BAKU: S Sargsyan explains to "NKR" separatists serious concessions

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
June 19 2009

Serzh Sargsyan explains "NKR" separatists that serious concessions to
Azerbaijan have no alternative

20 June 2009 [10:02] – Today.Az

According to Armenian Tert.am, the Graparak newspaper has published
information about talks around Karabakh as well as a version of the
discussed map.

Referring to "information from reliable sources", the newspaper reads
that Serzh Sargsyan said "NKR" separatists there is no alternative to
serious concessions to Azerbaijan for a way out of the situation,
established in Armenia.

According to this information, international peacekeeping troops will
be dislocated in Lachin, while the so-called "security belt around the
unrecognized "NKR" – (Armenian occupied regions) – will be returned to
Azerbaijan in turn.

At the same time , the earlier occupied Fizuli, Aghdam, Cebrail,
Kubalti, Zangelan and Kelbajar will be returned to Azerbaijan.

URL:
From: Baghdasarian

http://www.today.az/news/politics/53264.html

ANKARA: Cancellation would hurt Turkey’s image: France

Hurriyet, Turkey
June 19 2009

Cancellation would hurt Turkey’s image: France

PARIS – France is continuing with its preparations at full speed to
host its Turkey Season as planned between July 1 and March 31, 2010,
even though ErdoÄ?an has signaled a possible cancellation. The
nine-month-long event is set to introduce Turkey, in all facets, to
the French people

Amid threats from Turkey to cancel the event at the last minute,
France is working at full speed to host its "Turkey Season" as
planned. The nine-month-long event is set to introduce Turkey, in all
its cultural, social and economic facets, to the French people,
Europe’s most vocal opponents to Turkey’s entrance into the European
Union.

"Canceling it would be the best present given to the enemies of Turkey
and France. Such a thing would clearly hurt Turkey’s image in France
and in Europe," Stanislas Pierret, the commissar responsible for the
"Turkey Season in France," told the Hürriyet Daily News &
Economic Review during an interview at his office late Wednesday.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an last week signaled that he
would consider canceling the season in response to French President
Nicholas Sarkozy’s statements that Turkey should be satisfied with a
"privileged partnership" instead of being made a full member of the
EU. ErdoÄ?an has already canceled a dinner with the sponsors of
the season and made clear that he will not be supporting the
initiative.

It was also reported that President Abdullah Gül would not be
be present during the Turkey Season’s July 4 opening
ceremony. Although the Turkish leaders are not expected to participate
in the events, the Foreign Ministry and Ankara in general seems
inclined to proceed with the implementation of "Turkey Season" as
planned.

Pierret said he knew about the Foreign Ministry’s statements denying
the cancellation rumors, but was not aware of Gül’s decision
and that France is continuing with its preparations at full speed. The
season will take place between July 1 and March 31, 2010, and will be
officially announced by the two countries’ culture ministers June 30
in Paris. The foreign and culture ministries of France and Turkey are
supervising the process.

Leading a young team composed of Turks, French and one Italian,
Pierret and top aide Arnaud Littardi are responsible for the
coordination of all activities. "You see, it’s a European team,"
Pierret said while introducing them. Pierret and Littardi have both
served in Ankara at the French Cultural Institute, likely the reason
why they were chosen for this hard task. On the Istanbul end of the
preparations, Görgün Taner and Nazan Ã-lçer of
the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts, or İKSV, are the
responsible parties.

This year’s event ‘more complicated’

"The difference in the Turkey Season from the [events] held for other
countries in previous years is that it will not be concentrated only
on one topic," said Pierret. "Apart from cultural activities, it will
have a strong economic dimension and create an environment for
cooperation between the universities. It’s not a festival. It’s
something much more complicated."

Littardi said the activities and performances will take place in
nearly 40 cities and will not be confined to Paris. Large cities such
as Bordeaux, Lyon, Strasbourg and Marseille will all host some events
during the season.

This is a courageous decision when one considers that Marseille, for
example, is home to a strong Armenian diaspora and Strasbourg has many
Turkish citizens of Kurdish origin who frequently criticize Turkey’s
policies in mass demonstrations.

In fact, some program events will specifically address the members of
the Armenian community and Kurds. Aynur DoÄ?an, a Turkish artist
of Kurdish origin, will take part in a concert along with Mercan Dede,
Rasim Bıyıklı, DJ Sufi and DJ Yakuza in Nantes,
during the July 14 celebrations of France’s Republic Day.

