Ahmed Davudoghlu: Turkey Supports The OSCE Minsk Group And The Co-Ch

AHMED DAVUDOGHLU: TURKEY SUPPORTS THE OSCE MINSK GROUP AND THE CO-CHAIRS IN THE KARABAKH CONFLICT REGULATION ISSUE

ARMENPRESS
DECEMBER 2, 2009
ATHENS

ATHENS, DECEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS: Turkey supports the OSCE Minsk Group
and the co-chairs in the Karabakh conflict regulation issue.

Turkey finds that the efforts toward the settlement of the conflict
will help to consolidate trust in the region. "These two processes
cannot be viewed as one," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmed Davudoghlu
said in his speech at the 17th session of the OSCE Ministerial Council.

According to him, the establishment is the only All-European
institution which is a platform of joint discussions over security
issues. He called on the OSCE countries to use their opportunities
to reactivate the organization. "OSCE member states face such
new challenges which demand collective and agreed confrontation,"
Davudoghlu said, expressing gratitude to Russia for new suggestion.

Russia has come forth with the initiative of developing European
Security agreement.

Irish Foreign Minister Michael Martin assessed the dynamics of
meetings of the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents as promising,
noting that though this process is not connected with the normalization
of Armenian-Turkish relations but may bring peace and stability to
the region.

Today the speeches of Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers
Edward Nalbandyan and Elmar Mammedyarov are expected.

The works of the Ministerial Council’s session will be summed up
today at a press conference by foreign ministers of Finland, Greece
and Kazakhstan.

The Ministerial Council is also expected to adopt a statement on
Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

Lori LLC Plans To Sign Credit Agreement With Russia In 2010

LORI LLC PLANS TO SIGN CREDIT AGREEMENT WITH RUSSIA IN 2010

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.12.2009 14:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Lori LLC plans to sign a credit agreement with
Russia in 2010.

"The credit will allow to increase the plant’s capacity and to offer
more job opportunities," Lori diamond processing plant director Isahak
Aghajanyan told a news conference in Nor Hajn.

"The credit will help increase exports to Russia by 30%. Two years ago,
the plant operated with Russian raw materials, and now we have the
necessary prerequisites to renew the collaboration with raw material
suppliers, specifically with Alrosa CJSC," he noted.

According to Isahak Aghajanyan, the plant workers’ average salary
totals about AMD 100 000, 90% of workers are Nor Hachn residents,
10% are from Yerevan.

Government Guarantees To Construction Companies Amid Crisis

GOVERNMENT GUARANTEES TO CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES AMID CRISIS

news.am
Nov 30 2009
Armenia

Amid the financial and economic crisis in Armenia, the RA Government
has provided budget guarantees to the amount of U.S. $10m to a number
of construction companies this year for completing the construction
of elite housing.

Khachik Avdalyan, Assistant to the RA Prime Minister, told NEWS.am
that U.S. $2.5m budget guarantees were provided to the Elite Group
Company by means of the Ameria Bank. The company is to repay the money
in three years. The Levon Amirkhanyan received U.S. $2.64m guarantees
by means of the Prometey Bank. Also, the MG Housing Ltd received U.S.

$3m by means of Inecobank, the individual businessman Vahe Harutyunyan
U.S. $950,000 by means of Areximbank and the Norashen-2007 Company
U.S. $500,000. Avdalyan said that the Government was to provide
guarantees to two more companies. However, the Hermek Company
encountered problems and did not receive the U.S. $1m intended for
it, and the AVO S.M.G. refused the government guaranteed funds. "It
is not money, but guarantees that the government provides to promote
the completion of housing construction projects. We made this step
to prevent mistrust amid the crisis," Avdalyan said.

As to whether the Government is supervising the companies’ activities
to prevent misapplication of funds, Avdalyan said that "the Government
provides guarantees only for the principal sum, without interest rates,
which prompts the banks to conduct monitoring." Whether the Government
made the right decision to provide funds to a sector that actually
caused the crisis, he said that "doing nothing would be easier, but
refusing the funding amid the crisis would create problems. Economic
diversification will reduce the share of this sector, which has
actually causes a grave crisis here."

If case the construction companies fail to repay the funds,
the Government, at taxpayers’ expense, will have to sponsor the
construction of elite housing. A NEWS.am correspondent made several
attempts to talks with the construction companies’ managers. He failed
to find three of them.

Alik Hovhannisyan, Director of the Levon Amirkhanyan Ltd. said that
the company received U.S. $2.6m for completing the construction of
elite housing in Sayat Nova St. by 2010. As to the price of 1 sq meter,
he said with irritation: "I do not want to say, it is secret."

