"ArmNet 2012" current year innovation is in the field of mobile comm

”ArmNet 2012” current year’s innovation is in the field of mobile
communication

11:20, 8 December, 2012

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS: ”ArmNet 2012” Information
Technology’s third international conference entitled ”Brands and
digital technology” declared its launch on December 8. Orange Armenia
Company marketing director Aram Lazarian stated in the briefing with
Armenpress, the exhibition is of great importance regarding to the
history of Armenian digital web history.

”Reportedly ArmNet has already become populous in Armenia. The event
sums up all the efforts of the companies engaged in the formation of
online content” Lazarian noted. In his words passing three years
coincide with the boom of the internet. ” Currently internet is
available even in remote villages, which greatly contributed to the
development of Armenian internet contact.” ArmNet 2012” pan Armenian
web-conference and competition seeks to determine landmark for the
development of internet in coming years.

”ArmNet 2012” pan Armenian web contest awards ceremony is scheduled
to take place on December 8 at 20:30 pm. Maeutica Company, Orange and
Armenia’s Internet community are the organizers of ”ArmNet 2012”
annual series of events.

From: Baghdasarian

Baku: Nalbandian Accuses Azerbaijan Of Rejecting Proposals Of Osce M

NALBANDIAN ACCUSES AZERBAIJAN OF REJECTING PROPOSALS OF OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS

APA
Dec 7 2012
Azerbaijan

Dublin. Victoria Dementeva – APA. “Unfortunately, no result has
been achieved during the co-chairs’ visit to the region, because the
Azerbaijani side rejects all proposals of the co-chairs successively.

We see that Azerbaijan intends to disrupt the work done within the
OSCE mandate,” said Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian at
the 19th meeting of the OSCE Ministerial Council, APA’s correspondent
reports from Dublin.

He noted that Azerbaijan has taken a maximalist position in
negotiations and is impeding the work of the Minsk Group: “The
Azerbaijani side strongly tries to replace the mediators and denigrate
their efforts. Azerbaijan is pursuing a policy of hatred against
Armenia and constantly taking steps contradicting the principles of
civil society”.

Touching on Ramil Safarov’s case Nalbandian said that “this person
has become a symbol of national pride and example for people and it
poses a threat to the regional stability”.

He expressed his concern over “constant threats of Azerbaijan to use
force in Nagorno Karabakh”. Nalbandian said that Armenia is on the
side of the co-chairs towards the peaceful settlement of the conflict:
“We also regret that no progress has been achieved in Kazan summit.”

From: Baghdasarian

Baku: Azerbaijani Fm: Absense Of Joint Statement On Nk Due To Yereva

AZERBAIJANI FM: ABSENSE OF JOINT STATEMENT ON NAGORNO KARABAKH DUE TO YEREVAN’S UNCONSTRUCTIVE POSITION

Trend
Dec 7 2012
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, Dec.7 / Trend, E.Tariverdiyeva /

The absense of a joint statement of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs
and the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, is due to
Yerevan’s non-constructive position, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister
Elmar Mammadyarov told journalists when commenting on the results
of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs’ meeting within the 19th annual
meeting of the OSCE Ministerial Council in Dublin.

“Unfortunately, because of Yerevan’s non-constructive position, which
has a habit of renunciating of its previous agreements, we could not
agree on a joint statement of the co-chairs and foreign ministers,”
Mammadyarov said.

The minister said that the absense of Yerevan’s political will and
decisive steps is due to the presidential elections in Armenia.

As Mammadyarov said, unfortunately, the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk
Group did not use enough persistency regarding this issue.

Mammadyarov stressed that the core of the problem is the presence of
Armenian Armed Forces on Azerbaijani territory, which greatly impedes
resolution of the conflict. Even starting the withdrawal of the troops
from the Azerbaijani occupied territories will create conditions for
the beginning of the conflict resolution

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan.