Noting that Istanbul has been designated as the 2010 European Capital
of Culture, Pierret said this magic city would be introduced to French
public opinion with all its different cultures, including those of the
Jewish and Armenian communities.

Pierret said the goal of Turkey Season is to re-introduce the richness
of Anatolia to France. "We are just organizers. Turkey will introduce
itself: its energy, its reforms, its developments," he said. "Those
who know only clich?s about this country will have to reconsider."

Though the Turkey Season primarily targets a French audience, some
events will take place in the touristy parts of Paris, so they will
also attract international visitors. A traditional Turkish coffeehouse
will be set up in the Tuilieres Gardens district of Paris between July
15 and Aug. 15 to serve tea and coffee with traditional Turkish
delight to guests. Some 10 million visitors pass through this district
during the tourism high season. The Louvre Museum will host three
separate expositions during the event.
From: Baghdasarian

EU Summit approved `Eastern Partnership’ program launch

EU Summit approved `Eastern Partnership’ program launch
20.06.2009 15:07 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Upon completion of 2-day summit, state and
governmental leaders of 27 EU member states approved `Eastern
Partnership’ program launch. `Eastern Partnership’ is an important and
mutually beneficial tool for multilateral collaboration with Eastern
neighbors of EU, conclusive communiqué of the summit emphasized.
The project was officially launched on May 7 in Prague. The program
stipulates for allocation of Euro 600 million funding until 2013 for
strengthening of state institutions, border control and development of
small companies in post-soviet republics (Ukraine, Byelorussia,
Moldavia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia).
From: Baghdasarian

Exports From Armenia Halved In The Past Five Months

EXPORTS FROM ARMENIA HALVED IN THE PAST FIVE MONTHS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.06.2009 20:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the past five months exports from Armenia
decreased by 47.8 per cent and totaled 76.4 billion AMD, RA National
Statistical Service reports. Meanwhile, compared with the same
period of last year the decrease of imports was only 29.9 per cent,
so imports reduced to 374.8 billion AMD.

As the RA National Statistical Service reports, over January-May of
this year Armenia’s foreign trade turnover reduced by 33.7 per cent
compared with the same period of last year and totaled 451.2 billion
AMD. Country’s foreign trade deficit reached 298.4 billion AMD in
the past five month.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenia Approves Amnesty Proposal

ARMENIA APPROVES AMNESTY PROPOSAL
Lena Badeyan

"Radiolur"
19.06.2009 19:31

The Armenian Parliament today approved President Serzh Sargsyan’s
proposal on declaring an amnesty with 98 votes for, 1 against and
3 abstentions.

The general pardon will apply to about 2 000 people by September
31. Some prisoners will be set free, others will have their sentences
cut. The amnesty will apply to approximately 90% of the persons jailed
after the riots in Yerevan on March 1, 2008, Armenian Minister of
Justice Gevorg Danielyan said.

Will the general pardon apply to Deputies Hakob Hakobyan, Myasnik
Malkhasyan, as well as Gagik Jhangiryan and Smbat Ayvazyan? As for
Nikol Pshinyan, and MPs Sasun Mikaelyan and Khachatur Sukiasyan,
there are certain preconditions. The amnesty will apply to Khachatur
Sukiasyan and Nikol Pashinyan if they appear before June 30.

According to MP Zaruhi Postanjyan, all in all, 18 persons detained
after the March 1 riots in Yerevan will not benefit from the amnesty.

Let us remind that amnesty was among the requirements of the PACE
Resolutions. Does this mean that thus Armenia is implementing its
commitments before the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe? Head of the Armenian delegation to PACE David Harutyunyan
assures that "if the amnesty was the requirement of the Council of
Europe, it would have been declared in April." "This is a domestic
political issue," he added.

David Harutyunyan considers that the amnesty will help mitigate the
tension among the Armenian society and create a basis for cooperation.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Kickboxing Team To Leave For Spain To Participate In World

ARMENIAN KICKBOXING TEAM TO LEAVE FOR SPAIN TO PARTICIPATE IN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
17.06.2009 15:41 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On June 22, Armenian kickboxing team will leave
for Madrid, Spain, to participate in World Kickboxing Championship
due on June 23-27. The team will arrive in Spain on June 22, RA
Kickboxing Federation Chair Garnik Hayrapetyan told a PanARMENIAN.Net
correspondent.

