Armenia To Let In Rosneft In Exchange For Lift Of Custom Fees

ARMENIA TO LET IN ROSNEFT IN EXCHANGE FOR LIFT OF CUSTOM FEES

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Dec 5 2013

5 December 2013 – 2:36pm

Armenian Minister for Energy Armen Movsisyan said that Rosneft will
be permitted to work in Armenia only after lifting custom fees for
Russian petroleum, News.am reports.

Earlier reports said that the project implied formation of a network of
40-50 gasoline stations at the Zartnots Airport of Yerevan. The project
has not been completed and its costs have not yet been fully decided.

Armenian Minister for Energy Armen Movsisyan said that Rosneft will
be permitted to work in Armenia only after lifting custom fees for
Russian petroleum, News.am reports.

Earlier reports said that the project implied formation of a network of
40-50 gasoline stations at the Zartnots Airport of Yerevan. The project
has not been completed and its costs have not yet been fully decided.

Genocide Deniers And Their Cronies

GENOCIDE DENIERS AND THEIR CRONIES

Neos Kosmos, The Hellenic Perspective, Australia
Dec 5 2013

Thee campaign for Australian recognition of the Armenian, Assyrian
and Greek genocides has intensified and the issue has reached the
Australian mainstream like never before.

Dean Kalimniou

ABC political analyst Michael Brissenden recently tweeted: “Is
Parliament House the right place for genocide deniers. We wouldn’t
give a committee room to David Irving.” He was of course referring to
the lecture, booked by Labor MP Laurie Ferguson, to be given by one of
the world’s most strident genocide deniers. Professor Justin McCarthy,
an American history academic, is well known for his denial of the
Armenian, and by implication, Assyrian and Greek genocide in Anatolia.

According to Michael Brissenden, he is considered by Armenians to be
what David Irving is to the Jewish Holocaust.

Interestingly enough, the same gentleman was scheduled to speak at
the University of Melbourne and the Art Gallery of NSW. However,
after certain interested members of the public drew the university
and the gallery’s attention to both the content of the lecture and
Justin McCarthy’s active campaigning against genocide recognition,
it was announced that the lecture was not to take place.

Of late, the campaign for Australian recognition of the Armenian,
Assyrian and Greek genocides has intensified and the issue has reached
the Australian mainstream like never before. Further, the Australian
media are beginning to realise both the enormity of the crime and the
fact that it involved not just the Armenians, but also other Christian
peoples of Anatolia. Thus, in his recent report on Lateline, Michael
Brissenden took pains to point out that: “Although it’s known as the
Armenian genocide, thousands of Assyrians and Pontian Greeks were
also killed.” Hundreds of thousands would have been a more accurate
description, but the fact that this connection is being made at all
is encouraging for all those activists who campaign for recognition of
what is a crime that has largely gone unrecognised. Furthermore, as we
have seen this year, more and more Australians have become indignant at
the manner in which the Turkish government seeks to quash a groundswell
of Australian public support for the recognition of the genocide, by
seeking to hold the Gallipoli celebrations to ransom. As the Speaker
of the Turkish Grand National Assembly Mr Cemil Cicek has stated:
“One of only two things … could disrupt good relations between
Turkey and Australia.” One is for Australia “to support any claims
about genocide without hearing the Turkish side … this could cause
huge rifts between the nations and even jeopardise commemorations
around Gallipoli.” In handling this matter so clumsily, all they have
managed to do is to show the Australian public that they have something
to hide. As NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell comments: “It’s deplorable
anyone associated with the Turkish government would try and use next
year’s centenary of the Gallipoli landing for political purposes.”

Such attempts at bullying are not new. Australian scholars who study
the genocide have been known to receive abusive emails and threats
from genocide deniers and this is especially so if they belong to an
ethnic community that was a victim of the genocide. Leading genocide
recognition campaigner Dr Panayiotis Diamadis has, over the years,
been the recipient of a barrage of quite disturbing and threatening
emails which have only intensified as the campaign gains momentum
and more and more Australians become sensitive to the issue. Even
the Diatribe is not immune, with one incensed reader writing in to
state in May of this year: “Panayiotis Diamadis and yourself are prime
examples of the hypocritical human (although Diamadis’s credentials
are highly doubtful) who comes across as good and noble, because you
are against genocide, and who is going to argue with that?

But in reality, both of you are exploiting human suffering
for political and professional gain. You are determining who the
villains and victims are, and your determinants have little to do with
legitimate history. In addition, by avoiding the crimes perpetrated
by those you have designated as the victims, you are telling us that
one people are more worthy than another.

