Head Of Iran’s National Library Meets With Armenian Culture Minister

HEAD OF IRAN’S NATIONAL LIBRARY MEETS WITH ARMENIAN CULTURE MINISTER

Iran Book News Agency
Nov 13 2012
Iran

Head of the National Library and Archives Organization of the Islamic
Republic of Iran Eshagh Salahi met with Armenia’s Culture Minister
Hasmik Poghosyan in Armenia on Tuesday, November 13, 2012.

IBNA: Salahi has traveled to Armenia to meet with the country’s top
cultural officials.

During the meeting, the two sides exchanged views about the two
countries’ cultural relations with a focus on books.

In the meeting, Salahi proposed that the resources available at Iran’s
National Library about Armenia become accessible for Armenians and
vice versa.

For her part, Poghosyan stated that a large festival was arranged in
Armenia highlighting books. “This year, we had a busy year in terms
of the number of conferences and seminars with Iran present at some,”
she said.

As she said, one of the outcomes of Iran’s presence is the popularity
translations of Armenian books into Persian and vice versa have gained
in Armenia.

She further underlined Salahi’s statement about the number of the books
kept at Iran’s National Library, and said, “Like Iran, we enjoy almost
the same number of books in our national library which indicates the
two countries’ care for culture and literature.”

She also noted appointment of the head of Iran’s National Library
by the President as a sign that high ranking officials in Iran care
about books and culture.

She proposed that manuscripts about Iran and Armenia should be
digitally scanned and sent to the libraries of the two nations.

http://www.ibna.ir/vdcd9o0fkyt0ks6.em2y.html

Armenia Replants Trees Burnt In Wartime Blockade

ARMENIA REPLANTS TREES BURNT IN WARTIME BLOCKADE

Deutsche Welle
Nov 14 2012
Germany

War and an energy crisis in the early 1990s compelled Armenians to
cut down thousands of trees for firewood. The Armenia Tree Project
is working to reforest Armenia, but illegal logging poses a major
obstacle.

Mashtots is a typical neighborhood on the outskirts of Armenia’s
capital Yerevan. On a recent Sunday night, children played in the
asphalt streets as families gathered for the weekly khorovats, or
barbecue. Serob Badalyan’s family didn’t think twice about using
a pile of logs and some twigs to make their fire. But Badalyan,
a 34-year-old engineer, remembered a period in the early 1990s when
that would have been out of the question.

“The problem was, we didn’t have energy,” he told DW in an interview.

“That’s why we were going out cutting trees. Sometimes we brought
them home. Sometimes police arrested us and took away our saws. But
then the next day we would go with our friends to bring wood home
and have fire.”

The energy shortage was caused by war. Armenia and neighboring
Azerbaijan fought from 1988 to 1994 over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave
that Azerbaijan claimed as its own while the territory’s Armenian
population wanted independence. Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey
blockaded Armenia. Later on, the collapse of the Soviet Union ended
energy subsidies to Armenia. The result was years of power shortages.

Freezing to death

Yerevan saw below-freezing winter days with just one to two hours of
power, and things were often worse outside the capital. Armenians were
desperate and they took to the country’s forests for firewood. They
burnt everything they found, including their own flooring and
furniture.

Badalyan and his friends returned again and again to an apricot orchard
in the Yerevan neighborhood of Daviteshan. “We were going in groups
of five or six,” he said. “Each time, we would get wood for one of us,
in order to have wood for a week-long period.”

Eventually, the Armenian government turned on a previously deactivated
nuclear power plant in 1995. The move was controversial in its own
right, but brought electricity back to the country.

Desertification threat

Thousands of Armenia’s trees had been cut down. Illegal logging
companies, which continue to operate, also sprang up. As a result,
up to 30 percent of Armenian forests have been lost, according to
a June report by the forest governance program ENPI FLEG, which is
funded by the European Union and other organizations.

“Armenia could become a desert,” said Armine Tokhmakhyan of the Armenia
Tree Project (ATP), an NGO dedicated to reforesting the country.

The organization has been trying to fight deforestation since 1994.

Community outreach programs deliver trees to parks, schools, hospitals
and other organizations that want to spruce up their premises. ATP is
also trying to reforest wide swathes of land in provinces including
northern Lori. The organization reports 80 percent survival rates
for its plants – and says loggers have stayed away from their forests
to date.

ATP grows their trees in three nurseries. DW visited their site in
the town of Karin. Clusters of Soviet-era houses dot long stretches
of dusty terrain leading out of the capital Yerevan. But the town of
Karin is surprisingly lush.

