BAKU: Aliyev: Azerbaijan, Armenia only parties to conflict

AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
Nov 26 2008

Aliyev: Azerbaijan, Armenia only parties to conflict
26-11-2008 04:01:47

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev described as a positive step the
signing of a declaration on the Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict with
the Armenian and Russian leaders in Moscow on November 2.
Aliyev emphasized that the document accurately sets out the steps
needed to reach a settlement to the dispute.
"These are the norms and principles of international law, and the
resolutions and decisions adopted in this framework. This declaration,
itself, is an important political document that determines ways of
settlement referring to the very decisions of international
organizations," Aliyev said while hosting participants of the
international roundtable entitled "Azerbaijan in the 21st century –
the strategy of success," held in Baku last week.
He noted that the declaration cites guarantees that are to be provided
during the various stages in resolving the conflict. This envisions a
stage-by-stage settlement process, which Azerbaijan has always
insisted upon.
"Certainly, it is also an important factor that Armenia and
Azerbaijan, which signed the declaration, are parties to the
conflict. There are no other parties to this conflict. This has always
been obvious and now this has been confirmed by the Armenian leader`s
signature."
The self-proclaimed Upper Garabagh republic is seeking participation
in peace talks as a party, a claim repeatedly dismissed by Baku as a
blatant contradiction to international law. Azerbaijani officials
have, on many occasions, made it clear that preserving the country`s
territorial integrity is mandatory in reaching a solution to the
Garabagh problem.
The declaration, signed following the Russia-brokered November
meeting, urges further OSCE-mediated dialog between the Azerbaijani
and Armenian governments. The sides were also urged to continue in
joint efforts to bolster stability in the South Caucasus through a
political settlement of the conflict based upon the principles of
international law and earlier documents. It is the first time in
nearly 15 years that such a document has been signed.
Nonetheless, the Azerbaijani leader said adopting the declaration was
not, in itself, enough to reach a solution to the long-standing
Garabagh dispute.
"In order to reach the correct decisions, such as to withdraw from the
territories that never belonged, do not and will never belong to
Armenia, to end the occupation, and to pursue a policy consistent with
international norms, and, simply, with international rules of conduct,
first of all, political will of the Armenian side is necessary. Then
it would be possible to achieve peace in the Caucasus much sooner."
Azerbaijan and Armenia have been locked in conflict for over a
decade. Peace talks began in 1994 after a lengthy war that ended with
the signing of a cease-fire but have brought few tangible
results. Armenia continues to occupy Upper Garabagh and seven other
Azerbaijani districts in defiance of international law.
Vasiliy Istratov, the Russian Ambassador in Baku, did not rule out the
self-styled republic`s joining peace talks in the future. He said that
although the Moscow declaration contains no relevant clauses, "it does
not say that this will never happen, either."
Commenting on Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian`s recent statement to
that end, Istratov told reporters that the regime`s participation "was
an affair of the future."
The ambassador noted that the Moscow declaration touched on
all-important issues regarding ending the conflict.
"It outlines ways of settling the conflict. Azerbaijan and Armenia are
cited in the document as parties in negotiations, and the sides
co-signed this. As for Sarkisian`s statement, it should be merely
treated as such as it has no legal force."

Garabagh status
Matthew Bryza, the US co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group (MG) brokering
the peace process, has said holding a referendum to determine the
status of Upper Garabagh was on the negotiating table.
"Holding a referendum in the future, as well as developing a mechanism
for this process and its participants, is a subject of talks," Bryza
told Radio Liberty`s Russian bureau.
According to Bryza, the fact that Russia was the only MG co-chairing
state that co-signed the November 2 declaration demonstrates that
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had sought to bolster his country`s
influence in the settlement of conflicts in the turbulent South
Caucasus region.
Asked whether the Armenian president was facing US pressure regarding
the Garabagh settlement, Bryza said that "Armenians, themselves,
should answer that question."

Armenian parliament passes bill on judges’ wages

Armenian parliament passes bill on judges’ wages

YEREVAN, November 27. /ARKA/. Armenia’s National Assembly (NA) passed
today a bill on the wages o the prosecutor general and judges. The
official salary of common jurisdiction judges and the prosecutor
general will be included in a separate expenditure item, said RA
Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Arsen Hambardzumyan.

To curb corruption, the salary of Armenia’s judges will double to
440,000 drams (US$1,440), the minister added. Though it is impossible
to eradicate the social evil, the wage rise will make judges work more
diligently, according to Hambardzumyan.

