U.S And Turkish Leaders Discussed Relations Between Azerbaijan And A

U.S. AND TURKISH LEADERS DISCUSSED RELATIONS BETWEEN AZERBAIJAN AND ARMENIA

AZG DAILY
09-12-2009

International

Normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations is connected with the
Azerbaijani-Armenian negotiations, said the Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan at press conference after the meeting with U.S.

President Barack Obama, CNN Turk reported, according to an Azerbaijani
news agency..

According to Erdogan, U.S. and Turkish leaders discussed relations
between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

"This is important in the context of relations between Turkey and
Armenia" he said.

Erdogan said that at the meeting they discussed the
Armenian-Azerbaijani talks in the framework of OSCE Minsk Group.
From: Baghdasarian

Purchase And Sale Transactions Of 1 Million 755 Thousand Dollars Car

PURCHASE AND SALE TRANSACTIONS OF 1 MILLION 755 THOUSAND DOLLARS CARRIED OUT AT NASDAQ OMX ARMENIA OJSC ON DECEMBER 7

Noyan Tapan
Dec 7, 2009

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, NOYAN TAPAN. Purchase and sale transactions of 1
million 755 thousand dollars at the weighted average exchange rate of
384.81 drams per dollar were carried out at Nasdaq OMX Armenia OJSC
on December 7. According to the press service of the Central Bank of
Armenia, the closing price made 384.75 drams.
From: Baghdasarian

S. Sargsyan, "Armenia Is Interested In Strengthening And Deepening R

S. SARGSYAN, "ARMENIA IS INTERESTED IN STRENGTHENING AND DEEPENING RELATIONS WITH THE PERSIAN COUNTRIES"

ARMENPRESS
Dec 7, 2009

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS: President Serzh Sargsyan received
today the delegation headed by Foreign Minister of the United Arab
Emirates (UAE) Anvar Gargash.

Presidential press service told Armenpress that welcoming the
high-ranking guests President Sargsyan expressed confidence that their
visit, as well as the activated high-level visits of the latest period
will have a positive role in the strengthening of relations between
Armenia and the Emirates. Noting with gratification the cooperation
dynamically developing between the two countries, Serzh Sargsyan
said that Armenia is interested in strengthening and deepening the
ties with the Persian countries. The president highly assessed the
reserved and balanced attitude of the United Arab Emirates toward
the sensible issues of our region.

UAE Foreign Minister Anvar Gargash expressing gratitude for the warm
reception, conveyed to President Sargsyan the warm greetings and
wishes of UAE president and vice-president. Stressing the interest
of the United Arab Emirates in extending the cooperation with friend
Armenia in political and economic spheres Anvar Gargash assessed his
visit to Armenia and the discussions held here as succeeded.

In regard to the anniversary of the disastrous earthquake in 1988,
the minister expressed condolences to Armenian people saying that
they will never forget that tragic day.

During the talk the sides exchanged ideas on multi-content cooperation,
on issues connected with the work of intergovernmental commission
and cooperation in international organizations.
From: Baghdasarian

EU Skills Seminar Kicks Off In Yerevan

EU SKILLS SEMINAR KICKS OFF IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.12.2009 11:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ British Council Armenia and RA Council of Civil
Service jointly with the RA Ministry of Economy launched a series
seminars in the framework of EU Skills program.

"Representatives of 10 Armenian ministries are participating in
the first seminar to improve their negotiation skills," EU Skills
coordinator Lilit Kalantaryan told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

The second seminar will be dedicated to preparation of reports in
line with the international standards.
From: Baghdasarian

International Volunteer Day To Be Celebrated In Armenia

INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTEER DAY TO BE CELEBRATED IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
04.12.2009 14:44

On Saturday, 5 December 2009 a Volunteer Fair will be launched
in Yerevan, at the Eurasia International University premises. The
event is designed to observe the International Volunteer Day and
is organized jointly by the Professionals for Civil Society public
organization and the Eurasia International University. This fair is
one of the countrywide celebration events initiated by the National
Volunteers Involving Organizations’ Network of Armenia.

The purpose of the event is to introduce the concept of volunteerism
and its practical deployment in Armenia. The Volunteer Fair will get
together students from different Armenian universities as well as
representatives of local NGOs and international organizations. Through
interactive communication including the exchange of information and
hands-on involvement, the participants will learn about volunteerism
opportunities, volunteer involving organizations and also will plan and
design personal commitments based on different volunteer activities.