“Most of our visitors write this is an oasis in the desert,”
Tokhmakhyan said. “During our 16 years of hard work, we managed to
give a green look to the village.”

Forest oasis

The village’s main street is lined with robust trees, and ATP’s
nursery fills about a hectare in the center of town. More than 50
species of plants flourish there, including evergreens, fruit trees,
maples, poplars, oaks and many kinds of shrubs. Most of the plants
growing at the facility are native to Armenia, with nine of them in
danger of going extinct, according to government scientists.

The government forestry agency, Hyantar, claims Armenia’s forests are
as big as they were in 1988. The agency reported just 2,425 trees were
illegally logged last year. But environmental activist Luba Balyan
told DW that those figures are way off. In research for EPI FLEG,
she found at least 240 thousand cubic meters of forest had been
illegally logged last year. If her figures are correct, thousands
more trees were lost than the government has registered.

Call for oversight

“It’s quite a lot for Armenia, being the size of Maryland or Belgium,”
she said. “The environmental implications have been really harsh. And
number one is desertification. You’re losing the forest cover. You’re
losing water. And that is a big problem.”

Balyan said most of the logging doesn’t come from villagers scraping
for wood, but large companies that harvest wood en masse while the
government turns a blind eye. Balyan added that those firms sell
the wood to construction companies and furniture makers or import
it abroad.

She has proposed several ways Armenia can reverse the trend, including
strengthening Hyantar’s monitoring programs and updating the forest
code to modern standards. For now, the energy crisis that sparked
the deforestation is a distant memory to most Armenians.

As for the apricot orchard where Badalyan and his friends used to
cut wood, the trees were never replaced.

http://www.dw.de/armenia-replants-trees-burnt-in-wartime-blockade/a-16378733

A Crash Course In International Communication Means Leadership Skill

A CRASH COURSE IN INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION MEANS LEADERSHIP SKILLS, FUN

The Daily Yomiuri(Tokyo)
November 13, 2012 Tuesday

Kimiyasu Ishizuka, Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer, Yomiuri

This is a translation from The Yomiuri Shimbun’s Education Renaissance
series. The article focuses on educational programs designed to
produce personnel–mainly businesspeople–who have what it takes to
play a leadership role in international environments.

“Laugh!” shouted a foreign instructor, instructing fixed pairs of
participants in a leadership development course to lift their hands
to meet those of their partners, moving their upper bodies up and
down or in a circle.

This was an exercise to practice making friends through face-to-face
communication, and a scene from the training program that teaches
employees how to train junior staff.

The Global Leadership Studies program was held from July 9 to July
28 at the International Christian University (ICU) in Mitaka, western
Tokyo, to develop internationally minded company executives. Nineteen
people in their 20s to 40s took this year’s course, the second
iteration of the program that was launched last year. The participants
of the 2012 class were employees from 17 major companies, including
an auto maker and an insurance firm.

During the intensive three-week course, the pupils took classes
conducted entirely in English–including lectures given by
world-renowned business managers and classes in cultural issues,
chemical experiments and other liberal arts. They stayed in a dormitory
on the university’s campus.

Even at night at the dormitory, they gathered in groups of four or
five, busy discussing their ideas for new business plans that could
be carried out by a fictional company as a course project. On the last
day of the course, each group delivered a presentation on its plan.

One of the groups was led by Takako Sato, a departmental sales manager
of financial and global business services at IBM. Her group’s plan
was to run nursery schools in Japan in alliance with nonprofit
organizations based in developing countries.

After the presentation, Sato said, “We didn’t win [the business
planning contest], but we worked together by leveraging each other’s
strengths in the activities.

“When we didn’t have a meeting to prepare for the presentation,
we had casual drinking sessions and lively conversations about our
own workplaces.”

GLS founder is Prof. Grant Pogosyan of ICU. The 59-year-old Armenian
mathematician says that employees’ perspectives often become narrow
after working at the same company for a long time. Pogosyan says
his program will help them to think more flexibly by giving them
the opportunity to interact with those working for other companies
in different fields. This is important for them to gain leadership
skills, he said.

The course fee is 1.23 million yen, but it is popular among companies
as they find it cheaper than the cost of dispatching an employee
overseas for an educational program.

In 2008 the University of Tokyo, also known as Todai, launched a
similar program called the Executive Management Program to cultivate
the next generation of leaders.

In the six-month course, lectures are given every Friday and Saturday
by Todai professors and lecturers from external institutions.

Participants acquire business management know-how, but the course
also puts a strong emphasis on the liberal arts–as does ICU’s program.

About 70 percent of the curriculum of the Executive Management
Program focuses on such liberal arts as philosophy, space science
and brain science.

