Armenia: 2006 At Glance

ARMENIA: 2006 AT GLANCE
By Armen Dulian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Dec 28 2006

The year 2006 was quite eventful for Armenia, even if it saw no
elections and political upheavals. Below are the top ten developments
which the RFE/RL Armenian Service believes have dominated the public
agenda in the past twelve months.

1. The crash on May 3 of an Armenian airliner off the Russian Black
Sea coast. All 113 people on board the Airbus A-320 were killed in
what was the worst air disaster in Armenia’s history.

2. The ouster on May 12 of then parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian’s
Orinats Yerkir party from the governing coalition.

3. The official disclosure in June of the international mediators’
most recent plan to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

4. The announcement on July 18 of Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian’s
affiliation with the governing Republican Party of Armenia (HHK). The
move was widely construed as a confirmation of Sarkisian’s intention
to contest the next presidential election due in 2008.

5. The emergence and rapid expansion throughout the year of a
new political party led by Gagik Tsarukian, the most influential
of Armenia’s government-connected tycoons. The Prosperous Armenia
party is now tipped to make a strong showing in the forthcoming
parliamentary elections.

6. The year saw more street protests by residents of Yerevan that
were forcibly evicted from their homes as a result of the ongoing
massive redevelopment in the city center. The evictions were declared
unconstitutional by Armenia’s Constitutional Court.

7. A further strengthening of the national currency, the dram,
that triggered fresh opposition allegations about exchange rate
manipulation. One U.S. dollar is now worth roughly 360 drams. It
traded at about 460 drams at the beginning of 2006.

8. An apparent rise in anti-Russian sentiment fuelled by continued
racially motivated killings of Armenians in Russia.

9. The year saw a number of high-profile cultural events such as
Armenia’s first-ever participation in the Eurovision song contest,
an open-air concert given by Charles Aznavour and other famous French
singers, and the annual Golden Apricot film festival in Yerevan.

10. The Armenian team’s victory in the 2006 world Chess Olympiad.

Turkish Armenian Pianist Denied An Entry Visa To Azerbaijan

TURKISH ARMENIAN PIANIST DENIED AN ENTRY VISA TO AZERBAIJAN

ArmRadio.am
26.12.2006 13:33

Azerbaijan did not provide an entry visa to Turkish citizen of
Armenian origin Burack Petikyan who arrived in Baku with the group
of the famous Turkish musician Sertab Erener. In the same plane he
was sent back to Istanbul.

Petikyan told the Turkish "Hyurriet" that what happened to him in
Azerbaijan was racism, and that such position of Azerbaijan is a
direct offence on Turkey. " Baku’s position is racist and a shameful
deed against humanity. This action against the Turkish citizen is an
offence on Turkey," said the Turkish Armenian pianist and declared
that he had addressed a letter of protest to the Turkish Ministry of
Foreign Affairs.

Azerbaijan Asked To Explain ‘Mistreatment’ Of Turkish-Armenian Music

AZERBAIJAN ASKED TO EXPLAIN ‘MISTREATMENT’ OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN MUSICIAN
By Suzan Fraser, The Associated Press

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Dec 27 2006

Turkey has asked its close ally Azerbaijan for information on the
alleged mistreatment and expelling of a Turkish musician who is of
Armenian descent, a Foreign Ministry official said Tuesday.

Murat Bedikyan – a pianist with Eurovision song contest winner Sertap
Erener’s band – accused officials in Azerbaijan of mistreating him
and unfairly ousting him from the country on arrival for a concert
over the weekend.

Bedikyan was forced to return to Istanbul and could not join his
band. He insisted he was singled out and mistreated despite his
Turkish citizenship, because he is a member of Turkey’s minority
Armenian community.

Turkey had formally requested information on Bedikyan’s allegations
from Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry, according to a Turkish Foreign
Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of rules
that bar civil servants from speaking to journalists without prior
authorization. A similar request had been made with the Azerbaijani
Embassy in Ankara, the official said.

The ex-Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia are at loggerheads
over the mountainous region of Nagorno Karabakh in Azerbaijan that
has been under the control of Armenian and ethnic-Armenian forces
since a 1994 cease-fire. The six-year separatist conflict killed
about 30,000 people and drove about 1 million from their homes,
including many of the region’s ethnic Azeris. The region’s final
status remains unresolved and years of talks under the auspices of
international mediators have brought few visible results

Turkey has close ties to Azerbaijan, with which it shares an ethnic
and linguistic heritage. It refuses to have diplomatic relations with
Armenia because of Yerevan’s unresolved conflict with Azerbaijan.

