Baku States Lack Of Progress In Karabakh Peace Process

BAKU STATES LACK OF PROGRESS IN KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS

Interfax, Russia
Oct 21 2013

BAKU. Oct 21

Azerbaijan states a lack of progress in the Karabakh peace negotiations
with Armenia.

“As you can see, no progress has been made. We have nothing but our
hopes,” Azeri Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov told reporters
on Monday.

“Debates have yet to begin, we simply hold separate meetings. We have
to see evidence of the other side’s interest in holding a debate. In
our opinion, the other side has not demonstrated this readiness so
far,” he said.

“Meetings may be planned and they are being planned at high and summit
levels but, as I have said repeatedly, in my personal opinion, it
would be senseless to make such a meeting a goal in and of itself,”
the deputy minister observed.

Te cm

From: A. Papazian

Hraparak: Vahe Eloyan Keeps On Struggling

HRAPARAK: VAHE ELOYAN KEEPS ON STRUGGLING

10:59 22/10/2013 ” DAILY PRESS

Former Chief of Staff of the Armenian Ministry of Sport and Youth
Affairs Vahe Eloyan continues to struggle for justice.

According to Hraparak, the Ministry has warned him to stop his
struggle, otherwise he will fall into the trap of law enforcers. They
will thoroughly examine his past and reveal something. In response,
Eloyan said that he has been acting on the instructions of his chief –
leader of Prosperous Armenia Party.

Source: Panorama.am

From: A. Papazian

EBRD Expected To Invest In The Armenian Economy About 90 Million Eur

EBRD EXPECTED TO INVEST IN THE ARMENIAN ECONOMY ABOUT 90 MILLION EUROS THIS YEAR

YEREVAN, October 22. / ARKA /. The European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) is expected to invest in the Armenian economy about
90 million euros this year, virtually as much as in 2012, according
to Mark Davis, the head of EBRD Yerevan Office, who told reporters
that the effectiveness of EBRD’s investments in Armenia is very high.

Mr. Davis also said that cooperation with Armenian partners allows
EBRD to accelerate and facilitate all financing procedures as local
banks are familiar with the clientele base, have an understanding of
local market conditions and therefore their credit risks assessments
are quite reliable.

He said loans provided to clients through Armenian banks become much
more accessible and the fact that EBRD cooperates here with 12 banks
indicates the willingness of banks to cooperate.

Mr. Davis said the amount of 2014 financing has not been determined
yet, but the Bank will make every effort to finance implementation
of interesting projects.

Mr. Davis noted that the EBRD focuses on the financing of small
and medium-sized businesses, agriculture, services, construction,
manufacturing, mining sector and energy.

He said EBRD could provide finances to more agricultural projects
because it believes that agriculture is a very important sector.

The EBRD has been active in Armenia since the country’s independence in
1991, and has, to date, invested over ~@652 million in 123 investment
projects. The Bank is focused on supporting the development of the
financial sector, with the aim of improving access to finance for
local enterprises, especially those operating in the rural regions
of Armenia. In 2013 the EBRD signed seven projects in Armenia,
for a total of approximately US$ 44 million. .-0- – See more at:

From: A. Papazian

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/ebrd_expected_to_invest_in_the_armenian_economy_about_90_million_euros_this_year/#sthash.6f5VBRPW.dpuf

CoE Commissioner For Human Rights To Visit Armenia Next Year

COE COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS TO VISIT ARMENIA NEXT YEAR

October 22, 2013 | 17:36

The Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights Nils Muižnieks
will pay a profound visit to Armenia next year.

On Tuesday Muižnieks had a joint press conference with Armenia’s
Ombudsman within the framework of his visit to Armenia to participate
in the Conference on Combating Racism, Xenophobia and Intolerance
in Europe.

