Kardashian’s Husband Seals Deal With Turkish Club

KARDASHIAN’S HUSBAND SEALS DEAL WITH TURKISH CLUB

epress.am
11.25.2011

Los Angeles Lakers forward Lamar Odom (pictured) has reached an
agreement in principle to sign with Besiktas of Turkey, according to
sources close to Odom.

Final details will not be sorted out before Friday, sources said,
but Odom has indicated that he plans to join the Istanbul-based team
as early as next week if the NBA lockout continues.

Sources told ESPN.com that the deal would pay Odom in excess of $2
million if he spends the rest of the season with Besiktas. The deal
will include an opt-out clause to return to the NBA as soon as the
lockout ends.

Odom, the husband of Khloe Kardashian (pictured), turned 32 earlier
this month and is well-regarded in Turkish basketball circles following
his strong role in Team USA’s FIBA World Championship’s gold-medal
win last summer in Istanbul.

“Despite the fact that his wife, Khloe Kardashian, has Armenian roots,
Odom’s reality show with Kardashian airs in Turkey and is said to be
popular there,” writes ESPN’s Marc Stein.

Recall, Khloe is the sister of socialite, actress Kim Kardashian,
who has been quite vocal in criticizing Turkish and US authorities
for not recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

Furthermore, earlier this year, Turkish Airlines (THY) signed Los
Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant as its “global brand ambassador”
for the next two years. Bryant’s latest endorsement deal resulted in
outrage by Armenian-American fans, who wrote letters to the Lakers
guard, urging him to break his contract with the national air carrier
of a country that has not recognized the Armenian Genocide.

From: A. Papazian

United States halts cooperation with Russia on CFE arms treaty

United States halts cooperation with Russia on CFE arms treaty

© AFP/ Massoud Houssainin
06:45 23/11/2011
WASHINGTON, November 23 (RIA Novosti)

The United States has curbed its cooperation with Russia on the
Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty, State Department
spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said on Tuesday.

The restriction means that the United States will no longer exchange
information on conventional weapons and troops with Russia four years
after Russia stopped implementing the treaty in 2007.

`Today the United States announced in Vienna, Austria, that it would
cease carrying out certain obligations under the Conventional Armed
Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty with regard to Russia,’ Nuland said in a
statement.

`This announcement in the CFE Treaty’s implementation group comes
after the United States and NATO Allies have tried over the past 4
years to find a diplomatic solution following Russia’s decision in
2007 to cease implementation with respect to all other 29 CFE States,’
she said.

`Since then, Russia has refused to accept inspections and ceased to
provide information to other CFE Treaty parties on its military forces
as required by the Treaty,’ she said.

The original CFE Treaty was signed in 1990 by 16 NATO countries and
six Warsaw Pact members and came into force in 1992. The treaty set
equal ceilings for each bloc on five key categories of conventional
armaments and military hardware, including tanks, combat armored
vehicles, artillery, assault helicopters and combat aircraft.

The CFE Treaty played a crucial stabilizing role during the breakup of
the Soviet Union and its satellite states in Eastern Europe. However,
later the document became largely outdated and irrelevant amid
large-scale changes in the military and political environment.

The treaty was updated in 1999, but NATO members states refused to
ratify it citing the fact that Russia was keeping troops in Georgia
and the breakaway Moldovan region of Transdnestr as a pretext.

Russia imposed a unilateral moratorium on the CFE treaty in December
2007, citing concerns over NATO’s eastward expansion, U.S. missile
defense plans for Europe, and the refusal of alliance members to
ratify the adapted treaty. Moscow has repeatedly said it will resume
its participation in the CFE if NATO member states ratify the adapted
treaty.

Nuland also said her country will continue implementing the treaty and
carrying out all `obligations with all States Parties other than
Russia, including not exceeding the numerical limits on conventional
armaments and equipment established by the Treaty.”

“We will resume full Treaty implementation regarding Russia if Russia
resumes implementation of its Treaty obligations,’ she said.

`The United States remains firmly committed to revitalizing
conventional arms control in Europe. In order to increase transparency
and consistent with our longstanding effort to promote stability and
build confidence in Europe, the United States will voluntarily inform
Russia of any significant change in our force posture in Europe,’ she
said.

