Azerbaijan talks about defence cooperation with US

TendersInfo
January 19, 2013 Saturday

Azerbaijan,United States : AZERBAIJAN talks about defence cooperation with US

Colonel General Safar Abiyev, Minister of Defense, has received the
delegation led by Principal Deputy Under the US Secretary of Defense
for Policy Dr. Kathleen Hicks.

The sides talked regarding the relations in defense area, the Defense
Ministry s press service reports. Safar Abiyev informed the guest
regarding military condition in the region and the causes that the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict has not been settled up to now.

Kathleen Hicks, articulating her satisfaction with Azerbaijan s
contribution in peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan and joint activity
in fight against terrorism, highlighted the US is planning to carry on
the strategic cooperation with Azerbaijan in a number of significant
issues.

Presidential Election in Armenia: Interest Without Intrigue

Politkom.ru , Russia
Jan 10 2013

Presidential Election in Armenia: Interest Without Intrigue

by Sergey Markedonov

2013 will be an important political milestone for all states in the
South Caucasus. Presidential elections are in store for Armenia,
Azerbaijan and Georgia. In Georgia, in addition to electing the head
of state, the process of replacing the ruling elite, which started
with the 1 October 2012 parliamentary elections, is to be completed.
This process will take place in parallel with constitutional reform
(amendments will take effect after a president is elected) aimed at
redistributing powers between the head of state, the government, and
the national parliament.

Armenia is the first to enter the election race. The process of
nominating candidates started as early as 25 December 2012. Initially,
15 people notified the republic’s Central Electoral Commission of
their participation, but far from all of them got through the
Electoral Commission’s screen. The only candidates remaining after the
preliminary “screening” were: incumbent President Serzh Sargsyan;
Heritage Party leader Raffi Hovhannisyan; Freedom Party leader Hrant
Bagratyan (this structure used to be part of the Armenian National
Congress [ANC]); Paruyr Hayrikyan, a dissident well known during the
Soviet era; Arman Melikyan, former foreign minister of the
unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic; political analyst Andreas
Gukasyan; and Vardan Sedrakyan, who has no party affiliation. Even a
cursory glance at this list is enough to prompt at least some
questions.

The main troublemakers of Armenian politics are missing from the list
of contenders. Levon Ter-Petrosyan, Armenia’s first president, leader
of the ANC, and participant in the 2008 presidential campaign, is not
on the list. Nor is second President Robert Kocharyan, whose ambitions
were discussed by many after the scandalous elections in 2008, which
were marred by civil confrontation. However, by the middle of last
year, the relevance of discussions about a “second attempt at a
return” (the first unsuccessful attempt was made by Levon
Ter-Petrosyan) had decreased significantly. Also absent from the list
is Gagik Tsarukyan, who could be called the main troublemaker of the
past year (again, in contrast to the first president of Armenia, who
lays claim to the title of chief troublemaker of the past five years).
Let us recall that during last year’s parliamentary election, the main
intrigue was not so much the standoff between the ruling and
opposition segments of Armenia’s political spectrum, but the
confrontation between the major “parties of power,” the Republican
Party and Prosperous Armenia. Not only did Tsarukyan’s party
consistently campaign on a populist platform, even resorting to
criticism of the authorities, but according to the election results
Prosperous Armenia showed a quantitative increase compared to the
previous convocation of parliament. In 2012, Prosperous Armenia had 11
seats more than it did five years before. It is no coincidence,
therefore, that on 24 May 2012, Prosperous Armenia declared its
nonparticipation in the postelection coalition government. However, in
December of last year, “the Tsarukyan problem” was solved. Prosperous
Armenia leader Gagik Tsarukyan declined to participate in the
campaign, while the party itself declared that it would not support
any of the candidates. For the Republicans and their candidate Serzh
Sargsyan, this is tantamount to passive support.

