Heavy Thoughts Of Armenian Officials: "parade Of Resignations" Or "w

HEAVY THOUGHTS OF ARMENIAN OFFICIALS: “PARADE OF RESIGNATIONS” OR “WHAT KIND OF LIFE IS THIS?”
Hayk Khalatyan

PanARMENIAN.Net
November 3, 2011 – 17:16 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Recent parade of high-ranking officials’
resignations became the highlight of Armenia’s political life,
effectively overshadowing the Armenian National Congress (ANC)
leader’s statement, accepting the possibility for Congress to run
for parliamentary elections.

These days, Armenian public lives in anticipation of the next
resignation, spreading rumors of yet another Minister’s dismissal.

Armenian Prime Minister was picked as another victim of rumormongers,
whose false reports the government didn’t comment in view of their
absurdity.

Yet, even more so than rumors, the “colorless existence” of Armenian
officials is worth attention. If, in the 1930s, Soviet officials
slept with pistols under their pillows, wary of possible arrest, in
modern Armenia, the officials are keeping their pens ready to sign
resignation papers.

Seeing as all resigned officials were interviewed by ArmNews, Armenian
people, known for their sense of humor, have spread a joke, asking
everybody around, “have you been interviewed by ArmNews yet?”, or ,
by way of an ill wish, “ArmNews is waiting to interview you.”

So, media, as well as average citizens, have only to arm themselves
with patience and pop-corn in expectation of the next sitting of
the ruling Republican Party of Armenia to announce news. So far,
the rumormongers are persistently spreading reports of Vice Prime
Minister Armen Gevorgyan’s resignation following the actual dismissals
of parliamentary speaker and police chief.

Grant Thornton Armenia Supports Adding New Ukrainian Firm To Network

GRANT THORNTON ARMENIA SUPPORTS ADDING NEW UKRAINIAN FIRM TO NETWORK

PanARMENIAN.Net
November 3, 2011 – 13:19 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – As of January 1, 2012 Grant Thornton International
will add a new member firm in Ukraine to the network.

Grant Thornton Armenia, the leading audit and advisory firm in the
region, which continuously supports development of Grant Thornton
network, will have a significant role in this process.

Having extensive experience in establishment and development of
Grant Thornton firms in other countries, specifically in Georgia and
Tajikistan, Grant Thornton Armenia will support establishment of the
new member firm in Ukraine. The Ukrainian member will be created on the
basis of Legis Group, local audit and advisory firm, with participation
of Grant Thornton Armenia and Grant Thornton Cyprus, and will offer
a wide spectrum of audit, tax and advisory services in the market.

Ed Nusbaum, CEO, Grant Thornton International, says, “We are very
pleased to be able to strengthen still further our already strong
presence across the CIS region.”

“The Armenian Grant Thornton is distinguished by its multi-sided and
long-term expertise, as well as establishment and development of new
firms in the region. Taking this into consideration, our firm has
expressed readiness to support the establishment of the new member
firm in Ukraine, and welcomes and wishes success to its new partner in
the Ukrainian market,” comments Gagik Gyulbudaghyan, Managing Partner,
Grant Thornton Armenia.

All The Schools Of RA To Be Heated

ALL THE SCHOOLS OF RA TO BE HEATED

ARMENPRESS
NOVEMBER 4, 2011
YEREVAN

Though not all the schools of Armenia have central boiling-house,
all the educational centers have heating opportunity, head of the
comprehensive education department of Education and Science Ministry
Narine Hovhanissyan said, adding that next year the heating issue of
five-six schools will be solved.

Referring to the provincial schools Narine Hovhanissyan said that each
governor tries to give quick solution to the issue. “The situation we
have now essentially differs from the one we had before. Few schools
without heating have remained,” she said.

Yegparian: Freudian Confession

YEGPARIAN: FREUDIAN CONFESSION
By: Garen Yegparian

Fri, Nov 4 2011

Gotta love, Freud, Gul, and the PKK! These three have cooperated,
albeit unwittingly, to elicit a telling comment reported in the
LATimes in “Turkey forces push into Iraq after raids by Kurd militants”
(p. 6, Oct. 20, 2011).

Abdullah Gul declared, “These terrorist acts will be reciprocated.” So
the president of that democratic-ideal-of-a-state Turkey is promising
terrorist action. What a surprise! This confession is such a whopper
that it doesn’t even merit the fig leaf/euphemism of calling it a
Freudian slip.

