Dutch Parliament: Draft Law for Penalising Genocide Denial

Christian Union feels Europe¹s support for its draft law
³Penalise the denial of genocide²

Trouw
Dutch daily newspaper

2 December 2008

By Cees van der Laan

The Dutch Labour Party (PvdA) has little sympathy for the idea, but the
Christian Union pushes ahead its draft law for penalising the offending
denial of genocides. The Armenian issue simmers just below the surface.

It has been quiet for a time since Christian Union in 2006 initiated the
draft law for penalising the public denial of genocide. The vehemence of the
debate on Armenian Genocide during the elections of 2006 may have been the
reason of this silence. In addition to that, Christian Union, an advocate of
punishment of genocide denial, and PvdA, an opponent of it, are now
coalition partners in the government. In that circumstances, it would be not
ill-advised to let the issue just cool down.

However, the Christian Union (CU) now feels the support of Europe for going
ahead with its draft law. The European Commission, European Parliament and
the EU ministers of justice, are of the idea that the member states should
make the denial punishable in their respective legislations. On Saturday,
this European Framework Decision was published and now is official. ³A clear
expression of the European attitude², according to Christian Union Member
of Parliament Mr. Joel Voordewind. Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Spain and
Luxemburg already have legislation to punish denial of genocide.

Monday, the CU organises a roundtable discussion in the Parliament on its
draft law. It is a closed meeting so that the members of Parliament, the
invited genocide scholars and the jurists can exchange views freely. Another
reason could be that the Armenian Genocide will also be a subject of
discussion, since the Federation of the Armenian Organisations will also be
present.

This is an exceptionally emotional issue for Turks living in the
Netherlands, since according to most Turks there was no genocide. In 2006,
three Turkish candidates of the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) and the
Labour Party (PvdA) for parliamentary elections, withdrew from the campaign
because they had denied the Armenian Genocide. State Secretary Ms. Albayrak
(Labour Party) thinks that massacres have been perpetrated at the time, but
whether those massacres can be defined as genocide under international law
remains a question for her.

Mr. Voordewind expects to submit officially the draft law to the Parliament
after the hearing. The bill has been amended on some points after the
remarks of the State Council, but the purport remains intact. The coalition
partner, PvdA, however, does not support it. Also, the minister of Justice,
Mr. Hirsch Ballin does not advocate a separate legislation. He supports the
European Framework Decision, but finds that the present legislation already
provides this option. According to him, deniers of the Jewish Holocaust and
other genocides (Srebrenica, Rwanda, Armenians) can be apprehended on the
strength of the present laws criminalizing discrimination and insult.

The CU does not agree with this argument. According to Mr. Voordewind,
falsifying of the facts consciously in combination with hurting, insulting
or discriminating of the victims or their descendants must be a recognised
penal act in itself. Besides, a special legislation will work more
effectively than the present more general provisions of the Criminal Law.

The origin of the draft law lies in a motion by Christian Union back in
2004, which was adopted by the Parliament. In that motion, the Armenian
Genocide was recognised. At the time, the government had no problem with
that. In 2006, the Christian Union submitted the draft law for penalising
the ?negationism¹, i.e. offending denial of crimes against humanity in
general, with up to one year imprisonment or an equivalent pecuniary
punishment. The draft law is not particularly directed to the Armenian
Genocide, but applies to all internationally established genocides.

============

* Note by Abovian Cultural Centre:
The hearing took place on 15 December 2008 and was organised by Christian
Union parliamentary faction, initiator of the draft law, with participation
of Dutch MP¹s, genocide experts, jurists, Centre for Information and
Documentation on Israel (CIDI) and the Federation of Armenian Organisations
of the Netherlands (FAON).

Haigazian: Mouradian Lectures on Turkey-Armenia Dialogue

PRESS RELEASE
From: Mira Yardemian
Public Relations Director
Haigazian University
Mexique Street, Kantari, Beirut
P.O.Box. 11-1748
Riad El Solh 1107 2090
Tel: 01-353010/1/2
Email: [email protected]

Mouradian Lectures on Turkey-Armenia Dialogue

On Thursday, December 11, a lecture on Turkish-Armenian relations,
titled "Soccer Diplomacy and the Road Not Taken," was held at Haigazian
University.

