Withdrawal Of Resolution Cold Shower To Azerbaijan

WITHDRAWAL OF RESOLUTION COLD SHOWER TO AZERBAIJAN

Aysor
Sept 10 2010
Armenia

Azerbaijan’s withdrawal of its resolution from the UN General Assembly
is Armenian diplomacy’s victory, Doctor of Historical Sciences Edgar
Hovhannisyan told a press conference.

According to him, the reason why Azerbaijan withdrew the resolution
is that the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing countries refused to move
the Nagorno Karabakh problem resolution to another platform.

“It is another cold shower for Azerbaijan,” expert said adding that
taking advantage of Turkey’s chairmanship Baku will try to push through
some resolution in UN Security Council, but it will be a failure again.

In return, member of the Public Council under the Defense Ministry,
military expert David Jamalyan said that even if the resolution were
kept on the UN General Assembly agenda, it would be a failure.

“I am convinced no state would vote for that document,” Jamalyan said.

“However, Armenia still has much to do since Azerbaijan will keep
its attempts to put into circulation term “occupant Armenia” in
international politics.”

According to Jamalyan, Armenia should introduce term “occupied
territories of NKR” into international politics. It is also important
for a fact-finding mission to be launched in Artsakh, expert believes.

From: A. Papazian

President Serzh Sargsyan Receives Bulgaria’s Transport Minister

PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN RECEIVES BULGARIA’S TRANSPORT MINISTER

Panorama
Sept 10 2010
Armenia

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan received today Bulgarian
Minister of Transport, IT and Communication, Co-chair of the
Armenian-Bulgarian inter-governmental commission on trade-economic
and scientific-technical cooperation Alexander Tsvetkov, who is in
Yerevan September 9-10 on the occasion of the 6th session of the
mentioned commission, President’s press office reported.

Serzh Sargsyan noted that Armenia highly signifies expansion
of friendly ties in all the spheres with Bulgaria – political,
economic, and cultural. According to the President, the role of the
inter-governmental session is big in that issue, which is implementing
considerable work especially in the direction of development of
cooperation in the sphere of economy, intensification of contacts
between the businessmen of the two countries and implementation of
new programs.

The Armenian President said that the extensive legal-agreement field
between the two countries is a good opportunity to considerably expand
the trade-economic ties. “I am full of hope that this session of
the commission will afford new opportunities both to state bodies
and business circles of the two countries to find new edges for
cooperation,” the President highlighted.

Alexander Tsvetkov presented to Serzh Sargsyan the discussions over
some issues held during the Yerevan session, which included spheres
prospective from the viewpoint of Armenian-Bulgarian cooperation. He
assured that the results of those discussions and reached agreements
will be tangible already in near future.

From: A. Papazian

Global Insider: Russia-Armenia Defense Ties

GLOBAL INSIDER: RUSSIA-ARMENIA DEFENSE TIES
Kari Lipschutz

World Politics Review

Sept 10 2010

Armenia agreed to extend Russia’s lease of a military base in the
city of Gyumri until 2044. In an e-mail interview, Kim Iskyan,
a director in the Russia and Eurasia practice at Eurasia Group,
discusses Russia-Armenia defense relations.

WPR: What has historically been Russia and Armenia’s defense
relationship?

Kim Iskyan: Russia and Armenia have long shared a close relationship,
with defense as a critical dimension. Upon the collapse of the Soviet
Union in 1991, there were Soviet bases in all three countries of
the Caucasus, but Azerbaijan and Georgia subsequently engineered the
departure of the Russian military presence. Armenia, though, wanted to
keep Russian boots on Armenian territory. Russia currently maintains a
base with several thousand troops in the city of Gyumri. Russian and
Armenian forces are jointly responsible for the defense of Armenia’s
borders.

In the bigger picture, the Russian presence has been a critical
source of support for Armenia against the possible threat of any
heightened tension with Turkey and, in particular, with Azerbaijan. The
Nagorno-Karabakh issue remains a source of continued contention,
and Armenia does not have relations with Turkey nor Azerbaijan. So
Armenia has long been in a tenuous position — geopolitically,
economically and militarily — and has looked to Russia for support.

