National Assembly Approves 2008 Action Plan Of Control Chamber

NATIONAL ASSEMBLY APPROVES 2008 ACTION PLAN OF CONTROL CHAMBER

Noyan Tapan
Feb 5, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 5, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA National Assembly on February
5 approved the 2008 action plan of the RA Control Chamber (CC). The
chairman of the Control Chamber Ishkhan Zakarian said that it is for
the first time that the action plan of the recently reorganized CC
is presented in accordance with the new law.

In particular, it includes control of the use of resources allocated
from the state budget and by foreign states and international financial
organizations and used in a number of spheres. Control will also
be done in several departments, including in the police adjunct to
the Armenian government, as well as control of the use of resources
allocated from the state budget for implementation of the "state
order" and programs at Public Television of Armenia CJSC, control
of budgetary revenues, and control of management and use of state
property. The Control Chamber also envisages implementing control of
the use of budgetary resources by three marzes (provinces) and three
communities of the city of Yerevan, control over the collection of
community budgets’ revenues and the management and use of community
property. Control over the management and use of real estate by the
Yerevan mayor’s office will also be done.

Any Breach Of Law In Election Campaign Period To Be Stopped

ANY BREACH OF LAW IN ELECTION CAMPAIGN PERIOD TO BE STOPPED

Russia & CIS Presidential Bulletin
February 4, 2008

Any breach of law in the election campaign period will be stopped
firmly, President Robert Kocharian said while touring a new building
of the Defense Ministry in Yerevan.

Everyone must know that the Criminal Code is not ‘frozen’ for the
period of the election campaign. On the contrary, law enforcement
agencies must be stricter and prevent additional problems that may
be caused by electoral passions, he said.

As for the car race in downtown Yerevan initiated by the ex-
president’s supporters, Kocharian said, traffic rules are compulsory
for everyone.

The incident on the junction of the Bagramian Avenue and Demirchian
Street happened right before my eyes. It was an impudent act and I
think that governmental agencies must prevent acts of the kind and
the culprits must be punished, Kocharian said.

The police have opened a hotline, and the Prosecutor General’s Office
has formed a special working group, the president said.

They will inform the public how a particular incident is being
investigated, he said.

I call on everyone to abstain from provocative acts. You should not
respond to provocative acts either. The organizers of rallies are
responsible for their compliance with the law. No one must forget
about that, Kocharian said.

Armenia will elect the president on February 19. The Central Elections
Commission has registered nine candidates, including Prime Minister
Serzh Sargsyan, first Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrossian,
Vice-Speaker Vaan Ovannisian and former Prime Minister Vagen Manukian.

FAR Awarded Highest Rating By Charity Navigator, Again

PRESS RELEASE
Fund for Armenian Relief
2/5/2008
Contact: Edina N. Bobelian
(212) 889-5150
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]

The Fund for Armenian Relief Awarded Highest Rating by Charity
Navigator, Again FAR Among Only 15% of Charities in America to Receive
the Coveted Four-Star Rating Two Years in a Row

New York, NY – Feb. 5, 2008 –

On February 4, 2008, Charity Navigator congratulated the Fund for
Armenian Relief (FAR) on achieving its coveted four-star rating for
sound fiscal management for the second year in a row.

As the nonprofit sector continues to grow at an unprecedented pace,
savvy donors are demanding more accountability, transparency, and
quantifiable results from the charities they choose to support with
their hard-earned dollars. In this competitive philanthropic
marketplace, Charity Navigator, America’s premier charity evaluator,
highlights the fine work of efficient charities and provides donors
with essential information needed to give them greater confidence in
the charitable choices they make.

Charity Navigator uses the most recent financial information available
to calculate its evaluations and award its ratings. It provides a
comprehensive explanation of its methodology for donors.

FAR earned its second consecutive four-star rating for its ability to
efficiently manage and grow its finances. Only 15% of the charities
rated by Charity Navigator have received at least two consecutive
four-star evaluations, indicating that FAR outperforms most charities
in America to operate in the most fiscally responsible way
possible. This "exceptional" designation from Charity Navigator
differentiates FAR from its peers and demonstrates to the public it is
worthy of their trust.

The New York Times, NPR and The Chronicle of Philanthropy, among
others, have profiled and celebrated Charity Navigator’s unique method
of applying data-driven analysis to the charitable sector. Charity
Navigator evaluates ten times more charities than its nearest
competitor and currently attracts more visitors to its website,
than all other charity rating groups
combined, thereby making it the leading charity evaluator in America.

