Azerbaijan May Spurn West

AZERBAIJAN MAY SPURN WEST

International News
8
Nov 27 2009
Pakistan

BAKU: On a windswept hilltop looking down at the Azerbaijani capital
Baku, Turkish flags flutter over a monument that testifies to decades
of close ties between the two nations.

Surrounding an obelisk bearing the Turkish crescent and star, stone
blocks carry the names of dozens of Turkish soldiers who died while
fighting for Azerbaijan’s independence before it was absorbed into
the Soviet Union in 1922.

For Turks and Azerbaijanis, who share close ethnic and linguistic
roots, the monument is a symbol of what officials in both countries
frequently describe as "brotherly" relations.

So it came as a shock when Azerbaijan — angry over Ankara’s efforts
at reconciliation with Azerbaijan’s arch-rival Armenia — removed
the Turkish flags flying over the monument in October.

After some soothing words from Ankara, the flags soon returned. But
anger at Turkey is running deep in Azerbaijan, and tensions are
threatening not only a partnership that has been crucial for both
countries, but also Western interests in an area of great strategic
importance.

Diplomats and analysts say resentment in Azerbaijan is aimed not
only at Nato member Turkey for pursuing ties with Armenia, but also
at the United States and Europe for pushing Ankara towards a deal.

That could see Azerbaijan turn away from nearly two decades of looking
to the West, threatening vital energy supplies to Europe and sowing
further instability in the volatile South Caucasus region between
Russia and Iran.

"It’s not only Azerbaijan whose interests are put at risk by this
abruptive, not carefully prepared… rapprochement between Turkey
and Armenia," Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov told
AFP in an interview.

The interests of Europe and the United States also stand to suffer,
he said, while warning that "reactions from Azerbaijan will be even
more harsh" if Turkey ratifies a deal to establish diplomatic ties
and open its border with Armenia. At the centre of the dispute is
the mountainous southwestern Azerbaijani region of Nagorny Karabakh,
where ethnic Armenian separatists, backed by Yerevan, seized control
from Baku during a war in the early 1990s that left 30,000 dead.

Negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the region have been
stalled for years and tensions remain high, with frequent fighting
and deadly shootings along a fragile ceasefire line.

Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
Azerbaijan over the Karabakh conflict, and Baku insists the border
should not re-open until the region’s status is settled.

The United States and Europe had pushed for Ankara to reach a deal
with Armenia earlier, making it appear that Baku’s interests have
been set aside, said Vladimir Socor, a regional expert with the
Washington-based Jamestown Foundation.

"Azerbaijan is justifiably irritated with Western policy on this
issue," he said. "Azerbaijan correctly feels that its own security
concerns and the Karabakh issue are simply not being taken into
account to a sufficient degree, if at all, by the United States and
by the major European powers."

Socor said that by ignoring Azerbaijan’s interests, Western powers
are jeopardising years of effort to gain influence in the strategic
Caucasus region and to tap the vast energy reserves of the Caspian Sea.

Since gaining its independence with the Soviet collapse in 1991,
Azerbaijan has been at the heart of Western efforts to transport oil
and gas from the Caspian to Europe, decreasing Western reliance on
Russian supplies.

Baku is the starting point for two major pipelines carrying oil and
gas from the Caspian, through Georgia and Turkey, to hungry European
consumers.

Efforts are underway to expand the network into Central Asia,
and Azerbaijan is also considered a key potential supplier for
the European Union’s flagship Nabucco gas pipeline. But in the
wake of the Armenia-Turkey deal, Azerbaijan has threatened to seek
alternative export routes and in recent months has signed new supply
deals with both Russia and Iran. Azimov, the deputy foreign minister,
said the West needs to realise that pushing for a deal between Turkey
and Armenia without taking Baku’s interests into account will have
consequences.

"The question that needs to be asked is: Are we important? And if
we are, then issues have to be solved in a way providing for all
interests," he said.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/print1.asp?id=21071

ANKARA: European Parliament: Ergenekon Investigation Is An Opportuni

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT: ERGENEKON INVESTIGATION IS AN OPPORTUNITY

Today’s Zaman
Nov 27 2009
Turkey

The draft of the European Parliament progress report on Turkey calls
Ergenekon investigation an opportunity for Turkish democracy and rule
of law.