The minister pointed out large-scale activities to enhance Armenia’s
judicial system, stressing the importance of the second-generation
judicial reforms.
The law will be effective till December 31, 2009. Z. Sh. `0–

Next sitting of CSTO defence ministers Council to be held in Minsk

Next sitting of CSTO defence ministers Council to be held in Minsk

2008-11-28 12:56:00

ArmInfo. Regular sitting of Defence Ministers Council of Collective
Security Treaty Organization member-states has been held in Yerevan

The delegations from Armenia, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,Tajikistan and Uzbekistan participated in the sitting.
Several documents were signed, including Bilateral Cooperation Plan
between defence ministries of Armenia and Russia for 2009; Bilateral
Cooperation Plan between defence ministries of Armenia and Belarus for
2009 and Bilateral Cooperation Plan between defence ministries of
Russia and Belarus for 2009.

The next sitting of CSTO defence ministers Council will be held in
Minsk, at the second half year of 2009.

Production Volumes Of Armenian Industrial Enterprises Decline Due To

PRODUCTION VOLUMES OF ARMENIAN INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES DECLINE DUE TO GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS

Noyan Tapan

Nov 26, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 26, NOYAN TAPAN. By the results of the monitoring
by the RA Ministry of Economy, the production volumes of Armenian
industrial enterprises declined in January-October 2008 on the same
period of 2007. The head of the ministry’s sectoral and territorial
economic development department Hayk Mirzoyan said at the November
26 press conference that the production volumes declined by 0.9% to
244 billion drams (about 800 million USD), sales by 3.5% and exports
by 6.5%.

According to H. Mirzoyan, for the time being it is impossible to assess
the negative impact of the global financial crisis on Armenian economy.

Nevertheless, the crisis has considerably affected the mining
industry, which is mainly conditioned by the fall in international
prices of non-ferrous metals. The same situation is in the chemical
industry. The main reason for the decline is the fall in demand for
production of Nairit Plant, in particular, in the demand of foreign
partners. It was mentioned that unlike Nairit, the production of the
Vanadzor chemical enterprise grew in recent months.

H. Mirzoyan announced that the production volumes of the gem and
jewelry sector also grew in the past two months: the growth rates
made 112.2% in January-October and 158% in September-October. In the
past 10 months a growth was also recorded in mechanical engineering
(112.9%) and electrotechical sectors (101.8%).

H. Mirzoyan said that the decline in production volumes at the
enterprises of the light industry subjected to monitoring was not
conditioned by the global financial crisis. This sector mainly
operates by the "temporary import for processing" customs regime so
the production volume depends on the availability of external orders
which is dictated by the demand of the foreign market.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1010025

The Patriarchate Of Jerusalem Not Guaranteed From New Clashes

THE PATRIARCHATE OF JERUSALEM NOT GUARANTEED FROM NEW CLASHES
Naira Khachatryan

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
25 Nov 08
Armenia

Member of RPA Council Artak Grigoryan is one of the eyewitnesses
of the scuffle provoked by the Greek clergymen, during the ceremony
devoted to the Discovery of the Cross, in the temple of Resurrection
in Jerusalem on November 9. "It must be difficult for us the laymen to
perceive this incident, but what I understood is that it is the same
as to show a rude interference in the internal policy of a state,"
he said in "Hayatsk" club yesterday.

According to A. Grigoryan that day the Greeks tried to demonstrate
that they are the only owners of the Lord’s grave and they have
full right to be present in the holy mass of the Armenian Apostolic
Church. Whereas according to the church contract signed in 1852 six
Christian churches: orthodox, catholic, the Armenians, the Syrians,
Ethiopians, and the copts have divided the territory of the Lord’s
grave and none of the before mentioned directions has the right to
control the actions of the others.

"Despite that similar clashes are of regular character. To avoid
similar clashes our clergymen used to surrender. But as far as I
understood after each concession the Greeks put forward new and new
demands. Which means the problem is not new. It is recurrent. From
the moment the Greeks started to lay obstacles in the path of our
clergymen to the territory of the Lord’s grave our clergymen had to
make the second round around the Lord’s tomb. But the Greek clergymen
simply attacked and closed the entrance to the tomb.

