Warwick Mayor Scott Avedisian Was In Turkey When Quake Hit

WARWICK MAYOR SCOTT AVEDISIAN WAS IN TURKEY WHEN QUAKE HIT

WPRI-TV 12

Oct 24 2011

October 24th, 2011 at 5:28 pm by Ted Nesi under Nesi’s Notes By
Tim White

WARWICK, R.I. (WPRI) – Warwick Mayor Scott Avedisian was in Turkey
when a massive 7.2 magniutude earthquake rocked the region on Sunday.

Avedisian was far from the epicenter, according to Chief of Staff
Sue Baker, and was unhurt. Baker said she texted the mayor as soon
as she learned of the disaster and received an immediate response.

Avedisian was in the southern province of Diyarbakır for an Armenian
remembrance, Baker said. She was not sure if the mayor felt the ground
shake, but published reports indicate the southeastern province he
was visiting did experience the tremors.

The mayor is expected back in Rhode Island on Tuesday.

From: A. Papazian

http://blogs.wpri.com/2011/10/24/warwick-mayor-scott-avedisian-was-in-turkey-when-quake-hit/

WikiLeaks Suspends Release Of Secrets, Faces Financial Problems

WIKILEAKS SUSPENDS RELEASE OF SECRETS, FACES FINANCIAL PROBLEMS

PanARMENIAN.Net
October 24, 2011 – 18:58 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said Monday Oct
24 that financial problems may lead to the closure of the notorious
secret-spilling site at the end of this year.

“If WikiLeaks does not find a way to remove this blockade we will
simply not be able to continue by the turn of the new year,” he said.

“If we don’t knock down the blockade we simply will not be able
to continue.”

WikiLeaks said in a statement Monday that it would stop publishing for
the moment in order to focus on making money – explaining that the
blockade imposed by financial companies including Visa, MasterCard,
Western Union and PayPal left it with no choice.

The statement says that in order to ensure survival, WikiLeaks must
“aggressively fundraise in order to fight back against this blockade
and its proponents.”

U.S.-based financial companies pulled the plug on WikiLeaks shortly
after it began publishing some 250,000 U.S. State Department cables
last year. The group says the restrictions starved it of nearly all
its revenue.

The group has long shown signs of financial distress. In a recent
statement about Assange’s contested book deal, the group said it did
not have enough money to hire a lawyer.

Assange remains under legal pressure in Europe and the United States.

A decision on whether to extradite him to Sweden to face sex crime
allegations is expected in the next few weeks. He also may face
possible legal action in the United States, The Associated Press
reported.

From: A. Papazian

The Erdogan Doctrine

THE ERDOGAN DOCTRINE

Sep 12, 2011 1:00 AM EDT

Why Israel Fears the Regional Ambitions of Turkey’s Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

When it comes to bashing Israel, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan is an old hand. He was at it even before he took power in March
2003, castigating the Israeli Defense Force for breaking Palestinians’
heads in the West Bank towns of Jenin and Nablus. He became a hero
in the Arab world two years ago when he stormed out of a Davos
panel discussion after snarling at Israeli President Shimon Peres:
“You know very well how to kill.”

But last week his vitriol reached a new level. In response to Israel’s
continued refusal to apologize for its deadly 2010 commando raid on
a Turkish-owned aid vessel en route to Gaza, he broke off diplomatic
and military relations in all but name, accused Israel of “running
wild” and behaving “like a spoiled child,” promised to take the case
to the International Court of Justice, and swore that in the future
all Turkish aid shipments to Gaza would have naval escorts. “We will
not allow anyone to walk all over our honor,” he fumed.

His talk of trampled honor and gunboats raises the question of who
exactly is the spoiled child. Still, there’s method to Erdogan’s heated
talk. It’s about something more than justice for the nine activists
who were killed aboard the Mavi Marmara as they challenged Israel’s
blockade of Gaza. The Iraq War and the Arab Spring have created a
regional power vacuum, and Erdogan is determined to fill it.

