Kiro Manoyan: Obama’s Pledge To Recognize The Armenian Genocide Seem

KIRO MANOYAN: OBAMA’S PLEDGE TO RECOGNIZE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SEEMS CONVINCING

armradio.am
24.06.2008 15:28

US Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama’s pledges to
recognize the Armenian Genocide are more convincing, unlike the
former candidates, Head of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(ARF) Bureau’s Hay Dat and Political Affairs Office Kiro Manoyan told
a press conference on June 24.

According to him, the latter recently reconfirmed the importance of
recognizing the Genocide.

"Although it’s hard to guarantee anything in politics, unlike the
former candidates, Obama states this not only as a presidential
hopeful but also as a Senator," he said.

According to Kiro Manoyan, Turks had a meeting with Obama’s advisers.

"They told the Turks they should have a second program, because
Obama will recognize the Armenian Genocide if elected," Kiro Manoyan
said. In his words, Obama turns not only to the issue of the Armenian
Genocide, but also the settlement of the Karabakh conflict on fair
principles. Mr. Manoyan considers that nothing new will be registered
in the Karabakh settlement process before the presidential elections
in the US and Azerbaijan.

Kiro Manoyan noted also that the US has not yet expressed its distinct
attitude towards the new authorities of Armenia. "The United States
has to show that it does not pose the issue of legitimacy of the
Armenian authorities," he noted.

Political Correctness And Censorship

POLITICAL CORRECTNESS AND CENSORSHIP
Patrick J. Buchanan

Niagarafallsreporter.com
June 23 2008
NY

Freedom of the press is on trial in Canada.

The trial is before a court with the Orwellian title of the British
Columbia Human Rights Tribunal. The accused are Maclean’s magazine
and author Mark Steyn. The crime: In mocking and biting tones, they
wrote that Islam threatens Western values.

Had Steyn written that, given the Crusades, colonial atrocities in
Africa and the slave trade, Christianity had been on balance a curse,
he would not be in the dock. In the United States, these charges would
have been tossed out by any federal judge, who would have admonished
the plaintiffs that, here in America, we have a First Amendment.

The United States, however, is an isolated exception, as western
nations seek to impose wider restrictions on what has come to be called
"hate speech."

Questioning the Holocaust is a crime in Canada and Europe, as British
historian David Irving discovered when he was sentenced to prison in
Austria. To say the Armenian massacres of 1915-1924 were an attempt
at genocide is a crime in Turkey.

In France, animal rights champion Brigitte Bardot has been fined
$23,000 for provoking discrimination and racial hatred by denouncing
Muslims who slaughtered a sheep in a religious ceremony. Bardot had
been punished five previous times for her statements.

Censorship is making a comeback. Outside the United States, it is
considered an acceptable price to pay for the new diversity western
man seems now to value more than the old liberty.

In 1990, writes Adam Liptak of The New York Times, Chief Justice
of the Canadian Supreme Court Brian Dickson wrote, in upholding the
conviction of one James Keegstra for anti-Semitic slurs:

"(T)he international commitment to eradicate hate propaganda and,
most importantly, the special role given equality and multiculturalism
in the Canadian Constitution necessitate a departure from the view
… that the suppression of hate propaganda is incompatible with the
guarantee of free expression."

There you have it. Canada’s commitment to multiculturalism and the
equality of all religions, races and cultures requires the silencing
of those who do not believe all races, creeds and cultures are equal.

The dogmas of the diverse society dictate that the cherished rights
of the free society be sacrificed on the altar of social tranquility.

What has caused this reversal of the advance of freedom?

Western man has come to believe there are more important values than
freedom, if men use their freedom in ways our new Lords Temporal
find unacceptable.

Nor is this anything new. Censorship has always had powerful patrons
and not always benighted backers.

In the Middle Ages, pious men sought to silence heretics because they
believed the faith led to Paradise, while its loss led to Hell for
all eternity. The Christian censorship we mock today was born of men’s
deepest convictions about the most important thing in life: salvation.

Devout Muslims believe heretics and apostates should be put to
death. Islam is the most important thing in their lives, and its
truths are valued more than any freedom to mock them.

And, indeed, most men accept some form of censorship.

Most of us believe that published or spoken lies that ruin good names
should be punished by libel and slander laws. Most of us believe there
are military secrets that must be protected. Not a few Americans
believe that the moral codes imposed on Hollywood by the Legion of
Decency helped protect society from the toxic pollution that poisons
our children. Most of us support FCC sanctions against filthy language
or racist slurs on the airwaves.