Some may call that ‘human rights’ ‘search for justice’ etc., but by
choosing the better human group (one side is completely bad, the
other completely good), what both of you are advocating might be
better termed as ‘racism’.

We have taken note of your racist attitude.”

My response was to point out that in previous articles I have
not shied away from discussing Greek brutalities committed upon
innocent Turkish civilians during the 1821 War of Independence and
challenged the writers to meet me in the middle by condemning the
brutalities committed by their own people. I received no response
and of course it seems far beyond the bullies to realise that if we
are to prevent genocide, we must condemn it in all its forms. This
has nothing to do with asserting the relative merits of one race over
another. History has shown that we are all capable of the heinous as
well as the sublime. The manner in which we acknowledge faults, and
take steps not to repeat them, forms a measure of our humanity. The
apology to the Stolen Generation of indigenous Australians is a prime
example. The inverse is true when we try to cover up crimes.

Given these gross attempts to sweep under the carpet a genocide for
which there is ample contemporary eyewitness and documentary evidence,
evidence that even Turkish scholars such as Taner Akcam openly
acknowledge as condemnatory, the fact that a Labor MP would use the
chief symbol of Australian democracy as a forum for a genocide denier
to promote his views is mystifying and thoroughly hurtful. At first
glance, it reeks of Orientalism. According to this view, Armenians,
Assyrians and Greeks rank lower in the hierarchy of races, so that
any event of concern to them is of lesser importance to the mainstream
than it would have been if the same event had been visited upon other
‘high ranking races’. This may provide an extra dimension to Joe
Hockey’s 2011 comment: “The Armenian genocide is one of the least
known, least understood and least respected human tragedies of the
modern era.” Accordingly, politicians and others can use such events
to play politics or curry favour with interest groups, knowing that
the public outcry will not be significant or politically damaging.

Further, as the Executive Council of Australian Jewry points out in
a recent letter, there is a fine line between freedom of speech and
racial vilification. The council supports the contention that hundreds
of thousands of Armenians were slaughtered with ‘genocidal intent’,
and argues that parliament is being ‘misused’ by acting as a forum
for the genocide deniers in question.

Michael Brissenden’s insightful Lateline report, as well as his
inspired ‘tweet’, highlight the dangers of such a trivial approach
to important historical events. This also marks a watershed in the
campaign for genocide recognition as the Australian public begins
to question the appropriateness of using important and respected
Australian institutions for the purposes of subverting traumatic
events. Laurie Ferguson, who declined to comment to Lateline, would
do well to spend some time with the survivors of genocide and their
descendants. He should hear accounts of Armenian orphans forced into
Turkish orphanages in Syria and beaten when they spoke their mother
tongue, during their process of Turkification. He should read the
chilling accounts of Hasan Fehmi, who wrote: “Why did we impute the
title of murderer to our race? Why did we enter into such decisive
and difficult struggle? That was done just for securing the future
of our country that we know as more precious and sacred than our
lives.” He should also have regard to Halil Pasha who wrote: “The
Armenian nation, which I had tried to annihilate to the last member
of it… if you … try to betray Turks and the Turkish homeland,
I will order my forces which surround all your country and I won’t
leave even a single breathing Armenian all over the earth. Get your
mind.” Then he should be asked what qualifications or special insights
he possesses that permit him to encourage the denial of the massacre
of millions and whether he believes that insulting the memories of
over a million innocent victims of a massacre and their descendants
is appropriate for a member of the Australian parliament. The party
that he represents should also be asked the same question. In the
meantime, the clock is ticking, and with every passing moment, more
and more Australians are looking to their elected representatives to
do the right thing – to honour the victims of imperialism, racism and
brutality. After all, their ancestors fought for them and it is upon
this foundation that our nation is based.

* Dean Kalimniou is a Melbourne solicitor and freelance journalist.

http://neoskosmos.com/news/en/genocide-and-their-cronies

Turkish FM To Visit To Armenia On Dec. 12

TURKISH FM TO VISIT TO ARMENIA ON DEC. 12

CRI ENGLISH, China
Dec 5 2013

2013-12-06 02:43:58 Xinhua Web Editor: Xing Yihang

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu announced Thursday that
he will pay a visit to Armenia on Dec. 12 in a bid to improve the
strained relations between the two countries.

Davutoglu told reporters in Ankara’s Esenboga Airport that he will
participate in the meeting of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
to be held in the Armenian capital of Yerevan during his visit to
the country.

Media has reported that Turkey has requested Switzerland’s help in
resolving the conflicts between Armenia and Azerbaijan so as to repair
its own ties with Armenia.

According to a report published by Zaman daily, Davutoglu told Swiss
officials during a visit to Switzerland in mid-October that Turkey
was ready to normalize its relations with Armenia.