In the past decade he has transformed Turkey, presiding over phenomenal
economic growth and excluding the previously all-powerful Army from
national politics. Now he’s out to bring similarly sweeping change to
the entire region. After winning a third term in office this June by a
larger-than-ever majority, Erdogan portrayed himself as a neo-Ottoman
savior. “Believe me, Sarajevo won today as much as Istanbul, Beirut
won as much as Izmir, Damascus won as much as Ankara!” he told cheering
crowds at a victory speech in the capital.

“The West Bank and Jerusalem won as much as [Turkish Kurdistan’s
leading city] Diyarbakir!”

Ankara wants Israel to apologize for the killing of nine activists
aboard this ship in May 2010., Tommaso Ausili / Contrasto-Redux

In line with that expansive vision, Erdogan is championing the one
issue that everyone in the Middle East-everyone other than Israel,
that is-can agree on: the rights of blockaded Gaza. He has praised
Hamas as “resistance fighters who are struggling to defend their land”
and called the blockade “a crime against humanity.” Many Israelis
view him as a mortal enemy of their country. The latest document
spill from WikiLeaks includes an October 2009 U.S. Embassy cable
quoting Israel’s ambassador to Turkey, Gabby Levy, on his assessment
of Erdogan: “Levy dismissed political calculation as a motivator for
Erdogan’s hostility, arguing the prime minister’s party had not gained
a single point in the polls from his bashing of Israel. Instead,
Levy attributed Erdogan’s harshness to deep-seated emotion: ‘He’s a
fundamentalist. He hates us religiously’ and his hatred is spreading.”

Yet the notion of Erdogan as a Jew-hating jihadi doesn’t really fit.

Just before the current standoff, Erdogan sat down to dinner with
the leaders of Turkey’s religious minorities, including the Chief
Rabbi of Istanbul, and promised to return thousands of properties the
Turkish state had confiscated from Christians and Jews in the past
century. He also made a point of praising the “vast diversity of the
people that have peacefully coexisted” in Istanbul. “In this city the
[Muslim] call to prayer and church bells sound together,” said Erdogan.

“Mosques, churches, and synagogues have stood side by side on the
same street for centuries.”

Skeptics might dismiss that attempt at ecumenicalism as just
sweet-sounding bunkum. But what’s very real-and a surer indicator of
where his priorities really lie-is Erdogan’s decision this month to
let NATO deploy antimissile radars near the Turkish-Iranian border.

Tehran is predictably furious. “We expect friendly countries and
neighbors … not to promote policies that create tension, which
will definitely have complicated consequences,” said Iranian Foreign
Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast. In the past, Erdogan has
often called President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad “my good friend,” and he
recently opposed new U.N. sanctions on Tehran’s nuclear program. But
when push came to shove, Erdogan sided with Turkey’s friends in NATO,
not in Iran.

His aim is no less than to rescue the entire Middle East from poverty
and dictatorship. To those who know him well, that crusade-for want
of a better term-is a direct extension of his personal religious
conviction. “He’s a very moral man, very serious about righting
injustices,” says one associate of the past 20 years. “If you ask if
that is rooted in his personal view of Islam, the answer is yes.”

Even so, Turkey’s neighbors and allies worry that Erdogan’s latest
face-?off with Israel could be the start of a new foreign policy, one
that focuses on hard power instead of soft. Up to now, Turkish Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has pursued a policy of “zero problems with
neighbors,” full of touchy-feely confidence-building measures like
joint historical commissions with Armenia, visa-free travel with
Syria, airport-building contracts with Georgia, cultural exchanges
with Greece, and the like. But Ankara’s stance seems to have suddenly
turned tough. Turkish jets have bombed separatist Kurdish guerrillas
in the mountains of northern Iraq, killing an estimated 160 people,
according to the Turkish military. Davutoglu has begun publicly
calling for Syria’s embattled dictator, Bashar al-Assad, to step down.

And during a planned visit to Egypt this week, Erdogan says he intends
to cross the border into Gaza-a move guaranteed to infuriate Israel.