Nor is government censorship unknown to America.

President John Adams signed the Sedition Acts, which called for the
incarceration of journalists who wrote insultingly of him. Abraham
Lincoln suppressed newspapers that denounced his war. Woodrow Wilson
imprisoned the Socialist Eugene Debs for denouncing his war.

A new censorship is now arising. We read of speech codes on campuses,
sensitivity training for freshman and tribunals before which students
are made to grovel and recant for joking references that offended
some minority or other.

"The best test of truth," said Justice Holmes, "is the power of
thought to get itself accepted in the marketplace."

Nonsense. Editor Elijah Lovejoy was lynched in Alton, Ill., in 1837
for advocating abolition — against the view of the marketplace. Truth
is truth, whether the majority agrees or not.

Yet one’s money ought to be on the new censors, for men who believe
deeply in something, even when wrong, usually triumph over men who
believe in nothing.

Today, the true believers in Islam and the true believers in diversity
uber alles are making common cause against those who believe in
freedom of speech and the press. As the former have the convictions
and increasingly the power, they may prevail, and not only in Canada
and Europe.

A new orthodoxy is arising. Freedom’s finest hour may be behind us.

One Person Needs 20m2

ONE PERSON NEEDS 20M2

Panorama.am
15:35 23/06/2008

‘This year in Yerevan 100 ha green areas are envisaged to plant. 40
ha of it have already been planted in Shengavit community and the
rest is envisaged to do in the other communities in the forthcoming
months’,-said Avet Martirosyan, the head of nature protection
administration of Yerevan`s municipality.

He added that the taking of the planted trees in Shengavit community
is 85-90%. Today the total green area of Yerevan is 67383.5ha and
453.18ha are in centre. For watering these areas it is planned to
set up 8.015 long meters irrigation system, and it costs 35mln.AMD.

Martirosyan notified that this year 22 illegal logging cases are
recorded and levied amount of cutting down is 5.5mln.AMD.

According to the head planner, in 2020 in Yerevan the green area for
one person should be 20m2. It is accounted that each year in Yerevan
500mln. AMD`s planting of greenery is planned to realize. Only this
year, about 60mln AMD has been spent on the planting of greenery.

In Yerevan the population is about 1.2mln. It is accounted that for
the planting like this it is needed either to widen the territory of
Yerevan or pass to the vertical planting of greenery.

NKR: Receptions At NKR President

RECEPTIONS AT NKR PRESIDENT

Azat Artsakh Daily
23 June 08
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]

On June 20th NKR President Bako Sahakyan met with the delegation of
National Academy of Armenian Sciences, by the head of the chairman of
the Academy, academician Radik Martirosyan. Questions referring to
today’s situation of the sphere of Artsakh science and perspectives
of development were discussed at the meeting. The necessity of
collaboration in NKR higher educational system, preparation of
qualified scientific cadres, increasing of interest with respect to
science were emphasized. Bako Sahakyan assured, that by consistent
involvement of Armenian scientific experience and innerpower Artsakh
would restore its former fame. — — — — On June 21st NKR
President Bako Sahakyan met with the members of International Centre
of Human Development /ICHD/, by the head of the executive director of
the centre Tevan Poghsoyan. Tevan Poghosyan represented the President
the main ways of the activity realizing by the centre, the program
of "Momentum" netting, which had for an object to prepare young
cadres gifted by high professional abilities. Questions connected
with establishment of useful collaboration with Artsakh within the
scopes of this program, exchange of accumulated experience, as well
as increase of information about the processes taken place in NKR
were discussed at the meeting.

Pace Plenary Session To Discuss Issue Of Putting Debates On The Situ

PACE PLENARY SESSION TO DISCUSS ISSUE OF PUTTING DEBATES ON THE SITUATION IN ARMENIA ON AGENDA OF SUMMER SESSION

ArmInfo
2008-06-23 12:50:00

PACE Plenary Session is to discuss the issue of putting debates on the
situation in Armenia on the agenda of Summer Session Monday, Head of
the Armenian delegation to PACE, Chairman of the Armenian Parliamentary
Commission for State and Legal Affairs David Haroutunyan told ArmInfo.

Commenting on the most probable developments at PACE, D. Haroutunyan
said: process>. As regards the opinion that any sanctions on Armenia
will hinder democratization of the country, he said: ‘I think it will
become known after the debates. In the meantime, we have much to do
at the Monitoring Committee. So, the issue will be mainly discussed
there’.

