Young Armenian Weightlifters Gain 3 Gold, 9 Silver, And 6 Bronze Med

YOUNG ARMENIAN WEIGHTLIFTERS GAIN 3 GOLD, 9 SILVER, AND 6 BRONZE MEDALS IN EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP

Noyan Tapan

Se p 22, 2008

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 22, NOYAN TAPAN. European Weightlifting Youth
Championship finished on September 20 in the city of Durres,
Albania. Among representatives of Armenia Sevak Sahakian (105 kg,
Kasakh) took the second place with 327 kg result in biathlon and
received a silver prize. He recorded 171 kg result in snatch and 201
kg in clean and jerk.

Superheavyweight Ruben Alexanian also received a silver prize (Ararat,
187 kg + 225 kg = 412 kg).

Aghvan Melikian (Gyumri, 153 kg – 192 kg = 345 kg) received bronze
medal in the competition of 85 kg weight category sportsmen. Aram
Andrikian (Sevan) was the 3rd in the same weight category, in clean
and jerk, 191 kg.

Armenian David Bekjanian in the Russian national team received gold
medal in 105 kg weight category.

Thus, Armenia’s weightlifting youth national team received 18 medals
in European Championship (3 gold, 9 silver, and 6 bronze). In the
competition of 197 participants of 32 countries the Armenian team
took the second honorary place with 550 points. National teams of
Russia (604 points) and Albania (485 points) took the first and third
prize places.

Kosovo was elected the 49th member-country at the conference of
European Weightlifting Federation held in days of the championship.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117626

RA President: Recreation Of Independence Of Armenian Nationhood Was

RA PRESIDENT: RECREATION OF INDEPENDENCE OF ARMENIAN NATIONHOOD WAS HISTORY’S DEMAND

ArmInfo
2008-09-22 09:31:00

ArmInfo. ‘Recreation of independence of the Armenian nationhood was the
history’s demand. Our people has never put up with loss of independence
– the people, whose historians and writers called a lack of freedom
and the aggressors’ power illegal’, RA President Serzh Sargsyan said
in view of 17th anniversary of Independence.

He emphasized that Armenia’s citizens, having given their votes for
independence seventeen years ago, created a history of today’s and
tomorrow’s Armenia. Independence, he said, ‘is fulfillment of our
dream, our biography, a period full of ups and downs, aspirations
and struggle, our potential and capacity to stand up for our national
dignity, our right to pay the costs and find national achievements,
the right to be proud of them jointly’. ‘Independence is the right
to build the own history by the own will. We succeeded to defend
our country during seventeen years, approve the state system, lay
the foundation of the developing economy, give a new breath to our
culture, education and health’, S. Sargsyan said.

As RA president said, ‘today, our country moves towards, and if there
is development, there is a power behind this development’. ‘This power
is our compatriots, their work, faithfulness and sacrifice. This power
is each of us. This is what makes September 21 a holiday of national
pride for us. This is a pride and not a self-complacence. We develop
new traditions of the Armenian state from declaration of independence
up to now. Today, we are a formed state which must be able to disroot
the phenomena braking our progress and stimulate the values which
our generations fight for, the values we advocate, that is, freedom,
democracy and equality before the law.

We are the masters of these values and we shall protect them’,
S. Sargsyan emphasized.

Macedonian flag on Mount Ararat

Macedonian flag on Mount Ararat
_content&do_pdf=3D1&id=3D3478
http://maced oniaonline.eu/index2.php?option=3Dcom_content& task=3Dview&id=3D3478&pop=3D1&page=3D0 &Itemid=3D2
hp?option=3Dcom_content&task=3Demailform&i d=3D3478&itemid=3D2

Updated Sunday, 21 September 2008

Four members mountain expedition from Macedonia was present at the ninth
annual international climbing of biblical Mount Ararat (5.165m), organizedby
the Turkish Mountaineering and Climbing Federation.
Macedonia was represented by Zivko Temelkovski, Goran Strezoski, Dimitar
Popovski and Viktor Kalauzi.
The Turkish Climbing Federation is celebrating the birth of Macedonian born
Turk Kemal Mustafa Ataturk, the father of modern Turkey.