Saner voices in Israel are trying to downplay the war of words. “The
main thing is not to get confused, not to get into a tailspin,”
Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Israel Radio last week. “Turkey
is not about to become an enemy of Israel, and we have no cause to
waste invective and energy over this.” The trouble is that Erdogan
gets so much out of confronting Israel: not only does it raise his
stature in the region, but it also dovetails with his self-image as
a fighter for justice. That gives him little incentive to let the
matter rest-especially since he’s been at it for so many years.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2011/09/11/why-israel-fears-the-regional-ambitions-of-turkey-s-p-m-erdogan.html

Estate.Am Launches The First IPhone Application In Armenia With Real

ESTATE.AM LAUNCHES THE FIRST IPHONE APPLICATION IN ARMENIA WITH REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENTS

arminfo
Monday, October 24, 19:37

Estate.am has launched the first and only iPhone application in
Armenia with real estate announcements, the company’s press service
told ArmInfo.

According to the source, in the near future the company will also
launch an application for Android platform smartphones.

The company says that the iPhone application with real estate
announcements can be downloaded on AppStore portal. The mobile gadget
of the users will reflect the daily updated information (direct
proposals from the owners) about sale and rent of the primary and
secondary housing, commercial property and land plots.

On the map the users will be able to see not only the location of
the selected object, but also its remoteness.

To note, the relevant project was developed by Bonsai company. The
project was launched in mid March 2011. The database of the website
currently contains over 5,000 announcements about sale and rent of
the primary and secondary housing, commercial property, and land plots.

From: A. Papazian

Linear Accelerator To Ensure Rapid Progress In Life Sciences

LINEAR ACCELERATOR TO ENSURE RAPID PROGRESS IN LIFE SCIENCES

Tert.am
24.10.11

The agreement on constructing linear accelerators in Armenia is a
key achievement of the country’s 2011 scientific development plan,
according to Samvel Harutyunyan, the head of the Education Ministry’s
State Committee on Science.

At a news conference on Monday, Harutyunyan said the project is already
underway, with equipment worth ~@3 million having been already imported
from Germany.

The construction is expected to finish in 2013, while accelerator
rings are due to be completed in 2016. The Government has also
allocated resources for the construction of second-generation linear
accelerators which will cost a total of ~@60 million.

“I am hopeful the construction of those accelerators will ensure
rapid progress, especially in life sciences,” Harutyunyan said.

Harutyunyan noted that 2011 was a fruitful year for scientific
cooperation, as Armenia managed to sign over 20 agreements with Russia,
France , Belarus, Germany and Italy, and is expected to conclude new
agreements with Switzerland and Ukraine.

He said further that two Armenian-French scientific laboratories
opened as a result of a joint contest with the French National Center
for Scientific Research, and a regional program for Armenia, Russia
and Azerbaijan is now underway.

From: A. Papazian

Seminar-Course Program Continues Successfully

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Center for National and International Studies
75 Yerznkian Street
Yerevan 0033, Armenia
Tel: (+374 – 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
Fax: (+374 – 10) 52.48.46
Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
Website:

October 21, 2011

Seminar-Course Program Continues Successfully

Yerevan–Today’s session of the Armenian Center for National and
International Studies (ACNIS) youth school program was devoted to `Key
Issues of Human Rights Protection in Armenia.’ The guest speaker was
Arthur Sakunts, Head of Helsinki Citizen’s Assembly-Vanadzor, whose
presentation, made in the scope of citizen-society-state triangle,
covered theoretical material closely linked with the Armenian
experience in the field of human rights protection.

This was the penultimate session in October agenda of the
seminar-courses initiated by ACNIS. The next lecture will be carried
out on October 28. As a reminder, the program with umbrella topic
`Establishment of Civil Society and Formation of Constitutional State
in Armenia: Key Issues and New Challenges’ is made of twelve seminars,
six of which have already been accomplished.

—————————————————–

The Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS) is
a leading independent strategic research center located in Yerevan,
Armenia. As an independent, objective institution committed to
conducting professional policy research and analysis, ACNIS strives to
raise the level of public debate and seeks to broaden public
engagement in the public policy process, as well as fostering greater
and more inclusive public knowledge. Founded in 1994, ACNIS is the
institutional initiative of Raffi K. Hovannisian, Armenia’s first
Minister of Foreign Affairs. Over the past fifteen years, ACNIS has
acquired a prominent reputation as a primary source of professional
independent research and analysis covering a wide range of national
and international policy issues.

