Armenia Registers Progress In Talks On EU Association Agreement

ARMENIA REGISTERS PROGRESS IN TALKS ON EU ASSOCIATION AGREEMENT

news.am
Sept 20 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN.- Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian received on
Tuesday chief negotiator of the European side in talks on Armenia-EU
association agreement Gunnar Vigand.

The sides gave appraisal of progress registered in bilateral
cooperation process. The officials discussed negotiation process and
summed up the results of talks ongoing since 2010.

Edward Nalbandian and Gunnar Vigand stated Armenia has registered
progress in talks on association agreement, foreign office~Rs press
service informed Armenian News-NEWS.am.

The officials discussed the issues related to cooperation in different
formats, exchanged views on relaxation of visa requirements and
preparation for talks on creation of free trade zone.

Closed Armenian-Turkish Border Last Remains Of Cold War – German Amb

CLOSED ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER LAST REMAINS OF COLD WAR – GERMAN AMBASSADOR

news.am
Sept 20 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN. – Resolution of the Karabakh conflict will be beneficial
to all the South Caucasian republics, said Germany’s Ambassador to
Armenia Hans-Jochen Schmidt.

“In my address on the anniversary of Armenia’s Independence I
expressed hope that Armenia, together with its partners, will come
to a mutually acceptable agreement on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue,”
Schmidt told journalists on Tuesday.

He stressed that the OSCE Minsk Group is presently considered the
best mediation format. According to him, resolution of the Karabakh
conflict will stimulate economic activity in the entire South Caucasus.

“Besides, I hope the issue of closed Armenian-Turkish border will be
solved. I consider it one of the last remains of the Cold War,” he
added. Schmidt stressed that all the OSCE states, including Turkey,
have expressed political will to unblock the now-closed borders and
provide free trade turnover.

Nagorno-Karabakh: Heavy-Weight Negotiators Needed

NAGORNO-KARABAKH: HEAVY-WEIGHT NEGOTIATORS NEEDED

Vestnik Kavkaza
Sept 20 2011

The ongoing negotiations over a settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
issue can be much more productive if more influential politicians
took part in the search for consensus. Dr. Svante Cornell, Director of
the Institute for Security and Development Policy, one of the leading
experts on Asia-Caucasus issues, believes that this is the least the
United States could do to draw more world attention to this problem.

“I would say” – stressed Dr. Cornell – “that one quick thing to do,
will be to increase the level of seniority of the diplomats involved
in these group negotiations. There is nothing wrong with midlevel
diplomats or midlevel ambassadors who are engaged in this. They are
serious people. But the problem is that in this type of geopolitically
laden conflict you have to have a much higher level of seniority and
the personalities of the negotiators. They have to have a direct access
to their state leaders and their foreign ministers and secretaries
of state. We don’t have it today. That would be one thing by which
the United States could easily signal that we are now taking this
conflict seriously”.

Another very important element for a successful outcome of the
negotiations would be a more detailed planning. If politicians had
a clear vision of what lies ahead of them, they would be more likely
to look for a consensus.

“The second issue would be to start planning for post-conflict
reconstruction. And the more you plan for the day after the agreement
has been signed, the more likely that the conflicting parties take
the negotiating process seriously”, – said Dr. Cornell.

Robert Fisk : Why The Middle East Will Never Be The Same Again

WHY THE MIDDLE EAST WILL NEVER BE THE SAME AGAIN
by Robert Fisk

The Independent
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
UK

The Palestinians won’t achieve statehood, but they will consign the
‘peace process’ to history.

The Palestinians won’t get a state this week. But they will prove
– if they get enough votes in the General Assembly and if Mahmoud
Abbas does not succumb to his characteristic grovelling in the face
of US-Israeli power – that they are worthy of statehood. And they
will establish for the Arabs what Israel likes to call – when it
is enlarging its colonies on stolen land – “facts on the ground”:
never again can the United States and Israel snap their fingers and
expect the Arabs to click their heels. The US has lost its purchase
on the Middle East. It’s over: the “peace process”, the “road map”,
the “Oslo agreement”; the whole fandango is history.

