BAKU: U.S. Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus Expands

U.S. CONGRESSIONAL AZERBAIJAN CAUCUS EXPANDS

Azer News, Azerbaijan
July 10, 2013 Wednesday

The number of members of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus (CAC) in
the U.S. House of US Representatives has reached 46, AzerTac state
news agency reported.

The Azerbaijani Embassy in Washington reported that Mark Medows from
Northern Carolina, Jim Bridenstine from Oklahoma and Filemon Vela
from Texas joined the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus.

The Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus was formed in the beginning of
2004 by congressmen Curt Weldon (R-PA) and Solomon Ortiz (D-TX),
its founding co-chairmen.

The Caucus has played an important role in increasing the understanding
of the Congress on the Caspian energy and geopolitics of the South
Caucasus region, in further developing the strategic relations
between the United States and Republic of Azerbaijan, increasing
trade, security and military cooperation between the two nations,
better grasp issues surrounding the illegal military occupation of
Azerbaijani lands such as the Nagorno-Karabakh (NK) and other regions
around it by Armenia, the Armenian blockade against Nakhichevan region
of Azerbaijan, and energizing the Azerbaijani-American voters.

Armenia: Getting Serious About Punishing Political Wrongdoers?

ARMENIA: GETTING SERIOUS ABOUT PUNISHING POLITICAL WRONGDOERS?

EurasiaNet.org, NY
July 10 2013

July 10, 2013 – 11:46am, by Marianna Grigoryan

First, it happened in the northwestern city of Gyumri. Then, in the
southern region of Syunik. Within the space of seven months, the
Armenian government has accepted the resignations of two powerful
regional chieftains with long-held track records for alleged violence.

But do these departures signal a real intention to hold public
officials, including political allies, accountable for their actions?

Critics long have charged that political power in Armenia’s regions
often can mean a warrant to behave more like a mafia godfather than a
public servant. Media reports of corruption, bribery and indiscriminate
use of violence run rife.

But now, with recollections of this year’s protests in mind, President
Serzh Sargsyan, who appoints all ten of the country’s governors,
has pledged to hold miscreant officeholders to account. “We will be
the first to condemn the faults and speak about theft and crimes . . .

since this is the price we have to pay to appear on the right path,”
he declared on June 29.

Nonetheless, choosing that path is not straightforward. Regional
officials routinely rally the vote for Sargsyan’s Republican Party
of Armenia (RPA).

That means that Sargsyan, even with no election in sight, “faces a hard
dilemma,” commented independent political analyst Yervand Bozoian. “On
the one hand, he punishes these people and loses their support because
they were providing votes for him. [But] if he does not punish them,
the state is decaying little by little,” Bozoian said.

Some observers believe that former scenario occurred during this
February’s presidential election, when President Sargsyan lost
Gyumri, the site of a Russian military base, to opposition leader
Raffi Hovhannisian by a spread of more than 42 percentage points,
an unprecedented defeat.

The loss was attributed in part to the departure of Gyumri’s former
mayor, Vardan Ghukasian, an ex-regional RPA boss known as “a good
vote provider,” who resigned in October 2012, following a scandal
over a city gunfight involving his son, Spartak.

During Ghukasian’s 13 years in office, the city of Gyumri had acquired
the name “Little Sicily” for its variety of bloodshed and corruption,
often allegedly involving the mayor or certain relatives. Prosecutions
were inconsistent, critics claim.

Following Ghukasian’s resignation, however, his son, an ex-con, was
arrested for a Gyumri gun battle, though subsequently released. This
April, police also scooped up Vardan Ghukasian himself as a potential
suspect in a shooting death, a crime to which Ghukasian’s nephew,
Vahe, confessed.

Many Armenians, though, see these measures and the government’s
acceptance of Ghukasian’s resignation less as a desire for
housecleaning, and more as a payback for the loss of Gyumri in last
year’s parliamentary elections.

Meanwhile, a similar debate about accountability has emerged in
Syunik, a region bordering on Iran that houses much of Armenia’s
mining industry, one of the economy’s few cash cows.

Until his resignation last month, Syunik’s 56-year-old Surik
Khachatrian, known as “Liska” (“Little Fox” in Russian or based
on the Armenian word for “Energized”), ranked as one of the most
influential of Armenia’s presidentially appointed governors, a man
not easily crossed.

Sargsyan’s 12-percentage-point loss this February to Hovhannisian
in Syunik’s seat, Kapan, demonstrated one limit to that influence,
however. A fatal June 1 gunfight near Khachatrian’s house in the town
of Goris that resulted in the death of one man, Avetik Budaghian,
and the serious injury of three others provided a further taint.

