"Rubezh-2008" Discussed During A Yerevan Meeting

"RUBEZH-2008" DISCUSSED DURING A YEREVAN MEETING

A1+
25 January, 2008

According to the programme of preparation of the "Rubezh 2008"
military exercises and the joint operative and military preparation
programme for 2008 of the member states of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization (CSTO), January 22-25 the working group of the
Joint Staff of the Collective Security Treaty Organization headed by
Major-General Sergey Zuvakin visited Armenia.

The schedule of the "Rubezh 2008" was developed during the working
consultations in Yerevan An agreement on creating an information
centre of the military exercises was reached.

Members of the working group of the Joint Staff of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization were received by the Deputy Chief of
the General Staff of Armed Forces of the Republic of Armenia, Colonel
Artak Davtian. Issues of preparation of the joint military exercises
were discussed.

Hillary Clinton Pledges To Recognize Genocide As President

HILLARY CLINTON PLEDGES TO RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE AS PRESIDENT

armradio.am
25.01.2008 10:10

Democratic Presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, in a forceful
statement shared with the Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA), called for Congressional passage of the Armenian Genocide
Resolution and pledged that, as President, she will recognize the
Armenian Genocide.

"Armenian Americans from across the United States welcome Hillary
Clinton’s strong support for the adoption of the Armenian Genocide
Resolution, and her pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide as
President of the United States," said ANCA Executive Director Aram
Hamparian. "Hillary Clinton’s statement, which reflects her consistent
track record of support in public office, speaks powerfully to our
community’s deeply held concerns regarding the recognition of the
Armenian Genocide, the expansion of the U.S.-Armenia relationship,
and a fair and democratic resolution of the Nagorno Karabagh conflict."

As a Senator, Hillary Clinton has, since 2002, has cosponsored
successive Armenian Genocide resolutions. She joined Senate colleagues
in cosigning letters to President Bush in 2005 and 2006 urging him
to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

"Alone among the Presidential candidates, I have been a longstanding
supporter of the Armenian Genocide Resolution. I have been a
co-sponsor of the Resolution since 2002, and I support adoption of
this legislation by both Houses of Congress.

I believe the horrible events perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire
against Armenians constitute a clear case of genocide. I have twice
written to President Bush calling on him to refer to the Armenian
Genocide in his annual commemorative statement and, as President,
I will recognize the Armenian Genocide. Our common morality and our
nation’s credibility as a voice for human rights challenge us to
ensure that the Armenian Genocide be recognized and remembered by
the Congress and the President of the United States.

If the mass atrocities of the 20th Century have taught us anything
it is that we must honestly look the facts of history in the face in
order to learn their lessons, and ensure they will not happen again. It
is not just about the past, but about our future. We must close the
gap between words and deeds to prevent mass atrocities. That is why
I am a supporter of the Responsibility to Protect. As President,
I will work to build and enhance U.S. and international capacity
to act early and effectively to prevent mass atrocities. The Bush
administration’s words of condemnation have not been backed with
leadership to stop the genocide in Darfur. I support a no-fly-zone over
Darfur. I have championed strong international action to ensure that
the government of Sudan can no longer act with impunity, or interfere
with the international peacekeeping force, which is essential for
the protection of the people of Darfur.

I value my friendship with our nation’s vibrant Armenian-American
community. This is in keeping with my dedication to the causes of
the Armenian-American community over many years. I was privileged
as First Lady to speak at the first-ever White House gathering in
1994 for leaders from Armenia and the Armenian-American community to
celebrate the historic occasion of Armenia’s reborn independence. I
said at the time that America will stand with you as you realize what
the great Armenian poet, Puzant Granian, called the Armenian’s dream
"to be left in peace in his mountains, to build, to dream, to create."