As to assessment of situation in Armenia, the Commissioner for Human
Rights refrained from voicing any opinion. He underscored that he is
not voicing opinion before a full-fledged visit.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

From: A. Papazian

PM Attends Meeting Under "Armenia Is A Country Of Opportunities" Pro

PM ATTENDS MEETING UNDER “ARMENIA IS A COUNTRY OF OPPORTUNITIES” PROGRAM

14:57 22.10.2013

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan attended a meeting held under the
“Armenia is a country of opportunities” program organized by the
Financial-Banking Center Foundation.

Special guest and keynote speaker at the event was Peter
Shchedrovitsky, Deputy Director of the Institute of Philosophy of the
Russian Academy of Sciences, Adviser to Director General of Rosatom
State Corporation, President of the Development Institute after G. P.

Shchedrovitsky, who made a report entitled “Global economy:
technological development prospects.”

The head of the Armenian government praised Peter Shchedrovitsky’s
activities as a prominent philosopher and methodologist. Note that
Peter Shchedrovitsky has repeatedly visited our country as part of the
ongoing close cooperation between the Armenian-Russian methodological
movements.

“As early as in 1989, the methodological movement was launched in
the Republic of Armenia, initiated by Peter Shchedrovitsky’s father,
prominent Russian methodologist George Shchedrovitsky. A first-ever
methodological game was organized in Tsahkadzor involving talented,
young researchers who gave birth to the methodological movement
in Armenia.” According to Tigran Sargsyan, the current report is
important in that it suggests ways for formulating problems and
finding relevant solutions.

The meeting was attended by Deputy Minister of Education and Science
Manuk Lazarian , representatives from the Office of Government,
Economy, Finance Ministries, financial institutions, the IT sector
and international organizations.

The participants of the “Armenia is a country of opportunities”
program can learn about economic developments at home and abroad,
enhance professional skills, master global know-how.

Note that Peter Shchedrovitsky has already conducted a seminar in
the Office of Government.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/10/22/pm-attends-meeting-under-armenia-is-a-country-of-opportunities-program/

Le Karabakh S’interesse A L’expansion De Ses Liens Avec La Belgique

LE KARABAKH S’INTERESSE A L’EXPANSION DE SES LIENS AVEC LA BELGIQUE

BELGIQUE

La Republique du Haut-Karabakh (NKR) s’interesse au developpement
et a l’expansion de ses relations avec la Belgique, en particulier,
avec sa communaute d’affaires a declare le president du Karabagh Bako
Sahakian lors d’une table ronde organisee par la Chambre de Commerce
belgo-armenienne.

Selon le bureau de presse de Bako Sahakian, lors d’une rencontre avec
un groupe d’entrepreneurs belges Bako Sahakian a declare que pour le
Karabagh la Belgique represente le monde civilise et un pays ayant une
forte culture des entreprises. Il a ajoute que la cooperation sera
benefique pour les deux parties en raison de la legislation fiscale
liberale du Karabagh, de la disponibilite d’une main de haute qualite
et d’un faible coût du travail, des ressources naturelles abondantes
et une population respectueux de la loi.

mardi 22 octobre 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

Armenian President Receives CE Sec Gen

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT RECEIVES CE SEC GEN

16:14 ~U 21.10.13

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan received on Monday Secretary General
of the Council of Europe Thorbjørn Jagland, who has arrived in Armenia
to participate in the High Level Conference on Combating Racism,
Xenophobia and Intolerance in Europe, in Yerevan, October 21-22.

The conference was organized as part of Armenia’s Presidency at the
Ministerial Committee of the Council of Europe.

Armenia’s leader the CE’s role in disseminating universal values as
well as the importance of the Yerevan and Mr. Jagland’s participation
to the event. President Serzh Sargsyan called the Conference one
of the pivotal events held in Armenia. Armenia’s leader expressed
hope that Armenia’s Presidency at the CE Ministerial Committee has
promoted CE activities. He expressed gratitude to the CE Secretary
General for his constant support throughout Armenia’s Presidency in
the Ministerial Committee and for the Yerevan conference.

On his part, the CE Secretary General noted that the topic of the
Yerevan conference is extremely important for him personally and
expressed hope that it will produce results. He congratulated President
Serzh Sargsyan on the successful Presidency at the CE Ministerial
Committee. Mr Thorbjørn Jagland also stressed the importance of the
CE Yerevan Office’s activities.

