Armenian Prime Minister To Leave For Washington October 9-15

ARMENIAN PM TO LEAVE FOR WASHINGTON OCTOBER 9-15

ARMENPRESS
Oct 7, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 7, ARMENPRESS: Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan
will leave October 9-15 for USA to participate in the annual conference
of World Bank and International Monetary Fund which will take place
in Washington.

Governmental press service told Armenpress that the delegation headed
by the prime minister consists of Economy Minister Nerses Yeritsian,
Finance Minister Tigran Davtian, President’s assistant on economic
affairs Vahram Nersissyants, head of the government’s staff David
Sargsyan, chairman of the Central bank Arthur Javadian, deputy foreign
minister Arman Kirakosian, and other officials.

Mysterious Murder In Vardenis

MYSTERIOUS MURDER IN VARDENIS

A1+
[08:07 pm] 07 October, 2008

After three days of searching, family and friends finally found the
body of criminal investigation department officer of the Vardenis
police headquarters Samvel Khachatryan right where they had begun
the search.

On September 12, Samvel Khachatryan had left for work at 10 a.m.,
but late in the evening family and relatives began to worry and
started looking for him. According to the relatives, the Vardenis
police couldn’t help them and even one of the police officers told
them that they would join the relatives if they knew where to search.

According to the police, on September 15 at 2 p.m. farmers had found
Khachatryan’s body a meter away from his car parked in the forest
located 500 meters away from Sevan Lake. After autopsy, it became
clear that Khachatryan had died instantly from a gunshot.

Samvel Khachatryan’s family and relatives had gathered today in
front of the presidential residence to receive the response to their
protest-letter. As Khachatryan’s relatives told A1+, the police
persistently tried to dodge the information that Khachatryan had
committed suicide. However, his friends assure that Samvel couldn’t
have committed suicide because he had no reason to do that.

Relatives only suspect former chief police officer of Vardenis Valodya
Torosyan because he was the one who had avoided rumors that Samvel
had committed suicide.

There are also rumors in Vardenis that Khachatryan was at the
police department on the day of his death and that is where he was
kept. According to relatives, Samvel had received eight calls on his
cellular phone on the night of September 12 at 12 a.m. "The Viva Cell
operator gave us the list of calls made on the night of September 11,
but not the list of calls made on the night of September 12. But that
is the only way to know where our friend could be," says Samvel’s
friend.

While at the presidential residence, Samvel’s relatives assured that
they would get the response to their protest-letter in the next couple
of days.

Jhangiryan To Take Part In Session?

JHANGIRYAN TO TAKE PART IN SESSION?

A1+
[06:57 pm] 07 October, 2008

Tomorrow the court will resume the case of Vardan Jhangiryan, brother
of former Deputy Prosecutor General Gagik Jhangiryan. However,
Vardan’s attorney Yervand Varosyan says that he is not feeling better.

Let us remind that Vardan Jhangiryan is diagnosed with tuberculosis
of the vertebral column and that is why on September 22 the trial was
dismissed so that Vardan could take part in the sessions later. But
actually, he is not doing well. "Vardan is out of the hospital,
yet his condition is critical. There was no sense in leaving him at
the hospital because the doctors only gave him tranquilizers. He
can take them at home too," told A1+ Yervand Varosyan. "The court
resumed the trial based on the fact that Vardan is at home. But we
don’t understand the logic because his diagnosis hasn’t changed. He
still needs to stay in bed."

129 Sentenced To Imprisonment

129 SENTENCED TO IMPRISONMENT

A1+
[09:17 pm] 07 October, 2008

At present, out of the 144 criminal cases on the March 1 events,
128 cases regarding 145 people have been filed and are currently
over. Based on the verdicts reached, 129 people have been sentenced
to imprisonment. Forty-seven of them have not received the conditional
punishment measures and two have received punishment measures based on
the 64th article of the RA Criminal Code, that is, a less mitigating
punishment than that foreseen by the law.

According to the information provided by press secretary of the RA
Cassation Court Alina Yengoyan, in general, the court reached the
"8+6" verdicts of acquittal-seven people received punishment having
nothing to do with imprisonment, while one’s criminal case was quashed
based on the reconciliation

A1+ – Throwing The Blame For The 10 Murders On Political Prisoners?

THROWING THE BLAME FOR THE 10 MURDERS ON POLITICAL PRISONERS?