Haigazian’s Student Life Director and Haigazian Armenological Review’s
executive secretary Antranig Dakessian spoke briefly about the current
developments in Turkish-Armenian relations and introduced the speaker,
Khatchig Mouradian, editor of the Boston-based Armenian Weekly and a
graduate of Haigazian University.

Mouradian first provided the context in which the recent Turkey-Armenia
rapprochement happened. During the Russia-Georgia conflict, he noted,
traffic was disrupted on an important highway connecting the two
countries, stopping vital supplies from reaching Armenia. With the
Russia-Georgia standoff unresolved, urgent attention was given in
Yerevan to the Turkey-Armenia border, closed by Turkey when the Karabagh
conflict erupted. Mouradian also talked about the presidential election
in Armenia and how it affected the rapprochement.

The speaker then detailed the political situation in Turkey and the
reasons behind Ankara’s interest in reaching a breakthrough in
Turkey-Armenia relations. After a brief overview of the situation in
Turkey, during which he spoke about the role of the Turkish army and
bureaucracy and the difficult situation the ruling AK party has found
itself in, Mouradian noted that Turkey’s interest in a breakthrough
could be summarized by one word: genocide.

"With a democratic majority in Congress, and with the prospects of an
Obama/Biden victory high, Turkey realized that it is only a matter of
time before the U.S. officially recognizes the Armenian genocide,"
Mouradian said.

Mouradian said, "In Turkey, the hardliners argued that Ankara should
avoid normalizing relations with Yerevan before the latter stop pursuing
international recognition of the Genocide and withdraws forces from
Karabagh. The moderates, on the other hand, argued that the best
strategy for Turkey would be to disrupt the harmony between the Armenian
state, which has made genocide recognition a foreign relations priority,
and the Armenian Diaspora, which has been pursuing genocide recognition
worldwide for decades through activism and lobbying." By starting
negotiations with Armenia and receiving concessions from it on the
genocide recognition front, Mouradian argued, Turkey hoped of creating a
schism between the Diaspora and Armenia and undermine the passage of the
Genocide Resolution in the U.S.

Mouradian then talked about the inherent asymmetries in the
Turkey-Armenia dialogue. He said, "True transformation of
Turkish-Armenian relations cannot take place without involving all
sectors and levels of the affected population. ‘Soccer Diplomacy’ was
not Turkish-Armenian dialogue-as it was portrayed in the media-it was
Turkey-Armenia dialogue and ignored the large and powerful Diaspora that
has been the coronary artery of Armenia since its independence."

He concluded, "A great amount of creativity is necessary to address the
power asymmetries that are so inherent to this conflict-especially since
these asymmetries are the product of the genocide perpetrated by one
side and the denial and hostile attitude that continued to define the
policies of that side towards the other."

Armenia Tree Project’s Green Dream Is Coming True

ARMENIA TREE PROJECT
65 Main Street
Watertown, MA 02472
Tel: (617) 926-TREE
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
December 12, 2008

Armenia Tree Project’s Green Dream Is Coming True

— Nearly 2,500,000 Trees Planted and Restored Since 1994

YEREVAN–Armenia Tree Project (ATP) has just completed the planting of
460,070 trees in 2008, bringing the total number of trees planted and
restored close to 2,500,000 since the organization was founded in 1994.

This fall, ATP’s Rural and Mountainous Development (RMD) Program planted
402,720 tree seedlings at new forest sites in the Gegharkunik and Lori
regions, while the Community Tree Planting (CTP) Program planted 57,350
trees at 188 sites in 10 regions of Armenia.

CTP Program Works in Urban and Rural Communities

"The number of trees planted by the CTP program exceeded our annual
objectives. All of these high-quality indigenous tree seedlings were planted
at sites chosen to maximize the survival rate due to the availability of
irrigation water, fencing and monitoring, soil quality, as well as the
inspiration and willingness of the local population to care for the trees,"
stated program manager Anahit Gharibyan.

The CTP program planted 22,085 trees and shrubs from ATP’s Karin and
Khachpar nurseries in the spring, along with 1,300 pine seedlings from the
Mirak Family Reforestation Nursery which were planted in collaboration with
the Nor Nork Greenery Department.

In the fall, the CTP program planted 33,965 trees and shrubs at 97 sites in
Yerevan and nine regions of Armenia. In addition, ATP’s apricot, wild apple,
peach, and pear trees at 115 sites provided a harvest of 227,439 kg (507,317
lbs) of fresh fruit which benefited the local communities and institutions.

