Visit Of The Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan To USA Continue

VISIT OF THE ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER TIGRAN SARGSYAN TO USA CONTINUES

ARMENPRESS
Nov 6, 2009

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS: Visit of the Armenian Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan to USA where he is participating in "ArmTech 2009"
congress continues.

Governmental press service told Armenpress that November 5 Tigran
Sargsyan visited one of the scientific-educational centers of the
world – Stanford University. The head of the government walked in all
the branches of the scientific center and its laboratories as well as
met with the representatives of Armenian Students’ Union of Stanford.

The representatives of the union presented to the prime minister the
activity, goals and issues of the organization. During the meeting
the prime minister answered to the questions of the students.

Tigran Sargsyan highlighted the participation of the Armenian students
studying in best universities of the world in the educational reforms
in Armenia as well as further deepening of Armenia-Diaspora relations.

The prime minister also visited "Sequoia Capitals" company and met
with its leadership.

Afterwards the prime minister visited "Venture Partners of the United
States" where he discussed with the businessmen of the venture branch
opportunities of development of capital in Armenia. The businessmen
noted that particularly the venture capital in Armenia may have a
success for ensuring of which certain work must be carried out.

Tigran Sargsyan also visited California’s Berkley University and
greeted the participants of "Armenia’s Competitiveness Agenda"
conference. Tigran Sargsyan spoke about the developments taking place
in the contemporary world.

Tigran Sargsyan also spoke about the anti-crisis events of the
Armenian government. Afterwards the head of the government returned
to San Jose where the "ArmTech 2009" congress will kick off today.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan Receives Special Representative Of

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN RECEIVES SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE OF NATO SECRETARY GENERAL TO CAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA ROBERT SIMMONS

ARMENPRESS
Nov 6, 2009

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
received today special representative of NATO Secretary General to
Caucasus and Central Asia Robert Simmons.

Presidential press office told Armenpress that President Sargsyan
said that in spring he met with the assistant NATO secretary general
but after that meeting many developments took place as well as the
2009-2010 Individual Partnership Action Program was established.

Serzh Sargsyan pointed out that Armenia will continue efforts toward
consolidation of partnership with NATO. The leader of the country
considered cooperation with NATO useful not only in military but in
security, emergency situations spheres.

Robert Simmons said that NATO-Armenia relations are on a very good
platform. He expressed hope that the 2009-2010 Individual Partnership
Action Plan program will be a success. NATO top official also
highlighted Armenia’s contribution to the international peacekeeping
activity.

In the pre-context of discussion of regional issues NATO secretary
general’s special representative highly assessed the progress
registered in the process of normalization of Armenian-Turkish
relations and noted that NATO is for establishment of relations
without preconditions.

He expressed hope that the parliaments of the two countries will as
soon as possible ratify the protocols.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian National Assembly Speaker Receives Special Representative O

ARMENIAN NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SPEAKER RECEIVES SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE OF NATO SECRETARY GENERAL TO CAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA ROBERT SIMMONS

ARMENPRESS
Nov 6, 2009

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenian National Assembly Speaker
Hovik Abrahamyan received today special representative of NATO
Secretary General to Caucasus and Central Asia Robert Simmons.

NA public relations department told Armenpress that greeting the
guest the NA speaker highlighted cooperation with NATO and expressed
readiness of the Armenian side to develop it.

The interlocutors agreed that it must be transparent and
understandable. In this pre-context they discussed Armenian NA’s
initiatives within the framework of NATO PA as well as reforms in
the Armenian Armed Forces’ civil oversight.

During the meeting the interlocutors referred to the regional security
issues.

Newly Appointed Georgian Ambassador To Armenia Hands His Credentials

NEWLY APPOINTED GEORGIAN AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA HANDS HIS CREDENTIALS TO THE ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN

ARMENPRESS
Nov 6, 2009

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS: Newly appointed Georgian ambassador to
Armenia Grigol Tabatadze handed today his credentials to the Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan.

