Lithuanian Parliament Panel Greenlights Setting Up Embassy In Armeni

LITHUANIAN PARLT PANEL GREENLIGHTS SETTING UP EMBASSY IN ARMENIA

Baltic News Service
February 28, 2007 Wednesday 3:06 PM EET

The parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee deliberated the matter
of setting up Lithuania’s embassy in Armenia and unanimously approved
of the motion from the Foreign Ministry on Wednesday.

The parliamentary public relations department has reported that the
embassy in Armenia would be set up as of October this year.

Since 2004, Lithuania has been identifying the relationship with South
Caucasus countries as a foreign policy priority — Lithuania already
has a diplomatic representation in Georgia; in January, the country
established its embassy in Azerbaijan as well.

According to the press release, currently the ties with Armenia are
developing quite fast to include more and more essential areas like
politics, military, economy and culture.

By having a diplomatic presentation in South Caucasus, Lithuania is
aiming both at making its own contribution in shaping the European
Unions eastern policy and at strengthening the country’s national
and energy security and establishing itself as a centre of regional
cooperation.

Robert Kocharian: Armenia Is Interested In Having Large-Scale Relati

ROBERT KOCHARIAN: ARMENIA IS INTERESTED IN HAVING LARGE-SCALE RELATIONS WITH POLAND

Noyan Tapan
Feb 27 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 27, NOYAN TAPAN. Armenian-Polish bilateral relations
have good opportunities of further development. This was mentioned
at the February 27 meeting between RA President Robert Kocharian and
Polish Foreign Minister Anna Fotyga who is in Armenia on a regional
visit. In R. Kocharian’s words, Armenia is interested in having
large-scale relations with the biggest country of East Europe having
the biggest economy. For making bilateral contacts more practical
RA President emphasized the necessity of some institutional steps,
in particular, the necessity to complete the process of formation
of Armenian-Polish Intergovernmental Commission as quickly as
possible. R. Kocharian also attached importance to cooperation
between the two countries within the framework of Armenia’s policy
of European integration. Considering implementation of efficient
reforms as the main resource of Armenia’s development he said:
"We try to completely and efficiently use the opportunities given
by the EU New Neighborhood policy and in this context we consider
Poland as one of our main partners." A. Fotyga expressed confidence
that as a result of her visit the friendly relations between the two
countries will continue to extend and to deepen for even more by
involving new spheres of cooperation. As Noyan Tapan was informed
from RA President’s Press Office, the interlocutors also discussed
regional issues, touched upon relations with neighboring countries
and the current process of Nagorno Karabakh settlement.

Gazprom Ups ArmRosGazprom Stake To More Than 57%

GAZPROM UPS ARMROSGAZPROM STAKE TO MORE THAN 57%

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS Energy Newswire
February 27, 2007 Tuesday 2:24 PM MSK

Russia’s Gazprom (RTS: GAZP) increased its interest in Armenia-based
gas utility ArmRosGazprom to just over 57% as the result of a share
issue.

ArmRosGazprom has boosted its charter capital 40%, to $391.8 million
from $280 million with the issue, worth $111.8 million, Shushan
Sardanian, the company’s spokesman, told Interfax.

Gazprom increased its interest in the company to 57.59% from 45% as a
result of the share issue. The Armenian government’s stake decreased
from 45% to 34.7% and that of Itera (RTS: ITER) fell from 10% to 7.71%.

Former Employee Of Anticorruption Department Attached To National Se

FORMER EMPLOYEE OF ANTICORRUPTION DEPARTMENT ATTACHED TO NATIONAL SECURITY, ARSEN KARAPETIAN APPOINTED AS HEAD OF NINOTSMINDA REGIONAL POLICE

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Feb 27 2007

AKHALKALAK, FEBRUARY 27, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. By the decree
of Georgian Minister of Internal Affairs, Vano Merabishvili, Arsen
Karapetian was appointed as Head of Ninotsminda Regional Police. Before
the appointment he had worked at the Samtskhe-Javakhk Regional Unit
of Anticorruption Department attached to National Security. As Noyan
Tapan was informed from Javakhk-Info, Samvel Iritsian held the office
of Head of Ninotsminda Regional Police before.

Talking With Elif Shafak: Commuting Between Asia And America

TALKING WITH ELIF SHAFAK: COMMUTING BETWEEN ASIA AND AMERICA
By John Freeman

Newsday (New York)
February 25, 2007 Sunday
ALL EDITIONS

A Turkish novelist acquits herself nicely

Salman Rushdie once noted that societies that emerged from colonial
rule in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s became hotbeds for literary invention.