A1+
[07:29 pm] 07 October, 2008

Pan-Armenian movement representative Levon Zurabyan weighs up the
Yerevan city council’s denial to hold a meeting on Northern Avenue
as exclusive and award-winning. On September 29, "Republic" party
political council president Aram Sargsyan’s authorized representative
Artak Zeynalyan sent a notice to the Yerevan city council to hold a
mass public meeting on October 17, however, according to the notice,
the meeting is going to kick off at Northern Avenue and end with
a march.

"This time the authorities made an award-winning allegation based
on the violation of the right of proprietors; however, the law on
meetings, marches and demonstrations does not state anything about
that. In other words, this formulation is very weak from the juridical
point of view," said Levon Zurabyan. He also told A1+ that the denial
of the Yerevan city council is being protested in the Administrative
Court and the hearing will take place today.

Despite the outcome, Levon Zurabyan promised members of the Armenian
National Congress that the meeting will take place on October 17 on
Northern Avenue as promised.

Zurabyan also touched upon the October 2 statement made by the PACE
monitoring commission. According to him, it was a late, yet important
evaluation by the Council of Europe which states that imprisonment
of people for political views is unacceptable.

The PACE monitoring commission members don’t refer to the prisoners as
political prisoners, but that doesn’t worry Levon Zurabyan. According
to him, there are currently 75 political prisoners in Armenia who are
members of the opposition and the authorities are not only keeping
them hostage, but are also trying to use them to solve their issues.

Perhaps they are not giving answers because everything is clear. In
response to that, Levon Zurabyan said that the authorities are
busy trying to hide the facts. They have sent seven cases of state
appropriation to court and have attached the accusations of those
seven to the descriptions of the ten murders. Thus, the authorities
are trying to throw the blame for the ten murders on the seven
political prisoners.

Zurabyan added that he was not making it up because authority
officials had said that they couldn’t blame the murders on anyone
if they released all political prisoners. So, they are keeping the
prisoners hostage in order to forget about the crime.

Armenian Troops Pull Out Of Iraq: US Military

ARMENIAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF IRAQ: US MILITARY

AFP
Oct 7, 2008

BAGHDAD (AFP) — Armenia has withdrawn its contingent of 46 soldiers
from Iraq, further shrinking the US-led coalition forces, the American
military said on Tuesday.

The unit of the former Soviet republic brought its operations to
a close on Monday with a ceremony at Camp Victory in Baghdad, a
statement said.

Armenia sent troops to Iraq in January 2005.

Since then, it has worked in support of the Polish Brigade, which
formally ended its mission in Iraq on Saturday and announced that
its 900 soldiers will complete their withdrawal from the country by
the end of this month.

"The Armenian armed forces have rotated 380 personnel through Iraq
and have provided first-class support to Operation Iraq Freedom in
the areas of transportation, engineering and medicine," US Marine
Corps Major General Paul Lefebvre said.

Armenian military chief in Iraq, Commander Ruben Papyan, said they
were pleased to have served in the US-led coalition.

"It has been our honor to serve under your command and to know and
to work with you in the filtering of peace and democracy in Iraq,"
Papyan said at the official ceremony.

In May 2003, two months after the US invasion, the occupying force
was made up of 150,000 Americans and 23,000 other troops from 40
countries. Now, US numbers are around 144,000, while the coalition
has shrunk to less than 10,000.

The non-US element of the coalition is now made of Britain, Romania,
El Salvador, Bulgaria, Azerbaijan, Albania, Mongolia, Czech Republic,
Macedonia, Tonga, Lithuania, Bosnia, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine,
Latvia and Moldova.

Article Wrong About ADL’s Armenian Genocide ‘Reversal’

ARTICLE WRONG ABOUT ADL’S ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ‘REVERSAL’
Laura Boghosian Lexington

Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle
Tuesday October 7th, 2008

As a member of the "ragtag group of activists in Boston" mentioned
in the JTA article "In 5768, establishment faced new upstarts" in
the Sept. 26 Chronicle, I must object to the writer’s statement that
the Anti-Defamation League "reversed its refusal to recognize the
Armenian genocide."

In fact, the ADL worded its August 2007 release in such a way as to
actually contravene the international legal definition of genocide.