Presidential press office told Armenpress that congratulating the
ambassador on assuming the office, Serzh Sargsyan said "We have
passed a very long historic way, our former relations oblige us to
consolidate our friendship and cooperate more closely. Today’s level
of our cooperation, of course, is very high but they always need to
be improved. That is why the ambassadors of our countries must work
intensively. I think that we have not used the whole potential of
our opportunities and we may open new prospects of partnership."

The ambassador said that President Saakashvili also gives a great
importance to the development of relations with Armenia and finds
that friendship and cooperation do not have an alternative. At the
same time he said that the political leadership of his country highly
assesses the vision of the Armenian president, considering that he is
the political figure who looks to the future not forgetting the past.

The president and the ambassador agreed that there are no such issues
between the two countries which will not be possible to solve through
joint discussions and dialogue.

Serzh Sargsyan expressed hope that the newly appointed ambassador
will have its important contribution to boosting bilateral ties.

The Politics Of Genocide And The Turkey – Armenia Protocols

THE POLITICS OF GENOCIDE AND THE TURKEY-ARMENIA PROTOCOLS

AZG DAILY
07-11-2009

Armenian Genocide; Armenia-Turkey

By Roger W. Smith, Chairman of the Academic Board of Directors of
the Zoryan Institute

We must approach all cases of genocide as part of world history. If
we believe in "Never again" and want to prevent future genocides,
we must treat such epochal events as part of the universal experience
and of concern to all.

James Traub writes the following in an Oct. 18 New York Times review of
Daniel Goldhagen’s new book, Worse than War: Genocide, Eliminationism,
and the Ongoing Assault on Humanity:

But to exclude mass murder from the realm of conscious action offers
an exculpation of its own, both to the killers and to ourselves-for
how could we, ordinary folk who cherish life, descend to such madness?

In this magisterial and profoundly disturbing "natural history" of
mass murder, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen calls for an end to such willful
blindness… Goldhagen insists that even the worst atrocities
originate with, and are then propelled by, a series of quite
conscious calculations by followers as much as by leaders. "We must
stop detaching mass elimination and its mass-murder variant from our
understanding of politics," Goldhagen writes… Atrocities resemble one
another; their differences are shaped by the perpetrators’ ideology,
their specific fantasy of a purified world, their view of the victims
they seek to eradicate…

But if the ultimate goal is to ensure that we never again stand by in
the face of a Rwanda-style genocide, public opinion will not be rallied
through an earnest accounting of national interest, but through an
appeal to conscience… He heaps scorn on the United Nations, whose
founding principles of respect for sovereignty and of noninterference
in internal affairs have served, as he rightly observes, as a shield
for leaders in Sudan and elsewhere who are bent on slaughtering their
own people.

This is interesting in light of the press coverage both before and
after the signing of the Turkish-Armenian protocols. A recurrent
theme emerges, particularly in countries that have yet to recognize
officially the mass murder of the Armenians in 1915 as genocide: the
dispute between Turkey and Armenia over the genocide is exclusively
their problem. For example, the BBC, in reporting on the protocols on
Oct. 10, 2009, stated, in effect, the Armenians say it was genocide,
Turkey says it wasn’t, so the reader does not know what to believe:

Armenians have campaigned for the killings to be recognized
internationally as genocide-and more than 20 countries have done so.

Turkey admits that many Armenians were killed but says the deaths
were part of the widespread fighting that took place in World War I.

As far back as 2005, the distinguished human rights activist and Nobel
laureate Elie Wiesel described the difficulty of Armenian-Turkish
relations because "ancestral hate is not easily erased." This gives the
impression that the problem between the two countries is intractable
ancient history, rather than a political problem arising out of a
specific historical event: the Armenian Genocide of 1915 committed
by Ottoman Turkey.

On April 9, 2009, when President Barack Obama was in Turkey,
he distanced himself from getting directly involved in the
Armenian-Turkish issue, stating:

I want to be as encouraging as possible around those negotiations,
which are moving forward and could bear fruit very quickly, very soon.