Charity Navigator’s evaluation of FAR is available online at ch.summary&orgid=3738

About FAR

FAR is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in New York,
with offices in Yerevan, Gyumri, and Stepanakert. Since 1989, FAR has
implemented more than 220 relief, development, social, educational,
and cultural projects valued at more than $265 million in Armenia,
Karabagh and Javakhk.

FAR, one of the preeminent relief and development organization
operating there, is dedicated to realizing the dream of a free,
democratic, prosperous, and culturally rich Armenia. It works towards
a brighter future by partnering with donors to make daily life better
for vulnerable people.

For more information on FAR or to send donations, contact us at 630
Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016; telephone (212) 889-5150; fax (212)
889-4849; web

http://www.charitynavigator.org
http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=sear
www.farusa.org

Lawyer Among 29 Held Over Murders

LAWYER AMONG 29 HELD OVER MURDERS

The Irish Times
February 2, 2008 Saturday

TURKEY: Prosecutors claim to have unmasked a plot to engineer a coup
by murdering dissidents, writes Nicholas Birch in Istanbul

Turkish investigations into a gang suspected of a series of
high-profile killings and a plot to murder Nobel Prize-winning novelist
Orhan Pamuk broadened this week, in a crackdown some are comparing
to the anti-Mafia operations in Italy in the 1990s.

Twenty-nine people, including a retired general and a prominent lawyer,
have now been charged by an Istanbul prosecutor with "provoking armed
rebellion against the government". Their plan, allegedly, was to
assassinate public intellectuals, Kurdish politicians, even military
targets, as part of a campaign to destabilise Turkish society and
force military intervention.

Dubbed "Ergenekon" by the Turkish press, the plotters’ target date
was in 2009. But after two years of increasing social tensions
that culminated in army coup threats in April 2007, the group
already seems to have a lot to account for. One of the men charged
is Alparslan Arslan, currently on trial for the May 2006 murder of
a judge at the High Court in Ankara. The attack on this secularist
bastion triggered a backlash that culminated in last spring’s massive
secular demonstrations.

The judge’s death was blamed at the time on extremist Islamists. Yet
while Arslan himself appears to be religious-minded, many of those
behind him are secular-minded, self-styled patriots.

It’s a mix Turks call "the Red Apple coalition", a counter-intuitive
collaboration based on rabid nationalism and a determination to block
Turkey’s path from authoritarianism to full democracy.

Unsurprisingly, evidence linking Ergenekon to the murder of Hrant Dink,
a mould-breaking Armenian-Turkish journalist whose assassination last
January sparked deep social polarisation, is mounting fast.

One of those arrested last week is Kemal Kerincsiz, the lawyer who
opened dozens of cases against dissident intellectuals including Dink
and Pamuk.

A key suspect, meanwhile, is retired general Veli Kucuk, whose
presence at Dink’s trial, Dink later wrote, convinced him the death
threats he was getting were serious. Alleged founder of a shadowy
military police intelligence unit suspected of the murders of dozens
of Kurdish activists in the 1990s, Kucuk also has strong links to
Trabzon, the home town of Dink’s killers.

"He recently set up a security company there, and owns a local
magazine," explains Belma Akcura, an investigative journalist whose
book on state-mafia links was published last year. "Who writes for
the magazine? A retired colonel linked to the nationalist group Dink’s
killers frequented."

Akcura points to another of the bizarre coincidences piling up around
the Ergenekon case: the High Court gunman and the Trabzon man suspected
of masterminding the Dink murder attended the same secondary school
in the eastern city of Elazig.

Kucuk rose to notoriety in 1997 when it turned out he was the last
man to talk to a convicted nationalist multi-murderer who died when
a car carrying a police chief and a pro-state Kurdish MP crashed at
high speed. Dubbed "Susurluk", the ensuing scandal shed a grim light
on the Turkish state’s dabbling in organised crime.

For many, Kucuk’s presence in Ergenekon proves the gang is part of the
"Deep State", a shadowy nexus of politicians, civilian and military
bureaucrats and mafia many believe tries to twist Turkish society to
its own anti-democratic agenda.

Back in 1997, the then prime minister blocked a parliamentary
commission’s demand that Kucuk give evidence. The army promoted him
shortly afterwards. Some see his arrest now as evidence that Turkey
is getting better.

"It’s early days, but I’m optimistic we’re seeing signs of a
fundamental change in the balance of power between the elected
government and the state," says Alper Gormus, editor of a magazine
that was shut last year after it revealed a top admiral’s plans for
a military coup.