© 2008 MINA

http://macedoniaonline.eu/index2.php?option=3Dcom
http://macedoniaonline.eu/index2.p
http://www.macedoniaonline.eu/

CBA Preliminary Approval for Banking Licence to Postbank CJSC

CBA GIVES PRELIMINARY APPROVAL FOR GRANTING BANKING ACTIVITY LICENCE TO
ARMENIAN POSTBANK CJSC

Y EREVAN, SEPTEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN. At the September 19 sitting of the
Board of the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) conducted by the CBA
chairman Arthur Javadian, a decision was made to give preliminary
approval for granting a banking activity licence to Armenian Postbank
CJSC, Noyan Tapan was informed by the CBA PR service.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117595

Eat Beat: Fall Festivals

EAT BEAT: FALL FESTIVALS
Karri Peifer

Richmond.com
Sept. 20, 2008

50th Annual Armenian Food Festival:

I’m not exactly sure where Armenia is located, somewhere near Turkey
and Iran, I believe, but if you love the Greek festival then you’re
sure to love the Armenian Food Festival. Armenian food is actually
surprisingly similar to traditional Greek favorites. There’s Spinach
Boreg (that’s phyllo dough with spinach filling), shish kabobs,
Lahmajoon (meat pie) and the Hye burger (ground sirloin and ground
lamb) and it’s all affordably priced to promote maximum sampling. Throw
in plenty of sweets and drinks, and the fact that this event is rumored
to be the oldest food festival in Richmond, plus music and dancing
and you’ve got the best Armenian culture has to offer. Admission
is free. St. James Armenian Church: 834
Pepper Ave.

Thursday, Sept. 18, and Friday, Sept. 19, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5
p.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday. Sept. 20, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sunday,
Sept. 21 noon. to 7 p.m.

http://www.stjamesva.org/.

Deux Poids, Deux Mesures?

DEUX POIDS, DEUX MESURES?

Le Monde
20 septembre 2008
France

Je n’ai pas grande sympathie pour l’ex-KGB V. Poutine, l’énorme
musculature de sa "démocratie", et peu d’estime pour son pâle
paravent présidentiel actuel. Ceci dit…

– L’indépendance du Kossovo sous la pression de l’UE, et quels
qu’aient été les crimes de Milosevic, ouvrait la voie aux sécessions
ossète et abkhaze. Intangibilité des frontières et droit des
peuples a disposer d’eux-mêmes ne font pas spécialement bon ménage.

– C’est le Président georgien qui a déclenché les hostilités en
bombardant, plutôt rudement, l’Ossétie du Sud.

– De la même manière que je comprenais le blocus de Cuba organisé
par JF Kennedy lors des livraisons de fusées russes, je concois que
V. Poutine ne soit pas enchanté de voir ses frontières se couvrir
de troupes, de bases de missiles et d’anti-missiles américaines.

Alors, ceci dit, je trouve aussi, comme quasiment tous les médias
francais, la politique russe imbécilement agressive, en Tchétchénie
et ses justifications du maintien de troupes en Georgie largement
outrancières.

Mais l’exemple vient de loin. C’est GW Bush qui il n’y a pas si
longtemps a notoirement organisé une campagne éhontée de mensonges
pour, au nom des armes de destruction massives et du soutien a Al
Quaïda, avoir les mains libres afin d’envahir l’Irak. Je ne souviens
pas d’une telle unanimité des médias francais pour dénoncer, a
l’époque, cette politique agressive sur strict fond de ressources
pétrolières.

L’U nion Européenne n’est pas exempte d’ambiguité dans
ce domaine. J’ai appris dernièrement que les accords récents
qu’elle a conclu avec l’Ukraine et la Georgie font référence a
l’intangibilité des frontières alors que celui signé avec l’Arménie
(Haut Karabagh oblige) fait, lui, référence au droit des peuples
a disposer d’eux-mêmes. Cherchez l’erreur et les risques de suites
désastreuses a venir..!

Comme pour l’ Afghanistan, il serait temps d’accorder les violons.