WPR: What is the significance of the recent extension of the
Russia-Armenia base deal?

Iskyan: The deal highlights Russian commitment to Armenia, and
solidifies Russia’s role as Armenia’s big brother. That said, Russia
has long tried to walk a fine line, as it is not in Russia’s interest
to alienate Azerbaijan — which is economically far more important
to Russia than Armenia because of its oil resources.

Critics of the deal question whether — if push came to shove — Russia
would go to the wall for Armenia against Turkey and/or Azerbaijan, and
whether the agreement may give Armenia a false sense of security. (This
is highlighted by the rumored sale by Russia of anti-aircraft rocket
launchers to Azerbaijan.) Also, the extension of the base deal limits
Armenia’s scope for maneuver; it in effect further reduces the chances
that Armenia will join NATO, for example.

Any change in heart, or policy, on the part of Russia vis-a-vis its
objectives in the Caucasus, or the broader region, could be dangerous
for Armenia.

WPR: What impact does the base have on the regional balance of power,
now and in the years to come?

Iskyan: There is unlikely to be any real impact on the regional
balance of power. The deal further strengthens Russia’s position in
Armenia — and the region in general — but it doesn’t represent
a significant shift in the balance of power. The level of Russian
military commitment is unchanged, and there is no shift in Russia’s
position regarding Nagorno-Karabakh, or Armenia’s relations with Turkey
and Azerbaijan. Russia’s relations with Georgia remain challenging,
but this is largely divorced from Russia’s role in Armenia.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/trend-lines/6371/global-insider-russia-armenia-defense-ties

Talks On Raising Gas Tariffs For Armenia Underway

TALKS ON RAISING GAS TARIFFS FOR ARMENIA UNDERWAY

Aysor
Sept 10 2010
Armenia

The issue of raising tariffs for Russian gas supplied to Armenia
was discussed during Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s state visit
to Yerevan, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan told reporters after the
launching ceremony of the Central Veterinary Laboratory in the Erebuni
community of Yerevan.

“The problem is in the focus of government attention, with respective
services holding consultations on the issue. The ArmRosGazprom
company was charged to keep negotiating with its Russian partners
to make predictable the pricing policy and methods,” Sargsyan said
commenting upon the news on rise in gas tariffs from 2011.

“Within several months, the ArmRosGazprom administration will provide
exact information on the results of talks with the Russian party,”
Premier said.

From: A. Papazian

Israel & Turkey: A Tale Of Two Standards At The Toronto Film Festiva

ISRAEL & TURKEY: A TALE OF TWO STANDARDS AT THE TORONTO FILM FESTIVAL
by Victor Morton

Big Hollywood

Sept 10 2010

It was the best of times. It was the worst of times. It was the age
of wisdom. It was the age of foolishness. (Actually in this case,
it was mostly foolishness.)

For two years now, the Toronto International Film Festival has had
a program called City-to-City, highlighting movies from the present
and past featuring a particular world city.

In 2009, the city was from a country that has invaded neighbors
and occupied for some decades territory that is inhabited by an
internationally-recognized people of another ethnic group and
language who want a state of their own on that land. In battling
against insurgents and terrorists, that nation sometimes violates
human rights and has been credibly accused of war crimes.

In 2010, the city was from a country that has invaded neighbors
and occupied for some decades territory that is inhabited by an
internationally-recognized people of another ethnic group and
language who want a state of their own on that land. In battling
against insurgents and terrorists, that nation sometimes violates
human rights and has been credibly accused of war crimes.

In 2009, that city was Tel Aviv. In 2010, that city is Istanbul. One
of those City-to-City programs created a storm of controversy, public
boycotts, open letters, a film being pulled. The other has created
the proverbial perfect pin-dropping environment. And if you can’t
figure out which is which, maybe I shouldn’t be quoting “A Tale of
Two Cities,” but something more appropriate like “Rip Van Winkle.”