Written by Dutch Christian Democrat Ria Oomen-Ruijten, the draft calls
on the government to revamp the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors
(HSYK). The 8-pages report which bears the date of 26-11-2009 commends
the government’s initiative on the Democratic and Armenian initiatives
but at the same time criticizes the slow pace of implementation. The
parts of the draft on Cyprus seem to be hugely influenced by the
Greek Cypriot position.

The first debate of the draft report will take place on Dec. 2 in
Committee on Foreign Affairs (AFET). Following are some important
topics from the draft report.

Judicial Reform

By welcoming the government’s approval of the judiciary reform
strategy, the report also encourages the government to re-structure
the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) so as to ensure
its representative ness, objectiveness, impartiality and transparency.

It takes note of progress made on legislation limiting the jurisdiction
of military courts and regrets the lodging of an appeal before
the Constitutional Court seeking annulment of that legislation; is
concerned by the continuing involvement of the military in Turkish
politics and foreign policy, and reiterates that in a democratic
society the military must be fully subject to civilian oversight.

Ergenekon

The draft report is also concerned about the alleged magnitude of the
Ergenekon criminal network; urges the government and the judiciary
to ensure that all proceedings are fully in line with the due process
of law and that the rights of all defendants are respected.

Democratic initiatives

Welcomes the initiatives taken by the Turkish Government to bring
Turkish citizens together and enable every citizen, irrespective of
origin or religion, to enjoy equal rights and play an active role
in Turkish society. Welcomes the adoption of legislation removing
all restrictions on broadcasting in the Kurdish language by private
and public channels at the local and national levels as well as of
legislation on the use of the Kurdish language in prisons; urges
the government to take further measures ensuring real opportunities
to learn Kurdish within the public and private schooling system,
allowing for Kurdish to be used in political life and in access to
public services; calls on the Government to make sure that anti-terror
laws are not misused to restrict fundamental freedoms, and to abolish
the system of village guards in the south-east of Turkey.

Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) terrorist organization

Condemns the continuing violence perpetrated by the PKK and other
terrorist groups on Turkish soil, and urges the PKK to respond to
the political initiative of the Turkish government by laying down
its arms and putting an end to violence;

Religious Minorities

Welcomes the dialogue entered into by the Turkish government with
non-Muslim religious communities and the Alevis; underlines, however,
that positive steps and gestures cannot mask the lack of real reform
of the legal framework, which must enable these religious communities
to function without undue constraints, in line with the ECHR and the
case-law of the European Court of Human Rights;

It also reiterates its concern about the obstacles faced by the
Ecumenical Patriarchate concerning its legal status, the training of
its clergy, and elections of the Ecumenical Patriarch.

Press Freedom

The report is concerned about continued restrictions on press freedom,
particularly following the imposition of an unprecedented fine on
a media group, as well as regarding frequent website bans; stresses
that the cultivation of press freedom is an important sign of political
culture in a pluralistic society; recommends that in this context, and
in light of the unhealthy links between media and business interests,
a new media law be adopted.

Cyprus

Calls on the Turkish government actively to support the ongoing
negotiations, and to contribute in concrete terms to the comprehensive
settlement of the Cyprus issue, based on a bi-zonal, bi-communal
federation, in line with the relevant UN Security Council resolutions
and the principles on which the EU is founded; calls on Turkey to
facilitate a suitable climate for negotiations by withdrawing its
forces;

Relations with neighbours

Commends the diplomatic efforts made to normalise relations with
Armenia, and urges the Turkish government to open the border with
Armenia; calls on the Turkish Parliament (TBMM) and the Parliament
of Armenia to ratify the relevant protocols without delay and without
setting any preconditions;

Takes note of the limited progress achieved in improving Turkish-Greek
bilateral relations; calls on the TBMM to withdraw its casus belli
threat, and expects the Turkish government to end the continued
violations of Greek airspace.

Welcomes the continued improvement of relations with Iraq and with
the Kurdish regional government; stresses once again its appeal to
the Turkish government to ensure that any anti-terrorist operation
that is conducted fully respects Iraq´s territorial integrity, human
rights and international law, and that civilian casualties are avoided.

Foreign Policy

Notes Turkey´s increasingly active foreign policy and appreciates
its efforts to contribute to solutions in various crisis regions;
calls on the Turkish government to intensify its foreign policy
coordination with the EU, in particular as regards Iran.