Throughout the year, ATP’s CTP program participated in events and
environmental campaigns launched at Tsitsernakaberd, Kashatagh, Nubarashen,
Noravank, Khor Virap, and elsewhere. ATP supported these initiatives by
providing healthy seedlings along with special training on planting
techniques and tree care.

For example, ATP worked with organizations and students to plant trees at
the Nubarashen Boarding School, and worked with HSBC Bank, Synopsys CJSC,
American University of Armenia, Armenian Monuments Awareness Project, and a
number of other institutions operating in Armenia.

The CTP program also increased the number of beneficiaries of its planting
project in 15 villages where 5,572 families have benefited from the fruit
trees planted by ATP since 2004. The village planting project was initiated
to improve the quality of rural backyard gardens in order to present them to
ATP donors for sponsorship.

RMD Program Plants Over 400,000 Trees

ATP began a completely new reforestation program on a 40 hectare (100 acre)
plot of community owned land in Jrashen, near ATP’s Mirak Family Nursery and
the newly planned Michael and Virginia Ohanian Environmental Center in
Margahovit. "It was noteworthy that ATP established a new forest and
obtained the land in Jrashen as a result of collaboration with Armenia’s
Hayantar State Forestry Service," noted RMD program manager Vadim Uzunyan.
This fall, ATP began by planting the first 7,000 oak seedlings at the site
in cooperation with Hayantar.

"ATP had the full support of the community and 25 trained tree-planters
hired from the Lori region welcomed the opportunity to work as part of the
ATP initiative. This program has allowed families to improve their
socio-economic situation, while at the same time improving the local
environment and natural resource base," stated Uzunyan.

This year a total of 399 rural families from the Gegharkunik and Tavush
regions grew 309,720 seedlings in their backyards, which were purchased by
ATP for reforestation purposes. The program received the prestigious Energy
Globe Award for Sustainability at the European Parliament in May. The other
86,000 reforestation seedlings were planted this fall from ATP’s Mirak
Family Nursery.

ATP hired 100 local residents to plant new seedlings on 100 hectares (250
acres) of land belonging to the communities of Aygut and Dprabak. "The local
residents were inspired and enthusiastic about the reforestation initiated
by ATP to combat the interrelated problems of deforestation and massive
landslides that threaten the villages of the Getik River Valley," noted
Uzunyan. "Landslides became more frequent and destroyed the homes of a
number of families this year. These families understand that
well-established and maintained forests have the potential to provide
economic, social, and environmental benefits."

PHOTO CAPTIONS

The apricot, wild apple, peach, and pear trees planted by Armenia Tree
Project provided a harvest of 227,439 kg (507,317 lbs) of fresh fruit in
2008; this photo was taken in July after the apricot harvest at St. Gevork
Monastery in Mughni

ATP’s Rural and Mountainous Development Program planted 402,720 tree
seedlings at new forest sites in Gegharkunik and Lori in 2008; the program
creates employment for hundreds of workers every year

Note to editors: The photographs for this story are available in color if
you can use them for your print publication or web site. Please write to
[email protected] for color versions of photos if needed.

www.armeniatree.org

When Jesus met Buddha

008/12/14/when_jesus_met_buddha/?page=full

The Boston Globe

When Jesus met Buddha

Something remarkable happened when evangelists for two great religions
crossed paths more than 1,000 years ago: they got along

By Philip Jenkins | December 14, 2008

WAS THE BUDDHA a demon?

While few mainline Christians would put the matter in such confrontational
terms, any religion claiming exclusive access to truth has real
difficulties reconciling other great faiths into its cosmic scheme. Most
Christian churches hold that Jesus alone is the Way, the Truth, and the
Life, and many also feel an obligation to carry that message to the world’s
unbelievers. But this creates a fundamental conflict with the followers of
famous spiritual figures like Mohammed or Buddha, who preached radically
different messages. Drawing on a strict interpretation of the Bible, some
Christians see these rival faiths as not merely false, but as deliberate
traps set by the forces of evil.

Being intolerant of other religions – consigning them to hell, in fact –
may be bad enough in its own right, but it increasingly has real-world
consequences. As trade and technology shrink the globe, so different
religions come into ever-closer contact with one another, and the results
can be bloody: witness the apocalyptic assaults in Mumbai. In such a world,
teaching different faiths to acknowledge one another’s claims, to live
peaceably together side by side, stops being a matter of good manners and
becomes a prerequisite for human survival.

