BAKU: Armenian MPs Demonstrate Different Positions On Talks Of Azerb

ARMENIAN MPS DEMONSTRATE DIFFERENT POSITIONS ON TALKS OF AZERBAIJANI, ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS – HEAD OF AZERBAIJANI DELEGATION AT PACE
Author: A.Ismayilova

TREND, Azerbaijan
Dec 11 2006

MP Samad Seyidov, the head of the Azerbaijani Delegation at the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), said on
December 11, that Armenian MPs demonstrate different approaches on
the talks on the level of Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia, Trend
reports. He was commenting the Armenian delegation refuse from the
participation in PACE Political Committee Meeting in Baku on December
11, 2006 in Baku.

MP Seyidov said that the CE insisted on the participation of
Armenia at a meeting of the Ad Hoc Committee on Media in Baku and
they refused. The same was repeated at this meeting and it actually
testifies Armenian non-constructive position.

Armenian NA Speaker, Indian Ambassador Discuss Bilateral Relations

ARMENIAN NA SPEAKER, INDIAN AMBASSADOR DISCUSS BILATERAL RELATIONS

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Dec 11 2006

YEREVAN, December 11. /ARKA/. Speaker of the Armenian Parliament
Tigran Torosyan held a meeting with Indian Ambassador to Armenia Rina
Pandei. The sides discussed issued of Torosyan’s forthcoming visit
to India and prospects of bilateral relations.

Ambassador Pandei pointed out the importance of the planned visit for
maintaining and strengthening the high-level bilateral relations. He
said that it will be an impetus to further cooperation in various
fields.

Among the promising spheres of cooperation the Indian Ambassador
pointed out interparliamentary relations and exchange of law-making
experience, healthcare and alternative medicine, agriculture,
information technologies. She addressed the issue of opening the
Yerevan-Delhi air route, which facilitates the establishment of
business ties.

Pandei also thanked Armenia for supporting India in international
structures.

In his turn, Speaker Torosyan stressed the necessity if using the
whole potential of bilateral relations, elaborating and implementing
specific programs. He reported that after a three-year interval,
the Armenian-Indian intergovernmental commission will hold its meeting.

Armenian President Demands Eliminating All Loop-Holes In Tax Legisla

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT DEMANDS ELIMINATING ALL LOOP-HOLES IN TAX LEGISLATION AND CREATING EQUAL CONDITIONS FOR ALL ECONOMIC ENTITIES

Noyan Tapan
Dec 08 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 8, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian President Robert
Kocharian on December 8 conducted a working consultation on state
revenues collection problems. NT was informed from the RA President’s
press service that the prime minister, the minister of finance and
economy, the minister of trade and economic development, the chairman
of the Central Bank of Armenia, the heads of the State Tax Service and
the State Customs Committee participated in the consultation. Noting
that at the end of a year the work done is usually summarized and
the activities and programs to be done next year are outlined, R.
Kocharian said that their implementation greatly depends on the
work of tax and customs bodies. In his words, a serious increase in
revenues is envisaged in 2007, so one must be sure that the reforms
will continue and the planned work will be done efficiently and
fully. Although in the past one-two years, some work has been carried
out for improving the tax and customs administration, according to
the RA President, it is far from being satisfactory. Noting that
various tax revenues are not in line with the existing potential,
R. Kocharian demanded focusing on the elimination of all loop-holes
in the tax legislation and ensuring equal conditions for all economic
entities. He said that next year he will be more demanding and he
anticipates an improvement in the quality of work. According to him,
good work will allow to increase considerably the revenue collection,
which in its turn will help with implementation of more programs and
solutions of more problems.

Galust Sahakian: RPA Has Its Modest Plan And Its Modest Contribution

GALUST SAHAKIAN: RPA HAS ITS MODEST PLAN AND ITS MODEST CONTRIBUTION INSIDE STATE

Noyan Tapan
Dec 07 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, NOYAN TAPAN. "The nearer the elections are
the more the people try to present themselves as David of Sassoun,
while David of Sassoun is a collective image," RA NA RPA faction Head
Galust Sahakian said at the December 8 press briefing commenting upon
ambitions of some political forces to register greater progress at the
2007 parliamentary elections. In his words, the processes taking place
inside the state that "very often are directed to RPA with bayonets"
cannot be a political factor for the forces that "appeared in the
situation of having lost everything and have fallen into hysteria."