Jerusalem: Mouths Filled With Hatred

MOUTHS FILLED WITH HATRED
By Larry Derfner

Jerusalem Post
59231077244&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowF ull
Nov 27 2009

Father Samuel Aghoyan, a senior Armenian Orthodox cleric in Jerusalem’s
Old City, says he’s been spat at by young haredi and national Orthodox
Jews "about 15 to 20 times" in the past decade. The last time it
happened, he said, was earlier this month. "I was walking back from
the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and I saw this boy in a yarmulke and
ritual fringes coming back from the Western Wall, and he spat at me
two or three times."

Wearing a dark-blue robe, sitting in St. James’s Church, the main
Armenian church in the Old City, Aghoyan said, "Every single priest
in this church has been spat on. It happens day and night."

Father Athanasius, a Texas-born Franciscan monk who heads the Christian
Information Center inside the Jaffa Gate, said he’s been spat at by
haredi and national Orthodox Jews "about 15 times in the last six
months" – not only in the Old City, but also on Rehov Agron near the
Franciscan friary. "One time a bunch of kids spat at me, another time a
little girl spat at me," said the brown-robed monk near the Jaffa Gate.

"All 15 monks at our friary have been spat at," he said. "Every
[Christian cleric in the Old City] who’s been here for awhile, who
dresses in robes in public, has a story to tell about being spat at.

The more you get around, the more it happens."

A nun in her 60s who’s lived in an east Jerusalem convent for decades
says she was spat at for the first time by a haredi man on Rehov
Agron about 25 years ago. "As I was walking past, he spat on the
ground right next to my shoes and he gave me a look of contempt,"
said the black-robed nun, sitting inside the convent. "It took me a
moment, but then I understood."

Since then, the nun, who didn’t want to be identified, recalls being
spat at three different times by young national Orthodox Jews on
Jaffa Road, three different times by haredi youth near Mea She’arim
and once by a young Jewish woman from her second-story window in the
Old City’s Jewish Quarter.

But the spitting incidents weren’t the worst, she said – the worst was
the time she was walking down Jaffa Road and a group of middle-aged
haredi men coming her way pointed wordlessly to the curb, motioning
her to move off the sidewalk to let them pass, which she did.

"That made me terribly sad," said the nun, speaking in ulpan-trained
Hebrew. Taking personal responsibility for the history of Christian
anti-Semitism, she said that in her native European country, such
behavior "was the kind of thing that they – no, that we used to do
to Jews."

News stories about young Jewish bigots in the Old City spitting on
Christian clergy – who make conspicuous targets in their long dark
robes and crucifix symbols around their necks – surface in the media
every few years or so. It’s natural, then, to conclude that such
incidents are rare, but in fact they are habitual. Anti-Christian
Orthodox Jews, overwhelmingly boys and young men, have been spitting
with regularity on priests and nuns in the Old City for about 20 years,
and the problem is only getting worse.

"My impression is that Christian clergymen are being spat at in the Old
City virtually every day. This has been constantly increasing over the
last decade," said Daniel Rossing. An observant, kippa-wearing Jew,
Rossing heads the Jerusalem Center for Jewish-Christian Relations
and was liaison to Israel’s Christian communities for the Ministry
of Religious Affairs in the ’70s and ’80s.

For Christian clergy in the Old City, being spat at by Jewish fanatics
"is a part of life," said the American Jewish Committee’s Rabbi David
Rosen, Israel’s most prominent Jewish interfaith activist.

"I hate to say it, but we’ve grown accustomed to this. Jewish
religious fanatics spitting at Christian priests and nuns has become
a tradition," said Roman Catholic Father Massimo Pazzini, sitting
inside the Church of the Flagellation on the Via Dolorosa.

These are the very opposite of isolated incidents. Father Athanasius
of the Christian Information Center called them a "phenomenon." George
Hintlian, the unofficial spokesman for the local Armenian community
and former secretary of the Armenian Patriarchate, said it was "like
a campaign."

Christians in Israel are a small, weak community known for "turning
the other cheek," so these Jewish xenophobes feel free to spit on them;
they don’t spit on Muslims in the Old City because they’re afraid to,
the clerics noted.

THE ONLY Israeli authority who has shown any serious concern over this
matter, the one high official whom Christian and Jewish interfaith
activists credit for stepping into the fray, is Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi
Yona Metzger.

