Private Institutes Of Higher Education Cheat Students Over Resuming

PRIVATE INSTITUTES OF HIGHER EDUCATION CHEAT STUDENTS OVER RESUMING NEW LICENSES

Tert.am
09.09.10

Armenia’s Ministry of Education and Science will continue monitoring
the activities of higher educational institutions which may result
in further suspension of the licenses.

In a press conference today Deputy Minister of Education and Science,
Ara Avetisyan, said that the process will be carried out on a
phase-by-phase basis so that “no single student suffers” from it.

“The activities of all the institutions of higher education that do
not meet the requirement will be suspended,” said he.

Earlier the ministry suspended the licenses of 14 institutions
of higher education which left the future of about 2000 students
uncertain.

According to Mr Avetisyan some of those students have already applied
to the ministry to replace them to other universities, but he failed
to mention any exact figure.

Asked that some of those shut-down institutes of higher education
misinform people, saying they will soon resume their activities after
they are given new licenses, Mr Avetisyan said that the ministry
received such information only from the University of Management.

“The management of those institutes says that it has eliminated the
shortcomings, but if that were the case, the ministry would allow
them to resume their activities,” explained he.

From: A. Papazian

ReAnimania International Film Festival Kicks Off In Yerevan

REANIMANIA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL KICKS OFF IN YEREVAN

Tert.am
09.09.10

ReAnimania 2nd International Film Festival is kicking off in Yerevan
today. With films from 45 countries the festival will last until
13 September.

The solemn opening ceremony will take place at the Moscow Cinema
this evening. The festival will start with a French animation film
– Juggler.

The festival incorporates 4 competition programs – feature films, short
films, and films students shot as their diploma paper and TV films.

This year also the festival will have numerous guests among them also
chairperson of the Exodus Film Group Max Howard, who used to work
in Disney for 12 years, as well as David Sproxston, Director of the
Aardan Studio.

Separate master classes will also be conducted in the framework of
the festival.

In a separate program also will be screened Barking Dog – a film by
French Armenian director Serj Avedikian that won a Golden Palm at
the Cannes Festival this year as the Best Short Film.

A retrospective screening of the films by famous Armenian cartoonist
Robert Sahakyants, will also take place.

A novelty of this year’s festival will be the open-air screening
of the feature films from the last year’s festival in Cascade in
downtown Yerevan.

David of Sasun – a film about an Armenian epic hero who drove Arab
invaders out of Armenia – will close the ceremony.

From: A. Papazian

Armenian-Bulgarian Business Forum Held In Yerevan

ARMENIAN-BULGARIAN BUSINESS FORUM HELD IN YEREVAN
Liana Yeghiazaryan

“Radiolur”
09.09.2010 17:22

Armenian- Bulgarian business forum kicked off in Yerevan today with a
view to promote the further development of trade-economic cooperation
between the two countries. Representatives of eleven companies
representing different branches of economy have arrived in Armenia to
participate in the forum. The economic relations between Armenia and
Bulgaria are dynamically developing and both parties are confident
that only a small part of the existing potential is being used.

Te Armenian-Bulgarian Intergovernmental Commission convened its 6th
sitting followed by a business forum at the Armenian Development
Agency.

The meetings are aimed at discovering the new potential of the
Armenian-Bulgarian bilateral cooperation, develop the existing ways
of cooperation and to show why the Armenian market is attractive for
foreign investments.

“I think there is still much to do. We need to develop cooperation.

The legal field should also be regulated. All this is meant for our
businessmen to have a serious field for cooperation in the spheres of
transport, agriculture, ecology and construction,” Armenian Minister
of Transport and Communication Manuk Vardanyan said.

“Irrespective of the fact that the development of our economic ties
is far from the wishes and opportunities of our two countries, I’m
confident that we can coordinate our efforts to develop mutually
beneficial cooperation,” said Alexander Tsvetov, Bulgaria’s Minister
of Information Technologies and Communication.

From: A. Papazian

Turkey’s Too Important To Dismiss Its Referendum As A Rowdy Squabble

TURKEY’S TOO IMPORTANT TO DISMISS ITS REFERENDUM AS A ROWDY SQUABBLE
Simon Tisdall

guardian.co.uk
Thursday 9 September 2010 13.59 BST

A no vote may undermine Erdoðan’s stabilising role in the region

Recep Tayyip Erdoðan’s government will be weakened if Turks vote
no in the referendum on constitutional amendments. Photograph:
Umit Bektas/Reuters

Proposed reforms to Turkey’s constitution, the subject of a national
referendum on Sunday, appear largely unexceptional to western eyes.