And as a consequence, what I want to do is not focus on my views,
but focus on the views of the Turkish and the Armenian people, if
they can move forward and deal with a difficult and tragic history,
then I think the entire world should encourage them. So what I told the
president was I want to be as constructive as possible in moving these
issues forward quickly. And my sense is that they are moving quickly.

I don’t want to, as the president of the United States, to preempt
any possible arrangements or announcements that might be made in the
near future. I just want to say that we are going to be a partner in
working through these issues in such a way that the most important
parties, the Turks and the Armenians, are finally coming to terms in
the most constructive way.

It seems that there is a certain point of view prevailing that only
Turkey and Armenia have a vested interest in the Armenian Genocide,
and that it is no one else’s problem.

One wonders, would the Rwandan Genocide be characterized as a
problem of concern only to Hutus and Tutsis? The complexities of
the situation in Rwanda, for example, involved Belgium, France,
Burundi, Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the U.S., and the
UN. The United States’ contortions to avoid using the word "genocide"
in 1994, and the UN’s refusal to accept General Dallaire’s warning
of imminent genocide there in order to avoid getting involved, are
well documented. Such obvious political manipulation caused outrage
in most people, and the suffering caused by the slaughter of some
800,000 victims made us all empathize with the plight of our fellow
human beings. The horror of that genocide, where the men, women,
children, and elderly of one group were targeted with the intent to
annihilate them, was an outright violation of international law,
and was watched on our television screens, bringing the injustice
home to everyone. It may have been easier for some to be bystanders
in the face of that genocide, but no one today would say this tragedy
is of concern only to Hutus and Tutsis.

The same is true for the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide. In fact,
the Armenian Genocide is recognized by scholars as the archetype of
modern genocide, and its lessons have universal application. One of
the lessons most particularly associated with the Armenian Genocide
is how denial of the crime can embolden future perpetrators, as we
learned from Adolf Hitler and Albert Speer. In order to be able to
prevent genocide in the future, we must raise awareness of it as a
scourge on humanity and educate our societies about it. We must resist
all attempts to disparage or dismiss any case of genocide. Once you
compromise the universality of any genocide, the entire worldwide
effort for genocide prevention is undermined.

The prevention of genocide and upholding freedom of expression and
thought are mandated by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
the Crime of Genocide. It is against this background that the Zoryan
Institute is committed to raising awareness of genocide and the
necessity of its prevention and to promoting universal human rights.

These are the principles reflected in our commentary on the Turkish
Armenian Reconciliation Commission (TARC) in 2001, in our open letter
to Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan on his call for a joint historians’
commission in 2005, in our commentary against the proposed law to
criminalize denial of the Armenian Genocide in France in 2006, in our
co-organizing a Symposium on the Albright-Cohen Genocide Prevention
Task Force Report in March 2009 (which, among other issues, was based
on faulty assumptions and the ignoring of past history), and in our
open letter to Armenian President Sarkisian regarding the protocols
last month.

Our position on the protocols is to make sure that the incontestability
of the Armenian Genocide is neither ignored nor called into
question. It is from this perspective that we wrote to President
Sarkisian:

…numerous distinguished historians, political scientists,
sociologists, legal scholars, and authoritative institutions around the
world have investigated the genocide many times over, issued academic
publications, and even made public declarations. These scholars have
devoted their professional lives to conducting scientific research with
the highest levels of academic integrity. As a result of their work,
scholars have identified the Armenian Genocide as the archetypal
case of modern genocide, whose pattern has many similarities with
subsequent cases.

What the Armenian and Turkish governments do or agree upon, as two
sovereign nations, is their prerogative. However, our objective
is to raise the awareness of all those involved in these protocols
(the two signing countries, the three OSCE monitoring countries-the
U.S., Russia, and France-and the EU representative) that the Armenian
Genocide is a historical fact, part of the universal human experience,
and can not be compromised.