On November 11, Metzger addressed a letter to the "rabbis of the
Jewish Quarter," writing that he had "heard a grave rumor about
yeshiva students offending heaven…[by] spitting on Christian clergy
who walk about the Old City of Jerusalem." Such attackers, he added,
are almost tantamount to rodfim, or persecutors, which is one of the
worst class of offenders in Jewish law. They violate the injunction
to follow the "pathways of peace," Metzger wrote, and are liable to
provoke anti-Semitism overseas.

"I thus issue the fervent call to root out this evil affliction from
our midst, and the sooner the better," wrote the chief rabbi.

Metzger published the letter in response to an appeal from Armenian
Archbishop Nourhan Manougian, an appeal that came in the wake of a
September 5 incident in the Old City in which a haredi man spat on
a group of Armenian seminarians who, in turn, beat him up. (See box.)

This is not the first time Metzger has spoken out against the spitting
– he did so five years ago after the most infamous incident on record,
when Manougian himself was spat on by an Old City yeshiva student
during an Armenian Orthodox procession. In response, the archbishop
slapped the student’s face, and then the student tore the porcelain
ceremonial crucifix off Manougian’s neck and threw it to the ground,
breaking it.

Then interior minister Avraham Poraz called the assault on
the archbishop "repulsive" and called for a police crackdown on
anti-Christian attacks in the Old City. Police reportedly punished
the student by banning him from the Old City for 75 days.

Seated in his study in the Armenian Quarter, Manougian, 61, said
that while he personally has not been assaulted since that time,
the spitting attacks on other Armenian clergy have escalated.

"The latest thing is for them to spit when they pass [St. James’s]
monastery. I’ve seen it myself a couple of times," he said. "Then
there’s the boy from the Jewish Quarter who spits at the Armenian women
when he sees them wearing their crosses, then he runs away. And during
one of our processions from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre this year,
a fellow in a yarmulke and fringes began deliberately cutting through
our lines, over and over. The police caught him and he started yelling,
‘I’m free to walk wherever I want!’ That’s what these settler types are
always saying: ‘This is our country and we can do whatever we want!’"

Where are the police in all this? If they happen to be on the scene,
such as at the recent procession Manougian described, they will chase
the hooligans – but even if they catch them, they only tell them off
and let them go, according to several Christian clergymen.

"The police tell us to catch them and bring them in, but then they
tell us not to use violence, so how are we supposed to catch them?"

asked Aghoyan, a very fit-looking 68-year-old. "Once a boy came up to
me and spat in my face, and I punched him and knocked him down, and an
Armenian seminarian and I brought him to the police station [next to
the Armenian Quarter]. They released him in a couple of hours. I’ve
made many, complaints to the police, I’m tired of it. Nothing ever
gets done."

Said Rosen, "The police say, ‘Show us the evidence.’ They want the
Christians to photograph the people spitting at them so they can make
arrests, but this is very unrealistic – by the time you get the camera
out, the attack is over and there’s nothing to photograph."

Victims of these attacks say that in the great majority of cases the
assailants do not spit in their faces or on their clothes, but on the
ground at their feet. "When we complain about this, the police tell us,
‘But they’re not spitting on you, just near you,’" said Manougian.

Sitting inside the Church of the Flagellation on the Via Dolorosa,
Pazzini recalled: "Early this year there were about 100 Orthodox
Jewish boys who came past the church singing and dancing. The police
were with them – I don’t know what the occasion was, maybe it was a
holiday, maybe it had to do with the elections. There was a group of
Franciscan monks standing in front of the church, and a few of the
Jewish boys went up to the monks, spat on them, then went back into
the crowd. I went up to a policeman and he told me, ‘Sorry about that,
but look, they’re just kids.’"

Jerusalem police spokesman Shmuel Ben-Ruby refused to provide an
official comment on the situation on behalf of the Old City police
station. "We don’t give interviews on relations between Jews and
Christians in the Old City," he said. "We’re not sociologists,
we’re policemen."

The Jerusalem municipality likewise refused to be interviewed. "We have
not received any complaints about this matter and we do not deal with
things of this nature," said assistant city spokesman Yossi Gottesman.

EVERY CHRISTIAN cleric interviewed for this article stressed that they
weren’t blaming Israeli Jewry as a whole for the spitting attacks;
on the contrary, they said their general reception by Israeli Jews,
both secular and religious, was one of welcome.

"I keep in mind that for every person here who’s spat at me, there
are many more who’ve come up and said hello," said Father Athanasius.

"I studied at Hebrew University for seven years and the atmosphere
was wonderful. I made a lot of friends there," said Pazzini.