Over the past 30 years, the Roman Catholic Church has faced repeated
battles over this question of Christ’s uniqueness, and has cracked down on
thinkers who have made daring efforts to accommodate other world
religions. While the Christian dialogue with Islam has attracted

most of the headlines, it is the encounters with Hinduism and especially
Buddhism that have stirred the most controversy within the church. Sri
Lankan theologians Aloysius Pieris and Tissa Balasuriya have had many
run-ins with Vatican critics, and, more recently, the battle has come to
American shores. Last year, the Vatican ordered an investigation of
Georgetown University’s Peter Phan, a Jesuit theologian whose main sin, in
official eyes, has been to treat the Buddhism of his Vietnamese homeland as
a parallel path to salvation.

Following the ideas of Pope Benedict XVI, though, the church refuses to
give up its fundamental belief in the unique role of Christ. In a widely
publicized open letter to Italian politician Marcello Pera, Pope Benedict
declared that "an inter-religious dialogue in the strict sense of the term
is not possible." By all means, he said, we should hold conversations with
other cultures, but not in a way that acknowledges other religions as
equally valid. While the Vatican does not of course see the Buddha as a
demon, it does fear the prospect of syncretism, the dilution of Christian
truth in an unholy mixture with other faiths.

Beyond doubt, this view places Benedict in a strong tradition of
Christianity as it has developed in Europe since Roman times. But there is
another, ancient tradition, which suggests a very different
course. Europe’s is not the only version of the Christian faith, nor is it
necessarily the oldest heir of the ancient church. For more than 1,000
years, other quite separate branches of the church established thriving
communities across Asia, and in their sheer numbers, these churches were
comparable to anything Europe could muster at the time. These Christian
bodies traced their ancestry back not through Rome, but directly to the
original Jesus movement of ancient Palestine. They moved across India,
Central Asia, and China, showing no hesitation to share – and learn from –
the other great religions of the East.

Just how far these Christians were prepared to go is suggested by a
startling symbol that appeared on memorials and stone carvings in both
southern India and coastal China during the early Middle Ages. We can
easily see that the image depicts a cross, but it takes a moment to realize
that the base of the picture – the root from which the cross is growing –
is a lotus flower, the symbol of Buddhist enlightenment.

In modern times, most mainstream churches would condemn such an amalgam as
a betrayal of the Christian faith, an example of multiculturalism run
wild. Yet concerns about syncretism did not bother these early Asian
Christians, who called themselves Nasraye, Nazarenes, like Jesus’s earliest
followers. They were comfortable associating themselves with the other
great monastic and mystical religion of the time, and moreover, they
believed that both lotus and cross carried similar messages about the quest
for light and salvation. If these Nazarenes could find meaning in the
lotus-cross, then why can’t modern Catholics, or other inheritors of the
faith Jesus inspired?

Many Christians are coming to terms with just how thoroughly so many of
their fundamental assumptions will have to be rethought as their faith
today becomes a global religion. Even modern church leaders who know how
rapidly the church is expanding in the global South tend to see European
values and traditions as the indispensable norm, in matters of liturgy and
theology as much as music and architecture.

Yet the reality is that Christianity has from its earliest days been an
intercontinental faith, as firmly established in Asia and Africa as in
Europe itself. When we broaden our scope to look at the faith that by 800
or so stretched from Ireland to Korea, we see the many different ways in
which Christians interacted with other believers, in encounters that
reshaped both sides. At their best, these meetings allowed the traditions
not just to exchange ideas but to intertwine in productive and enriching
ways, in an awe-inspiring chapter of Christian history that the Western
churches have all but forgotten.

To understand this story, we need to reconfigure our mental maps. When we
think of the growth of Christianity, we think above all of Europe. We
visualize a movement growing west from Palestine and Syria and spreading
into Greece and Italy, and gradually into northern regions. Europe is still
the center of the Catholic Church, of course, but it was also the
birthplace of the Protestant denominations that split from it. For most of
us, even speaking of the "Eastern Church" refers to another group of
Europeans, namely to the Orthodox believers who stem from the eastern parts
of the continent. English Catholic thinker Hilaire Belloc once proclaimed
that "Europe is the Faith; and the Faith is Europe."