According to a fair remark by Yerevan political analyst Sergey
Minasyan, the upcoming election is effectively becoming a
“technicality.” In fact, just a cursory glance at the potential
contenders for the president’s seat is enough. In the early 1990s,
Hrant Bagratyan served in the government’s “economic bloc,” and was
prime minister in 1993-1996. He is called “the father of land reform,”
a policy considered one of the most consistent liberal agrarian
reforms in the whole post-Soviet space. Parallels are always subject
to qualification, but Bagratyan has an image as “the Armenian Yegor
Gaydar” which, in today’s circumstances, can hardly be regarded as the
best credential. The World Bank recognized the economic reforms in
Armenia as one of the most successful post-Soviet reforms. However, it
is unlikely that the Armenian voter will use this rating scale.

Raffi Hovhanisyan is the son of well-known Armenian-American historian
Richard Hovhanisyan. Born and educated in the United States, and
having forged a successful career there, in the early 1990s he rushed
to help his historic homeland. In 1991-1992, he was also Armenia’s
foreign minister, and since 2007 has twice been elected deputy to the
national parliament. However, being elected deputy is not at all the
same thing as becoming president. And the Heritage result of 5.79% in
the last parliamentary election suggests that Hovhanisyan should
hardly count on an “electoral revolution.”

Paruyr Hayrikyan became known back in Soviet times thanks to his
struggle for Armenia’s national independence. He was arrested several
times in the Brezhnev era, but was expelled from the USSR to Ethiopia
and stripped of his Soviet citizenship during the perestroika period
in 1988 (this story could have provided material for a first-rate
Frederick Forsyth-style detective story). [Passage omitted: anecdote
on Hayrikyan’s nationalism told by writer Michael Heifetz] In a 1988
election (if there had been one, and if, indeed, there had been an
independent Armenia), Hayrikyan would have had success. Today, past
merits are unlikely to be in high demand with the much more
down-to-earth voters, who have experienced many disappointments and
become convinced that ideological purity alone is not always enough
for well-being and prosperity.

For the other figures, there are also major doubts about their
political assets. And also about how widely they are known to the
public. Though Arman Melikyan has experience of participating in
presidential campaigns (2008), at the same time he clearly specializes
in foreign policy (whether it is diplomatic work in Kazakhstan,
working as ambassador-at-large under the auspices of the Armenian
Foreign Ministry, or “unrecognized diplomacy” in Nagorno-Karabakh).
Political scientist Andreas Gukasyan is running for the first time,
and is known not so much for political as for civil initiatives.
Vardan Sedrakyan is an epic poetry expert who has already managed to
make a number of populist statements, such as inviting the three
presidents of Armenia to be his advisers in the event of his electoral
success.

Does this mean that the upcoming election has no interest for
Armenia’s internal political dynamics? After all, the outcome of the
campaign can in fact be predicted with much more confidence than it
could five years ago. It seems that such a conclusion could only be
reached on the basis of purely superficial markers. First, it is worth
linking the two election campaigns into one cycle, because it is
difficult to understand the current “technical” race without last
year’s parliamentary elections. What was it that so influenced the
current situation? First, the May 2012 parliamentary election campaign
drew a sort of line under the story that started with the civil
controntation in 2008. It showed that President Serzh Sargsyan was not
a shadow of his predecessor, but an independent politician who tends
to use a more subtle approach than Kocharyan. Of course, history
doesn’t have a conditional mood, but it seems that political
coexistence between oppositionist Levon Ter-Petrosyan and President
Robert Kocharyan did not have to end with “bloody Saturday” [1 March
2008, when the disputed outcome of the presidential election led to
fatal clashes between Yerevan riot police and protesters in Yerevan].
Sargsyan provided the so-called “nonsystemic opposition” with a little
piece of power. First, the ANC was allowed to enter Yerevan’s Council
of Elders — that is, the capital’s parliament — and then also the
highest representative body at national level. Thus the main force of
the mass street protests got the opportunity to enter the “system,”
even if as an oppositionist force with extremely limited rights. But
unlike the Kremlin, the third Armenian president’s team did not start
to exaggerate the “Orange threat” and demonize its opponents (although
after the events of 2008 official Yerevan had more grounds to do so
than the Russian authorities had after the demonstrations on Bolotnaya
and Sakharova). On the one hand, the opposition was allowed to display
in all its glory its inability to formulate clear policy alternatives,
and on the other hand they shared a little piece of power, enabling
what in the West is popularly referred to as “engagement.” Second, in
the period between May and December 2012, Sargsyan was able to solve a
problem of an entirely different order. We are, of course, referring
to intraelite dialogue. Thus he managed to achieve Prosperous
Armenia’s benevolent neutrality, which in the current conditions
almost amounts to support.