"My class members at ulpan visited our convent, they couldn’t have
been more warm and friendly," said the nun in east Jerusalem. She
recalled that a group of boys in a schoolyard near the ulpan once
threw stones at her and another nun, and two ulpan teachers saw it,
became outraged and went straight into the school principal’s office.

"The kids never threw stones at us again," the nun said.

"I don’t want to cause troubles for Israel – I love Am Yisrael," said
Manougian, adding that he felt completely unthreatened and at ease
when visiting Tel Aviv, Haifa and other parts of the country. The
problem of belligerent Orthodox Jews spitting at Christian clergy,
added Rossing, is evidently confined to Jerusalem.

There was a time when priests and nuns in the capital went virtually
unmolested. In the first 20 years or so after Israel conquered the Old
City in the 1967 Six Day War, spitting incidents did occur, but only
once in a very long while. Old City police would lock the offender
up for the night, which proved an effective deterrent, said Hintlian.

"Whatever problem we had, we could call [mayor] Teddy Kollek’s office,
we could call people in the Foreign Ministry, the Interior Ministry,
we could call Israeli ambassadors. In those days, Christians in
Jerusalem were ‘overprivileged,’" he said.

That era of good feelings came about as a result of two circumstances,
continued Hintlian, the leading chronicler of Jerusalem’s Armenian
history. For one, he says, Israel in general and Jerusalem in
particular were much more liberal in those days, and secondly, Israeli
authorities were out to convince the Christian world that they could
be trusted with their newly acquired stewardship over the Old City’s
holy places.

"Now Israel doesn’t need the world’s approval anymore for its
sovereignty over Jerusalem, so our role is finished," said Hintlian.

"Now we don’t have anyone in authority to turn to."

Yisca Harani, a veteran Jewish interfaith activist who lectures on
Christianity to Israeli tour guides at Touro College, likewise says
the change for the worse came about 20 years ago. She blames the
spitting attacks on the view of Christianity that’s propagated at
haredi and national Orthodox yeshivot.

"I move around the Old City a lot," she said, "I come in contact with
these people, and what they learn in these fundamentalist yeshivot
is that the goy is the enemy, a hater of Israel. All they learn about
Christianity is the Holocaust, pogroms, anti-Semitism."

Rosen recalls that in 1994, after Israel and the Vatican opened
diplomatic relations, he organized an international Jewish-Christian
conference in Jerusalem, "and the city’s chief rabbi called me in
and said, ‘How can you do this? Don’t you know it’s forbidden for
us? How can you encourage these people to meet with us?’

"He told me that when he sees a Christian clergyman, he crosses the
street and recites, ‘You shall totally abhor and totally disdain…’
This is a biblical verse that refers to idolatry." Rosen noted that
the Jerusalem chief rabbi of the time, like the more insular Orthodox
Jews in general, considered Christians to be idolators.

The people doing the spitting, according to all the Christian victims
and Jewish interfaith activists interviewed, are invariably national
Orthodox or haredi Jews; in every attack described by Christian
clerics, the assailant was wearing a kippa.

The great majority of the attackers were teenage boys and men in their
20s. However, the supposition was that they came not only from the
Old City yeshivot but also from outside. Hintlian and Aghoyan noted
that the spitting attacks tended to spike on Fridays and Saturdays,
when masses of Orthodox Jews stream to the Western Wall.

The hot spots in the Old City are the places where resident Orthodox
Jews and Christians brush up against one another – inside Jaffa Gate,
on the roads leading through the Armenian Quarter to the Jewish
Quarter and around Mount Zion, which lies just outside the Old City
and is the site of a several yeshivot.

Of all Old City Christians, the Armenians get spat on most frequently
because their quarter stands closest to those hot spots.

Near Mount Zion, four teenage boys on their way to the Diaspora
Yeshiva affirmed with a nod that they knew about the spitting attacks
on Christian clergy. "But it’s nobody from our yeshiva," said one boy,
16, who noted that he’d seen it happen twice right around there – once
by a boy wearing a crocheted kippa and once by a boy without a kippa.

(This was the only mention I heard of a secular Jew spitting on
a Christian.)

"We’re against it because it’s a desecration – it gives religious
Jews a bad name," said the boy. He added, however, "Inside, I also
feel like spitting on the Christians because everybody knows how they
preach against the Jews. But I’d never do it."