According to the RPA faction leader, the latters try to blacken RPA
and its leaders ignoring the path passed by them and trying to distort
another’s biography. "We have our modest plan, as in 2003, and we
have our modest contribution inside the state. And our political
manifestation will be based on the very two arguments," G.Sahakian
said. And the political hysteria, in his words, can give rise to
greater tension. However, as G.Sahakian forecast, "there will be no
distortion or marked tension" in connection with the parliamentary
elections.

The Origin Of Hamshen Armenians Not Under Question

THE ORIGIN OF HAMSHEN ARMENIANS NOT UNDER QUESTION

ArmRadio.am
06.12.2006 13:26

The hypothesis of Turkish scholars about the Turkish origin of "
Armenian-speaking Hamshens" has been refuted. He first results
of the molecular-hereditary expertise of Hamshen Armenians are
already ready. "Yerkramas" newspaper of Russian Armenians reports
that according to Dr. Levon Yepiskoposyan, the coordinator of the
given project, the hereditary examination of DNA samples of Hamshen
Armenians has been carried out in the London University College
together with British colleagues.

According to Levon Yepiskoposyan’s data, the examinations allow to
confirm that the Armenian origin of Hamshen Armenians is not under
question.

To note, Hamshen Armenians comprise the majority of the Armenian
population of Krasnodar region and Kuban. They moved to Kuban still
in mid-19th century after the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman
Empire. According to the data of experts, about 250 thousand Hamshen
Armenians reside in Kuban and Abkhazia, while according to different
sources, 700,000 – 2 million Islamized Hamshen Armenians reside
in Turkey.

War Disrupts, But Does Not Deter, Lebanese Prodigy

WAR DISRUPTS, BUT DOES NOT DETER, LEBANESE PRODIGY
by Pirate Irwin

Agence France Presse — English
December 5, 2006 Tuesday 8:27 AM GMT

Four years ago renowned American athletics coach John Smith tipped
Lebanese sprinter Gretta Taslakian as a future star if carefully
nurtured.

Four years on a mixture of personal misfortune and war has prevented
it from happening.

She may be just 21 but the four years since Smith spotted her on the
training track at the 2002 Busan Games have not been kind to Taslakian,
whose descendants were Armenian and fled to Lebanon during the 1915-17
genocide by the Turks.

Now her generation are discovering what it is like to be bombarded
having come through the 34-day war between Israel and Lebanon-based
Hezbollah in July which left a huge swathe of Lebanon destroyed and
thousands dead.

"We were preparing for the Asian Games this summer and then the
war started in July," said Taslakian, who is one of a five-strong
Lebanese team here for the Asian Games athletics which gets underway
on Thursday.

"What happened was very dramatic in Lebanon so we were not in the
right frame of mind to train for this big event.

"Because of the war the Lebanese championships were cancelled so the
Lebanese Federation sent us (with the help of governing body the IAAF)
to Singapore where we stayed for three months and we worked on the
technical rather than the physical areas."

Taslakian, national recordholder in the 100, 200 and 400m,
is realistic about her chances of success at the Games given her
disrupted preparation.

Her ultimate goal is for an emotional triumph next year at the Asian
Championships in Lebanon.

"The Asian Games would be a fantastic preparation for the Asian
Championships in Lebanon next year," said Taslakian, whose father
inspired her to take the sport up aged 15.

"I cannot guess what my result will be here as I have not competed
for a long time but I aim to beat my personal best in the 200m."

Things looked distinctly rosier not only for Lebanon but also for
Taslakian two years ago as she went to the Athens Olympics and was
not disgraced while running a personal best in the 200.

She was rewarded by the IAAF with a nine-month scholarship to train
in Cologne, Germany, with higher class facilities than she could ever
hope for back home. But it didn’t go as planned.

"It was originally a dream come true," she said.

"I tried to make the most of my good fortune but I tore a calf muscle
and couldn’t do what I had in mind.