The country that brought us genocide in the 20th century (of Armenians,
Assyrians, Greeks, and Kurds), invasion and occupation of Cyprus,
incursions into Iraq (and now possibly Syria), massive repression of
its own population, and miscellaneous other human rights violations
that would get any other entity labeled “terrorist,” is promising
still more terrorism. Hardly newsworthy, but it is interesting in
the current context.

Gul’s comment came on the heels of PKK (Partiya Karkeren Kurdistan,
or Kurdish Workers Party) attacks on Turkish military targets this
month that killed two dozen soldiers. This might be understandable
as a presidential reaction to being caught unprepared and losing some
of your troops. But the question is why promise terrorism, under the
false premise that the attackers are terrorists?

I write this despite the fact that Turkey, the EU, and the U.S. have
all labeled the PKK as “terrorist.” But are they really? They are a
group that is fighting for their people’s, nation’s, and homeland’s
liberation against an occupying power (which is legal under the UN’s
rules, as I recall).

What the labelers really don’t like is that the PKK is struggling
to change the established order, and resorting to military means
because other, civil-democratic, means are unavailable to it. What
more proof is needed than the recent invasion of Turkey’s primarily
Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party’s headquarters by the authorities?

But, wait, isn’t deposing an unjust regime a legitimate end? Didn’t
NATO just provide bombing cover to Libya’s rebels? Weren’t those
rebels fighting the legally established regime in Libya, much as the
PKK has done on and off for three decades? How come Libya’s rebels
aren’t terrorists?

But the most delicious irony is that after initially hesitating, Turkey
sided with Libya’s rebels! Such grand heights of hypocrisy might be
hard to imagine, except when it comes from the likes of Turkey and
its current leaders who defended Somalia’s genocidal president Omar
al-Bashir (I suppose misery loves company so genocidal leaders have
to stick together).

The next time someone starts to sing Turkey’s praises, remind them
of these perversions of decency that are part of that country’s
daily routine.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2011/11/04/yegparian-freudian-confession/

Why Turkey Dislikes The Armenian NPP

WHY TURKEY DISLIKES THE ARMENIAN NPP

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 16:40:50 – 04/11/2011

Turkey supports the closure of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant and
thinks it is dangerous for the region. According to Turkish mass media,
such a statement was made by the Minister of Energy of Turkey Taner
Yildiz. According to him, Turkey will soon appeal to International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for this issue.

Why is Turkey so insisting to close the Armenian NPP? Why is it
not worried with the nuclear power plant of Iran? How many Muslim
countries are there in the world where there are nuclear plants? And
why does Turkey not allow building an NPP but allows the deployment
of nuclear objects to which it has no access?

According to the Karabakh Committee Member Ashot Manucharyan, the
presence of the NPP is a weighty political capital for the country.

The point is not only about the fact that those countries where there
are NPPs are more protected by the international community. The point
is that for such countries there is somewhat different attitude, as
if they belong to the unofficial club of trusted states the sanity of
which is not doubted. As there are doubts about, say, the constancy of
the representatives of some nations who are not drafted into the army.

Turkey is against the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant from this point of
view. No one would like to have a neighboring country that is trusted
nuclear energy, without feat that inadequate people with inadequate
targets will appear at the “button”.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics24078.html

Armenia’s Budget Should Not Aim To Collect Money: Former Central Ban

ARMENIA’S BUDGET SHOULD NOT AIM TO COLLECT MONEY: FORMER CENTRAL BANK CHAIR

epress.am
11.04.2011

It’s good that stabilizing inflation up to 4%, as well as 4.4% economic
growth, is in the Armenian government’s plans, but it’s not enough
to solve the country’s problems, former chair of Armenia’s Central
Bank, current Armenian National Congress (HAK) representative Bagrat
Asatryan told journalists in Yerevan today.

Speaking about the planned increase of 100 billion Armenian drams
($263.9 million USD) in tax revenue in the 2012 state budget, Asatryan
said that’s no small change.

“100 billion drams is not a small figure, but collecting it is not
so impossible – taking into account that in terms of tax collection,
it’s not a big problem. 55-60 of the 100 [billion] depends on the
increase in revenue, on inflation. A portion of the other 40 billion
drams falls on excise and other types of taxes,” he said.

In the opinion of the former Central Bank chair, this budget has one
purpose, to collect fiscal money, and this is the first thing that
should go. In Asatryan’s opinion, Armenia will live worse in 2012
than it did in 2011.