ONLY A TINY proportion of the spitting incidents are reported to
police. "When somebody spits at our feet, or at the door to the
monastery, we don’t even pay attention to it anymore, we take it for
granted," said Aghoyan. We have no suspect or evidence to give the
police, nor any reason to think the police care, he said.

Pazzini, the vice dean of the seminary at the Church of the
Flagellation, said the dean of the seminary had his face spat upon,
but he rejected Pazzini’s urgings to file a police complaint. "He
told me, ‘There’s no point, this is the way things are around here,’"
Pazzini said.

Even outrageous incidents, one after another, go unreported to the
police and unknown to the public. About a month ago, when a senior
Greek Orthodox bishop was driving into the Jaffa Gate, a young Jewish
man motioned him to roll down his window, and when he did, the young
man spat in the bishop’s face, said Hintlian.

Father Athanasius says that about a year ago, he witnessed the
archbishop of Milan, which is one of the world’s largest Roman
Catholic dioceses, get spat at in the Old City. "The archbishop was
with another Italian bishop and a group of pilgrims, and a class of
about a dozen adolescent boys in crocheted kippot and sidecurls came
by with their teacher. They stopped in front of the archbishop and
his guests, the boys began spitting at the ground next to their feet,
and then they just kept walking like this was normal," said Father
Athanasius. "I saw this with my own eyes."

Rosen, Rossing and Hintlian say the most frustrating thing is that
there’s no longer anyone in authority who’s ready to try to solve this
problem, and the reason is that the Christian community in Israel is
too small and powerless to rate high-level attention anymore.

"In the old days there were ministers and a mayor in Jerusalem who took
the Christian minority seriously, but now virtually everyone dealing
with them is a third-tier official, and while these individuals may
have wonderful intentions, they have no authority," said Rosen. As
far as the current cabinet ministers go, he said the phenomenon of
Orthodox Jews spitting on Christian clergy "is at most distressing to
some of them, while there are other ministers whose attitude toward
non-Jews in general is downright deplorable."

Among Christian victims and Jewish interfaith activists alike, the
consensus is that two steps are needed to stop the spitting attacks.

One, of course, would be much stronger law enforcement by police. The
other would be an educational effort against this "campaign," this
"phenomenon," this "tradition" – although it may be that there’s
nothing to teach – that a person, even an adolescent, either knows
it’s wrong to spit on priests and nuns or he doesn’t.

"We can’t tell the Jews in this country what to do – they have to see
this as an offense," said Father Athanasius. "There’s only a small
part of the population that’s doing it, but the Jewish establishment
has to bring them under control."

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=12

Baku Presented Possibility To Suspend Talks On Platter: DPA Leader

BAKU PRESENTED POSSIBILITY TO SUSPEND TALKS ON PLATTER: DPA LEADER

news.am
Nov 27 2009
Armenia

Armenian authorities should break off the negotiations based on
Madrid Principles on Karabakh conflict settlement, the more so as
Baku presented this possibility to Yerevan on a platter by its warlike
statements, said Democratic Party leader Aram Sargsyan at the Nov. 27
press conference in Yerevan.

According to him, Madrid Principles contain not only the issues on
Karabakh status, but also necessity of territories’ return. Thus,
when Armenian authorities assure that talks are held on status only,
it means the accord on the rest points is already reached. This proves
that Armenian side backs this policy, otherwise it would terminate
the negotiations referring to threats by Baku. "Yerevan acts like
an aggressor. Can’t they say: "Yes, the territories were occupied in
the course of the war unleashed by Azerbaijan, and we do not return
them both as they are a security zone and there are over 500.000
Armenian refugees, that should get compensation from Azerbaijan,"
stated Sargsyan.

In view of the above mentioned, he maintained that it is necessary to
refuse Madrid document and recognize the fact of Karabakh independence
from Azerbaijan. Then, we need to determine NKR status or recognize
its independence, or else claim about Karabakh’s joining Armenia.

Civil Defense Concept To Be Elaborated In Armenia

CIVIL DEFENSE CONCEPT TO BE ELABORATED IN ARMENIA

news.am
Nov 27 2009
Armenia

A civil defense concept will be elaborated in Armenia in conformity
with the national security strategy of Armenia and the Armenia-NATO
individual partnership program.

Gayane Gasparyan, Spokeswoman of the Secretary of the RA National
Security, told NEWS.am that at its November 27 sitting chaired by RA
National Security Secretary Artur Baghdasaryan the interagency work
group decided to submit the concept to the National Security Council
of Armenia for approval next May.