As a witness I ask myself "Couldn’t they avoid this clash?" but I
must repeat that similar incidents are not new and I don’t think by
compromise Armenian Church could have been represented in Jerusalem
by similar size. Either they had to become weaker by always yielding
or protect themselves even by fist. And on November 9 there was no
other option except for protecting self-dignity by fists.

Long, Dirty Road To Azerbaijan

LONG, DIRTY ROAD TO AZERBAIJAN
By Scott Taylor

The Chronicle Herald
2168.html
Nov 24 2008
Canada

LAST MONTH, as I left Canada for the Caucasus, my primary objective
was to enter South Ossetia.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, this region has
fiercely resisted the authority of the Republic of Georgia. In the past
17 years, ethnic Ossetians have clashed four times with their Georgian
neighbours. The most recent bloodletting began with a Georgian army
offensive on Aug. 7 that eventually provoked a major Russian military
intervention in the disputed territory.

With a population of just 25,000 people, a militia still fully
mobilized and coping with post-battle destruction of catastrophic
proportions, the new government in the South Ossetian capital of
Tskhinvali obviously had more pressing concerns than the establishment
of a media liaison office.

As such, my arrival at the Russian-Ossetian border post was cause for
concern among the local officials. There was no translation required
during most of our appeals to the border officials, as I understood
the word "nyet" and the raised hand gesture removed any further doubts.

For three days in a row we would drive two hours from Vladikavkaz
through the long, narrow mountain pass that connects North Ossetia,
Russia, to South Ossetia. We would arrive in hopeful anticipation that
the previous night’s barrage of emails and phone calls had shifted
the border chief’s resolve. When we heard the "nyet" and saw the hand
raised, we would settle into a day-long routine of endless cups of
tea from the roadside merchants.

We quickly decided against eating any food during these extended
delays as the public toilet at the border was without a doubt the
world’s dirtiest. Each night when the border finally closed, we drove
back to Vladikavkaz.

Hope was waning, but because we had already invested so much time
and effort in the venture and the Russian embassy in Ottawa had a
duty officer working around the clock to assist us, we agreed to give
it one last shot. When we were finally granted passage, everyone at
the border post seemed surprised, including the tea ladies who had
suggested that a "fee" of $300 each would help unlock the doors.

We finally entered the conflict zone and, as detailed in previous
reports, were finally able to describe the war crimes committed by
the Georgian troops in those first days of their offensive.

But the delay in the schedule meant I had to forfeit my planned
excursion to the Georgian side of the conflict lines. Instead, I was
able to buy a ticket to fly directly from Mineralnye Vody, Russia,
to Baku, Azerbaijan.

Upon my arrival in Baku, I presented my passport to the immigration
officer, confident that I had a valid visa and I was entering
Azerbaijan on an official invitation to give a speech at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs University. Those credentials went up
in smoke when the officer asked me incredulously, "You have been to
Nagorno-Karabakh?" She shouted for assistance and I was hurriedly
escorted by police into a private office for questioning.

The ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh proclaimed their independence
from Azerbaijan in 199, at about the same time that Azerbaijan seceded
from the Soviet Union. A bloody war ensued, and although a ceasefire
was brokered in 1994, Azerbaijan never relinquished formal claim to
Nagorno-Karabakh. Having a visa from this disputed territory was a
definite no-no in Azerbaijan.

Thanks to some frantic calls from the embassy in Ottawa and direct
intervention by their deputy minister of foreign affairs, my late
Saturday-night detention at the airport was limited to only a few
hours.

The normal routine under such circumstances would be a KGB
interrogation followed by official deportation. I was lucky.

( [email protected])

Scott Taylor is the publisher of Esprit de Corps military magazine
and author of several books.

http://thechronicleherald.ca/Columnists/109

ANKARA: Turkish Airlines Prepares For Charter Flights To Yerevan

TURKISH AIRLINES PREPARES FOR CHARTER FLIGHTS TO YEREVAN

Today’s Zaman
Nov 24 2008
Turkey

In a move likely to contribute to the recent thaw in bilateral
relations between Armenia and Turkey, which gained momentum when
President Abdullah Gul visited Yerevan in September, Turkey’s national
airline company has been preparing to launch charter flights to the
Armenian capital.

Turkish Airlines (THY) has recently sent unofficial letters to both the
Directorate General of Civil Aviation (SHGM) and the Foreign Ministry,
asking for information regarding charter flights by Armenian national
air company Armavia from Yerevan to İstanbul and the Mediterranean
coastal city of Antalya.

