Pupils’ Armenological Knowledge To Be Checked In Competitions To Be

PUPILS’ ARMENOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE TO BE CHECKED IN COMPETITIONS TO BE HELD IN SEPTEMBER IN YEREVAN

NOyan Tapan
Jul 23, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA Ministry of Education and
Science, on September 14-20, will organize simultaneously two All
Armenian competitions for pupils in Yerevan, the third olympiad on
Armenian language and literature and the competition of Armenological
knowledge. Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed about it by the
Ministry’s Information and Public Relations Department.

The goal of these competitions on knowledge in Armenian language
and Armenological subjects is to promote and encourage knowledge
of Armenian language, Armenian literature, Armenian history, and
Armenian culture.

The olympiad and the competition of Armenological knowledge are
intended for pupils above 14 years. Tasks from Armenian history and
Armenian culture will be included in the competition of Armenological
knowledge. The participants can be both pupils of Armenian colleges
and educational institutions and Armenian and foreign youths attending
other schools. Pupils speaking other languages can take part in the
competitions in languages they prefer.

First, second and third category prizes have been instituted for the
winners of both competitions. Contests of recital, oratory, patriotic
song, and other creative contests are also envisaged. Special and
encouraging prizes have been instituted for them.

Robert Fisk: No Wonder The Bloggers Are Winning

The Independent

Robert Fisk: No Wonder The Bloggers Are Winning

These Gutless Papers Explain Why More People Are Googling Than Turning Pages
Published: 21 July 2007
I despise the internet. It’s irresponsible and, often, a net of
hate. And I don’t have time for Blogopops. But here’s a tale of
two gutless newspapers which explains why more and more people are
Googling rather than turning pages.

First the Los Angeles Times. Last year, reporter Mark Arax was
assigned a routine story on the 1915 genocide of one and a half
million Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish authorities. Arax’s report
focused on divisions within the local Jewish community over whether
to call the genocide a genocide.

It’s an old argument. The Turks insist – against all the facts and
documents and eyewitness accounts, and against history – that the
Armenians were victims of a civil war. The Israeli government and its
new, Nobel prize-winning president, Shimon Peres – anxious to keep
cosy relations with modern Turkey – have preferred to adopt Istanbul’s
mendacious version of events. However, many Jews, both inside and
outside Israel, have bravely insisted that they do constitute a
genocide, indeed the very precursor to the later Nazi Holocaust of
six million Jews.

But Arax’s genocide report was killed on the orders of managing editor
Douglas Frantz because the reporter had a "position on the issue"
and "a conflict of interest".

Readers will already have guessed that Arax is an
Armenian-American. His sin, it seems, was that way back in 2005,
he and five other writers wrote a formal memo to LA Times editors
reminding them that the paper’s style rules meant that the Armenian
genocide was to be called just that – not "alleged genocide". Frantz,
however, described the old memo as a "petition" and apparently accused
Arax of landing the assignment by dealing with a Washington editor
who was also an Armenian.

The story was reassigned to Washington reporter Rich Simon, who
concentrated on Turkey’s attempt to block Congress from recognising
the Armenian slaughter — and whose story ran under the headline
"Genocide Resolution Still Far From Certain".

LA Times executives then went all coy, declining interviews, although
Frantz admitted in a blog (of course) that he had "put a hold" on
Arax’s story because of concerns that the reporter "had expressed
personal views about the topic in a public (sic) manner…". Ho ho.

Truth can be dangerous for the LA Times. Even more so, it seems, when
the managing editor himself – Frantz, no less – once worked for The
New York Times, where he referred to the Armenian massacres as, yes,
an "alleged" genocide. Frantz, it turns out, joined the LA Times as
its Istanbul correspondent.

Well, Arax has since left the LA Times after a settlement
which forestalled a lawsuit against the paper for defamation and
discrimination. His employers heaped praise upon his work while Frantz
has just left the paper to become Middle East correspondent of the
Wall Street Journal based in – of course, you guessed it – Istanbul.