"The good side was that when I was fit I was able to compete with
high class athletes but on the down side I didn’t get the attention
of the coaches because they prefer to focus on the star athletes.

"So I felt very alone without my family and friends," added Taslakian.

Alvaro Hakobian To Head Uruguay Philharmonic Orchestra

ALVARO HAKOBIAN TO HEAD URUGUAY PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Dec 05 2006

MONTEVIDEO, DECEMBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. 31-year old
Armenian musician Alvaro Hakobian was appointed the new head of the
Uruguay Philharmonic Orchestra. According to Radio Liberty, Hakobian
was born in Montevideo, is an Armenian-speaking, visited Armenia few
times, is also a specialist of the Armenian music. He founded and
headed Armenian choirs and orchestras in South America. Presenting
his programs, Alvaro Hakobian mentioned that he will always attempt
to involve Armenian composers’ and especially Aram Khachatrian’s
works in repertoire of the orchestra.

Oskanian: Genocide Recognition Not Precondition To Armenian-Turkish

OSKANIAN: GENOCIDE RECOGNITION NOT PRECONDITION TO ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.12.2006 18:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "I have always said and will continue to say
that Genocide recognition is not a precondition to Armenian-Turkish
relations," Armenian FM Vartan Oskanian stated in an interview with
the New Anatolian. In his words, "it is our moral obligation to
pursue recognition. But that should not impede the normalization
of our relations. As long as the Armenians do not say that unless
Turkey recognizes the genocide we will not normalize our relations,
Turkey should not say the reverse, that Armenia should drop the
complaint of the Armenian Genocide. Neither side should put any
preconditions. We pursue recognition; Turkey is pursuing policies
of denialism. I really cannot see the reason why the borders cannot
be opened, so that our people would interact. That certainly would
create more favorable conditions, so that we can address those issues
in a more constructive manner," the Armenian FM underscored.

Armenian Foreign Minister: Hopes Are High For Deal On Nagorno-Karaba

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER: HOPES ARE HIGH FOR DEAL ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Associated Press Worldstream
December 4, 2006 Monday 11:50 AM GMT

Armenia’s foreign minister said Monday hopes are high for a
lasting solution to the simmering conflict in Azerbaijan’s disputed
Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Vardan Oksanian told a meeting of the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe that last week’s meeting of presidents of
Armenia and Azerbaijan "gives hope that agreement is possible even
on the most problematic issues on which we don’t see eye to eye."

Pope Meets With Turkish Christians

POPE MEETS WITH TURKISH CHRISTIANS
By Tracy Wilkinson, Times Staff Writer

Los Angeles Times
Nov 30 2006

The pontiff joins Orthodox leader in prayer and calls for more
protections for religious minorities

EFES, TURKEY – Invoking the name of a martyred priest, Pope Benedict
XVI on Wednesday made a pointed plea on behalf of Turkey’s beleaguered
Christian minority and celebrated Mass in an ancient shrine revered
as the last home of the Virgin Mary.

Benedict ended his second day in Turkey with another solemn gesture
of religious unity: He joined the spiritual leader of the world’s
250 million Eastern Orthodox Christians for prayer and blessings in
Istanbul – the former Constantinople, which once served as a seat of
medieval Christian power.

The day saw the pope shifting his focus from Muslim reconciliation
to Christian solidarity.

The Vatican on Wednesday also responded to a statement from Al Qaeda
in Iraq denouncing the "crusader campaign" of the pope in Turkey as an
affront to Islam. Spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said such threats
were precisely the reason violence must be separated from religion,
which he said was the core of the pope’s message. Lombardi added that
the pope was not worried about the threat.

Security was already extremely tight for Benedict’s first visit to a
Muslim country. In Istanbul on Wednesday evening, miles of streets
were closed to protect the convoy, with police in riot gear posted
along the route.

The pope had intended his Turkey pilgrimage to highlight Christian
unity and the bridging of the 1,000-year-old rift between Catholics
and the Orthodox, who do not recognize the authority of the pope. But
comments he made in September critical of Islam enraged much of the
Muslim world and forced him to change the agenda, using this visit
to reach out to Muslims and attempt to repair the damage.