RFE/RL reported on July 9 that the father of Budaghian and another
victim alleged that an argument between his sons and Khachatrian had
preceded the shootout. Khachatrian’s 19-year-old son, Tigran, and
a bodyguard have been arrested and charged with murder and illegal
weapons’ possession in connection with the incident. Khachatrian told
police he was asleep at the time of the murder.

Past instances of retaliatory violence, though, contributed to demands
for his resignation, and still raise popular suspicions.

Recently, in a downtown Yerevan hotel, the ex-governor was filmed
slapping businesswoman Silva Hambarzumian, who had alleged that he had
stolen a mine and mining equipment from her. No punishment followed
the incident.

Similarly, in 2008, a US embassy cable released by WikiLeaks cited
a “direct source” about a brutal beating delivered by Khachatrian
in his office to a teenage boy who had scuffled with his son. No
consequences ensued.

“There has been a lack of political responsibility; instead, the
authorities have patronized him,” charged human rights activist Arthur
Sakunts, chairperson of the Helsinki Assembly’s Vanadzor office.

Even with Khachatrian’s resignation, that plotline has not changed,
Sakunts argued. “They did not fire him, but dismissed him according
to his own resignation request . . . There is no political will here
[for dismissals].”

The Republican Party of Armenia, however, underlines that Khachatrian
must be considered innocent until proven otherwise. “If Surik
Khachatrian did not resign, he would not be dismissed because if you
and I and others are not guilty [of a crime until proven guilty] . . .

he is not guilty, either,” commented Deputy Chairperson Galust
Sahakian.

Some observers, though, believe that, even with sufficient proof,
a criminal prosecution of Khachatrian would not occur so long as the
ex-governor supports the president.

RPA Secretary Eduard Sharmazanov objected. “Regardless of whether
you are someone’s relative or have a good position or belong to some
party . . . you must face punishment in the case that you are guilty,”
he said.

Editor’s note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67232

Beirut: First-time fasters embrace Ramadan

FIRST-TIME FASTERS EMBRACE RAMADAN

The Daily Star (Lebanon)
July 8, 2013 Monday

by Brooke Anderson

Anyone who has ever fasted knows the discipline required for going
without food or drink from sunup to sun down.

BEIRUT: Anyone who has ever fasted knows the discipline required for
going without food or drink from sunup to sun down. And those with
devoted Muslim friends and family members have seen up close what it
takes to make the daily sacrifice for 30 days during the holy month
of Ramadan. Nevertheless, every year millions of people across the
world take up fasting for the first time – be they children who have
reached puberty, religious converts, Muslims who are newly embracing
their faith or non-Muslims who are doing so as a symbolic gesture to
people of a different faith.

“I’ll be fasting in solidarity with my Muslim friends this year
for the first time so I can feel the meaning of sacrifice,” says
Adriana Bou Diwan, a Christian who is part of an interfaith studies
and solidarity organization called Adyan, Arabic for “religions.”

“When you put yourself in the place of someone else you understand
them better,” she says. “I’m also doing it because we have a lot in
common in our religious traditions.”

Bou Diwan grew up in a predominantly Christian area and was educated
in Catholic schools through university. Until recently she had very
little exposure to Islam. Although she will only fast for one day
because there is no one at home to break the fast with, she will be
taking part in all the traditions, including the predawn suhoor meal.

While Lebanon’s Dar al-Fatwa said it would watch for the Ramadan
crescent Monday evening, the office of the late Shiite preacher Sayyed
Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah announced that the first day of Ramadan
would be Tuesday.

The caretaker government said last week that state institutions and
municipalities would run shifts between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. during the
holy month of Ramadan.

Mohammad Anis al-Arwadi, a Beirut-based medical doctor with a PhD
in Shariah law, cautions that first-time fasters should make sure
they are in good medical condition before embarking on a month of
no meals during the daytime. For children under the age of puberty
(generally 13), fasting is advised for only a few days as a way of
“training” for later in life.

Arwadi also suggests people who are new to fasting consider why
they are doing it. He says they should be doing it out of religious
conviction and sacrifice – not for social reasons. But he does support
Christians fasting in solidarity with Muslims, especially in Lebanon,
where sectarian tensions remain a lingering relic of the Civil War.

No matter people’s reasons for fasting, he says it’s important for
it to be a genuine conviction.

“You’re obliging your body, in spite of its instincts, to go
without food,” Arwadi says. “It teaches you to feel for poor people
everywhere.”