But in the early centuries other Christians expanded east into Asia and
south into Africa, and those other churches survived for the first 1,200
years or so of Christian history. Far from being fringe sects, these
forgotten churches were firmly rooted in the oldest traditions of the
apostolic church. Throughout their history, these Nazarenes used Syriac,
which is close to Jesus’ own language of Aramaic, and they followed Yeshua,
not Jesus. No other church – not Roman Catholics, not Eastern Orthodox –
has a stronger claim to a direct inheritance from the earliest Jesus
movement.

The most stunningly successful of these eastern Christian bodies was the
Church of the East, often called the Nestorian church. While the Western
churches were expanding their influence within the framework of the Roman
Empire, the Syriac-speaking churches colonized the vast Persian kingdom
that ruled from Syria to Pakistan and the borders of China. From their
bases in Mesopotamia – modern Iraq – Nestorian Christians carried out their
vast missionary efforts along the Silk Route that crossed Central Asia. By
the eighth century, the Church of the East had an extensive structure
across most of central Asia and China, and in southern India. The church
had senior clergy – metropolitans – in Samarkand and Bokhara, in Herat in
Afghanistan. A bishop had his seat in Chang’an, the imperial capital of
China, which was then the world’s greatest superpower.

When Nestorian Christians were pressing across Central Asia during the
sixth and seventh centuries, they met the missionaries and saints of an
equally confident and expansionist religion: Mahayana Buddhism. Buddhists
too wanted to take their saving message to the world, and launched great
missions from India’s monasteries and temples. In this diverse world,
Buddhist and Christian monasteries were likely to stand side by side, as
neighbors and even, sometimes, as collaborators. Some historians believe
that Nestorian missionaries influenced the religious practices of the
Buddhist religion then developing in Tibet. Monks spoke to monks.

In presenting their faith, Christians naturally used the cultural forms
that would be familiar to Asians. They told their stories in the forms of
sutras, verse patterns already made famous by Buddhist missionaries and
teachers. A stunning collection of Jesus Sutras was found in caves at
Dunhuang, in northwest China. Some Nestorian writings draw heavily on
Buddhist ideas, as they translate prayers and Christian services in ways
that would make sense to Asian readers. In some texts, the Christian phrase
"angels and archangels and hosts of heaven" is translated into the language
of buddhas and devas.

One story in particular suggests an almost shocking degree of collaboration
between the faiths. In 782, the Indian Buddhist missionary Prajna arrived
in Chang’an, bearing rich treasures of sutras and other
scriptures. Unfortunately, these were written in Indian languages. He
consulted the local Nestorian bishop, Adam, who had already translated
parts of the Bible into Chinese. Together, Buddhist and Christian scholars
worked amiably together for some years to translate seven copious volumes
of Buddhist wisdom. Probably, Adam did this as much from intellectual
curiosity as from ecumenical good will, and we can only guess about the
conversations that would have ensued: Do you really care more about
relieving suffering than atoning for sin? And your monks meditate like ours
do?

These efforts bore fruit far beyond China. Other residents of Chang’an at
this very time included Japanese monks, who took these very translations
back with them to their homeland. In Japan, these works became the founding
texts of the great Buddhist schools of the Middle Ages. All the famous
movements of later Japanese history, including Zen, can be traced to one of
those ancient schools and, ultimately – incredibly – to the work of a
Christian bishop.

By the 12th century, flourishing churches in China and southern India were
using the lotus-cross. The lotus is a superbly beautiful flower that grows
out of muck and slime. No symbol could better represent the rise of the
soul from the material, the victory of enlightenment over ignorance,
desire, and attachment. For 2,000 years, Buddhist artists have used the
lotus to convey these messages in countless paintings and sculptures. The
Christian cross, meanwhile, teaches a comparable lesson, of divine victory
over sin and injustice, of the defeat of the world. Somewhere in Asia,
Yeshua’s forgotten followers made the daring decision to integrate the two
emblems, which still today forces us to think about the parallels between
the kinds of liberation and redemption offered by each faith.

Christianity, for much of its history, was just as much an Asian religion
as Buddhism. Asia’s Christian churches survived for more than a millennium,
and not until the 10th century, halfway through Christian history, did the
number of Christians in Europe exceed that in Asia.