From: A. Papazian

ISTANBUL: Genie out of bottle on facing up the past

Hurriyet, Turkey
Nov 25 2011

Genie out of bottle on facing up the past

Friday, November 25, 2011
BARÇIN YÝNANÇ
ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan’s apology for the killings in
Dersim has let the genie out of the bottle, says an academic, adding
that other dark periods of Turkish history will come under scrutiny.
While the realities about Dersim have long been known, the wider
public is now more aware of the event, says Ahmet Demirel

For the past 20 years, academics have done brilliant work to unearth
the reality of Dersim, Ahmet Demirel (R) tells the Daily News at
Marmara University, where he teaches about Turkey’s political culture.
DAILY NEWS photos, Emrah GÜREL

The prime minister’s apology for the mass killings in Dersim is the
Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) most important act in its
near-decade of rule regardless of the motives behind the move,
according to a leading historian.

Despite the apology, however, Associate Professor Ahmet Demirel
criticized Prime Minister Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan for using the
incident, in which thousands were killed in a military operation in
the Dersim region in the late 1930s, to target the opposition. “Dersim
should not be used for political gains,” Demirel told the Hürriyet
Daily News in an interview this week.

Q: What happened in Dersim?

A: There were 16 uprisings in the Republican era from 1921 to 1938.
Fifteen of them can clearly be identified as Kurdish uprisings. What
separates Dersim is that it is not an uprising. Even in the documents
of the military, all are listed as uprising but Dersim is called an
“operation.”

Q: Why were the Kurds were revolting?

A: During the first parliament between 1920 and 1924, there was
emphasis on both Turks and Kurds as the essential elements of the
nation-state. But during the period of the second parliament, the
Turkish element came to the forefront. The 1925 uprising of Þeyh Sait
[in Southeast Anatolia] is a breaking point. I have scanned all the
deliberations in the Parliament from 1924 to the mid-1940s. The word
Kurd is absent. In the 1930s, the mentality of “there is no Kurd”
starts to prevail and the politics of “Turkification” starts. These
uprisings were against the denial of Kurdish identity.

Q: Uprisings against the Republic have usually been described as a
religious backlash, as resistance to modernization efforts.

A: If you claim there are no Kurds, how can you claim there is a
Kurdish uprising? So you immediately claim that it is a religious
backlash. The state always looked on the Kurdish uprisings as a
religious backlash, as a movement that was provoked by outside forces
or as resistance from the tribal order in the east. These perspectives
made the state see it as a military problem and thus try to solve it
through military measures. But obviously you can not solve it like
that and the problem turned gangrenous.

In 1931 the Kurdish uprisings ended. But by the late 1930s, Dersim
still remained a geographically remote area with a tribal order. The
state, for instance, could not extract taxes from there. So the state
decided to establish its authority there by establishing guard posts,
building roads and bridges. These efforts were objected to by local
rulers. [During this time,] the name Dersim was changed to Tunçeli
[Turkish for bronze hand].

Q: Why was there a need to change the name?

A: Many names of villages were changed at that time. It is part of the
Turkification campaign. When you read the media of the time, there was
talk of “bringing modernity” to a “primitive area.”

Q: But isn’t it normal for a state to build roads and bridges to reach
a remote area?

A: Of course it is normal. You are building a state and there is this
remote area where you basically cannot even enter. But behind it also
lay the aim to reach the area as soon as possible in case of turmoil.
This was because the people of Dersim had been seen as potential
criminals since Ottoman times. Some of them were, because there were
some groups of bandits among them. But the problem is that the state
saw all the local population as potential criminals. When some tribes
started attacking the posts, the army besieged the city. In the winter
of 1936-37, clashes intensified. Following serious losses among the
army ranks, the aerial bombings started. By the summer, the situation
was taken under control.

Q: Some argue that there was no resistance. What you are telling us is
that it was normal for a state to launch a military campaign to stop
the resistance of the locals to the state’s wish to establish its
control over the region.

A: Obviously the state was right to launch the operation. But what is
unacceptable is the way the operation was conducted. Disproportionate
force was used when you compare it to the small dimension of the
resistance shown. The operation not only targeted those who had shown
resistance but to all the civilians in the region. In the summer of
1937, the whole situation had been taken under control but the state
started using excessive force. People in the villages were gathered
and executed. The Munzur River was said to have turned red because of
the mass executions. The caves where people were hiding were gassed.
Women were raped.

Q: Do we know the death toll? Some have the tendency to call it a
genocide or ethnic cleansing.