Armenian armed forces have occupied 20 per cent of Azerbaijan since
1992, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding
districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France and the U.S. –
are currently holding peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

From: Baghdasarian

Ankara: The Good, The Bad And The Shrewd

The Good, The Bad And The Shrewd

Hurriyet, Turkey
Dec 7 2012

Send to friend ” Share on linkedinEleftherios Venizelos, the
illustrious statesman and former prime minister of Greece, once noted
that the well-being of small nations is guaranteed by, 1) Realism;
2) Avoidance of illusions of grandeur; and 3) Being consistent in
their alliances with powerful, even if selfish, allies.

Apparently, Venizelos’ homeland wellness prescription is the
antithesis of neo-Ottoman Turkey a century later. And no doubt,
Turks love that antithesis. Betting and other means of gambling are a
Turkish pastime. I no longer hope to see crumbs of realism in Turkey’s
foreign policy calculations, but I am still wondering whether crumbs
of consistency will remain the rare commodity forever.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his foreign policy czar,
Ahmet Davutoglu, should decide, for the sake of an elementary level
of consistency, whether the “world order” they praise and condemn at
the same time is good or bad.

For instance, the United Nations is good when its General Assembly
upgrades Palestine to non-member state status. But the U.N. Security
Council is bad when it does not do as Mr. Erdogan thinks it should
do about Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The U.N. is also bad when
it does not grant Palestine full member state status.

The old League of Nations was bad when it passed resolution after
resolution to condemn the Turkish occupation of Cyprus. It was so very
awful when it treats Hamas as a terrorist entity. But it was good when
its secretary-general did not even bother to reply to any of the 20
or so Israeli appeals this year to stop attacks on its citizens. It
was good when it deplored, condemned or strongly deplored Israel;
called on Israel to do this, took note of previous calls on Israel
or deeply regretted that Israel had done this or that.

The United States is good when it treats the Kurdistan Workers’
Party (PKK) as a terrorist entity. The U.S. is good when it allows
the Islamic headscarf on its campuses, or when Congress blocks a bill
recognizing the Armenian genocide. It is also good when it supports
a concerted move to topple Mr. al-Assad.

But it is bad when its president does not ban a video that insults
Islam, or because its president in fact believes what the Turks did to
the Armenians was genocide. The U.S. is also bad because it refuses to
bomb Damascus and treats Hamas like it treats the PKK. It is so very
bad when some American states allow gay marriages or when Washington
declares that Israel has a right to self-defense.

Just like Russia, which is good when tens of billions of dollars in
trade flow over the border with Turkey, but bad when it holds the
key to topple Mr. al-Assad and remains an ally with him.

Or like France, which is bad when its Parliament makes it illegal to
deny the Armenian genocide and is suddenly good when its Constitutional
Council scraps that bill. France is bad if run by Nicolas Sarkozy
and good if run by Francois Hollande. But France is good because
it has recognized the Syrian Opposition V.2 as the sole legitimate
representative of the Syrian people.

And NATO was good when it bombed Moammar Gadhafi’s Libya. But it is
bad because it does not bomb al-Assad’s Syria. It was bad because
it forced us to deploy a radar system on our soil to intercept
potential missiles from Iran. We agreed, but we will be angry if any
ally attempted to share any information collected by that radar with
Israel. All the same, NATO is so very good as it has agreed to deploy
the Patriot air defense system on our soil.

The West, in general, is bad because it allowed Israel to have its
nuclear weapons. It is also bad because it does not allow Muslim
Iran to have its own nuclear arsenal. It is especially bad because
thousands of Syrians are dying in a civil war. But it was not so bad
when hundreds of thousands of Iraqis were killed or forced to flee
their homeland under bombs and bullets.

You may not believe it, but all that is not the foreign policy doctrine
at the kindergarten in your neighborhood.

December/07/2012

From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Opposition Responds Ruling Party Mp Accusations On Scandal

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION RESPONDS RULING PARTY MP ACCUSATIONS ON SCANDAL IN COMMITTEE ON ETHICS

news.am
December 07, 2012 | 22:35

YEREVAN. – The decision by the Committee on Ethics of Armenian
Parliament regarding the opposition ARF Dashnaktsutyun MP Armen
Rustamyan’s application examination is absolutely legal, temporary head
of the Committee and opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC) MP
Nikol Pashinyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am commenting on the statement
by the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) MP and Committee
member Davit Harutyunyan, who claimed the decision was illegal.