As the course fee is 6 million yen, many of the course participants are
sent by companies. On Sept. 15, 21 people completed its 7th iteration,
bringing the total number of program graduates to 173.

Keio University offers three-month courses in which working adults and
students, including those from other universities, study and discuss
topics in liberal arts and business. The programs are part of a program
run under the name of Fukuzawa Yukichi Kinen Bunmeijuku–or literally,
“The Fukuzawa Yukichi Memorial Cram School of Civilization.”

About 50 people enroll in each course, and about 40 percent of them
are working adults. Course participants are required to pay a 35,000
yen fee to cover operating costs, but the courses themselves are free.

The current, 8th iteration of the program started Sept. 22.

It is expected that going back to university will foster human
resources who will become internationally competitive in their
respective business fields.

The Nkr Foreign Minister’s Letter Addressed To The Un General Secret

THE NKR FOREIGN MINISTER’S LETTER ADDRESSED TO THE UN GENERAL SECRETARY

2012-11-12 18:01

Excellency,

I am writing to communicate the position of my Government regarding the
issue of the rehabilitation of the Stepanakert airport and in response
to the groundless allegations of the representative of Azerbaijan to
the United Nations contained in a document circulated on 11 October
2012 (A/67/507-S/2012/754).

I feel compelled to provide certain clarifications  with regard to
the fraudulent campaign of Azerbaijan   aimed  at  misleading the
international community and justifying  its  policy  of using force
or the threat of force against the  people  of Nagorno Karabakh.

Since  the  declaration  of  its  independence,  following  the  free
expression  of popular will, the Nagorno Karabakh Republic has been
building its statehood based on democratic values, the rule of law,
respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. The independence of
the Nagorno Karabakh  Republic  withstood  the military aggression of
Azerbaijan and, since the ceasefire agreement of 1994, the Nagorno
Karabakh Republic has been fully and effectively controlling its
territory, including the airspace.

The  rehabilitation  of  the  Stepanakert  airport  is  the  sovereign
 right  of  the Nagorno  Karabakh  Republic  and  pursues  solely
civilian  and  humanitarian objectives, including the realization of
such a basic human right as the freedom of movement.

The freedom of movement of the civilian population of the Nagorno
Karabakh Republic,  alongside  other  human  rights  outlined  in
 the  Universal  Declaration  of Human  Rights  and other core
international  instruments,  have already  been continuously and
vehemently undermined by the ongoing Azerbaijani blockade.

The position of Azerbaijan, which openly declares its aim to fully
blockade the Nagorno  Karabakh  Republic  and  the  Republic  of
Armenia,  runs  counter  to  the Security   Council   resolutions
referred   to   in   the   communication   of   the  Azeri delegation.

The stance of Azerbaijan is a clear manifestation of its outright
disregard for human rights and fundamental freedoms as a continuation
of its policy of the collective punishment of the civilian population.

The  bellicose  rhetoric  and  threats  to  shoot  down  civil aircraft
 in  particular, voiced by the high-ranking Azeri officials, are in
material breach of its international obligations and contradict the
provisions of the Convention on International Civil Aviation.

Such threats, along with the statements on the highest level declaring
all the Armenians of the world as enemy number one of Azerbaijan,
are a vivid example of the long-established anti-Armenian hysteria and
xenophobia of its state policy. The pardon and nationwide glorification
of Ramil Safarov, Azerbaijani officer, who was convicted of and
sentenced to life imprisonment in Hungary for perpetrating a brutal
hate crime, a manslaughter, is the most shocking recent manifestation
of that policy.

In this context, my Government  considers the steps taken by the
Government of  the  Republic   of  Azerbaijan,   in  particular
declarations   on  undertaking   “all necessary  measures”  in order
to prevent the functioning  of the Stepanakert  airport along  with
previous   threats  to  shoot  down  civil  planes,   as irresponsible
  and politically charged actions.

The stance of Azerbaijan clearly violates the basic principles
of international civil aviation. Moreover, it runs counter to the
commitments  undertaken voluntarily by Azerbaijan  in the framework
of the negotiation  process  mediated  by the States serving as
Co-Chairs of the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation  in  Europe,  namely  France,  the  Russian  Federation
and  the  United States of America. On 13 July 2012, the Co-Chairs
stated that, regarding reports of the planned opening of an airport
in Nagorno-Karabakh, they had received renewed assurances from the
sides that they would reject any threat or use of force against civil
aircraft,   pursue   the   matter   through   diplomatic   steps  
and   refrain   from politicizing the issue.

