Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Implements Program On Construction Of Out

HAYASTAN ALL-ARMENIAN FUND IMPLEMENTS PROGRAM ON CONSTRUCTION OF OUTDOOR LIGHTING SYSTEM IN SYUNIK

Noyan Tapan

Jan 23, 2009

KAPAN, JANUARY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. With the assistance of the Armenian
diocese of Tehran, the "Hayastan" All-Armenian Fund has implemented a
program on construction of an outdoor lighting system in Shvanidzor,
Alvank and Nrnadzor communities of Syunik marz (province). The program
cost about 7 million drams. As NT was informed by the Fund’s Executive
Board, 20 light poles were installed in each of the beneficiary
communities for solving the problem of outdoor lighting.

A water-pipe construction program started in the village of Nrnadzor
in October 2008 with the support of the same benefactors. The work
of the first stage has already been completed. The new suction well
ensures water supply of the village through a newly-built 1,200
meter water-pipe. It is envisaged constructing an intertnal water
supply network, two ponds and a pumping station during the program’s
second stage.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011530

Heads Of Delegations Of CSTO Member Countries To OSCE Parliamentary

HEADS OF DELEGATIONS OF CSTO MEMBER COUNTRIES TO OSCE PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY TO MEET IN MOSCOW

ARMENPRESS
Jan 21, 2009

YEREVAN, JANUARY 21, ARMENPRESS: Heads of parliamentary delegations
of CSTO member countries to OSCE PA will meet January 22, in the
Secretariat of Collective Security Treaty Organization, Moscow.

An official from the national representation of the CSTO international
public center of information support told Armenpress that this is the
first meeting of representatives of CSTO legislative bodies within
the frameworks of coordination of the foreign political activity.

It has been noted that the heads of parliamentary delegations will
refer to the issues which have been included in the agenda of the
session of the OSCE PA scheduled for the second half of February
in Vienna, will exchange opinions on them and will work out joint
positions in case of necessity.

Head of the delegation of Armenian parliament to the OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly Aram Safarian has also left for Moscow to take part in
the meeting.

BAKU: OFID To Provide A $14 Million Loan To Armenia

OFID TO PROVIDE A $14 MILLION LOAN TO ARMENIA

Trend News Agency
Dec 25 2008
Azerbaijan

Armenian Ambassador to Austria Ashot Hovakimyan and the Director
General of OPEC Fund for International Development Suleyman Al-Harbish
signed an agreement on provision of a $14 million loan to Armenia
from the Fund, reported Public Radio.

The loan is provided to the Armenian government for the implementation
of the ââ~B¬Å~[Farmers of marketing opportunitiesââ~B¬Å&#xA5 ; program. The
program is meant to promote the economy of the urban regions of
Armenia.

The Director General of the Fund noted that this is the second program
jointly implemented with Armenia. Mr. Al-Herbish expressed appreciation
for he cooperation with the Armenian Government and expressed hope
that the cooperation will continue in the future.

On behalf of the Government of Armenia, Ambassador Hovakimyan expressed
gratitude of the provided grant and support. He highly assessed the
cooperation with the Fund and noted that during his visit expected
net year the Director General will have an opportunity to personally
assess the results of the programs implemented.

–Boundary_(ID_nQxRjbRAnG6KMxN6nZPRr A)–

Minority Rights? No Thanks!

MINORITY RIGHTS? NO THANKS!
Brian Whitaker

guardian.co.uk
Friday September 19 2008

When so many people face oppression in the Middle East, is there any
point in focusing on the rights of minorities?

"What we commonly think of as the ‘Arab and Muslim world’ is in fact
a rich and varied mosaic of peoples. Over the last 50 years, many
Middle Eastern minorities have been oppressed or have struggled to
survive – be they national groups (Berbers, Kurds, Turkomans, etc),
religious communities (Christians, Zoroastrians, Baha’is, etc) or both
(Armenians, Jews, etc) …"

This was the blurb for a talk last night hosted by the London
Middle East Institute, and attended by a fascinating collection
of representatives from the region’s forgotten minorities, even a
Zoroastrian lady – one of the few remaining adherents of a faith that
once dominated Iran and much of the surrounding area.