I will, as President, work to expand and improve U.S.-Armenia
relations in addressing the common issues facing our two nations:
increasing trade, fostering closer economic ties, fighting terrorism,
strengthening democratic institutions, pursuing our military
partnership and deepening cooperation with NATO, and cooperating on
regional concerns, among them a fair and democratic resolution of the
Nagorno-Karabagh conflict. As President, I will expand U.S. assistance
programs to Armenia and to the people of Nagorno-Karabagh.

I look forward, as President, to continuing to work with the
Armenian-American community on the many domestic and international
challenges we face together, and to build on the strong foundations
of shared values that have long brought together the American and
Armenian peoples," Mrs. Clinton stated.

Hovannisian Cedes Election Commission Seats To Opposition Candidates

HOVANNISIAN CEDES ELECTION COMMISSION SEATS TO OPPOSITION CANDIDATES
By Anna Saghabalian

Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
Jan 25 2008

Opposition leader Raffi Hovannisian has confirmed through aides his
decision to cede hundreds of seats in election commissions reserved for
his Zharangutyun (Heritage) party to allies of opposition presidential
candidates Levon Ter-Petrosian and Vazgen Manukian.

Under Armenia’s Election Code, President Robert Kocharian and the five
parties represented in parliament, including Zharangutyun, each appoint
one member of the Central Election Commission (CEC) and its more than
1,920 district and precinct-level divisions. Two other commission seats
are controlled by a government body overseeing the Armenian judiciary.

The code also stipulates that only those individuals who attend
special courses organized by the CEC can become commission members.

Zharangutyun says that only about 1,000 of its members and supporters
have obtained licenses required for sitting on the bodies that will
conduct the February 19 presidential election.

The party, which joined the National Assembly last summer, says it has
lacked time to have more election workers trained by the CEC. It has
offered other opposition parties, which have held commission seats
in the past, to fill the vacancies.

Zharangutyun representatives said late Thursday that three of those
parties have already submitted the names of their members with CEC
licenses. According to Hovsep Khurshudian, the Zharangutyun spokesman,
92 of them are affiliated with Manukian’s National Democratic Union
(AZhM). He said the People’s and Hanrapetutyun parties supporting
Ter-Petrosian are ready to appoint many more commission members but
did not give any numbers.

"We will cover the entire territory of the republic with our joint
efforts," said Zaruhi Postanjian, a Zharangutyun parliamentarian.

"That is, licensed members representing us and those two forces will
be appointed to all commissions."

Smbat Ayvazian, a senior Hanrapetutyun member, told RFE/RL that the
Ter-Petrosian camp is ready to nominate as many commission members
as necessary. "Numerous citizens with necessary licenses are applying
to us, but we select only our party comrades," he said.

Despite sharing its commission quota with other opposition forces,
Hovannisian has indicated that he will not endorse any of the
opposition contenders before the first round of voting. Khurshudian
reiterated that Zharangutyun will likely throw its weight behind
one of Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian’s challengers only before a
possible run-off.

In Khurshudian’s words, Zharangutyun believes no presidential
candidate, including Sarkisian, is popular enough to score a
first-round victory. "If that happens, it will be obvious to us that
the elections were rigged," he said.

Consumers’ Complain

CONSUMERS’ COMPLAIN

Panorama.am
20:28 25/01/2008

A. Eghoyan, the president of "Consumers’ rights protection" said the
organization particularly gets complains and alarms on bad supply of
gas and electricity.

According to him they also got complaints on provisions sold and not
accepted back by the shop assistants.

The prices were increased after the New Year and still they did not
recover, so this is another reason of complain.

Philharmonic Society Of O.C. Packs In The Stars For Its 2008-09 Seas

PHILHARMONIC SOCIETY OF O.C. PACKS IN THE STARS FOR ITS 2008-09 SEASON
By Timothy Mangan

Orange County Register
Jan 24 2008
CA

The classical music presenter nabs acclaimed young conductor Gustavo
Dudamel for his Orange County debut.