Davutoglu was clear, however, that Armenia should end its occupation
of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is deemed as an Azerbaijani territory.

Turkey closed its borders with Armenia after its armed forces captured
Nagorno-Karabakh in 1993.

In 2009, Turkey and Armenia signed a protocol to normalize ties but
the process was halted after the document failed to be rectified by
their respective parliaments.

http://english.cri.cn/6966/2013/12/06/2724s801896.htm

Did Turkey Put The Kibosh On Carpet Display?

ARMENIA: DID TURKEY PUT THE KIBOSH ON CARPET DISPLAY?

EurasiaNet.org
Dec 5 2013

December 5, 2013 – 1:51pm, by Liana Aghajanian

It’s not often that Calvin Coolidge’s name is invoked these days
in Washington. But the long-dead 30th president is figuring in a
controversy involving several Armenian-American organizations, the
Smithsonian Institution and the White House.

At the center of the controversy is an intricate and colorful carpet
depicting the Garden of Eden, woven by orphaned Armenian girls and
presented to then-president Coolidge in the late 1920s. It is known
as the Ghazir Rug, named after the Lebanese city where it was made
by 400 orphans who lost their families during the mass slaughter of
Armenians by Ottoman Turkish forces starting in 1915.

The gift to Coolidge was a gesture of gratitude to the United
States, specifically for the relief efforts mounted by the Near East
Foundation, an American philanthropic organization founded in response
to the Armenian mass slaughter in Ottoman Turkey. The foundation’s
programs were credited with saving hundreds of thousands of lives.

For close to a century, the Ghazir Rug has remained largely hidden
in White House storage. But a similar carpet, known as the “Armenian
Orphan Sister Rug” will be on display December 5 in Boston, as part
of a holiday event sponsored by the Armenian Assembly of America,
a prominent Diaspora group. Martin Deranian, author of a book on the
Ghazir Rug’s history, titled President Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian
Orphan Rug, will be a featured speaker at that event. The sister carpet
to be displayed in Boston is part of Deranian’s personal collection.

The Boston holiday gala, however, has not quelled a controversy that
began in the autumn, when the White House abruptly decided not to
lend the Ghazir Rug to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington,
DC, for an event to mark the publication of Deranian’s book.

In a September letter, Paul Michael Taylor, director of the Asian
cultural history program at the Smithsonian, wrote to organizers
— Ara Ghazarians, curator at the Massachusetts-based Armenian
Cultural Foundation and Levon Der Bedrossian at the Armenian Rugs
Society – expressing regret that the White House had, without reason
or explanation, decided not to lend the rug for the Smithsonian
event. As a result, the event, which had been scheduled for December
16, was canceled.

“Needless to say this was a great surprise and disappointment …

because White House staff had previously offered considerable
assistance or the use of the rug,” Taylor wrote in the September
letter. The letter also mentioned that the US Ambassador to Armenia,
John Heffern, made inquiries on his own, but determined that the loan
of the Ghazir rug would not be possible.

The White House issued a statement last month: “The Ghazir Rug is
a reminder of the close relationship between the peoples of Armenia
and the United States. We regret that it is not possible to loan it
out at this time.”

Thirty-one members of Congress, including Adam Schiff, whose district
includes a large number of Armenian-Americans, signed a letter in
mid-November urging the Obama administration to let the rug be
displayed. The White House has remained firm on not lending out
the carpet.

The Smithsonian or Taylor did not respond to requests from EurasiaNet
for comment. The U.S. Department of State referred a request to
the White House. Officials at the White House did not respond to a
EurasiaNet.org query.

Without an explanation from the White House, representatives of
Disaspora groups, including the National Association for Armenian
Studies and Research (NAASR), believe the Smithsonian cancellation
was prompted by pressure from the Turkish government, which denies
that the 1915 events constitute Genocide. Turkey has been known to
exert diplomatic pressure on the United States on matters relating
to the recognition of the 1915 events.

“I see this to be a clear cut example of an administration playing
unfairly and unjustly to a people who deserve so much better,” said
Stephen Kurkjian, a former journalist for the Boston Globe and member
of NAASR.

Levon Der Bedrossian of the Armenian Rugs Society, a California-based
organization, suspects the same political motives. “We’ve seen this
time and again, after so many years it is the strength of the Turkish
lobby, there is no other explanation,” Der Bedrossian said.

Anthony Barsamian — who headed the group “Armenian-Americans for
Obama” in 2008 and 2008 and 2012, and a board member of the Armenian
Assembly of America — characterized the decision to not loan Ghazir
Rug as unacceptable – especially as the centennial of the mass
slaughter approaches in 2015. “Why should the White House deny the
Armenian Community their artifact?” he asked.