But after months of impassioned, increasingly polarised campaigning,
the vote has effectively transformed into a plebiscite on the
eight-year rule of the prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoðan, and
his neo-Islamist AK party. The outcome has potentially dramatic
implications for Turkey’s future regional and international role.

A string of amendments intended to strengthen individuals, trade
union and privacy rights are mostly uncontroversial. So, too, is a
proposal to try military personnel accused of crimes against the state
in civilian courts – although the army doubtless views it as another
assault on its autonomy. It is Erdoðan’s plan to change the way judges
and prosecutors are appointed that has got the opposition up in arms.

They say the proposal is part of the AKP’s “creeping coup” against the
secular state bequeathed by Turkey’s founding father, Kemal Ataturk.

By attempting to increase executive control over the judiciary, as he
as already done over the military, Erdoðan is accused of dangerous
“Putinist” authoritarianism, of pursuing a covert Islamist agenda,
and of seeking to create an all-powerful presidency that he himself
will one day occupy.

Erdoðan’s replies that the reforms will strengthen Turkey’s democracy
after decades of military meddling and reinforce its credentials as
an EU candidate. In typically combative style, he declared this week
that people who voted no were in effect defending the 1980 military
coup that created the current constitution. He also warned a business
group that it faced “elimination” if it opposed him, a threat that
brought a sharp rebuke from the European commission.

The overheated debate has divided Turkish opinion, with recent polls
suggesting the vote is too close to call. Writing in Today’s Zaman,
Bulent Keneþ said the tactics of the main opposition party, the
Kemalist Republican People’s party (CHP), had been shameful.

“There must be a sizable group of CHP supporters who are considerably
disturbed by the unethical and ruthless ‘no’ campaign based on lies,
threats, defamation and smears being conducted under the leadership
of Kemal Kýlýcdaroðlu,” he wrote. Kýlýcdaroðlu was “a big imaginary
balloon” who would pop when the “yes” campaign triumphed.

Speaking for the other side and decrying what he termed the “creeping
counter-revolution”, Hurriyet columnist Burak Bekdil argued that by
lumping together disparate constitutional amendments, some worthwhile,
some not, Erdoðan had presented Turks with an impossibly simplistic
choice. “We must respect the popular vote … but worshipping the
popular vote is a dangerous thing,” Bekdil said. “Presenting the
popular vote as the sole prerequisite for democracy is malevolence.

Reverence to malevolence in the name of autocratic liberalism is
distasteful buffoonery.”

In a leading article Hurriyet said many Turks felt the reforms
did not go far enough, for example in securing media freedoms,
while others would vote no just to punish the AKP. But the paper’s
main objection was the way it said both Erdoðan and the opposition
were cynically manipulating public opinion. Their conduct “has been
almost completely devoid of candour, statesmanship and commitment to
democratic principles,” it said.

Kurdish leaders complain meanwhile that their aspirations have been
ignored in the rewritten constitution, despite Erdoðan’s earlier
promise of a complete overhaul.

Analysts say a yes victory on Sunday could launch Erdoðan and the AKP
towards a third, successive election triumph next year. Defeat could
unsettle Turkey’s impressive economic recovery, encourage reactionary
elements within the military, increase religious tensions, and further
obstruct attempts to resolve the Kurdish question.

More importantly perhaps, for the outside world, a no vote, and a
subsequent weakening of the government’s position could undermine
Turkey’s ambitious outreach to problematic neighbours. Turkey’s
strategic importance as a moderating influence and a sometimes
controversial go-between, official or otherwise, in the west’s dealings
with Iran, Iraq, and Syria has grown rapidly in recent years.

Recent setbacks notwithstanding, Ankara has also developed an
influential, stabilising role in the Caucasus, particularly concerning
disputes affecting Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, and in the
Balkans. Speaking in Bosnia last week, President Abdullah Gul urged
all Balkan countries to follow Turkey in seeking full integration
into Nato and the EU and, like Turkey, to exploit their geographical
position as an east-west crossroads for commerce, trade and energy.

Viewed in this context, Sunday’s vote is much more than a rowdy,
internal squabble. The outcome could potentially shape or disrupt
future developments across south-east Europe and the near east. And
for Britain and a blinkered, disengaged EU, it highlights once again
how exceptionally important Turkey is becoming.