What ultimately obliterated the Asian Christians were the Mongol invasions,
which spread across Central Asia and the Middle East from the 1220s
onward. From the late 13th century, too, the world entered a terrifying era
of climate change, of global cooling, which severely cut food supplies and
contributed to mass famine. The collapse of trade and commerce crippled
cities, leaving the world much poorer and more vulnerable. Intolerant
nationalism wiped out Christian communities in China, while a surging
militant Islam destroyed the churches of Central Asia.

But awareness of this deep Christian history contributes powerfully to
understanding the future of the religion, as much as its past. For long
centuries, Asian Christians kept up neighborly relations with other faiths,
which they saw not as deadly rivals but as fellow travelers on the road to
enlightenment. Their worldview differed enormously from the norms that
developed in Europe.

To take one example, we are used to the idea of Christianity operating as
the official religion of powerful states, which were only too willing to
impose a particular orthodoxy upon their subjects. Yet when we look at the
African and Asian experience, we find millions of Christians whose normal
experience was as minorities or even majorities within nations dominated by
some other religion. Struggling to win hearts and minds, leading churches
had no option but to frame the Christian message in the context of
non-European intellectual traditions. Christian thinkers did present their
message in the categories of Buddhism – and Taoism, and Confucianism – and
there is no reason why they could not do so again. When modern scholars
like Peter Phan try to place Christianity in an Asian and Buddhist context,
they are resuming a task begun at least 1,500 years ago.

Perhaps, in fact, we are looking at our history upside down. Some day,
future historians might look at the last few hundred years of Euro-American
dominance within Christianity and regard it as an unnatural interlude in a
much longer story of fruitful interchange between the great religions.

Consider the story told by Timothy, a patriarch of the Nestorian
church. Around 800, he engaged in a famous debate with the Muslim caliph in
Baghdad, a discussion marked by reason and civility on both sides. Imagine,
Timothy said, that we are all in a dark house, and someone throws a
precious pearl in the midst of a pile of ordinary stones. Everyone
scrabbles for the pearl, and some think they’ve found it, but nobody can be
sure until day breaks.

In the same way, he said, the pearl of true faith and wisdom had fallen
into the darkness of this transitory world; each faith believed that it
alone had found the pearl. Yet all he could claim – and all the caliph
could say in response – was that some faiths thought they had enough
evidence to prove that they were indeed holding the real pearl, but the
final truth would not be known in this world.

Knowing other faiths firsthand grants believers an enviable sophistication,
founded on humility. We could do a lot worse than to learn from what we
sometimes call the Dark Ages.

Philip Jenkins is Edwin Erle Sparks professor of the humanities at Penn
State University. He is author of "The Lost History of Christianity: The
Thousand-Year Golden Age of the Church in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia
— and How It Died," published last month.

© 2008 The New York Times Company

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2

Armenian Boxer Wins The World Cup

ARMENIAN BOXER WINS THE WORLD CUP

armradio.am
15.12.2008 17:44

Armenian boxer Andranik Hakobyan (75 kg) became the winner of the
World Cup by defeating his Venezuelan contender Alfonso Blanco 10:9
in Moscow.

The newly appointed President of the Boxing Federation of Armenia,
Arman Muradyan, and the First Vice-President of the Federation,
Vice-President of the European Boxing Federation Dertenik Gabrielyan
were in Moscow to follow the competition.

Armenia, China Sign Agreement On Interparliamentary Cooperation

ARMENIA, CHINA SIGN AGREEMENT ON INTERPARLIAMENTARY COOPERATION

armradio.am
15.12.2008 18:03

China and Armenia signed a memorandum of understanding today on
exchange and cooperation between the two parliaments, Xinhua agency
reported

"The signing of the memo marks a new era for the relationship between
the two parliaments," Chinese top legislator Wu Bangguo said when
witnessing the signing ceremony with visiting chairman of the Armenian
National Assembly Hovik Abrahamyan, according to a press release
from the news office of the Standing Committee of China’s National
People’s Congress (NPC), China’s top legislature.

In his meeting with Abrahamyan, Wu, Chairman of NPC Standing Committee,
highlighted the roles that the two parliaments play in promoting
Sino-Armenian relations as "highly important," expressing his hope
that the two sides could maintain the exchange at various levels and
cement cooperation in fields such as legislation and legal supervision.

China highly values its ties with Armenia, Wu told Abrahamyan, saying
that the country is willing to promote relations with Armenia to
a higher level based on the principles of mutual respect, equality
and reciprocity.