Comparing the country with neighboring Georgia, Asatryan said Georgia
was worse off in terms of economic problems, but in the last 4-5 years,
it has registered much progress.

Russian Army Chief Visits Armenia, Inspects Ground Troops

RUSSIAN ARMY CHIEF VISITS ARMENIA, INSPECTS GROUND TROOPS

epress.am
11.04.2011

The commander-in-chief of Russia’s ground forces has visited Armenia
where he met top Armenian military officials and inspected Russian
troops stationed in the country, RFE/RL’s Armenian service reports.

The Armenian Defense Ministry gave no details of Colonel General
Aleksandr Postnikov’s talks with Armenian Defense Minister Seyran
Ohanian and the chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff, Colonel
General Yuri Khachaturov.

A ministry statement said the main purpose of Postnikov’s three-day
trip – which ended on Nov. 2 – was to “verify and oversee” an ongoing
“optimization of the order of deployment” of the Russian military
base headquartered in Gyumri.

It said he inspected various units and facilities at the base.

Postnikov already visited Armenia twice in April for the same purpose.

Armenian and Russian military officials have since given few details
of the redeployment of Russian troops. It is unknown whether their
overall number will change as a result of the redistribution

Senior Russian Defense Ministry official Andrei Gusev said in June
that “excess weaponry and military hardware” from the Russian base
will be transferred to the Armenian army for free as part of the
redeployment. He did not elaborate.

Gusev assured lawmakers in Moscow that the “optimization” will not
affect the combat-readiness of Russian troops.

The Russian base has up to 5,000 soldiers, more than 100 tanks and
armored personnel carriers, S-300 air defense missiles, and a squadron
of MiG-29 fighter jets.

A Russian-Armenian agreement signed in August 2010 extended the
Russian military presence in Armenia by 24 years, until 2044, and
upgraded its security mission. The deal also committed Moscow to
supplying Armenia with modern weaponry.

The Russian troop presence, a major element of Armenia’s national
security doctrine, was called into question in April when Georgia
decided not to renew a Russian-Georgian agreement that allowed Moscow
to use Georgian territory for shipments to Armenia.

The Armenian Defense Ministry downplayed the Georgian move at the
time, saying that it will not lead to any “change in Armenia’s
security environment.”

Turkish Publisher Zarakolu Sends First Letter From Prison

TURKISH PUBLISHER ZARAKOLU SENDS FIRST LETTER FROM PRISON

PanARMENIAN.Net
November 4, 2011 – 11:25 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – In his first letter sent from prison through his
lawyer Ozcan Kilic, publisher Ragip Zarakolu said: “My arrest and
the accusation of membership of an illegal organization are parts of
a campaign aiming to intimidate all intellectuals and democrats of
Turkey and particularly to deprive the Kurds of any support.”

As reported by Bianet, Zarakolu said that during the raid in his
house the police confiscated only few books as “evidences of crime”
and found nothing about his so-called relations with any organization.

The books confiscated as “evidences of crime” are the 2nd volume
of Vatansiz Gazeteci (Stateless Journalist) by Dogan Ozguden, chief
editor of Info-Turk, Habiba by Ender Ondes, Peace Process by Yuksel
Genc, manuscripts three books about the Armenian Genocide and the
Armenian History.

He added that at the police headquarters, all his bank and credit
cards were confiscated.

Reminding that he is invited as speaker to many conferences abroad,
mainly next week to Berlin, later on to the U.S. University Colgate,
Los Angeles and Michigan, Zarakolu said: “The government should give
them an answer explaining the real raison of my arrest.”

Zarakolu concluded his letter with the following appeal: “During my
interrogation, they did not ask any question about the organization
of which I was accused of being a member. They questioned me only
about the books that I wrote or edited for publication, the public
meetings where I spoke or attended. I think that everybody should
jointly react against this campaign of arrests that turns into a
collective lynching. These illegal practices should be stopped.”

Chorrord Inknishkhanutyun: Hard-Liner Armenian Police Chief

CHORRORD INKNISHKHANUTYUN: HARD-LINER ARMENIAN POLICE CHIEF

Tert.am
04.11.11

The newspaper reports that the newly appointed chief of Armenia’s
police launched activities by adopting a hard line.

He appointed a staff meeting even before the ex-chief Alik Sargsyan
packed up his belongings.

While Mr. Sargsyan was packing up, Mr. Gasparyan was issuing orders
to his subordinates.