A: The document that was revealed for the first time by the prime
minister put the number around 13,000. Researchers put it at around
40,000. We are not talking about annihilating a race but annihilating
the locals of a certain region. Following the hanging of local leaders
in the summer of 1937, the state declared two forbidden zones in the
region in 1938 and nearly everyone in these zones was killed. In 1938,
however, nothing was being done to the Kurds in Diyarbakýr – although
we should not forget that there was a Turkification campaign.

In 1934, a law was enacted meaning that some regions in the east were
declared no-go zones and people were forced to emigrate to the west.
The instructions were [to ensure that there were no regions where]
Turks or those who spoke Turkish remained in the minority.

Q: Why was the state so ruthless in Dersim?

A: It is about the mentality of that period. These are the years of
one-party rule. The party [Republican People’s Party (CHP)] was
swallowed up by the state, which could not even tolerate the party’s
relative autonomy. In one city, the CHP’s provincial head was forced
to resign and the governor became the CHP’s city representative out of
fear that the two could speak differently. The president was equal to
the CHP’s leader.

Q: Why was it so authoritarian?

A: The whole world was like that. The West that the new Republic was
taking as a model mostly consisted of countries ruled by
dictatorships.

Q: Why has it taken such a long time to discuss past incidents like Dersim?

A: All opponents of one-party rule were stigmatized as traitors and
reactionaries. We realized very lately that there could have been a
different history than what we were told. The breaking point was the
publishing in 1981 of a book written by Mete Tunçay; [the book] got
its author into serious trouble. This was followed by a new generation
of academics who produced brilliant works. There were serious studies
done by historians.

Most of what the prime minister talked about are known facts. But
these studies were known to a small group and did not reach the larger
public. Our reaction is generally to first deny, and then to say, “We
should not rake over the coals. What good will it do to dig up the
past?” Actually, it was former CHP MP Onur Öymen’s statement that led
to a widespread discussion of the issue in the larger public. [In
2009, Öymen made a statement that appeared to justify the Dersim
killings, sparking a debate within the CHP.] The genie is now out of
the bottle.

Q: Do you think the genie is out for all the dark periods in Turkish history?

A: It is possible. For the first time … a prime minister has
apologized for something for which he is not personally responsible.
This is not something we are used to. I believe this is the most
important act of the 10-year rule of the AKP. Independent of the
state’s apology, the CHP has to apologize as well. Today’s CHP is
endorsing everything that has been done in the past.

Q: Why does the CHP need to apologize? You said it yourself; the state
had swallowed the CHP.

A: Still, the CHP’s leadership was at the top of the state. The CHP
ruled Turkey from 1923 to 1946 and never tried to face its actions
during that period. The CHP has conducting self-censorship. To make a
differentiation between the old CHP and the new one, the one-party era
needs to re-evaluated. Apologizing for the past will not devastate the
CHP; it will have an opposite effect.

Q: Some are saying that the prime minister was not genuine it his
apology and that he is using the issue to humiliate the CHP.

A: This is possible. In fact, it is obvious that this has a political
dimension. This issue should not be used for daily political gains –
to target the opposition. But whatever the intention, it was good that
he offered an apology. He took the first step, now he should take the
second step and give back the name Dersim. And archives that have so
far not been open to public, especially military ones, should be open
to public.

History books need a rewrite

Knowing the past is important to understand the current issues, said
Associate Professor Ahmet Demirel.

“Facing the reality of Dersim can contribute to the solution of the
Kurdish problem,” he said. “We have always looked at the issue as a
public security issue and with that perspective it was impossible to
solve it. On the contrary, this outlook made us come to the point of
offering an apology. So we need to take a lesson from history not to
repeat the mistakes that made us come to the point of apologizing.”

Turkey will start facing other dark periods of its history, he said.
The so called “Liberty Courts,” established while the liberation war
was going on, will be next to come under scrutiny, according to
Demirel. “Many innocent people were hanged during that period,” he
said.

While he believes history textbooks need to be rewritten, he said
there will be resistance to include Dersim in the curriculum. “Turkey
is not yet ready for that,” he said.

Who is Ahmet Demirel?

Associate Professor Ahmet Demirel is a graduate of Bosphorus
University’s administrative sciences department. He received his M.A.
and Ph.D. degrees from the same university’s social sciences
institute. His research area focuses on the early stages of the
Republic era.