Artur Baghdasaryan pointed out the importance of forming a modern
civil defense system for ensuring Armenia’s national security. He
underlined the practical importance of approving the concept for
the strategic reforms in the Armenian civil defense system and for
meeting the new challenges.

Approving the concept implies an appraisal of the current civil defense
situation in Armenia, forming a civil defense system in conformity
with international standards, expanding the emergency management
system’s potential.

A regional emergency management center will be established in Yerevan,
with regional divisions to be formed later.

DPA Leader Critical Of Armenian-Turkish Protocols

DPA LEADER CRITICAL OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROTOCOLS

news.am
Nov 27 2009
Armenia

The Armenian-Turkish protocols contain not only unacceptable
provisions, but also incorrect wordings, Aram Sargsyan, Chairman of
the Democratic Party of Armenia (DPA) told a press conference.

According to him, this fact alone is sufficient for the RA
Constitutional Court to invalidate the documents as unconstitutional.

If Armenia ratifies the protocols, it will lose the reputation of a
"serious state," which is actually abandoning its policy of getting
Turkey to admit the Armenian Genocide.

The DPA leader also addressed the assurances by the Armenian
authorities, which do not see any problem in the point on mutual
recognition of the present-day Armenian-Turkish border. "The Armenian
authorities are claiming the border was recognized long ago, but
what is then the reason for Turkey’s insistence on this point in
the documents that are to be ratified by the two Parliaments?" asked
Aram Sargsyan.

He considers it unacceptable for Armenia to sign the documents in
their present form. In this context, Sargsyan stated that the DPA
intends to discuss the current situation and further steps with the
other political forces – the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF),
New Times Party, Heritage Party and others.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Cyprus OEV Picked By ILO For Mentoring Armenia

CYPRUS OEV PICKED BY ILO FOR MENTORING ARMENIA

Financial Mirror

Nov 27 2009
Cyprus

The International Labour Organisation has picked the Cyprus Employers
and Industrialists’ Federation (OEV) to undertake the mentoring of
the employers organisation of Armenia.

The ILO and the International Organisation of Employers (IOE)
said OEV was most suited for the mentoring programme that will
be underway in 2010, primarily because it is regarded as a model
employers organisation.

The mentoring programme includes helping to lay the proper foundations
of the sister organisation in Armenia and the right structure of its
mission and aims, as well as its effective operation.

The priorities in Armenia are to set up sector employers associations,
the successful negotiations of collective labour agreements with the
local trade unions, initiate a consultation mechanism with the state,
recruitment of new members, provision of services, as well as health
and security in the workplace.

www.financialmirror.com

Armenian President Takes Part In EurAsEC Conference

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TAKES PART IN EURASEC CONFERENCE

news.am
Nov 27 2009
Armenia

RA President Serzh Sargsyan participated in the conference of the
EurAsEC Council in Minsk, Belarus. Armenia has an observer status at
the Council.

The RA presidential press office reported that participating the
conference were also the leaders of Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. The Presidents held private talks,
followed by an enlarged meeting.

The conference agenda includes about 20 issues, including ones on
the execution of previously made decisions, formation of a EurAsEC
Customs Union, cooperation in overcoming the global crisis. The
EurAsEC member-states signed a number of documents.

The Armenian leader also participated in the international IT
development summit "Uniting the CIS".

The Armenian delegation is to return to Yerevan late at night.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Aristomene Varoudakis: Armenia Needs Diversified Economy

ARISTOMENE VAROUDAKIS: ARMENIA NEEDS DIVERSIFIED ECONOMY

news.am
Nov 27 2009
Armenia

Aristomene Varoudakis, Head of the WB office in Yerevan believes
Armenia needs economic diversification. When the construction sector
ensures 30% of profit, and the mining industry ensures 40% of exports,
it means that economy is in danger. If Armenia is to return to the
two-digit growth, it has to diversify its economy.

It is not a mechanical process. Rather it needs improved
business environment and huge investments in the transport and IT
infrastructures, as well as highly skilled personnel, Varoudakis said
in an interview with Radio Liberty.

As to the gravity of the situation in Armenia in the context of
Armenia’s foreign debt, which is expected to reach U.S. $3bn by the end
of this year and U.S. $3.5bn by the end of 2010 (50% of Armenia’s GDP),
Varoudakis said that there is not a universal figure, 50% or 60%. Any
country has a number of factors allowing it to have a certain foreign
debt. The first factor is economic growth rates, which enable countries
to cover their debts due to tax revenues. Secondly it is diversified
and competitive economy, and, of course, efficient tax administration.

