Zharangutiun Faction Condemns "Tax Persecution" Carried Out With Reg

ZHARANGUTIUN FACTION CONDEMNS "TAX PERSECUTION" CARRIED OUT WITH REGARD TO KHACHATUR SUKIASIAN

Noyan Tapan
Nov 14, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The Zharangutiun (Heritage) faction
of the RA National Assembly condemns the "tax persecution" carried out
with regard to MP and businessman Khachatur Sukiasian. This statement
was made by Armen Martirosian, a member of the above-mentioned
faction in the National Assembly on November 13. He also mentioned
that under the circumstances of the monopoly economy created in the
country Armenia is in the 110th place with the development degree of
the home competition among the 117 countries included in the report
of the annual Global Economic Competition of the World Economic Forum.

According to Armen Martirosian, the Zharangutiun (Heritage) faction
also condemns the persecution carried out with regard to the GALA
(Gyumri Independent News Channel) TV Company. In the words of the MP,
encroachments upon free press, as well as upon the rights of citizens
and businessman should not be allowed to be recorded in the country on
the threshold of the presidential elections having a fatal significance
for Armenia.

Armenian And Azerbaijani Intellectuals Thinking Over New Trip To Nag

ARMENIAN AND AZERBAIJANI INTELLECTUALS THINKING OVER NEW TRIP TO NAGORNY KARABAKH, YEREVAN AND BAKU

arminfo
2007-11-05 13:23:00

ArmInfo. Intellectuals of Armenia and Azerbaijan are planning a new
trip to Karabakh, Yerevan and Baku, Armenian Ambassador to Russia
Armen Smbatyan says in an interview with Day.az.

interesting and reflect the actual attitude of public to the contacts
and meetings of Armenian and Azerbaijani intellectuals. There are no
real preconditions to consider the first trip the last,> Ambassador
Smbatyan says.

He says the idea of the trip belongs to him and Azerbaijani
Ambassador to Russia Polad Bul-Bul oghli. The envoys have known
each other for already 20 years since both them are musicians and
ex-culture ministers. We were concerned upon the virtual propaganda
and confrontation that can develop at the prejudice of the people,
especially the youth that is unaware of historical facts and their
analytical interpretation, the Ambassador says.

He is sure that the world community will perceive these contacts
with understanding since it is against any confrontation and supports
civilized and panhuman ideas.

Interest Arouses In The Result Of Pressure

INTEREST AROUSES IN THE RESULT OF PRESSURE

A1+
[05:58 pm] 25 October, 2007

Head of the "Armenia People’s Party" Stepan Demirchyan does not
consider that "Golden Autumn" organized by the "Republican Party of
Armenia" or other pressures will hamper them to hold the gathering
tomorrow.

"I think that interest arouses in the result of pressures", said
Stepan Demirchyan to "A1+" and ensured that many people would be
present at the gathering.

The organizers of the gathering will speak about the unprecedented
crime committed on 27 October in 1999 and about its outcomes. "We will
reflect on the happenings in the country as well as on the upcoming
presidential elections".

To our question whether Stepan Demirchayn might announce that his
party would support Levon Ter-Petrosyan, he said: "The position of
the party in regard with presidential elections will be announced
during the nominations".

Spokesman For Armenia’s President: Ilham Alyiev’s Better Take Care O

SPOKESMAN FOR ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT: ILHAM ALYIEV’S BETTER TAKE CARE OF HIS OWN THINGS

Regnum, Russia
Aug 13 2007

A REGNUM correspondent addressed spokesman for the Armenian resident
Viktor Sogomonyan asking to comment on the current stage of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement as well as several statements made
by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev during his visit to Kazakhstan.

REGNUM: What do you think of the current stage of the negotiations on
the Nagorno Karabakh settlement? Do statements made by the official
Baku that the talks have come to a deadlock correspond with reality?

It is hard to give an ambiguous assessment to the current stage of
the talks. I would rather abstain from certain definitions; moreover,
assessments of the process made by parties involved directly in the
negotiations are usually subjective.