The authorities of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic are committed to
operating the  Stepanakert  airport  in  full  compliance  with
 the aims  and  objectives  of  the Convention on International
Civil Aviation, including but not limited to meeting the needs  of
 the peoples  of  the  world  for  safe,  regular,  efficient  and
economical  air transport;   insuring   the  safe  and  orderly
growth  of  international   civil  aviation throughout the world;
encouraging the development of airways, airports, and air navigation
facilities for international civil aviation; promoting safety of
flight in international air navigation; and promoting generally the
development of all aspects of international civil aeronautics.

I therefore count on your assistance, Mr.  Secretary-General,  and
that  of the United  Nations  and  its  specialized  agencies,  as
well  as  all  peace-loving  Member States,  in the  rehabilitation
of the  Stepanakert  airport  in order  to ensure  that  the people
of the Nagorno  Karabakh  Republic  are able to exercise  their  basic
 human rights and fundamental freedoms.

I strongly   believe   that the rehabilitation   of the Stepanakert
airport   will contribute to the realization of the aims and objectives
of the Convention on International Civil Aviation. It may also serve
as a confidence-building measure contributing towards progress in the
negotiation process under the auspices of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs.

Please accept, Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration.

Karen MIRZOYAN

Stepanakert, October 26, 2012

http://nkr.am/en/news/2012-11-12/465/

Expert: Azerbaijan Pursues One Purpose: To Distort Essence Of Negoti

EXPERT: AZERBAIJAN PURSUES ONE PURPOSE: TO DISTORT ESSENCE OF NEGOTIATION PROCESS

Panorama.am
14/11/2012

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry’s representative has announced that
Baku is ready to begin negotiations with Armenia over the big peace
agreement, stressing that protraction of the conflict is unacceptable
to them.

Panorama.am asked political expert Tigran Abrahamyan to comment on
the matter.

“The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry’s statement pursues one purpose:
to distort the essence of the negotiation process. At first sight,
it seems that Azerbaijan shows constructive approach, expresses
readiness to continue the negotiations. But only at first sight.

“How can the sides pass on to negotiations over the big peace agreement
while they failed to agree on the basic principles?

Azerbaijan in essence rejected the basic principles document in Kazan
in 2011, and put forward 10 new proposals.

“From the above mentioned we can conclude that despite its assurances,
in reality, it is Baku that delays the negotiations with its steps,
which is indeed inadmissible,” said the expert.

France-Armenie : Le President Hollande Veut Renforcer Les Echanges E

FRANCE-ARMENIE : LE PRESIDENT HOLLANDE VEUT RENFORCER LES ECHANGES ECONOMIQUES BILATERAUX

Quotidien du Peuple
13 nov 2012
Chine

Le president francais Francois Hollande a declare lundi vouloir
developper les relations economiques entre la France et l’Armenie,
a l’occasion de la visite de son homologue armenien, Serge Sarkissian.

“Nous pouvons nous feliciter des echanges culturels, linguistiques,
mais nous voulons aller beaucoup plus loin encore dans les echanges
economiques”, a affirme M. Hollande, s’exprimant devant la presse
a l’Elysee, a l’issue de son entretien avec M. Sarkissian. “Nous
pourrions faire encore davantage”, a-t-il ajoute, invitant l’Agence
francaise de developpement a “multiplier se activites et ses soutiens
de facon a ce que, notamment dans les domaines de l’agroalimentaire ou
des transports, nous puissions aller dans les meilleures directions”.

La France est, en effet, un gros investisseur en Armenie, puisque,
selon le Quai d’Orsay, elle se placait au premier semestre 2011 au
premier rang des investisseurs etrangers dans ce pays du Caucase,
devant la Russie.

Le president socialiste francais a reaffirme, en outre, sa volonte de
faire adopter une nouvelle loi penalisant la negation du genocide
armenien. Un premier texte en ce sens, presente et vote par la
precedente majorite de droite, avait fini par etre censure par le
Conseil constitutionnel en fevrier dernier.

Face a cet engagement hexagonal, M. Sarkissian a tenu a exprimer
“toute la reconnaissance de l’Armenie et du peuple armenien au
president francais, a la France et a tout le peuple francais pour sa
position claire et nette sur la question si importante pour nous du
genocide armenien”.

La France a adopte, le 29 janvier 2001, une loi sur la reconnaissance
du genocide armenien, qui est toujours en vigueur. En ce qui concerne
la penalisation de sa negation, l’Elysee a indique, en juillet dernier,
chercher “un chemin, une route qui permette d’avoir un texte compatible
avec la Constitution (francaise)”.

http://french.peopledaily.com.cn/International/8016519.html

Djorkaeff, Parrain Du Phonethon

DJORKAEFF, PARRAIN DU PHONETHON

Le Parisien
Vendredi 9 Novembre 2012
France

VAL-DE-MARNE; Le saviez-vous?