“In the new Middle East,” writes Fisk, “Amid the Arab Awakening and the
revolt of free peoples for dignity and freedom, this UN vote – passed
in the General Assembly, vetoed by America if it goes to the Security
Council – constitutes a kind of hinge; not just a page turning,
but the failure of empire. (EPA) Personally, I think “Palestine”
is a fantasy state, impossible to create now that the Israelis have
stolen so much of the Arabs’ land for their colonial projects. Go take
a look at the West Bank, if you don’t believe me. Israel’s massive
Jewish colonies, its pernicious building restrictions on Palestinian
homes of more than one storey and its closure even of sewage systems
as punishment, the “cordons sanitaires” beside the Jordanian frontier,
the Israeli-only settlers’ roads have turned the map of the West Bank
into the smashed windscreen of a crashed car. Sometimes, I suspect
that the only thing that prevents the existence of “Greater Israel”
is the obstinacy of those pesky Palestinians.

But we are now talking of much greater matters. This vote at the UN –
General Assembly or Security Council, in one sense it hardly matters
– is going to divide the West – Americans from Europeans and scores
of other nations – and it is going to divide the Arabs from the
Americans. It is going to crack open the divisions in the European
Union; between eastern and western Europeans, between Germany and
France (the former supporting Israel for all the usual historical
reasons, the latter sickened by the suffering of the Palestinians)
and, of course, between Israel and the EU.

A great anger has been created in the world by decades of Israeli
power and military brutality and colonisation; millions of Europeans,
while conscious of their own historical responsibility for the
Jewish Holocaust and well aware of the violence of Muslim nations,
are no longer cowed in their criticism for fear of being abused as
anti-Semites. There is racism in the West – and always will be, I
fear – against Muslims and Africans, as well as Jews. But what are
the Israeli settlements on the West Bank, in which no Arab Muslim
Palestinian can live, but an expression of racism?

Israel shares in this tragedy, of course. Its insane government has
led its people on this road to perdition, adequately summed up by its
sullen fear of democracy in Tunisia and Egypt – how typical that its
principle ally in this nonsense should be the awful Saudi Arabia –
and its cruel refusal to apologise for the killing of nine Turks in
the Gaza flotilla last year and its equal refusal to apologise to
Egypt for the killing of five of its policemen during a Palestinian
incursion into Israel.

So goodbye to its only regional allies, Turkey and Egypt, in the
space of scarcely 12 months. Israel’s cabinet is composed both of
intelligent, potentially balanced people such as Ehud Barak, and
fools such as Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, the Ahmadinejad of
Israeli politics. Sarcasm aside, Israelis deserve better than this.

The State of Israel may have been created unjustly – the Palestinian
Diaspora is proof of this – but it was created legally. And its
founders were perfectly capable of doing a deal with King Abdullah
of Jordan after the 1948-49 war to divide Palestine between Jews
and Arabs. But it had been the UN, which met to decide the fate of
Palestine on 29 November 1947, which gave Israel its legitimacy,
the Americans being the first to vote for its creation. Now – by a
supreme irony of history – it is Israel which wishes to prevent the
UN from giving Palestinian Arabs their legitimacy – and it is America
which will be the first to veto such a legitimacy.

Does Israel have a right to exist? The question is a tired trap,
regularly and stupidly trotted out by Israel’s so-called supporters;
to me, too, on regular though increasingly fewer occasions. States –
not humans – give other states the right to exist. For individuals to
do so, they have to see a map. For where exactly, geographically, is
Israel? It is the only nation on earth which does not know and will not
declare where its eastern frontier is. Is it the old UN armistice line,
the 1967 border so beloved of Abbas and so hated by Netanyahu, or the
Palestinian West Bank minus settlements, or the whole of the West Bank?

Show me a map of the United Kingdom which includes England, Wales,
Scotland and Northern Ireland, and it has the right to exist. But
show me a map of the UK which claims to include the 26 counties of
independent Ireland in the UK and shows Dublin to be a British rather
than an Irish city, and I will say no, this nation does not have
the right to exist within these expanded frontiers. Which is why,
in the case of Israel, almost every Western embassy, including the
US and British embassies, are in Tel Aviv, not in Jerusalem.