For Garen Yepremian, a Lebanese account executive who arrived in Dubai
three months ago, fasting will be a mandatory exercise throughout
the 30 days of Ramadan – because in the United Arab Emirates it is
forbidden to eat in public during daylight hours.

“Given I already had a heads up, I didn’t mind it much,” says
Yepremian, an Armenian Christian from Beirut, who knew about the law
before arriving for his latest stint in Dubai. “I just knew that if
I was desperate for food, I’d have to smuggle it in my clothes and
eat it in the bathroom stall without making noise.”

Still, he doesn’t seem to mind the inconvenience for one month given
the wide ranging freedoms he is afforded the rest of the year in Dubai.

“Given the free lifestyle that people have in Dubai and seeing how
open-minded the country [is], I find it fair to respect their beliefs
in their most holy month and support them just as they have given
everyone else the freedom of belief,” he says.

Even with the UAE’s strict laws regarding food consumption during the
months of Ramadan, Yepremian believes people are generally fasting
out of their own convictions: “I feel that they are doing so out of
their own will rather than from peer pressure because it’s the month
of giving for them.”

“Working on multiple marketing campaigns for different clients that
revolve around messaging and wishing blessings to their customers, I’ve
come to understand why it’s such a big deal for them and that makes
me respect them more for being true to their beliefs and convictions.”

Rawad Abed, a Druze who never fasted but grew up with many friends who
did, says he wants to try fasting this year – at least for one day –
so that he can understand why people do it.

“I see my friends doing it every year, and they say they enjoy it,”
he says. “I feel like I need to understand the spirit of their
commitment.”

http://www.lexisnexis.com.ezproxy.aub.edu.lb/lnacui2api/results/docview/docview.do?docLinkInd=true&risb=21_T17768913152&format=GNBFI&sort=BOOLEAN&startDocNo=126&resultsUrlKey=29_T17768913160&cisb=22_T17768913159&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=335154&docNo=143

Interview With Mkhitaryan: ‘Borussia Was My Choice’

INTERVIEW WITH MKHITARYAN: ‘BORUSSIA WAS MY CHOICE’

Wednesday, July 10th, 2013

Henrikh Mkhitaryan at his new club in Dortmund.

After his highly publicized official move to the German soccer club
Borussia Dortmund, the midfielder of the Armenian National Football
team, Henrikh Mkhitaryan, held his first interview with the Football
Federation of Armenia.

FOOTBALL FEDERATION OF ARMENIA: Henrikh, congratulations on your
move to Borussia Dortmund. Today, when everything is finished, can
you tell us about your transfer story?

HENRIKH MKHITARYAN: Thank you for the congratulations. I would like
to thank everyone for showing so much interest in my transfer. As I
promised, I’m giving my first interview after signing with Borussia
Dortmund to the FFA. I also promised that I would tell the story
about my move myself when everything was officially completed.

When I was in Yerevan, waiting for negotiations between the two clubs
to end, I heard a lot of rumors, which were useful for the media,
but not for me. That`s why I tried to avoid comments from various
people until the negotiations were finished.

As a professional football player, I had to follow the rules of the
game; the negotiations were under way and I had to wait for them to
finish. Now I am officially a Borussia Dortmund player.

FFA: When did you leave for Dortmund?

HM: I left from Yerevan to Vienna on the morning of the 8th of July
and then to Dusseldorf from there. From there, representatives from
Borussia Dortmund met me and we went to Dortmund.

FFA: When did your presentation to the team take place?

HM: My presentation took place on Monday, on the 8th of July. Borussia
played against Magdeburg the day before, so Monday was a free day. The
photoshoot with the newcomers also took place that day.

Everything is now settled and the contract is signed. I will be
wearing the No. 10 jersey. The atmosphere at the club is very good,
everybody received me very warmly and I am very glad of that.

FFA: Was it yours or the club`s decision to give you the number 10?

HM: It was my choice. I hesitated between No. 22 – which has become
dear to me and my fans – and No. 10, but finally decided on 10 in
the end.

FFA: You played against Borussia Dortmund last season. Are you familiar
with anybody there?

HM: No, but I’ve already gotten acquainted with all the players.

FFA: Have you discussed with Jurgen Klopp about your role in the team?

HM: Not yet. I start training with the squad today.

FFA: Was Borussia Dortmund your choice?

HM: Yes, absolutely. This is a very important step in my life. I
chose Borussia because it`s a very strong team, with good players
and a great coach. Borussia Dortmund fans create a great atmosphere
in the stadium. I hope to make them happy and to win in every game.

FFA: Will you live on the club’s campus as it was at Shakhtar?

HM: No, the club will give me an apartment.

FFA: What are your feelings leaving Shakhtar?