The Philharmonic Society of Orange County’s 2008-09 concert season,
unveiled this week, will feature appearances by several of classical
music’s biggest names as well as a healthy sampling of its rising
talent. The nonprofit Society, the county’s oldest presenter of
classical music, now in its 55th season, imports touring orchestras,
chamber ensembles and soloists from around the world to perform in
the Renee and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall and other local venues.

Firebrand Chinese pianist Lang Lang will give his first Orange County
recital to open the Society’s season on Oct. 1. His program has yet
to be announced.

The most talked about (as well as the most gushed about) man in
classical music, conductor Gustavo Dudamel, will make his Orange
County debut under the Society’s auspices, on Nov. 23. The Venezuelan
Dudamel, soon to be 27, is the music director-designate of the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, set to take the reins from Esa-Pekka Salonen
at the start of the 2009-2010 season. He’ll lead the touring Israel
Philharmonic in a program that includes Mendelssohn’s "Italian"
Symphony and Brahms’ Fourth Symphony here.

Elsewhere in its signature orchestra series, the Society will present
French conductor Stephane Deneve and the Los Angeles Philharmonic
(Jan. 23, 2009); conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco
Symphony (Jan. 28, 2009); and The Academy of St. Martin in the Fields,
with leader and violinist Julia Fischer, Gramophone magazine’s Artist
of the Year (May 2, 2009).

Conductor Valery Gergiev returns to Orange County for the first time
since the hall’s opening celebrations in 2006 to lead the London
Symphony Orchestra (for which he serves as music director) in two
programs on March 18 and 19, 2009.

Also appearing will be Operalia competition winner soprano Isabel
Bayrakdarian and the Armenian Chamer Ensemble (Oct. 5); jazz
saxophonist Branford Marsalis leading the Philharmonic Brasilianos
(Oct. 11); conductor Bernard Labadie and the period-instrument Les
Violons du Roy (Feb. 20, 2009); and conductor Derek Gleeson and the
Dublin Philharmonic performing a special St. Patrick’s Day program
(March 17, 2009).

The Orange County-based Pacific Chorale and the Los Angeles-based
period ensemble Musica Angelica join forces to perform Bach’s "St.

John Passion" (April 10, 2009) to round out the Society’s orchestra
series.

In addition to Lang Lang, recitalists include the bubbly Italian
mezzo-soprano Cecilia Bartoli (Feb. 17, 2009) and the distinguished
American pianist Richard Goode (April 29, 2009, at Irvine Barclay
Theatre).

The Society will also present three chamber concerts in the
Orange County Performing Artscenter’s Samueli Theater, with the
Musicians from Marlboro, the Curtis Institute on Tour and the
Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio making appearances. The Brentano
String Quartet, with guest pianist Peter Serkin, will offer a
performance of a new piano quintet by Charles Wuorinen at the Irvine
Barclay Theatre as well.

Three special presentations have crossover appeal: the West African
Festival (Nov. 20), the annual Fiesta Navidad with the Mariachi Los
Camperos de Nati Cano (Nov. 29); and The 5 Browns, a team of sibling
pianists (March 2, 2009).

The Elizabeth and Henry Segerstrom Select Series continues for its
second season (the Israel Philharmonic, the first London Symphony
concert, Bartoli and Lang Lang are part of it).

Subscription packages start at $121 and range up to $3,160 (for
"The Works" series). For more information and season brochures, call
949-553-2422 or visit Single tickets
are expected to go on sale in early summer.

www.philharmonicsociety.org.

Organ Music In Armenia Topic Of AGO Program

ORGAN MUSIC IN ARMENIA TOPIC OF AGO PROGRAM

HollandSentinel.com
http://www.hollandsen tinel.com/stories/012408/local_20080124020.shtml
J an 24 2008
MI

"A Visit to Armenia" is the topic for the Holland Area Chapter of the
American Guild of Organists when members meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
in the organ studio in Nykerk Hall of Music at Hope College.

