Israel Among Top 20 Most Virtuous Nations Regarding Software Piracy

ISRAEL AMONG TOP 20 MOST VIRTUOUS NATIONS REGARDING SOFTWARE PIRACY
By Galya Yemini

Ha’aretz, Israel
May 15 2007

One nation, one disk. That’s what they used to say about Israel, and
what they meant is that one Israeli would actually buy the software,
then everybody else would copy it. A recent study by IDC reveals
however, that the joke is obsolete.

The study found that 35% of the software installed in 2006 on personal
computers worldwide was obtained illegally, amounting to nearly
$40 billion in global losses to software companies. Put otherwise,
for every $2 paid for software, one dollar worth of programs was
bootlegged.

IDC said that progress was noted in many emerging markets, especially
China, where the piracy rate tumbled 10% in three years, and in Russia,
where piracy shrank 7% in that time.

Israel ranked 15th among the 20 countries with the lowest incidence
of software piracy.

The U.S. ranks the highest, with the lowest incidence of bootleg
software – 21%. Second is New Zealand. But the U.S. , being a giant
market, suffered the worst losses due to piracy: $7.3 billion,
IDC found.

Israel was in 15th place with a software piracy incidence of 32%.

Losses to software firms rose however to $102 million in 2006, from
$84 million the year before.

Below it is Canada, with 34%, then the Arab Emirates, with 35%.

Last on the list of the 20 is Singapore, with 39%.

"Over the next four years, businesses and consumers worldwide will
spend $350 billion on PC software. If current trends continue, the
study predicts more than $180 billion worth of PC software will be
pirated during that period," IDC wrote in a statement.

Now to glance at the list of the 20 worst offenders – Armenia is on
top, with a piracy rate of 95%. Azerbaijan and Moldova are next with
rates of 94% each.

IDC conducted the review for the Business Software Alliance, which
is fighting software piracy in the name of business.

50 000 Turkish Soldiers Concentrated At Turk-Iraqi Border Region

50 000 TURKISH SOLDIERS CONCENTRATED AT TURK-IRAQI BORDER REGION

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.05.2007 16:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 50 000 Turkish soldiers now concentrated at
Turk-Iraqi border region of Sirnak.

According to military sources a large operation by Turkish military
forces aimed at PKK (Worker’s Party of Kurdistan) terrorists in the
provinces of Sirnak near the Iraqi border continues. Units of the
Turkish military are fighting in the Cudi and Gabar mountains, as
well as the Bestler-Dereler points near Sirnak. New position have been
staked out by Turkish armed forces near the border, taking the border
into direct target in preparation for terrorists trying to cross over.

While the transfer of soldiers and vehicles to the border area
continues, as it has for 3 months now.

U.S. Ambassador to Ankara Ross Wilson stated the United States
supports the Turkish military operation in its pursuit of PKK
terrorists. "Turkey has been in a leader position for a long time
in the fight against terror. It has faced terror on a high level for
a long time. Turkey has lost 40 thousand lives fighting in the last
years," Wilson stated speaking at an anti-terrorism conference held
this week at the Swissotel in Istanbul.

Speaking in direct reference to the renewed efforts by Turkish security
forces against PKK forces last week, Wilson said, "In recent weeks,
the Turkish security forces began an open struggle against the PKK. The
U.S. supports this struggle," Ross Wilson underlined, Hurriyet reports.

BAKU: Stepan Demirchian: Armenian New Parliament Has Been Formed By

STEPAN DEMIRCHIAN: ARMENIAN NEW PARLIAMENT HAS BEEN FORMED BY BRIBERY AND TERROR

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 14 2007

Preliminary results of parliamentary elections in Armenia were
publicized, APA reports. Armenian Central Election Commission stated
that out of 22 parties and one alliance only 5 could beat 5% barrier.

According to preliminary results, ruling Republican Party comes the
first with 32.8% of the vote. "Prosperous Armenia" led by businessman
Gagik Charukyan is the second (14.7%) and followed by Dashnaksutyun
Party (12.7). Two more parties were able to beat 5% barrier – Orinach
Erkir (6.8%) and Heritage (5.8%).

CEC noted that 59.9% of the people having the right to vote
participated in the voting.

Final results of the elections will be publicized in two weeks.

Chief of People’s Party of Armenia Stepan Demirchian was not able to
beat the minimum barrier stated that the new parliament has been formed
not by people’s will, but by bribery and terror. He did not accept the
international organizations’ appreciating the elections improvement.

"The improvement was observed only in the field of bribery. The
parliamentary elections were accompanied by mass bribery and it
influenced on final results. The opinion of international organizations
was formed basing on their observations in poling stations," he said.