But now let’s go north of the border, to the Toronto Globe and Mail,
which assigned columnist Jan Wong to investigate a college murder
in Montreal last September. Wong is not a greatly loved reporter. A
third-generation Canadian, she moved to China during Mao’s "cultural
revolution" and, in her own words, "snitched on class enemies and
did my best to be a good little Maoist."

She later wrote a "Lunch With" series for the Globe in which she
acted all sympathetic to interviewee "When they relax, that’s when
their guard is down," she told a college newspaper. "It’s a trick,
but it’s legit." Yuk!

Wong’s take on the Montreal Dawson College shooting, however, was
more serious. She compared the killer to a half-Algerian Muslim who
murdered 14 women in another Montreal college shooting in 1989 and to
a Russian immigrant who killed four university colleagues in Montreal
in 1992. "In all three cases," she wrote, "the perpetrator was not
‘pure laine’, the argot for a ‘pure’ francophone. Elsewhere, to talk
of racial purity is repugnant. Not in Quebec."

Painfully true, I’m afraid. Parisians, who speak real French, would
never use such an expression – pure laine translates literally as "pure
wool" but means "authentic" – but some Montrealers do. Wong, however,
had touched a red hot electric wire in "multicultural" Canada. Prime
Minister Stephen Harper complained. "Grossly irresponsible," said
the man who enthusiastically continued the policy of sending Canadian
troops on their suicidal mission to Afghanistan.

The French-Canadian newspaper Le Devoir – can you imagine a British
paper selling a single copy if it called itself "Duty"? – published
a cartoon of Wong with exaggerated Chinese slanted eyes. Definitely
not pure laine for Le Devoir. The hate mail was even more to the
point. Some contained excrement.

But then the Globe and Mail ran for cover. Its editor-in-chief,
Edward Greenspon, wrote a cowardly column in which he claimed
that the offending paragraphs "should have been removed" from her
story. "We regret that we allowed these words to get into a reported
(sic) article," he sniffled. There had been a breakdown in what he
hilariously called "the editorial quality control process".

Now I happen to know a bit about the Globe’s "quality control
process". Some time ago, I discovered that the paper had reprinted an
article of mine from The Independent about the Armenian genocide. But
they had tampered with it, altering my word "genocide" to read
"tragedy".

The Independent’s subscribers promise to make no changes to our
reports. But when our syndication folk contacted the Globe, they
discovered that the Canadian paper had simply stolen the article. They
were made to pay a penalty fee. But as for the censorship of the word
"genocide", a female executive explained to The Independent that
nothing could be done because the editor responsible had "since left
the Globe and Mail".

It’s the same old story, isn’t it? Censor then whinge, then cut and
run. No wonder the bloggers are winning.

le2788619.ece

http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/artic

Former Security Chief Wins Presidential Vote In Nagorno-Karabakh

FORMER SECURITY CHIEF WINS PRESIDENTIAL VOTE IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Pravda, Russia
July 21 2007

The former security chief of Nagorno-Karabakh has won elections
for the presidency of the Armenian-controlled breakaway region,
the election committee said Friday.

Bako Saakian took 85 percent of Thursday’s vote, election committee
head Sergei Nasibian said.

Saakian, 47, had headed Nagorno-Karabakh’s security service since 2001
but resigned in June to stand in the election. He ran as an independent
and will replace Arkady Gukasian, who served two five-year terms.

Saakian pledged to push for full independence of the mountainous
territory inside Azerbaijan, whose claim to autonomy is not recognized
by any country. His main rival, Masis Mailian, got some 12 percent
of the vote, and the remainder was split among three other candidates.

Three-quarters of the territory’s 92,000 registered voters cast
ballots.

It was the fourth presidential election in the impoverished territory
that has been controlled by Armenian and ethnic Armenian forces since
a shaky 1994 cease-fire ended one of the bloodiest conflicts that
followed the Soviet collapse.