According to Pashinyan, the Committee made a legal decision based on
parliamentary and the Committee laws and no one can claim the opposite.

To note, the Committee on Ethics temporary head Pashinyan convened a
snap session on Friday, which also discussed Rustamyan’s application
regarding the issue of absence of 83 MPs during the Nov. 21
parliamentary session.

From: Baghdasarian

A Truth Commission For Georgia

A TRUTH COMMISSION FOR GEORGIA

Anna Dolidze, Thomas de Waal Article, December 5, 2012

The issue of what constitutes justice has come to the forefront of
political life in Georgia.

On October 1, the Georgian Dream coalition won a decisive and widely
unanticipated victory in Georgia’s parliamentary election. What
might be called a historic “democratic moment” saw a peaceful
handover of power through the ballot box to a new prime minister,
Bidzina Ivanishvili. However, controversy has followed the election,
particularly as a result of a series of arrests of officials associated
with the previous governing party.

A furor has erupted in Georgia, with the arrests becoming the
number-one issue of public debate in the country. The new government
finds itself facing competing demands. On the one hand, the new
leaders are accused of pursuing “political justice” and have heard
expressions of serious concern from Western officials. In a meeting
with Ivanishvili on November 16, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Philip Gordon warned that if the new government was seen to be applying
“selective prosecutions” that could affect “Georgia’s reputation in
the world and its path towards the Euro-Atlantic institutions.”

Thomas de Waal

Senior Associate Russia and Eurasia Program

On the other hand, the government evidently believes it has a popular
mandate to investigate and punish what are allegedly very serious
abuses committed by its predecessors. Some observers warn that the
public could turn against the government if Ivanishvili is seen as
submitting to Western pressure.

Georgia needs a way to overcome past injustices without further
dividing society. It is essential for Georgia’s peaceful development
that it tackles this issue fairly and effectively. Here, the country
can learn from the experiences of other emerging democracies that
have faced similar problems. To bolster the rule of law in Georgia,
the government should take a “transitional justice” approach to its
political and legal problems by forming a truth commission to examine
controversial cases from the past.

Politics and Justice Collide in Georgia

The political culture in Georgia remains very polarized after a
bitterly contested election. The next few months will be critical,
especially because two men who declared each other mortal enemies
during the campaign are now forced to work side by side: President
Mikheil Saakashvili, who remains in office into 2013, and Prime
Minister Ivanishvili.

The prime minister enjoys more day-to-day authority, but until October
2013 when constitutional amendments enter into force that transfer many
of the powers of the presidency to the prime minister, the president
retains authority in several important areas, including the power
to dismiss the cabinet and parliament and to return a draft law to
parliament. (The Georgian Dream currently has 85 seats out of 150 in
parliament-although it hopes to win more as a result of defections from
the former governing party. To overturn a presidential veto it needs 91
votes, and to make constitutional changes it needs 101.) Gigi Ugulava,
the mayor of Tbilisi and a close ally of Saakashvili, also remains
in office and is opposing the new government on a number of issues.

Meanwhile, the new public prosecutor, Archil Kbilashvili, has filed a
series of charges against former public servants. Ironically, he has
at his disposal the instruments of the very same criminal justice
system that he is recommending be investigated for abuse.

On November 7, 2012, former interior minister Bacho Akhalaia and
former army chief of staff Giorgi Kalanadze were arrested on charges of
exceeding official powers, which have since developed into accusations
of torture and abuse. Akhalaia may also face charges relating to
other decisions he took during his official career, such as the
violent suppression of a riot in Tbilisi Prison No. 5 in March 2006,
when he was prisons minister, and the death in custody of a retired
military officer, Sergo Tetradze, last year.

A second wave of arrests followed on November 15, resulting in
charges being filed against eleven former Interior Ministry officials,
including the deputy mayor of Tbilisi, Shota Khizanishvili.