Editor’s note: Liana Aghajanian is a freelance writer based in Los
Angeles.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67835

Nagorno Karabakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan Visits ARS Center

PRESS RELEASE
ARS of Western USA, Inc.
Regional Headquarters
517 W. Glenoaks Blvd.
Glendale, CA 91202-2812
Tel. (818) 500-1343
Fax (818) 242-3732
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:

CONTACT: Hratch Hintlian or Maro Kechichian
(818) 500-1343
[email protected]

Nagorno Karabakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan Visits ARS Center
ARS Social Services Distributes Thanksgiving Cheer

(Glendale, CA, December 2, 2013) – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR) President
Bako Sahakyan visited the Armenian Relief Society (ARS) of Western USA
headquarters in Glendale on November 26, 2013. Prior to the President’s
meeting with the ARS representatives, he met with needy children who were
awaiting a concert and turkey giveaway at the center.

The guests included Prelate Arch. Moushegh Mardirossian, NKR President’s
Advisor Georgy Petrossyan, NKR Permanent Representative Robert Avetisyan
from DC, Republic of Armenia Consul General to Los Angeles Sergei Sarkisov,
ARS Central Executive Chairperson Vicky Marashlian and member Annie
Kechichian, ARF Central Committee representative Dr. Viken Yacoubian,
Armenia Fund Chairman Antranik Baghdassarian, and other clergy, advisors,
staff members, representatives of Armenian community organizations, current
and former ARS central and regional executives, and chapter executives.

ARS-WUSA Regional Executive Chairperson Lena Bozoyan made welcoming remarks
to the honored guests noted the important projects that the ARS has
undertaken in Artsakh during the past two decades, including the Sosse
Kindergartens. She said that whenever the youth visit Artsakh, they return
feeling more Armenian, more patriotic and more determined to achieve our
national aspirations and goals.

Bozoyan said that the ARS with a keen sense of the priorities in Artsakh was
one of the initiators of the Armenia Fund and has participated in the annual
telethons. Bozoyan said that the latest campaign for the construction of the
Vartenis to Martakert Highway has economic and strategic importance to
Artsakh and the ARS has resolutely raised funds for that purpose. Noting the
difficulties faced by the Armenians in Syria, she said that part of the
telethon proceeds would be allocated to them.

NKR President Bako Sahakyan spoke to ARS members with admiration and
gratitude regarding their organization’s century-old humanitarian mission.
He told his audience that they probably could not imagine the importance of
the kindergartens for Artsakh, following the dark days of war, because
that’s where the critical stage of the development happens for the future
generation of protectors of the homeland, artists, engineers, and social and
political scientists. He applauded the attention to the educational system,
despite the difficult overall situation in Artsakh.

President Sahakyan explained the vital and strategic importance of the
Vartenis to Martakert Highway in terms of economic development, as well as
the further development of the ethno-tourism industry and hydroelectric
power generation. He pointed out that the development of ethno-tourism would
further develop ties between the Diaspora and the homeland, and the
development of additional hydroelectric plants would make Artsakh an
exporter of electric energy. President Sahakyan also took the opportunity to
introduce the new ROA Consul General Sergei Sarkisov.

On behalf of the ARS, Bozoyan presented a memento to the President, then
invited the attendees to a reception. Prelate Arch. Moushegh Mardirossian
blessed the tables, accompanied by Rev. Fr. Vazken Atmajian. The ARS members
got a chance to meet with President Sahakyan and Consul General Sergei
Sarkisov.

***

While the reception was going on, downstairs the ARS Social Services
children’s Hoy Lari concert was in progress. The Social Services invited 200
needy families to the performance and to take home an uncooked turkey and CD
compliments of the Mr. & Mrs. Sean and Nadia Shamsi of the Shamsi Law Firm.

Earlier, donors including students from Vahan & Anoush Chamlian Armenian
School, had provided complete Thanksgiving dinners with all the trimmings,
and the ARS Social Services Glendale office distributed them to needy
families.

***

On Thanksgiving Day, November 28, 2013, during the Armenia Fund Telethon,
ARS-WUSA Regional Executive Chairperson Lena Bozoyan delivered a televised
message, urging the world-wide audience to donate to the telethon “to
assist, to support and to overcome” for the sake of the people of Armenia,
for the reconstruction of Artsakh and for the perseverance of the Armenians
of Syria.

The ARS delegation headed by ARS-WUSA Regional Executive Vice Chairperson
Carmen Libaridian, announced that the greater world-wide ARS family
contributed $40,000 to the Telethon, which featured the construction of the
Vartenis to Martakert Highway as the main project.