In the new Middle East, amid the Arab Awakening and the revolt of free
peoples for dignity and freedom, this UN vote – passed in the General
Assembly, vetoed by America if it goes to the Security Council –
constitutes a kind of hinge; not just a page turning, but the failure
of empire. So locked into Israel has US foreign policy become, so
fearful of Israel have almost all its Congressmen and Congresswomen
become – to the extent of loving Israel more than America – that
America will this week stand out not as the nation that produced
Woodrow Wilson and his 14 principles of self-determination, not as
the country which fought Nazism and Fascism and Japanese militarism,
not as the beacon of freedom which, we are told, its Founding Fathers
represented – but as a curmudgeonly, selfish, frightened state whose
President, after promising a new affection for the Muslim world,
is forced to support an occupying power against a people who only
ask for statehood.

Should we say “poor old Obama”, as I have done in the past? I don’t
think so. Big on rhetoric, vain, handing out false love in Istanbul
and Cairo within months of his election, he will this week prove that
his re-election is more important than the future of the Middle East,
that his personal ambition to stay in power must take first place
over the sufferings of an occupied people. In this context alone,
it is bizarre that a man of such supposed high principle should
show himself so cowardly. In the new Middle East, in which Arabs are
claiming the very same rights and freedoms that Israel and America
say they champion, this is a profound tragedy.

US failures to stand up to Israel and to insist on a fair peace
in “Palestine”, abetted by the hero of the Iraq war, Blair, are
responsible. Arabs too, for allowing their dictators to last so long
and thus to clog the sand with false frontiers and old dogmas and oil
(and let’s not believe that a “new” “Palestine” would be a paradise
for its own people). Israel, too, when it should be welcoming the
Palestinian demand for statehood at the UN with all its obligations of
security and peace and recognition of other UN members. But no. The
game is lost. America’s political power in the Middle East will this
week be neutered on behalf of Israel. Quite a sacrifice in the name
of liberty…

Coffee With Ahmet And Mehmet

COFFEE WITH AHMET AND MEHMET
By Jirair Tutunjian

9 September 2011

Ahmet and Mehmet are having their morning “kehve” (coffee) at a
cafe in Turkish provincial town deep in Anatolia . Ahmet is scanning
the newspaper.

Mehmet: What’s new in the “Turan Daily News”?

Ahmet: There’s a story on page one about the Israeli foreign minister
Lieberman saying that Turkey should give Mt. Ararat to Ermenistan.

Mehmet: Yes, I saw that on TV last night. I looked up the map of
Turkey, but I couldn’t find Mt. Ararat. There must be some mistake.

There’s no Mt. Ararat.

Ahmet: You never know… it could be a Jewish trick. They want to
confuse us. Maybe it’s Mt. Arafat.

Mehmet: I thought that was in Holy Mecca. Anything else in the
newspaper?

Ahmet: That Lieberman says Turkey should recognize the Armenian
Genocide.

Mehmet: Now, I like that. We all know how Armenians committed genocide
against the Turks. Yes, we should not keep silent any longer: we
should publicize the Armenian Genocide of our people. I guess the
Israelis are pushing for genocide recognition to improve their ties
with us. I tell you, Ahmet, Jews are afraid of us. They know we have
atomic bombs at the Incerlik base, near Adana.

Ahmet: Don’t start me on Incerlik. Those Gavoor Ermenler are now
saying Incerlik beongs to them. Next thing they will claim all of
Eastern Turkey belongs to them. We made a mistake… We shouldn’t
have allowed a single Armenian survive their deportation. This is
what happens when you are soft-hearted.

Ahmet: Forget them. Ermenistan has fewer than two million people. I
am talking about the Israelis. They will have no chance against our
invincible navy when we escort the flotilla to Gaza.