"The Empire Writes Back," he called the phenomenon, punning on George
Lucas’ "Star Wars" film.

That phrase is gaining new currency in Turkey, where, according to
35-year-old writer Elif Shafak, a young generation of Turks is using
the novel, a form that came to them from the West, to reimagine their
society from within.

"Novelists have played a very, very critical role as the engineers of
social and cultural transformation in Turkey," Shafak says, sitting
in an empty hotel ballroom in New York City. "Maybe in that regard
we are closer to the Russian tradition than the Western tradition."

The debate over what these novels say about Turkish society, and
how they say it, lurched to the forefront of life in Istanbul in
recent years, as the Turkish government began prosecuting writers for
"offending Turkishness."

Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk and several dozen other writers were
tried under this code of Turkish law. In September, Shafak, too,
was put on trial because of passages from her new novel, "The Bastard

of Istanbul" (Viking, $24.95), which referenced the long fallout of
what many call the Armenian Genocide, when up to 1 million Armenians
were forcibly removed from Turkey and killed.

The book has become a bestseller in Turkey, selling more than 60,000
copies, but not without repercussions for Shafak. Writing in The
Washington Post, Shafak explained how critics within Turkey claimed
she "had taken the Armenians’ side by having an Armenian character
call the Turks ‘butchers’ in a reference to the Ottoman Empire’s
deportation and massacre of Armenians during World War I."

Although Shafak was acquitted, others have not been so lucky. On Jan.

19, her "dear friend," journalist Hrant Dink, the Armenian
editor-in-chief of a Turkish newspaper, was murdered on a street
in Istanbul, allegedly by an ultra-nationalist teenager. The
reverberations of this event are still etched on Shafak’s face.

"The debate on literature and art is very much politicized," she
says, her voice revealing palpable anguish, "sometimes very much
polarized. I think my work attracted it because I combined elements
people like to see separate."

Shafak is referring to sex and religion, faith and skepticism, and
all these elements come together in "The Bastard of Istanbul." The
novel tells the story of two families – one Turkish Muslim, the other
Armenian – who discover they are united by a shared secret.

Set mostly in Istanbul, it is a lively book, populated by powerful,
talkative women who are full of superstitions, folk tales and vengeful
schemes.

"Turkey is incomparable with any other Muslim country with regard to
the freedoms women exercise," Shafak says. "But we have a tradition
of state feminism. To this day, when we talk about women’s rights, we
say Ataturk gave us our rights," she says, referring to the republic
of Turkey’s first president. "And that tells us a lot. What we need
is an independent women’s movement."

In some people’s eyes, Shafak is a walking contradiction: a radical
feminist Muslim Turk who writes about sex and slang; a leftist on
some issues who believes in the power of religion. Every point of
her identity is politicized, even the types of words she uses.

"Turkish as we speak today is very centralized. We took out words
coming from Arabic origin, Persian origin and Sufi heritage. And I
think in doing so we lost the nuances of the language."

Born in France, Shafak spent her childhood shuttling between Germany,
Jordan and Spain, with stops in between in Turkey. She earned a
graduate degree in international relations and titled her PhD thesis
"An Analysis of Turkish Modernity Through Discourses in Masculinities."

Since 2003, she has lived in Turkey and traveled to the United States
to teach. She calls herself a commuter, not an immigrant. "There is
a metaphor I like very much in the Quran, in the Holy Book, and it’s
about a tree that has its roots up in the air. When my nationalist
critics say you have no roots, you are a so-called Turk, I say no,
I do have roots, they’re just not rooted in the ground. They are up
in the air."

In popular conception, Istanbul is the great meeting bazaar
between East and West, but Shafak says the city remains somewhat
uncomfortable with that role. "One thing that worries me is that
there is no … mobility between classes. There’s not that kind of
geographical mobility – east and west, north and south – that you
have in the States."

And yet, Istanbul remains a source of endless inspiration for Shafak,
and it also remains her home. "For anyone," she says, "especially
after 9/11, who is asking herself how western democracy and Islam
can co-exist side by side, how seemingly opposite forces can be
juxtaposed, for anyone asking these sorts of questions, Istanbul is
a very important case study."

As for how she is going to manage, given the controversy and the real
security issues, she’s up for the challenge.

"My relationship with the city has been like a pendulum. I am deeply
attracted to it, but sometimes suffocated by it.

"So I need to take a step outside of it and then come back."