THY asked about the arrangements and agreements involving these
flights. In its response, the SHGM said the flights have been taking
place with the Foreign Ministry’s approval and that permission for
Armavia’s charter flights to Turkey is renewed every two or three
weeks. In the coming days, THY is expected to send another letter
to the Foreign Ministry asking whether launching charter flights to
Yerevan would "comply with the national interests" of the country. The
final decision will be made after receiving the Foreign Ministry’s
response outlining Ankara’s stance on the issue.

Currently, Atlasjet, a private Turkish airline company, has been
conducting charter flights between İstanbul and Yerevan.

Turkey severed its ties with Armenia and closed its border
with the landlocked country in 1993 as a sign of solidarity with
Azerbaijan. There have been no formal ties between the two countries
since then, and Ankara says the normalization of relations depends on
Armenia’s withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh and an end to Yerevan’s
support for the Armenian diaspora’s efforts to win international
recognition for claims that Armenians were subjected to genocide at
the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Gul broke the ice when he visited
Yerevan to watch a soccer match between the two countries’ national
teams in early September. Gul invited Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan
to Turkey for the next game between the two countries’ teams next year.

As part of intensifying contacts between Armenia and Turkey, Armenian
Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian is scheduled to arrive in İstanbul
today for a meeting of the Organization of the Black Sea Economic
Cooperation (BSEC). The İstanbul BSEC meeting will also offer an
opportunity for a bilateral meeting between Nalbandian and his Turkish
counterpart, Ali Babacan. Babacan and Nalbandian had three-way talks
with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in September to
discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. While trying to re-establish
relations at the official level through meetings, Turkey has been
also making certain gestures that it hopes will eventually help to
normalize ties between the two estranged neighbors.

A senior Turkish official, speaking with Today’s Zaman, said THY has
been assuming an important role in Turkish foreign policy. Describing
THY as "an important tool of Turkey’s policy of strategic initiatives,"
the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the company
always requests the Foreign Ministry’s view when it prepares to launch
a new flight route abroad.

–Boundary_(ID_ImkCY37pgLGTuYhn8+KLpg)–

Top UBC psychologist uncovers roots of religion – and himself

Vancouver Sun, British Columbia (BC), Canada
Nov 22 2008

Top UBC psychologist uncovers roots of religion – and himself

"It was horrible. When I look back, it was insane."

Renowned University of B.C. social psychologist Ara Norenzayan, 37,
spent his teenage years in bomb-ravaged Lebanon thinking he could die
at any moment in a civil war largely fuelled by religion.

When Norenzayan was young, the kitchen of the Beirut apartment he
lived in with his family was blasted through with a bomb’s metal
shards. He dove for cover in the living room.

Norenzayan’s close friend, a soccer goalkeeper, was killed by one of
the many car bombs that would suddenly shatter the city’s tense quiet.

As Norenzayan and I talked at the window of a café in the Point Grey
neighbourhood of Vancouver where he lives, he pointed at a black car
parked a few metres from us on 10th Avenue near Alma.

We imagined how that car could blow up at any moment, killing hundreds
of innocent Lebanese, or Vancouverites. It elicited a hint of
just-below-the-surface terror.

It was a suggestion of the kind of pervasive fear, no doubt mixed with
courage, that became a routine aspect of the bewildering civil war
that ravaged previously cosmopolitan Lebanon from 1975 to 1990.

Why did such brutal antagonism arise between Lebanon’s Palestinian
Sunni Muslims and Catholic Maronites, not to mention members of the
Druze sect and Israeli Jews?

In the last few years, Norenzayen has earned an international
reputation for his ground-breaking research into trying to answer the
question: How does religion affect the way people behave, pro and con?

Or, as Norenzayan succinctly puts it: "What is it about religion that
can turn nice people into murderers?"

The people who were killing each other in Lebanon were generally well
intentioned, he said. "They were not psychopaths. They were nice
people doing terrible things out of ideology."

More than 100,000 people, he said, were murdered during the Middle
Eastern country’s civil war. The fighting turned Beirut, which had
often been described as "the Paris of the East," into a virtual
hellhole.

After leaving Lebanon with his family in 1990, Norenzayan finally
returned for the first time several years ago. "When I went back and
asked people what they thought happened during the war, they couldn’t
tell me — because they don’t know," he said over lunch.

"People don’t understand the relationship of religion to violence," he
said.