Mehmet: It’s not going to be like the parting of the Red Sea for Moses
and the Israelis. Hey, did you know Gaza was originally called Gazi,
after “Gazi” Mustapha Kemal the Conqueror? Jews changed the name to
Gaza. You, of course, remember how Ataturk beat the Gavoor British
and French forces in Palestine during the First World War.

Ahmet: Of course, I do. Why, the capital of Jordan is still called
“Amaan” because that’s what the Gavoor British and French soldiers
were wailing when our mighty Gazi Ataturk put them to the yataghan.

You know something Mehmet, Thanks to our educational system we know
so much about the glorious history of Turkey.

Ahmet: That’s why I enjoy these coffee conversations with you, Mehmet.

We know so much. Talking about Ataturk, I hear some people are calling
Erdogan “Ataturk II.”

Mehmet: I don’t know about that… Ataturk wouldn’t like some of the
things Erdogan is doing.

Ahmet: But Mehmet, arkhadash. Gazi Ataturk would love Erdogan. Just
wait and see: Erdogan will conquer all the Arab countries, without
even firing a bullet-from Morocco to Kuwait-and restore our Ottoman
Empire. Tell you something… I think we should call him Erdogan
Sultan and Davutoglu his Vizier.

Mehmet: I don’t trust that Davutoglu fellow. With that name and
face, those glasses, his teaching profession… he must surely be
the son of a deunme Jew… “Son of David.” Check it out… Read
the bestseller “The White Man.” It will tell you about the Deunme
-Freemason-Zionist-Rothschild conspiracy. His father was probably
from Salonika.

Ahmet: Those Mountain Turks are in the news again. Why don’t they
come down from the mountains and join us-the civilized, peace loving
Turks of the lowlands?

Mehmet: They are getting too fancy for their breeches. Now they want
us to call them Kurd. Say it fast, it sounds like Turk. How soon
they forget that for years we allowed them to loot Gavoor Ermenler
and steal their women. Weren’t Sultan Abdul Hamid’s Hamidiyes all
Mountain Turk bandits?

Ahmet: Some people have violence and greed in their DNA. You can’t
change that.

Mehmet: What’s DNA?

Ahmet: I think it’s a spice or something Kurds sprinkle on their
shish-kebab. It makes them violent and raises their blood pressure.

Ahmet: Ahhh… What are we going to do about Cyprus? Those Gavoor
Greeks want to drill for underwater oil near the Turkish island.

Mehmet: Don’t worry, arkhadash. After we finish off the Israel navy,
the cowardly Greeks would keep their mouth shut-just like their
Patriarch in Istanbul. Cyprus… I mean “Kbrz.” What kind of name is
that for a country?

Ahmet: Shh… Somebody might say the same thing about our country.

http://www.keghart.com/Tutunjian-Ahmet-Mehmet

Over 1,100 Tons Of "Elite" High-Quality Wheat Seeds Imported Into Ar

OVER 1,100 TONS OF “ELITE” HIGH-QUALITY WHEAT SEEDS IMPORTED INTO ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
20.09.2011 | 16:01

Economy

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan on September 20 was present at
the unloading of wagons with over 1,100 tons of “Elite” high-quality
wheat seeds imported into Armenia from Russia’s Stavropol region.

The head of government heard the opinions about the quality of wheat,
expressed by both agricultural officials and beneficiaries who will
use the imported seeds. The representatives of the agricultural
sector assured the prime minister that 220,000 tons of wheat has
been received from 950 tons of seeds imported last year, compared
with 183,000 tons in the previous year.

The first reproduction seeds (2,900 tons) will be distributed to 9-10
thousand beneficiaries who have land plots of 0.4-3 ha. The import
price for one kilogram has declined this year compared with 2010 when
wheat seeds were imported from Russia at the price equivalent to one
dollar, while this year the price of seeds was approximately 75 cents.