The six-year war killed 30,000 people and drove more than 1 million
from their homes, including many of the region’s ethnic Azeris.

Today, it remains one of the region’s "frozen" conflicts in the former
Soviet states.

Azerbaijan has rejected the vote as illegitimate and maintained that
Armenian separatists came to power in the former autonomous region
as a result of ethnic cleansing.

Azerbaijan and Armenia remain locked in a dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh
despite more than a decade of coaxing from international mediators led
by the United States, Russia and France to resolve the region’s status.

Armenian Presdent Robert Kocharian congratulated Saakian in a message
that said the election "bears witness to an irreversible historical
reality – the existence of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic."

The mostly agricultural region of 146,000 people tied to Armenia by
swaths of Azerbaijani territory also under ethnic Armenian control
has faced a steady brain drain and dire economic problems despite
financial aid from Armenia and the Armenian diaspora.

Saakian has said that international recognition of Kosovo
as an independent state would pave the way for acceptance of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s sovereignty.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a Russian-Turkish term that means "mountainous
black garden." Ethnic Armenians, who now account for virtually the
entire population of the territory, prefer to call it Artsakh.

Preliminary Results: Bako Saakyan Leading In Nagorno-Karabakh Presid

PRELIMINARY RESULTS: BAKO SAAKYAN LEADING IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 20 2007

STEPANAKERT, July 20. /ARKA/. Preliminary results of Nagorno-Karabakh
presidential elections show that Bako Saakyan, former National Security
chief, is leading in the presidential race leaving his rivals far
behind.

The Central Elections Commission says Friday at 10:00 a.m. that
Saakyan had scored 57 828 votes or 85.42% of total number.

Nagorno-Karabakh Deputy Foreign Minister Masis Mailyan, another
presidential candidate, won 8270 votes or 12.21%.

The third candidate, MP Armen Abgaryan got 856 votes or 1.26%.

The commission says that 0.8% or 539 people cast their votes for Hrant
Melkumyan, government control service chief and Communist Party leader.

Vanya Hovhannisyan, lecturer at Artsakh State University, managed to
get only 202 votes or 0.3%.

The Central Election Commission recorded 77.36-percent turnout. It
means 71 285 people went to the poll on Thursday.

ANTELIAS: The representative of Patriarch Zakka I Iwas in Antelias

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

THE
REPRESENTATIVE OF PATRIARCH ZAKKA IWAS I VISITS
HIS HOLINESS ARAM I

His Holiness Aram I received the representative of Patriarch Zakka I Iwas,
Spiritual Leader of the Syrian Orthodox Church in the St. Mary’s Monastery
in Bikfaya on July 19. The Metropolitan of Lebanon, Bishop George Saliba
conveyed the greetings of Patriarch Zakka I to His Holiness and
congratulated him on his successful achievement of reconciling between the
Coptic and Ethiopian Orthodox Churches.

The Pontiff talked about the various phases, which gradually led the two
churches to mutual understanding. He spoke about the joint declarations he
signed with Patriarch Paoulos in Addis Ababa and Patriarchs Shenouda III and
Abba Paulos in Cairo with respect to the reconciliation between the two
churches. The Pontiff and his guest also discussed issues related to the
meeting of the three Orthodox spiritual leaders of the Middle East, as well
as the upcoming meeting of the Middle East Council of Churches.

##
View photo here:
tos/Photos16.htm#2

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Pho

Former Jordanian Information Minister: Iranian Regime Is Supporting

FORMER JORDANIAN INFORMATION MINISTER: IRANIAN REGIME IS SUPPORTING TERRORIST

NCR-Iran.org, UK
National Council of Resistance of Iran
/
July 19 2007

NCRI – Salah al-Kulaab, former Jordanian Information Minister in
an interview with the al- Arabiya TV channel said that the Iranian
regime is engaged in supporting terrorists all over the world. This
regime has nothing to do with Shiism unless it serves its goals and
interests. Alghab added that this regime is ready to play its cards
in all possible directions in order to serve its aspirations for
creating an empire.