Thus, in order to get this intrigue-free election, Sargsyan’s team had
to go through a lot of intrigue and complex maneuvers. But the most
interesting thing will start in February 2013. As the well-known
political analyst Richard Giragosyan very accurately observed,
Sargsyan’s second term will be like his first. Indeed, he is going to
the polls not as another leader’s successor and without Kocharyan’s
shadow behind him. In his first five years, he was able to minimize
polarization in society and save Armenia from the extremes of civil
confrontation (of course, this was not done without notorious
administrative resources and informal rules of the game). And that is
not a bad starting place for new legislature. But let us not forget
that Armenia is not a country with a nuclear “button” or a strong
regional power. In many cases, its internal dynamics are very tightly
aligned with “background factors,” be they the situation in the Middle
East or in the South Caucasus as a whole. And, of course, the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will continue to have a profound impact on
the country’s domestic and foreign policy. However, something else is
also evident. Without at least a minimal harmonization of the domestic
situation, pursuing a foreign policy course is much more difficult.

[Translated from Russian]

Armenian Patriarchate Geared Up For Election of 97th Incumbent

Palestine News Network (PNN)
January 23, 2013 Wednesday

Armenian Patriarchate Gearing Up For Election of 97th Incumbent

by Arthur Hagopian The Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem is gearing
up for one of the most momentous events in the 2,000 year-old history
of the Armenian presence in the Holy Land. Preparations for the
election of a new patriarch to succeed the late Archbishop Torkom
Manoogian, are proceeding at a brisk rate, with the main event
scheduled to take place tomorrow. Patriarchate sources told this
correspondence tomorrow’s agenda is designed to narrow down the list
of potential candidates to five. This will later be pared down even
further, to two, before the final vote is cast.