"Our federation has invested its best efforts for our kick-boxers
to be in good shape before championship. The preparatory activities,
including trainings, food and medical services, were organized on a
high level. I have great expectations from our kick-boxers. I hope
we’ll bring at least three gold medals," he said.

Armenian national team (chief coach: Arthur Arshakyan) will consist of
7 kick-boxers, including adult class sportsmen Melsik Baghdasarayan
(weigh class 53 kg.), Garik Tsaturyan (champion of Europe, w.c. 64
kg.), David Yeginyan (world champion, w.c. 64 kg.), Levon Sargsyan
(w.c. 50 kg.), Grigor Keyan (world and European champion, w.c. 57
kg.) and junior class kick-boxers Hrant Hayrapetyan (w.c. 55 kg.) and
Vardan Ghazaryan (w.c. 53 kg.).

During 2007 world championship, Armenian national team achieved
brilliant results, having won 9 gold medals. After the European
kickboxing championship organized in Kharkov in April 2009, our
sportsmen returned with 4 gold, 1 silver and 3 bronze medals.
From: Baghdasarian

Facebook Employees Speak Their Mind On Holocaust Denial

FACEBOOK EMPLOYEES SPEAK THEIR MIND ON HOLOCAUST DENIAL
by Michael Arrington

TechCrunch
loyees-speak-their-mind-on-holocaust-denial/
June 15 2009

The Facebook Holocaust denial debate rages on. Facebook’s position is
clear, Holocaust denial groups and content is fine (nipples aren’t):
"Just being offensive or objectionable doesn’t get it taken off
Facebook. We want it [the site] to be a place where people can discuss
all kinds of ideas, including controversial ones."

Facebook has also said "we have a lot of internal debate" about the
issue. And based on what we’ve seen from public comments by Facebook
employees, they remain proud of their company’s position on the issue.

The first statement came from Ezra Callahan, currently on the PR team,
who wrote "You do not combat ignorance by trying to cover up that
ignorance exists. You confront it head on. Facebook will do the world
no good by trying to become its thought police." Facebook Spokesperson
Randi Zuckerberg supported Ezra, saying "Really well-written,
articulate, and insightful note by Facebook employee Ezra Callahan
on being a Jewish employee and supporting Facebook’s policy to not
remove groups that deny the Holocaust."

Over the weekend Facebook employees really got fired up over the
issue. Six current and former employees commented on a post I wrote
about advertisers starting to balk at their ads being shown around
this content. Robert Scoble noticed the debate and started his own
over on MobFeed.

There is a common theme – that protection of free speech outweighs
any damage caused by the existence of this content. That’s an argument
that both eBay and MySpace have thrown out the window, by the way.

I think it’s important that we force our government to stay out of
deciding what’s permissible and not as speech, as much as possible. But
private companies don’t have the luxury of a Constitution to force
their hand, and free speech experts clearly think that private
companies can and should make their own decisions on this type of
content. They have the freedom to make subjective choices between
right and wrong. To lean on the Constitution and argue a misguided
notion that they are pursuing a higher cause isn’t just intellectual
dishonesty, it’s irresponsible. To see this kind of hateful content
with a Facebook logo sitting right next to it makes me embarrassed
to be a member. Apparently, most Facebook employees are far from
embarrassed. Those willing to speak out are uniformly in favor of
keeping the content.

The lone exception, Net Jacobsson, is no longer with the
company. That’s a scary signal – one one that isn’t lost on
current Facebook employees. The company has a policy and can use the
Constitution to make its case. Stand with us or stand apart. Is there
really not one single current Facebook employee who thinks this policy
is wrong?

The comments are below:

Blake Ross: "I’m a Facebook employee, so I’ll go on record: If
Facebook changes its policy on this, it will be wrong, and I will
not be proud. Our current policy is correct, notwithstanding your
irrefutable citation of a USA Today op-ed."

Blake Ross: "And just to be clear, I’m speaking as myself, not as a
representative of the entire company. I know this blog was confused
about that the last time Randi decided to express her thoughts."

Adam Mosseri: "I don’t understand how one can rationalize censorship,
no matter how wrong or evil the message. It’s not the place of
government, news media or communication platforms to tell anyone
what they can or cannot say. I’m a Facebook employee and speaking
for myself, not as a representative of the company."