Furthermore, any attempt to deny it was genocide, to trivialize this
enormous crime, or to relativize it as an issue only between Armenians
and Turks will be firmly opposed by scholars, legal specialists,
and human rights activists in this field. The recent open letter from
Prof. William A. Schabas below is vivid testimony of this resolve.

Dear Prime Minister Erdogan and President Sarkisian,

The proposed protocols between Armenia and Turkey call for an
"impartial historical commission" to investigate what the world knows
as the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

As the leading scholarly organization engaged in the study of genocide,
we welcome continued investigation that will enhance our understanding
of the 1915 massacres. However, we are extremely wary of any call
for allegedly impartial research into what are clearly established
historical facts.

Acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide must be the starting point
of any "impartial historical commission," not one of its possible
conclusions. The world would not accept an inquiry into the truth
of the Nazi Holocaust, or the extermination of the Tutsi in Rwanda,
and nor can it do so with the genocide of the Armenians.

William Schabas, President, International Association of Genocide
Scholars

In 1915, against the background of great power politics intervening
in the Ottoman Empire and of World War I, some 1.5 million Armenians
were slaughtered. While on May 24, 1915, the Allied Powers (France,
Great Britain, and Russia) warned the Ottoman leaders that they
would be called to account for their "crimes against humanity,"
U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau described on July 16, 1915 what was
happening as "race extermination." Raphael Lemkin, the legal scholar
who coined the term "genocide" in 1944, describing in his personal
memoir how he became involved in its study, wrote:

I identified myself more and more with the sufferings of the victims,
whose numbers grew, and I continued my study of history. I understood
that the function of memory is not only to register past events,
but to stimulate human conscience. Soon contemporary examples of
genocide followed, such as the slaughter of the Armenians.

We note that monitors at the protocols signing ceremony-Russia,
France, the European Union, and Switzerland (the mediator in the
negotiations)-all have already acknowledged the Armenian Genocide
through their respective parliaments. The U.S., whose official
diplomatic archive is one of the richest historical sources on the
Armenian Genocide, will itself eventually have to stop compromising
the truth for political expediency. President Ronald Reagan called
it genocide in 1981. President George W. Bush described it as "the
annihilation of as many as 1.5 million Armenians through forced exile
and murder at the end of the Ottoman Empire" in 2004. President Obama,
in January 2008, stated:

I also share with Armenian Americans-so many of whom are descended
from genocide survivors-a principled commitment to commemorating and
ending genocide. That starts with acknowledging the tragic instances
of genocide in world history. As a U.S. senator, I have stood with the
Armenian American community in calling for Turkey’s acknowledgment
of the Armenian Genocide. Two years ago, I criticized the secretary
of state for the firing of U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, John Evans,
after he properly used the term "genocide" to describe Turkey’s
slaughter of thousands of Armenians starting in 1915. I shared with
Secretary Rice my firmly held conviction that the Armenian Genocide
is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but
rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of
historical evidence. The facts are undeniable. An official policy that
calls on diplomats to distort the historical facts is an untenable
policy. As a senator, I strongly support passage of the Armenian
Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106 and S.Res.106), and as president I
will recognize the Armenian Genocide.

Notwithstanding the above, we are of the opinion that while Turks
today are not guilty of committing the genocide, they are responsible
for accepting and allowing Turkey’s official state denial. Denial is
considered the final stage of genocide, which continues to victimize
the survivors and their descendants, aggravating an open wound
that can not heal. The tremendous pain that an Armenian feels is no
different from that a Jew, Pole, or Roma feels because of people,
such as President Ahmedinejad of Iran, who deny the Holocaust of
World War II, or a Tutsi feels when the Rwandan Genocide is denied.

In conclusion, the Armenian Genocide is part of world history. If we
want to prevent future genocides, we must treat all cases of genocide
as part of the universal experience, and of concern to all.

Two More ‘Swine Flu’ Cases In Azerbaijan

TWO MORE ‘SWINE FLU’ CASES IN AZERBAIJAN

AZG DAILY
07-11-2009

Swine flu

According to Azerbaijani Health Ministry statement, two more ‘swine
flu’ (A/H1N1) cases have been confirmed in Azerbaijan.