Armen Mkoyan, Director of the Elite Group Company, said that the
company received a budget guarantee for completing the construction
of a residential building at Dzorapi 40. According to him, the
construction is to be completed in a couple of months, the price of
1 sq meter of housing being 300,000 AMD (about U.S. $800).

Vice Speaker Of The Armenian Parliament Samvel Nikoyan Receives Dire

VICE SPEAKER OF THE ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SAMVEL NIKOYAN RECEIVES DIRECTOR OF THE US STATE DEPARTMENT’S CAUCASIAN AFFAIRS AND REGIONAL CONFLICTS OFFICE EATEN GOLDRICH

ARMENPRESS
NOVEMBER 30, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS: Vice speaker of the Armenian
parliament Samvel Nikoyan received today Director of the US State
Department’s Caucasian Affairs and Regional Conflicts Office Eaten
Goldrich and First Secretary of the Political-Economic Department of
the US embassy in Armenia Daniel Hastings.

NA public relations department told Armenpress that with the request
of the guests Samvel Nikoyan presented the NA’s structure, introduced
to legislative and oversight functions, involvement of the political
forces in the NA.

During the meeting the interlocutors also discussed a number of
issues on normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations, process of
ratification of signed protocols without pre-conditions.

Sinhala one of the world’s most creative scripts

Sinhala one of the world’s most creative scripts

RANDOM THOUGHTS By Neville de Silva

Sunday Times
11.29.2009

Unknown to the media and most in Sri Lanka the Sinhala language has
won international recognition.
More precisely, it is the Sinhala script rather than the language
itself that has been named as one of the world’s 16 most creative
alphabets
among today’s functioning languages, some of them among the oldest
in the world. Though the elevation of the Sinhala script to this
position of significance happened early last month it has gone unsung
and unhonoured
even by scholars and academics, leave alone the average Sri Lankan who
seems to have more mundane matters to think about than the esoteric
intricacies of script and sound.
The individual responsible for gaining the Sinhala alphabet this
eminence among the written scripts of the world is J.B. Disanayaka, a
former Professor of Sinhala at the University of Colombo who made an
irrefutable case for
placing the Sinhala alphabet among the world’s most creative ones.
The nine international scholars who acted as judges at the first World
Character Conference in Seoul, South Korea last month could not but
agree with
Disanayaka, currently Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Thailand, and
recognize some unique features in the Sinhala alphabet and so place it
on the world list.
It is significant that of the 16 alphabets listed as the most creative
in the world, 13 are what could be called Asian languages in that they
originated in what is geographically the Asian continent. The three
European languages are Greek, Italian (Roman) and Armenian. The Asian
languages are Arabic, Burmese (Myanmar), Cambodian, Chinese, Hebrew,
Indian Devanagari, Indian
Tamil, Japanese, Korean, Laotian, Mongolian and Thai. The fact that in
such a galaxy of Asian languages, some of the oldest languages still
in use, the Sinhala script should find recognition speaks for its
uniqueness. So Sinhala and Tamil, the two main languages in use in Sri
Lanka, find themselves
in the distilled list of scripts considered the most creative in the
world.
The founder of this World Character Conference is a Korean academic
Soon Jick Bae who spent nearly 25 years travelling the world trying to
identify countries that have created their own alphabets. He narrowed
it down to 16 that included Sri Lanka. It was during his travels that
he went to the Sri Lanka diplomatic mission in Chennai (Madras) last
year to get a visa to go to Colombo and met Deputy high commissioner
P.M. Amza.
Amza suggested that instead of going to Colombo in search of an expert
in the subject he should go to Bangkok and talk to Sri Lanka’s
ambassador there J.B. Disanayaka which he did. That is how Ambassador
Disanayaka, still pursuing his love for linguistics and scholarship,
found himself centre stage defending before the nine-judge
international panel of scholars, Korean Soon Jick Bae’s instinctive
appreciation that Sinhala deserved a place among the select group of
scripts.
Once Soon Jick Bae identified what he thought were distinctive
scripts, he
had his impressions confirmed by scholars. He then invited the chosen
scholars to attend the conference and convince the judges of the
uniqueness of the respective scripts. Disanayaka in his presentation
said that Sinhala has been in continuous use for 2500 years at
least. Genetically Sinhala is related to classical Indian languages
such as Sanskrit and Pali. Sinhala occupies a unique position within
the Indo-Aryan family of languages.
The official introduction of the script by the Buddhist monk Mahinda
who brought Buddhism to Sri Lanka, goes back to the mid- 3rd century
BC. That script was known as the Brahmi script and was one of the two
ancient scripts used in India at the time. Historical and
archaeological evidence points to
the fact that writing existed in Sri Lanka before the introduction of
the Brahmi script. Evidence of this is the discovery of several
symbols in the earliest Brahmi inscriptions found here that do not
rightly belong to the Brahmi script. For well over two millennia this
Brahmi script passed through
the evolutionary process leading to the eventual birth of the modern
Sinhala script.
The latest Sinhala alphabet is that which has been approved by the
International Standards Organisation (ISO) and consists of 61 letters
(though only
58 are in use), a process in which Disanayaka played a leading role at
a conference in Greece.
So what is it that makes the Sinhala script unique and deserving of a
place among the most creative alphabets in the world?
Disanayaka in presenting the case in Seoul identified two unique
features.