Armenia’s leader reiterated Armenia’s commitment to continue state and
social reforms based on the principles of protection of human rights,
democracy and the rule of law.

President Serzh Sargsyan expressed hope that the Council of Europe
and the Venice Commission in particular will support amendments to
Armenia’s Constitution.

The sides also discussed CE agenda, development of Armenia-EU
cooperation, regional problems, judicial reforms in Armenia and other
issues of mutual interest.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/10/21/sargsyan-jagland/

Armenian ‘Orphan Rug’ Is In White House Storage, As Unseen As Genoci

ARMENIAN ‘ORPHAN RUG’ IS IN WHITE HOUSE STORAGE, AS UNSEEN AS GENOCIDE IS NEGLECTED

Washington Post
Oct 22 2013

By Philip Kennicott, Tuesday, October 22, 3:18 AM E-mail the writer

The rug was woven by orphans in the 1920s and formally presented
to the White House in 1925. A photograph shows President Calvin
Coolidge standing on the carpet, which is no mere juvenile effort,
but a complicated, richly detailed work that would hold its own even
in the largest and most ceremonial rooms.

If you can read a carpet’s cues, the plants and animals depicted on the
rug may represent the Garden of Eden, which is about as far removed as
possible from the rug’s origins in the horrific events of 1915, when
the fracturing and senescent Ottoman Empire began amurderous campaign
against its Armenian population. Between 1 million and 1.5 million
people were killed or died of starvation, and others were uprooted from
their homes in what has been termed the first modern and systematic
genocide. Many were left orphans, including the more than 100,000
children who were assisted by the U.S.-sponsored Near East Relief
organization, which helped relocate and protect the girls who wove
the “orphan rug.” It was made in the town of Ghazir, now in Lebanon,
as thanks for the United States’ assistance during the genocide.

There was hope that the carpet, which has been in storage for almost
20 years, might be displayed Dec. 16 as part of a Smithsonian event
that would include a book launch for Hagop Martin Deranian’s “President
Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian Orphan Rug.” But on Sept.

12, the Smithsonian scholar who helped organize the event canceled
it, citing the White House’s decision not to loan the carpet. In a
letter to two Armenian American organizations, Paul Michael Taylor,
director of the institution’s Asian cultural history program, had no
explanation for the White House’s refusal to allow the rug to be seen
and said that efforts by the U.S. ambassador to Armenia, John A.

Heffern, to intervene had also been unavailing.

Although Taylor, Heffern and the White House curator, William G.

Allman, had discussed during a January meeting the possibility of an
event that might include the rug, it became clear that the rug wasn’t
going to emerge from deep hiding.

“This week I spoke again with the White House curator asking if there
was any indication of when a loan might be possible again but he has
none,” wrote Taylor in the letter. Efforts to contact Heffern through
the embassy in the Armenian capital of Yerevan were unsuccessful,
and the State Department referred all questions to the White House.

Last week, the White House issued a statement: “The Ghazir rug is
a reminder of the close relationship between the peoples of Armenia
and the United States. We regret that it is not possible to loan it
out at this time.”

That leaves the rug, and the sponsors of the event, in limbo, a
familiar place for Armenians. Neither Ara Ghazarians of the Armenian
Cultural Foundation nor Levon Der Bedrossian of the Armenian Rugs
Society can be sure if the event they had helped plan was canceled for
the usual political reason: fear of negative reaction from Turkey,
which has resolutely resisted labeling the events at the end of the
Ottoman Empire a genocide. But both suspect it might have been.

“Turkey is a very powerful country,” says Der Bedrossian, whose
organization was planning to fund a reception for the event.

And it’s a sign of the Obama administration’s dismal reputation in
the Armenian American community that everyone assumes it must be yet
another slap in the face for Armenians seeking to promote understanding
of one of the darkest chapters in 20th-century history.