It should be mentioned that the Ministry of Agriculture had
developed the 2010-2014 seed-growing program which was approved by the
government. In accordance with that program, “Elite” wheat seeds have
been imported into Armenia for two consecutive years. The seeds will
be distributed to farmers who have land plots of 7 ha or larger plots.

www.nt.am

Dafina Gercheva: The UN In Armenia Is Looking Forward To Enhancing T

DAFINA GERCHEVA: THE UN IN ARMENIA IS LOOKING FORWARD TO ENHANCING THE SUCCESSFUL PARTNERSHIP WITH NATIONAL AUTHORITIES AND THE CIVIL SOCIETY

Noyan Tapan
20.09.2011 | 14:57

Message of Ms. Dafina Gercheva, UN Resident Coordinator/UNDP Resident
Representative in Armenia on the occasion of 20th anniversary of
Armenia’s Independence:

“On behalf of the United Nations in Armenia, I would like to warmly
congratulate the people of Armenia on this historic occasion – the
20th anniversary of Armenia’s Independence.

On September 21st twenty years ago the people of Armenia manifested
their commitment to freedom and independence – the universally
recognized guarantees of development and stability – and joined the
UN family of independent nations.

During these two decades of independence, Armenia has witnessed many
challenges. At the same time, I am pleased to acknowledge that the
country registered substantial progress in areas of socio-economic
development, governance, environment and social services, etc.

In international affairs, as a member of the United Nations, Armenia
has positioned itself as a credible partner who brings its contribution
towards addressing global development challenges while benefiting
from the global best practices and forging regional cooperation
and stability.

We, the United Nations family in Armenia, work in the country to
support the national development priorities having as the core of
our work the continuous development of national capacities.

The UN in Armenia is looking forward to enhancing the successful
partnership with national authorities and the civil society for
the benefit of the people of Armenia – immediate beneficiaries of
independence.

I wish the people of Armenia peace, prosperity, health and successes
in the years to come”.

www.nt.am

Independence Day Concert Performance Depicts Legendary Founder Of Ar

INDEPENDENCE DAY CONCERT PERFORMANCE DEPICTS LEGENDARY FOUNDER OF ARMENIAN NATION

epress.am
09.20.2011 16:57

A concert-performance titled “Heroic Ballad” lasting 1 hour and 20
minutes will be staged in Yerevan’s Republic Square at 9:30 pm on
Sept. 21 within the scope of Independence Day events.

The performance will depict Armenian history from the legendary
patriarch and founder of the Armenian nation Hayk Nahapet to the
proclamation of the Republic of Armenia in 1991.

Performance director Aram Sukiasyan, meeting with journalists today,
said the performance will focus on Armenia’s independence, touch upon
the achievements and failures of the last 20 years and will mention
the victory in Shushi, Nagorno-Karabakh.

The concert-performance will include fountains choreographed to music,
which will serve as a sort of screen upon which the performance will
be projected.

After the concert-performance, fireworks will be launched from
all four corners of the square, followed by a dance club program,
Sukiasyan added.

Independence Generation Is Coming

INDEPENDENCE GENERATION IS COMING
Siranuysh Papyan

Lragir.am News

13:53:41 – 20/09/2011

Interview with Aghasi Tadevosyan, ethnographer

What are the achievements of independence?

The issue is whether we managed to build our state. We became
independent from the Soviet Union in 1991 that ruled for 70 years
and from the 200-year Russian domination. We were a dependent nation,
we had no state. Now the situation has changed radically.

Post-Soviet Armenia could not be considered independent yet. In
cultural terms, post-Soviet Armenia was an attempt to reform the
national with Soviet system rules. People engaged in the creation
of independent Armenia were Soviet people. They were brought up and
educated in the anti-Western spirit and were deprived of the ability
to perceive capitalism culturally, politically, economically. So,
they just managed to create a Post-Soviet-Armenia. This is what
we have today. The task of the new generation is to get rid of the
old generation, and this passage is almost over, but the passage to
independence still has to be continued.

The pro-Russian sentiment in Armenia in 75% of the population is,
though slowly, decreasing.