Others point out that Kucuk was then an active officer. Now he’s not.

"What we have here is a bunch of retired men trying to use the
influence they once had to their own ends," says Fehmi Koru, a
prominent columnist who was on the gang’s hit-list.

Most analysts think the real crunch will come when magistrates move
against acting officers whose internet chats on the finer points of
Ergenekon strategy began leaking into the press this week.

The allegations brought an uncharacteristially cautious public
statement on Wednesday from Turkey’s chief of staff. "The Turkish
armed forces are not a criminal organisation," Yasar Buyukanit said.

"Those who commit an offence as army members will be tried in court
and punished."

In an investigation whose success ultimately depends on government
determination, analysts are divided as to how far it will go. Some
think the army – whose coup threats last year served only to boost
the government’s crushing electoral victory – will think twice before
intervening again.

Others think the government’s backing for the investigation has more
to do with short-term power struggles with the army than any deep
desire to cleanse the state of its links to crime.

For Belma Akcura, the government’s limitations became evident in
its lack of interest in following up the Dink murder, an ongoing
investigation it has no vested interests in.

"I’ve looked into hundreds of political murder cases, and in all of
them all you get at the end are the footsoldiers, never the top of
the pyramid," she says. "To have the will to get to the top, you have
to believe in law, in democracy. These people do not."

Reuters adds: The Turkish government’s plans to allow female students
to wear the Muslim headscarf at university will provoke campus
chaos and street violence and end up destroying the secular state,
university rectors said yesterday.

"After such changes in the constitution and the law, the republic of
Turkey would inevitably turn into a religious state," Mustafa Akaydin,
head of Turkey’s inter-university council, said to loud applause from
dozens of academics. "We are worried that the universities will be
plunged into chaos . . . Universities are the venue for knowledge, not
for [ religious] faith," he said, reading out a statement unanimously
approved by the rectors after an emergency meeting in Ankara.

Some professors chanted, "Turkey is secular and will remain secular",
and held up a banner that read: "Enough already, wake up! Let’s protect
the principles and revolution of Ataturk and the secular republic!"

Canadian MP raises concerns over omission of Ukraine famine-genocide

BRAMA (press release), NY
Feb 2 2008

Canadian MP raises concerns over omission of Ukraine famine-genocide
from school course

In his letter to John Campbell, head of the Toronto District School
Board, M.P. Borys Wrzesnewskyj expressed his concerns that
information about the 1932-1933 Holodomor (famine genocide) in
Ukraine was excluded from TDSB’s grade 11 course entitled Genocide:
Historical and Contemporary Implications.

* * *

January 30, 2008

John Campbell
Chair
Toronto District School Board
5050 Yonge St.
Toronto, ON M2N 5N8
[email protected]

Dear John,

Let me begin by congratulating you on your recent election as Chair
of the Toronto District School Board (TDSB), the most diverse school
board in a province and country that are recognized across the world
for their commitment to multiculturalism. I am confident that your
previous experience as Chair of the Administration, Finance and
Accountability Committee has prepared you for the challenges that lie
ahead.

It is my understanding that the Ontario Ministry of Education has
approved the TDSB’s grade 11 course entitled Genocide: Historical and
Contemporary Implications. As someone who has devoted a considerable
amount of time to addressing human rights issues in the former Soviet
Union and who has organized, financed and led fact-finding missions
to devastated Somalia and the Darfur region of Sudan, I applaud the
introduction of a full-credit course which will allow students to
study, explore and confront genocide, war crimes and crimes against
humanity. It will provide young students with a historical context of
the horrific consequences of traveling down the path of intolerance
or a belief in racial or religious superiority.

John, you are probably unaware that I am a founding member and serve
on the executive of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for the
Prevention of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity, whose first chair
was Senator Rome’o Dallaire. We often engage in discussions about the
importance of education in the prevention of future crimes against
humanity.

I have also had the opportunity to lecture and engage on the issue of
genocide with University of Ottawa students who take Professor
Dominique Arel’s course `Political Violence: The Comparative Study of
Mass Killing.’ During this particular lecture I illustrated three
categories of genocide and variants thereof. The first category of
genocide is the most primitive and common form of genocide; this form
of genocide, which predates written history, I call the `hurricane of
hatred’ when one tribe descends upon another with the intent to
massacre the other tribe’s members. In the 20th century, the world
was frozen by a lack of political resolve when a `hurricane of
hatred’ descended upon Rwanda.