Stepan Demirchian underlined that not representing opposition parties
in the parliament reduce the chances of winning in the presidential
elections. He said hat he will try to restore their violated rights
in the parliamentary elections by court and rallies.

Issue Of Setting Up Armenian-Russian Diamond Cutting Joint Venture U

ISSUE OF SETTING UP ARMENIAN-RUSSIAN DIAMOND CUTTING JOINT VENTURE UNDER EXAMINATION

Noyan Tapan
May 14 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. Russian structures are examining the
issue of founding a diamond-cutting joint venture by state company
Smolenskie Cristaly (Russia) and DCA company (Armenia). Chairman of
DCA board of directors Gagik Abrahamian told this to NT correspondent.

In his words, the Armenian side substantiated that it would be
profitable for Russia to send diamonds of particular size to be cut in
Armenia. He said that part of diamonds mined in Russia are cut abroad,
particularly in China and India from where Russia buys cut diamonds.

According to G. Abrahamian, under Russian legislation, value added
tax (VAT) and customs duty are charged in the amount of 18% of the
diamond’s value in case of importing diamonds from Armenia, while
in case of importing from India and Chine VAT and customs duty are
charged in the amount of 40-42% of the value. So the Russian side
may work with the Armenian side with the use of tolls, paying only
for the cutting of diamonds.

21 RPA Candidates, 8 BH, 2 OYP, 1 Dashink Elected Majoritarian Dep.

21 CANDIDATES FROM RPA, 8 FROM BH, 2 FROM OYP, 1 FROM DASHINK ELECTED
DEPUTIES BY MAJORITARIAN SYSTEM

YEREVAN, MAY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. According to the official data of May 12
parliamentary elections, the following candidates won by majoritarian
system at 41 electoral districts:

Electoral district N 1 Ruben Hayrapetian (RPA)

N 2 Rafik Petrosian (RPA)

N 3 Ashot Tonoyan (BH)

N 4 Zohrab Zohrabian (RPA, non-partisan)

N 5 Levon Sargsian (RPA)

N 6 Haroutiun Pambukian (RPA)

N 7 Samvel Alexanian (non-partisan)

N 8 Hakob Hakobian (non-partisan)

N 9 Ruben Sadoyan (RPA)

N 10 Khachatur Sukiasian (non-partisan)

N 11 Grigor Margarian (non-partisan)

N 12 Versandik Hakobian (BH)

N 13 Armen Putoyan (RPA)

N 14 voting results were appealed

N 15 Khachik Manukian (RPA)

N 16 Tigran Stepanian (BH)

N 17 Henrik Abrahamian (RPA)

N 18 Manvel Ghazarian (non-partisan)

N 19 Sedrak Saroyan (RPA)

N 20 Hrant Grigorian (RPA)

N 21 Rustam Gasparian (non-partisan, BH)

N 22 Tigran Arzakantsian (RPA)

N 23 Hrant Madatian (BH)

N 24 Hakob Hakobian (RPA)

N 25 Sasun Mikayelian (RPA)

N 26 Robert Tovmasian (BH)

N 27 Melik Manukian (BH)

N 28 Gagik Tsarukian (BH)

N 29 Arkady Hambartsumian (RPA)

N 30 Viktor Dallakian (non-partisan)

N 31 Karen Saribekian (RPA)

N 32 Surik Poghosian (RPA)

N 33 Ashot Aghababian (RPA)

N 34 Martun Grigorian (Dashink)

N 35 Samvel Balasanian (OYP)

N 36 Mkhitar Varagian (non-partisan)

N 37 Alexander Sargsian (RPA)

N 38 Vahe Hakobian (RPA)

N 39 Samvel Sargsian (RPA)

N 40 Mikayel Vardanian (non-partisan)

N 41 Hakob Hakobian (OYP)

So, according to the results of voting by majoritarian system, 21
candidates from RPA, 8 from Bargavach Hayastan, 2 from OYP, 1 from
Dashink were elected deputies.

Shevarnadze: "Armenia Must Consider Azerbaijan’s Stance"

A1+

SHEVARDNADZE: `ARMENIA MUST CONSIDER AZERBAIJAN’S STANCE’
[03:02 pm] 11 May, 2007

`Armenia must take into consideration the stance of Azerbaijan, which
is the strongest country in the region, otherwise the country may lose
its independence,’ Eduard Shevardnadze, the former President of
Georgia, said.

`In my opinion, Armenia realises the importance of the Karabakh
conflict. In this view, the delay may result in complicated outcome,
as Azerbaijan left Armenia and Georgia behind with its economy,
military and other indexes.

Azerbaijan’s leading role in the region is determined by Heidar
Aliyev’s political will-power, Eduard Shevardnadze says.

`Heidar Aliyev was a unique personality. The country’s acting
president is also a wise person and Heidar Aliyev wasn’t mistaken in
his choice.’