Aram Suren Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National
Committee of America, says the president has had “a very negative
reception across the board in the Armenian world, and that includes
both Democrats and Republicans.” The principal emotion is profound
disappointment. As a candidate, and senator, Obama spoke eloquently
about the Armenian genocide, risking the ire of Turkey and Turkish
organizations. But since taking office, says Hamparian, Obama has
avoided the word, making more general statements about Armenian
suffering. Critics of his silence point to the geopolitical importance
of Turkey in a region made only more complex by the Arab Spring and
a brutal civil war in Syria.

The word genocide is a flash point in the ongoing animosity between
Turkey, Armenia and the Armenian diaspora. Turkish resistance to
accepting the historical facts of the Armenian genocide has included
wholesale denial that the events took place, an effort to contextualize
them as the fallout of a complicated, violent period, and semantic
argument based on the 1948 legal definition of genocide, established
by the United Nations. Independent scholars have eviscerated the
first of these claims, demonstrated the bad faith of the second
(the treatment of the Armenians was egregious) and grappled seriously
with the legal particulars, especially the difficulty of proving the
“intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial
or religious group, as such.” But few seriously argue that the events
weren’t genocidal.

Samantha Power, for example, uses the term “Armenian genocide”
throughout her landmark 2002 book on genocide, “A Problem From Hell.”

Power was appointed by Obama to serve as U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations, and was confirmed in August.

But the president’s language has been more circumspect. As a candidate,
he said, “The Armenian genocide is not an allegation, a personal
opinion or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact
supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence. America
deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian genocide
and responds forcefully to all genocides.” But in his most recent
presidential proclamation honoring April 24’s Armenian Remembrance
Day, he used the Armenian term “Meds Yeghern” – “great calamity” –
while avoiding explicit mention of genocide.

U.S. government officials and the Smithsonian have been reluctant
to address a controversy that is often dismissed as just another
intractable historical dispute. Although Armenian musicians performed
at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in 2002, a Smithsonian spokeswoman
says the institution hasn’t taken up the subject of the genocide, a
remarkable omission of scholarship concerning an important ethnic group
in the United States and one of the last century’s most critical and
notorious historical events. (Even Adolf Hitler supposedly referred
to the Armenian genocide in a quote that is also disputed by some
scholars: “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the
Armenians?” he asked in a speech just before Germany invaded Poland
in 1939.)

In Power’s book, the author notes the power of “Turkish objections”
to prevent official U.S. recognition of the genocide. As a presidential
candidate, Obama said in a statement that he “stood with the Armenian
American community in calling for Turkey’s acknowledgment of the
Armenian Genocide.” But April’s presidential proclamation finessed the
delicate situation by saying, “I have consistently stated my own view
of what occurred in 1915, and my view has not changed,” suggesting
he strongly supports a truth he no longer has the courage to utter.

Calls and e-mails to the Turkish Embassy in Washington weren’t
returned.

The status of the rug remains ambiguous. It was last taken out of
storage in 1995 and is reported to be in good condition. But a White
House spokesman declined to answer questions about whether it might
ever be seen again, if the climate is simply too politicized for the
rug to be exhibited.

And the Smithsonian is distancing itself from Taylor. “Dr. Taylor
put this together on his own, nobody knew about it, certainly senior
leadership didn’t know about it,” says Randall Kremer, who handles
public affairs for the National Museum of Natural History, where
Taylor is employed.

Taylor says he doesn’t want to speculate about why the White House
won’t lend the object, and he says he isn’t an expert on the tortured
politics of the region. It was the rug, its iconography, its status
among Armenians and its history that intrigued him, especially after
hearing Armenians discuss it during a 2012 visit to Armenia.

“We’re not afraid of doing Armenian exhibitions,” he says. “I would
love to do one.”

Although the White House can offer no explanation about why the rug
is off limits to the American people, Der Bedrossian is optimistic
that it might someday see the light of day.

“Rug weaving is a metaphor for me: We can make peace weaving together,”
he says. “We are patient. I tend to believe in miracles.