Echoing Wu’s views on the ties between the two nations and the two
parliaments, Abramyan said Armenia was committed to developing its ties
with China especially in the fields of trade, science and technology,
and education.

The Armenian National Assembly would regard the signing of the
agreement memo as an opportunity to boost friendly exchange and
pragmatic cooperation and inject new vigor into relations, said
Abrahamyan.

He said that Armenia would continue to adhere to the one-China policy.

Situation Along The Line Of Contact Discussed At NKR President’s Off

SITUATION ALONG THE LINE OF CONTACT DISCUSSED AT NKR PRESIDENT’S OFFICE

armradio.am
15.12.2008 18:07

On 15 December NKR President Bako Sahakyan held a consultation with
the supreme command staff of the NKR Defense Army at the head of
defense minister Movses Hakobyan, Central Information Department of
the Office of the NKR President reported.

Issues related to army building, situation along the line of
contact between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan armed forces and
improvement of social conditions of the servicemen were discussed at
the consultations.

Sitting Of The Commission Coordinating Armenia’s Defense Strategy Re

SITTING OF THE COMMISSION COORDINATING ARMENIA’S DEFENSE STRATEGY REVIEW

armradio.am
15.12.2008 18:15

On December 15 the recurrent sitting of the interdepartmental
commission coordinating the review of the Defense Strategy of the
Republic of Armenia was held at the Ministry of Defense. The sitting
was chaired by Co-Chairs of the Commission, RA Minister of Justice
Seyran Ohanyan and Secretary of the National Security Council Arthur
Baghdasaryan.

Participants of the sitting discussed the draft document on assessment
of RA security atmosphere and challenges. All the suggestions of
the members of the Commission and the disputable questions were
agreed upon.

The Commission took the decision to edit the document and present it
for the approval of the President of the Republic of Armenia.

Armenia Interested In Continuing Cooperation With OSCE

ARMENIA INTERESTED IN CONTINUING COOPERATION WITH OSCE

armradio.am
15.12.2008 18:59

On December 15 the Foreign Minister of Armenia, Edward Nalbandian,
received the OSCE Secretary General, Marc Perrin de Brichambaut.

Greeting the guest, Minister Nalbandian noted that as an OSCE member
state Armenia is interested in continuing the cooperation in all three
spheres of OSCE activity and in this regard attaches importance to
the reformation of the organization to make it more effective. The
Armenian Foreign Minister noted also that the European security
needs new architecture, which should take into consideration all the
existing concerns.

Summing up the results of the OSCE Ministerial meeting in Helsinki,
Edward Nalbandian and Marc Perrin de Brichambaut attached importance to
the consolidation of the provisions targeted at promoting cooperation
over the area of OSCE responsibility in the documents adopted as a
result of the meeting.

Speaking about the opportunities of settlement of the Artsakh issue,
Edward Nalbandian emphasized the role of the OSCE in the settlement
process and stressed the importance f the declaration of the OSCE
Foreign Ministers and the declaration of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair
countries on the Karabakh conflict resolution.

The interlocutors dwelt on the activity of the OSCE Yerevan Office
and the programs implemented by it. In this regard, Edward Nalbandian
noted that Armenia attaches importance to the existence of the OSCE
Office in Yerevan.

Agricultural Market Information System Created In Armenia

AGRICULTURAL MARKET INFORMATION SYSTEM CREATED IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Dec 15, 2008

YEREVAN, December 15. /ARKA/. The first system of agricultural
market information, created in Armenia under the sponsorship of the
Millennium Challenge – Armenia Account, is to be presented in Yerevan
on December 17.

The press service, Millennium Challenge – Armenia Account, reports
that the international experience in using market information systems
will be presented as well.

The ceremony is to be attended by RA Deputy Minister of Agriculture
Samvel Avetisyan, other officials, as well as by farmers,
representatives of agricultural associations and banks, manufacturers
and processing enterprises, representatives of local and international
organizations.

Ara Hovsepyan, CEO, Millennium Challenge – Armenia Account, and Richard
Garlbrink, "From Water to Market" program executive, are to speak at
the presentation.

Mr. Garlbrink said that the system is supposed to provide farmers,
food producers, and other members of the marketing chain with firsthand
information on market prices.

The system based on Internet and mobile communication will also provide
information on the quality, technologies and industrial news. -0–
From: Baghdasarian