“We are going to work without wasting time on words,” he said.

Ultra-Orthodox Spitting Attacks On Old City Clergymen Becoming Daily

ULTRA-ORTHODOX SPITTING ATTACKS ON OLD CITY CLERGYMEN BECOMING DAILY
By Oz Rosenberg

04.11.11

Clergymen in the Armenian Church in Jerusalem say they are victims
of harassment, from senior cardinals to priesthood students; when
they do complain, the police don’t usually find the perpetrators.

Ultra-Orthodox young men curse and spit at Christian clergymen in the
streets of Jerusalem’s Old City as a matter of routine. In most cases
the clergymen ignore the attacks, but sometimes they strike back. Last
week the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court quashed the indictment against
an Armenian priesthood student who had punched the man who spat at him.

Johannes Martarsian was walking in the Old City in May 2008 when an
young ultra-Orthodox Jew spat at him. Maratersian punched the spitter
in the face, making him bleed, and was charged for assault. But Judge
Dov Pollock, who unexpectedly annulled the indictment, wrote in his
verdict that “putting the defendant on trial for a single blow at a
man who spat at his face, after suffering the degradation of being
spat on for years while walking around in his church robes is a
fundamental contravention of the principles of justice and decency.”

“Needless to say, spitting toward the defendant when he was wearing
the robe is a criminal offense,” the judge said.

When Narek Garabedian came to Israel to study in the Armenian Seminary
in Jerusalem half a year ago, he did not expect the insults, curses
and spitting he would be subjected to daily by ultra-Orthodox Jews
in the streets of the Old City.

“When I see an ultra-Orthodox man coming toward me in the street,
I always ask myself if he will spit at me,” says Narek, a Canadian
Armenian, this week. About a month ago, on his way to buy groceries in
the Old City, two ultra-Orthodox men spat at him. The spittle did not
fall at his feet but on his person. Narek, a former football player,
decided this time not to turn the other cheek.

“I was very angry. I pushed them both to the wall and asked, ‘why are
you doing this?’ They were frightened and said ‘we’re sorry, we’re
sorry,’ so I let them go. But it isn’t always like that. Sometimes
the spitter attacks you back,” he says.

Other clergymen in the Armenian Church in Jerusalem say they are all
victims of harassment, from the senior cardinals to the priesthood
students. Mostly they ignore these incidents. When they do complain,
the police don’t usually find the perpetrators.

Martarsian left Israel about a year ago. He was sent back home by
the church, as were two other Armenian priesthood students who were
charged after attacking an ultra-Orthodox man who spat at them.

The Greek Patriarchy’s clergymen have been cursed and spat on by
ultra-Orthodox men in the street for many years. “They walk past
me and spit,” says Father Gabriel Bador, 78, a senior priest in the
Greek Orthodox Patriarchate. “Mostly I ignore it, but it’s difficult.

Sometimes I stop and ask the spitter ‘why are you doing this? What
have I done to you?’ Once I even shouted at a few of them who spat
at my feet together. They ran away,” he says.

“It happens a lot,” says Archbishop Aristarchos, the chief secretary
of the patriarchate. “You walk down the street and suddenly they
spit at you for no reason. I admit sometimes it makes me furious,
but we have been taught to restrain ourselves, so I do so.”

Father Goosan Aljanian, Chief Dragoman of the Armenian Patriarchate
in Jerusalem, says it is often difficult for temperamental young
priesthood students to swallow the offense.

bout a month ago two students marching to the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre beat up an ultra-Orthodox man who spat at them. They were
sent away from the Old City for two weeks.

“I tell my students that if they are spat at, to go to the police
rather than strike back” says Goosan. “But these are young kids who
sometimes lose their cool.”

A few weeks ago four ultra-Orthodox men spat at clergymen in the
funeral procession of Father Alberto of the Armenian Church. “They
came in a pack, out of nowhere,” said Father Goosan. “I know there
are fanatical Haredi groups that don’t represent the general public
but it’s still enraging. It all begins with education. It’s the
responsibility of these men’s yeshiva heads to teach them not to
behave this way,” he says.

Father Goosan and other Patriarchy members are trying to walk as
little as possible in the Old City streets. “Once we walked from the
[Armenian] church to the Jaffa Gate and on that short section four
different people spat at us,” he says.

http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/ultra-orthodox-spitting-attacks-on-old-city-clergymen-becoming-daily-1.393669