At the same time, the fact is the talks gave born no results. Causes
of such situation are evident for the Armenian side. These are
non-constructive position of the Azerbaijani side, and the illusion
that time can be reversed and one can go back to the state of affairs
of 1988. Existence of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic is an evident
fact and it cannot become a matter of bargain.

That is why, taking into account the non-constructive position of the
Azerbaijani side, the Armenian president reiterated that he had only
careful optimism about success of the talks. I am afraid the optimism
has become even more careful.

REGNUM: In an interview to a Kazakh newspaper, the Azerbaijani
president once again presented allegations to the Armenian side. In
particular, Aliyev said that "the Armenian side is acting insincerely
and is trying to drag time and deceives the mediators." Besides
Aliyev announced that if "Armenia suspends the policy of occupation,
the relations between Baku and Yerevan come to normal, and Armenia
will gain more from cooperation with Azerbaijan than from tips from
outside." How could comment on it?

Unfortunately, as you can see, Mr. Aliyev had enough political will and
courage only for another indiscretion. I would not rather comment much
on those opuses, I would only say that there is someone to think of
the future of Armenians, the future of Armenia and the Nagorno Karabakh
Republic. Mr. Aliyev should better take care of his own things.

The AKP May Not Be The Same As Hamas, But Their Ideology Does Kill I

THE AKP MAY NOT BE THE SAME AS HAMAS, BUT THEIR IDEOLOGY DOES KILL INNOCENT PEOPLE.
by Stephen Schwartz, a frequent contributor to THE WEEKLY STANDARD.

The Weekly Standard
Turkey Votes
cles/000/000/013/911zygqb.asp
07/24/2007 12:00:00 AM

TURKEY’S REELECTION OF incumbent prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
AKP, or Justice and Development Party, has reenergized the low-level
debate in Washington about foreign Islamic parties that claim to
respect democracy and secularism. But for the AKP–no less than its
rivals in the Turkish military and secular state structures–the
positive element lacking in their outlook involves pluralism, more
than either politics or prayers.

Turkey is now divided between two forms of intolerance: a secular
element that only accepts Islam under strict state supervision, and
a religious faction that similarly restricts its approval to Sunnism.

Neither respects Turkey’s minorities: the heterodox Alevi Muslims,
who fear the AKP because it excludes them; the Kurds, whose situation
is dangerous for Iraq and the U.S.-led coalition there as well as
Turkey itself; the small Greek Orthodox population, which suffers
curtailment of its most elementary religious functions, or the
Armenians, who still clamor for truth about the deportation and
massacres they suffered at the end of the First World War.

Many American commentators would like to see "Islamic democratic"
parties emerge across the Muslim world–notably in Egypt, with a
presumed option of American accommodation with the Muslim Brotherhood
(MB). Both Erdogan’s AKP and the Egyptian MB (the latter having been
the godfather of Hamas among the Palestinians) talk the talk. They
say they opt for ballots over bullets, and since voting and renouncing
violence are the words Americans love to hear, the chance at supporting
parties representing a "tame" Islamist ideology is attractive to many
inside the Beltway.

In addition, the strident rhetoric and militaristic legacy of Turkish
secularism seems to blame Islam as a faith for the problems of Turkish
politics, which plays well with some sectors of Western opinion,
but is a risky conception if the Western democracies intend to
defeat radicals inside Muslim countries. Nobody serious on the side
of freedom has suggested that the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq should
make the eradication of Islam its strategic goal.

And finally, when they mark their ballots, many Turks vote for the
AKP because after more than 75 years of enforced secularism, they
are aggrieved at those who swore that driving religion from public
life, and rooting out the old manners and morals of the Ottomans,
would create a modern, efficient nation–but then failed to make
good on their promises of accountability and prosperity. Turkey
ended up with an army prone to violence, a police known for extreme
corruption, and political bloodshed between leftist and rightist
nationalists. Worst of all, the Turkish army holds on to its "right"
to throw out governments of which it disapproves, which is hardly
exemplary from the democratic viewpoint.