The second form of genocide, `genocide by attrition,’ appeared as a
contemporary of human civilization and written history. Typically,
this form of genocide entailed a city state’s population being
surrounded militarily, allowing hunger and disease, that is,
`genocide by attrition.’ In the 20th century the world stood by as
Stalin encamped `Europe’s breadbasket’ in Ukraine, millions of
peasants were starved through a `genocide by attrition’ all the while
grain produced on these fertile fields was being exported to the
West. This particular `genocide by attrition’ not only deserves
special note as it had the largest number of victims by this form of
genocide, but also because there continues to be `holodomor/genocide
denial’ by the Russian Federation and fellow travelers. Shockingly,
Russian politicians such as President Putin pride themselves as the
inheritors of Stalin’s political legacy, and have even applied
pressure in international forums (including in meetings with Canadian
government officials) to deny this genocide.

Finally, there is the third category of genocide of which there is
only one horrific example, `the Holocaust.’ A genocide by which
politicians engaged not just soldiers, but highly educated engineers
and scientists in its meticulously planned `Final Solution.’

While I applaud the introduction of a course by the TDSB that
`investigates examples of genocide in the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries,’ I am perplexed and disturbed that one of the greatest
mass murders in European history and the most horrific example of
`genocide by attrition,’ the 1932-1933 Holodomor (famine genocide) in
Ukraine, a famine master-minded and carried out by the Soviet regime
under Joseph Stalin, is not explicitly mentioned along with the
`Holocaust, Armenia, and Rwanda’ (see PDF file). This is especially
worrisome as there is no lack of `holodomor/genocide’ deniers in
Canada.

John, a number of constituents, who are also your constituents, have
raised concerns with me about the omission of the mention of the
Holodomor in this course description. I have also been contacted by
Mr. Marco Levytsky, editor of Ukrainian News, a national Ukrainian
Canadian newspaper, seeking answers to the following questions:

Why was the Holodomor omitted from the list of genocides to be
explicitly studied?
Are there any plans to rectify this omission?
If so, is the TDSB willing to work with the Ukrainian Canadian
community to rectify this omission?

I would ask you to review the issues and concerns that I and many
others in Toronto are raising and would appreciate meeting with you
on this issue.

Respectfully,
Borys Wrzesnewskyj, M.P.
Etobicoke Centre

cc:
Bruce Davis, Trustee (Ward 3 Etobicoke-Lakeshore)
Marco Levytsky, Editor & Publisher Ukrainian News
Hon. Yoine Goldstein, Chair, All-Party Parliamentary Group for the
Prevention of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity
Hon. Raynell Andreychuk
Gerard Kennedy

zesnewskyj_faminegenocide.html

http://www.brama.com/news/press/2008/02/080202wr

Cypriot Community Of U.S. Condemns Genocide Denier Robert Wexler

CYPRIOT COMMUNITY OF U.S. CONDEMNS GENOCIDE DENIER ROBERT WEXLER

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.01.2008 17:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Cyprus Action Network of America (CANA)
accompanied by political organizers from Washington DC, along with
hundreds of activists, many from Florida and many traveling from
several states away, joined together to rally against Armenian Genocide
denier and Cyprus invasion denier Congressman Robert Wexler (D-19).

CANA Press Officer, Nikolaos Taneris delivered an impassioned
address reminding the community of Wexler’s abysmal record in
regards to Cyprus, and the long-lasting horrors of Turkey’s criminal
military-occupation, many local Cypriots attended the rally and held
up placards with the messages "End Turkish Military Occupation of
Cyprus" and "Turkey Out of Cyprus", as well as "End Turkish Fascism."

Armenian community leader Albert Mazmanian, Chairman of the ANC of
S. Florida., commented "The ANC of South Florida felt it was time to
voice our concerns about Congressman Wexler. Enough is enough. It is
time for change, and to elect someone who will represent Florida’s 19th
District. We now have a candidate who is the right man for the job, and
the Armenian and Greek communities stand by him one-hundred percent."

CANA consultant John Bosnitch, commented on Wexler "he is in the
pocket of the big money Turkish lobby denying the illegal occupation of
Cyprus…Wexler’s denial of the past Genocide of Armenians is strike
one, Wexler’s support of the present Genocide of Greeks in Cyprus is
strike two, Wexler’s support of the future Genocide of Kosovo Serbs
is strike three…lets be Americans about this.. Mister Wexler,
three strikes you’re out," GIBRAHAYER e-magazine reports.