Autres sujets: "Vous cherchez un assassin de premier choix ? Voyez
chez les gardes du corps – personne ne se méfiera. Vous aimeriez
un voleur efficace ? Pensez au gardien – il a les clés et les
codes. Souhaitez-vous le traître le plus destructeur ? Songez a l’ami
proche, au complice, au frère. Ce sont autant de recettes increvables
: elles ont assuré déja la réussite d’innombrables coups d’Etat,
révolutions de palais et forfaitures en tout genre. C’est pourquoi,
depuis belle lurette, les philosophes se sont préoccupés de cette
question". Extrait de l’excellente chronique du Monde "Quand la
sécurité devient un danger".

– C’est fait les USA viennent de décider de prendre a leur charge,
c’est a dire a celles des contribuables toutes les créances douteuses
des banques d’affaires qui se sont goinfrées et ont spéculé
sur des crédits pourris qu’elles ont ensuite "titrisées" dans
l’opacité la plus totale et revendu aux autres ce qui, en langage
ordinaire, s’appelle de l’escroquerie. Du coup, les Bourses du monde
redécollent. C’est si simple de faire payer les autres… Pour vous
et moi, ce type de comportement mène a la prison, mais pas dans la
haute finance.

– Enfin, la candidate, ex-candidate a la Présidence de la
République,qui prétend incarner la rénovation du PS fait alliance
dans cette perspective avec les barons (Bouches du Rhône et Hérault
en tête) qui incarnent ce qu’il y a de plus pourri dans ce parti. Ce
congrès de Novembre me semble très bien parti.

–Boundary_(ID_q4Ir0LNp5WNT+fdg9zadOg)–

Minority Rights? No Thanks!

MINORITY RIGHTS? NO THANKS!
Brian Whitaker

guardian.co.uk
Friday September 19 2008

When so many people face oppression in the Middle East, is there any
point in focusing on the rights of minorities?

"What we commonly think of as the ‘Arab and Muslim world’ is in fact
a rich and varied mosaic of peoples. Over the last 50 years, many
Middle Eastern minorities have been oppressed or have struggled to
survive – be they national groups (Berbers, Kurds, Turkomans, etc),
religious communities (Christians, Zoroastrians, Baha’is, etc) or both
(Armenians, Jews, etc) …"

This was the blurb for a talk last night hosted by the London
Middle East Institute, and attended by a fascinating collection
of representatives from the region’s forgotten minorities, even a
Zoroastrian lady – one of the few remaining adherents of a faith that
once dominated Iran and much of the surrounding area.

The main speaker was Egyptian-born Masri Feki, the founder of a
French-based pressure group called The Middle East Pact, who had come
over from Toulouse.

"Masri Feki sees minority rights as central to his vision of secular
democracy," the blurb said. "Now, more than ever, thriving minorities
are the cornerstone of a healthy civil society and the key to pluralism
and peace in this troubled region."

Well, I’m not so sure about that. As Mr Feki rightly pointed out
in his talk, ethnic and religious diversity is something that
pan-Arab nationalists and, more recently, Islamists, have tried to
obliterate. But what’s so special about minorities as such?

How much sympathy should we feel for the Alawite minority who rule
Syria? Or the Sunni minority who rule Bahrain? And then there’s the
Kurdish minority in Iraq – I’ve heard some horrible stories about
the way some of them treat another minority, the Turkomans.

Of all the oppressed people in the Middle East, those most widely
and consistently denied their rights are women. Whether they happen
to be more or less numerous than men is surely beside the point.

Well-intentioned as they may be, Mr Feki’s efforts to focus special
attention on the region’s minorities strike me as the result of some
muddled thinking. This is not to suggest that minority rights are
necessarily unimportant; it is vital to protect them, for example,
in a democratic countries.

In democracies, the will of the majority is supreme and so we need
safeguards to ensure that the majority does not abuse its position
by oppressing minorities. In most of the Middle East, though, with
only a very limited measure of democracy, minorities and majorities
are largely irrelevant: prejudice, discrimination, intolerance and
bigotry are rife, full stop.

A couple of months ago I was in the Middle East, researching this
problem for a book that I am writing and two points in particular
stood out.

One is that very few people grasp the concept of diversity. Difference
– whether ethnic, religious, cultural or sexual – is viewed as an
embarrassment and something you keep quiet about. The roots of this
attitude lie deep in the history and culture but it’s a far cry from
the idea, now prevalent in the west, that diversity is valuable and
enriches a society rather than weakening it.