HM: I want to thank FC Shakhtar, the president of the club, my
teammates and all the coaches – especially Mircea Lucescu – and all
the fans fans, who helped me a lot during the years. Without their
help I would not have what I have now. I would also like to thank
the people who helped complete my move to Borussia Dortmund. I will
try to make them proud of me.

http://asbarez.com/111237/interview-with-mkhitaryan-%E2%80%98borussia-was-my-choice%E2%80%99/

Borussia Goalkeeper: We Can Be Really Delighted About Mkhitaryan

BORUSSIA GOALKEEPER: WE CAN BE REALLY DELIGHTED ABOUT MKHITARYAN

17:43 11.07.2013
Borussia, Henrikh Mkhitaryan

Henrikh Mkhitaryan has already begun to show what all the fuss was
about for his new club, Borussia Dortmund, Soccer-Laduma writes.

The versatile Armenian attacking midfielder only joined the Bundesliga
side earlier this week, but they have already put him through his
paces in a pre-season friendly.

The ~@27 million 24-year-old played 45 minutes for Dortmund in their
3-1 over FC Basel on Wednesday night.

In his cameo Mkhitaryan scored one goal and set up another, leaving
his new club certain that they made the right decision in breaking
the bank to sign him.

According to Dortmund’s sporting director Michael Zorc, Mkhitaryan
enjoyed “a great debut.”

“He instantly took on our game,” Zorc told Kicker.

Dortmund goalkeeper, Roman Weidenfeller, was also impressed by what
he saw from the highly-rated and prolific Armenian.

“We can be really delighted about Miki,” Weidenfeller told Ruhr
Nachrichten.

“I think we have signed a huge talent that will help us a lot this
season.”

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/07/11/borussia-goalkeeper-we-can-be-really-delighted-about-mkhitaryan/

Archil Magradze Appointed ArmenTel Mobile Communication Commercial D

ARCHIL MAGRADZE APPOINTED ARMENTEL MOBILE COMMUNICATION COMMERCIAL DIRECTOR

YEREVAN, July 11. / ARKA /. Armenia’s ArmenTel telecom (trading as
Beeline) announced Thursday that Archil Magradze was appointed as
commercial director of the company’s mobile communications division.

According to an ArmenTel press release, Archil Magradze received
a degree in international economics and law and has many years of
experience in the telecommunications business, including in VimpelCom
group of companies.

“I hope that Archil will use his rich experience in telecommunication
markets of different countries to promote the mobile market in Armenia
“, ArmenTel CEO, Andrei Pyatakhin was quoted as saying.

Archil Magradze worked for MegaCom Ltd., the first telecom in Georgia
where in nine years he rose fr om customer service manager to marketing
and sales director.

In 2006, Archil Magradze joined Georgian Mobitel, where he took an
active part in the launch of the Beeline brand. From 2007 to 2008
he headed the company’s branch in Batumi; in 2008 he was appointed
Beeline Commercial Director in Georgia.

In 2010, Archil Magradze was appointed director of the Tashkent branch
of Unitel, working under Beeline brand in Uzbekistan, wh ere in a
short time he secured a double-digit growth in sales and earnings;
in 2012 he was appointed Commercial Director of Beeline in Cambodia.

Archil Magradze is married and has four children.

ArmenTel is owned fully by Russian VimpelCom Ltd. It provides fixed
and mobile telephony, as well as high speed Internet access throughout
Armenia. -0-

– See more at:

http://telecom.arka.am/en/news/telecom/archil_magradze_appointed_armentel_mobile_communication_commercial_director_/#sthash.7a8UyOmH.dpuf

Lebanon Demonstrates Political Will Not To Give Way To Provocations:

LEBANON DEMONSTRATES POLITICAL WILL NOT TO GIVE WAY TO PROVOCATIONS: SHAHAN KANDAHARIAN

15:18, 11 July, 2013

YEREVAN, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS: The responsibility for the explosion,
occurred in the southern district of Beirut on July 9, was not
assumed to any organization or party, though there is an opinion
that the incident is a domestic Lebanese or a domestic Islamist
conspiracy. This was stated by the Editor-in-Chief of Azdak Daily
Shahan Kandaharian in the conversation with Armenpress. “The incident
is in the background of the Shia-Sunni tension in the entire region.

There will be forces, which will try to use the Syrian War to raise
the tension. At the same time there is also a political will not to
give way to provocations”, – said Shahan Kandaharian.

The Editor-in-Chief of Azdak Daily emphasized as well that the
incidents and collisions in Lebanon are not of All-Lebanese nature.

