Armenia – KRG Keen To Establish Relations; Yerevan Opens Consulate I

ARMENIA – KRG KEEN TO ESTABLISH RELATIONS; YEREVAN OPENS CONSULATE IN ERBIL

10:39, February 3, 2015

Falah Mustafa, Foreign Minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government
(KRG) met with Armenia’s Ambassador to Iraq on February 2 in Erbil,
capital of the autonomous Kurdish enclave in northern Iraq, to discuss
bilateral relations, according to the official KRGwebsite.

This was the first visit by Ambassador Karin Gregorian to Erbil for
talks with the government of the Kurdish Region.

Gregorian said that the president and Armenian government are committed
to establishing and strengthening ties with the Kurdistan Region
and briefed Minister Mustafa on the opening of Armenia’s consulate
general in Erbil.

The Ambassador announced that starting next week; Armenia will conduct
direct flights from Yerevan to Erbil twice per week. He hoped that this
will lead to more economic and cultural exchanges between Kurdistan
and Armenia.

Ambassador Gregorian commended the KRG for its political and economic
developments as well as its culture of peaceful coexistence and
religious tolerance.

Minister Mustafa welcomed the Ambassador to Kurdistan and thanked him
for his efforts to establish institutional ties between Kurdistan and
Armenia. He commended the commitment of the government of Armenia
to strengthen ties with Kurdistan and welcomed the commencement of
flights between Erbil and Yerevan.

Mr. Mustafa and Ambassador Gregorian also discussed the security and
humanitarian challenges facing the Kurdistan Region. The Ambassador
expressed the support and solidarity of the government and people of
Armenia with the government and people of Kurdistan and pledged that
Armenia will soon provide Kurdistan with assistance.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/58377/armeniakrg-keen-to-establish-relations-yerevan-opens-consulate-in-erbil.html

Textile Industry Able To Offer About 15,000 New Jobs In Armenia – Co

TEXTILE INDUSTRY ABLE TO OFFER ABOUT 15,000 NEW JOBS IN ARMENIA – COMPANY HEAD

YEREVAN, February 3. /ARKA/. If favorable conditions are created,
the textile industry can ensure a 10-15-time growth of production
and exports and at least 15,000 new jobs in Armenia, co-chairman of
the country’s Union of Light Industry Employers, director of Tosp
knitwear factory Suren Bekirski said.

Bekirski said favorable conditions imply government support, cheap
loans, investments of $7-8 million with a payback period of 10 years,
tax burden easing or at least equal conditions.

If exports do not develop, Armenian companies will fail to grow and
be competitive.

According to co-chairman of Union of Light Industry Employers Hovsep
Poghosyan, the officialdom’s unwillingness to perform and lack of
affordable loans and individual approach to companies are the main
problems in the sector.

Earlier, the minister of economy Karen Chshmarityan said light
industry output rose by 12% in Armenia in 10 months of 2014 to about 7
billion drams. The minister said the industry recorded growth in both
production and exports in the period. The country’s exports hiked 25%
to 3 billion drams. ($1- 476.74 drams). -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/textile_industry_able_to_offer_about_15_000_new_jobs_in_armenia_company_head/#sthash.OlibGWE9.dpuf

Russian Railways To Develop Night Line Train Routes With SNCF In Fra

RUSSIAN RAILWAYS TO DEVELOP NIGHT LINE TRAIN ROUTES WITH SNCF IN FRANCE – YAKUNIN

YEREVAN, February 3. /ARKA/. The Russian Railways company (RZhD)
and the French SNCF will be working on a joint project of night line
trains, president of the Russian Railways Vladimir Yakunin said in
his interview to Les Echos.

The distances are too long in Russia, and these trains are still
widely used there, unlike Europe where night trains have started to
disappear, Yakunin said.

The project is expected to start by the end of this year, he said,
according to RIA Novosti.

Earlier, RZhD and SNCF signed an agreement on international rail
ticket sales to promote national and international routes operated
by their daughter companies. Since September 2010, train trips from
Moscow to Nice and Paris have been operated between Russia and France.

-0–

From: Baghdasarian

http://arka.am/en/news/in_the_world/russian_railways_to_develop_night_line_train_routes_with_sncf_in_france_yakunin/#sthash.FqMpFFwq.dpuf

Journalists- On The Events In Berdzor

JOURNALISTS- ON THE EVENTS IN BERDZOR

12:59 | February 3,2015 | Politics

Even the journalist’s badge didn’t help the photojournalist of “Noyan
Tapan” Anushavan Nikoghosyan to avoid the beating by policemen on
Artsakh border on January 31.