Relations are further complicated over the World War I-era killings
of Armenians.

Russia Distances Himself From South Caucasus

RUSSIA DISTANCES HIMSELF FROM SOUTH CAUCASUS

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.12.2006 16:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The year of 2006 became a jump in Russia’s distancing
from the South Caucasus. One of the causes of this distance is Russian
‘gas’ policy towards the CIS countries, said political scientist
Alexander Iskandaryan, the Director of Caucasian Media Institute to
a news conference in Yerevan. "The other heavy factor of Russia’s
distancing from the region is the aggravation of Russian-Georgian
relations. In both cases Russia’s attitude towards the South Caucasus
lead the Armenian community to great changes in the sphere of social
discourse, greatly changed Armenian’s attitude towards Russia," he
stressed. In his words, it’s true that Russia has been and remains the
heaviest and most essential military-political partner of Armenia. "But
in other sphere of republic’s relations with other states, say in
trade-economic sphere, Europe has paramount importance for Armenia.

Here there are several causes: the consistently developing Armenia-NATO
Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP), EU-Armenia Action Plan in
the framework of European Neighborhood Policy, new developments in
Turkey-EU relations," thinks the Armenian political scientist.

Alongside, he underlined that Armenia’s policy in Russian-Georgian
opposition proceeds from rationality.

"Armenia cannot allow luxury to spoil Armenian-Georgian relations in
favor of Russia. This is being done and it is right. In his turn Moscow
demand from the Armenian authorities to behave other way. Moreover,
Armenia begins to come out of such primitive notions as ‘everlasting
allies and enemies’ and refers to the role of "Russia’s outpost"
by other way, which she is being strongly imposed and which is far
away from the reality," Iskandaryan stressed.

In regard of increasing xenophobia towards Caucasian migrants, the
Armenian political scientist thinks that just it has being written
much about. "Murders and persecutions of Armenians in Russia existed
always, just currently the Armenian press has begun to notice it. In
1994-95 there were pogroms and expulsions in Krasnodar Territory but
nobody used to write about it.

So the matter is in activation of the press. And then, this is Russia’s
and other multi-national states’ problem," Iskandaryan said.

Tax Privileges To Be Used For Construction Of Meghri-Kajaran Gas Pip

TAX PRIVILEGES TO BE USED FOR CONSTRUCTION OF MEGHRI-KAJARAN GAS PIPELINE

Noyan Tapan
Dec 21 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, NOYAN TAPAN. Taking into consideration the
importance of constructing the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, the Armenian
government at the December 21 sitting approved the draft law on tax
privileges for construction of the Meghri-Kajaran gas pipeline. The
draft will be submitted to the RA National Assembly in prescribed
order. NT was infomed about it from the RA Government Information
and PR Department.

Kurd Writer Amine Avdal’s 100th Anniversary Marked At Writers’ Union

KURD WRITER AMINE AVDAL’S 100th ANNIVERSARY MARKED AT WRITERS’ UNION OF ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Dec 19 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN. Prominent figure of the Kurdish
national culture, writer, pedagogue Amine Avdal was a representative
of that generation of the Kurdish intellectuals who had great
contribution in development of the Kurdish national culture in the
years of 20-30s in Soviet Armenia. Kurdish intellectual Chaykyaze
Rash-Mstoyan said about it on December 18 at the morning party
organized at the Writers’ Unionof Armenia which was dedicated to
A.Avdal’s 100th anniversary. Chaykyaze Rash mentioned that A.Avdal
was born in Kars, but the family migrated and settled in Armenia after
the genocide implemented by the Ottaman Empire at the beginning of the
20th century. A.Avdal worked at the RA NAS History and Eastern Studies
Institute as a scientific worker, Kurdologist. In words of Chaykyaze
Rash, A.Avdal had a great contribution in the sphere of ethnography and
studies of the Kurdish people as well as in the affair of preparing
Kurdish text-books, gathering folklore, terminology and orthography
of the Kurdish language. A.Avdal’s "Believes of Yezidi Kurds" work
published by the NA Archeology and Ethnography Institute was also
presented at the event. Kurdish patriarchal life, Kurd Yezidis’
historic past, way of living, their believes and religious notions
are presented in the work.