The Volunteer Fair will be followed by a range of other events in
Tsitsernakaberd Park and Pyunik Association for the Disabled organized
by various volunteer involving organizations operating in Armenia.
From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Armenia Faces Demographic Problem: Azerbaijani Politician

ARMENIA FACES DEMOGRAPHIC PROBLEM: AZERBAIJANI POLITICIAN

Trend
Dec 3 2009
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani politician said that at present, Armenia is facing a
serious demographic crisis.

"A significant number of people left the country (Armenia) within
a short period of time. It is a serious signal. It is impossible to
solve this problem rapidly," the Center for Political Innovation and
Technology director Mubariz Ahmadoglu said at a briefing in Trend’s
press center today.

The politician said that Armenian politicians and experts hoped
that the country will cope with this problem and the population
will increase.

"The research conducted during a year testifies that Armenia faces
depopulation. Moreover, Armenian citizens often leave Armenia,"
he said.

The politician said that financial assistance rendered to Armenia is
used for other purposes.

"Armenia delivers humanitarian aid from Europe and several countries
to increase the military budget", Ahmadoglu said.
From: Baghdasarian

Project On Preservation Of Karmir Blur To Be Submitted By Government

PROJECT ON PRESERVATION OF KARMIR BLUR TO BE SUBMITTED BY GOVERNMENT IN THE NEAR FUTURE

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
02.12.2009 18:43 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Accompanied by Yerevan Mayor Gagik Beglaryan,
Minister of Culture Hasmik Poghosyan and Doctor from Erebuni Museum
Gagik Gurdjian, Premier Tigran Sargsyan Tuesday visited the ancient
site of Karmir Blur (red hill) to conduct a discussion on arranging
the maintenance and preservation of the monument.

Early this year, Armenian Government’s control service found out
that 40 hectares of the territory was covered by construction waste,
while 1.5 hectares formed part of the nearest graveyard.

Dr. Gagik Gurdjian briefed to Premier on the problems and current state
of Karmir Blur. Mr. Sargsyan, for his part, said that Government will
soon submit the program aimed at the maintenance and development of
the historical site. "We must be able to elaborate a strategy enabling
us to preserve the historical heritage, making it a tourist attraction
site," he said.

The program also envisages construction of a road along the border
of ancient settlement.

Karmir Blur is a hill located on the left bank of Hrazdan river.

Archaeologists have found here remains of Teishebaini, an ancient
town-castle (VII-VI centuries B.C.) belonging to Urartian kingdom. In
the VI century B.C., the castle was seized and burnt.

The historical site of Karmir Blur forms part of Erebuni museum. The
excavations conducted here by renowned archaeologist Boris Piotrovsky
from late 1930s till 1971 helped reveal items dating from the VII
century B.C., i.e. the second period of Vienna Kingdom.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Prime Minister Receives Newly Appointed Georgian Ambassador

ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER RECEIVES NEWLY APPOINTED GEORGIAN AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA GRIGOL TABATADZE

ARMENPRESS
DECEMBER 2, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS: Armenian Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan received today newly appointed Georgian ambassador to Armenia
Grigol Tabatadze.

Governmental press service told Armenpress that congratulating the
ambassador on starting his mission in Armenia, the prime minister
expressed assurance that the ambassador’s activity will promote
the new progress in Armenian-Georgian relations. Tigran Sargsyan
highlighted particularly the promotion of economic cooperation and
drew the attention to the circumstance that the current volume of
trade turnover between the two countries is not satisfactory.

The prime minister noted that the possible opening of the Upper Lars
border check-point will have a favorable impact on the further economic
development and will consolidate Georgia’s role as a transit state.

Referring to the issues connected with the Armenian churches
in Georgia, head of the government pointed out the importance of
undertaking relevant steps by the Georgian government to restore St.
Gevorg Church.

The interlocutors discussed also the works of the Armenian-Georgian
inter-governmental commission the eighth session of which is planned
to be conducted in the beginning of the coming year in Yerevan.
From: Baghdasarian

Transitional Period For Tsarukyan

TRANSITIONAL PERIOD FOR TSARUKYAN
Hakob Badalyan

Lragir.am
01/12/09

The absence of the BHK leader at the RP congress was quite interesting
in particular under the latest inner-governmental developments and
the famous video appeared in internet, Gagik Tsarukyan’s latest TV
activeness, the famous "debate" of the BHK leader Gagik Tsarukyan
and the member of the RP board Ruben Hayrapetyan.