Someday it will come.”

From: A. Papazian

http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/museums/armenian-orphan-rug-remains-in-white-house-storage-as-unseen-as-genocide-is-neglected/2013/10/21/90458518-3a6d-11e3-b6a9-da62c264f40e_story.html

Vahan Artzruni’s Advice to President Sargsyan: "Resign Immediately"

Vahan Artzruni’s Advice to President Sargsyan: “Resign Immediately”

Marine Martirosyan
14:06, October 18, 2013

An interview with singer-song writer Vahan Artzruni.

Especially lately, may have noted that the country is in dire straits.
When do you think the downfall began?

In general, all is explained when we come to grips with the fact that
there is a widespread crisis of governance in Armenia. Those sectors
that cannot be left to fend for themselves, that are much more
sensitive, and where we see that which is happening, in other words,
emigration, the general manifestation of apathy in the people and
cultural issues

What have we lost in the 22 years of independence? Have we held on to
what we obtained?

Let’s start from our achievements. What have we achieved? Borders –
that consciousness that we can build our own history and that on our
own we can build the border of our own country. The second thing is
that we can maintain that border by ourselves. Having a national army
is glaring proof of this. A great achievement is that we have a
mono-ethnic country, where 93% of the population is homogenous.
Another indisputable achievement is that we have our national
language, cultural institutions, national currency, national army, our
country’s borders and, finally, the Constitution.

Now, the second problem is in what situation all this exists. We can
talk at length about this given all the unexamined incidents and
developments of the past 22 years, even up till recent developments
when our country’s independence and borders became issues of public
debate.

Here, I refer to the letter of Zori Balayan. You can’t subject a
citizen of your own country to such tribulations. The easiest path is
to display incapability in the administrative sectors, to bring the
country on the verge of collapse, and to then say that the solution is
to sign an agreement with Russia. But where were all your institutions
before signing that agreement? Where was your diplomacy and national
development program? In other words, all that which hasn’t worked for
the past 22 years?

So what has worked?

You know, the easiest thing is when you start to build not based on
the domestic interests of your country but rather by taking into
account those documents and facts that are placed on your table.

That’s to say, if Russia now extols this blueprint, you agree to it
because you lack your own policies. If, tomorrow, the European Union
proposes a more beneficial variant, you’d say it was more mutually
beneficial or the pressures were great. Maybe, you’d say there is a
third variant, one that neighboring Iran might propose.

You won’t get far by following this line of reasoning. You will become
subjected to certain interests and proposals. When referring to an
administrative collapse, I mean the following – when the country’s
prime minister publicly explains why we can’t become a member of the
Customs Union and, two days later, the country’s president signs that
agreement document. This is one factor.

The second is when 105 MPs sign a document without knowing its
content, Later on they say, `But we didn’t understand what the term
gender means’. This signifies that the country is being ruled by
structures lacking internal coordination; which is explained by a lack
of overall policy orientation and vision of development. In other
words, they go to work in the morning, perform some duties, and go
partying in the evening, to sit at tables of joy or lament. How long
can such an approach work? Thus, it is only natural, that Russia made
such a proposal in these conditions.

Does Armenia have the ability of making a choice?

But, you shouldn’t take the country to a point where there is no
chance of having options. Russia is mired in its own terrible
unresolved problems, where basic human rights are neglected –
religious and minority rights.

What future do you see for Armenia?

They say that nature does not tolerate emptiness. Nature is always
filled with content, because for every reaction there is a counter
reaction, in this case, a forward reaction.

We well know that this phenomenon exist especially in the youth;
that’s to say that people more interested in public rather than
private matters. That’s where the solution lies. When this
consciousness becomes all encompassing, and when such an Armenian
comes into existence who places the public, the national interest,
before the private.

What advice would you offer the president?

To immediately resign from office and to hand over the position to
another individual or team capable of drafting an overall plan of
action, both in terms of foreign affairs and domestic governance, that
will stabilize the overall processes now ruining the country.

Do you see such a person on the horizon?