The main speaker was Egyptian-born Masri Feki, the founder of a
French-based pressure group called The Middle East Pact, who had come
over from Toulouse.

"Masri Feki sees minority rights as central to his vision of secular
democracy," the blurb said. "Now, more than ever, thriving minorities
are the cornerstone of a healthy civil society and the key to pluralism
and peace in this troubled region."

Well, I’m not so sure about that. As Mr Feki rightly pointed out
in his talk, ethnic and religious diversity is something that
pan-Arab nationalists and, more recently, Islamists, have tried to
obliterate. But what’s so special about minorities as such?

How much sympathy should we feel for the Alawite minority who rule
Syria? Or the Sunni minority who rule Bahrain? And then there’s the
Kurdish minority in Iraq – I’ve heard some horrible stories about
the way some of them treat another minority, the Turkomans.

Of all the oppressed people in the Middle East, those most widely
and consistently denied their rights are women. Whether they happen
to be more or less numerous than men is surely beside the point.

Well-intentioned as they may be, Mr Feki’s efforts to focus special
attention on the region’s minorities strike me as the result of some
muddled thinking. This is not to suggest that minority rights are
necessarily unimportant; it is vital to protect them, for example,
in a democratic countries.

In democracies, the will of the majority is supreme and so we need
safeguards to ensure that the majority does not abuse its position
by oppressing minorities. In most of the Middle East, though, with
only a very limited measure of democracy, minorities and majorities
are largely irrelevant: prejudice, discrimination, intolerance and
bigotry are rife, full stop.

A couple of months ago I was in the Middle East, researching this
problem for a book that I am writing and two points in particular
stood out.

One is that very few people grasp the concept of diversity. Difference
– whether ethnic, religious, cultural or sexual – is viewed as an
embarrassment and something you keep quiet about. The roots of this
attitude lie deep in the history and culture but it’s a far cry from
the idea, now prevalent in the west, that diversity is valuable and
enriches a society rather than weakening it.

The second point is that the principle of equality – equal rights,
equality before the law, equality of opportunity, etc – has not really
been taken on board either. "It’s not that people haven’t heard of
these concepts," Nadime Houry, a researcher for Human Rights Watch
told me when I met him in Lebanon. He explained:

Most laws – and [Arab] constitutions as well – are framed in a way
[that says] "we are against discrimination, we are for equality and
all citizens are born equal" – but all these slogans ring hollow
when you look at them more closely … Even within society the sense
of equality or non-discrimination is absent. It’s not just the state
that is the culprit here. Most examples of discrimination are between
people, but no one is really going to take a strong stand to push
for that equality.

In Cairo, Hossam Bahgat, director of the Egyptian Initiative for
Personal Rights, echoed this view. "People can immediately spot
injustice and stand up for the oppressed," he said, "but it’s not
the same thing as discrimination or inequality. They don’t spot
inequality as easily. They can see why torture is wrong, why the
imprisonment of a journalist or a political activist is wrong. They
see the abuse. But just because someone is not getting exactly the
same treatment as another person is not as shocking to their moral
system as simple abuse."

A large part of the problem, he said, is the sheer pervasiveness of
injustice and inequality. "It affects everyone almost, apart from
the lucky few – so it becomes a matter of ‘why them?’

"Another part of the problem," he continued, "is that it’s all a power
game, so a middle-class middle-aged civil servant in the ministry of
transport who is working in inhuman conditions and gets very poor
treatment from his superiors would take this out on his wife or
his children or his Coptic neighbour. This sense of injustice gets
exercised in different ways. In a sea of victims it’s really hard to
find one victim and to make a big case about their victimhood."