One of the two ‘swine-flu’-infected individuals has arrived from
Ukraine’s Ivano-Frankovsk province and also is a relative of the woman
from Azerbaijan’s Kurdamir region who was previously tested positive.

She has also arrived from Ukraine by train on Oct. 26. She has been
hospitalized and currently is under doctor’s control. Her condition
is satisfactory.

The other individual tested positive is Azerbaijan national who
arrived from Ukraine in Nov. His condition is satisfactory.

So, according to Azerbaijani news agencies, Azerbaijan has three
‘swine-flu’ cases at present.

TBILISI: Armenian And Azeri School Leavers Will Need To Pass Only Ge

ARMENIAN AND AZERI SCHOOL LEAVERS WILL NEED TO PASS ONLY GENERAL SKILLS EXAMS

The Messenger
Nov 6 2009
Georgia

Armenian and Azeri school leavers who plan to attend Georgian
universities will need to pass only one exam, a General Skills exam,
in the National Exams from next year.

On November 5, at a sitting of the Committee on Education, Science
and Culture, amendments to the Georgian Law on Higher Education was
discussed. The bill aims to increase the accessibility of higher
education in Georgia for those citizens who pass the general skills
exam in the Azeri and Azerbaijani languages. It specifies the creation
of a programme of Georgian language training which will provide
students with the skills and knowledge necessary for higher education.

Reportedly this programme will be financed by the state, its essential
condition being that the students collect 60 credits after a one year
course and continue to study in Georgian.

The Committee also considered the Bill on amendments to the Georgian
Law on General Education initiated by the Georgian Government, at
a second reading. Both bills were presented by Maia Kopaleishvili,
Deputy Minister of Education and Science. Nika Gvaramia, Minister
of Education and Science, participated in the meeting as well. The
Committee supported submitting the bills to a plenary session.

Ruling party MP Khatuna Ochiauri also presented a bill of amendments
to the Georgian Law on General Education for a first reading. This
bill aims to regulate and simplify the rules on directing property
transferred from the state to the public schools. Specifically, if
state property is transferred to schools in the Autonomous Republics,
the right to decide what to do with it must rest with the Ministry
of Education of the Autonomous Republics and not the Ministry of
Education of Georgia. The Committee unanimously supported this change.

TBILISI: Patriarch Talks About Territorial Integrity

PATRIARCH TALKS ABOUT TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY

The Messenger
Nov 6 2009
Georgia

As part of his visit to Azerbaijan Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia
Ilia II met Caucasus Muslims Sheikhulislam head Haji Allahshukur
Pashazade on November 5. One of the topics they discussed was the
territorial integrity of Georgia and Azerbaijan.

Azeri news agency Trend News reported that the Catholicos-Patriarch
stated at the meeting that war and instability will not last forever
in the South Caucasus, adding that Georgia will do everything it can
to restore territorial integrity in both countries.

"We live in a very difficult time," he said. "Although we always
dreamed of independence, our expectations have not been entirely met.

Azerbaijan’s and Georgia’s territorial integrity have been violated.

We will not allow Azerbaijan’s integrity to be further violated. We
will do everything we can to restore it," the Catholicos-Patriarch
stated, mentioning the efforts of the Sheikhulislam and the Azerbaijani
and Georgian Presidents to restore peace and stability in the region.

Pashazade stated at the meeting that both neighbouring states share a
‘common fate’ and in many ways the destiny of Azerbaijan and Georgia
is the same, highlighting that some forces hope to sow discord among
these nations. "A major problem for both Georgia and Azerbaijan
is the violation of their territorial integrity," he said. "It is
no secret that other serious problems in the Caucasus are related
to Armenia’s territorial claims against its neighbours. I believe
you will make every effort to establish peace in the Caucasus and
eliminate separatism," the Caucasus Muslim spiritual leader added.