Green Party Of Azerbaijan Offers Referendum In Karabakh

GREEN PARTY OF AZERBAIJAN OFFERS REFERENDUM IN KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.01.2008 14:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Green Party of Azerbaijan has developed "25 steps
toward Karabakh resolution" program. According to party chairman Mais
Gyulnaliyev, presently the party members are attending to the problems
concerning Green Parties throughout out the globe. The Nagorno Karabakh
conflict is also in focus.

"We have developed a program which considerable differs from the
proposals made by the leadership and opposition. Steps 11 and
12 suggest that the oil income should be distributed among the
people. Step 25 supposes conduction of a referendum in Nagorno
Karabakh, since the problem can’t be solved by use of force," he said.

"The authorities missed several chances to settle the conflict. The
first chance emerged in 1991; the second was in 1994, when the
Millennium Summit Treaty was signed. Then followed 2003, when
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline was put into operation. Now, we have
to count on our own strengths," Gyulnaliyev resumed, Day.az reports.

Overdue Loans Of1.5 Billion

OVERDUE LOANS OF1.5 BILLION

KarabakhOpen
30-01-2008 13:34:42

On January 29 Prime Minister Ara Harutiunyan held a meeting on overdue
loans. By preliminary calculations, the volume of overdue loans totals
1.5 billion drams.

The prime minister stated that recently a special commission has been
set up to study and tackle the problem of overdue loans. The relevant
agencies have been instructed to make the list of major borrowers
within a ten days time.

The prime minister also drew attention to overdue rents, which total
243 million drams. It was noted that in case of repayment by November
1 there will be no fines. The farmers whose crops were damaged by
fire will not be fined.

Ter-Petrosian’s Pre-Election Staff Accused The Armenian Authorities

TER-PETROSIAN’S PRE-ELECTION STAFF ACCUSED THE ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES OF "PREVOCATIONAL AND ILLEGAL STEPS"

Mediamax
January 30, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. The pre-election staff of the Armenian presidential
candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian made a statement, in which it accused
the authorities of "prevocational and illegal steps".

The statement reads that during the rally of Ter-Petrosian, which
took place on January 27 in Talin, a provocation was organize with
the direct participation of the authorities", as a result of which
the activists of the local pre-election headquarter were called to
the local department of the Police, which "paralyzed the work of
the headquarter".

The statement reads that on January 28 in Kapan, the policemen
"with the use of force closed the local pre-election headquarter of
Ter-Petrosian, in fact paralyzing its activity".

The staff of the presidential candidate stated that on the nights
of January 27 and 28, the signboards of the headquarters of Levon
Ter-Petrosian were torn in Vanadzor town and the Yerevan Arabkir
community.

The statement notes that on January 29, "by illegal means" the cars,
participating in the "spontaneous" pre-election car-rally of Levon
Ter-Petrosian, were taken to a penal ground.

"These actions aim at stopping the victorious march of Levon
Ter-Petrosian and take the pre-election situation out of control. We
are warning the Armenian authorities that they will be the ones to
bear responsibility for the unexpected consequences of such actions",
the statement reads.

Meanwhile, as the press service of the Armenian Police stated the day
before, on January 28, a report of the road Police was sent to the
Yerevan Department of the Police, according to which at the crossroad
of Baghramian Avenue and Demirchian street, the 150-200 drivers,
accompanying Levon Ter-Petrosian, not only ignored the requirements of
the road Police to stop, but, threatening that they would use force,
continued the movement, entering the median strip and creating threat
for the life of not only the policemen, but other citizens as well.

They Rely On Their Birthplace

THEY RELY ON THEIR BIRTHPLACE

A1+
30 January, 2008

Over 400 people gathered in Sisian today to meet presidential candidate
Arthur Baghdasarian.

"I come from Sisian and I hope that residents of Sisian will back
Arthur Baghdasarian during the presidential election," OYP Deputy
Chairman Mher Shahgerdian addressed the public.

He dwelt on poverty reduction and massive emigration which is
especially troublesome at frontier regions.

Mher Shahgerdian says the most worrying is that people have lost
every hope of better life.

In his speech Arthur Baghdasarian spoke of monopolistic control in
the country. Unemployment is still a top-priority in Armenia but the
Government takes no measures in this respect.

"If you take election bribes today and pay 6000 AMD per a sack of
flour, tomorrow you will have to pay 12000 AMD per a sack," Arthur
Baghdasarian said while speaking of election bribes.

In case Arthur Baghdasarian is elected he will take efforts to reduce
taxes and to raise money for tuition.