The phrasing circumvents the "intent" required by the 1948 United
Nations Genocide Convention by suggesting that Armenians died simply
as a "consequence" of World War I conditions and not from a planned
program of extermination — which just happens to be Turkey’s position.

The Massachusetts Municipal Association and 12 of the 13 Massachusetts
communities that dissociated from the ADL’s No Place for Hate program
did so after the ADL’s statement, judging it unacceptable.

The ADL has been playing a double game, issuing a disingenuous
statement while simultaneously advancing the Turkish government’s
agenda by opposing a Congressional resolution formally affirming the
Armenian genocide.

Moreover, ADL leaders have repeatedly endorsed Turkey’s call for a
historical commission to investigate the Armenian genocide, much like
Ahmadinejad’s 2006 conference that purported to examine the Holocaust.

This denying tactic has been condemned by the International Association
of Genocide Scholars, as well as groups like the Southern Poverty
Law Center.

Baku: Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict Likely To Be Settled: Russian FM

NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT LIKELY TO BE SETTLED: RUSSIAN FM

Trend News Agency
07.10.08 12:22
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, 7 October /Trend News corr. N.Abdullayeva/ Russian
Foreign Minister believes the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict may be settled.

"Two or three issues on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict remain
unsolved. They will be coordinated at the next meetings between
Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents," Russian FM Sergei Lavrov said
to the Russian Newspaper.

The conflict between the two countries of the South Caucasus began
in 1988 due to Armenian territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Since
1992, Armenian Armed Forces have occupied 20% of Azerbaijan including
the Nagorno-Karabakh region and its seven surrounding districts. In
1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement at which
time the active hostilities ended. The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk
Group (Russia, France, and the US) are currently holding peaceful
negotiations.

According to Lavrov, the meetings are likely to take place after the
upcoming presidential elections in Azerbaijan. "The Lachin passage
is the most important issue. As one of the three intermediaries,
we feel settlement is quite real," he said.

Certainly, it is Armenia and Azerbaijan to settle the conflict within
the direct agreements. But intermediaries, Russia, United States
and France, which are well aware of all minutest details and the
sensitivity of the process, see opportunities to settle the conflict,
said FM.

According to Lavrov, even before the Caucasus crisis there had
been a good chance to promote the Nagorno-Karabakh settling via
direct meetings between Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents through
mediators. A substantial document, describing almost all principles
and mechanisms of settlement, was devised.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia’s Psychological Scars

ARMENIA’S PSYCHOLOGICAL SCARS
By Cesar Chelala

Middle East Times
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Egypt

During a recent trip to Armenia, I was once again reminded of man’s
inhumanity to man. I also found myself face-to-face once again with
the power of memory and of hate, and asked myself if there is any
way to overcome the lingering and pernicious effects of conflicts
among peoples.

In 1915, as the Ottoman Empire was in its death throes, almost 1
million Armenians were massacred, and many others were forced into
exile from their land. The circumstances that led to this ordeal are
still under spirited discussions.

Can the Armenian hatred for the Turks, almost a century after
the devastating events of 1915 be overcome so that a productive
relationship between the two countries can be brought about? It is
obviously too late to bring those responsible to justice. However, it
should be possible to reach a level of understanding and cooperation
between the two societies.

I spoke with Professor Mira Antonyan, director of the Fund for Armenian
Relief, about the effects of those events on Armenians today. "The
only thing that unites us now is our resentment against the Turks
for the events of the past" she told me. That feeling was shared by
her husband and a friend of both, who regularly trade with Turkish
businessmen. "Being Armenian means having sad memories," she added.

I told them that I felt Armenians were in a quagmire, unable to move
forward because of the tremendous weight of past events. "Perhaps you
are right," Mira’s husband answered, "but genocide is a very heavy
burden on our shoulders. We cannot just forget what happened. We
cannot erase our memory."

I believe that there is a generational divide on the question. The
older generation — those over 50 — insist on the need for an apology
from the Turkish government for the assassination of Armenians. The
younger generations, without rejecting the facts of history, feel
the need to overcome the negative effects of those memories. They
believe that such visceral attachment to the past is self-defeating.

Kamilla Petrosyan, an Armenian psychiatrist in her late 30s, told
me how her 4-year-old son arrived home one day from kindergarten
frightened to death on learning that day about the 1915 massacres. "We
have to stop this culture of victimization," she said, "otherwise we
will never be able to move forward."