In that vein, Benedict reversed his opposition to Turkey’s attempt to
join the European Union, among other gestures. But the EU bid suffered
a setback Wednesday when the European Commission recommended that
negotiations with Turkey be partially suspended because of continued
dispute over the country’s dealings with EU member Cyprus.

Turkey has refused an EU demand to open its ports to Cyprus until the
European bloc makes good on a promise to end the economic isolation
of the Turkish-occupied part of the divided island nation.

Olli Rehn, EU enlargement commissioner, said in Brussels that Turkey’s
aspirations to enter the organization were not dead but would move
at a much slower pace.

Following on a day spent attempting to promote reconciliation with
Turkey’s overwhelmingly Muslim majority, the pope Wednesday turned to
"the little flock of Christ" living in the midst "of a great nation."

He traveled to southwestern Turkey, to the ruins of the ancient Greek
city of Ephesus, known in Turkish as Efes, and to the squat stone
house where some Christians believe the Virgin Mary lived out her
final days. Parts of the foundation date to the 1st century, and
legend has it that St. John brought her here from Jerusalem after
Jesus’ crucifixion.

Mary is revered by Muslims as well as Christians. The Koran mentions
the mother of Jesus numerous times, and the shrine here, at the end of
a winding road, attracts pilgrims from both faiths. Benedict stressed
that common bond Wednesday.

Standing on a stone altar festooned with carnations, a few yards
from Mary’s purported house and enveloped in towering pines, Benedict
celebrated Mass for several hundred Christians and others who managed
to brave a battery of metal detectors and security gauntlets. It
may have been one of the smallest public audiences ever seen on a
papal trip, and was largely imported, at that. There were Turkish
Christians but also many who had arrived from Spain, Italy and other
parts of Europe.

It was an unusually intimate celebration. No one was farther than a
few dozen yards from the pope, close enough to see his eyes.

Benedict offered his "personal love and spiritual closeness" and
"a word of encouragement" to Christians in Turkey, "a small minority
which faces many challenges and difficulties daily."

"Let us sing joyfully, even when we are tested by difficulties
and dangers, as we have learned from the fine witness given by the
Roman priest Don Andrea Santoro, whom I am pleased to recall in this
celebration," the pope said.

Santoro was shot to death in February as he knelt in prayer at his
church in the Turkish city of Trabzon. He was attacked amid the furor
over Dutch newspaper cartoons that had satirized the prophet Muhammad.

Aishe Urturk, a fireplug of a woman in a tweed coat, pushed her way
to the front of the crowd to catch a glimpse of the pope. "I love
all the Christians," the 70-year-old Muslim said.

Several in the audience gave the pope high marks for his efforts to
soothe Muslim anger.

"He prayed here for peace and happiness for all mankind," said
Konstantinos Cedolini, a 39-year-old Turkish businessman and Roman
Catholic. "He never mentioned a single word against Turkey. His speech
was proof of his respect to all the Muslim world."

Later Wednesday, the pope flew to Istanbul where he joined the
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I for a prayer service inside the
Cathedral of St. George, headquarters of Greek Orthodox worship. The
two religious leaders, in flowing robes and sparkling capes, followed
a procession of priests who held long candles the color of honey and
sent wafts of smoky incense into the air.

The city called Constantinople was the capital of the Byzantine Empire
for nearly a millennium, and the center of eastern Christianity. Turkey
today is a country of about 70 million Muslims.

Christians are dwindling in number, to perhaps 100,000, and those
that remain complain of harassment and discrimination.

Among the problems they suffer are severe restrictions on their
ability to buy and sell property and run schools to train their
clergy. Most Christians are also ethnic communities, people of Greek
or Armenian heritage and viewed by some Turks as "foreigners" who
cannot be trusted.

The EU has consistently pushed Turkey to strengthen freedoms for
religious minorities. But on Wednesday, at about the same time the EU
was slowing talks with Turkey, Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
vetoed a law required by the EU that would have enhanced property
rights for non-Muslims.

The dilemma for Benedict is that as he offers support for Christians
he risks again offending the Muslims he is seeking to engage.