The arrests present Georgia’s political class with a difficult set
of issues. It is important that there is justice and accountability
for crimes and abuses committed in the past, but equally vital that
justice is seen to be fair and apolitical. There is also a political
imperative for healing and unity-the most revered person in the
country, the patriarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church, Ilia II, has
called for reconciliation, expressing the hope that “there will be
no revenge, there will be no enmity and instead we will be brothers.”

Failings of the Rule of Law

The furor around these arrests, both in support of and in opposition
to them, reflects that the rule of law is probably the most critical
problem for present-day Georgia. In fact failings of the rule of
law could be called the “dark side” of the 2003 Rose Revolution,
which unfortunately-and despite the efforts of nongovernmental
organizations such as the Georgian Young Lawyers’ Association and
Human Rights Watch-received less attention than the government’s
anticorruption and economic reforms.

Nine years after President Mikheil Saakashvili came to power, Georgia
possesses what could be described as strong “technical institutions,”
such as its Central Electoral Commission or traffic police, but not
durable legal institutions. Data from the World Economic Forum’s
annual Global Competitiveness Report illustrates the nature of the
problem. In the organization’s latest report Georgia is ranked second
out of 144 countries for the number of days required to open a business
and ninth when it comes to “burden of government regulation.”

However it comes in 95th place with regard to “judicial independence,”
a lowly 131st place when it comes to “property rights,” and in 141st
place with regard to “effectiveness of anti-monopoly policy.”

A pattern was set in the period immediately after the Rose Revolution
when Saakashvili and his government began detaining many officials
from the government of Eduard Shevardnadze who were widely believed
to have enriched themselves at the people’s expense. There was little
sign of due process and most of the cases were dropped as soon as
substantial funds or assets, worth millions of dollars in total,
were handed over. In one case raised by human rights watchdogs,
former official Sulkhan Molashvili, said that he was tortured with
cigarette burns and electric shocks while in custody.

Asked in November 2012 whether he regretted the way these men had
been arrested, President Saakashvili did not deny that due process
was not observed. But he said that there was a “big, big difference”
between the actions undertaken by his government and the present
spate of arrests because the men arrested under his government
“proved themselves corrupt.”

The Saakashvili administration also presided over dozens of
controversial economic cases in which businesses or properties were
confiscated. Many of these expropriations are now being contested
by the former owners. The claimants range from small property owners
living on sites that the government planned to develop as major new
tourist zones to tycoons formerly close to the Shevardnadze government
to regular businessmen. In one example among many, businessman Jemal
Leonidze, who was jailed in 2010 on fraud charges and is still in
prison, says that his company Magnati-2006 was forced into bankruptcy
and its assets devalued after it was targeted for takeover by the
government.

A Legacy of Zero Tolerance

In 2006, the president unveiled a new and harsh “zero tolerance”
policy on crime, as a result of which petty crime fell significantly.

This led to a sharp increase in criminal cases in which acquittals
were virtually unknown, with more than 99 percent of criminal cases
brought to court ending with a conviction. According to the Ministry
of Justice, the policy was aimed at “transforming the public’s attitude
towards crime, decreasing the crime rate to a minimum, and eradicating
impunity by reacting to every single crime, including minor [ones].”

The government also adopted the new process of “plea bargaining,”
loosely tailored to the American model. The number of plea bargains
climbed steadily over the years, with more than 9,000 such agreements
being concluded in 2008. In 2009, more than half of cases were
concluded in this manner, with defendants agreeing to plead guilty and
pay “damages,” thus avoiding a jail sentence. These agreements turned
into a big revenue-generating tool for the government: in the first
eight months of 2009, they contributed about $55 million dollars to
the Georgian treasury.

The “zero tolerance” policy gave new powers to the police, which
became a feared institution. In enforcing the new policy, the police
made extensive use of a Soviet-era law dating back to 1984, which
allows for the ninety-day detention of suspects on police testimony
(the new government says it plans to end this practice).

The policy led to an increase in the excessive use of force by police
and a growing number of deaths during arrest. In 2011, the ombudsman
(called the public defender in Georgia) reported that “force used
by police during arrest often exceeds the allowed limit and in some
cases reaches the degree of a crime itself.” In 2005-2006, 73 arrests
resulted in the deaths of 25 suspects, nearly all of them unarmed.