Something similar happens in Turkey. Arman Artuc, editor of the HyeTert
news portal in Istanbul, told me recently, "Almost everybody living in
Turkey grew up with stories (beginning with primary school textbooks,
newspapers and other media) of how cruel Armenians have been to Turks
during and after WWI using a language of hatred and insults. Only
recently commissions were established to change the textbooks and
remove such language."

These and other events demonstrate that the Turks too are beginning
to show signs of the need to move forward. A number of Turkish
intellectuals, including last year’s winner of the Noble Prize for
literature, Orhan Pamuk, have made public statements to that effect.

Armenian President Serge Sarkisian’s recent invitation to Turkish
President Abdullah Gul to watch a soccer match in Armenia between their
countries’ national teams can contribute to create a psychological
climate that could lead to productive relations between both
countries. President Gul has been quite forceful on the need and
mutual convenience to have better relations between both countries
and has called for the formation of a joint commission of Turkish
and American scholars to assess past events.

The creation of a commission of both Turkish and Armenian historians
under the auspices of the United Nations and with representatives
from the International Court of Justice at The Hague is an important
and necessary step. The task of such commission would be to analyze
historical documents that will shed definitive light on the events
of the past.

A change of paradigm that will allow us to move away from a culture
of violence is desperately needed. We should take advantage of the
present situation to create an irreversible motion towards mutual
understanding through the implementation of a wide range of peace
building measures that will create a strong foundation for cooperation.

The importance of an agreement for peace and cooperation between Turkey
and Armenia goes beyond their borders. In a world wired for war, it can
show that peace and understanding between peoples burdened by the past
is still possible, and create a psychological momentum for peace that
would allow reaching similar agreements in other parts of the world.

It is only by constructing bridges of understanding–particularly
working with young people, still

untainted by the weight of the past — that we will be able to change
the present paradigm of violence and war for one of collaboration
and peace.

Dr. Cesar Chelala is the co-author of "Missing or Dead in Argentina:
The Desperate Search for Thousands of Abducted Victims," a New York
Times Magazine cover story, for which he shared an Overseas Press
Club of America award.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Dancing With The Stars’ Kim Kardashian Posts Image Of Herself As A T

DANCING WITH THE STARS’ KIM KARDASHIAN POSTS IMAGE OF HERSELF AS A TEEN TO DISPROVE RUMOURS SHE’S HAD A BOOB JOB

Daily Mail
3:03 PM on 07th October 2008
UK

Dancing With The Stars’ Kim Kardashian posts image of herself as a
teen to disprove rumours she’s had a boob jobBy Daily Mail Reporter

Reality TV star Kim Kardashian has posted a photo of herself as a
busty teenager in a bid to dispel rumours she’s had a boob job.

The 28-year-old socialite is a regular feature in gossip pages and
internet blogs due to her famously curvaceous figure.

In a bid to set the rumours to rest, Kim has dug out an image of
herself as a teenager in a bikini to prove she has always had large
breasts.

Writing on her website blog, Kim said: ‘I have not ever had plastic
surgery.

‘I am definitely not against it at all, but haven’t yet had
it! Personally, lip injections are the thing I would never do –
even if I didn’t have full lips.

‘This is a picture of me when I was (younger) in a bikini. I hope
after seeing this you guys will never ask me a plastic surgery question
again! I have had a size C since I was 11 years old.

‘So one day I will definitely get a lift, but I am waiting until
after I have kids. Until then I rely on a great supportive bra.

‘All the butt implant rumours are just so not true and now just
silly to me. I have answered dozens of times "no I do not have butt
implants," but people just don’t seem to want to believe it.’

Kim credits her exotic good looks with her late Armenian father Robert
Kardashian – former lawyer to O.J. Simpson and her Dutch-American
mother Kris Jenner – now married to Olympic gymnast Bruce Jenner.

Kim, who is a close friend of Paris Hilton, currently stars alongside
her family, including sisters Kourtney and Khloe, in hit U.S. reality
TV show Keeping Up With The Kardashians.

Last week, she was voted off Dancing With The Stars – the U.S. version
of Strictly Come Dancing – after a disappointing rumba with partner
Mark Ballas.

She is currently dating American football player Reggie Bush and was
previously married to record producer Damon Thomas.