Unfortunately limited space and my computer keyboard inhibit me from
reproducing these particular Sinhala characters which would have shown
more clearly the uniqueness. Suffice it to say that while the English
letter =80=9Ca’ stands for both the short `a’ (as in at) and
the long `a’ (as in ass), the Sinhala alphabet has two sets of special
characters to represent these two vowel sounds.
As for the five consonant letters, they are not found in any other
Indo-European or Dravidian language. But they are found in the
Maldivian language Divehi which is an off-shoot of the Old Sinhala.
The significance of the evolution of the Sinhala script is that it has
a complete set of visual symbols to represent sounds. Apart from the
fact that
Sinhala has created its own alphabet, it has helped the evolution of
other
languages such as Thai. It happened in the 11th century during the
Sukhothai period when Sri Lankan Buddhist monks resident in the then
Thai capital city inspired the creation of the Thai script by King
Ramkhamhaeng.
It seems a curious coincidence that the Sri Lanka ambassador to
Thailand is also accredited to Cambodia and Laos for the languages of
all four countries are now recognized as among the most creative in
the world.

http://www.sundaytimes.lk/091129/News/nws_25.html

Al-Jazeera: Turkish Armenians Hope For New Era

TURKISH ARMENIANS HOPE FOR NEW ERA
By Jonathan Gorvett

Aljazeera.net
107341540951.html
Nov 26 2009
Qatar

With news of growing rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey, one
community that has been watching this process with a mixture of both
hope and trepidation is the Armenian community of Istanbul.

Numbering between 60,000 to 70,000, these are the last descendants
of a community that once numbered millions throughout the territory
of Turkey’s predecessor, the Ottoman Empire.

Nowadays, they are the largest of Turkey’s officially-recognised
minority groups, with a history in the city that stretches back to
medieval times.

Istanbul also has its own Armenian Patriarchate, the highest body
of the local Armenian Orthodox Church. There are some 33 Armenian
churches in the city, 15 Armenian schools and two Armenian hospitals.

Memories of 1915

Relations between Istanbul’s Turkish Armenians and their Turkish
neighbours are also generally good, on a personal level.

Photo: The mood is positive at Istanbul’s Church of the Virgin Mary
[Jonathan Gorvett]

"I have many Turkish friends and our relations are very good," says
Melisa Buman, who is studying to be an English teacher. "We don’t
really have any problems between us."

But Turkey and Armenia certainly do have problems between them.

"The two big issues are 1915 and Nagorno Karabakh," says Robert
Haddeler, the editor of one of Istanbul’s three Armenian newspapers,
Marmara, and a renowned poet. "These are enough alone for us to see
the future as very unclear."

The year 1915 is scorched in the memories of most Armenians as
the year the Armenian community in the Ottoman Empire was largely
destroyed. This was done mostly by Turkish and Kurdish irregulars,
but also, many accounts suggest, with the connivance of the Ottoman
authorities.

This act has been called a ‘genocide’ by most Armenians – and by many
international historians.

Turkey, however, officially denies that a genocide took place and
instead says many Turks and Armenians were killed at the time, as
part of the tragic events of the First World War.

Welcomed and feared

This dispute has soured relations ever since. Yet a more recent
conflict, that between neighbouring Armenia and Azerbaijan over the
disputed Caucasian territory of Nagorno Karabakh, has also badly
damaged relations.

Turkey backed Azerbaijan in that 1994 conflict and instituted a land
blockade of Armenia that has been going on ever since.

Ankara also broke off diplomatic relations with Armenia at that time.

Yet earlier this month, Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols
re-establishing formal links and promising to reopen the border –
if both country’s parliaments agree.

This rapprochement has been both welcomed and feared by the Turkish
Armenian community.

"Opening the borders and beginning diplomatic relations have been
dreams for the Armenians who live Turkey for many years," says Rober
Koptas, of the Armenian newspaper Agos.