Having trusted secularists who delivered little, many Turks want
to give religious believers a chance in government. And the AKP,
in its electoral propaganda, asks for no more than an opportunity
to administer the existing state in a more conscientious and clean
manner. Its functionaries and apologists profusely deny any intent to
introduce sharia law–a source of literal horror among many Turks–or
otherwise expand the role of the mosque in Turkish life.

But will the "Islamic democrats" of AKP walk the walk? The question
is acute in Turkey, because that country’s combination of unstable
factors means that no outcome can be certified as secure.

AKP supporters compare the movement with Christian-based parties in
Germany, Austria, and the Netherlands, which have excellent records
of fidelity to democracy–but also are products of compromises by and
between the churches. The German Christian Democrats and Austrian
People’s Party arose in response to socialist labor movements,
and recognized or adopted many of the programmatic principles
of the left. The Dutch religious parties were born of a national
reconciliation between Catholics and Protestants.

No such compromise between the AKP, the military, secular civilians,
or, most important, religious and ethnic minorities, is in sight
in Turkey, and, if anything, the common Turkish nationalist and
Sunni-centric habits of both the secular military and the AKP have
become more aggravated.

Neither the military secularists nor the AKP will recognize the
rights of the large Alevi minority, whose faith combines Shiism,
Sufi spirituality, and ancient Turkish culture. Before the AKP came
to power the secular Diyanet, or State Administration of Religious
Affairs, built mosques and certified imams for the Sunnis, but refused
money for the Alevis to build their meeting houses, known as cemevi,
or to train their clerics. On that issue there is no difference
between the secularists and the AKP.

Neither the military secularists nor the AKP has proposed to grant
his traditional status to the Ecumenical Patriarchate, Bartholomaeus
I, representing Christian Orthodox believers and headquartered
in Istanbul. The Patriarch is required to be a Turkish citizen,
and has extremely limited official duties inside the republic. A
Greek training seminary and publishing house have been closed. The
secularists maintain this policy out of distaste for all religion,
as well as Turkish nationalism. It is doubtful the Sunnis of AKP will
rush to grant relief to the small community of Greek Christians.

Neither the military secularists nor the AKP has shown any interest
in resolving the question of historical Armenian suffering in Turkey.

The novelist Orhan Pamuk mentioned the Armenian events in writing
and was threatened with a public trial–by the AKP government. And
finally, and most dangerously, neither the military secularists nor
the AKP has indicated any willingness to concede ethnic rights to
the country’s large Kurdish population. Military-secular tradition
holds that there are only Turks in Turkey, and that Kurds are all
terrorist secessionists; anybody who defends the Kurds is labeled a
Marxist extremist. Turkish troops have been sent to the border of
Iraqi Kurdistan, and both the military and the AKP have adopted a
threatening tone toward the U.S.-led coalition that may inevitably
produce a shooting war. Both the military and the AKP have also fed
growing anti-American propaganda.

The Sunni-centric politicians of the AKP may not be the same as Hamas,
but their ideology does kill innocent people, as does the secular
Turkish army. On a date never forgotten by Turkish and Kurdish Alevis,
a Sunni mob attack on a hotel where an Alevi cultural event took place,
in the city of Sivas in 1993, left some 37 people dead. After years of
official atrocities against the Kurds inside Turkey, the Turkish army
now fires artillery into northern Iraq. It is difficult to report
accurately on the Alevis and Kurds, because Turkey systematically
undercounts them. While official figures state that Turkey is 99
percent Sunni, Alevis make up from 20 to 33 percent of the population,
depending on the source of population statistics, i.e. between 15
and 25 million people.