YSU Students Get Military Knowledge at Military Institute

YSU STUDENTS GET MILITARY KNOWLEDGE AT MILITARY INSTITUTE

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. Yerevan State University students
started courses of military training with getting acquainted with
structure of the Kalashnikov automatic firing and principles of work
at the Vazgen Sargsian Military Institute. As Colonel Albert Galstian,
the Chief of the Military Institute Force Faculty said during the
journalist’s visit on February 22, the two institutions cooperate
according to the worked out program, the first stage of which lasts
from February 19 to June 30, 2007. In his words, the students will
study shooting with the help of shooting equipment of the Military
Institute, then with real automatic firings in field conditions. In
A.Galstian’s words, students will be given knowledge of using other
arms as well. It was mentioned that the YSU and Military Institute
cooperate already for a long time, by organizing scientific
conferences, meetings, other events. In the words of Arsen Karamian,
the YSU Pro-Rector for Students, Graduates and Public Relations,
shooting and a competition on mastering automatic firing will be
organized at the end of the shooting courses: winning students will be
rewarded with joint honour certificates of the YSU and Military
Institute Rectorates.

According to his data, 600 students among the 3rd-4th year bachelor
ones and 1st year magistracy ones of different faculties of the YSU
participate at the present stage of the courses. It is envisaged that
the number of participants will reach 1000 starting from the 2007-2008
academic year. In A.Karamian’s words, it is envisaged to put in action
at the YSU a "virtual shooting-ground, like the one operating at the
Military Institute. It will give possibility of teaching shooting by
the Military Institute lecturers just at the YSU. By the way, the
mentioned equipment of the Military Institute was programmed at the
Yerevan Scientific-Research Institute of Mathematical Machines.

1st specialized Western Union branch in S Caucasus opens in Yerevan

ArmRadio
2007-02-23 14:05:00

First specialized Western Union branch in South Caucasian region
opened in center of Yerevan

The first specialized branch of the Western Union international money
transfer system has been opened in the center of Yerevan in
collaboration with the Araratbank.

Ashot Osipyan, the executive director of the Araratbank, noted that
the specialized branch will carry out both Westerm Union
money-transfers and other banking services, particularly, community
charges, microcredits, etc. According to A.Osipyan, the branch has
been operating for 10 days, and about 20 transfers a day are made
under the Western Union. The bank is planning to raise this indicator
to 50, and to render round-the-clock services.

According to Mikhail Babirenko, the Western Union business manager for
Armenia, Georgia and Ukraine, the key task of the Western Union is to
render efficient and safe services all over the world. There are
Western Union specialized branches in Germany, France, Great Britain,
Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan.

Chairman of the Central Bank of Armenia Tigran Sargsyan, who was
invited to the presentation, noted that Armenia’s financial sphere is
diversifying services, leading to a high competition. In his opinion,
the Araratbank has chosen a right strategy, as today clients are not
surprised at new branches. But to open a branch specializing in money
transfers is an advantageous and positive step.

To note, the Western Union company is the leader in the world market
of money transfers. The company has representative offices in over 200
countries and about 30 thsd branches all over the world. The company
has been operating for over 10 years and has over 200 points of
service in Armenia. According to the CBA’s data, the total volume of
transfers under the Western Union in 2006 totalled 45.2 bln AMD, 41.2
bln of them were transferred to Armenia.

Artur Aghabekyan dismissed from post of Deputy Defense Minister

PanARMENIAN.Net

Artur Aghabekyan dismissed from post of Deputy Defense Minister
23.02.2007 18:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Armenian President Robert Kocharian signed a
decree on dismissing Artur Aghabekyan from the post of Deputy Defense
Minister, reports the RA leader’s press office. Aghabekyan explained
his resignation by an intention to engage in politics and participate
in the forthcoming parliamentary election. During the tenure of his
office Artur Aghabekyan’s membership in ARF Dashnaktsutyun was
suspended.

RPA Expects To Have Absolute Majority At New Parliament

RPA EXPECTS TO HAVE ABSOLUTE MAJORITY AT NEW PARLIAMENT

Noyan Tapan
Feb 21 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The Republican Party of Armenia
(RPA) will increase the number of its current seats at the parliament
as a result of the parliamentary elections to be held in May. Gagik
Melikian, Secretary of RA NA RPA faction, gave assurance at the
February 21 press conference.

Moreover, RPA expects to have absolute majority at the parliament,
but in case of failure, formation of coalition power is possible.

In G. Melikian’s words, all political forces should undertake measures
to exclude falsifications at the elections. In his words, any step
that may result in unfair elections, taken by not only opposition,
but also power should be taken under control.