To recall, in April 208 PACE adopted the Resolution No1609 ‘Functioning
of democratic institutions in Armenia’. Among the recommendations to
the Armenian party, the Assembly urges the Armenian authorities to
undertake the following reforms without further delay: the political
system should guarantee a proper status and appropriate rights to the
opposition and a fully transparent administration of the election
process; the independence from any political interest of both the
National Television and Radio Commission and the Public Television
and Radio Council must be guaranteed; the authorities should step up
their efforts to establish a truly independent judiciary and enhance
the public’s trust in the courts; arbitrary arrests and detentions, as
well as the ill- treatment of detainees, in particular during police
custody, should be stopped; an effective public control mechanism
over the police must be guaranteed both in law and practice.

It should be noted that PACe co-rapporteurs that had recently visited
the country found the efforts of the authorities insufficient. PACE
adopted the above Resolution after post- election incidents in Yerevan.

No Increase In Price For Fixed-Line Telephone Expected In Armenia

NO INCREASE IN PRICE FOR FIXED-LINE TELEPHONE EXPECTED IN ARMENIA

ARKA
June 20, 2008

YEREVAN, June 20. /ARKA/. ArmenTel company is not planning to increase
prices for fixed-line communication, General Director of ArmenTel
closed joint stock company (Beeline brand) Neycho Velichkov told
journalists. The company has no intention to reduce the monthly
no-charge call limit either, he said.

Yet, he reported, the company is negotiating with the Public Services
Regulatory Commission over possible balancing of the current prices.

"We understand that prices for telecommunication services are falling,
and that the Armenian market has great opportunities for growth, but
this does not mean than we have to constantly subsidize one direction
of our activities at the expense of other services," Velichkov said.

He pointed out that the company intends to go back to the system
of balanced prices among others through expansion of the range of
services offered.

The current price for fixed-line telephone communication is 1,100 drams
including VAT (about $3.15) for population and 4,800 drams (about $14)
for organizations. No-charge call limit is 360 minutes for digital
lines. After that, the cost is 5drams per minute starting from the
361st minute and 9drams per minute starting from the 1601st minute.

"ArmenTel" closed joint stock company is a daughter enterprise
of "Vimpelcom" Russian telecommunication company (Beeline
trademark). It provides services to about 640,000 subscribers of
stationary communication and over 450,000 subscribers of mobile
communication. ($1=304.59drams).

Not Only Condemn But Also Help

NOT ONLY CONDEMN BUT ALSO HELP

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on June 20, 2008
Armenia

"There are certain accomplishments which are quite positive. No need
to go further in order to have Armenia’s reliability recognized not
only by the Armenians but also by the international structures and
first of all, the Council of Europe," Jorge Columbier, co-rapporteur
of the Monitoring Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe said, touching upon his visit to Armenia and the
Armenian authorities’ compliance with Resolution # 1609.

Mr. Columbier also pointed out that Armenia anticipates encouragement
for continuing the activities it has undertaken after adopting
Resolution # 1609 on April 17. "I really want the Council of Europe
and the PACE to give the authorities specific recommendations,
so as they will continue pursuing the path of democracy. This is
extremely important. I am sure that the Armenian authorities will
follow the recommendations and comply with the requirements," the
co-rapporteur said.

Mr. Columbier also added that Armenia anticipates "not only
condemnation but also help."

BAKU: US Urges Armenia To Recognize Turkish Border

US URGES ARMENIA TO RECOGNIZE TURKISH BORDER

Trend News Agency
June 20 2008
Azerbaijan

The United States for the first time publicly called on Armenia to
formally recognize its border with Turkey as part of proposed measures
for reconciliation between the two conflicting neighbors. "Armenia
should acknowledge the existing border with Turkey and respond
constructively to efforts that Turkey may make," Dan Fried, assistant
secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, told a hearing
of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on recent developments in the
Caucasus.Also in the written text of his speech at the panel, Fried
said, "Armenia must be ready to… disavow any claim on the territory
of modern Turkey."A top problem between Ankara and Yerevan is Armenia’s
insistent calls for the recognition of World War I-era killings of
Armenians in the Ottoman empire as genocide, reported Turkishdailynews.

Turkey recognizes Armenia, but has refused to set up diplomatic
relations with it and keeps their mutual land border closed in response
to Armenia’s ongoing occupation of Nagorny-Karabakh, an enclave inside
Azerbaijan, and some Azeri lands.Armenia and U.S. Armenians accuse
Turkey of subjecting its northeastern neighbor to an economic blockade.