From: A. Papazian

Armenian Archbishop Condemns Insult To Quran

ARMENIAN ARCHBISHOP CONDEMNS INSULT TO QURAN

IRNA
Sept 9, 2010
Tehran

Tehran, Sept 9, IRNA – An Armenian archbishop in Tehran on Thursday
condemned any insult to the holy Quran by anyone.

In his letter to IRNA, Sebouh Sarkissian expressed his deep hatred
towards the plan by Terry Jones, pastor of the Dove World Outreach
Center, who defended his church’s decision to burn copies of Quran
on September 11.

He reiterated that such a church cannot represent the Jesus Christ
or Christianity.

Sarkissian stressed that such moves are aimed at creating tension
among various religions.

From: A. Papazian

Armenia Ranked 98th In 2010-2011 Global Competitiveness Report

ARMENIA RANKED 98TH IN 2010-2011 GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS REPORT

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 9, 2010 – 15:08 AMT 10:08 GMT

The head of Economy and Values Research Center Manuk Ergnyan announced
the results of 2010-2011 Global Competitiveness Report by the World
Economic Forum (WEF).

The WEF report covers 139 states worldwide, with Armenia ranked 98th,
against 97th place last year (with 133 states assessed).

“In the context of competitiveness, Armenia has returned to the stage
of natural resource-based economic development,” Ergnyan noted.

The report indicates improvements in healthcare sphere, employment
ratio, and facilitation of transactions for business enterprises among
positive tendencies in Armenia. Ineffective antimonopoly policy is
described among negative tendencies.

Switzerland remains the world’s most competitive economy, followed
by Sweden, U.S. and Germany. Among CIS states, Ukraine and Azerbaijan
slipped in the ranking (89 and 57th places respectively). Improvement
was reported in Tajikistan and Kirgizia (116 and 121st places
respectively). Georgia is ranked 93rd, Kazakhstan – 72nd, Russia- 63rd.

From: A. Papazian

Karabakh’s Direct Participation In Peace Talks Is A Necessity, Says

KARABAKH’S DIRECT PARTICIPATION IN PEACE TALKS IS A NECESSITY, SAYS FOREIGN MINISTER NALBANDYAN

Tert.am
09.09.10

The direct participation of the Nagorno Karabakh in the peace talks
over the Karabakh conflict is a necessity and will significantly
contribute to the resolution of this conflict, Armenia’s Foreign
Minister Edward Nalbandyan said at a meeting with the OSCE mediators
today in Yerevan.

The OSCE Co-Chairs Bernard Fassier (France), Robert Bradtke (US),
Igor Popov (Russia) as well the Personal Representative of the OSCE
Chairperson-in-Office Andzey Kasprzyk are in Yerevan in the framework
of a regional visit. They arrived in Yerevan this morning.

The mediators had before coming to Yerevan held talks with the
leadership both in the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan.

The OSCE Co-Chairs provided Mr Nalbandyan with the results of their
talks held in Stepanakert and Baku.

The parties also discussed the recent acts of sabotage on the contact
line between Karabakh and Azerbaijan, as well as their potential
consequences on the negotiation process and the situation in the
conflict zone.

They also discussed the further steps to be taken, as well as the
continuation of the talks based on the Madrid Principles.

From: A. Papazian

ROA Foreign Affairs Ministry on Azerbaijan Withdrawing UN Resolution

Armenia’s Foreign Affairs Ministry Statement on Azerbaijan Withdrawing
UN Resolution

On September 9, Azerbaijan withdrew its proposed draft resolution
A/64/L.57 from consideration and voting at the UN General Assembly,
requesting to move the relevant agenda item to the agenda of the 65th
Session of the GA.

We are thankful to all those UN member states and in particular to the
OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries, which through their stance
prevented Azerbaijan from deviating and damaging the negotiation
process of the settlement of Nagorno-Karabakh problem and not allowing
the adoption of an unconstructive draft resolution presented by
Azerbaijan in the UNGA.

The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ field-assessment mission in the
territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh is in no way connected to the
draft resolution proposed by Azerbaijan at the UNGA. In their
statement of September 6, 2010, the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs noted
that an agreement had been reached with the sides about the
field-assessment mission already before summer, that is, weeks ahead
of Azerbaijan’s submission of the draft resolution to the UNGA.

Azerbaijan should refrain from its continuous attempts to shift the
settlement process, currently underway within the Minsk Group
framework, to other formats and it should refrain from provocative and
bellicose statements and actions so that the negotiation process can
proceed on a more constructive and effective course.