"If people from Turkey go to Armenia and make contact with Armenians,
prejudices against Armenians can come to an end here too, we hope."

But, Haddeler says: "We fear that in both countries, but especially
in Turkey, the nationalists are not prepared to accept the ‘other
side’ as friends. We are fairly sure these people are not happy with
rapprochement and we fear they might act to sabotage it. This would
have a highly negative impact on our lives here in Turkey."

Such fears come from a long history of violence. Most recently, in
January 2007, Hrant Dink, the editor of Agos, was assassinated by a
Turkish ultra-nationalist just yards from his office.

Dink had been the most prominent and outspoken member of Turkey’s
Armenian community.

"The Turkish authorities have done nothing to prevent such attacks
in the future," says Koptas.

There is also a widespread belief among Turkish Armenians and indeed
many Turks that although the assassin, Ogun Samast, was swiftly
arrested, the assassination has still not been properly investigated.

Revived community

Yet there are also some positive signs of changing times for Turkey’s
Armenians on the streets of Istanbul.

Photo: Abandoned Armenian buildings are now being restored [Jonathan
Gorvett]

In the run down district of Kumkapi, where many of the city’s poorer
Armenians live and the Armenian Patriarchate is located, last Sunday’s
service at the Church of the Virgin Mary was a busy affair.

"We are very hopeful about the rapprochement," said one parishioner,
Arevig Hablan. "It makes things more normal between us all."

One physical sign of this is the already growing number of Armenians
from Armenia visiting, living and working in Istanbul, some of whom
were also at Sunday’s service. Many of these work illegally, but the
government largely turns a blind eye to this.

Meanwhile, around the corner, the ramshackle facade of a once proud
Armenian building, abandoned many years ago, is now likely to be
refurbished by a Turkish Armenian foundation. This is thanks to a
major change in the law brought in by the current government.

"This is very important," says Haddeler. "The government passed a new
law on foundations which returned a lot of property to us which had
previously been confiscated. The law also enables our foundations to
make a profit, so we can make money for the first time to invest in
our schools, hospitals and churches."

Changing mood

Many Turkish Armenians are positive about the current Justice and
Development Party (AKP) government, despite most Armenians’ Christian
beliefs and the AKP’s Islamist roots.

"The AKP is more open to hear the demands of minority groups than
the ‘secular’ parties," says Koptas. "It is very ironic, but this
complexity has been the essence of Turkish politics in the past
few years."

"For the first time, we have felt that the mood in government has
changed," says Haddeler. "Now we are hoping that this change of mood
will take place amongst the population at large."

Without this, the fear is that Turkey’s Armenian rapprochement may
be too fragile to last – and that this ancient community in Istanbul
may be amongst the first to suffer from any breakdown.

http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/2009/11/200911

Cultural Feast For Chamlian Students

CULTURAL FEAST FOR CHAMLIAN STUDENTS
By Max Zimbert

Glendale News Press
09/11/25/news/gnp-turkey112609.txt
Nov 26 2009
CA

LA CRESCENTA — An Armenian Thanksgiving menu hedges closely to
the American tradition, especially the generous portions of turkey,
mashed potatoes, corn and cranberry sauce.

Students at Vahan & Anoush Chamlian Armenian School went home full
after chowing down on a feast Wednesday and celebrating the American
cultural and dining wonder that is Thanksgiving.

"Giving thanks is good," said Matthew Ghazarian, a third-grader. "I
get to celebrate with my family [and] I love the food."

Students and parents had collected donations to benefit the Salvation
Army and the Armenian Relief Society.

"Thanksgiving celebration is a long-standing tradition at Chamlian,"
Vice Principal Rita Kaprielian said. "Our first- and second-graders
learn about the origin .â~@~B.â~@~B. of the special day through
various reading, writing and art activities."

The food was prepared in the school facilitates with parents arriving
at 8 a.m. Wednesday to finish organizing preparations that began
last week.

Vast pots of corn stewed on the stoves while teams of parents prepared
sides of cranberry sauce. Between 25 and 35 parents were divided into
shifts, with one group serving 200 students and the next shift about
260, and teachers, too.

The preparations resembled an assembly line — there was no other
way to deal with preparing 37 turkeys, parents said.

"We’re like Santa’s helpers," said Sossy Guekguezian, whose status
as lead organizer was denoted by a chef’s hat.

Students donned costumes for their lunch. The boys wore brown
construction paper hats with a yellow paper belt, and the girls wore
similar white paper bonnets with yellow trim.

"It’s fun to celebrate an American holiday," said Elita Nazearteian,
a first-grader.