We Turned To Be Bad Guys

WE TURNED TO BE BAD GUYS

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
12 Sep 2008
Armenia

As we have already informed you Armen Sargsyan who was sentenced to 10
years imprisonment for the organization of the murder of the Chairman
of the Council of Public Radio – TV Company Tigran Naghdalyan has
been released from prison.

Tigran Naghdalyan was murdered at the end of 2002. Murdered by the lees
that used to uproar from different tribunes and the press belonging to
Armenian Pan National Movement about the annihilation of the traitors,
establishing armies, and liberating the country from the conquerors.

Tigran was one of us who used to show the lees their real place under
the sun. What they did with Tigran? What else could they do? No person,
no problem! Thus they managed to scare others, which was the principle
goal of Tigran’s murder. No mystery, everything is quite clear.

The king in Yevgeny Swartz’ "Ordinary Miracle" says: "Suddenly my
grandfather from my mom’s side woke up inside me. He was very afraid of
pain. In any difficult situation he was unable to initiate anything. He
always hoped that everything would be ok. When they were throttling
his wife in front of him, he was whispering: "Try to bear it, dear,
maybe everything will be ok." When she died, during her funeral he
was walking behind her coffin and whistling."

We turned20to be bad guys. That is why we didn’t like the approach
of the king’s grandfather from his mom’s side. And we continued to
complete our work with greater efforts.

The political life in our reality reminds of a battle without
rules. But after Tigran’s murder great changes were made even in
the rules of the battle without rules. If before that everything was
allowed, after that absolutely everything is allowed.

So if the goal of Tigran’s murdered was to scare others they had
greater achievements.

What do we usually hear from the law enforcers after each murder? "A
criminal case has been instituted?" There is an impression that there
is an army of prosecutors in our reality who are on the way of the
crime and they immediately institute a criminal case before the crime
is committed.

After which they immediately make a photo-robot. Sometimes you even
want to give them a peace of wise advice: "You can detain those
photo-robots."

But this story was really special. In a very short period of time
they managed to find and arrest those who committed the crime, as
well as the organizers, in the person of Armen Sargsyan. The latter
was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment in 2003. At the moment he is
already in freedom. Maybe soon he will rush to the Northern Avenue.

And the only thing left to do for us, the citizens, is put up with all
th is, like the inhabitants of the building that faces a cemetery –
cemetery where honesty, decency, morality and sensibility are buried.

Brave Start Needs To Become A Solid Process

BRAVE START NEEDS TO BECOME A SOLID PROCESS

Gulf News
nion/world/10243548.html
Sept 8 2008
United Arab Emirates

The historic visit to Armenia by Turkish President Abdullah Gul is
a chance to start a new era between these two peoples who have had
a poisonous relationship based on decades of hatred, fuelled by
massacres and memories of persecution.

Before the First World War, historic Armenia was part of the
Tsarist empire, but hundreds of thousands of Armenians lived in the
neighbouring rival Ottoman Empire.

However, the cause of the present day hatred lies in the chaos in the
Ottoman Empire as it lost the First World War, when the Armenians say
that 1.5 million of them were massacred between 1915 and 1917 in an
orchestrated attempt at genocide; while the Turks say that 500,000
Armenians were killed (as well as many Turks) in civil war as parts
of the failing Ottoman Empire tried to succeed.

These accusations were frozen for decades as the Armenians lost their
independence to the Soviet Union in 1920, and the Turks tried to
cover up the killings. However, after Armenia’s restored independence
in 1991, all the hidden fury came back to the fore. It was fuelled
by Turkish support for Azerbaijan (Azeris are Turkic in origin) in
the war over the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh surrounded by
Azerbaijan, during which Turkey blockaded Armenia and only stopped
after peace was declared.