Turkish diplomats say that Armenian efforts for international genocide
recognition is a prelude to a larger list of demands, including
compensation and even "return of lands."Armenia’s constitution does
not explicitly recognize the country’s border with Turkey, and many
Armenians and the Armenian diaspora view part of eastern Anatolia as
traditional Armenian lands.Fried’s remarks were important in the sense
that it was the United States’ first public call for Armenia to respect
Turkey’s territorial integrity as a prelude to better relations.The
U.S. official also called on Turkey "to come to terms with a dark
chapter in its history.""Reconciliation will require political will on
both sides, and does require dealing with the sensitive and painful
issues, including the issue of the mass killings and forced exile
of up to one-and-a-half million Armenians at the end of the Ottoman
Empire. Turkey needs to come to terms with this history," Fried said.

He also reiterated a call for Turkey to open the land border
with Armenia, saying both sides would greatly benefit from such
reconciliation.Pro-Armenian lawmakers insistently asked Fried why
the United States does not officially recognize last century’s
Armenian killings in the Ottoman empire as genocide."We don’t use
the term because we do not think that the use of that term would
contribute to a reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey, nor would
it contribute to Turkey’s examination of the dark spots in its own
history," he replied.A genocide resolution came close to passage at
the U.S. House of Representatives last fall, and only strong Turkish
warnings that such a move destroy the relationship with America and
President George W. Bush’s administration’s focused efforts caused
it to be shelved.But analysts here warn that Turkey almost certainly
will face the same problem in Congress next year. Making things worse
for Turkey, Democratic presidential contender Barack Obama strongly
supports the Armenian position.

"Objects" Being Built In Intervals Between Trees In Ijevan

"OBJECTS" BEING BUILT IN INTERVALS BETWEEN TREES IN IJEVAN

Noyan Tapan

Ju ne 20, 2008

YEREVAN, JUNE 20, NOYAN TAPAN. Until 1990s, tall beatiful trees grew
in the center of the city of Ijevan and along the banks of the Aghstev
River, which gave a unique charm to this regional center of Tavush
marz. As NT correspondent reported from Tavush marz, over the past
ten years a lot of trees have been cut down mercilessly in order to
clear space for various facilities. "Deep pruning" of trees along
the highway, on the left bank of the river was done recently. The
huge trees were thrown into the river so that the flow will take them
away. The municipality has allocated areas for various "objects" on
the right bank, in the intervals between the trees. In the opinion of
local residents, the huge trees that "hamper" the newly-built shops
will dry up and die.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=114781

Police Await Post Mortem On Burned Body

POLICE AWAIT POST MORTEM ON BURNED BODY
CHRIS BISHOP

Norfolk Eastern Daily Press
June 19 2008
UK

Police were tonight hoping a post mortem examination would reveal
how a woman whose charred remains were found in a layby died.

A Home Office pathologist has spent today examining the corpse of
the woman, whose burning body was found at a truck stop beside the
A1301 at Hinxton, near Duxford, at 3.30am on Wednesday. Earlier today,
detectives said they had not yet established her identity.

Det Insp Dave Grierson said the body was so badly charred
it was difficult to even ascertain whether or not it had been
clothed. Witnesses who saw the body after it was found by a lorry
driver have been offered counselling.

Det Insp Grierson said: "Obviously this was a very traumatic experience
for them and they have been offered counselling as a result. Witnessing
such an incident would be traumatic for anyone."

Five lorry drivers who used the lay-by, in the early hours of
Wednesday, have been interviewed.

Police know an accelerant was used to set light to the body, while
examinations at the scene have revealed traces of a number of vehicles.

"We know several vehicles used the lay-by on the evening of Tuesday,
June 17," said Det Insp Grierson. "We would like to speak to any
drivers who used it and any other people who used that stretch of
road late Tuesday night or early Wednesday."

Police across East Anglia have been reviewing their missing persons
files for details of any women reported missing in their areas,
while forensic officers and sniffer dogs have continued to comb the
scene. Forty Cambridgeshire officers are working on the investigation.

In 2002 a badly-burned body was found in a field on the outskirts of
Peterborough, which police sparking a two-year forensic investigation
which took officers across Europe before they identified the victim
as 42-year-old Armenian Hovhahannes Amirian .

Three years later Nishan Bakunts, 28, from Yarmouth, was jailed for
16 years after being found guilty of his murder.

Police say anyone who used the lay-by or has information about missing
persons should call the Major Incident Team on 0845 456 4564.