The City-to-City program for 2010 has nine feature films and a program
of eight avant-garde shorts and gets under way Friday evening with a
film called “40,” apparently about migration to Istanbul from within
Turkey and from abroad.

And the crickets have been chirping.

To be sure there are differences between Turkey’s and Israel’s actions
on the world stage, but they would be as likely to cut against
the Turks as against the Israelis. Sure, Israel invaded Gaza more
recently than Turkey did Cyprus, but Turkey set up a collaborationist
regime that continues to occupy half the country to this day, and
seems to plan to do so in perpetuity. And no serious person accuses
Israel of outright genocide, while Turkey not only committed genocide
against the Armenians but denies that to this day. But wait … all
that ratiocination presupposes we are talking about objective or
even rational moral judgments. We are not. We are talking about the
international “concerned class,” artists heavily among them. For them
crapping on Israel, that “shitty little country,” is an end in itself.

Last year, the City-to-City program prompted a group of about 50
celebrities, artists and “activists” to issue what they called “The
Toronto Declaration” against the program. The signatories ranged
from Hollywood stars like Jane Fonda and Danny Glover to such public
intellectuals as Slavoj Zizek and Naomi Klein. Their public letter
denounced Israel as an “apartheid regime,” called the program a
whitewash, and accused the Festival of complicity in Israeli efforts
to burnish its public image in Canada.

A week of unaccustomed furor resulted, producing coverage in every
Canadian newspaper and TV network and such foreign outlets as Haaretz,
the Associated Press and Reuters news agency. By the middle of the
festival, another 1,500 usual suspects (do you need to know more than
that Noam Chomsky was one?) had affixed their names to the protest and
some of the signatories held a press conference and demonstration with
about 250 people in attendance at Ryerson University, whose auditorium
is a principal festival screening room. One of the initial signatories,
Canadian filmmaker John Greyson, pulled his film “Covered” from the
festival. Palestinian Elia Suleiman and Egyptian Yousry Nasrallah –
who directed the two Arab films I saw here last year – were among
the complainers, with both men in Toronto but avoiding official
participation, including introducing their own films.

Both City-to-City programmer Cameron Bailey and overall festival
director Piers Handling had to publicly defend the choice of city
and of films, and the festival denied any involvement with the
“Brand Israel” campaign (the signatories produced no evidence of
any other than timing-based insinuation). Pro-Israel entertainers,
including Jerry Seinfeld, Natalie Portman and Sacha Baron Cohen,
pushed back at the height of the festival by purchasing an issue ad
in Toronto newspapers, praising the program and TIFF’s decision as
showcasing Israel’s vibrant democracy and open artistic culture.

This year? Protests from Greek or Cypriot or Armenian or Kurdish
artists? Letters from their respective ethnic communities in Canada
or the US? No. As best I can tell, there hasn’t been a single act
of open protest – certainly none have been reported in mainstream
or popular media. Not only that, but some of the loudest protesters
last year will be here this year, apparently since TIFF’s focus on
Istanbul won’t make it “part of the Turkish propaganda machine,”
as their open letter last year put it about Israel.

Documentarian Sophie Fiennes has her latest film “Over Your Cities,
Grass Will Grow,” being presented three times next week as part of
the Visions program. Not only will leftist British director Ken Loach
and writing partner Paul Laverty present their latest film, an Iraq
War drama called “Route Irish,” as part of the prestigious Masters
section, but the two men, who both signed last year’s petition, will
participate in a 90-minute round-table discussion led by Michael Moore
(I am not kidding) next Thursday as part of the Mavericks program.

Moore will probably be the most conservative of the three –
Laverty once worked “in Nicaragua for a human-rights organization,”
the Guidebook winkingly tells us before noting that their first
collaboration “dealt with the US-backed war against the Sandinistas.”

Wonder whether they’ll make a film about the US-backed war (Turkey
gets American military aid) against the Greek Cypriots.