His book “Opposition in the First Parliament: the Second Group” (1994)
is said to have changed the whole paradigm on the opposition during
the single party rule in the early Republic era. He is also the author
of “Survey of the First Parliament: the Expectations for the Future of
the Parliamentarians of the First Period.”

He is currently teaching the Turkish constitutional process and
Turkish political culture and institutions at Marmara University’s
international relations department.

Friday, November 25, 2011

From: A. Papazian

Défaite électorale du HHK

ARMENIE
Défaite électorale du HHK

Un dirigeant du HHK a annoncé « une défaite électorale rare » lors
d’une rencontre avec le président Serge Sarkissian jeudi soir.

Les représentants du HHK ont déclaré que le résultat de l’élection du
maire dans la ville de Ijevan a été annoncé le 13 novembre.

Selon le résultat officiel des votes, le maire sortant d’Ijevan,
Varuzhan Nersisian, a été vaincu par son principal adversaire, Vartan
Ghalumian, du parti Prospère (BHK). Le HHK perd rarement ces
élections, en particulier grce à ses ressources financières.

Le vote a été suivi de nouvelles tensions entre les deux partis. Le
leader du BHK, Gagik Tsarukian, se montre réticent pour soutenir le
président Serge Sarkissian pour sa réélection en 2013.

Le porte-parole du HHK, Edouard Sharmazanov a annoncé lors d’une
interview à RFE/RL « que l’organe exécutif analysait les raisons de ce
résultat ». Mais il n’a pas donné plus de détails. Artak Zarakian, un
parlementaire du HHK, s’est montré également réticent lors d’une
conférence vendredi.

« L’organe exécutif du parti a demandé de faire davantage attention à
ce problème afin d’éviter cette erreur dans d’autres lieux et
d’organiser une meilleure campagne dans le futur. »

La réunion de fin de soirée a été également assistée par Armen
Ghularian, le gouverneur républicain de la province de Tavush dont
Ijevan est la capitale. Selon Sharmazanov, aucun dirigeant du HHK n’a
demandé que Ghularian soit limogé.

Le BHK, qui est représenté dans le gouvernement central par quatre
ministres, n’a pas commenté sa victoire à Ijevan. Vartan Bostanjian,
un parlementaire du BHK, a a déclaré la semaine dernière que le parti
de Tsarukian pourrait battre le HHK aux prochaines élections
législatives.

S’adressant aux journalistes vendredi, Naira Zohrabian, un membre du
BHK, a refusé de commenter le résultat d’Ijevan et a annoncé qu’il ne
signifiait pas que le BHK puisse gagner une majorité au parlement
arménien. « Le résultat de toute élection est démocratique », a-t-elle
annoncé vaguement.

Le HHK détient la majorité des sièges à l’Assemblée nationale et
contrôlent quelques communes à travers le pays. Le parti présidentiel
a indiqué son intention de gagner les élections de 2012, assurant
qu’elles seraient davantage démocratiques que les années passées.

mardi 22 novembre 2011,
Laetitia ©armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

Sargsyan met en garde contre la course aux armements imposée part Ba

ARMENIE
Le président arménien met en garde contre la course aux armements
imposée part Bakou