Adam Mosseri (responding to me pointing out that he supports all
speech, no matter how hateful): "The KKK is a terrorist organization
which pose an active threat to the safety of others. Hateful messages
to Jews are personal attacks which violate the rights and safety
of victims. Denying the Holocaust is ridiculous and deplorable,
but forming a group to talk about it isn’t an affront on anyone’s
safety. Implying that the senseless murder of a guard at the Holocaust
Memorial Museum in DC means that all people with similar beliefs pose
a threat to the safety of the others is not only irrational, but is
also an offensive abuse of a tragedy to further a policy agenda that
pays no respect to the victim or his family."

Ddam Mosseri (continues): "I believe that censoring someone because
you disagree with them is wrong, but I acknowledge our obligation to
the safety of our users trumps free speech. Taking down the KKK page,
which contained specific threads, was necessary. You’re saying that
these Holocaust denial groups, none of which seems to have more than
140 members, are presenting a threat to the safety of other people,
and I’m disagreeing. These groups are not responsible for the actions
of the murderer in DC, and you’re implying otherwise. Undermine my
opinion all you like, call me a sheep if you like, but I was open
about the fact that I’m an employee – which, incidentally, doesn’t
mean I don’t have a right to my own opinion."

Dave Willner: "Full disclosure – Also a Facebook employee, simply
expressing my own opinion. I find your apparent inability to accept
that people at the company genuinely disagree with you remarkable. We
all totally get that you hold your belief that Facebook’s stance
on this issue is the wrong one in good faith. But if you want
to seriously claim some sort of moral high ground you should, at
minimum, do those who disagree with you the courtesy of returning
the favor. The stance the company is taking essentially aligns
with the Constitutional restrictions on the US Government’s ability
to criminalize speech. Before anyone raises the canard, I totally
understand and completely accept that Facebook is not bound by those
restrictions. However, I also don’t think that fact is relevant to the
moral force of the arguments underpinning the argument. Either using
coercive power to censor others except in cases of direct threats to
violence is morally dubious or it isn’t. If it is, then Facebook’s
policy here is the right one. If it’s not, then the America’s radical
free speech protections are wrong. Getting a private company to do
the censorship doesn’t change the moral calculus."

Dave Willner (responding to another commenter): "Thinking carefully
and in detail about an issue that affects more than 200 million people
isn’t "mental gymnastics", it a duty. Stop avoiding the question
with ad hominems and false assertions. Argue against the argument. If
protecting the Freedom of Speech except in cases of direct threat is
a moral imperative, then it’s a moral imperative. If you think that it
isn’t, please explain why. I am willing to be convinced…but only by
actual reasoning, not by assertions of fact, accusations of bad faith,
and the statement of simple equivalences."

Blake Ross: "> at the end of the day you just want to fit in with your
colleagues." I"’m baffled by these odd rationalizations. Facebook is
an extremely outspoken and heterogeneous group of people. Employees
disagree with each other and the company all day every day, and
quite loudly. I’ll be the first to say that we really fuck things
up from time to time, but fortunately this isn’t one of them. We’re
disagreeing with you because we believe you are wrong. We have the
same debates internally."

Andrew Bosworth: "Jessica – I’m pretty sure you just accused Dave
Willner of empty rhetoric in the same post you compare him to a
Nazi. Ironically, he is making a valid point and you are doing nothing
but spewing hate. Don’t you realize that has real implications in the
lives of real people in the world? You aren’t just enabling it, you’re
part of it! This argument is a microcosm of the issue in general, at
what point is the judgment on hate speech just the majority enforcing
its views on the minority? Yelling fire in a crowded building isn’t
protected (legally or morally) because it directly infringes on the
physical safety of others, something they have a right to in our
moral judgement. I think it is pretty clear that these groups pose no
such imminent threat. They are distasteful and ignorant to all of us,
but they should not be shut down unless they pose a credible threat
to the physical safety of others, such as through threats of violence."