***

The Armenian Relief Society of Western USA, established in 1984 and with
regional headquarters in Glendale, CA, has 27 chapters and more than 1,200
members in five western states. The ARS-WUSA operates a Social Services
Division and Child, Youth, and Family Guidance Center, and funds numerous
youth programs, scholarships, and relief efforts. For further information,
please visit or call (818) 500-1343.

###

www.arswestusa.org
www.arswestusa.org

Noah’s Flood: Exposing The Biblical Myths III

NOAH’S FLOOD: EXPOSING THE BIBLICAL MYTHS III

Spy Ghana.com, Ghana
Dec 4 2013

‘The Incredible Discovery of Noah’s Ark’: An Archaeological Quest?

By Richard A. Fox Culled from the “Free Enquiry”, Summer 1993:43-48

“Babylonia”, written in Greek about 275 B.C.E., is lost, but later
chroniclers quoted Berosus. His flood story is a Sumerian version
roughly paralleling the biblical account (see Dundes 1988:42-43). The
hero was Xisuthrus (i.e., Xiusudra). The ark, wrote Berosus, came
to rest in “the land of Armenia.” Mt.Ararat is located in what was
ancient Armenia, formerly the kingdom of Ararat (see Bailey 1989).

Berosus, however, identified the Corcyraean mountains (i.e.,
Gordyaeans), also in Ararat, as the landing spot, not the Ararat range
(see Dundes 1988:43). The Gordyaeans are more than two hundred miles
south (roughly) of Mt.Ararat.

Note here that the Genesis reference – “mountains of Ararat” – could
refer to the kingdom, not the range and certainly not the peak.

Indeed, in Jeremiah 51:27, Ararat is called exactly that – a kingdom.

Clearly Berosus had a different understanding than do today’s ark
hunters, “Professor” Vleit included. Why they insist on combing
Mt.Ararat is indeed a mystery.

Berosus’s version might well prompt the frugal archaeologist planning
to find Noah’s ark to ask: a question: Are there more accounts putting
the vessel somewhere other than Mt.Ararat? Of course, but “Incredible”
ignored them all. Ancient Christian, Jewish, and Muslim sources put
the ark on various peaks, ranges, or districts stretching from Ceylon
to Arabia (see Bailey 1989 61-81). Some even record ark wood finds!

The Mt.Ararat tradition is evidently the latest. Bailey (1987:81) has
traced its origin to the eleventh century C.E. (although seventh-ninth
century timbers from Mt Ararat might put it earlier). Sources citing
the Gordyaeans are more numerous, so the archaeologist might well
decide to begin there. Conversely, Mt.Ararat might be a last resort,
since the tradition is further removed in time from the event. More
likely, the archaeologist would investigate what it is on Mt Ararat
that dates to medieval times.

Like the producer of “Incredible,” I find no difficulty in straying
from the archaeological “quest.” A Dr. Walter Brown (“professor
emeritus, physics”) presented a breathtaking synopsis of his
“hydroplate theory.” Fancy graphics illustrated how subterranean
waters ten miles deep burst through mid-ocean fissures and inundated
the Earth. Not much need be said about Brown. Geologists will pick
his nonsense apart. Rather, I will emphasize the subtle ploy used by
the scriptwriters. After Brown finished, the narrator capped it off:
“The demonstration you have just seen … supports the biblical story
of the deluge in every detail.” Of course! All Brown did was recklessly
rip hard-won knowledge from legitimate science (e.g., plate tectonics,
glaciology) and force it into the biblical framework.

Brown never did provide a mechanism to trigger his floodwater
eruptions. The scriptwriters remedied that. A David Coppedge
(“astronomer”) set the stage for Brown, explaining that any one of a
hundred ancient meteorite impact sites on Earth could have produced
a cataclysmic event. Then Brown appeared, mechanism in hand.

Predictably, Coppedge failed to consider why the hundred impacts
did not produce one hundred global floods. Astronomer Coppedge,
evidently without academic credentials, stood next to a small
stargazer’s telescope as he pontificated. A Mt. Wilson Observatory
set would have imparted more authority.

Several “experts” were, like Coppedge, less dazzling than Brown.

Addressing the knotty problem of ark space, Whitcomb insisted that
the Bible does not say all species boarded the vessel. He excluded
fish and “major” insect varieties. No evidence or reasons – just
sweep-of-the-hand authority.