The second point is that the principle of equality – equal rights,
equality before the law, equality of opportunity, etc – has not really
been taken on board either. "It’s not that people haven’t heard of
these concepts," Nadime Houry, a researcher for Human Rights Watch
told me when I met him in Lebanon. He explained:

Most laws – and [Arab] constitutions as well – are framed in a way
[that says] "we are against discrimination, we are for equality and
all citizens are born equal" – but all these slogans ring hollow
when you look at them more closely … Even within society the sense
of equality or non-discrimination is absent. It’s not just the state
that is the culprit here. Most examples of discrimination are between
people, but no one is really going to take a strong stand to push
for that equality.

In Cairo, Hossam Bahgat, director of the Egyptian Initiative for
Personal Rights, echoed this view. "People can immediately spot
injustice and stand up for the oppressed," he said, "but it’s not
the same thing as discrimination or inequality. They don’t spot
inequality as easily. They can see why torture is wrong, why the
imprisonment of a journalist or a political activist is wrong. They
see the abuse. But just because someone is not getting exactly the
same treatment as another person is not as shocking to their moral
system as simple abuse."

A large part of the problem, he said, is the sheer pervasiveness of
injustice and inequality. "It affects everyone almost, apart from
the lucky few – so it becomes a matter of ‘why them?’

"Another part of the problem," he continued, "is that it’s all a power
game, so a middle-class middle-aged civil servant in the ministry of
transport who is working in inhuman conditions and gets very poor
treatment from his superiors would take this out on his wife or
his children or his Coptic neighbour. This sense of injustice gets
exercised in different ways. In a sea of victims it’s really hard to
find one victim and to make a big case about their victimhood."

Derenik Melikyan: Iran Shares Armenian Stance Of Karabakh And Genoci

DERENIK MELIKYAN: IRAN SHARES ARMENIAN STANCE OF KARABAKH AND GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.09.2008 14:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ There are two Hay Dat offices in Iran. One is in
Tehran and the other is in Nor-Jugha, Derenik Melikyan, editor of
Aliq Tehran-based Armenian-language newspaper, told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter.

"We organize April evenings, seminars on genocide studies, including
the Armenian Genocide. Books dedicated to Armenian-Iranian,
Turkish-Iranian and Armenian-Turkish relations are published," he said.

"Iran has tensed relations with Turkey and, moreover, with
Azerbaijan. Tehran doesn’t welcome Baku’s yearning for the Turkic
world. Panturanism is inadmissible for Iran. Maybe this is the reason
why it shares the Armenian stance of Karabakh and Genocide. Moreover,
thanks to the NKR security belt, the Armenian-Iranian border became
longer," Melikyan said.

BAKU: Dennis Sammut: "A Dialogue Between The Azerbaijani Government

DENNIS SAMMUT: "A DIALOGUE BETWEEN THE AZERBAIJANI GOVERNMENT AND ITS CIVIL SOCIETY ON THE KARABAKH CONFLICT WILL MAKE THE POSITION OF AZERBAIJAN IN THE INTERNATIONAL ARENA MUCH STRONGER"

Today.Az
politics/47644.html
Sept 18 2008
Azerbaijan

Day.Az interview with chief executive of British NGO LINKS Dennis
Sammut.

– Can you comment about the Russian decision to recognize Abkhazia
and South Ossetia?

– I was surprised that Russia has recognized Abkhazia and South Ossetia
unilaterally. Quite apart from the fact that Russia had recognized
Georgia after the collapse of the Soviet Union within the borders of
the Georgia SSR and had been party to various UN and OSCE resolutions
which supported Georgia’s territorial integrity, the decision has
wide and long term implications for the whole international system,
but more significantly and immediately it has implications on all the
post soviet space. The status of Abkhazia and South Ossetia should be
defined through a wider international effort and the Russians could
have put their case for independence in such a context.

– How will it influence the situation in the region?

– It makes the situation in the Caucasus even more complicated than
before. I do not believe that this is what the Russians wanted. Russia
has an interest in peace and stability in the Caucasus. It is just
that it sometimes goes to achieve this objective in a heavy handed
manner. Russia has yet to learn the lesson of how to use soft
power. Tanks and guns are not the only way to project power.