Students celebrate mostly Armenian holidays throughout the year.

Christmas, for instance, is celebrated in January on the Armenian
calendar.

"We are trying to raise our kids to know we are part of the community
around us, but we respect our culture," said Armineh Dilanian, whose
daughter is in second grade.

Thanksgiving plays an important role to bridge an American language
and cultural education with American traditions and character.

"They get the best of both worlds," said Claudia Khodadadi, whose
daughter is a third-grader.

"Molly’s Pilgrim," a novel about a Russian Jew’s first Thanksgiving in
America, was read and discussed in class. The story coveys Thanksgiving
themes like tolerance and embracing cultural differences rather than
dividing along them.

"Students learn about Plymouth Rock, too," said Taline Porichis, a
second-grade teacher. "We teach strong Armenian and American values,
and Thanksgiving let’s us do both."

One lesson drawn from "Molly’s Pilgrim," as well as the Armenian
diaspora, is the notion of modern pilgrims. Many Chamlian parents
immigrated to the U.S. and consider themselves the latest chapter of
immigrants making a better life for themselves in America.

"We bring the good from any tradition and add a little Armenian,"
said Liliane Arejian, whose three children are in grades sixth,
fourth and second. "Being thankful is good any time in any place."

Like his peers outside Chamlian, Harout Abrahamian, a third-grader,
favors the time away from schoolwork.

"We get to have vacation and relax with family," he said. "That’s
the good part for me."

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/articles/20

Armenian, Japanese FMs Discuss Bilateral Cooperation

ARMENIAN, JAPANESE FMS DISCUSS BILATERAL COOPERATION

news.am
Nov 25 2009
Armenia

Japan is ready to expand its cooperation with Armenia at both the
government and parliament levels, as well as assist Armenia in settling
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and normalizing its relations with
Turkey. The statement was made following a meeting between Armenian
and Japanese Foreign Ministers Edward Nalbandian and Katsuya Okada.

The sides pointed out the importance of developing the bilateral
political dialogue and economic relations.

The sides agreed on regular information exchange and diplomatic
consultations on bilateral relations and international politics.

The Japanese Government is ready to support the Armenian economy under
an official development assistance program, contribute to a peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict under international law.

The Japanese Government welcomed the Armenia-Turkey normalization
process consolidated by the Armenian-Turkish protocols signed in
Zurich on October 10.

The Armenian Government appreciates Japanese companies’ activities in
Armenia and welcomes their larger-scale presence in the country. The
sides also pointed out the need for expanding intergovernmental
contacts and cooperation within international organizations, primarily
United Nations.

RA President Signs Laws On Changes In Tax Legislation

RA PRESIDENT SIGNS LAWS ON CHANGES IN TAX LEGISLATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.11.2009 18:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On November 24, RA President Serzh Sargsyan signed
laws on changes and additions to tax legislation, including laws on
VAT, excise and income taxes, presidential press service reported.

Besides, Serzh Sargsyan signed a law on changes and additions to RA
legislation on administrative violations and 2006-2007 state property
privatization report.

European Parliament Urges Turkey, Armenia Sign Protocols

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT URGES TURKEY, ARMENIA SIGN PROTOCOLS

news.am
Nov 24 2009
Armenia

The candidates for EU membership, as well as applicants, must
continue reforms in such fields as legislation, freedom of speech,
treatment of ethnic minorities, corruption and organized crime
control, says a resolution adopted by the Foreign Affairs Committee,
European Parliament. The resolution has been put to the November 26
vote. The European Parliament reaffirmed its commitment to the EU
expansion policy.

As regards legal norms, the European Parliament welcomes the dynamics
in the region though some of the countries still face such problems as
corruption and organized crime. By "freedom of speech" the European
Parliament understands freedom of the press and independence of
regulatory bodies. This particularly concerns Turkey and the West
Balkan states.

The resolution indicates the necessary for immediate legislative
reforms in Turkey for the improvement of state and society. The
European Parliament regrets the slow progress in religious
freedom (Alevi and non-Islamic religions) and in freedom of speech
(unprecedented fines imposed on media groups). The European Parliament
is also critical of Turkey for failing to fulfill its commitments
under the protocol to the Turkey-EU association agreement.

The European Parliament urges Turkey to sign the agreement in the
context of the Nabucco project and calls for the opening of an "energy
chapter" in the negotiations for the accession to the agreement. The
European Parliament stresses the importance of diplomatic efforts
to normalize the Armenian-Turkish relations. The resolution urges
the Armenian and Turkish Parliaments to ratify the Armenian-Turkish
protocols.