La course aux armements dans laquelle s’est engagé l’Azerbaïdjan
devrait être une source de preoccupation en termes de sécurité pour
l’ensemble de la région, a declare le président arménien Serge
Sarkissian le jeudi 18 novembre, lors d’un discours prononcé en
préambule à une conférence sur le thème `Dynamiques de sécurité
régionale dans le Sud Caucase’. `La course aux armements imposée par
l’Azerbaïdjan, qui dépasse de loin les normes autorisées par le Traité
sur les armes conventionnelles en Europe (CFE), est une source de
préoccupation non seulement pour l’Arménie et la région mais aussi au
regard de la sécurité régionale dans son ensemble’, a ajouté
M.Sarkissian. `Dans ces conditions, l’Arménie est contrainte de se
concentrer sur la modernisation de ses infrastructures militaires afin
de faire face à la politique belliqueuse de son voisin et de
contribuer à la stabilité dans la région’, a précisé le président
arménien.
M. Sarkissian a indiqué que le contexte géopolitique difficile du Sud
Caucase est un défi, avec ses dangers mais aussi ses perspectives pour
les pays de la région, qui suscite l’intérêt de la communauté
internationale et encouragent la compétition régionale. `Les défis
majeurs auxquels fait face la région sont ces conflits gelés toujours
en attente de règlements justes et durables. A maintes occasions, nous
avons réaffirmé notre volonté de voir ces conflits réglés par la seule
voie pacifique de la négociation, sur les bases des principes
fondamentaux de la législation internationale’, a poursuivi
M.Sarkissian, en précisant que le Groupe de Minsk de l’OSCE constitue
le seul cadre de résolution du conflit acceptable pour l’Arménie. Il a
ajouté qu’une paix durable dans le conflit du Karabagh ne pouvait être
envisagée qu’à la condition que soient garanties la sécurité physique
et l’auto-détermination de la population de la République du
Haut-Karabagh. `Nous pensons que des frontiers ouvertes et la mise en
oeuvre de programmes économiques communs constitueraient la meilleure
impulsion pour la compréhension mutuelle et créeraient un climat de
confiance pour régler les problèmes’, a expliqué M.Sarkissian, en
mettant en garde contre les efforts visant à diviser plus encore les
pays de la région, qui `inévitablement, renforceront l’instabilité et
la méfiance dans tout le Sud Caucase’.
M.Sarkissian a aussi indiqué que l’Arménie avait lancé le processus de
normalisation avec la Turquie dans cette même perspective d’une
coopération régionale et d’une politique de bon voisinage. Si
l’Arménie reste attachée à ces principes, la Turquie doit de son côté
exprimer sa réelle volonté politique pour qu’un tel processus
aboutisse, a précisé le président arménien. M. Sarkissian n’a pas
manqué de souligner l’importance du rôle des ressources énergétiques
dans le développement de la région, mais pour mettre en garde contre
l’utilisation politique de telles ressources, par certaines puissances
désireuses de compromettre l’`équilibre’ des forces dans la région.
`De telles politiques constituent une menace non seulement pour la
sécurité des Etats de la région, mais aussi mettent sérieusement en
danger le fonctionnement des axes de transit énergétiques. Nous ne
devrions ainsi pas permettre que le Couloir énergétique du Sud
fournisse les moyens d’une nouvelle guerre. Ce n’est bon ni pout la
région, ni pour les compagnies gazières et pétrolières’, a ajouté M.
Sarkissian.

mardi 22 novembre 2011,
Gari ©armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

Quand le jazz rencontre la poésie….

FRANCE
Quand le jazz rencontre la poésie….

Hamaskaïne Paris vous propose un événement original mêlant des
musiciens jazz avec une comédienne déclamant Hovaness Chiraz, Vahan
Tekeyan, Kevork Emine et Kherakhouni.

Cette rencontre, à la fois artistique et poétique, est un dialogue
entre le passé et le présent et prouve que l’art est vivant. Pianiste
passionnée de compositeurs russes et français, Macha Gharibian se
détourne de ses classiques et part à la rencontre du jazz. C’est à New
York que commence son envie de composer, mêlant ainsi, lors de ses
improvisations scéniques, ses influences et ses racines. Elle signe
plusieurs bandes originales de film et musiques pour le thétre,
puisant son inspiration des mélodies du Caucase et des musiques
improvisées. Aujourd’hui, elle compose « My triplet » son projet «
live » qui lui permet de nous emmener dans son univers. Le groupe est
composé de Théo Girard à la contrebasse, Ichiro Onoé à la batterie,
David Potaux Razel à la guitare et, bien sûr, de Macha, pianiste et
vocaliste.

La jeune comédienne Arévik Martirossian lira des textes issus de la
tradition poétique arménienne, depuis Chiraz jusqu’à Tekeyan, en
passant par Emine et Kherakhouni .

Forte de ses expériences télévisuelles, cinématographiques et
thétrales, Arévik permettra au public d’éprouver tous le charme et la
grandeur des oeuvres des poètes mis à l’honneur.

L’événement est déjà de taille !

Hamaskaïne Paris organise cette rencontre le dimanche 4 décembre 2011
à 16h00 à la salle Rossini de la Mairie du 9ième ,6 rue Drouot 75009
Paris. Réservations : 06 14 74 92 97 ou au 01 47 37 28 93

Hamaskaïne a été fondée en 1928, et possède de nombreuses sections à
travers le monde notamment à Paris. Son but est de promouvoir et de
pérenniser la langue et la culture arménienne à travers les
générations

lundi 21 novembre 2011,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

The economy must be economical

The economy must be economical

by David Stepanyan

arminfo
Tuesday, November 22, 19:57

`The economy must be economical.’ That’s what Leonid Brezhnev, the
Soviet General Secretary of the 1970s-1980s, used to say, and that’s
what best fits the Armenian economy.