Criminal investigations into the use of excessive force by the police
were only initiated on four occasions. Official inquiries into such
incidents have taken place in only 2 percent of all cases.

A notorious case of police abuse attracted wide public attention
in 2006. A twenty-eight-year-old bank clerk, Sandro Girgvliani,
was tortured and killed by police officers after an altercation
witnessed by senior officials in the Interior Ministry. Two junior
police officers were given relatively short jail sentences for the
murder and later pardoned. In April 2011, the European Court of
Human Rights sharply rebuked the Georgian government for creating a
“culture of impunity inside the Interior Ministry” and ordered it to
pay reparations worth $65,000 to Girgvliani’s father.

The most egregious human rights problem the new policies created was in
Georgia’s prisons. Georgia’s prison population has tripled since 2004
and in 2012 stood at 23,227. Georgia now has the highest per capita
prison population in Europe, with 514 prisoners per 100,000 citizens,
and the sixth highest out of 221 prison systems in the world. The
number of deaths in prison rose unprecedentedly as well. In 2006,
89 people died in prisons, and that number rose to 140 in 2011.

In total during last six years, 653 prisoners have died within the
prison system, and according to the public defender, at least 6.57
percent of those deaths resulted “from violence.” As a comparison,
in 2009 the average prison mortality rate in Europe was 28.9 to 10,000
inmates, while Georgia’s rate was 71.6-the third highest in Europe.

Gavin Slade, an expert on criminal justice issues in Georgia, has
observed that the country’s penal system has borrowed aspects of
both the U.S. and Russian prison systems. He notes, “Georgia has
combined the worst of both of these worlds: it is a world leader in
imprisonment, lacks any rehabilitative philosophy, and its corrections
system has become an economic system in its own right. In short,
crime-control became more than about law and order; it became a system
of governing a whole array of social problems in Georgia.”

Conditions in jails played a major role in the election campaign
when shocking video evidence of torture and abuse, including rape,
from Tbilisi’s notorious Gldani Prison was leaked to two opposition
television channels. Evidence suggests that this kind of treatment
was an endemic practice. The most recent public defender’s report
declares that “inhuman and degrading treatment remains one of the
principal challenges of the Georgian penitentiary.” For instance,
a man currently imprisoned in Prison No. 2 in Kutaisi was said to
have been beaten, stripped naked, and humiliated by officials. In
a seminar on civil society and human rights in Georgia in June 2012,
Tamar Chugoshvili of the Georgian Young Lawyers Association has stated,
“many defendants [in remand] end up in Prison No.8 in Gldani, which
is notorious for problems of ill-treatment, and this contributes to
the high number of defendants who wish to enter a plea bargain.”

It is the political fallout from this criminal justice system that
Georgia now needs to address.

In Search of Justice

The new Georgian government has declared that it will tackle this
legacy of human rights abuses and review controversial past cases. An
encouraging sign is that the new minister of justice, Thea Tsulukiani,
is a respected lawyer who formerly worked at the European Court of
Human Rights in Strasbourg. At the same time the government, backed
by a substantial constituency, has been accused of using the arrests
as political retribution.

So far the government has not offered a general policy statement on
what it considers appropriate criteria for prosecution or pardon. As
if to illustrate this, a working group in the new parliament set
up by Georgian Dream devised a list of 184 people whom it deemed
“political prisoners” and recommended them for release. But the
criteria according to which the list was drawn up were unclear,
prompting two nongovernmental organizations to pull out of the group.

The new government needs to respond to three categories of crimes
allegedly committed under Saakashvili’s rule, all of which are
perceived to have political elements. The first category encompasses
physical crimes, including extrajudicial killings, torture, inhuman
and degrading treatment, beatings, illegal arrests and imprisonment.

The second includes crimes against privacy and personhood, such as
illegal surveillance, wiretapping, harassment, and threats. And the
third involves economic issues, such as the arbitrary deprivation of
property and business.

At the moment two options are being discussed in Georgia for dealing
with this issue systematically: the formation of a parliamentary
investigative commission and the retrial of cases through the general
courts.