Salah al-Kulaab,the former Jordanian Information Minister,July 18,
2007, at an interview with Al-Arabiya TV said:

I have discovered that the Iranian regime has nothing to do with
Shiism unless it serves its goals and interests. This regime is ready
to play its cards in all possible directions in order to serve its
aspirations for creating an empire.

For example, this is a regime that ignored the killings of Hazara
Shiites in Afghanistan by Taliban to maintain necessary alliances.

The Iranian regime was in alliance with Hekmatyar, as it is known
he was one of the Sunni leaders in Afghanistan, and then, more
importantly, if you will recall this regime was allied with the
Armenians fighting against Azerbaijan which was in fact a Shiite
government.

I have said in general that we do not want to deal with this regime.

It is not important for Iran that you are Shiite or Sunni. What is
important is that whether they serve its goals and aspirations in
the region or not.

The decision for the bloody military coup in Gaza was in fact taken
in Tehran and then Khaled Mashaal was either informed or most likely
was ordered to stage it.

What I want to say is that sometimes in political games redlines are
crossed and forbidden are allowed…terrorists have no backing in
this region except from Iran.

The justification for presence of the Quds Force is that their
interests are now best served in confronting the US throughout Iraq
whether it is a Shiite or Sunni region. I’m confident that the Iranian
regime is in contact with Al-Qaeda. They hold bases and camps inside
Iran and their families live in Iran.

http://www.ncr-iran.org/content/view/3859/152

Armenian PM Stated That It Is Necessary To Fight Against Shadow Econ

ARMENIAN PM STATED THAT IT IS NECESSARY TO FIGHT AGAINST SHADOW ECONOMY BY MEANS OF INCREASING THE COLLECTED TAXES

Mediamax News Agency, Armenia
July 17 2007

Yerevan, July 17 /Mediamax/. Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian
presented today the new Head of the State Tax Service Vahram
Barseghian.

As Mediamax was told in the press service of the government today,
speaking for the staff of the Service, Serzh Sarkisian thanked the
Ex-Head Feliks Tsolakian for the work done, noting that in the period
of his leadership the Tax Service managed to increase the volume
of tax collection for 2.5 times, making it reach from 120bln up to
280bln drams.

Armenian Prime Minister expressed confidence that, continuing the
good traditions, Vahram Barseghian will make a "step forward", will
implement new mechanisms and approaches in the work of the Service.

According to Serzh Sarkisian, without the use of new approaches,
it is impossible to completely solve the tasks set for the Service
and increase the level of the taxes collected.

"We have to do that, we have no another way to improve the life of
our people. We will manage to extirpate the shadow economy only by
means of increasing the level of the collected taxes. It is obvious
that any shadow sum works against the state, and we are to take up
serious measures", Serzh Sarkisian stated.

Vahram Barseghian assured the Head of the government that new
approaches and methods will be laid in foundation, which will allow
increasing the efficiency of the work of the Service in a short period
of time.

Measures Taken In Direction Of Modernization Of Medical Equipment An

MEASURES TAKEN IN DIRECTION OF MODERNIZATION OF MEDICAL EQUIPMENT AND MAJOR REPAIRS OF TEN REGIONAL HOSPITALS TO START FROM OCTOBER TO NOVEMBER

Noyan Tapan
Jul 18 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 18, NOYAN TAPAN. Issues concerning the improvement of
the quality and availability of the medical service, as well as the
increase in productivity of expenditures of the means allocated by the
state budget for the health sphere were discussed during the working
meeting of Robert Kocharian, the RA President, and Haroutiun Kushkian,
the RA Health Minister, which was held on July 17.

The Health Minister introduced the results of the study made in June
for the purpose of making more exact the degree of the productivity of
management, personnel potential, availability of services, as well as
the quality of medical service and the conditions of regional medical
institutions. They will serve as bases for implementing investment
programs for the development of the health system jointly with the
World Bank in the regions.