Besides being economical an open economy must be competitive,
export-oriented and liberal. So, in order to understand why our
economy is not, mildly speaking, so well, we should analyze those
three qualities.

In the last year’s global competitiveness index Armenia was just the
92nd among 142 countries but that was 6 positions higher than in 2009.
Inspired by that `achievement’ our Government pledged to make their
economy more open but our monopolists will hardly allow Tigran
Sargsyan’s Cabinet to do it.

The Forbes’ report ranking Armenia as the second worst economy in the
world was a big shock for our authorities and spurred them to do
something to make their economy more competitive. According to Premier
Sargsyan, the key to economic growth is fair competition. And so, he
launched a series of measures to improve the economic legislation and
to boost competition in the country

Given enlarged powers, the State Commission on Protection of Economic
Competition started active measures against unconscientious
businessmen and has transferred to the budget as much as 230mln AMD
($600,000) as a result. Despite such impressive performance, the
Commission is not going to do what it is supposed to, i.e. to fight
monopolies. And so, its activities are just an imitation. $600,000 is
good only if compared with what the Commission collected before but is
nothing as compared with the fines stipulated by the law on economic
competition (from $13,000 to $500,000 per entity). One can hardly
build a competitive economy under such conditions.

Now that the ruling Republican Party of Armenia is preparing for
parliamentary elections it keeps promising to enlarge the exports by
starting to produce import substitutes. This is not a new promise
though. We have been given such promises for over 20 years already and
have seen nothing done to this end this year.

Even though in Jan-Sept 2011 the exports grew more quickly than the
imports (139% against 111%) the negative balance grew from $2bln to
$2.021bln. The current 380 AMD USD rate can hardly stimulate the
export and the traditional pre-New Year AMD appreciation (to 350 AMD)
is meant for the monopolists only and will hardly benefit ordinary
people, who are heavily dependent on USD transfers from abroad.

Though sounding more like a legend the rumors about the super-profits
of the Armenian oligarchs take quite a real shape in the customs
statistics. For example, the customs price of one kilogram of sugar
imported into Armenia by a monopolist is 184 AMD while the commercial
price in the stores owned by the same monopolist it is 390 AMD, i.e.
twice as much. The Commission should have done something about it but
the point is that it has nothing to protect on the monopolistic sugar
market. The same is for the vegetable oil market, where the customs
price is 410 AMD while the market price – 930 AMD per liter. In such a
situation one can hardly orient the market towards export and
substitute import. Or can one? You better ask this question to the
authorities and their monopolist friends.

As regards Armenia’s much-vaunted liberal economic legislation, we
must admit that de jure it is not worse than the laws applied in the
most developed countries but de facto it is not effective.

Sept 29 the Armenian Government adopted a draft national budget 2012
stipulating reduction in the budget deficit due to a raise in tax
revenues (from 101bln AMD to 874bln AMD). According to experts, 30-50%
of the Armenian economy is in shadow, so, the Armenian authorities
seem to have a reserve for doing this but in reality everybody knows
that the raise will be ensured at the expense of budgetary workers and
small and medium-sized businessmen.

The Government will hardly have courage to exert pressure on the
oligarchs and will squeeze taxes from ordinary people.

So, we can imagine what economy we have today and what besides being
economical we can be tomorrow.

From: A. Papazian

Levon Aronian to perform at London Chess Classic 2011

Levon Aronian to perform at London Chess Classic 2011

November 26, 2011 – 16:22 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – London Chess Classic 2011 will be staged at the
Olympia Conference Centre in Kensington from December 3 through 12.
The 3rd edition of what has already become one of the world’s most
prestigious tournaments will be bigger and better than its
predecessors.

There will be two extra rounds, as the addition of one more top flight
player to this year’s main event will make it a nine player all play
all. One player will sit out each day and keep the spectators at
Olympia and online, doubly entertained by joining the commentary team.

The field is complete and is absolutely stellar with the following
top-ranking grandmasters participating: Magnus Carlsen (Norway), Vishy
Anand (India), Levon Aronian (Armenia), Vladimir Kramnik (Russia),
Hikaru Nakamura (U.S.), Michael Adams, Nigel Short, Luke McShane,
David Howell (England), London Chess Classic official website
reported.