Both of these approaches are problematic, however. Prosecutions
initiated as a result of an investigative commission set up by
the parliamentary majority might be perceived as being politically
motivated.

Nor is it a viable option to reopen a large number of trials.

Georgia’s current judicial corps would not be capable of dealing with
these issues. Most of the current judges were appointed during the
Saakashvili era, and some of them have issued convictions in cases
widely believed to have had a political character and to have been
marred by procedural violations. Moreover, Georgian judges do not enjoy
the trust of the public, as they are perceived by many to have been
political appointees of the previous administration. The judiciary
was regarded as one of the least-trustworthy public institutions in
Georgia in a 2009 survey by Transparency International.

Just as importantly, with the increased number of criminal cases and
shortened time frames for criminal trials, judges are now facing an
overwhelming workload. As a result, adding new cases to the existing
docket, many of which are highly complex and involve evidence going
back many years, will not result in a swift application of justice.

A Truth Commission for Georgia

So that it can strike a fair balance between the demands of justice
and political fairness, as well as the pressures of time, Georgia
should adopt a “transitional justice” process to deal with this
complex challenge. The approach should be similar to the ones applied
in South Africa, Argentina, Timor Leste, Sierra Leone, and Peru.

At first glance, it may seem strange to compare Georgia to these
countries, most of which saw massive violence committed in civil
conflict. However, the pattern is similar, even if the scale is
smaller. At issue are alleged serious abuses, a disputed political
legacy, and the need for a temporary justice mechanism that is seen to
be fair and bridges a political transition, during which the country
is building a legal system that commands universal respect.

Georgia’s new transitional justice commission can be endowed with
a range of powers, including the power to summon witnesses and to
recommend that some persons be prosecuted in the criminal courts and
others pardoned. The overall goal of the process is to make a definite
break with the past by confronting the root causes of an abusive system
and providing a historically grounded narrative about it. To borrow
French philosopher Ernest Renan’s definition, its task is to determine
what Georgia should remember, as a nation, and what it should forget.

One attractive model for Georgia, given the issue of how to deal
with a police and state security apparatus accused of abuses, is the
Argentinian National Commission on the Disappeared. The commission’s
task was to investigate the mass disappearances of people between
1976 and 1983 and to uncover the facts involved in those cases. Its
acclaimed report, Nunca Mas (Never Again), based on thousands
of testimonies and interviews, documented how approximately 9,000
disappearances took places and how the system made this possible. It
also made recommendations for the future. The Argentinian commission’s
report was crucial in establishing a reparations program for the
victims, strengthening its rule of law, and prosecuting a number of
members of military junta.

Georgia’s Truth, Justice, and Reconciliation Commission will deal with
a more modest number of cases that nonetheless have a deep impact on
a small and polarized society.

In order to enjoy legitimacy, the commission needs a strong mandate
and a strong basis in society. Above all, it needs to be independent.

The commission itself should have broad authority to define its own
mandate, including the time period it should address and what cases
it should investigate, but a deadline by which the commission must
complete its work should be specified in a statute. It should also
have the power to review criminal cases already initiated by the
new government.

The Georgian commission could follow the example of its Argentinian
counterpart and be composed of thirteen individuals. The procedure
for making appointments could be similar to the process through which
Georgia’s Constitutional Court justices are appointed: six members
appointed by the prime minister, three by the president, three by the
parliament, and one member appointed by the Georgian Orthodox Church.

Because the commission’s tasks are urgent, the process of appointment
should be public yet relatively swift.

The appointed individuals should be competent, highly credible, and
authoritative, and they need to enjoy a high degree of public trust
across society. For that reason, the commission should also aspire
to meet gender balance and to include Georgia’s ethnic minorities.

Commission members should be figures of authority, who come from a
variety of backgrounds, including history, economics, and ethnography
was well as law. They do not need to have been neutral, yet they
should not be a member of any political party.

The commission also needs to be given the power to be effective. That
means that it must be well funded and adequately staffed, with a
mandate that gives it the power to summon witnesses and ensure the
cooperation of law enforcement agencies.

