Iran and Turkey are interested in the
problem of keeping the maximum extension of its influence in the
region. "In this situation, our neighbors learn unique lessons.
Georgia thinks over a vast change of its foreign policy vector,
reorientation of the own political system. Both Georgia and
Azerbaijan, having made use of the growing interest of superstates in
the region, try to involve them, as serious players, in a context of
their own conflicts and, thus, to change the status-quo to the
detriment of the opposite side", R. Hovannisian said.

Hovannisian believes that the political support provided to
Azerbaijan in this context has already become obvious: the economic
capacities of our neighbors are growing and Armenia’s key task at
present is to successfully rival with them.

Asked about the challenges Armenia is facing under present
geo-political and regional conditions, Hovannisian said: "Armenia is
faced with a number of serious questions. First: how to reform its
political system and the structures involved in state and democracy
building lest our vital interests might be affected by sharp or
gradual geopolitical changes? Second: what will the breach of the
status quo bring to – war or stable peace? Third: how to revise the
policy on the Karabakh problem and what steps to take to this end?
Fourth: what and to what an extent should be emphasized in Armenia’s
foreign policy? Fifth: how to prevent the gradual isolation of the
country from the regional programs, the last example of which is the
plan to build Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi railroad? Sixth: what national
security strategy to adopt and how to respond to new and old
challenges to self-identity and security, particularly, to the
problems of Turkish-Armenian relation and Javakhq?"

Hovannisian believes that Armenia must clearly decide in what region
it wants to live or it will have to put up with existence imposed in
the framework of a sub-system formed by other states.

Vice-Speaker: Reason of widespread corruption unobstructed bribary

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Nov 24 2006

RA PARLIAMENT VICE SPEAKER: REASON OF ALL-ROUND SPREAD OF CORRUPTION
IN ARMENIA IS THAT BRIBER IS NOT SUBJECT TO OBSTRUCTION

The reason of an all-round spread of corruption in Armenia is that
the briber is not subject to public obstruction, RA Parliament vice
speaker, the member of ARF Dashnaktsutiun, Vahan Hovannesyan, said at
today’s press-conference in the "Urbat" discussion club.

According to him, as for the ARF Dashnaktsutiun party, which had
claimed in 1998 of its support of Robert Kocharyan provided that he
will efficiently fight with corruption, "we were optimists then, now
we have become realists. Robert Kocharyan as well. It became clear
that the problem cannot be resolved by public calling the briber
names, another ways are necessary", V. Hovannesyan said.

He is sure that after the Parliamentary elections in 2007, the
present alignment of intra-Parliament forces will hardly sufficiently
change and ARFD will gather the necessary percents of votes to pas to
the Parliament. The party does not rule out the possibility of
pre-election and post-election cooperation with any political force,
V. Hovannesyan said .

Vice-Speaker: Kocharyan & Aliyev meeting not to harm NK process

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Nov 24 2006

RA PARLIAMENT VICE SPEAKER: COMING MEETING OF PRESIDENTS OF ARMENIA
AND AZERBAIJAN IN MINSK NOT TO HARM SETTLEMENT PROCESS

The coming Minsk meeting of the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan,
Robert Kocharyan and Ilham Aliyev, within the frames of November 28
CIS Summit will not harm the settlement process, RA Parliament vice
speaker, the member of ARF Dashnaktsutiun, Vahan Hovannesyan, said
today in the "Urbat" discussion club. According to him, the dynamics
of the Presidents’ meeting is of no threat to Armenia. "It is
difficult to say now if the coming meeting will give any result. In
any case, it is necessary to meet", he said.

To remind, an agreement on meeting of the two states’ Presidents was
reached during the recent visit of OSCE MG Cochairs, Yuri Merzliakov
and Bernard Fassier, to the region.

Applications for UK visa in Armenia: Biometric fingerprinting

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Nov 24 2006

APPLICATIONS FOR A UNITED KINGDOM VISA IN ARMENIA: BIOMETRIC
FINGERSCANS

>From 1 December 2006 the British Embassy in Yerevan is introducing
biometric data collection (fingerscans), the press-service of the
British Embassy told ArmInfo.

This is part of a world-wide biometric identification process,
designed to protect an individual’s identity, facilitate future entry
to the UK, combat visa fraud and abuse of the UK’s immigration and
asylum systems. With effect from 1 December 2006 all visa applicants,
irrespective of nationality, will have to apply in person at the
British Embassy in Yerevan and have their fingerscans taken.