From: A. Papazian

People: Do not be afraid

People: Do not be afraid
By Ihab Shaarawy – The Egyptian Gazette
Saturday, November 26, 2011 03:19:14 PM

CAIRO – While many people in Egypt and outside are beginning to ask
many questions about the future of this country, one man who looks to
holy books for inspiration assures everyone that we mustn’t be afraid.

Krikor Okosolinos Coussan, the Bishop of Alexandria for the Armenian Catholics.

“You have to dismiss your fears; this country is going to
overcome all the problems, and prosperity and peace will prevail,”
says Krikor Okosolinos Coussan, the Bishop of Alexandria for the
Armenian Catholics.
The phrase `Do not be afraid’ occurs 62 times in the Holy
Bible, one of them being in Luke 1:30, when the Angel Gabriel tells
the Virgin Mary not to be afraid.
For Monsignor Coussan, now is not the time for fear and
speculation, but for working and praying. Last month, he offered Mass
in an Armenian Catholic church in Heliopolis for peace to prevail in
this country.
What was astonishing was that many Christians of other
denominations and Muslims too attended the Mass.
“I wanted to tell the people that this is Egypt, where we all
live together, with one heart and one faith, worshipping one God,” he
told The Egyptian Gazette, adding that the service got a lot of media
attention and that many journalists abroad now keep on calling him to
ask about the situation in Egypt.
“People outside should know that Eastern people have a unique
nature, which is why they can live together in a warm and loving
atmosphere, whatever differences they have.
`And this is another reason why I am optimistic,’ added
Bishop Coussan, a prelate of Armenian descent, who was born in Syria,
and has lived and studied in Lebanon, Italy and France.
He was posted to Egypt five years ago, since when he has
always insisted that he wants to help all Egyptians, whatever their
religion or beliefs.
“Here we all live in one land, moving along the same path and
worshipping one God,” he said, adding that sometimes secret hands try
to create divisions or rifts between the sons of this country, but
these hands will soon be discovered and punished for their evil.
“Today, the sheikhs and priests must walk hand in hand,
telling the people, especially the humble, how strong their
relationship is,” he stressed, explaining that, since arriving in
Egypt, he has maintained strong relations with people of every faith.
Coussan regretted that there is some tension between Al-Azhar
and the Vatican. He is now working to defuse the tension and stressed
that he counts many Azhar sheikhs among his good friends.
“Along with my friends, Muslim clerics, I intend to organise
several activities and seminars to show the people how all the divine
books urge people to live together and respect each other’s faith and
lives,” added Monsignor Coussan, who doesn’t agree with those people
who fear certain groups will dominate the political scene in Egypt.
“Why do we feel afraid of someone when we don’t talk together?
We have to engage in dialogue first. And this dialogue will be based
on the divine books that all say the same thing: Live in peace and
respect each other’s faith.’
Bishop Coussan stayed in his church in downtown Cairo
throughout the revolution, because he wanted to be near the young
people who were protesting against the ex-regime, only a few steps
away from his church.
“I wanted to be near them, so I could offer them whatever help
they needed. It was my duty,” said the Bishop, who considers himself
to be a father for all Egyptians, not just the several thousand
Armenian Catholics living here.
He believes that those Armenians who came to Egypt in the
early 20th century are a model for peaceful living and acceptance of
the Other in this area of the world.
For him, it is transparency and justice that will extricate us
from the hardships we are suffering.
“The absence of these two things was the main reason for these
young people to take to streets, asking for the removal of the
ex-regime. Now it’s time to avoid the mistakes made in the past,” he
said.

From: A. Papazian

G Design Group Becomes Google’s Authorized Distributor In Armenia

G DESIGN GROUP BECOMES GOOGLE’S AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTOR IN ARMENIA

Mediamax
Nov 24 2011
Armenia

Yerevan/Mediamax /. “G Design Group” Company is authorized to resell
one of Google apps in Armenia.

The company’s Director Grigory Semirjyan and marketing specialist Armen
Sargsyan said this during today’s press conference, Mediamax reports.

According to them, Google currently is involved and interested in
Armenia very little and certain measures need to be taken to call
the internet giant’s attention to our country.

Armen Sargsyan noted that major organizations will be their main
target groups. According to him, use of Google apps will give them
more opportunities for developing their business.

From: A. Papazian