Le champion du monde de foot 1998, Youri Djorkaeff, sera, cette annee,
le parrain du Phonethon, accompagne par le directeur des sports de
France Televisions, Daniel Bilalian. Organise par le Fonds armenien
de France, le Phonethon est une operation humanitaire au profit de
l’Armenie et du Karabagh, qui se deroule la semaine prochaine. Pendant
quatre jours, plus de 650 benevoles contactent par telephone environ
60000 familles et entreprises francaises, notamment depuis cinq centres
d’appels. Youri Djorkaeff sera present jeudi au centre d’appels de
Cachan et fera un tour a la radio armenienne d’Alfortville.

Most Active Factions In Armenia’s Parliament

MOST ACTIVE FACTIONS IN ARMENIA’S PARLIAMENT

tert.am
13.11.12

A recent monitoring of Armenia’s National Assembly has rated the
political factions’ activeness based on the number and frequency of
speeches delivered and the questions asked.

The members the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) turned
out the most active speech makers (13 speeches). The next in the
ranking are Prosperous Armenia (5), the opposition Heritage party
(5), the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaksutyun (ARF-D;
8), the opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC; 8) and the Rule
of Law party (8). In terms of their activeness in asking questions,
the parties were rated as follows: RPA (29), Prosperous Armenia (11),
Heritage (7), ARF-D (12), ANC (14), Rule of Law (10).

The monitoring has further revealed two speeches and four questions
by independent MPs.

But the records above are thought to be of a quantitative rather
than a qualitative nature given the lawmakers representation in
the parliamentary factions. The ANC, which has only seven members
(eight times less than the ruling political force) and the ARF-D
(whose representation in parliament is ten times less than that of
the ruling force) have appeared twice less active than the Republicans.

Armenia Negotiates With China To Get Status Of Guaranteed Tourism Co

ARMENIA NEGOTIATES WITH CHINA TO GET STATUS OF GUARANTEED TOURISM COUNTRY

tert.am
13.11.12

Economy ministry officials are working for the formation of legal
field for the tourism sphere. “We are cooperating with a number of
countries for the development of the sector.

Currently the negotiations are underway with China. As a result Armenia
will acquire “Guaranteed Tourism Country” status in their market,”
deputy economy minister Ara Petrosyan told the reporters on Tuesday,
adding that such like talks will be held with Egypt, Sri Lanka, Qatar,
Jordan and Spain.

The deputy minister said a new tourism direction – organization and
conduction of meetings, conferences and different events – should be
developed in Armenia.

“During the days of international conference in Yerevan we have
conducted the regular sitting of tourism council of the CIS member
states with the participation of tourism sphere representatives of
the member states,” he said, adding that the guests expressed opinion
that Armenia is secure and reliable country for tourism.

She said by the end of the year 4-5 representatives of Spanish hotels
will arrive in Armenia for talks and making investments in hotel
sector in Armenia in future.

38 Kenyan Officers Killed In Worst Single Incident

38 KENYAN OFFICERS KILLED IN WORST SINGLE INCIDENT

November 13, 2012 – 15:20 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – In the worst single incident for Kenyan police in
living memory, 38 officers were killed in northern Kenya over the
weekend by heavily armed cattle rustlers, according to injured police
reservists who were on the scene, CNN reports.

Local media reports put the number at between 37 and 42 dead. Internal
Security Minister Katoo Ole Metito would not give a total figure on
how many police officers had died.

The police officers were part of an operation to recover cattle
belonging to the Samburu tribe that had been stolen by the Turkana
tribe, according to the minister. They were ambushed in a valley
when a large group of Turkana fired on police, leaving dozens dead
and many injured.

The Turkana and Samburu, both pastoralist groups, have frequently
engaged in tit-for-tat cattle rustling operations over many years.

Villages in the region are heavily fortified by residents, and it’s
not unusual to see cattle herders armed with automatic rifles.

In the most recent incident, Turkana raided the Samburu last month
and took a large amount of cattle, according to the internal security
ministry.

The Kenyan government intervened and gave an ultimatum for the Turkana
to return the cattle last week, or it would respond with force. The
Turkana did not meet the deadline, prompting the police operation
that ended in tragedy.

Both Turkana and Samburu leaders have frequently asked for more
security in the region from the government. They say the police are
outmanned and outgunned.

0