The ark: space problem occupied Dr. Kenneth Ebel (“professor of
biology”). He noted that each “family” extant today has a single
pair of ancestors. The-hundred varieties of dogs, for example, have
a single common ancestor. Then Ebel made a deceptive shift. The only
“taxon” mentioned in the Bible is “kinds.” Scientific creationists
have a tough time with this, Ebel included. “Kinds” (compare family
above), said Ebel, were put aboard the ark. These “kinds” then, were
the ancestors of all the “species” (compare variety above) that we
know today. So there was plenty of room on that ark. With a sweep of
his hand, Ebel rewrote the binomial classification system. Families
became species and species became varieties, and genera vanished.

Ebel’s obfuscation would lead taxonomists to classify him as a
“scientific” creationist, not a professor of biology.

A Dr. Ken Cummings, also a “professor of biology,” explained another
tricky issue. How did animals from every corner of the Earth make it
to the ark? They instinctively sensed an impending disaster and were
led or driven to safety (i.e., right to the ark). Evidently the two
lucky survivors of each “kind” were genetically endowed with powerful
instincts. Just as clearly these favorable genes did not survive.

Today, millions of animals everywhere are wiped out annually by
catastrophic floods, wholesale fires, and the like.

Then there is the matter of being on time. Instinct had to kick in
early for those most distant from the ark, maybe decades for turtles.

Nonetheless, Cummings may be on to something. Mark Twain (1962:24)
suggested that the super-sensitive instincts of dinosaurs provoked
these beasts – all of them, not just pairs – into a frenzied, headlong
stampede toward the ark. Imagine the havoc they would have wreaked.

Fortunately, Noah learned of this and wisely sailed without them.

Besides, as Twain wrote and to which Whitcomb can attest, the ancient
mariner was under no obligation to admit all and so the dinosaurs
became extinct.

Roger Oakland (“author/science professor”) testified to the variable
evidence for a global flood. Even the fossil record shows it!

Worldwide, fish and animals were buried suddenly in “swimming
positions.” Most of us can probably accept the swimming fish. For
animals, however, Oakland cited the “most dramatic” example,
a Nebraska site where rhinos, hippos, and zebras were buried in
“swimming positions” by “volcanic ash.” What tephra has to do with
global flooding he did not say. Nor did Oakland define an animal’s
“swimming position.”

Oakland further noted, in references to the terrifying flood, that
in Scotland “tons of fish have been found in positions of terror,
fins extended and eyes bulging.” Ethologists may notice a rather
strong anthropomorphic bias here. Speaking of anthropomorphism,
Oakland did not consider why human skeletons are never found in
swimming positions. In any case, I recall occasionally seeing rather
calm fish swimming about with extended fins and bulging eyes, though
not tons of them.

These examples are representative of the nonarchaeological content.

There is also the laughable model ark test that “proved” that an ark
built to biblical specifications could survive the roughest seas ever.

Space does not allow a look at the “scientific” creationists’ water
vapor canopy theory (it went from biblical clue to certainty in
minutes). Neglected also is Grant Richard’s (“geologist/geophysicist”)
ignorance of orogenic processes (he claims that water-formed lava and
salt crystals on Mt.Ararat prove the flood), and much more nonsense.

Such “theories” expose the biggest single problem confronting
“scientific” creationists. In order to appear scientific, they
cannot suspend natural laws; they cannot invoke the powers of
an omnieverything being in order to get animals to the ark, to
supply floodwaters, or whatever. That is religion, not science. The
restriction results in torturous proofs of the improbable, if not
the impossible, everything dressed up as science.

“Incredible” had to face a more worldly problem. “Thousands,” as one
“expert” said, have sought the ark. On the other hand, no one has ever
produced it. This vexation was handled in two ways. Ark: eyewitnesses
were sprinkled throughout the two hours, reinforcing the Noah’s
ark claim through repetition. At the same time, repetition avoided
consolidating what are essentially two millennia of negative findings.

Next, the filmmakers’ employed what I call the “rotten luck” syndrome.

Just as the ark’s physical remains are about to be revealed, something
adverse intervenes. “Incredible” used an inhospitable mountain, a
dangerous and uncertain climb, an earthquake, uncooperative weather,
tricky glacial ice, inopportune deaths, low aircraft fuel, the
Russian revolution, fear of death, lost proofs, religious persecution,
Turkish political strife, terrorism, bandits, and the U.S. government’s
refusal to release incontrovertible proof of the ark (it would betray
our sophisticated spying technology).

In the end, though, what about the ancient sources, the nineteenth-
and early twentieth-century eyewitnesses, the past sojourns, the
photographs, and the previous calculations? Well, these are old news.

Though they prove the existence of Noah’s ark, too many people continue
to be skeptical. So “Incredible” would chronicle new “archaeological”
expeditions equipped with modern technology. And so we were introduced
to five new eyewitnesses, plus state-of-the-art satellite photo proofs.