They don’t, for that matter, understand the relationship of religion
to human existence and psychology. His intention is to bring
scientific understanding to bear on faith.

COMPARING RELIGION TO FIRE

Norenzayan, who last year was bestowed tenure at the unusually young
age of 36, said scientific research into religion has finally become
acceptable in higher education, after being virtually shut out of
secular academia for almost half a century.

Still, Norenzayan continues to run into people, including academics,
who completely dismiss religion. Many others staunchly defend
it. "There are so many opinions about religion," he said, "but so few
facts about it."

Helpfully, Norenzayan compares religion to fire.

Fire can be very good. And fire can be very dangerous. It depends how
it’s used. Religion "unites and then it divides."

Religion can produce a terrorist Osama bin Laden and a jingoistic
demagogue like Pat Robertson. But it can also create a socially
concerned Tommy Douglas or a non-violent Dalai Lama.

"Religion can be co-opted to construct large cohesive groups, but for
that very same reason it can also be exploited to set one group
against another, often violently."

Since The Vancouver Sun published the first media article about
Norenzayan’s work in 2004, his team’s findings have been picked up by
outlets as diverse as The New York Times, The Economist and Slate
Magazine.

He and his colleagues have published articles in leading scientific
journals providing data that show, for instance, antagonism towards
outsiders is not necessarily a result of belief in God or an active
prayer life.

Rather, hatred of others is more likely to be a by-product of people
finding an identity in a group, any group. Antagonism is related to
dogmatism, whether one is blindly religious or non-religious.

Norenzayan and his colleagues have also extensively studied the
relationship between religion and healthy societies, including whether
secular societies can be as strong as religious ones.

In other words, Norenzayan, whose life has been harmed by
religion-charged conflict, is not out to either praise or bury those
who are explicitly religious.

He is open to discovering whatever the evidence suggests about
organized religion and individual spirituality — "the good, bad and
ugly."

Despite believing such open-mindedness is the essence of science, and
receiving strong support from other faculty in UBC’s psychology
department, Norenzayan continues to receive criticism from many
quarters.

"I get really nasty e-mails."

Religious people will tell him he’s dismissing religion by trying to
explain it psychologically. Atheists will object to his research
because they believe it might make it harder to eradicate
religion. And some scientists still argue religion is not a bona fide
subject of exploration.

CHURCH MEMBERS TARGETED IN CIVIL WAR

Norenzayan conveyed a sense of calm as we spoke.

But he hasn’t always been this way.

He readily admits he lived in embattled Beirut as if any minute might
be his last on Earth.

Norenzayan’s own family’s religious origins are in the Armenian
Orthodox church, whose members were targeted during Lebanon’s civil
war for trying to remain neutral.

In an effort to feel normal amid the chaos, he and others continued to
go to school, work at jobs and play sports, not to mention take part
in religious practices. To quell ever-present anxiety, many also went
"with a vengeance" to nightclubs, dances and parties.

After 15 years of the fluctuating uncertainty and mayhem of Lebanon’s
war, Norenzayan’s family finally left Beirut in 1990. It turned out to
be six months before the war ended.

They travelled to the United States, where Norenzayan, who was
breaking out of his family’s small-business tradition by showing a
predilection for academia, studied at California State University in
Fresno and then did graduate studies at the University of Michigan.

Like many PhD students he lived an intense life, jacked up on six cups
of coffee a day. He excelled at learning, but his nerves were jangled.

Memories of Lebanon simmered below the surface. "I wouldn’t have been
surprised if I had symptoms of PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder]."

He was, for instance, set off by loud noises, which reminded him of
shellings and car bombs.

To find a way to cope, he began mindfulness meditation, and a bit of
yoga.

He continues both to this day, along with sailing and jogging through
the streets and parks of Point Grey.

Nestled behind a small oriental-style screen divider in his study is a
one-metre-by-one-metre space that contains a meditation pillow and
candle. It’s where he practises.

Asked to describe his own religious views, Norenzayan said he’s
"agnostic."

Even though he finds a sense of cultural and group identity in the
Armenian Orthodox Church, he attends less and less.

"I see value in religion. I can understand why people want
spirituality. At the same time I can’t bring myself to believe in
God."

He doesn’t do meditation and yoga for explicitly religious reasons. He
engages it in more of the "secular but spiritual" way that so many
people of the Pacific Northwest get in touch with their inner selves.