At the same time, the Secretary of RPA faction said that "for strong
political forces, it is not beneficial to commit falsifications." In
G. Melikian’s words, RPA and Bargavach Hayastan (Prosperous Armenia)
do not need falsifications, as they are strong political forces and
are convinced that they will win the elections. They will receive a
sufficient number of votes, the evidence of which is the results of
all political surveys conducted by them.

G. Melikian considered as a provocation the rumors that allegedly
the condominiums make pensioners bring their photographs and join
the Republican Party.

He also refuted the fact of making teachers join RPA declaring that
there is no teacher who will confirm this fact. "If most of teachers
at schools are RPA members, this means that they sympathize with our
party and have joined RPA of their own free will. If we replenished our
party through terror, we would have not 65 thousand but 650 thousand
members," G. Melikian declared.

He said that RPA has 922 initial and 61 territorial organizations,
country’s Prime Minister, NA Speaker, a great number of ministers,
governors, over 530 prefects, and there have been no complaints during
their elections. The party has offered over 12 thousand commission
members for working at 2000 district electoral commissions. Their
retraining will finish by the end of the current year.

BAKU: "Echo": Continuous Water

"ECHO": CONTINUOUS WATER
S. Rzayev N. Aliyev

Ïðaâî Âûaîða, Azerbaijan
Democratic Azerbaijan
Feb 21 2007

Accordingly to local expert, Armenians started Garabagh conflict to
tear away Azerbaijani territories, and now for some reason they refer
to violation of some rights about which they didn’t even mention
"From the very beginning Armenians started Garabagh conflict under
separatist slogans aiming to annex this territory to Armenia that is
why any kind of assertion about violation of their rights in former
Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan has no ground and sense". Rasim Agayev,
political scientist and member of former leadership of Soviet Republic
of Azerbaijan, directly involved with Garabagh problem during late
80s and early 90s last century, stated it.

We should underline that recently Armenians have attempted by all means
to justify keeping of occupation not only Nagorni Garabagh but also 7
regions. At the same time most of all Armenia insists on keeping two
regions outside Garabagh – Kalbajar and Lachin. As Armenian mass media
inform these 2 inhabited areas represent "pledge of water security"
for Armenians of Nagorni Garabagh.

The matter is that majority of rivers flowing in Nagorni Garabagh
begin in Lachin and Kalbajar regions. Accordingly to Armenians’
version still during the time of Soviet Union, Nagorni Garabagh
experienced water pressing from the part of center – Baku.

Separatists attempt "to enshrine" their argument in the so-called
"constitution" of non-recognized entity which states about keeping
control over territories actually controlled by separatist entity.

We should remind that one more confirmation of Armenians’ "appetite"
is emigrant policy pursued by Yerevan in occupied territories of
Azerbaijan.

Armenians who used to live outside the region are being settled in
regions neighboring with Nagorni Garabagh. And it is Kalbajar and
Lachin regions that are being settled.

Despite this political scientist, Rasim Agayev, holds that all
arguments of Armenians about violation of their rights during Soviet
period and within the context of restriction of resource supply to
the region have no ground.

He insists that separatists and their leaders may take any decisions
"but from the beginning they have no legal basis". Agayev underlines
that as rule all separatists "shout" that allegedly their rights were
violated. "But the matter is that in Garabagh everything didn’t start
with shouting about violation of rights!" – he recollects.

Political scientist reminds that Garabagh conflict started with
simultaneous addresses in Yerevan and Khankendi where annexation of
Nagorni Garabagh to Armenia was heard. "And now for some reason they
are speaking about fictitious water pressing", political scientist
says.

As Agayev pointed out if such pressing really took place, then what
documents of former USSR reflect it? "There is nothing of that sort!"

– he explains. He is astonished by the fact that separatists didn’t
mention about "water pressing" late 80s, when conflict had broken out,
and now they have "recalled" it. "If then they had applied to world
community it would have witnessed in Garbagh how Armenians went on
being "dried", well-known political scientist says with irony.

In turn Erkin Kadirov, jurist on international issues stated for
"Echo" that the so-called "constitution" of separatist entity is
illegal, and it is not juridical document, all what is written there
has no significance.

"No forcible occupation of territories can be turned to sovereignty and
it is enshrined in international documents", jurist stresses. For this
reason attempts of Armenians to justify their occupation policy can’t
be legal. Jurist also stressed that all issues concerning bordering
water resources can be solved after final regulation of the conflict.

–Boundary_(ID_ezcGScKrpzxzYLAUcyJl7A)- –

www.echo-az.com