Humour And Humanity

HUMOUR AND HUMANITY
Daniel Trilling

New Statesman
December 18, 2006

International literature explored the world of Zinedine Zidane and
brought us new works by Isabel Allende and Laura Esquivel.

The posters on the wall of the Paris bookshop say it all: a photograph
of a floodlit football pitch, empty except for a ball resting
forlornly on the penalty spot. Underneath are emblazoned the words
"<em>La Melancolie de Zidane</em>". Whereas, this side of the Channel,
we make do with <em>Wayne Rooney: my story so far</em>, in November
France was treated to a philosophical tract on Zinedine Zidane’s
World Cup disaster by the Belgian writer Jean-Philippe Toussaint.

Published in an elegant slimline volume by the highbrow imprint Les
Editions de Minuit, <em>La Melancolie de Zidane</em> is a 17-page
reflection on that fateful moment when the player head-butted an
opponent during the World Cup final and was sent off, dashing France’s
hopes of victory. When interviewed by<em> ‘Equipe</em> magazine,
Toussaint declared that, although Zidane had broken the rules of fair
play, the head-butt itself was "novelistic in its ambiguity". Four
months on, it is a measure of how painful the event was to the French
national psyche that the arrival of Toussaint’s book has been treated
with awed reverence.

Across the border in Germany, painful memories of an altogether
different sort were dredged up this year. Gunter Grass, the Nobel
Prize-winning author, confessed that he had served in the Waffen
SS during the Second World War. The revelation shocked those who
knew Grass as an outspoken peace activist, and came ahead of the
publication of the latest volume of his memoirs, <em>Peeling the Onion
</em>(published in the UK by Harvill Secker next June). Grass, many of
whose novels deal with Germany’s wartime past, said that he had been
recruited aged 17 into an SS tank division, and though he had not felt
ashamed at the time, his silence over the years "weighed" upon him.

Reactions to the news were mixed. The head of Germany’s main Jewish
organisation said that it reduced Grass’s earlier anti-war statements
to "absurdities", and the former Polish president Lech Walesa said
that he should hand back his honorary citizenship of Gdansk. Other
writers, including Salman Rushdie and John Irving, defended Grass,
while others claimed that the revelation had been timed to boost
sales of his new book.

Two of Latin America’s best-known authors provoked controversy by
writing novels that cast the era of the conquistadors in a new light.

The Chilean author Isabel Allende and Laura Esquivel from Mexico
both published novels about women who collaborated with the Spanish
colonisers. Allende’s <em>Ines of My Soul</em> (HarperCollins) tells
the story of Ines Suarez, a Spanish seamstress who became the lover of
the conquistador Pedro de Valdivia, while Esquivel’s <em>Malinche</em>
(Simon & Schuster) tells the story of an Aztec woman who changed sides
and helped the Spanish conquer Mexico. Both authors hope that their
characters will be seen as misunderstood heroines, but reviewers have
complained that their books ignore the slaughter of indigenous peoples.

At least Allende and Esquivel could say what they liked about their
countries’ histories without fear of persecution. In Turkey, the
novelist Elif Shafak became the latest in a long line of writers,
editors and academics to be tried under a law that forbids citizens
from "insulting Turkishness". Many of these cases revolve around the
massacre of Armenians during the last days of the Ottoman empire,
an event that Turkey’s government refuses to accept was genocide.

In Shafak’s case, there was an added twist, in that the disputed
comments were made not directly by her, but by characters in her latest
novel, <em>The Bastard of Istanbul </em>(Viking). Shafak was unable
to appear in court because she had just given birth, but thankfully
the judges decided against sending a mother with a newborn baby to
prison for comments made by people who didn’t exist. The Turkish
prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, welcomed the verdict, but the
law still stands and other writers are facing trial.

Finally, while Iranian authors have been finding themselves writing
in an ever-more restrictive climate – the latest development being
the blacklisting of dozens of bestsellers – the Iranian-born graphic
novelist Marjane Satrapi has used her emigre status to produce works
that show a different side to Islam and Iranian culture from the
western media stereotype.