And it’s not as if the actual films in question seem to address the
subject of Turkey’s foreign and security policies. In another “tale of
two cities” standards, about half the Tel Aviv films, to judge from
last year’s Festival’s guidebook, are in significant part about ties
between Jew and Arab, between Israeli and Palestinian. As best I can
tell from this year’s guidebook descriptions, Greeks, Cypriots, the
Orthodox Church, Armenians and Kurds or Turkish behavior there-toward
are not the surface subject matter of any (this is definitely the case
for the one Istanbul film I’ve seen – Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s “Distant”).

Impressionistically, there’s no question which of these two programs
is a whitewash of its country’s foreign-policy sins. None.

I tried to contact Mr. Bailey, who also co-programmed this year’s
slate, to ask if he could definitively confirm both the seeming
lack of protest and my Guidebook-based impressions of the films in
each program. But he did not return multiple calls over two days,
Tuesday and Wednesday. I figure he may have wanted not to talk. I can
understand – who wants more controversy (and in case it isn’t obvious,
my point isn’t that there should be a furor this year, but that there
shouldn’t have been one last year).

But isn’t it surprising that the way to duck controversy is to pick a
city from a country that invades Cyprus, oppresses (and maybe gasses)
Kurds, is strangling the Orthodox Church and committed the 20th
century’s first genocide? As long as Israel did none of these things?

Surprising? Not in the Tale of Two Standards, it isn’t.

From: A. Papazian

http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/vmorton/2010/09/10/israel-turkey-a-tale-of-two-standards-at-the-toronto-film-festival/

French Senate Urged To Recognize Armenian Genocide

FRENCH SENATE URGED TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

news.am
Sept 10 2010
Armenia

On his website petition-genocidearmenien.com Didier Parakian put
a petition calling on the French Senate to adopt a law providing
punishing for denial of the Armenian Genocide. 46-year-old Didier
Parakian is a Marseilles-bases stylist. He is Vice-Mayor of Marseilles
and is responsible for economic development of enterprises abroad.

He explained the reason for his decision to put the petition on the
website. “On October 12, 2006, the French National Assembly approved,
in the first reading, a bill providing for severe punishment for
denial of the Armenian Genocide. The text still needs the Senate’s
consideration to be enforced. However, pressed by Turkey, France’s
economic partner, the Senate will not yet put the text on the agenda.

“Four years are enough! France cannot bargain over the memory of
people that suffered from a crime against humanity in exchange for
some economic agreements with Turkey, which is obvious far from
European values as far as memory is concerned.

“So for memory’s sake, we, Armenian citizens of France, as well as
ethnic Frenchmen, call on the Senate to vote for the bill criminalizing
the Genocide.

From: A. Papazian

Body Of Armenian Victim In Vladikavkaz Terrorist Act To Be Brought T

BODY OF ARMENIAN VICTIM IN VLADIKAVKAZ TERRORIST ACT TO BE BROUGHT TO ARMENIA

news.am
Sept 10 2010
Armenia

One of the Armenian victims killed in a terrorist act in Vladikavkaz
on September 9, Arsen M.Elbakyan (34) is a RA citizen, RA Consul
General in Rostov Ararat Gomtsyan informed NEWS.am.

The other two Armenian victims are Russian citizens. One of them is
Sergey Grigoryan (60). According to Gomtsyan, at the moment the local
Armenian community does its utmost to bring Elbakyan’s body to Armenia.

According to the information at the Armenian community’s disposal,
there are 4 Armenians were killed and seven injured in the terrorist
act.

On September 9, a suicide bomber arrived at the Vladikavkaz central
market in a Volga car stuffed with explosive. According to the latest
information, the explosion claimed 17 lives, leaving 137 injured.

From: A. Papazian

BSL-2 Veterinary Laboratory Opens In Yerevan

BSL-2 VETERINARY LABORATORY OPENS IN YEREVAN

Aysor
Sept 10 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian has participated in the
opening ceremony of the Veterinary Laboratory in the Erebuni settlement
of Yerevan, a spokesperson to government told media.

Among attendees of the opening ceremony was Philippe Le Houerou,
World Bank Vice-President for Europe and Central Asia.