It is important that a new spirit is built between these two
historic neighbours. The Turkish President has taken a brave step in
starting the process, but his single visit has to turn into a solid
process. This will require the Turks to persevere and the Armenians
to respond, which will not be easy for either. There is much to
forgive on both sides. Strong leadership in Turkey and Armenia is
needed to overcome resistance from the more intransigent sections of
their populations.

http://www.gulfnews.com/opinion/editorial_opi

Everything Is Possible In Politics

EVERYTHING IS POSSIBLE IN POLITICS

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
03 Sep 2008
Armenia

In the press conference held yesterday, L. Ter-Petrosyan made several
interesting statements.

Who will be LTP’s legal successor, i.e. the leader of the
"opposition"? Stepan Demirtchyan or David Shahnazaryan? The speaker
was very displeased to answer this question. "There is no point in
speaking about the names of individuals today. Individuals do not
matter to me. It so happened that I am at the head of the movement at
present. For me, the important thing is to strengthen the movement and
make it a permanent political factor in Armenia. As to the leader,
it is always possible to find one. And that leader will be the most
deserving person. Make no doubt about it!"

How is the ex-President going to achieve the realization of the
principal slogan of the upcoming demonstration, i.e. the resignation
of Serge Sargsyan? "I wouldn’t like to make it a simple and primitive
matter.

What is known as a principal slogan is nothing more than a slogan
which implies large-scale work on a horizontal level and in different
directions.

The essence of our activity consists in strengthening the movement,
i.e. bringing the congress into existence, and that will spontaneously
lead to a shift of power; that’s true. It will lead to the resignation
of Serge Sargsyan.

It’s not that we demanded his resignation, and he resigned. No one
ever resigns from his post in that way. Serge Sargsyan should, at
some moment, see that he is not accepted by an organized group of
society vs. some uncertain mass of people, and that he cannot rule
this country any more," the leader-congressman replied.

To what extent is the leader’s innermost desire realistic? "I
strive for that. Whether or not I will manage to do that is known
to God only. I am a modest person, and I have never overestimated
my potentials. I have only set a task, an objective. If I achieve
its realization, that will be good; if not, that will not be the end
of the world. There are also some people who think that we will not
reach our aim under any circumstances," the speaker said, returning
to the harsh reality.

And, forgetting about the bitter experience of 1996, he became
sincerely astonished: can one stick to the throne so persistently? "The
so-called power, the practice of sticking to power is characteristic
to the criminal authorities only. Authorities which are honest never
stick to power."

The authorities, in his opinion, "are facing a problem in terms of
communicating with society and being acceptable to that society"
and not him or the "pan-national movement.

To be honest, we are facing a problem too. If the situation has come
to dead end, it is true for both parties.=2 076 of our friends are
now in prison, and the international community tolerates that. As to
how long they will remain tolerant I don’t know it, but there is not
yet anyone standing on their way."

One of the journalists tried to figure out whether the speaker
considered Robert Kocharyan as a potential rival on the way of his
further progress.

"What if I say I didn’t understand the question? I haven’t been engaged
in politics for 10 years. I was engaged in scholarly activity during
the past 10 years and wasn’t the rival of anyone in all that period.

That’s all.

To be a political rival means to run for election. I don’t know what
Robert Kocharyan is doing now. He is not engaged in politics. When
he starts his political activity again, and I continue my political
activity too, we’ll become rivals. It’s quite possible that we may
become allies at some moment. Everything is possible in politics,"
Mr. Ter-Petrosyan said, trying to sound sharp-witted.

And in order not to be "misunderstood", he added, "This was a joke,
but such strange things are really possible in politics." And the
evidence is the ex-President’s second advent and the incredibly high
result he attained in the elections.

With regard to the rumors on Robert Kocharyan’s return, the
ex-President said "I am very sorry, and I don’t=2 0want you to think
that I avoid giving an answer, but these are gossips. And I am not in
the habit of interpreting gossips and making judgments about them. When
he returns to politics, we’ll talk about it," the founding-chairman
said, changing the subject of the conversation.