Source:

From: A. Papazian

http://www.epress.am/FNew.aspx?nid=3D3168

Hetq: Open Letter to Minister of Defense Seyran Ohanyan

Open Letter to Minister of Defense Seyran Ohanyan
Hetq.am
2010/09/07 11:15
Society

english link:
Armenian link:

Hasmik Hovhannisyan, mother of contract soldier Artak Nazaryan who
died on July 27 in the military unit of the Mehrab village, Tavush
Marz, has written an open letter to Minister of Defense Seyran
Ohanyan. We present that letter in its entirety below:

At 7:00 AM on June 27th, according to the official version, my son
Artak Nazaryan ostensibly `committed suicide.’ I maintain that my son
could never have done such a thing. He believed in God, he had a
Father Confessor, he was a member of the Holy Trinity Fraternal Order
up until he received his orders from the Ministry of Defense and began
to work. For him, God’s laws had become flesh and blood, and he
clearly knew that not only murder is a sin, but suicide, as well, and
for that greatest of sins the punishment would be horrible.

I know that to speak of higher spiritual values is ludicrous for you.

They killed my son. They killed him in a premeditated manner and in
calculated, cold blood. They eliminated from their path the light that
perturbed them, the good and the honest. Such animals are evil and
are the product of an atmosphere of impunity. They are not ordinary
murderers; they are traitors to the fatherland who brutally kill and
obliterate the officer who defends the border.

To hide the traces of their brutality, they elevated his body above
the 300-meter position, placed him in the enemy’s line of sight,
relying on the shots of enemy snipers. But the Turks realized that if
the officer leaning there was not already killed, then he was half
dead, and the Armenians needed a pretext to blame the enemy side for
the death of the soldier killed by their own hands. But having been
proven wrong in their calculations, and to put an end to the problem
of the half dead officer, they placed the barrel of the automatic
weapon in his mouth, and fired. Rather than calling a doctor, helping
him, washing his innumerable wounds before killing him – and with that
easing their guilt – they went to the very end.

It is not known by whose order such people were being protected, from
the beginning, hiding the obvious murder under the shroud of
`suicide.’ Those working in that direction, by deliberately
distorting evidence, supposedly push the work forward in the name of
the Armenian Army. They, too, are traitors to the nation and the
fatherland. And with that action, they are casting down even further
the pride of the army, putting a stamp of blood and shame on the army
and on the brow of its leadership.

The only way to wash off the blood and shame is through a fair
investigation, which from the beginning has suffered serious
shortcomings.

They did not lift fingerprints from my son, according to them, before
his body cooled; they worked without gloves; the house where my son
lived was not sealed off. Ten days after the incident a search was
conducted at his house, from which my son’s 2010 diary was not found.
Nothing was said about the seized material. I don’t know whether the
military bag and winter jacket he took with him this time still exist,
or not.

My son’s body was sent to Yerevan completely naked. Where are my
son’s military uniforms? I have put stitches on those uniforms with my
own hands and know them well; perhaps they are going to exchange them.
There would be numerous marks left on the uniform from a brutally
committed murder.

To preserve the body, they asked us for 40 kilograms of ice. It
wasn’t enough that a horrific crime, which has no name, had been
committed. And after all that, to ease out of their guilt, they wanted
to send him home in a closed casket; and only after my begging and
pleading did they fix his face, covering it with a ton of makeup,
bringing him home on the 29th, at the end of a work day. Already at
that time there were worms in his nose, for which we invited a doctor.
He cleaned his nostrils of the worms and sealed them with special
fluids.

The next day, on July 30th, we buried him. His body was in a horrible
state. This is evidence that the event did not happen on July 27th,
but earlier, on the night of the 24th. Where was his body placed
until he was moved to Yerevan, and why? There was not going to be an
autopsy at that place, they only acted that way to take off his
clothing, a favor for some people.

One of the pallbearers of my dead son’s body was the battalion
commander. He was untroubled, and spoke as though nothing had
happened. He was that commander about whom my son had spoken with his
father, saying, `Father, there are two individuals after me, the
political officer and the battalion commander, especially the latter.’

All the necessary information which should have helped to solve the
case has been deliberately delayed, which speaks to the fact that the
case is being led, purposefully, in another direction to cover up for
the beastly army commanders who stick close to their feeding troughs,
and for the battalion commander who told my husband who had gone to
receive my son’s body, and in the presence of relatives, that my son
was a weak officer.