The new eyewitnesses, not one an archaeologist, seemed sincere enough.

But the usual caveats apply. People often see what they want to see,
especially religious zealots. Also, things get garbled; what is seen
is not necessarily what is reported. Sometimes people simply fabricate
stories, playing on what folks want to hear. As well, eyewitnesses are
not always capable of comprehending what they see, and so on. But the
most damaging case against these new witnesses lies in results. Like
all before, not one produced an ark or information leading to an ark.

Much was made of the late James Irwin’s photograph. The program played
masterfully on Irwin’s deep spiritual convictions, his dedication to
discovery, his career, and his untimely death. The skillful emotional
weave helped to convince us that the astronaut had indeed captured
Noah’s ark on film. Irwin had wanted to confirm his find. Then death
intervened, the somber narrator reminded us. A tragedy, indeed,
but with such conclusive evidence at hand, what about a follow-up by
colleagues? “Incredible” made no mention of such.

The other photographic “proof” segments reminded me of the story about
the emperor’s new clothes. Even with photo enhancements, l seldom saw
an object. Yet the analysts insisted something was there, probable
an ark. One segment reduced a French satellite image to a handful of
pixels. Using a pointer, the analyst carefully outlined an “ark-like”
object protruding from a pixel of known size. The object’s dimensions,
he assured us, closely paralleled ark specifications. Expecting, I
am sure, that few would see anything (I saw nothing), a telestrator
finally drew it in.

And so “Incredible” ended. Like the old proofs, the new bore no
semblance to archaeology. Rather, the program abused my profession
and insulted its practitioners. And CBS is responsible. What does
archaeology really say about a global inundation and the rejuvenation
of world populations through Noah’s lineage? Wherever post-deluge sites
exist, they must lie above flood deposits. The prediction is fatal to
the historicity of a biblical flood and Noah’s harrowing voyage. Few
buried sites in my part of the world lie above flood sediments of any
kind. I guarantee that the situation holds everywhere. Archaeology
joins all historical sciences in refuting the claims made in this
abysmal, irresponsible production.

END

For references, see

http://www.spyghana.com/noahs-flood-exposing-biblical-myths-iii/

Russian Investment – Biggest In Armenia

RUSSIAN INVESTMENT – BIGGEST IN ARMENIA

The Messenger, Georgia
Dec 4 2013

By Messenger Staff
Wednesday, December 4 Russia is the biggest investor in Armenia. It
invests more than 40% of the total number of FDI. The trade
turnover between Armenia and Russia has shown signs of permanently
increasing. There are joint projects implemented in Armenia with
the participation of the Russian and Armenian capitals. Russia is
involved in running Armenian railways, a nuclear power station,
and the construction and maintenance of several hydroelectric power
stations. There are also different regions of Russia, which have
direct contacts with the Armenian business sector.

HIV Infection Rates Rise In Armenia

HIV INFECTION RATES RISE IN ARMENIA

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
IWPR Caucasus Reporting #712
Dec 4 2013

Spread of virus linked to migrant population moving back and forth
to Russia and Ukraine.

By Yekaterina Poghosyan – Caucasus CRS Issue 712, 4 Dec 13

Like many of his compatriots, Hayk left the country to find work
aboard, arriving in Russia in 2005.

He began working on building sites and sent money home to support
his wife and children.

“It was hard work and I missed home. I worked all year and I was only
able go home for New Year,” Hayk (not his real name) told IWPR.

Hayk, who is now 38, found out he was HIV-positive in 2006, after
undergoing a test required by the Russian authorities for official
registration as a migrant worker. His application was turned down,
and he had to go back to Armenia. When he told his wife, she divorced
him and took the children with her.

Hayk believes he contracted HIV from a girlfriend in Russia.

HIV remains rare in Armenia, but experts fear that growing infection
rates could lead to a healthcare crisis.

Statistics on HIV infection rates in Armenia are limited. The
Armenian government says a total of 1,586 cases have been recorded
since records began in 1988, and 351 have since died.

This implies a total of around 1,200 current recorded cases. UNAIDS,
the United Nations agency responsible for combating the virus,
estimates that some 3,500 people are living with HIV in Armenia,
including unrecorded cases.

The trend over recent years appears to be upwards. The government
reported that the 228 cases diagnosed in 2012 were a record high. From
January through November 2013, a comparable figure of 205 new cases
was recorded.