Her latest book, <em>Chicken With Plums</em> (Jonathan Cape), follows
the story of Nasser Ali Khan, a real-life musician whose heart breaks
when his favourite instrument gets smashed. Nothing will shake him
from this depression – not even his favourite meal, from which the
book takes its title – and Nasser Ali Khan is haunted by memories and
visions, communing with Sufi mystics, the spirit of his late mother
and even the Angel of Death.

Beautifully drawn, and written with humour and humanity, <em>Chicken
With Plums</em> is one of the year’s finest books and should be on
your wish-list if you don’t have a copy already.

To Fulfill EU Demands On Living Standards In Turkish Regions – Is To

TO FULFILL EU DEMANDS ON LIVING STANDARDS IN TURKISH REGIONS – IS TO OPEN BORDERS WITH ARMENIA

Yerevan, December 19. ArmInfo. The easiest way to fulfill demands of
European Union (EU) to equal living standards of population in Turkish
regions, is to open borders with Armenia, said Tigran Jrbashyan,
Armenian Director of Armenian-European Policy and Legal Advice Centre
(AEPLAC), at the meeting with journalists today.

Among the 35 points discussed by EU with Turkey on its membership
in EU, negotiations over the 8 were suspended, and the other 27 are
actively negotiated.

"First of all Turkey will gain if the blockade is opened. EU mentions,
as the most acute problem, unequal distributed Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) in Turkish regions. The inequality in the regions bordering
with Armenia falls three times. The easiest solution of the problem
is opening of the frontier. The onshore cargo transportation will
decrease Armenia’s expenses", T. Jrbashyan pointed out.

Tehran: Iran Calls For Promotion Of Cooperation With Armenia

IRAN CALLS FOR PROMOTION OF COOPERATION WITH ARMENIA

Fars News Agency, Iran
Dec 18 2006

TEHRAN (Fars News Agency)- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stressed
that Tehran and Yerevan should utilize their abundant potentials to
increase mutual cooperation in all areas.

According to a statement released by the Presidential Press Office,
Ahmadinejad made the remarks in a meeting with Armenian Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian here on Sunday.

During the meeting, Ahmadinejad noted the two countries’ ties that are
developing and deepening, and called for the utilization of all the
potentials existing on both sides to further increase Tehran-Yerevan
cooperation.

He further viewed consolidated ties among neighboring states as an
influential factor in the exaltation of regional nations, reiterating
that the expansion of cooperation and communications among neighboring
and regional countries, including Iran and Armenia, serves regional
peace and security and progress of the two nations.

Pointing to Iran-Armenia cooperation in various spheres, including
transfer of energy and transportation, the Iranian president stressed
the need for the speeding up of implementation of the two countries’
mutual agreements, including those pertaining to the transfer of
Iran’s natural gas to Armenia via pipeline, which he said serves
regional peace, friendship and development.

For his part, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian assessed mutual
exchange of visits by the two countries’ officials as effective in
the expansion of Tehran-Yerevan relations, and said that his country
attaches special significance to the development of all-out ties
with Iran.

The top diplomat also stressed that construction and completion of
the natural gas pipeline plays a vitally important role in securing
Armenia’s energy needs.

Azeri Captive Doesn’t Want To Return To Homeland Fearing Of Savage P

AZERI CAPTIVE DOESN’T WANT TO RETURN TO HOMELAND FEARING OF SAVAGE PUNISHMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.12.2006 14:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Vusal Magomed ogly Garacheyev, captured on
December 7, upon return to Azerbaijan will be sent to prison to spend
a long time there," NKR President Arkady Ghukasian said in Yerevan
December 17. In his words, ‘the Azeri soldier knowingly crossed the
border in a grave health state, since he was constantly beaten by
his fellows.’ "There is no necessity to investigate the incident,
it’s clear."

Ghukasian remarked adding that ‘the captive does not want to return
to Azerbaijan fearing of savage punishment.’

The NKR President also informed that ‘within a day after capturing
an appeal was sent to the International Committee of the Red Cross
and presently technical issues are being settled.’ At the same time
President remarked that ‘if the Azeri soldier keeps on saying that he
does not want to return the Karabakhi side will not insist.’ "However,
to all appearance, pressure will be exerted upon his family and it
will make him return," he said reminding that unlike Azerbaijan the
NKR authorities always timely convey the captives to the ICRC while
Baku carries out investigation during several months and tries to
recruit the captives, reports IA Regnum.