Program Of Reforms In Armenian Army Continues

PROGRAM OF REFORMS IN ARMENIAN ARMY CONTINUES

NOYAN TAPAN

JU LY 24

The program of army reforms is in the focus of attention of the RA
Defence Ministry. Proper legislative amendments are prepared according
to that program. RA Defence Minister Seyran Ohanian said on July 23,
on the occasion of 100 days of his taking his post. According to him,
100 days are not enough to solve big problems, but it is not his first
100 days, and he continues fulfilling the tasks set before Armenia’s
Armed Forces in 2008. The program of army reforms is envisaged to
be finished in 2015. As for the law On Defence, that bill has been
already approved by the government and has been sent to the National
Assembly, where it will be discussed during the autumn session.

S. Ohanian said that two big command-headquarters exercises were held
in the above mentioned period, the Rubezh-2008 joint exercises in one
of Armenian army’s contingents and within the framework of CSTO. A
special attention was paid to perfection of contract sergeant service,
provision of army with ammunition and military equipment and their
modernization. Work has been done to strengthen fighting positions,
to ensure security at the contact-line.

According to the Minister, along with success, there have also been
some omissions during the 100 days, and society is aware of part of
them. S.

Ohanian informed those present that an official investigation is
carried out in the Ministry on serviceman Gor Manasarian’s murder. The
Minister said that the latter of his own free will had left the
positions during military duty, and information about his death was
received from the website of Azerbaijan’s Defence Ministry. As regards
the four citizens entering the territory of Azerbaijan, the Minister
had no new information about their fate.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=115965

Levon Aronian Takes 12th Place In International Chess Federation Cla

LEVON ARONIAN TAKES 12TH PLACE IN INTERNATIONAL CHESS FEDERATION CLASSIFICATION LIST

NOYAN TAPAN

JU NE 24

On June 21 the International Chess Federation made public the
classification table of chess players having higher than 2700
rating. Vishwanathan Anand (India, 2798 showing) is in the lead of
the classification list. He is followed by Alexander Morozevich and
Vladimir Kramnik (both from Russia, 2788 showing). Vasili Ivanchuk
(the Ukraine) takes third place with 2781 showing, Levon Aronian
(Armenia) takes 12th (2737) and Sergei Movsisian (Slovakia) 16th
place with 2723 showing.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=114873

Traveler Club Opens in Yerevan

TRAVELER CLUB OPENS IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 7, NOYAN TAPAN. The opening of the National Geographic
Traveler Club took place and an exhibition of photographs of the
National Geographic Traveler Armenia magazine was organized in Yerevan
on May 5. The photographs of the "Unwitnessed Armenia" special issue of
the National Geographic Traveler, as well as those of the materials
"Towards the top of Ararat" and "Noravanq" are exhibited in the
exhibition and will be published in the next issue of the magazine.

As Ruben Mangasarian, the editor-in-chief of the magazine, mentioned,
the objective of the club is to organize interesting adventurous
travellings on the basis of the materials published in the magazine.
Joint travellings of journalists and club members are also planned for
the purpose of preparing new materials for the magazine. The club will
launch its activities with the Kars and Ani journey. According to Ruben
Mangasarian, journeys towards Khustup, Bridge of Satan, Noratus,
Fioletovo with the materials of the special issue of the "Unwitnessed
Armenia" are also planned. Everybody without any restrictions can
become a member of the club.

It was also mentioned that the National Geographic Traveller has 4.7
million readers in the United States of America. The magazine is
published also in the countries of China, Spain, Russia, Netherlands,
Israel, Poland, Hungary, Slovenia and Latin America. The periodical
publishing of the National Geofraphic Traveler Armenia is envisaged to
start in the near future publishing 6 issues a year. The objective of
the Armenian National Geographic Traveler is to newly discover Armenia
and Armenian historical-cultural hetitage abroad, to acquaint readers
with the sights of the world and help to productively organize the
travelling and rest.