For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or
27-48-18; fax (37410) 52-48-46; email [email protected] or [email protected];
or visit

From: A. Papazian

www.acnis.am
www.acnis.am

BAKU: Azerbaijan, Iran DMs discuss Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

Trend, Azerbaijan
Oct 22 2011

Azerbaijan, Iran defence ministers discuss Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

22 October 2011, 19:03 (GMT+05:00) Azerbaijan, Baku, Oct. 22 / Trend
R.Darakhshan/

Azerbaijani Defence Minister Colonel General Safar Abiyev met Saturday
in Baku with Iranian Minister of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics
Major General Ahmad Vahidi, the press service of Azerbaijani Defense
Ministry said.

During the meeting the ministers discussed the ties between the two
countries, regional security and the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict
over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Abiyev said that negotiations are under way to resolve the conflict,
but at the same time he pointed out the need to strengthen the
Azerbaijani army in order that the country would ready to liberate its
lands from occupation at any moment.

Vahidi arrived in Baku on a working visit on Saturday.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. – are
currently holding the peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

From: A. Papazian

BAKU: "Apricot Republic" Armenia expects second wave of crisis

Trend, Azerbaijan
Oct 22 2011

“Apricot Republic” Armenia expects second wave of crisis

22 October 2011, 09:00 (GMT+05:00) Trend European Desk Commentator
Elmira Tariverdiyeva

The fear experienced by the countries with weak economic systems is
not alien to a small ‘apricot republic like Armenia, blocked on two
sides by insoluble arguments with its neighbours.

Yerevan too, has learned from bitter experience of the impact of the
financial crisis of 2008 and faces disappointing forecasts as the
approaching wave of a second global economic collapse signals more
destruction.

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan recently recognised that matters could
now come to a head in 2012. The Mediamax agency reported that the
prime minister discussed this at a meeting of the EurAsEC Interstate
Council in St. Petersburg.

Of course Armenia reflects back to ‘Black Tuesday’ in April 2009 and
Yerevan looks nervously at what the next financial disaster might do.

The cause of the 2009 collapse was the Armenian Central Bank declaring
a floating exchange rate of U.S. dollars which caused an unprecedented
rush.

The dollar cost 305-306 drams on Tuesday morning and was sold for 309.
These figures increased to 350 and 390 drams in the afternoon,
respectively. After the sharp fall of the Armenian currency, the
prices on pharmaceuticals increased. A number of pharmacies in Yerevan
closed and when they reopened, prices on medicines increased by 20 to
30 per cent.

After the collapse of the Armenia’s national currency, the dram, the
state deteriorated whilst prices on fuel, sugar, oil and other
essential commodities increased.
The memory of the terrible ‘Black Tuesday’ is supported by the current
disappointing state of the Armenian economy. After the global crisis,
it had not changed enough to help the country to overcome the negative
impact of the second wave of recession.

Mr Sargsyan was quoted as saying: “The world financial crisis
significantly hit the construction industry in Armenia in 2009.

“The decline was registered at 43 per cent, but the main issue of
concern to us is a possible crisis expected in 2012. One should
understand how it might affect our economy. Our consultations with the
World Bank, International Monetary Fund and other international
organisations do not give a clear answer to the question how the rest
of the world will affect our economy.”

Of course, Prime Minister is cunning. Yerevan does not want to believe
in the points designated to Armenia by the international financial
institutions.

In his recent interview with ARKA agency, member of delegation of EBRD
Board of Directors Kurt Bayer answered all questions regarding the sad
future of the Armenian economy.

Stressing that the Armenian economy got a painful blow during the
crisis, Bayer said that the economic recovery proceeds rather inertly.

“This testifies to the fact that the economy has structural
inefficiency,” he said. “This made it very vulnerable given the
negative development of the world economy.”

According to the EBRD representative, many potential foreign investors
say that Armenia is perceived as a country with high level of
corruption. The rule of law is not sufficient in the country and that
people whose economic rights are violated, can not to seek protection
in the court.