H. Kushkian stated that the modernization process of medical equipment
and major repairs of ten regional hospitals will already start from
October to November.

Robert Kocharian has ordered the Health Minister to increase the
productivity of the expenditures of the means allocated to the health
system by the state budget, improve the quality and availability
of medical service, and speed up the process of optimalization. The
President mentioned that the optimalization will give an opportunity
to make the management system better, as a result of which the
economized financial means will be directed at the development of
medical institutions and the medical service for the socially insecure
stratum of the population.

According to the information provided to Noyan Tapan by the RA
President’s Press Office, issues connected with the improvement of
the legislation concerning the health system were also discussed
during this meeting.

Iran Offers Armenia To Create A Free Trade Zone

IRAN OFFERS ARMENIA TO CREATE A FREE TRADE ZONE

Lragir, Armenia
July 18 2007

The head of the department of economic cooperation of the Iranian
foreign ministry Seyed Mahdi Mirubutalebi stated in Yerevan that his
country offers Armenia to create a free trade zone, ARKA reported.

Mirutalebi voiced concern that the lowest level of trade is with
Armenia. He said a change is necessary. "Iran and Armenia have a
high-level political cooperation, whereas the economic component is
much weaker. The governments of both countries state it is necessary to
boost trade but there are no tangible results," the Iranian official
stated. He thinks the governments should negotiate and make steps
towards boosting trade to one billion dollars. Therefore, Iran offers
Armenia to create a free trade zone.

Legislative Elections In Turkey: What To Expect

LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS IN TURKEY: WHAT TO EXPECT

EurActiv, Belgium
islative-elections-turkey-expect/article-165627
Ju ly 18 2007

On 22 July 2007, Turkish voters will renew the 550 members of the Grand
National Assembly, the only chamber of Parliament. A Robert Schuman
Foundation paper reviews the main issues in the general election –
coming four months early following Parliament’s failure to elect a
successor to President Ahmet Necdet Sezer.

The favourite is the Justice and Development party (AKP), led by
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who insists on the need to win
two thirds of the seats in the Grand National Assembly. According to
the paper, the remaining doubts are the extent of the victory, and the
number of parties that will win seats in Parliament. The outcome of
these legislative elections will influence the forthcoming election
of the next head of state – by indirect suffrage.

The Justice and Development Party’s campaign is centred on the need
for stability in Turkey, arguing that this is only possible under a
government built around one single political party. Its objectives
include boosting relations with neighbouring states, enhancing the
country’s regional position, turning Turkey into a world player,
undertaking active diplomacy in the Cypriot conflict and continuing
negotiations to take Turkey towards membership of the EU.

The Prime Minister, in office for the past five years, is relying
on his social and economic results for these general elections. The
excellent economic results in the first quarter of 2007 can only
help support the government, states the paper. The AKP has received
the support of the spiritual leader of the Armenians in Turkey – who
considers the Justice and Development party to be the most moderate
and least nationalist – and Christian communities in Turkey, which
used to support the People’s Republican Party but now accuse it of
being nationalist, notes the author.

According to the paper, the opposition is very fragmented. The People’s
Republican Party, a centre-left party, is running a campaign centred
on education, healthcare and prosperity; The Just Way Party (DP) is
a centre-right party and promises a constitutional review in order
to ensure better rights for civil society, judicial independence
and press freedom. The paper also mentions the Mother Country Party
(ANTAVAN) – a centre-right party – and the National Action Party
(MHP), an extremely nationalist movement led by Devlet Baceli.

Accession to the EU has not really been addressed during the electoral
campaign, notes the paper. However, attacks by the Kurdish Workers’
Party (PKK) in the south-east of the country are in the news, and
popular demonstrations against the violence have revealed slogans at
many rallies accusing the Justice and Development party of working
with the Kurdish Workers’ Party, notes the paper.

Robert Schuman Foundation: General Elections in Turkey, A Round Up
One Week before the Vote

http://www.euractiv.com/en/enlargement/leg