Armenian parliament election kicks off

People’s Daily Online, China
May 12 2007

Armenian parliament election kicks off

Armenian parliament election started Saturday morning with 1,364
candidates running for 131 seats in the single house National
Assembly, according to reports reaching Moscow.

About 2.3 million of the more than three million population has
resisted voting and the 1,923 polling stations across the Caucasian
country have been open since 8:00 a.m. (0300 GMT), according to the
Itar-Tass news agency.

More than 20 political parties, including the ruling Republican Party
led by Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan, will strive to win seats after
12 hours of polling.

The election will be monitored by hundreds of local and international
observers including those from Russia and Europe.

A total of 41 seats in the parliament will be elected in
single-mandate constituencies and another 90, on party ballots,
Itar-Tass said.

Source: Xinhua

Defenseless in Baghdad: Anti-Christian Violence in Iraq

Assyrian International News Agency AINA
May 12 2007

Defenseless in Baghdad: Anti-Christian Violence in Iraq

It was in 1999 that I first went to Dora, which for many centuries
has been a strongly Christian area of Baghdad. Visiting a block of
flats, I saw the appalling poverty of the Christian community. Like
most of the Iraqi population they were suffering the effects of the
UN sanctions, but in addition Christians had to cope with the
hostility of Muslims who blamed the Christians for what were seen as
"Western" sanctions and the intolerable deprivations which they
created. The hostility was at this time kept in reasonable check by
the tight security of Saddam’s regime.

Take my last son away with you

In the company of a government interpreter I called on a Christian
woman and her teenage son. Her living room had only a table and a few
chairs — everything else had been sold to try to survive. When we
entered she spoke to the interpreter and then started to cry. I
learned that she was pleading for me to take her son back to Britain
with me. "I had six sons," she explained. "The five eldest have all
died fighting in Saddam’s wars [the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s and
the Gulf War of 1990-1]. My husband also died in the military. Next
year my youngest son will be old enough to be called up, and most
likely he too will be killed."

I stood containing my emotion as this lady spoke with great courage,
knowing what she said would be reported back by the interpreter to
the intelligence service. I could do nothing to help her, for it was
impossible for me to take her son away with me. What has become of
her and her son, and of other Christians like them whom I came to
know on my various visits to Iraq?

Pay, convert, leave or die

Since the war of 2003 the anti-Christian hostility in the country has
increased immeasurably, and there is no longer the strong hand of
Saddam to prevent the men of violence from doing as they please. In
response to raging anti-Christian violence, huge numbers of Iraqi
Christians have fled their homes. A few have chosen another option
and converted to Islam. It is next to impossible to continue to live
in Baghdad as a Christian.

Many Christians in Dora are now facing demands for the traditional
Islamic tax on non-Muslim minorities, the jizya. This is not being
imposed by the government, but by Islamist insurgents who are
operating freely in Dora without any intervention by either Iraqi or
American forces. In keeping with the teaching of shari’a (Islamic
law), Christians are offered the choice of paying money (which will
be used to fund the insurgent violence), converting to Islam, leaving
the area, or being killed. The demands can come as written messages
delivered to their home, or from militants knocking on the door.
Sometimes the option of paying jizya is not offered — it is then a
choice of convert to Islam, flee within 24 hours leaving their homes
to be seized by the militants, or be killed.

Christians in Mosul have also been facing demands for jizya.

"We are not here to protect you" — American commander

A letter from an Iraqi Christian organization in the West addressed
to the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-Moon, dated 11th May 2007, urges
Mr Ban to ask the US and Iraqi governments to protect the minorities
in Iraq and work for peaceful coexistence.

It brings to mind a later visit I made to Baghdad, when I sat with a
minister in his church in the central market place (an area which has
since suffered dreadfully from bombing). He told me how the
Christians were being systematically attacked and how he had visited
the local American commander to beg for protection for Christians.
The answer he got was, "We are not here to protect you." .Together
with other church leaders he visited the senior American general with
the same request. But the general simply sent them back to the local
commander who repeated his statement, "We are not here to protect
you."

The Christian community in Iraq has been left unprotected and
vulnerable. Last year I visited the American Congress and spoke with
senior officials and also spoke with US military leaders in Iraq. I
discussed the future of the Christian community in Iraq, a community
which is facing genocide at the hands of Islamic militants determined
to eliminate the Christian presence in Iraq. The same answer was
given to me in each case: "We cannot protect the Christians."

If the coalition forces refuse to protect Christian communities, if
they overthrow a dictator in order to bring democracy, if this
democracy leads to the imposition of shari’a, to ethnic cleansing, to
dispossession of property, and ultimately to genocide of a section of
the community, then the coalition governments must bear the moral
responsibility for a tragedy which they have allowed to happen.

Speaking out

Christians cannot stand by and allow this genocide to take place, as
we did during the Armenian genocide of a century ago, and as we did
during the Sudanese civil war which had killed two million mainly
Christian Southerners by the time it ended in 2005. Christians cannot
sacrifice their brothers and sisters in Iraq. Neither political
expediency, nor support for our own governments "right or wrong", nor
the goal of inter-faith relations with Islam can take precedence over
the desperate needs of our fellow Christians. There comes a time when
Christians must stand in solidarity with their brethren, must speak
out for them and for justice and righteousness.

Dr Patrick Sookhdeo
International Director, Barnabas Fund

Polls close in Armenian election

Polls close in Armenian election

Story from BBC NEWS:
europe/6648935.stm

Published: 2007/05/12 18:57:38 GMT

Polls have closed in Armenia’s parliamentary elections, seen as a key test
of the country’s democracy.
The governing Republican Party, led by Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan, is
expected to win.
This is Armenia’s fourth election since it gained independence in
1991. Foreign monitors said the last poll, in 2003, did not meet
democratic standards.
Ahead of the vote, Western countries warned of serious consequences if
Armenia did not improve this record.

Fight against corruption
Casting his vote, Armenian President Robert Kocharyan said the polls had been
calm and he was sure everything would be all right.
If there is evidence of fraud, the former Soviet nation could lose more than
$200m (£101m) of American development aid and the possibility of closer links
with the European Union, the BBC’s Matthew Collin in Yerevan says.
These are vital for the future of this small, impoverished and isolated
country, our correspondent says.
Preliminary results are expected within 24 hours.
"The real test is on election day and during counting," a spokesman for the
Organisation for Security and Co-operation of Europe (OSCE) monitors told
Reuters news agency.
"That is a cornerstone," he said.
Some voters expressed concerns about widespread poverty and corruption, as
well as hopes for a more prosperous future.
But others said they did not believe that change would come quickly.
"I think it does not matter, the current government or a future one, all of
them are petty criminals and absolutely no one thinks about the nation," one
disillusioned voter told BBC News.
‘Buying support’
About 2.3m voters were registered to elect 131 members of the country’s
National Assembly.
The start of the campaign was marred by a series of violent attacks.

Questions were also raised about the conduct of some politicians, who had
been offering gifts to potential voters.
Our correspondent says some opposition parties believed the vote would be
rigged so Armenia’s elite can retain its wealth and power.
Critics have accused the authorities of trying to silence dissent and have
vowed to launch protests after the elections.
Officials say that changes in the country’s electoral law will make these
polls more democratic.
Armenia fought an unresolved war with neighbouring Azerbaijan over the
Nagorno-Karabakh region after the break-up of the Soviet Union in the
early 1990s.

Yerevan also has fraught relations with Turkey.
Earlier this week, Armenia angered OSCE by refusing to grant visas to eight
Turkish members of its 400-strong group of foreign observers.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/

NKR President: We Are Aware Of The Goals Targeted At Achieving NKR’s

NKR PRESIDENT: WE ARE AWARE OF THE GOALS TARGETED AT ACHIEVING NKR’S INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION AND WILL ACHIEVE OUR AIM

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
May 10 2007

May 9 the 62nd Anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War,
15th Anniversary of the NKR Defense Army and Shoushi liberation was
celebrated in the Nagorno-Karabagh Republic /NKR/.

To participate in the festivities RA delegation headed by President
Robert Kocharian arrived in Stepanakert.

A military parade with participation of all arms of the NKR Defense
Army service was held at the Stepanakert central square. Defense
Minister Lt. General Seyran Ohanian took the parade.

Upon completion of the military parade the NKR leadership and RA
delegation visited the Stepanakert Memorial Complex and laid wreaths at
a monument to those perished during the Great Patriotic and Karabagh
wars. Talking to journalists, the NKR President Arkady Ghoukassian
underscored great importance of Shoushi liberation in achieving a
victory in the Karabagh war, due to which the Nagorno-Karabagh has
gained independence. "We are aware of the goals targeted at achieving
NKR’s international recognition and will achieve our aim", Arkady
Ghoukassian stated.

Commenting on current militaristic statements made by AR President
Ilham Aliyev, Arkady Ghoukassian expressed bewilderment over the
press’s serious attitude to such >>> statements. In his opinion,
official Baku’s threat to resume hostilities in case the Karabagh
conflict is not resolved according to the Azeri scenario is nothing
but elementary blackmail calculated for the international community.

Touching on the Presidential elections to be held in the NKR, Arkady
Ghoukassian voiced confidence that succession of policy targeted at
the democratic development of the NKR and its international recognition
would be ensured by a new President.