{For an in-depth look at how people practise spirituality in B.C.,
Washington and Oregon, see the new book I have edited, Cascadia: The
Elusive Utopia – Exploring the Spirit of the Pacific Northwest. }.

"I wished I could be religious, but I couldn’t do it," Norenzayan
said.

"But I still want to live a rich, meaningful life. Meditation was a
way to explore my spiritual questions and longings. It’s a way to
cultivate presence and peace of mind."

The fact Norenzayan’s early life was filled with unpredictably savage
violence and death may partly explain his continuing fascination with
organized religion and personal spirituality.

His own research suggests one reason why that could be the case. One
of his groundbreaking studies found that subjects who are reminded of
death are far more likely than others to be open to religion, to
consider belief in supernatural agents.

His experiments were among the first to provide "solid empirical
evidence" to back up theories by philosophers Soren Kierkegaard and
Simon Fraser University’s Ernest Becker that humans become religious
because they’re capable of recognizing they will die.

When it comes to death and violence, another innovative research
project Norenzayan’s team worked on involved Palestinian Muslims and
Israeli Jewish settlers.

Against conventional wisdom, Norenzayen and co-researchers Jeremy
Ginges and Ian Hansen discovered no correlation between how much
Palestinian Muslims and Israeli settlers prayed and how much they were
inclined to support violence.

However, the study did show a link between how often Palestinian
Muslims and Israeli settlers worshipped at their religious
institutions and how much they would support attacks on their rivals.

In other words, violence was linked to group behaviour, not spiritual
practice.

A ‘LEAP OF FAITH’ CAN BE BENEFICIAL

In many ways, Norenzayan follows one of the founders of modern
psychology, the great American thinker William James, who taught that
"the truth value of religion is not its only value."

Whether certain metaphysical beliefs are provable or not, James taught
they can be valuable simply because they can positively affect human
behaviour.

Like falling in love, Norenzayan said a "leap of faith" can be
beneficial. "Neither is inherently bad."

Personally, he said he is not comfortable with being a hard-core
atheist. It doesn’t feel accurate to conclude that humans are just
"pieces of self-replicating meat."

Since atheism can easily slip into philosophical nihilism, the belief
that life is meaningless, Norenzayan said there is a debate arising in
psychology about whether atheists actually exist at a deep
psychological level.

"At the end of the day, even the most die-hard atheist wants to live a
meaningful life," said Norenzayan, who adds he often collaborates with
researchers who are atheist.

Norenzayan expects there are inherent psychological roots to religion
and spirituality, whether people recognize them or not.

He suspects deep down that even atheists believe they are more than
random bits of physical matter.

"Atheists are going to find sources of meaning that are not derived
from rationality, not derived from science. They come from inside,
from internal experience."

Even though atheists might deny the existence of a "soul," or psyche,
Norenzayan and colleague Will Gervais are researching whether all of
us might subconsciously believe we have "souls" that are independent
of our physical bodies.

Somewhat like Yale psychologist Paul Bloom and many process
philosophers, Norenzayan said most of us feel the mental aspects of
our selves are not reducible to the physical.

"When we say, ‘My body is shaking right now,’ we’re saying there is an
immaterial self that inhabits our body."

Curious about how widespread atheism among a population might affect a
society, Norenzayan has become intrigued by Denmark.

In that small Nordic country, he said, only 25 per cent of the
population believes in God, compared to more than 90 per cent in the
U.S., 80 per cent in Canada and 70 per cent in B.C.

Since religion throughout history has been effective at creating
cohesive societies among people who are not biologically related, he
wants to explore how it is that Denmark has developed into a generous,
communitarian state.

In studies of altruism, Norenzayen and co-researcher Azim Shariff have
found there is more cooperation among religious societies than
non-religious ones, especially when group survival is under
threat. Religion through history has encouraged cohesion among
genetically unrelated people.

In their fall article in the prestigious journal Science, which
reviewed the literature on the scientific study of religion,
Norenzayan and Shariff found many things, including that belief in God
reduces cheating and selfish behaviour.

In one psychological experiment out of dozens surveyed by Norenzayan
and Shariff, children were explicitly instructed not to look in a box
and then left alone with it.

"Those who were previously told that a fictional supernatural agent —
Princess Alice — was watching were significantly less likely to peek
inside the forbidden box."