Elizabeth Claar, chapter dean, will share music, photos and stories
from the eight months she lived in Armenia in 2006-07. She will focus
on organists and organ music, as well as worship music of the Armenian
Apostolic Church. She will also describe life in a post-Soviet culture.

The program is free and open to the public.

For more information about the program, or about the American Guild
of Organists in general, contact Claar (616) 392-7172.

Two Chess Players In Lead In Main Tournament Of Wijk Aan Zee Interna

TWO CHESS PLAYERS IN LEAD IN MAIN TOURNAMENT OF WIJK AAN ZEE INTERNATIONAL CHESS FESTIVAL

Noyan Tapan
Jan 23, 2008

WIJK AAN ZEE, JANUARY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. The International Chess Festival
is going on in the city of Wijk aan Zee, Holland. The games of the 9th
tour took place on January 22. In the main tournament Levon Aronian
shared his point with Pavel Elyanov (Ukraine) and now is at the top
of the tournament table with Magnus Karlsen (Norway) with 5.5 points
each. In the 10th tour Aronian will compete with Michael Adams (Great
Britain). The latter shares the 3-6th places with 5 points.

In tournament B the leader is Sergei Movsisian (Slovakia), who has
6.5 points. Gabriel Sargsian is in the 13th place with 3 points.

Families Split By Ossetia Border Closure

FAMILIES SPLIT BY OSSETIA BORDER CLOSURE
By Elizaveta Valieva

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Jan 23 2008
UK

Shutting of Georgian-Russian border prevents ordinary people from
visiting loved ones across the mountains.

Larisa Pavliashvili has lived in a small house in the village of
Balta in Russia’s autonomous republic of North Ossetia for five years,
after moving back here with her two younger daughters from the Kazbegi
region of Georgia, on the other side of the nearby mountains.

Larisa, 46, has a tough life, supporting her grandmother and two
older daughters who stayed behind in Kazbegi. Visiting them, at least,
used to be easy enough – a mere 90-minute bus ride – and Larisa used
to bring food for them when she went to see them.

Now these relatives belong almost to a different world on the other
side of a sealed border.

For the past year-and-a-half, the Russian-Georgian border through
North Ossetia has been closed and Larisa and many others have been
separated from their loved ones.

She recently checked out of hospital where she underwent an operation
for a hernia, brought on by stress and overwork.

"When the road was open, I was a trader, I took goods from Tbilisi
and Vladikavkaz and back," she said. "After they closed the road I
worked in the bakery at the Elektrotsink factory. The work was hard
and I earned myself a hernia."

North Ossetia and Georgia are connected by the 208-km-long Georgian
Military Highway which was built in tsarist times and traverses the
Caucasus range across one of the highest mountain passes in Europe.

The two crossing points are Verkhny Lars on the Russian side and
Kazbegi on the Georgian side.

The Russian authorities closed the Verkhny Lars crossing point in June
2006. The closure hit inhabitants of border areas on either side of
the crossing they hardest; previously they had the right to travel
across without a visa by having a special slip in their passport.

The Kazbegi region is much closer to the North Ossetian capital
Vladikavkaz than to Tbilisi, which is on the other side of a high
mountain pass. There have always been lively trading links between
villages on either side of the border.

Almost all the inhabitants of North Ossetian border villages have
terrible stories to tell about the costs of closing Verkhny Lars.

"One old man from [the village of] Kobi went on business to Kazbegi
region and died there; his heart stopped," she said. "At that moment,
they closed the road. The relatives could not go and collect his
body. He was buried by strangers."

People on both sides of the border have asked the authorities in
North Ossetia several times to intercede on their behalf to have the
frontier reopened.

The press office of the border department of the FSB
counter-intelligence service told IWPR that this was a matter for
the federal authorities in Moscow, not those in North Ossetia.

Taimuraz Mamsurov, the president of North Ossetia, said that an
ever-growing number of people were appealing to him to be allowed to
cross into Kazbegi region. He said that he had asked for help from
a series of top officials in Moscow and been given the answer that
the border crossing point was being rebuilt.