– Will the recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia help to resolve
their conflict with Georgia?

– In the short term this is going to make even basic discussions and
negotiations difficult. It will be up to the Georgian leadership to
be pragmatic and not to worry too much about symbols but to engage
with Abkhazia and South Ossetia on more substantial issues. If the
international community is able to be creative and to be united in
wanting peace in the region it can still come up with formulas that
would enable both Georgia, as well as Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
to come out of this with honour. The Abkhaz de facto president, Mr
Bagapsh has been talking about making Abkhazia an offshore financial
centre. Offshore centres need stability to succeed. So I think
once the dust settles down both sides will need to find channels of
communication and ways to move forward.

– And what is the impact of all this on Karabakh?

– Diplomats, both Russian and American and European say that Karabakh
is a different case. But then they said this about Kosovo also! Of
course they are right in that each conflict has its own specific
dynamics but we must expect some fallout from the Georgian crisis
in the Karabakh context too. For me there is one important lesson
to be learnt by everybody, namely that it is a big mistake to leave
these conflicts unresolved. There should now be an urgent renewal of
the effort to solve the Karabakh conflict peacefully and both the
international community and the parties directly involved need to
revitalize the peace process.

– Do you think that the initiative of Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan
to launch a Caucasus Stability and Co-operation platform can contribute
to peace in the region?

– I think the Turkish initiative is long overdue and I congratulate the
Turkish Government and Turkish diplomacy for starting the process. This
is not going to be an easy process. The CSCE process in Europe during
the cold war took ten years to prepare and two years of intensive
negotiations before the Helsinki Final Act could be agreed. I think
we can move quicker in the Caucasus but this will still require a
long term engagement and Turkish diplomacy needs to stick with the
idea through its ups and downs, of which I am sure there will be
many. I believe for this idea to succeed it must be inclusive. The
US and the EU must play a full role. Iran should be brought in. And
then the biggest challenge will be how to engage with the de facto
authorities in Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh. We have
an absolutely new situation now in the Caucasus. In a relatively
small region we have three tier s of political entities: sovereign
states that are part of the international system; states that have
self declared independence and have been recognized by some, and
unrecognized states. How to get everybody round the table to sort
out the mess we are in now is a challenge we all have to engage with.

– How will LINKS change its work to respond to the new situation?

– We have first and foremost to continue providing a space for key
players from different sides to discuss with each other in informal
and semi formal frameworks. I think that if more of this was done in
the previous years between Russians and Georgians and Georgians and
Ossetians we will not be where we are today.

Secondly we will contribute with ideas about how we can move the
different processes forward. We are working closely with other non
governmental organizations in Europe and in the region and we will
intensify this work. Governments must start listening more to what
civil society has to say.

I want to appeal specifically to the Government of Azerbaijan to open
a dialogue with its civil society on the Karabakh conflict and on the
future of the region. Such a dialogue will not be a sign of weakness
but a sign of strength and it will make the position of Azerbaijan
in the international arena much, much stronger. But it will need to
be a real dialogue not something orchestrated for media consumption.

At the moment LINKS is working with other organizations in the
framework of the Consortium Initiative to prepare concrete suggestions
on these issues which we hope to discuss with both the Azerbaijani,
as well as the Armenian government in the near future.

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

RA FM Underscores Importance Of Maintaining OSCE Minsk Group Format

RA FM UNDERSCORES IMPORTANCE OF MAINTAINING OSCE MINSK GROUP FORMAT

DeFacto Agency
Sept 18 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 18.09.08. DE FACTO. On September 17 a meeting of RA FM
Edvard Nalbandian with OSCE Minsk group French Co-Chair Bernard
Fassier was held. In the course of the meeting Minister Nalbandian
highly estimated OSCE Minsk group format’s maintenance.

According to the RA MFA, RA FM underscored importance of maintaining
OSCE MG format, which proved its viability.

The parties discussed current situation and perspectives of Karabakh
talks. In this context RA FM again reaffirmed Armenian party’s
principal stand to resolve conflicts via peace talks.