“Comparing the 2012 figure with those for previous years, we can say
with certainty that the epidemic is spreading in Armenia. At the start
of the 2000s, there were no more than 30 recorded cases in Armenia,”
Lena Nanushyan, UNAIDS coordinator in Armenia, told IWPR. “If you
set these figures against those for countries like Ukraine or Russia,
they look insignificant. But they are cause for concern, especially
if you take into account the rise in infection.”

Janetta Petrosyan, the head of the health ministry’s AIDS Prevention
Centre, told IWPR that 70 per cent of recorded cases involved men,
reflecting the fact that they were more likely to travel out of
the country.

“According to the 2012 data, 62 per cent of patients were infected
abroad, and another 20 per cent were their partners. That means
that migration played a role in more than 80 per cent of cases,”
Petrosyan said.

According to figures from Russia’s Federal Migration Service, 125,000
Armenian nationals entered the country to work in 2011. The numbers
heading there and to Ukraine continue to rise as the Armenian economy
remains weak.

Experts say that this kind of population mobility can lead to more
rapid and wide-ranging transmission than, say, the use of shared
needles, which occurs within a narrower section of the community.

According to UNAIDS, 90 per cent of HIV cases diagnosed in Central
Asia and Eastern Europe occur in Russia and Ukraine, with shared use of
needles among drug users identified as the prime source of infection.

By contrast, data from Armenia’s AIDS Prevention Centre indicate that
the main route of transmission in the country is heterosexual sex.

This is a major concern for women’s rights organisations, which say
that in most cases where women have contracted HIV, it has been from
husbands returning to Armenia after spells working abroad.

“Gender inequality is one of the main problems tied to ignorance
about HIV,” Anush Poghosyan of the Women’s Resource Centre said. “In
our society, it’s considered pretty much fine for the husband to be
unfaithful when goes off to earn money in Russia or Ukraine. After
some time, he [may] return infected with HIV, and will ignore his
wife’s request to undergo a test, and pass it on.”

Anti-retroviral drug therapy for HIV has been available free of charge
in Armenia since 2005. However, HIV/AIDS is widely seen as a taboo
subject, and many carriers prefer not to tell medical professionals
and others of their status.

“People we work with often tell us that a dentist, for example,
will refuse to treat someone when he finds out they are infected,”
said Anush Arakelyan, spokeswoman for Real World, Real People, an
organisation that helps HIV-positive people. “If you go to another
dentist and don’t tell him… you will get treated. As a result of
such cases, people are scared to talk about this.”

Hayk is among those who keep their status secret. He did not seek
treatment for several years, as he was worried about what people
would think of him.

“In Russia, you see posters warning you about AIDS every step of
the way. HIV-positive people are accepted as more or less OK there –
not like here,” he said. “People think they’ll get infected just from
talking to you. That’s why I prefer to keep quiet about my disease.

Only my parents know.”

Yekaterina Poghosyan is a reporter for Mediamax in Armenia.

http://iwpr.net/report-news/hiv-infection-rates-rise-armenia

Kurdish-Armenian Cemetery Rebuilt As Police Academy Site In Turkey

KURDISH-ARMENIAN CEMETERY REBUILT AS POLICE ACADEMY SITE IN TURKEY

18:40 02.12.13

A brotherhood cemetery of Kurds and Armenians has turned into a site
of a police academy in the Turkish province of Sghert.

The Kurdish website Ozgur Gundem has described the government-initiated
construction project as the result of dirty policies aimed at hiding
the historical truth.

The Armenians subjected to Genocide in 1915, as well as over 200
Kurds killed after 1984 are buried there.

Vetha Aydin, the head of the local human right organization committee
has said that the project to build a police academy and a roadway
runs counter to all moral and legal principles.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Armenia Pleased With Iran-World Powers N. Deal

ARMENIA PLEASED WITH IRAN-WORLD POWERS N. DEAL

Fars News Agency, Iran
Dec 3 2013

TEHRAN (FNA)- Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan described Iran as
an important regional country, and expressed his satisfaction with
the newly signed nuclear deal between Iran and the six major world
powers in Geneva late in November.

“Iran is an important country for Armenia. That is why we of course
view positively the peaceful resolution of issues between Iran, the
EU and the US,” Sargsyan told a news conference following talks with
the Russian president on Monday.

He added that the Geneva deal is “an important step promoting stability
and security at the regional and global levels”.

On November 24, Iran and the five permanent United Nations Security
Council members- the US, Russia, France, China, and Britain- plus
Germany sealed a six-month accord to lay the groundwork for the full
resolution of the West’s decade-old dispute with Iran over its nuclear
energy program.

In exchange for Tehran’s confidence-building bid to limit certain
aspects of its nuclear activities, the Sextet of world powers agreed
to lift some of the existing sanctions against the Islamic Republic.