Finally, the commission must have the trust of the public and
be transparent. The public should be constantly kept abreast of
developments. The commission should determine itself whether it
will hold public hearings, but regardless, it should accept a large
number of depositions from individuals and create a scrupulous record
of testimonies. The commission’s report should be presented to the
parliament and made publicly available on government websites as well
as at government offices.

Georgia’s new leadership is facing an ongoing political crisis, for
which a transitional justice commission, adapted to face Georgia’s
needs and challenges, is the right instrument. Timing is of the
essence: a swiftly created mechanism can help avert a looming political
confrontation. Over a longer time period, if it is allowed to do its
work effectively, Georgia’s Truth Commission could help usher in more
fundamental respect for the rule of law and would set the country on
the path to a democratic future.

Anna Dolidze is a visiting assistant professor of law at Western
University and a Joachim Herz Fellow at the German Marshall Fund. She
is a former chairperson of the Georgian Young Lawyers’ Association.

From: Baghdasarian

http://carnegieendowment.org/2012/12/05/truth-commission-for-georgia/eqdm#

Baku Spreads Its Aggressive Stance Onto Others – Armenian Fm

BAKU SPREADS ITS AGGRESSIVE STANCE ONTO OTHERS – ARMENIAN FM

December 7, 2012 – 18:41 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Many international organizations on human rights
alerted about flagrant cases of racism, intolerance and violations of
human rights in Azerbaijan, on the policy of hatred against Armenians,
RA Foreign Minister said.

“Azerbaijan is not only ignoring the expectations of the international
community, but is constantly taking new steps against the values
of civilized world. The latest such case is the Azeri government’s
release and glorification of the murderer Safarov, who had slaughtered
with an axe Armenian officer in his sleep, during a NATO program in
Budapest simply because he was Armenian. The Azerbaijani leadership
made him a symbol of national pride and an example to follow by youth.

The world’s reaction was unanimous in condemning what was done by Baku,
which has seriously undermined the Nagorno Karabakh negotiation process
and endangered the fragile regional stability,” Edward Nalbandian
said at Dublin-hosted OSCE ministerial council meeting.

“Azerbaijan poses a threat to the regional security by constantly
menacing to use force against Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia along with
daily war-mongering, by rejecting the proposals on the consolidation
of the ceasefire, by systematic provocations and ceasefire violations,
by ceaseless acts of vandalism towards the Armenian historical and
cultural heritage.

Azerbaijani authorities are notorious for violations of fundamental
freedoms in their own country, and are now trying to spread this
behavior onto others. Their approach is – if a state is not recognized,
then the people living there should be deprived of the human rights
and fundamental freedoms. According to this logic, the people in the
Nagorno Karabakh Republic should not exercise the right to freedom
of movement, be cured, get education, use drinking water and even
give birth,” Minister Nalbandian said.

From: Baghdasarian

People On The Outskirts Of Stepanakert Complain Of Waste Disposal

PEOPLE ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF STEPANAKERT COMPLAIN OF WASTE DISPOSAL

Thursday, 06 December 2012 14:38

“In contrast to the past years when cows were greasing and hens
were scratching near the dustbins today the refuse is obligatorily
taken away in time. Yet some people have not given up their habit
of throwing the litter near the dustbin,” Mrs Alina, inhabitant of
Heqimyan street, says.

Director of “Sanitary Purification” public non-commercial organization
Alexey Seiranyan assures of the proper implementation of waste disposal
and reports that there are more than 200 waste disposal posts with
700 dustbins in the capital. Waste disposal is performed every day
by means of 18 cars.

“The gathered waste is thrown away into the central dump near Berqadzor
village, Askeran region, where every day the refuse is covered with
a layer of soil by means of a tractor,” A. Seiranyan noted in his
interview to Karabakh-open.info and added that in the nearest future
the central dump will be transported to another place.

The transportation of the central dump is conditioned by the future
exploitation of the airport.

However, not all inhabitants of the capital are satisfied with the
waste disposal. “It is two years I have lived in this street but I
have never carried out the litter to the dustbin as it is too far
from our house and both in rainy weather and in winter it becomes
extremely hard to carry the trash out,” Gayane, an inhabitant of
Naberezhnaya street explains and adds that the inhabitants of the
street who own a car prefer to carry the refuse out by car.