According to the North Ossetian customs service, the crossing point
is being refurbished to increase its capacity so that it can handle
400 vehicles a day.

Balta is in North Ossetia but has a predominantly Georgian
population. Many families send their children to the Georgian-language
school in Vladikavkaz, although there is a local school. There is
very little work in the village and young people mainly earn their
living on construction sites in the big city.

"It’s hard to get to work in Vladikavkaz," said Nodar Tinikashvili,
who lives in Balta. "There’s only one bus service which works only
on weekdays because it carries students and workers."

The border villages do not have natural gas and there is no water
in Lars. According to the deputy head of the local region, Marina
Chkareuli, "We asked for help but we were told there was no money.

They promised but it wasn’t clear when it would come.

"The biggest problem for these villages is the border closure because
most of the people here have connections with Kazbegi region. Many
families are divided, with the children on one side and parents
on the other. It’s upsetting when a son can’t go to his mother’s
funeral. It’s very hard for people."

Zaur Kuchiev, North Ossetia’s economics minister, told IWPR that the
economy of the autonomous republic as a whole had not suffered from
the border closure, only the border regions.

"It has a small effect but there is no shortage of fruit," he said.

"In the main, imports come from Moscow and from Stavropol region."

Armenian political analyst David Petrosian said that the closure of
Verkhny Lars was a purely political issue.

"The main reason for is thatwithin the context of its confrontation
with Georgia, the Russian leadership is trying to restrict Georgian
farmers’ ability to get their goods to market," said Petrosian.

However, if the intention had been to foster discontent amongst
Georgian farmers against their own government, the policy seems to
have failed. Georgia has found other markets for its goods in the
rest of the South Caucasus and the Black Sea region.

The biggest loser from the border closure has been Armenia, which
used Verkhny Lars as its main overland trading route with Russia and
which is now having to seek alternative markets.

Zaur Abashvili of the Georgian justice ministry in Tbilisi said that
the closure hurt the inhabitants of Kazbegi region more than most.

"The closure of this road is a huge economic blow for the people
of Kazbegi," he said. "For two centuries this region, has been much
closer economically to Vladikavkaz than to Tbilisi. We know of course
that this road was the main and almost the only means of communication
between Georgia and Russia, and also between Armenia and Russia."

Zurab Gagua lives on the Georgian side of the border, in the village
of Arsh.

"It’s a great pity that it’s impossible to meet relatives and friends
in Lars, Vladikavkaz or Beslan," he said. "The closure of this road is
a big threat to relations between two close peoples of one [Orthodox
Christian] faith, the Ossetians and Georgians."

Divided families cannot even afford to keep in touch by telephone.

"It’s cheaper to call America than to call Georgia," said Larisa
Pavliashvili. "A minute’s conversation costs 24 roubles [about one
US dollar]. So on the whole we keep in touch by SMS.

"If the road opens tomorrow, I will take half a sack of flour to
Kazbegi, that will be a real help for my children. I will take them
sunflower oil and sugar, which are far more expensive there. Flour
costs 1,000 roubles a sack in Kazbegi and a [monthly] pension is
500 roubles. And with a pension like that, do you pay for gas or buy
flour? It’s much harder than here."

She concluded, "It’s become much harder for poor people since the
road closed. For me personally, it’s a catastrophe."

Candidate For The Position Of The Armenian President Intends To Turn

CANDIDATE FOR THE POSITION OF THE ARMENIAN PRESIDENT INTENDS TO TURN TO THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

Mediamax
January 22, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Candidate for the position of the Armenian
President, Ex-Foreign Minister of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR)
Arman Melikian intends to turn to the Constitutional Court.

Mediamax reports that, speaking today at a news conference in Yerevan,
Arman Melikian stated that his intention to turn to the Constitutional
Court is conditioned by the decision of the Armenian leadership not
to open electoral areas in NKR and abroad.