Today Anushavan Nikoghosyan told that when he was hit in the back, he
showed his badge but it didn’t matter. He was hit for the second time.

“Six policemen were hitting together. They tore the badge and the
camera was lost,”- he told.

The operator of the Founding Parliament Arsen Khechoyan reminded
that on that day armed people had been already standing on the road,
“They were well-prepared and filmed everything, they said that all
the journalists could pass to the other side, but I didn’t pass,”-
he remembers.

Arsen Khechoyan said that they were asked to show the journalist’s
badge and the policemen avoided the cameras, “No one wanted to
be shot.”

Today neither he nor Anushavan Shahnazaryan has cameras.

Anushavan Shahnazaryan calls on to return his camera for the further
professional activities but he won’t apply to the court, “I leave it
on their conscience.”

Anushavan still has got a headache, at night he had a temperature,
but in general he feels good.

From: Baghdasarian

http://en.a1plus.am/1205229.html

‘Turkey’s President Is Not Acting Like The Queen – He Is Acting Like

‘TURKEY’S PRESIDENT IS NOT ACTING LIKE THE QUEEN – HE IS ACTING LIKE A SULTAN’

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN SAYS HE ISN’T A SULTAN – RATHER HE WISHES TO
BE LIKE THE QUEEN IN A CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY – BUT HIS ACTIONS
SUGGEST OTHERWISE

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan stands inside the new Ak
Saray presidential palace Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
stands inside the new Ak Saray presidential palace (White Palace)
on the outskirts of Ankara, Turkey Photo: AFP/Getty Raziye Akkoc

By Raziye Akkoc

8:00AM GMT 02 Feb 2015

He lives in the world’s biggest residential palace that cost £384
million but according to Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the model of democracy
he seeks to follow is the UK’s very own.

Despite Britain having a constitutional monarchy in which the
Queen’s role is largely ceremonial, Mr Erdogan described the UK as a
“semi-presidency” which Turkey should see as an example.

“In my opinion, even the UK is a semi-presidency. And the dominant
constituent is the Queen,” Mr Erdogan told Turkish state broadcaster,
TRT.

But so far, Mr Erdogan has acted in a manner more similar to an
Ottoman sultan than Queen Elizabeth II.

The Queen has many properties but none as large as Mr Erdogan’s
White Palace

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It boasts 1,000 rooms and has a total floor area of 3.1 million square
feet. This makes it four times the size of Versailles, home of the
lavish Louis XIV, the “Sun King” of France. Buckingham Palace only
has 775 rooms.

In Turkish, it’s called the Ak Saray – White Palace – and, as the
Telegraph’s David Blair points out, the “quixotic architectural style
seems to cross the Ottoman and Seljuk traditions with that of a modern
Chinese railway station”. Then there’s the silk wallpaper.

The former Turkish prime minister also spent £115 million on a new
presidential jet.

He chaired cabinet meetings earlier this month

There is no doubt that Mr Erdogan changed Turkey during his time as
prime minister for 11 years until August last year. For most – even
his opponents – it was for the better, with more infrastructure in
a country where many areas, especially Anatolia, had been neglected.

But the former leader of the Justice and Development Party (AKP)
is now changing the presidential role from one largely ceremonial to
one with more power.

He has already made it clear he has influence on foreign policy but
this month he chaired a cabinet meeting – his predecessors, Ahmet
Necdet Sezer and Abdullah Gul, never did.

The meeting was held in the lavish palace and lasted a reported
eight-and-a-half hours.

There are also his recent comments on the Armenian genocide, which
would usually be an issue for the prime minister.

The president said if history “actually reveal[s] that we have
committed a crime, if we have a price to pay, then as Turkey we would
assess it and take the required steps”. Turkey still denies it and
disputes the figure of 1.5 million killed.

He literally posed with Turkish warriors including one from the
Ottoman period

When images emerged of the president posing with warriors dressed in
attire dating back as far as 200 BC, Game of Thrones jokes abounded.

But he truly did welcome Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority
leader, to Turkey and his palace with men dressed as warriors from
the Seljuk empire, the Mughal empire, and of course the Ottoman
empire. Reports say all world leaders will be welcomed in a similar
fashion.