All visa applicants must have their fingerscans taken, with the
exception of children under the age of five. An exception may also be
granted to applicants, who for genuine medical reasons cannot provide
fingerscans. The following categories of applicant are also exempted
from providing their fingerscans: Holders of Diplomatic passports and
accompanying dependants travelling on official government business.
Holders of Official passports who are travelling on official
government business in the United Kingdom. United Nations officials
holding UN Travel Documents who are travelling on official UN
business. Commonwealth and NATO armed forces personnel posted for
service in the UK Holders of a certificate of entitlement confirming
right of abode in the United Kingdom.

Fingerscans will be collected from each applicant by using an
electronic scanner. No ink, liquid or chemical will be used and the
procedure will take no more than two minutes to complete.

If an applicant refuses to provide fingerscans, the application
cannot be processed.

All applicants should ensure that their fingertips are free from any
forms of decoration (henna, for example), abrasions or other markings
prior to attending the British Embassy as these may affect their
ability to provide acceptable fingerscans. Visa applications cannot
be processed until applicants are able to provide acceptable
fingerscans.

For further information about the application process please contact
us on +374 (010) 26 43 01 or by email at [email protected]

Kocharyan visited wall dividing Nicosia into Greek & Turkish parts

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Nov 24 2006

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT VISITED THE WALL DIVIDING CYPRIAN CAPITAL INTO
GREEK AND TURKISH PARTS

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and Mayor of Nicosia, the capital
of Cyprus, Michalakis Zampelas met in the municipality of Nicosia,
Friday.

After a short conversation, the Mayor of Nicosia thanked the Armenian
President for his visit and awarded a golden key of the city and a
diploma to him. The head of the city noted that the large Armenian
community living in Nicosia makes an important contribution to the
public, political and economic life of the Cyprian capital. In his
turn, Robert Kocharyan thanked the local authorities for their
attitude to the Armenian community and expressed hope that Nicosia
will be united again, as the Cypriotes want. The Mayor accompanied
the Armenian President to the old city. Near the cease-fire line
there is a wall dividing the city into Greek and Turkish parts.
R.Kocharyan made a note in the mourning book. Today, the delegation
led by R.Kocharyan will visit the St.Virgin Church and will meet with
the Armenian community.

ANM meader warns Armenian public against distinct messages of Russia

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Nov 24 2006

ANM LEADER WARNS ARMENIAN PUBLIC AGAINST DISTINCT MESSAGES OF RUSSIA

Russia once again threatens Armenian independence, Aram Manoukyan,
one of the leaders of the Armenian National Movement ruling in
Armenia in 1990s, said at a press-conference, Friday.

A.Manoukyan noted that on the threshold of parliamentary elections in
Armenia, Russian "groupings" have sharply activated their work in the
political field of the republic. Though this has a negative effect on
political processes of the country, Armenia, however, will continue
to be on friendly terms with Russia. The latter tries to put all the
countries under its supervision. The case of Georgia is a distinct
message for all of them who doesn’t want to maintain good relations
with it, Manoukyan noted. According to him, there started a real
struggle between Armenian politicians trying to prove their devotion
to Russia. Leaders of practically all the parties stand in queue to
get Moscow’s approvement of their activity, though the country’s
independence should be superior to the party’s interests, he said.
A.Manoukyan connected the process of rapid "russification" of
Armenian politicians with the pre-electoral race, in the course of
which leaders of Armenian parties try "to build themselves up".
Particularly, he pointed out the hunting of people carried out by the
"Prospering Armenia" and the Republican Parties of Armenia which
fight for greater number of followers. A.Manoukyan said that he
himself would like to know the real results of the parliamentary
elections. He said that even if honest and transparent elections are
held in spring 2007, both Serzh Sarkisyan and Gagik Tsarukyan will
fail to get the overwhelming majority of votes, as no citizen of the
Republic will vote for them voluntarily.

At the same time, A.Manoukyan admitted that the action of
"distributing potatoes", implemented by Gagik Tsarukyan, the leader
of "Prospering Armenia", may have a considerable effect on the
pre-electoral mood of dwellers of the Armenian remote regions, and
this will turn the Armenian Parliament into "an assembly of people
having thick necks and thick wallets" and "not knowing how many
letters the Armenian alphabet has". He expressed hope that one day
the Armenian Parliament will consist of deputies having at least
distinct political views.