It’s not as if there is no one out there. On the contrary. During the
Soviet period, they would say, `Other than the Communist Party, what
other party do you know that can take over the reins of power?’ This
is childish blabber. It’s a thesis only worthy of ridicule.

What historical period would you compare today’s situation with?

With the last years of the Soviet Union, when there was an
administrative collapse in the country. They didn’t know how to govern
the country. But it’s not comparable in the sense that the country was
governed by a collection of charismatic old men and when they started
dying off the status in the country changed. Now, they are quite young
and if we follow that model, then we will have to deal with them for
another 20-30 years.

From: A. Papazian

http://hetq.am/eng/interviews/30096/vahan-artzrunis-advice-to-president-sargsyan-resign-immediately.html

L’anniversaire de la base militaire d’Erebouni

Par La Voix de la Russie
19 oct 2013

L’anniversaire de la base militaire d’Erebouni

Par La Voix de la Russie | Les pilotes russes stationnés sur la base
aérienne d’Erebouni près d’Erevan, en Arménie, ont célébré le 15e
anniversaire du réarmement de cette base avec des chasseurs de la
quatrième génération MiG-29. Les pilotes considèrent cette date comme
la journée anniversaire de la base.

0C’est il y a 15 ans jour pour jour qu’a été donné l’ordre concernant
le début des vols des avions de chasse de quatrième génération MiG-29
sur l’aérodrome d’Erebouni. Les militaires de la base militaire ont
célébré cette date avec un défilé, et les soldats dont la performance
a été distinguée par les supérieurs, ont reçu des diplômes de
reconnaissance et des prix. L’aérodrome a été ouvert au public. Les
invités ont eu la possibilité de se faire prendre en photo sur le fond
des avions de combat et des hélicoptères. Les visiteurs ont pu
également observer les vols de démonstration des hélicoptères Mi-8 et
Mi-24. Les pilotes russes ont montré leurs compétences en matière de
l’évacuation des blessés.

0Les diplomates de l’Ambassade de Russie et les hauts fonctionnaires
du ministère de la Défense de l’Arménie sont venus féliciter les
militaires avec l’anniversaire de la date aérienne, ainsi que des
employés de la Direction frontalière du FSB de Russie en Arménie. Le
colonel Andreï Rouzinski, commandant de la 102e base militaire russe
s’est adressé avec un discours solennel aux pilotes russes.

0« Je tiens à exprimer l’espoir que le personnel de vol et de
maintenance vont continuer à exécuter aussi brillamment les tches et
les missions qui leur sont confiées. Je voudrais féliciter
personnellement et au nom du personnel de la base militaire 102 avec
cette date anniversaire et vous souhaiter de bon c`ur du bonheur.
Félicitations ! »

0

0Photo: La Voix de la Russie

0La nouvelle concernant l’utilisation du polygone militaire arménien
Maréchal Bargamian pour leurs exercices militaires fut accueillie avec
joie par les militaires de la base Erebouni. Le ministère de la
Défense de l’Arménie a déjà donné son accord préliminaire à cet effet,
a indiqué le commandant de la base, le colonel Alexandre Petrov.

0« Cette décision facilitera nos man`uvres. Nous décollerons d’ici, et
en seulement trois minutes de vol nous pourrons réaliser les objectifs
fixés. L’équipement du polygone Maréchal Bagramian et les capacités de
nos MiG-29 le permettent. Je peux dire que notre niveau de préparation
sera atteint plus rapidement grce à cela. »

0Outre l’escadron de chasseurs, un escadron d’hélicoptère devrait être
prochainement formé sur la base d’Erebouni. En d’autres termes, les
pilotes russes pourront mieux relever leur mission principale plus
efficacement. Cette mission – c’est la protection de l’espace aérien
de la république d’Arménie dans le cade du système de défense aérienne
uni des pays de la CEI.

Rédaction en ligne, Elina Kazarian

From: A. Papazian

http://french.ruvr.ru/2013_10_19/L-anniversaire-de-la-base-militaire-d-Erebouni-1845/