[ottoman_3166050c.jpg]

The Arabic-alphabet Ottoman language is returning

This is one that is sure to upset his opponents, which include
the party of the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
the Republican People’s Party (CHP). Ataturk abolished the Ottoman
language in 1928 and replaced its Arabic alphabet with a Latin one.

Now Mr Erdogan wants a return to the Arabic alphabet, forcefully
declaring that it would be taught in schools and compulsory to learn.

“Whether they like it or not, the Ottoman language will be learnt
and taught in this country,” he said last month.

sident-is-not-acting-like-the-Queen-he-is-acting-like-a-sultan.html

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/turkey/11380281/Turkeys-pre

What Turned Erdogan Against The West?

WHAT TURNED ERDOGAN AGAINST THE WEST?

TURKEY PULSE

Turkce okuyun

TURKİYE’NİN NABZI

________________________________

Supporters hold up a portrait of Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan while waving Turkish and Justice and Development Party (AKP)
flags during an election rally in Istanbul, March 23, 2014. (photo
by REUTERS/Murad Sezer)

As any Turkey watcher would easily confirm, hostility to the West has
increasingly marked the rhetoric of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, his
ruling Justice and Development (AKP) and pro-government media in the
past two years. Especially since the Gezi Park protests in June 2013,
the narrative of Erdogan and his entourage has revolved around Western
“conspiracies” and a “national will” that is bravely fighting them.

Summaryâ~N~Y Print The Turkish ruling party’s fast-rising anti-Western
rhetoric may be a reaction to Western “meddling in our domestic
affairs” rather than opposition to the West’s “imperialist” foreign
policy.

Author Mustafa AkyolPosted February 2, 2015 TranslatorSibel Utku Bila

Yet for those familiar with the AKP’s 14-year history, this may
have come as a surprising turn. When the AKP was created in 2001,
hostility to the West was not something with which it identified
itself. On the contrary, party founders claimed to have disowned the
Islamist, anti-Western “National View” tradition from which they
came. Likewise, in the first years after the AKP came to power in
2002, Westernization (i.e., integration with the European Union) was
the party’s prime objective. Back then, Europe was the source not of
treacherous conspiracies that had to be thwarted, but of democratic
criteria that had to be embraced.

Not surprisingly, the fiercest opposition to the AKP during that
period from 2002 to 2010 was mounted by the anti-Western breed of
Turkish secularists, known as neonationalists. This quarter — whose
slogan is “Neither the US nor the EU, but a fully independent Turkey”
— accused Erdogan’s government of “selling Turkey out to imperialism.”

In 2007, one of Turkey’s best-selling books was nonsense titled “Moses’
Children,” which declared Erdogan to be a “crypto-Jew” colluding with
the Elders of Zion. In the same era, the argument that Turkey should
move closer to Russia instead of the EU was promoted by neonationalist
generals, who would be implicated in the alleged Ergenekon coup plot
to overthrow the AKP.

So, what happened that things turned upside down in the past two
years? Why is the cry for a “fully independent Turkey” coming from AKP
quarters now? Why is a paranoia of “Jewish agents” seeking to undermine
Turkey being fueled by the pro-government press and social media?

Government quarters will likely answer these questions along those
lines: “The West is aggressive against Muslims. Palestine is bleeding.

Muslim blood is flowing in Syria. Egypt’s legitimate Islamist
government was overthrown in a bloody coup. The West is responsible
for all these and standing up against Western imperialism is our
justified reaction.”

This answer, however, is unconvincing for a plenty of reasons. Here
are some of them:

If “Western imperialist aggression against the Muslim world” is the
problem, then the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 was its most tangible
example during the AKP’s rule. The invasion, however, did not turn the
AKP against the West. In fact, Erdogan, who was party leader but not
yet prime minister at the time, was eager to join the United States
in the war, but failed to persuade then-Prime Minister Abdullah Gul
and his party’s parliamentary group.

If the Syrian civil war is the key problem of the past several years,
how it leads to blaming the West is equally hard to comprehend. For
if the AKP is to be angry with someone because of its aversion to
Bashar al-Assad’s regime, this should be Vladimir Putin’s Russia,
Assad’s leading supporter. Yet, sympathy is the only sentiment for
Putin that one comes across in pro-government media. Erdogan’s angry
tirades against the international community never target Putin,
either. (AKP quarters seem also untroubled by Putin’s annexation of
Ukrainian territory, which has ruffled the Muslim Crimean Tatars).