Dave Willner: "Please advance an argument against the idea that
protecting free expression except to prevent direct harm is a moral
imperative. Thus far, the collective response has consisted entirely
of false equivalences, attacks on the idea of reasoning, ad hominems,
incorrect/incomplete/misinformed assertions, and accusations of bad
faith on the part of Facebook. I will not answer these in detail,
since they simply are not arguments. However, since we are now in
the business of quoting others, let me add some passages of my own:
"…there ought to exist the fullest liberty of professing and
discussing, as a matter of ethical conviction, any doctrine, however
immoral it may be considered…the only purpose for which power can
be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community,
against his will, is to prevent harm to others." "The peculiar evil of
silencing the expression of an opinion is, that it is robbing the human
race; posterity as well as the existing generation; those who dissent
from the opinion, still more than those who hold it. If the opinion is
right, they are deprived of the opportunity of exchanging error for
truth: if wrong, they lose, what is almost as great a benefit, the
clearer perception and livelier impression of truth, produced by its
collision with error." – John Stewart Mill, "On Liberty" "We are not
afraid to entrust the American people with unpleasant facts, foreign
ideas, alien philosophies, and competitive values. For a nation that
is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open
market is a nation that is afraid of its people." – John F. Kennedy
"If we don’t believe in freedom of expression for people we despise,
we don’t believe in it at all." – Noam Chomsky "Books won’t stay
banned. They won’t burn. Ideas won’t go to jail. In the long run of
history, the censor and the inquisitor have always lost.

The only weapon against bad ideas is better ideas." – Alfred Whitney
Griswold, New York Times, 24 February 1959â~@³

Dave Willner: "@David Appletree – You’re still evading the
question. The fact that you don’t like the politics of the person
making a statement has no bearing on the truth of that statement. I’m
not always Chomsky’s biggest fan either. But that has absolutely
nothing to do with the matter at hand. @Jessica – While I still
do not agree with your conclusions, I wanted to start by thanking
you for earnestly addressing the argument directly. Quick note, I’m
(still) speaking for myself here, not the company. I do not believe
that Holocaust Denial, as an idea on it’s own, inherently represents
a threat to the safety of others. While despicable and untrue, it
doesn’t not necessarily call for violence against anyone. Any groups
which actually directly call for violence, or are so directly racist
that their prejudice is a de facto call for violence are already
removed….regardless of the idea underdiscussion. I understand that
attempting to dispute historical violence could potentially be used
to undermine the victims of that violence, but that is simply not
a direct threat. Look at the question this way – if Facebook were
to remove Holocaust Denial groups, what else should the company
also remove as categorically similar? Among other things, it would
push the company towards removing any speech arguing that any other
historical instance of wide spread violence didn’t happen/wasn’t as
bad as the accepted narrative, e.g. 9/11 conspiracy theory, Armenian
genocide denial, potentially groups like "Palestine is not country",
large numbers of Serbian nationalist groups that dispute whether
break away states are properly countries, etc. Those examples just
scratch the surface. I think the crux of our disagreement is the
notion you expressed by writing, "We wish to be clear — we have
no issues with legitimate political discourse that is contextual,
comparative, and truthful." While I, personally, have pretty definite
views on the truth/falsehood of these issues, Facebook as a company
does not and should not attempt to judge the truth value of ideas
discussed in the content we carry, provided it does not meet a number
of very clear exceptions (direct threats of violence, attempts to
defraud our uses via spam/phishing, etc). Making judgements about
truth value necessarily requires Facebook as a company to have an
official version of the history of the world. It’s relatively straight
forward to have set views on the Holocaust. But the proposition gets
much much more difficult when you try to take on issues that are
less well known in the English speaking world, but matter no less to
the lives of those they affected. Having a set version of the truth
for all events ever/anywhere involving significant violence is an
unachievable proposition on it’s face. Plus, it’s clearly censorious
and runs directly counter to Facebooks purpose as a communication
platform. I also do not believe it’s teneble to special case the
Holocaust. First, special casing any event inherently deprioritizes
other peoples suffering, which I think is pretty morally dubious. While
I totally agree that it was the worst instance of industrialized mass
murder in history…I’m very wary of using that as grounds because
it strikes me as weak place to think from. If a similar tragedy that
claimed more victims happened tomorrow would the Holocaust be any less
horrifying? Clearly the answer is no but the "worst ever" logic points
to an answer of yes. If we then tried to special case two events,
the question becomes why only stop at those two events? Anyway,
while you’ve yet to convince me, thank for directly addressing
the questions. This kind of discussion is productive for everyone,
especially when we don’t agree."