The number of the wounded in the result of the explosion occurred
on July 9 in the southern district of Beirut has reached 38. The
anonymous source of the local lawenforcement bodies supposed that
the Jabhat al-Nusra grouping extremists standbeyond the explosion,
who fight in Syria on the side of the rebels.

The Armenian community in Beirut did not suffer damage from the
clashes ongoing in Lebanon. On June 23 a war situation was created
in the Southern Lebanon, when the Islamist groupings attacked the
Lebanese army. In the result of the collision the army gave wounded
and killed. On June 24 the armed Islamists opened sniper shots towards
the streets of the Southern capital of Lebanon.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/725755/lebanon-demonstrates-political-will-not-to-give-way-to-provocations-shahan-kandaharian.html

Saudi Missile Base Possibly Targets Israel, Iran

SAUDI MISSILE BASE POSSIBLY TARGETS ISRAEL, IRAN

July 11, 2013 – 14:51 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Saudi Arabia may be targeting Israel and Iran
with lorry launched missiles from a base 125 miles south-west of
Riyadh, the IHS Jane’s Intelligence Review revealed, according to
The Jerusalem Post.

The Jane’s analysts examined a satellite image of the base, near the
town of Al-Watah, built within the last five years.

Analysts found that one of the launch pads “appears to be aligned
on a bearing of approximately 301 degrees and suggesting a potential
Israeli target, and the other is oriented along an azimuth (bearing)
of approximately 10 degrees, ostensibly situated to target Iranian
locations.”

According to the report the launch pads, were designed for Saudi
Arabia’s arsenal of lorry launched DF 3 missiles, which have a range
of 1500-2500 miles and can carry a two ton payload.

Saudi Arabia reportedly acquired missiles from China in the 1980s.

StrategyPage: Azerbaijanis Are Greater In There Number And Baku Has

STRATEGYPAGE: AZERBAIJANIS ARE GREATER IN THERE NUMBER AND BAKU HAS MORE MONEY, BUT ARMENIANS ARE BETTER FIGHTERS

14:38 11/07/2013 ” SOCIETY

Between 1991 and 1994, there was a nasty war between the two countries
over Nagorno-Karabakh, which Armenia won. Over a million people
became refugees 400,000 Armenians in that number. The situation was
humiliating for Azerbaijan, who saw it as yet another example of more
powerful and wealthier (via oil fields) Moslems being defeated by a
smaller number of armed and more capable non-Moslems, the portal on
military news StrategyPage reports.

The article says that some 20,000 people died. The portal notes
that over 400,000 Armenians fled their homes. There has been a truce
between Armenia and Azerbaijan since 1994. But it has been a hot truce.

“The situation was humiliating for Azerbaijan, who saw it as yet
another example of more powerful and wealthier (via oil fields)
Moslems being defeated by a smaller number of armed and more capable
non-Moslems,” the article says.

Although Azerbaijan has three times more people and much more money
because of oil, the Armenians are better soldiers and the dispute
has been stalemated.

“Azerbaijan has a population of nine million and a GPD of $72 billion,
compared to 3.2 million Armenians who have a GDP of $10 billion.

Azerbaijan is determined to reverse this string of defeats, no matter
the cost. But the Azeris are not stupid and have to deal with the
fact that the Armenians are still better fighters and have Russia as
an ally,” the article says.

The article also notes that two years ago Armenia signed a pact with
Russia that, in effect, puts it under the protection of Russia. The
deal extends the lease on a Russian military base in Armenia from
2020 to 2044.

“In the last few years Azerbaijan has purchased over $5 billion worth
of new weapons from Israel and Russia. Officially, all of this is
for potential use against Armenia. But the billions spent on naval
and air defense weapons seem more suited for defense against Iran,”
the article reads.

http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2013/07/11/azeri-war-nkr/

Stefan Fule Meets With Armenian National Congress Representatives

STEFAN FULE MEETS WITH ARMENIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS REPRESENTATIVES

09:56, July 11, 2013

Visiting European Commissioner for Enlargement and Neighbourhood Policy
Å tefan Fule met yesterday with Levon Zourabyan, Vice President of
the opposition Armenian National Congress.

The two discussed the envisaged autumn signing of the EU Association
Agrteement from the perspective of Armenia’s integration into Europe.

Zourabyan, accompanied by ANC Foreign Affairs Committee President
Vladimir Karapetyan, underscored that they expected the EU to assist
in reforming the electoral process in Armenia.

The sides agreed to continue to hold meetings between the political
opposition in Armenia and EU institutions.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/28036/%C5%A1tefan-f%C3%BCle-meets-with-armenian-national-congress-representatives.html