When it comes to the military coup in Egypt, which truly unsettled the
AKP grassroots, it should have spawned reactions first and foremost
against Saudi Arabia, the most straightforward, resolute and powerful
supporter of coup leader Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Again, though, we
have heard no tirades from Erdogan blasting the Saudi monarchy. On
the contrary, last week we had a day of national mourning after King
Abdullah’s death.

In short, the strong anti-Western sentiment in the AKP world is hard
to explain with — or at least only with — the West’s “imperialist”
foreign policy. What could be the actual reason, then?

In my view, it’s the West’s continuous meddling in “our domestic
affairs.” In the past several years, not a month has passed without
a Western think tank issuing a report criticizing the state of press
freedom or judicial independence in Turkey. Western media are awash
with commentaries of a Turkey “moving toward authoritarianism.” The
EU’s progress reports warn of “regression” on democratic norms.

Washington often voices “concern” over the state of freedoms in Turkey.

Russia, on the other hand, never meddles in “our domestic affairs.”

Moreover, Putin — himself under Western fire over Russia’s grave
record on freedoms — praises Erdogan as a “tough man.” Erdogan’s
chief adviser, Yigit Bulut, in return, describes Putin and Erdogan
as the world’s “two greatest leaders” today.

But then here is another question: The West was similarly meddling
in “our domestic affairs” a decade ago as well. Why was Erdogan not
angry at the West at the time?

The answer is not that hard to find. A decade ago, the real power in
Turkey did not rest with Erdogan, but with the Kemalist establishment,
represented by the military and the judiciary. Erdogan was in fact
under the threat of their iron fist. Hence, the West’s meddling in
“our domestic affairs” and its pressure on Turkey to abide by European
norms was playing into Erdogan’s hands.

In 2008, for instance, the European Commission’s then-president Manuel
Barroso visited Turkey after a court case was opened to outlaw the
AKP. He urged the Turkish judiciary to respect the “Venice Criteria,”
which would rule out party closures merely based on ideology. It was
hard-core secularists keen to see the AKP banned who denounced this
“imperialist” meddling, while AKP members seemed quite happy with it.

Starting from 2010, the AKP subdued the old Kemalist establishment
and laid hands on “full power.” With its newly found self-confidence,
the party went back to its own ideological agenda. Its intimidating
response to reactions from Turkish society served only to intensify
those reactions. Growing political tensions dragged the AKP into
a sharp us-versus-them rhetoric, in which the West morphed into a
diabolical force behind “the enemies within” — such as secularists,
liberals and, especially, the Gulenists.

In sum, it’s not the West, but rather the AKP that has dramatically
changed since 2002. (If any key change took place in the West, the
United States has shifted in a positive sense, moving from Bush’s
aggressiveness to Obama’s moderation). The fundamental change was
Erdogan attaining “absolute power.” He refuses to tolerate any limits
imposed on his power by the international community and the liberal
values it promotes, hence he yearns for a “fully independent” Turkey.

In response to criticisms over press freedoms, for example, Erdogan
today tells the EU “to mind its own business.”

None of these mean that all Western criticism toward Erdogan and
his government is justified. Some in the Western media have used a
prejudiced tone against Ankara, driven by ideological bias against
“Islamists,” or as a reaction to Erdogan’s conspiratorial narrative.

There is also no doubt that the Western foreign policy has no shortage
of hypocrisy. Washington’s unconditional defense of Israel or leniency
for the coup in Egypt, for instance, deserve lots of criticism.

Moreover, some Western fiats on Turkey could be really driven by mere
interests, and resisting those fiats is certainly a rightful stance.

Yet still, none of these reasons fully explains, let alone justifies,
the categorical anti-Western rhetoric we hear from Turkey’s ruling
elite today. The real explanation, I think, is their rejection of
Western-style liberal democracy in favor of a self-styled authoritarian
democracy. It is no coincidence that Hungary’s anti-EU leader Victor
Orban agrees, for now he applauds Turkey, along with Putin’s Russia,
as a good model for “illiberal democracy.”