The Republican Veterinary epidemiological and diagnostic center
was renovated within the World Bank Program “Against Bird Flue.” The
program was implemented at the expense of grants and donations equal to
$1,5 million. The Center is located on a 3,200-square meter territory,
each department has own laboratory; the center fully goes with
international standards and meets biosafety level 2 standards (BSL-2).

The center’s works aim at security of food and diagnosis of veterinary
disease; it will conduct tests and identify dangerous infections in
food and animals’ organisms.

The center’s technical equipment was provided by government of Greece,
the USAID, the Organization for Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO), and the U.S. Agency for Defense Threat Reduction.

From: A. Papazian

A. Arzumanyan: I Hope ANM Will Restore Its Values

A. ARZUMANYAN: I HOPE ANM WILL RESTORE ITS VALUES

Aysor
Sept 10 2010
Armenia

Former Chairman of the Armenian National Movement (ANM) and
former Foreign Minister Alexander Arzumanyan spoke about the latest
disagreements in ANM at a press conference. He expressed regret that
ANM has abandoned its liberal positions.

Speaking about ANM role in the Armenian National Congress (HAK)
Arzumanyan expressed the hope that ANM will restore its values and
will become HAK’s locomotive.

“I hope ANM with its newly established board will become the locomotive
to lead the liberal forces. Liberal is the most passive force in HAK,
and being liberal, I want this ideology to keep expanding and to
become a leading one in Armenia,” speaker said in his remarks.

From: A. Papazian

Reforestation Helps Revitalize Crisis-Stricken Armenia

REFORESTATION HELPS REVITALIZE CRISIS-STRICKEN ARMENIA
by Jennifer Hattam

Treehugger

Sept 10 2010

The series of calamities — a massive earthquake, energy shortages,
and military conflict — that hit the small Caucasus nation of Armenia
in the late 1980s left much of its population uprooted and unemployed,
and its environment impoverished as well. At the current rate of
deforestation, the country could be a desert within 20 to 50 years,
according to the Armenia Tree Project, which has been working to
rebuild and revitalize the nation and its people, one seedling at
a time.

Villagers uprooted during the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan
are among the beneficiaries of the group’s environmental efforts. In
the Getik River Valley, families that had to abandon the fields
they’d tended for decades are reestablishing their lives with the
help of the group’s Backyard Nursery Micro-Enterprise Program, in
which villagers in the area grow seedlings in their yards and sell
them to the organization when they are ready to be planted in the
forest. Many have doubled their annual income as a result:

Thirty-nine-year-old Vatchakan Tsakanyan… lives with his sister
and her two kids, as well as his wife and their four children. The
tree seeds they received from Armenia Tree Project are cared for
by Vatchakan’s sister, 35-year-old Nvart, who fills buckets from
the nearby Getik River a few times a day and carries them to water
the plants.

Though it’s hard work, Nvart and Vatchakan are happy to use part of
their land to raise tree seedlings for ATP. With the money they will
receive from ATP for their backyard tree nursery, Vatchakan and Nvart
hope to increase their three beehives to 15…. [and] earn a bit of
an income from the sale of honey.

A successfully re-greened park in Armenia. Photo via the Armenia
Tree Project.

Since its founding in 1994, the Armenia Tree Project has planted
and restored more than 3,500,000 trees at over 800 sites around the
country and created hundreds of jobs in tree-regeneration programs.

The need is dire: Dependence on wood for cooking and heating has
reduced the amount of forest cover from a healthy 25 percent at the
beginning of the 1900s to less than 8 percent today, causing flooding,
erosion, and landslides that have destroyed homes and arable land.

In addition to planting trees, the group is designing environmental
education programs for the country’s schools and providing sustainable
forestry training for adults in partnership with Yale University’s
Global Institute of Sustainable Forestry. It also provides fruit
and nut trees to people in urban areas and hopes to eventually win
national protection for forests as wilderness sanctuaries. “In many
ways,” NatGeo News Watch wrote in a blog post about the group’s work,
“the effort to restore trees to Armenia is a restoration of the
nation’s vitality.”

From: A. Papazian

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/09/reforestation-helps-revitalize-crisis-stricken-armenia.php