Gagik Tsarukyan’s absence was explained by his earlier planned personal
and working visit to the U.S. But the RP congress was also planned on
November 28 and it was not decided say, in the evening of November
27. Gagik Tsarukyan is possible to have planned his visit to the
U.S. earlier than the RP congress day was decided, but whether his
visit was so important not to be able to re-planned.

Perhaps we do not have to make superfluous conclusions. Merely, the
fact that Gagik Tsarukyan is often absent lately from events with
Serge Sargsyan’s participation is a fact. While, Gagik Tsarukyan
left for Russia and Ukraine to participate in the congresses of the
Yedinaya Rossia and Regions’ Party.

Is this a ground to see disagreements between the RP and the BHK
parties? Of course, it is not. The disagreements existing between these
two parties are not to be expressed by their mutual participation in
congresses and conferences. These disagreements lay under the concept
of power and its Armenian perception as well as in the bases of the
transitional period of the government when in Armenia the president
has changed or is still changing with all its consequences.

The point is that in Armenia, power means not only administration
of levers provided for the government by the Constitution but first
control on the economic field and capital. In Armenia, those who
control the economic sphere have the power. Gagik Tsarukyan is one
of the major representatives of that sphere. He reached this status
during Robert Kocharyan’s tenure when he was considered the number
one oligarch even if in Armenia the concept of an oligarch is relative.

Naturally, for a person who reached their present status during
Kocharyan’s tenure the transitional period of the presidential change
cannot be fluent and without problems. Serge Sargsyan, who became
or is becoming the president of Armenia, in order to successfully
complete this process, has to solve the issues on the complete control
on the economic sphere. Naturally, he will seriously deal with Gagik
Tsarukyan succeeded during Robert Kocharyan’s tenure who besides his
economic status, got also some tangible political status.

Now, Serge Sargsyan and Gagik Tsarukyan have the problem on clarifying
Tsarukyan’s economic status. Either Tsarukyan goes on being the number
one oligarch of Armenia owing for it Serge Sargsyan, or Serge Sargsyan
has to have his own "baptized" oligarch.

Alongside with this, Serge Sargsyan’s environs are not to be forgotten
where there are several candidates for that status, Robert Kocharyan is
not to be forgotten either for whom Gagik Tsarukyan is the last circle
connecting him with the power. This is the problem. This problem
arouses objectively, regardless the warm relations of Tsarukyan,
Serge Sargsyan, Robert Kocharyan and others. Power is out of their
personal relations and includes wider issues including ones connected
with international partners.

As once, Robert Kocharyan said during an interview after having left
his office, power supposes for concrete public responsibility it
cannot be in shadow. There is always a concrete responsible person
for the power which is now Serge Sargsyan. Consequently, either he
takes everything under his responsibility or he appears under it.
From: Baghdasarian

Window to The Future

`Window to the Future’
What you need to know about the person shaping Turkey’s muscular new foreign
policy.

Newsweek Web Exclusive
Nov 28, 2009

Expect to hear a lot more of the name Ahmet Davutoglu. The former university
professor who became Turkey’s foreign minister last year is the man behind
Ankara’s landmark new diplomatic outreach, including a previously
unimaginable rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia and a new warmth with
Syria.

Some Western analysts are dismayed at these developments, interpreting them
as a sign that Turkey is turning East at the expense of the West. The
mild-mannered Davutoglu typically gets angry at these suggestions, saying
these comments come from those who begrudge Turkey its expanding role in the
region.

Yet while Davutoglu is no stranger to Turkish politics-he began serving as
chief foreign-policy adviser to the ruling AKP in 2002-he remains something
of a cipher, even in his home country. To remedy that, NEWSWEEK’s
Turkish-language partner, NEWSWEEK Türkiye, recently examined the forces
that shaped Davutoglu and how he is changing relationships with Turkey’s
neighbors in the Middle East, the Balkans, and the Caucasus.

Some of the highlights from the magazine’s comprehensive profile, written by
Yenal Bilgici with reporting by Semin Gümüsel and Nevra Yaraç:

Davutoglu risked the deadly Izmit earthquake to save the manuscript of his
signature book, Strategic Depth: Turkey’s International Position, which lays
out the conceptual framework for what he now calls his "zero problems with
neighbors"policy. When the shaking started on Aug. 17, 1999, he managed to
flee his endangered Istanbul home unharmed-but then ignored warnings of
aftershocks to dash back into the house and eject the computer disk
containing his years of work. Now in its 30th printing, the book brought him
national and international recognition.