Norma Returns: ‘It’s Like Bellini’s In The Room’

NORMA RETURNS: ‘IT’S LIKE BELLINI’S IN THE ROOM’
by Marsha Lederman

The Globe & Mail
Nov 27 2009
Canada

Richard Bonynge, who conducted a landmark Norma for the Vancouver Opera
in 1963, returns for a new Norma to launch the VO’s 50th-anniversary
season

.Richard Bonynge has been here before – at the Queen Elizabeth
Theatre, on the podium, conducting the orchestra for a Vancouver
Opera production of Bellini’s Norma . The first time was in 1963,
when Bonynge conducted a production that became legendary – and a
turning point in the company’s young history. Tonight, he’s back at
the just-renovated Queen Elizabeth Theatre for a new Norma that will
launch the company’s 50th-anniversary season and provide the first
test of the venue’s natural acoustics.

That 1963 production was the start of something huge for Bonynge. It
was his first Norma. Since then, the 79-year-old has conducted more
than 100 performances of the difficult opera, for which he has become
renowned.

"It’s like Bellini’s in the room," says James Wright, the VO’s general
director, who went after Bonynge for this event not only because of his
skill, but because he feels Bonynge personifies the Vancouver Opera’s
history, as does Norma . Wright wanted to begin this all-important
season (it is, after all, Olympic season as well) with an opera that
would pay tribute to the VO’s past. And Norma was the obvious choice.

"Norma is our homage to Irving [Guttman, founding artistic director
of the Vancouver Opera] … to the early years and that pivotal,
pivotal production," says Wright. "And having Bonynge return to
conduct this …

just made a lot of sense. And I finally decided to take a deep breath
and produce Norma myself."

It was Guttman’s vision – and tenacity – that led to that milestone
production in 1963. He wanted to bring in Joan Sutherland –
Bonynge’s wife – for the title role, but faced a fight with his board
members, who balked at Sutherland’s fee of $3,000 for each of five
performances. Guttman held his ground, and got Sutherland and Bonynge –
as well as the great Marilyn Horne for the role of Adalgisa.

The result, he remembers, was thrilling. Sutherland and Horne
sounded magnificent together, night after night. "There’s not enough
superlatives for that kind of thing," Guttman says. "My God, it
was magic."

In Norma , the Roman consul Pollione abandons Norma, the mother of
his two sons, in favour of Adalgisa, an acolyte. The role of Norma
is considered one of the most demanding in the soprano repertoire; a
"super-human role," Bonynge calls it. Consider the placement of the
popular aria Casta Diva , so early on – leaving little time to warm up.

Sutherland’s first attempt at the role was in that 1963 production –
chosen by her and her husband because Vancouver was considered a little
out of the way, and off the opera radar. "She felt that it would be a
great place to try Norma out," says Bonynge. "And of course it ended
up as much more than a tryout." Sutherland, dubbed "La Stupenda,"
went on to perform the role on many other stages to great acclaim,
and is featured on several recordings. Now 83, she has long since
retired and was too ill to make the trip with her husband to Vancouver
from their home in the Swiss Alps.

Bonynge’s history with the VO didn’t end with Norma , of course. In
1974, he became artistic director of the company and, in 1977, founded
the Vancouver Opera Orchestra. "I’m thrilled that they’re still in
existence because it was the orchestra which we started … and to
find them in such a fantastic shape is a great thrill," Bonynge says.

He is also impressed, he says, with the cast for this production.

Armenian soprano Hasmik Papian is one of the world’s most in-demand
Normas at the moment. Kate Aldrich makes her VO debut in the role of
Adalgisa. And Victoria native Richard Margison sings Pollione.

Tonight marks the first non-amplified music event at the Queen
Elizabeth Theatre since its $48.5-million, four-phase renovation,
so the acousticians (and others) will be listening carefully –
and nervously.

Though expectations – acoustically, musically and nostalgically –
are high, Bonynge himself will have a steady hand. He’s happy with
the cast and orchestra, and is certainly familiar with the material.

"I’m too old to be nervous," says the Maestro. "I’ve been at it for
a long, long time."

Norma runs at Vancouver’s Queen Elizabeth Theatre from tonight to Dec.

5 (vancouveropera.ca ).