Dave Willner: "What if someone wanted to post a group entitled
‘Most people who are gay are homosexual due to sexual abuse’? I have
no idea whether this statement is truthful or not, but shouldn’t
Facebook leave it up so we could all engage in discourse about
it? Investigate it? Hash it out? What if someone put up a group
called ‘The Bible frowns upon homosexuality’ or ‘Gays can choose
not be gay’?….I’ll tell you right now, FB employees who have
their own fan page against California Prop 8 would go nuts if
they saw such groups and they’d delete them faster than your head
could spin."
h ttp://
"

Dave Willner: "If protecting the Freedom of Speech except in cases of
direct threat is a moral imperative, then it’s a moral imperative. If
you think that it isn’t, please explain why." Likewise, if you think
discussion of the Holocaust can/should be handled differently than
discussion of the many other incredibly horrible events in human
history, please explain why. If you instead believe that it fits into a
broader category of tragedies that can/should be handle differently,
please specify which events and what criteria should be used to
select them. Finally, quoting you above: "The only thing that gets you
people to take action is negative publicity, the threats of lawsuits,
or government action, etc." If that were the case, wouldn’t we have
already changed our stance? This article isn’t exactly seem favorable."

Net Jacobsson (former employee): "As a former Facebook employee. I
really disagree with their policy on this. This is not about freedom
of speech – its about hate. Facebook can as a private company take a
firm stance against hate on its platform. Even President Obama, said
last week in Buchenwald that holocaust denial is hate.. "To this day,
there are those who insist that the Holocaust never happened," Obama
said at a news conference at the gates of the camp. Such statements
are "ignorant, baseless and hateful." Facebook is a very powerful
platform for sharing, spreading information & organize people. I
believe that with such a powerful tool demands a higher sense of moral
responsebility. It is never too late to change and its is never too
late to say "we were wrong". Again – this is not about the freedom
of speech – its about hate."

Mark Slee: "Michael, you’ve crossed the line here. You are now taking
advantage of the senseless murder of an innocent civilian and using it
to further your own personal agenda against Facebook’s policies. This
behavior is shameful and dishonest. This murder has nothing to do
with Facebook. Grow up. Rather than turning this travesty into a tool
in your policy crusade, let’s all show the victim and his loved ones
the respect they deserve."
From: Baghdasarian

http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/06/15/facebook-emp
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2201212877
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=87767017523
www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=150174035284

BAKU: Visiting US official sees "historical chance" for peace in NK

ANS TV, Azerbaijan
June 11 2009

Visiting US official sees "historical chance" for peace in Karabakh

Visiting US envoy has said that a historical opportunity has emerged
to promote peace and security in the region.

Speaking about the regional security and the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict visiting US Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs Philip Gordon told journalists that a historical
opportunity emerged to promote peace and security and that the USA was
ready to do its best to settle the conflict.

"I will discuss the Nagornyy Karabakh issue in the meetings with
Azerbaijani officials and will deliver the USA’s view of the conflict
settlement. A historical opportunity has emerged to promote peace and
security and the USA is ready to provide any support in this issue. I
cannot specify a concrete time for settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict but I think there is some progress. We are seriously engaged
in this issue. A solid agreement exists about settlement of the
conflict on basic principles. I think each party will benefit from
settlement of the conflict. A date should be appointed for separate
meetings and summits. Any contact or a meeting between the parties
with our support is a good idea. I hope that a progress will be made
soon. This is very important to us," Philip Gordon said.

He was shown speaking in English with overlaid Azeri translation.
From: Baghdasarian

MCC Chief Executive Officer: Responsibility For Stopping Road Constr

MCC CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER: RESPONSIBILITY FOR STOPPING ROAD CONSTRUCTION FUNDING REMAINS WITH GOVERNMENT OF ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
June 11, 2009

YEREVAN, JUNE 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The U.S. Government’s Millennium
Challenge Corporation (MCC) Board of Directors, chaired by
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, today held its
quarterly meeting to discuss the progress of its poverty reduction
programs worldwide. As a result of the meeting, MCC will not resume
funding for any further road construction and rehabilitation. This
was mentioned in the MCC press release placed on the official website
of the Embassy of U.S. in Armenia.

According to the same source, the hold on funding is a result of
actions by the government of Armenia that are inconsistent with MCC
principles promoting democratic governance.

"MCC regrets that it cannot move forward with funding road construction
in Armenia. However, the responsibility for this outcome remains with
the government of Armenia, whose actions have been inconsistent with
the eligibility criteria that are at the heart of the MCC program,"
Acting MCC Chief Executive Officer Rodney Bent said.

He also mentioned that he does not not anticipate that the Board will
revisit this issue in the future.
From: Baghdasarian