According to him, "this violates my rights as a candidate, since most
part of my electorate is abroad".

Commenting on the pre-election campaign, which started, and the
behavior of his rivals, Arman Melikian stated that the fact, "when
one oppositional candidate struggles against another oppositional
candidate" is unacceptable for him.

The candidate for the position of the President noted that he is an
optimist and is not inclined to believe in the statements that the
results of the elections are predetermined.

According to Melikian, the presidential elections in Armenia will be
composed of two rounds. In case he enters the second round, he would
like to see any of the candidates as his rival.

Turks Demand Justice For Slain Journalist Hrant Dink

TURKS DEMAND JUSTICE FOR SLAIN JOURNALIST HRANT DINK

Southeast European Times, MD
Jan 21 2008

Commemorating the first anniversary of Turkish-Armenian journalist
Hrant Dink’s murder, thousands of people demanded on Saturday that
all those behind his assassination be brought to justice.

(Zaman – 21/01/08; Bianet – 20/01/08; Reuters, AP, AFP, DPA, UPI, BBC –
19/01/08; Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders – 18/01/08)

Thousands of people gathered in downtown Istanbul on Saturday (January
19th) to commemorate the first anniversary of Turkish-Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink’s murder.

Carrying banners reading "For Hrant, For Justice", the mourners
placed red carnations on the spot where the founder and editor of the
bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly, Agos, was last seen alive. Dink,
who devoted his life to the reconciliation between his community
and the majority Muslim Turks, was gunned down on January 19th 2007,
outside his newspaper’s offices.

With a huge portrait of the ethnic Armenian journalist covering part
of the building where he worked and candles lit on the street, the
mourners observed a minute of silence at the exact time he was shot
by Ogun Samast, who is described as a hardline nationalist from the
Black Sea city of Trabzon.

"We are at the pavement where they tried to clean his blood with soap,"
Dink’s widow, Rakel, said at the ceremony, reportedly attended by
10,000 people. "You are here for justice today. A scream for justice
rises from your silence."

Samast — who immediately confessed to the killing — and 18 others,
most of them also from Trabzon, are currently being tried in Istanbul.

Claiming that evidence has been destroyed and that authorities have
refused to probe the suspected involvement of members of Turkish
security forces in the murder plot, lawyers representing the Dink
family have described the investigation as flawed.

"Unnecessary administrative decisions blocked judicial investigations
of state employees that should have been carried out," the group quoted
Bahri Bayram Belen, one of the lawyers, as saying. "Since the initial
investigation, certain enquiries … have not been appropriately
conducted because the security forces did not participate."

Marking the first anniversary, Reporters Without Borders and Amnesty
International urged Turkish authorities to bring all those involved in
the case to justice. They also repeated their call for the abolition
of the controversial Article 301, which makes it a crime to insult
"Turkishness" and has been used against scores of Turkish journalists,
writers and intellectuals.

Dink was prosecuted on charges of "denigrating Turkishness" due to an
article describing the killings of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians
during World War I as "genocide", which is not the official Turkish
position on the issue. He was convicted and given a six-month suspended
sentence in July 2006.

"The continuing suppression of freedom of expression in Turkey has
created an atmosphere of deadly intolerance culminating in the killing
of Hrant Dink," Amnesty International’s researcher on Turkey Andrew
Gardner said on Friday. "In addition to implementing current legal
reforms, urgent legislative reform must be adopted. The authorities
must seize the opportunity to advance the protection of fundamental
rights and freedoms for all in the new constitution that is being
drafted."

Turkish Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin told journalists Saturday
that draft amendments to Article 301 would soon be submitted to
parliament.

According to Reporters Without Borders, the proposed changes fall
"well short of satisfying" its calls for the complete abolition of
the controversial legislation, as "the proposed amendment offers
no solution to the problem of the article’s arbitrary application
by judges."

This content was commissioned for SETimes.com