Read more:

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/02/turkey-erdogan-anti-west.html##ixzz3QgOn8uRn

Blaze At A Building In Yerevan Center Put Down

BLAZE AT A BUILDING IN YEREVAN CENTER PUT DOWN

YEREVAN, February 3. /ARKA/. Firefighters have put down the blaze in
one of the buildings in the center of Yerevan, Novosti-Armenia reports.

The blaze started in the ventilation pipe of Pandok Yerevan restaurant
in Amiryan street near the Republican Square.

Residents of the house living above the restaurant noticed the heady
smoke coming out of the pipe around 14:00.

A squad that arrived at the scene contained the fire in 20 minutes.

High temperatures inside the pipe made the fat accumulated within
the tube blaze, said Gevorg Mnatsakanayn, the deputy head of the
prompt response department of the rescue service at the ministry of
emergencies. -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/incidents/blaze_at_a_building_in_yerevan_center_put_down/#sthash.UG9j3fv7.dpuf

Karabakh President Commissions Police Chief To Conduct Detailed Inve

KARABAKH PRESIDENT COMMISSIONS POLICE CHIEF TO CONDUCT DETAILED INVESTIGATION INTO SATURDAY INCIDENT

YEREVAN, February 3. /ARKA/. Nagorno-Karabakh Republic President
Bako Sahakyan has commissioned the police chief to conduct a detailed
investigation into an incident happened on Saturday in the republic
and inform him about results.

The Founding Parliament organization is staging now motor rallies
under the slogan ‘The 100th Anniversary without Regime’ demanding
the Armenian authorities to resign.

On Saturday the rallyists headed for Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and
were bitten by the police as they entered Nagorno Karabakh’s territory.

Members of the organization say some participants of the rally were
bitten by the police as they entered the republic’s territory.

Sahakyan said that the initiative of the motor rally in Nagorno
Karabakh aroused the population’s indignation and that the police
informed about movement of hundreds of people to the republic were
left with no option but to rake necessary measures for protecting
public order and prevent possible adverse processes.

he said. —0—-

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/karabakh_president_commissions_police_chief_to_conduct_detailed_investigation_into_saturday_incident/#sthash.8jLD0oAT.dpuf

Oil And Gas To Be Prospected In Sevan

OIL AND GAS TO BE PROSPECTED IN SEVAN

12:30 February 03, 2015

EcoLur

“Blackstars Energy Armenia” LLC intends to prospect oil and
gas in the littoral areas of Sevan. Now the Nature Protection
Ministry is conducting environmental expertise of the oil and gas
geological prospecting claim in the conditional areas of Armenia. The
geoprospecting areas will include villages dealing with fishing –
Hyaravanq, Tsaghkashen and Noraduz.

The company intends to conduct geological mapping and geochemical
studies, seismic investigation and to drill one well, and an individual
claim shall be submitted for expertise.

Under the claim, the works will be carried out in 2015-2016. The
total costs of the studies will account for US$ 11,000,000.

The company has submitted several documents for expertise, among which
“Policy on Preservation of Environment, Health and Safety”. This
document doesn’t have an EIA and has descriptive nature.

It’s interesting how “Environmental Expertise” SNCO of Nature
Protection Ministry will respond to this claim, which contains only
good wishes instead of EIA.

http://ecolur.org/en/news/mining/oil-and-gas-to-be-prospected-in-sevan/6985/

Condemning Violence Over Journalists And Public Representatives – Vi

CONDEMNING VIOLENCE OVER JOURNALISTS AND PUBLIC REPRESENTATIVES – VIDEO

15:28 February 02, 2015

EcoLur

EcoLur is condemning the violence over the journalists and public
representatives, which “law enforcement bodies” exercised in
Syunik-Artsakh borderline on 31 January.

We are calling for our authorities to perform their functions and to
protect the citizens of Armenia, journalists and their constitutional
rights in and beyond Armenia.

Reminder: on 31 January the Members of the Founding Parliament
were stopped by police troops on the Goris-Stepanakert highway
near Berdzor during the action organized by Founding Parliament’s
“Centennial without the Regime” movement. Former commander of Shushi
special battalion and Artsakh Defense Army Brigade Commander, Jirayr
Sefilian, and several other participants of the action, including
reporters and war veterans, were severely beaten up and hospitalized
as a result of police beating on Saturday.

http://ecolur.org/en/news/sos/condemning-violence-over-journalists-and-public-representatives/6983/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OX3lNHOFe1M