For Turkey to become a respected, modern nation, it is time for it to
give up all forms of ideological politics: militaristic secularism,
an ultranationalist definition of rights, and Sunni-centrism. Turkey
needs a government about which there will be no doubts, because it will
stand above and seek to heal–rather than stand upon and aggravate–its
dangerous differences. The AKP cannot provide such a government.

http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Arti

Raiffeisen Bank Aval Starts Selling Silver Coin ‘Painter Ivan Aivazo

RAIFFEISEN BANK AVAL STARTS SELLING SILVER COIN ‘PAINTER IVAN AIVAZOVSKY’

Arminfo
2007-03-22 14:08:00

Raiffeisen Bank Aval has started selling silver coin "Painter Ivan
Aivazovsky," reports the bank’s PR department with reference to the
head of the precious metals and coins department Alla Ischenko.

This is a Brilliant Uncirculated legal tender 100 Dram piece made
by the Polish State Mint. The coin measures 40 millimeters by 28
millimeters and is minted from 28.28 grams of .925 silver. One can
buy the coin in all Raiffeisen Bank Aval divisions participating in
the World Coins program.

The reverse of the coin pictures Aivazovsky and a fragment of one of
his pictures.

The averse pictures the emblem of the Republic of Armenia and one
more painting by the artist.

Ivan (Hovhannes) Aivazovsky is Russian painter of Armenian descent,
most famous for his seascapes, which constitute more than half of
his 6,000 paintings.

It Makes No Difference Who Karabakh Will Belong To

IT MAKES NO DIFFERENCE WHO KARABAKH WILL BELONG TO
Lragir.am
18 July 06
The G8 statement on the conflict over Karabakh is an ordinary
statement, announced Vazgen Manukyan, the leader of the National
Democratic Union, July 18. He says that the year 2006 specified in
the statement of G8, during which the great powers call the conflict
parties to reach agreement on the basic principles of settlement,
does not make the statement special. “After all, they are not saying
that if you do not reach agreement in 2006, we will station forces,”
says Vazgen Manukyan.
“For these big states it is not important Karabakh is inside Armenia
or inside Azerbaijan. They are interested that there is not a conflict
which may impact them as well. They want a prosperous life and they do
not want a conflict,” says the leader of the NDU. He does not think
that the OSCE Minsk Group statement on placing responsibility on the
conflict parties increased the risk that the war will ignite again.
Aliyev realizes that there will be no signature to mark whom Karabakh
belongs to, and the only way to take it is war. First of all, any war
can be lost, and he has already lost the war for several times, he
knows that even if he is twice or three times stronger, he is not the
winner. Nobody can say I will wage a war and win, says Vazgen Manukyan.
“When the war starts, they are living a prosperous life inside their
clans, and earn billions of dollars. Why should they risk everything
they have, why should they risk the oil pipeline, why should they
risk their relation with the West? Therefore in the nearest future
I do not expect that their threat will be important.
This does not mean that there will not be a war in the future, but
now it is not worthwhile to treat it seriously. We must negotiate
with a cool head and develop our state,” says the leader of the NDU.
According to him, it is wrong to think that the statement of co-chairs
untie the hands of conflict parties and give them their approval to
wage a war.
“It is a trick. They do such things during negotiations. During the
talks one of the parties may slam the door then returns or is asked to
return. Negotiations are negotiations, it has its technologies. This
is one of the technologies of talks, which I think is normal. On the
one hand, this can be explained psychologically.
People constantly offer proposals, but since they understand that
there cannot be a compromise with regard to the Karabakh issue,
they are also responsible for those who empowered them to conduct
the talks,” says Vazgen Manukyan.