The inhabitants of Hin Armenavan district have the same problem,
part of them cannot carry the trash out to the single place for it as
it is quite far away. According to A. Seiranyan however, they tried
to locate some dustbins in the district but each of the inhabitants
required it to be placed far from their house.

“As the inhabitants did not come to an agreement we had to locate
another dustbin near the railway station at a distance of 200-300
meters from the residential settlement,” he noted.

On part of the trash that is poured into the River Karkar Seiranyan
assured that the area was under their control and the trash could
never be poured into the river as one of their employees watched the
place every day and gathered the litter.

Some of the inhabitants of the district assured that they throw the
trash in the area near the River Karkar as it was impossible to carry
it so far away. “In spite of this we are demanded to pay for waste
disposal whereas the company does not perform its duties properly”,
a woman of 55 years old says.

From: Baghdasarian

http://karabakh-open.info/en/societyen/2604-en541

Dink Foundation: Turkish Media Hate Speech Targets Armenians Most

DINK FOUNDATION: TURKISH MEDIA HATE SPEECH TARGETS ARMENIANS MOST

10:54, December 7, 2012

The Istanbul based Hrant Dink Foundation has issued a media study
showing that Armenians in Turkey and overseas were the most targeted
in hate speech articles and news reports between May and August in
2012 in Turkey.

The Foundation identified 101 op-eds and news articles targeting
national, ethnic and religious groups during the period. 35
items focused on women and individuals with non-mainstream sexual
orientations.

The report concludes that the groups most targeted were Armenians,
Christians, Jews and Greeks, in that order.

The report notes: “Out of this group, the aspect that stood out
the most in terms of hate speech towards Armenians, which we
may identify as a fixed category, was their association with the
[terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party] PKK within the context of the
recently intensifying conflict. This discourse, produced through
an understanding that “Muslim Kurds are harmless and the PKK is an
Armenian movement,” was also seen to be reproduced at times with
content targeting Christians and Jews. However, the most dominant
assertion was that of Armenians supporting the PKK, looking for
opportunities to harm Turkey, the “eternal enemy,” and being a risk
factor.”

According to the Foundation study, newspapers with a
nationalist-conservative bent provided the most space to hate speech.

The study singled out Milli Gazete, Yeni Akit, Ortadoðu, Yenicað and
Yeni Mesaj as leading the hate speech list.

The Hrant Dink Foundation has been monitoring the media for hate
speech since 2009. It says its main purpose is to combat racism,
discrimination and intolerance in Turkey. The foundation monitored
approximately 1,000 local newspapers and all national newspapers
through the Media Monitoring Center using various key strings (such
as collaborator, Turcophobe, separatist etc.).

From: Baghdasarian

http://hetq.am/eng/news/21324/dink-foundation-turkish-media-hate-speech-targets-armenians-most.html

Jeep Trial Open International Rally To Be Held In Armenia

JEEP TRIAL OPEN INTERNATIONAL RALLY TO BE HELD IN ARMENIA

16:42, 6 December, 2012

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. “Adrenalin” Extreme Sport Association
together with “Armentel” will organize Jeep Trial open international
rally in Armenia. The rally, entitled “Zangezur Extreme 2012” will
be held in Kapan, Syunik region on December 16.

“Armentel” informed “Armenpress” that participants of the competition
will have to overcome artificial and natural obstacles on the
road of the rally. The organizers are considering implementation of
various modern facilities in different parts of the road. The fastest
participants will be declared winners. They will have to cross the
road before the other participants with minimal penalty points.

Chairman of “Adrenalin” Extreme Sport Association Artashes Stepanyan
stated: “We remain loyal to our principles and “Adrenalin” Extreme
Sport Association is organizing such events in the regions as
frequently as possible in order to discover new talents. Athletes
from Georgia, Russia and Iran regularly visit Armenia to partake in
the events organized by “Adrenalin” Extreme Sport Association.”

From: Baghdasarian