This decrease is due to the emergence of a class of people in the
country who are RoA citizens. These young people are not many but they
already have big influence and serious competitive qualities. This
class is very active. These young people, such as those of “We are
the masters of this city” initiative, are able to fight the oligarchs
and achieve results. In terms of quality, they radically differ from
those who they compete with. They are not the Soviet generation,
they are the independence generation. Further confrontations will
take place between the Soviet generation that monopolized government
and the economy and the one of the independent Armenia. When does
the influence of one social class or another increase? When the
competitor’s ideas differ. Why are the rest of people unable to protect
their rights? Because they don’t have a stance, their position does
not differ from the one of the oligarchs who are accused of robbing
the country.

Do you explain declining Russophilia by individual approaches only?

I think Russophilia does not suppose deep love towards Russia and the
Russian people but the inability to see and evaluate your own power.

This arises in the result of group thinking when people do not believe
they are able to achieve something with their own force, without
being members of this or another clan. There is no oligarch that is
individually independent. They are all members of groups. Most of
them will lose their “almightiness” as soon as they are deprived of
the protection of tax and customs services and forced to compete in
equal conditions. This is the reason why people think they are unable
to ensure their security without their sponsor – the elder brother
– Russia. The elder brother traditionally takes care of the other
brothers, takes decisions for them, and leads the clan. So, I think,
Russophilia in Armenia has a subservient nature rather than friendly
and it will be possible to overcome it if the bearers of individual
values become more in our society. This is the only way in the modern
world to establish independence at the national level. As a state we
do not have our position. The point is our development. We failed the
passage because we did not know what we wanted, some Western theorists
and political figures decided that Armenia should pass the standard
transition processes including the sock therapy, privatization etc.

But these theorists came out to be wrong. We suffered losses because
our decisions were taken by others.

So, we haven’t “tasted” independence?

There should be a shift of generations, new characteristics should
arise because if we rely on the value and worldview of the Soviet
generation, we will fail. Those, who have Soviet ideas and values and
continue the Soviet thinking, will never change. We must replace these
people with others. We just need to not lose time. Our shortcoming
in the past 20 years of independence has been our failure to shape a
generation that would consolidate and develop the independence. This
generation, I have spoken about such individuals, has formed
accidentally, and the state or the public efforts have nothing to
do with this. Many of them living in the Western environment became
carriers of interpretation abilities of that sphere, then they acted
as mediators for the Armenian society, because their cultural capital
was not formed in Armenia but in the West. They brought that capital
and invested in Armenia, creating a new quality of civil society. In
essence, the processes happening in the civil area are deeply political
because politics is an activity aimed at fulfillment of ideas.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/interview23426.html

ReAnimania Yerevan International Animation Film Festival A Great Suc

REANIMANIA YEREVAN INTERNATIONAL ANIMATION FILM FESTIVAL A GREAT SUCCESS DESPITE FINANCIAL PROBLEMS

arminfo
Tuesday, September 20, 13:51

The Third ReAnimania Yerevan International Animation Film Festival
was over on September 19.

Vrezh Kasuni, ReAnimania Director, told ArmInfo the festival was a
great success despite financial problems. The festival can boast of
a new program “Let’s Speak on the Language of Animation” during which
closed master classes were held for animators of Armenia and Turkey.

Kasuni said the program may become traditional and it may be a good
platform for cooperation on joint projects in future.

“I am sure this program will involve also Arab and Middle East states
and very interesting meetings of animators will be held in Armenia,”
Kasuni said.

“So far, our central failure is financial problems. It is a unique
festival not only in the region but also in the East up to China. I
am sure, ReAnimania will become more and more interesting in future
and businessmen will start encouraging us,” Kasuni said.

The Third ReAnimania Yerevan International Animation Film Festival
commenced on September 14. This year with the support of EurAsian
Cooperation Fund, well-known producer Max Howard gave master classes
for Armenian and Turkish animators on Sept 15, 16 and 18. Well-known
Japanese animator Joshiharu Ashino (the author of the First Squad-The
Moment of Truth – an animation film about the WWII) gave a master-class
on anime. The best native films were demonstrated during the program
“Armenian Palet”. The 50th birthday anniversary of animator Naira
Muradyan was celebrated on sidelines of the Festival.