All this means that the second wave of crisis may affect the economy
of the apricot republic which has not recovered after the first wave
of crisis. It is fragile because of isolation from all transportation
projects in the region.

There are all conditions that Prime Minister Sargsyan’s anxiety justified.

According to the Armenian National Statistical Service, consumer
prices increased by 10.6 percent in Armenia in 2010. The largest price
increase – 13.1 percent was registered for food, that is, the social
welfare sector, without which it is impossible to do. Prices on
industrial goods increased by 5.6 percent, tariffs for services – by
4.2 percent.

The poverty rate has already reached 35 percent. This made 60,000
people to leave Armenia last year. The level of habitation continues
reducing and threatens to turn into a revolution to overthrow the
power. Moreover, the current power in Armenia does nothing to try and
help people. As a result of the governmental policy and a lack of real
market competition, small and medium facilities are closed. This
significantly affects the public due to the increase in prices and the
monopolization of the economy.

In this situation, the second wave of crisis could be the last blow to
the Armenian economy.

From: A. Papazian

Armenia’s president comes to Russia on state visit

ITAR-TASS, Russia
October 23, 2011 Sunday 05:01 AM EST

Armenia’s president comes to Russia on state visit

YEREVAN October 23

Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan starts on Sunday a three-day state
visit to the Russian Federation at the invitation of his counterpart
Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev.

The programme of the visit includes top-level negotiations in the
Kremlin on Monday, as well as meetings with the country’s leaders.
Besides, Sargsyan will meat with teachers and students of the Moscow
State Lomonosov University and will lay wreaths to the Unknown Soldier
Monument by the Kremlin wall.

Political cooperation between the two countries is considered as
strategic partnership and the political dialogue is at the high level.
During Medvedev’s state visit to Armenia last August, the presidents
confirmed following the strategic partnership and further development
of bilateral relations.

“Russia is Armenia’s leading trade and economic partner,” Armenia’s
Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisyan said. “Russia makes over half of all
investments in Armenia’s economy over its independence.”

He said that presently there are about 1,400 enterprises in Armenia,
where Russian capital participates.

“They are investments of billions in our economy, from the energy
sector to small and medium businesses and the financial sector,”
Sarkisyan said.

Russian enterprises feel comfortable in Armenia, he said on October 18
in St. Petersburg during his meeting with Russia’s Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin. Their “economic potential is growing,” these
“enterprises have reached a rather high level of revenues,” he said.

Russia’s loan to Armenia of 500 million dollars let the country soften
the consequences of the world financial crisis, solve certain urgent
social and economic objectives, like reconstruction in the northern
part of the republic which had suffered from an earthquake back in
1988.

Armenia appreciates greatly Russia’s mediator role as co-chair of the
Minsk Group of the OSCE on Nagorny Karabakh and personal involvement
of Russia’s president in efforts to bring closer positions of the
sides.

Russia and Armenia cooperate closely in the military-technical sphere.
In compliance with the inter-state agreements, Armenia hosts a Russian
military base and border guards /at the border with Turkey and Iran/.
Armenia takes presence of Russia’s military and border guards as a
major component of the national security. In 2010, the term of the
Russian base’s presence was extended by 49 years.

“Our peoples have historic, spiritual, social, economic and political
ties,” Sargsyan told the Allies. CSTO magazine earlier. “Cooperation
between our countries has reached the level of strategic partnership,
and cooperation in the framework of the CSTO has strengthened
additionally the dynamically developing Armenia-Russia relations.”

From: A. Papazian

Iranian defense chief meets Azerbaijani president

Iranian defense chief meets Azerbaijani president

Monday 24 October 2011

TEHRAN – Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi met with Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev in Baku on Saturday and handed over President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s letter to him.

During the meeting the two sides discussed bilateral ties and mutual
cooperation in various areas.

Vahidi also met with his Azerbaijani counterpart Safar Abiyev in which
they discussed regional security and the dispute between Armenia and
Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

From: A. Papazian

http://tehrantimes.com/index.php/politics/3829-iranian-defense-chief-meets-azerbaijani-president