The foreign minister is a somewhat reluctant politician. After Turkey’s
ruling AKP won the elections of 2002, he turned down requests to serve in
the government and opted instead to continue his university work while
serving as an adviser to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Five years
later, he was on the verge of a full-time return to academia when rebels
from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) attacked the Daglica military post
in Turkey’s eastern city of Hakkari, killing 13 soldiers. "I cannot leave
now," Davutoglu told his inner circle. Instead, he stayed on to take up the
position of foreign minister and facilitate recent agreements aimed at
granting long-denied rights to the Kurdish minority and ending two decades
of attacks by the PKK.

The peripatetic minister went to 13 countries in October alone, raising
Turkey’s diplomatic profile to its highest level in years. Indeed, Davutoglu
won unprecedented praise in Arabic media, like the London-based Al-Hayat
newspaper, where a columnist begged the foreign minister to help solve
Lebanon’s problems as well. "You carry ideas, aspirations, solutions, and
medicine in your luggage," wrote the columnist. "You are the window to the
future."

Davutoglu may be known for his temperate demeanor, but he has little
patience with Ankara’s political elites and their unassertive approach to
diplomacy. "These rootless elites are conditioned to not being noticed and
not taking initiative rather than coming to the front and being decisive
during critical periods," he wrote in an uncharacteristically sharp tone in
Strategic Depth. "They think of being passive as a safer and risk-free
policy." These criticisms, writes Bilgici in NEWSWEEK Türkiye, are a
beginner’s guide to understanding Davutoglu and his policy. The second
pointer to his character: the minister’s constant use-and embodiment-of the
term "self-confidence."

Davutoglu is also known for his work ethic and self discipline. A family
friend told NEWSWEEK Türkiye that, while working on his book, the professor
once spent three straight days without leaving his chair. A former student
says Davutoglu believes that sleeping eight hours a night is a luxury. "We
do not have the right to sleep this much," he frequently told the student.

Davutoglu’s conscientiousness manifested itself at a relatively early age.
As a high-school student at the prestigious Istanbul High School for Boys,
where he was taught by German teachers who had come to Turkey during World
War II, he presented his teachers with ambitious reading lists of dense
philosophical and scientific works that he thought would serve him well in
the future. His instructors advised him and his friends to go out and play
ball for a while instead. Davutoglu took the advice to heart; even after
he’d become a professor, he continued to play soccer with his students (as a
highly regarded forward), right up until he was appointed foreign minister.

While honing his soccer prowess, Davutoglu was refining his language and
academic skills too. In addition to the German learned in high school, he
took all-English programs to graduate from the economics and political
sciences department of Bogazici University. He learned Arabic while studying
on a scholarship in Jordan, worked on his doctoral thesis at Cairo
University, and learned Bahasa Malaysia while a professor at Malaysia’s
International Islamic University. His thesis, a comparative analysis between
Western and Islamic political theories and images, was published in 1993 by
American University Press with the title Alternative Paradigms: The Impact
of Islamic and Western Weltanschauungs on Political Theory. Davutoglu’s
postdoctoral work included critiques of the theories of Samuel Huntington
(clash of civilizations) and Francis Fukuyama (end of history).

Colleagues say that Davutoglu’s oratorical skills are equal to his writing
ability. "There is no one the minister cannot make drop their guard in 10
minutes," one high-ranking team member told NEWSWEEK Türkiye. One example:
when Ankara refused to allow U.S.-led forces cross Turkish territory for the
2003 invasion into Iraq, a local Jewish leader came over to read Davutoglu
the riot act. The visitor initially said he could only stay 10
minutes-partly because he needed to prepare for a fast the following day-but
ended up spending three hours with Davutoglu after being won over by the
minister’s erudite discourse about Jewish culture, history, and the
background to the upcoming fast. Next time, the Jewish leader said, he’d
like to stay for the day.

Davutoglu is not without his critics, who have accused him of double
standards for criticizing Israel’s actions in Gaza while failing to condemn
the approach of a fellow Muslim-Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir-in Darfur.
But even those who don’t support him see him as a statesman who is both a
thinker and a doer. And right now, he’s the talk of more than just Ankara.

Find this article at

© 2009
From: Baghdasarian

http://www.newsweek.com/id/224713