To my husband’s question as to who was the first to see the body, the
political officer answered that he had, and that supposedly he had
found a suicide note in my son’s pocket and had kept it.

The note was discovered two days after my son’s house was searched,
and his house was searched ten days after the incident. Investigator
Madatyan hastily sent off the forged note found for examination. That
forged note isn’t worth a penny for me, based on its content; it was
written after the murder.

My son’s notebook, which I don’t know if was stolen from his house or,
according to their version, taken from his pocket, was ripped apart
like my son’s body. They had removed all of the pages and left only
three dated pages and one torn page where the word `suicide’ had been
forged. They didn’t show us the original; how many secrets the
original would have revealed…

Does the person about to commit `suicide’ climb 300 meters, torment
his own body, smash his own head and teeth, fire into his own mouth
and not on the bestial torturers?

Mr. Minister, a question arises: How is it that a 30-year-old young
man who had graduated from the Faculty of Oriental Studies of Yerevan
State Institute, being inexperienced in the filthy dealings of the
military of which you are well aware, and who had treated the soldiers
of the battalion as his own brothers, who loved the Lord, would forget
all and commit suicide?

Why do you not, the head of the entire system, although they say even
of you that you are a feeble minister who has no say in anything, want
to cleanse the army and the entire structure of the blood and filth,
and truly punish the guilty? If that task is beyond your
capabilities, then you too, like my son, should commit `suicide’ and
leave a genuine note saying that as a high-ranking military man, you
are ashamed to have such a corrupt Armenian army.

So then, all those who wittingly or unwittingly participated in the
murder of my son – beginning with the commander who issued the order and
whom you relieved of his responsibilities rather than arrest; the
soldiers who witnessed the incident; those who instigated the fight;
those who committed the actual violent acts; those who held his arms
down; those who bashed his head in (i.e., the political officer, as a
result of whose assault, if my son didn’t die, was rendered
unconscious and left in that condition for days on end until they
could decide what to do next); the inspector; those who moved his body
and whose crude fingerprints were left on the broken arms of my son,
ending with those who have buried the system in corruption and whose
hands are stained not only with the blood of my son, but also of many
other youths like my son – you should make all of them stand before a
tribunal not as ordinary criminals but as traitors to the fatherland,
traitors for whom there is no sanctity except their bellies. In times
of war, traitors to the fatherland are shot by a firing squad.

Mother of Nazaryan, Hasmik Hovhannisyan
In a postscript in the letter sent to Seyran Ohanyan through the
online newspaper Lragir.am Hasmik Hovhannisyan has also noted: `I
wanted to send this letter to you directly, but convinced that such
letters are never read, I preferred to publish it in the press so that
you would be forced to read it.’

From: A. Papazian

http://hetq.am/en/society/a-nazaryan/
http://hetq.am/am/society/a-nazaryan/

Commander Killed My Son For $100 USD, Says An Armenian Mother

COMMANDER KILLED MY SON FOR $100 USD, SAYS AN ARMENIAN MOTHER

Tert.am
09.09.10

The square in front of Armenia’s Government Building was again full
of people this morning that had come with the hope to get answers to
their appeals.

Some of them were citizens who wanted had invested their savings
in the banks and lost it after the collapse of the Soviet Union,
but some of them were mothers whose sons had been killed while doing
their military service in the army.

“It is the commander of the battalion who killed my son for $100 USD.

This state does not want to accept that soldiers are being killed
in the army for not taking money [to their commander]. My son took
a leave and came home and returned without money, and here is the
result,” Anahit Lazarian, the mother of Araik Avetisyan, who was
killed in the army, told Tert.am.

Anahit Lazarian requires that the person who killed her son to be
held responsible.

Gohar Sargsyan, another mother of a soldier (Tigran Ohanjanyan)
killed in the army in 2007, said that there would not be fresh
killings in the army today, should the person killing her son had
been held accountable.

“Why are they defending the assassins, what is the reason? Today
genocide is being perpetrated in the army. [The Defense] minister
is said to have a good personality, but why doesn’t he control the
situation in the army as a minister?” said he.

Most of those parents losing sons in the army are in the opinion that
it is due to the atmosphere of impunity that such incidents occur in
the army.

Earlier on Wednesday another incident was reported this time in
the military unit in Vaiq where Arthur Hakobyan, a contract junior
sergeant allegedly committed suicide.

Two other similar incidents in the previous months this summer left
at least 7 dead.

From: A. Papazian