Before meeting Pashazade the Catholicos-Patriarch had met Azeri
President Ilham Aliyev on November 4. According to Azeri news sources
Aliyev expressed his satisfaction regarding the successful development
of Azeri-Georgian relations in all spheres. The Azerbaijani leader
praised the participation of the Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia
in the international conference entitled "Interreligious dialogue:
from mutual understanding towards joint cooperation" to be held in
Baku. Greeting President Aliyev on behalf of the Georgian Orthodox
Church and people, Ilia II said that the Georgian people know the
Azerbaijani leader very well and love him for conducting his wise
policy at this difficult time.

Georgian Patriarch Ilia II left for Baku on November 4 to attend
the 60th birthday of Allashukur Pashazade, Caucasus Muslim Council
Head and spiritual leader of Azerbaijan. Russian Patriarch Kyril,
Pope Benedict XVI and other spiritual leaders are also expected to
attend the celebrations on November 6. Contradictory reports have
been spread concerning a possible meeting between the Georgian and
Russian Patriarchs, which would be their first, in Baku.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Reacts To Armenian FM’s Statement

AZERBAIJANI FOREIGN MINISTRY REACTS TO ARMENIAN FM’S STATEMENT

Today
/57268.html
Nov 6 2009
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry has reacted to Armenian Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandyan’s statement.

The statement is meant for domestic audience in Armenia, Azerbaijani
Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Elkhan Polukhov said.

Armenian foreign minister said in country’s parliament on Nov. 5 that
"only status of the "Nagorno-Karabakh Republic" is discussed in talks
on resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict."

Nalbandyan said no other issues are discussed.

"Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan’s statement is aimed at
domestic audience of the country. Being a participant of negotiations
he is aware very well what range of issues are discussed at the
negotiations," Polukhov said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.az/news/politics

Studies In The Area Of Statistical Mechanics Reported From A.E. Alla

STUDIES IN THE AREA OF STATISTICAL MECHANICS REPORTED FROM A.E. ALLAHVERDYAN AND CO-RESEARCHERS

Science Letter
November 3, 2009

Allahverdyan and co-researchers

"A basic task of information processing is information transfer
(flow). Here we study a pair of Brownian particles each coupled to
a thermal bath at temperatures T-1 and T-2," scientists in Yerevan,
Armenia report (see also Statistical Mechanics).

"The information flow in such a system is defined via the time-shifted
mutual information. The information flow nullifies at equilibrium,
and its efficiency is defined as the ratio of the flow to the
total entropy production in the system. For a stationary state
the information flows from higher to lower temperatures, and its
efficiency is bounded from above by (max[T-1, T-2])/(vertical bar
T-1-T-2 vertical bar). This upper bound is imposed by the second law
and it quantifies the thermodynamic cost for information flow in the
present class of systems. It can be reached in the adiabatic situation,
where the particles have widely different characteristic times. The
efficiency of heat. low-defined as the heat flow over the total amount
of dissipated heat-is limited from above by the same factor. There
is a complementarity between heat and information flow: the set-up
which is most efficient for the former is the least efficient for
the latter and vice versa. The above bound for the efficiency can be
(transiently) overcome in certain non-stationary situations, but the
efficiency is still limited from above. We study yet another measure of
information processing (transfer entropy) proposed in the literature,"
wrote A.E. Allahverdyan and colleagues.

The researchers concluded: "Though this measure does not require any
thermodynamic cost, the information flow and transfer entropy are
shown to be intimately related for stationary states."

Allahverdyan and colleagues published their study in the Journal
of Statistical Mechanics – Theory and Experiment (Thermodynamic
efficiency of information and heat flow. Journal of Statistical
Mechanics – Theory and Experiment, 2009;():9011).

For additional information, contact A.E. Allahverdyan, Yerevan Physics
Institute, Alikhanian Bros St. 2, Yerevan 375036, Armenia.

The publisher’s contact information for the Journal of Statistical
Mechanics – Theory and Experiment is: IOP Publishing Ltd., Dirac House,
Temple Back, Bristol BS1 6BE, England.