Norenzayan and Shariff also found that religious people tend to be
more helpful and generous than non-religious people — on two
conditions. Those conditions are that they believe their helpful
behaviour will enhance their reputation among their peers, and that
they have been freshly reminded of their belief in supernatural
agents.

But if researchers remove those two conditions, Norenzayan said, "all
of a sudden you don’t find any differences" between the behaviour of
the religious and non-religious.

Norenzayen theorizes that people who believe in God assume the
existence of an all-knowing "supernatural watcher" who monitors their
behaviour, which makes them act more generously.

Nevertheless, Norenzayan said the five-page Science article does not
necessarily contradict those who argue religion exacerbates conflict
between cultures.

That’s because the UBC researchers also discovered that religious
people are often more generous and helpful (or "pro-social") to
members of their own religion, not necessarily to outsiders.

The Science article, titled The Origin and Evolution of Religious
Prosociality, said even though religion has been useful in creating
more helpful behaviour, it has no monopoly on it.

The beneficial role that an all-knowing, morally concerned God has
played in history, Norenzayan said, is in some cases being replaced by
non-religious mechanisms.

"Today, religions are not necessary to have large moral
communities. Just take a look at a society like Denmark (photo left),
a very cooperative society that is one of the least religious."

BLACK-AND-WHITE VIEWS ESCHEWED

Norenzayan is intrigued when I suggest the possibility most residents
of Denmark may have subconsciously embraced the communal Christian
ethics of their state-supported Lutheran church, but turfed the
religious teachings in part because of inadequate metaphysics.

He agrees: "The large moral communities of today may not have come
into existence without religion."

This way of thinking also dovetails with his research suggesting that
a cohesive society — with a value-laden school system, generous
welfare, policing, courts and social surveillance — can be as
effective as religion at creating cooperative people.

While Norenzayan has found some people behave more "pro-socially" when
researchers have reminded them of their belief in God, he said many of
us behave more ethically when we’re simply reminded of words such as
"civil," or because a police cruiser drives by.

In his important work, Norenzayan is creating as many questions —
psychological, social and metaphysical — as he is answering.

But he is justifiably proud to say that it is time to move the study
of religion away from strong, divisive opinion to the gathering of
empirical evidence.

Norenzayan eschews dogma, religious or scientific. "I don’t have much
tolerance for a black-and-white view of religion, or of anything for
that matter."

As he pursues his laboratory experiments and philosophical inquiries
and strives to makes personal sense of his tumultuous early years in
religion-torn Beirut, he says he has learned to live with ambiguity.

"I think it’s the only honest way."

Absence Of Alternative

ABSENCE OF ALTERNATIVE

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
21 Nov 08
Armenia

President of Armenian Sociological Association Gevorg Poghosyan said:
"An interesting thing happened. When Levon Ter-Petrosyan appeared
with his followers and he saw that it is difficult to play a new
game with old songs, he tried to get rid of the Armenian Pan National
Movement and formed a new movement. It was an attempt to unite various
pro-oppositional forces in one camp.

But the elections were over, the opposition was defeated and
that camp returned to its origins. So it turned into a collection
of various forces, where everyone has got its own standpoint and
Ter-Petrosyan’s standpoint differs from all the others, especially in
Karabakh issue. Which means there is no unification in that field,
to make them a political opposition. What they have is a positional
opposition that has no disagreements with the ruling power; the only
thing they want is to come to power.

Alas, because our society really needs a serious political opposition,
which can become a real alternative for the ruling power."

Russian Ambassador To Azerbaijan: "Moscow Declaration Is A Road Map

RUSSIAN AMBASSADOR TO AZERBAIJAN: "MOSCOW DECLARATION IS A ROAD MAP OF KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT"

AZG Armenian Daily
22/11/2008

Karabakh conflict

"The Moscow declaration of the Presidents of Russia, Azerbaijan
and Armenia is a road map that comprises possible ways of Karabakh
conflict settlement", Russian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Vasili Istratov
announced, according to Armenpress.

"The Moscow declaration has not the signature of the Nagorno Karabakh
representatives, and it does not state that Nagorno Karabakh has
no right to participate in the settlement process", mentioned the
Ambassador commenting on the statements that NKR representatives
should also participate in the conflict settlement process.

The diplomat said that it is necessary to wait for further
developments.

"I have heard various thoughts, but they are only viewpoints. We
should take into account the fact that we have the Moscow declaration",
said Russian Ambassador to Azerbaijan.