Tension runs high in Georgia’s Armenian-populated district

Tension runs high in Georgia’s Armenian-populated district
Imedi TV, Tbilisi
11 Mar 06
[Presenter] A rally organized by ethnic Armenian action groups in
Akhalkalaki [southern Georgia] continued for about an hour. After the
rally, protesters tried to storm and loot several buildings. First,
the protesters stormed the Akhalkalaki court building. They are angry
because ethnic Armenian judges failed to pass attestation and were
suspended. The action group is demanding that an ethnic Armenian judge
be appointed along with the Georgian judge and that court proceedings
be carried out in the Armenian language.
>From the court building the protesters moved to the Akhalkalaki
branch of the [Tbilisi State] University. Crime Police officers tried
to stop them, but the protesters managed to break into the building
and loot some rooms.
However, they left the building when told so by the organizers. The
Armenian action groups are demanding that the Georgian university
should be closed unless Armenian-language classes are
introduced. [Video shows a crowd breaking into a building and smashing
a door]
[Nodar Gvaramadze, Georgian judge] I had no idea that this rally was
planned. When these people came here, they entered the building and
told me to leave. When I asked why, they told me that they wanted to
board up the door. I told them that I was there to perform my duties
and they could only make me leave by force. They said I had better
leave. In the end, in order to avoid escalation and damage to the
building, I decided that it was better to leave.
[Young man, no caption, in Russian] Recently, [ethnic] Armenian judges
from Akhalkalaki, Kalbatono [Georgian polite form of addressing a
woman] Susana and judge Ararat Chobanyan, were sacked because they do
not speak Georgian.
That’s what the problem is. The people rebelled. They [judges] should
speak an understandable language.
[Albert Maranjyan, in Russian] This [university branch] should be
either closed or a joint facility should be opened, so that our people
could also study here. Our people cannot study here because they do
not speak Georgian, they are educated in Armenian. How can they study
in this institute? Only one or two students from the entire
Akhalkalaki study here, and even they were admitted in exchange for
money. All others [students] are not locals.
[Reporter] What are your plans?
[Maranjyan] Plans? These studies here should be shut down. If they
want to open something, it should have an Armenian component, so that
Armenians could study here too.
[Presenter] A short while ago, the situation in Akhalkalaki
escalated. After sacking the court and university buildings, the
protesters moved to the building of the Kumurdo-Akhalkalaki eparchy
[of the Georgian Orthodox Church].
They tried to break into the building too. The protesters were
claiming that arms were hidden in the eparchy, so they wanted to check
the premises. After the negotiations with the police and a telephone
conversation with Father Nikoloz, several protesters were allowed to
enter the building and check the premises. After finding no arms, they
left the eparchy. At the moment, the rally is slowly coming to an end.
[Albert Maranjyan, in Russian] No, nothing of the sort. We simply met
and talked with employees [of the eparchy]. We saw how they live, and
we left, nothing else.
[Sister Mariam] They came here and I was among those who met them. I
asked them what they wanted. They said that the building was a
kindergarten and that we should vacate it. They wanted to break into
the building. Another sister managed to shut the door, and we stood
there. Then all these people were pushing the door and telling us
that unless we left this building – stressing that it was a
kindergarten – they would storm it.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

10 Liter Petrol Per Day

Panorama.am
17:04 14/10/05
10 LITER PETROL PER DAY
>From the next year, duty machines of the government instead of 4 liter
petrol per day will waste 10 liter. Such kind of benevolence of the
government is connected with the budget of 2006, i.e. the expenses of the
government has increased with 6.7 billiard, 3 billion of which is overseen
for increasing the salaries.
The executive could normalize the expenses of communication and electricity,
the number of machines as well. For example, the number of duty machines for
the presidential staff will be 63 (there are 40 this year). /Panorama.am/

OSCE Holds Monitoring Of Armenian-Azeri Front-Line

OSCE HOLDS MONITORING OF ARMENIAN-AZERI FRONT-LINE
Nagorny Karabakh Foreign Ministry,
Oct 11 2005
On 11 October, according to an agreement reached earlier, the OSCE
mission carried out planned monitoring on the contact line between the
armed forces of Nagornyy Karabakh and Azerbaijan near the settlement
of Yusifcanli.
On the positions of the NKR [Nagornyy Karabakh Republic] defence army
the monitoring was held by the personal representative of the OSCE
chairman-in-office, Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk (Poland).
The monitoring group includes the field assistants to the OSCE personal
representative, Olexandr Samarsky (Ukraine) and Harry Eronen (Finland),
and the head of the OSCE high-level planning group, Col Tomaso Strgar
(Slovenia).
The monitoring was held according to schedule and no truce violations
were registered.
On the Karabakh side, the monitoring group was accompanied by
representatives of the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry
of Defence.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress