Albert Sukiasyan Warns

ALBERT SUKIASYAN WARNS

A1+
[06:55 pm] 26 November, 2008

On November 26 Albert Sukiasyan, the father of Armenian MP Khacahtur
Sukiasyan, has issued a warning against the so-called "lawbreakers."

"Rumoured has it that someone wants to "take hold of" the Bjni
factory. I warn all lawbreakers that they will be brought to justice
for their misdeeds. Don’t think that you will be justified and
acquitted and don’t pretend to have carried out an order. You will be
punished for all damages inflicted on us. "I shall put out the eye of
those who "have an eye" on our property and want "to get hold of it."

Take my warning for granted."

Over 184 Kg Of Drugs Seized In Tajikistan In Joint Operation

OVER 184 KG OF DRUGS SEIZED IN TAJIKISTAN IN JOINT OPERATION

RIA Novosti
13:16 | 26/ 11/ 2008

DUSHANBE, November 26 (RIA Novosti) – Over 184 kg (406 lbs) of
drugs, including 95 kg (209 lbs) of heroin have been seized in
Tajikistan during a joint operation by members of a regional security
organization, a drug official said on Wednesday.

During the second stage of the Channel-2008 anti-drugs operation,
conducted by members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO) on November 18-24, law enforcement bodies in cooperation with
the border service recovered and prevented 26 crimes, connected with
the smuggling and trade of drugs.

The operation was held on the territory of CSTO member states –
Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan and
Tajikistan. The operation was monitored by representatives of law
enforcement bodies from Azerbaijan, China, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia,
the United States and Ukraine.

The first stage of the Channel-2008 anti-drugs operation, held in
Tajikistan on September 16-22, netted more than 954 kg (2,101 lbs)
of drugs.

His Holiness Karekin II meets with Sheikh of Sharjah

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
November 25, 2008

His Holiness Karekin II meets with Sheikh of Sharjah

On Monday, November 24, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and
Catholicos of All Armenians, during his visit to the United Arab Emirates,
met with His Highness Dr. Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammad al Qasimi, UAE Supreme
Council member and ruler of Sharjah.

His Holiness was warmly welcomed by Sheikh Sultan, who reflected with
happiness on his memories of visiting Armenia a few years ago.  His Holiness
expressed his appreciation to the Sheikh for the kind care and attention
given to the Armenian community of the United Arab Emirates, specifically
noting the help and support given by the ruler of Sharjah to the Armenians
in establishing and building an Armenian church in his emirate.  The
Armenian pontiff also expressed his gratitude to Sheikh Sultan for
sponsoring the renovation and restoration of the historic Monastery of
Haghartsin in Armenia.

The Sheikh highly commended the Armenian communities of the Middle East as
pious, faithful, worthy and hardworking members of society, and especially
mentioned the love of knowledge and education which is highly valued by
Armenian families.  Sheikh Sultan also noted his joy upon learning of the
progress of the reconstruction work of the buildings and road of the
monastic complex of Haghartsin.

During the meeting, the Catholicos and the Sheikh also spoke about the
importance of sustainable inter-faith dialogue; the special tolerance that
exists in the UAE toward other faiths and cultures; and the need for respect
and mutual love which shall be the guarantor of the peaceful and harmonious
life of humanity.

Accompanying His Holiness during the meeting with Sheikh Sultan were His
Grace Bishop Armash Nalbandian, Primate of the Armenian Diocese of Damascus,
Syria; Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian and Mr. Varoujan Nerguizian.

www.armenianchurch.org

A. Movsisian Says In Case Of Necessity Gas From Iran May Already Be

A. MOVSISIAN SAYS IN CASE OF NECESSITY GAS FROM IRAN MAY ALREADY BE IMPORTED TO ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
Nov 24, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS: The second round of construction
works of Iran-Armenia gas pipe line have finished and now the testing
works are being held. Energy and Natural Resources Minister Armen
Movsisian said today that in case of necessity it is already possible
to import gas from the Iranian side. The minister once again reminded
that the gas imported from Iran will not have tariff, instead for 1
cubic meter gas, the Armenian side must give 3kw/h electricity.

The minister noted that the issue on construction of oil-processor in
Armenia is not withdrawn from the agenda. "The task groups continue
working in that direction. It is necessary to forward such solutions
which will make the construction of oil-processor economically
effective," A. Movsisian said.

According to him, after reconstruction works the Armenian Atomic
Power Plant continues working. He said the works were done with high
quality and the plant started functioning 11 days earlier from the
expected time.

Referring to the construction of Hydro Power Plant, A. Movsisian
noted that this year session of Armenian-Iranian inter-governmental
commission is going to take place the agenda of which includes the
issue. In 2009 projecting-calculating works will kick off.

‘Ties With Tehran Priority For Yerevan’

‘TIES WITH TEHRAN PRIORITY FOR YEREVAN’

press tv
Mon, 24 Nov 2008 22:12:37 GMT

Artur Baghdasaryan(L) and Ali Larijani(R) meeting in Tehran.

Stable and comprehensive Tehran-Yerevan ties guarantee regional
security and tranquility, Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani
states.

In a meeting with visiting Armenian National Security Council Secretary
General Artur Baghdasaryan in Tehran on Monday, Ali Larijani expressed
satisfaction over growing bilateral relations. He also pointed to
common areas of interest as well as deep bonds between Iran and
Armenia.

‘Broad based relations between Iran and Armenia are rooted in
historical bonds between the two nations. Such enduring and all-out
ties secure security and stability in the region," Larijani said. He
noted that great steps have been taken in recent years with respect
to improvement of Tehran-Yerevan relations.

Baghdasaryan, for his part, labeled Armenia-Iran relations as
‘strategic’, stressing that the expansion of political, economic,
trade and infrastructural ties with Tehran comes as one of the foremost
goals of Yerevan’s foreign policy.

He underscored that Iran’s policy is to support peace and stability
in the Caucasus and prevent further conflicts in the region. "Iran
plays an effective and constructive role in establishing security
and stability in the region."

The Armenian official arrived in Tehran on Sunday and is accompanied
by Deputy Armenian Foreign Minister Gegham Gharibjanyan, deputies
of the National assembly Hovhannes Margaryan and Sukias Avetisyan as
well as other officials.

Book Review: Kurdistan: Crafting of National Selves

The Times Higher Education Supplement
November 20, 2008

Kurdistan: Crafting of National Selves

Christine Allison

BOOKS; Pg. 46 No. 1872

Kurdistan: Crafting of National Selves. By Christopher Houston. Berg,
256pp, £ 60.00 and £ 19.99. ISBN 9781845202682 and 02699. Published 1
June 2008

This book is not so much about how Kurds imagine their nation and
construct their identities as members of it, but more about how the
nation-states where Kurds live mould the national identities to which
Kurds are expected to conform. And a very chilly, top-down power
dynamic it looks too, despite the author’s commendable insistence on
the plurality of Kurdish communities, the dimension of gender (rarely
seen in writings on Kurds) and issues of individual agency and
negotiation. There is relatively little treatment or analysis of the
canonical Kurdish texts and voices in the discourse, but a great deal
on the environment in which this discourse functions.

Coming from a straightforward "Turkish studies" standpoint,
Christopher Houston considers Kurdish historical discourse within the
framework of Ottoman heritage. The first chapter explains very
effectively why the discussion of origins is still considered
necessary in the historiography of this region, and why history is
such a politicised activity in Turkey. The second focuses on the
independence of the Kurdish principalities of the Ottoman Empire,
their fall, and subsequent revolts led by sheikhs and tribal leaders
and the question of when exactly they ceased to be "local" and became
nationalist.

As the author notes, underlying nationalist concerns have allowed such
questions to dominate the discourse. He also notes that some Kurdish
writers, like their Turkish counterparts, underestimate the area’s
diversity, for example underplaying the Armenians’ role in history.
This is true although, as Maria O’Shea noted in 2004, others give a
Utopian view of past ethnic harmony in Eastern Anatolia. Moreover,
Kurds in Iraq make much of their efforts to foster pluralism and
protect their minority communities. The third chapter usefully
characterises some of the best- known works of ethnography on the
Kurds. All suffered from shortcomings associated with their time, or
the circumstances of their production – Edmund Leach’s work cut short
by war and Martin van Bruinessen having to make the virtue of breadth
out of the necessity of not having permission to remain and work in
depth on any one area.

The second part of the book takes a bold approach – as the author
says, it shifts its focus to identify a transnational state political
practice in which Kurds may be contextualised. Kurdish studies
normally look at transnational structures and practices on the part of
the Kurds, but not on the part of the states; indeed, we are taught
that both ideology and practice in the management of Kurds is
different in the various nation- states. Such a challenge to
traditional wisdom is very stimulating and merits a hearing. Houston
follows Bobby Sayyid in calling this type of secular nationalist state
practice "Kemalism", which is rather shocking to those of us reared on
the gentle shores of Iranian studies, especially when it appears to be
implied that Iran is an "Ottoman successor state".

However, Houston’s discussion of Kemalism is more nuanced than that of
Sayyid, who makes a much more brutal opposition between "Islamist" and
"Kemalist" state – for instance, Houston notes that the Islamic
Republic of Iran follows the Kemalist model in some respects. However,
he upholds Sayyid’s argument that "the work of Mustafa Kemal in Turkey
is generative of a new political paradigm for the wider Muslim world",
and shows convincing links across the states concerned, for instance
occasions where Reza Shah Pahlavi followed his friend Ataturk’s
example on such matters as modernist reforms, and the links between
Sati al-Husri, who presided over the creation of the Iraqi school
curriculum, and the great ideologue of Kemalism, Ziya Gokalp.

There is no doubt that these nationalisms and their enactment –
Turkey, Iran and Iraq are the states under consideration – show some
great similarities, but ultimately I remained unconvinced on two
points. Is the loaded term "Kemalism" useful, given that many of its
policies predated Ataturk and were continuations of the model of
modernism used by the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) and in
some cases by Iranian constitutionalists? And despite the similarities
of the overbearing state, the differences for the Kurdish experience
were enormous between Turkey and, say, Iraq, where despite such
atrocities as the 1988 Anfal massacres there also existed limited
Kurdish-language schooling, faculty teaching of Kurdish, Kurdish
literary output and media – as Amir Hassanpour might put it, the
difference between "ethnocide" and "genocide".

Nevertheless, there is much to appreciate in these chapters, which
contain nuanced discussions of projections of modernity and
relationships with Western discourse that tie in very well with other
work being done on Turkey’s treatment of its "underdeveloped"
areas. The role of music and folklore in nation-building is not
overlooked, and there is a whole chapter on the Kemalist city in the
three states concerned – a discussion of the role of the built
environment in these processes is rare and precious indeed. The
conclusion is also nuanced, looking at prospects for de-Kemalisation,
not by abolition of existing government policy, but by giving more
space to civil life. Overall, however, the book leaves us hungry for
more on how the Kurds themselves have constructed their nation and its
history in these adverse circumstances.

Christine Allison is Ibrahim Ahmed professor of Kurdish studies,
Institute of Arabic and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter, author
of The Yezidi Oral Tradition in Iraqi Kurdistan (2001) and co-editor,
with Philip Kreyenbroek, of Kurdish Culture and Identity (1996).

Armenian Government Proposes Amending Criminal Code And Envisaging S

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT PROPOSES AMENDING CRIMINAL CODE AND ENVISAGING STRICTER PUNISHMENT FOR ECONOMIC CRIMES

Noyan Tapan

Nov 21, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 21, NOYAN TAPAN. A parliamenary hearing on the bill
on amendments and additions to the RA Criminal Code will be held
on November 24 on the initiative of the National Assembly Standing
Committee of State and Legal Issues. A government-submitted bill was
put into circulation at the National Assembly on January 8 of this
year. It in particular envisages stricter punishments for crimes
against economic activity.

NT correspondent was informed by the Committee that representatives of
the prosecutor’s office, NGOs protecting the rights of manufacturers
and consumers and other interested NGOs have been invited to the
hearing.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009958

President Serzh Sargsyan Received The IMF Deputy Managing Director M

PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN RECEIVED THE IMF DEPUTY MANAGING DIRECTOR MURILO PORTUGAL

armradio.am
22.11.2008 11:28

President Serzh Sargsyan received the IMF Deputy Managing Director
Murilo Portugal and his delegation, President’s Press Office reported.

The President of Armenia hailed the IMF’s efforts in assisting our
country in fostering economic development and stability and noted
that without that assistance Armenia wouldn’t be able to achieve
great success.

Serzh Sargsyan expressed satisfaction with the recent approval
by the IMF Managing Council of the Poverty Reduction and Economic
Growth Program.

Noting, that in the recent fifteen years Armenia has made a
considerable economic progress and recorded an impressive growth,
Murilo Portugal said that he was happy to be Armenia’s partner and
to contribute to this success with both financial assistance and
technical expertise.

At the meeting the two sides spoke also about the global financial
and economic crisis. The IMF Deputy Managing Director said that
the crisis poses serious challenges for every country. The parties
exchanged views on the fortification of the Armenian economy in the
existing circumstances, on the steps undertaken by the Government
to mitigate impacts of the crisis, and possibility of employing
additional methods. The President of Armenia said that the existing
difficulties serve as an additional stimulus for reinforcing the tax
policy and administrative reforms, and increasing efficiency of the
governing structures.

If They Don’t Take Radical Actions Today Tomorrow Will Be Late

IF THEY DON’T TAKE RADICAL ACTIONS TODAY TOMORROW WILL BE LATE
LILIT POGHOSYAN

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
15 Nov 08
Armenia

Recently leader of the Armenian Democratic Party Aram Sargsyan
participated in the first summit of the international organization
`Dialogue of Civilizations’, established on the bases of the namesake
world public forum.

`What issues did they discuss during the Vienna summit `Dialogue of
Civilizations’ remarkable for our country?’

`Firstly I must underscore that Austrian Chancellor Guzenbouer also
participated in that not very big but still representational gathering,
who besides welcoming the participants of the forum delivered a long
speech.

Ex Chairman of the Council of Europe Walter Shvimer, ex Prime Minister
of Czech Republic Milosh Zeman, authoritative specialists, experts and
political scientists especially from Russia, Greece, France, Canada,
India, and the USA also participated and came out with speeches during
the forum.

The pretext of the speeches was as follows: global financial crisis is
not only financial crisis it is the crisis of the system. Which means
capitalism is a system that has already exhausted itself, the same is
about capitalistic relations and that we are on the threshold of
radical changes, in a historical refuge when the old vanishes and you
never know what will replace it.

Many people especially the champions of the market relations believe
that the global crisis will go and everything will be settled. Whereas
the conversation here is about more profound and comprehensive
phenomena that is linked with the world economy, which of course has
impact on Armenia as well. In this regard it is very important to
understand the essence of the problem, what actions should we take, how
to contradict these challenges, though it should have been done long
ago and the world wouldn’t have appeared on the edge of the canyon.’

`Do you see these actions?’

`In my speech I quoted Trdat king’s slogan `Let the path to the court
be covered by grass’, that is to say let no one go to the court, and on
the contrary `Let the path to the church be smooth.’

It is the lack of spirituality, and the victory of immorality that led
to this situation. When people break all the moral barriers only to
earn money it is quite understandable that we will have what we have.
That is to say unprecedented social poles, in the whole world
especially in our country, where under the veil of privatization the
protégé of the ruling power became oligarchs and the majority appeared
in poverty, and cynicism and immorality grows and grows.’

`What do you suggest, should we return to the resources of
social-democracy?’

`I suggest that we return to our fundamental resources. The President
of the Republic proposes very true postulates, the Prime Minister is
also trying to take certain actions, but he can’t be a success, for a
very simple reason: the system doesn’t allow. The system is
`accomplished’ and it is very difficult to break it.

We don’t mind market relations. On the contrary we consider it
necessary, but there should be a real competition. But just see what is
happening in our reality: the prices drop in the world market and
nothing is changed in Armenia. Even the prices of fuel have three times
dropped in the world market but in Armenia at best it has reduced by
30%.

Matters took such a turn that International Currency Fund gave one
month to bring the prices in conformity with the world market prices,
otherwise they intimidate to deprive us of the status of a market state.

Those who have great experience in that sphere, the same Austrian
Chancellor who is in essence a social democrat, also spoke about
morality, he said it is not the states that should be moral, those who
lead the state must be moral. If the person is immoral the state is
also immoral.

So we must restore those values, which we annihilated, due which we
have what we have: total impudence, impunity, distrust towards the
ruling power, etc. The pre-election promises, the commitments that
everyone is equal before the law, etc. must be implemented otherwise
they will be swiftly disvalued.

What we really need is radical actions towards the mitigation of social
polarization, because if we continue like this we will appear in a
worse situation. If at present certain part of society is able to
survive by the money, which they get from overseas tomorrow, they will
be deprived of that opportunity because the volume of the transfers is
becoming lesser and lesser.

How are they planning to compensate those sums that they receive from
overseas if they don’t raise the pensions and the salaries? Thus, what
we need is goal-oriented social programs – on account of the reduction
of shadow. We must struggle against the shadow not by words but by
actions.

Armenia must prosper on the account of our greatest capital `
intellect. We can give new scientific ideas to the world. We can
elaborate new technologies. We can send our best specialists to work
overseas and do it on the level of inter-state agreements, so that the
state will also benefit from it and so on and so forth.’

All International Law Principles Equal In Resolution Of Conflicts

ALL INTERNATIONAL LAW PRINCIPLES EQUAL IN RESOLUTION OF CONFLICTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.11.2008 13:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The best way to resolve the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict is a political dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan,
a senior Romanian official said.

"The principle of territorial integrity is one of the fundamental
principles of the international law. Nevertheless, the Helsinki
Final Act contains 10 principles and the right of nations to
self-determination is one of them. So, both principles are vital for
resolution of conflicts, Romanian Foreign Minister Lazar Comanescu
said when responding to a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter’s question during a
joint news conference with his Armenian counterpart Edward Nalbandian.

Mr. Comanescu appreciated highly the declaration on the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict signed by the Presidents of Armenia, Azerbaijan
and Russia.

For his part, Minister Nalbandian remarked that all principles of
the international law envisaged by the UN Convention are equal.