Under the rules and regulations of the Patriarchate, any member of the
Priestly Brotherhood of St James, that is, priests ordained in
Jerusalem, would be eligible for election. But in practical terms, the
incumbent is chosen from among the ranks of the highest princes – the
archbishops – of the Armenian church. The total number of Armenian
archbishops who were ordained priests by the Jerusalem Patriarchate
today stands at 8, three of them based in Jerusalem, and the remaining
five ministering to the needs of Armenian congregations in the
diaspora. The sources revealed that the front-runners to become the
97th Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, in a direct transmission from
the first patriarch, Abraham, are the Grand Sacristan, Archbishop
Nourhan Manoogian and Director of Ecumenical Relations, Archbishop
Aris Shirvanian, the current Locum Tenens. Manoogian (no relation to
the late patriarch) was born in Aleppo in 1948 and ordained a priest
in 1971. He was anointed bishop in 1999. Shirvanian, who is older, was
born in Haifa in 1934 and ordained a celibate priest in 1957. He
became a bishop in 1974. Archbishop Sevan Gharibian, born in Beirut in
1940 and made bishop in 1988, is the third potential Jerusalem
candidate. Observers have named the Primate of the Eastern Diocese of
the United States, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian (born in 1951 in
Arapgir, in the former Armenian district of Malatya), as another
leading candidate. The late Primate of the Australian and New Zealand
diocese, Archbishop Aghan Baliozian, had been seen as yet another
powerful possibility. As the members of the St James Brotherhood pray
for guidance and wait for the fateful day to dawn, Armenians all
around the world are watching developments in Jerusalem with great
anxiety. The Armenian church in the Holy City has been forced to wade
through the morass of debilitating challenges in recent years, and
needs the strength and endurance to maintain its stature and standing
not only as the second most vital font of spiritual rejuvenation after
the Mother Church in Armenia, but also as one of the three Guardians
of the Holy Places. Tomorrow “will be two important dates not only for
the new person succeeding Patriarch Torkom II and leading the church
in the Holy Land but equally importantly for the Armenians still
living and witnessing in those biblical and also historical lands,”
says one of the leading commentators of the Middle East religious
scene, Dr Harry Hagopian, Ecumenical, Legal and Political Consultant
to the Armenian Apostolic Church. Observers note that both of the
leading contenders, Manoogian and Shirvanian, are blessed with the
requisite qualifications to lead the church into the future. “Nourhan
is a man of steel who is not afraid of a challenge, and has the
charisma and bearing of a force to be reckoned with. He has been a
pillar of strength in times of crisis for the Patriarchate. He may be
brash at times, but his indomitable courage and determination are
undeniable. The Patriarchate needs a strong man like him at the helm,”
they add. Manoogian is keen to maintain Jerusalem’s traditionally
strong ties with the diaspora. His recent visit to Sydney, to attend
the funeral services for Baliozian, has been seen as further
indication of his inclinations. Observers believe Shirvanian’s
pronounced tact and diplomacy will be fundamentally important in
steering the church through the morass, particularly of the political
tint, surrounding it on all sides. “Despite his soft-spoken approach,
Shirvanian has the inner strength of a majestic lion, his sagacity and
wisdom evident in all the moves he orchestrates.” Although Shirvanian
is not one to shirk a challenge, his preference is for a more
softly-softly approach. In his recent Christmas message, he dwelt
heavily on the topic of peace in the region, among the Semitic
cousins, Arabs and Jews, ending it with an invocation in Arabic and
Hebrew. The late patriarch, Manoogian, has been known as a reformer
and a modernizer, a man of vision although not all his dreams were
realized. One of his grand designs was the construction of a hostel
for Armenian pilgrims and tourists, another was a residential project
that never got off the drawing board. Will the 97th Armenian Patriarch
build on those dreams, or will he have a different agenda to follow?
The next few days may, hopefully, give us an indication of where the
wind will lie.

Turkey’s Patriot missiles targeted against Russia – expert

Interfax, Russia
January 21, 2013 Monday 4:58 PM MSK

Turkey’s Patriot missiles targeted against Russia – expert

MOSCOW. Jan 21

The deployment of U.S. Patriot surface-to-air missile systems in
southern Turkey is targeted against Russia’s allies in the
Commonwealth of Independent States and the Collective Security Treaty
Organization rather than possible missile attacks from Syria, said
former Russian Air Force commander, General of the Army Anatoly
Kornukov.

“They are actually targeted against the CIS and the CSTO and, for that
matter, against Russia,” Kornukov told Interfax on Monday.

“I understand this step has been made against us, rather than Syria.
The border is near. Azerbaijan is an ally to Turkey. Armenia is easily
reachable for attacks if they deploy the systems on the border in the
mountains,” he said.

It emerged earlier on Monday that Patriot missiles had been delivered
to Turkey from Germany and Holland. Some 240 German soldiers arrived
at Incirlik military base to service the German Patriot missiles.
Patriot missiles have been deployed at Ankara’s request in southern
Turkey which are seen as a shield against possible Syrian missile
attacks. Six Patriot batteries are expected to be located in Turkey.
The United States, Germany and Holland are expected to provide two
batteries each. The Patriot systems are expected to become combat
ready in early February.

Kornukov said the Patriots being deployed in Turkey have a range of
just 75 kilometers. “Only the border zone will be covered. Nothing
else. Tactically, they will not solve the problem. If anything flies
into their zone, they will definitely bring the intruder down. But if
the place of deployment and the zone of coverage are known,
destruction may be dodged. It is a moral factor rather than anything
else,” Kornukov said.

Sd rb

What decision will ARF make, if the members of the party support Ser

What decision will ARF make, if the members of the party support Serzh Sargsyan?

2013-01-26 15:37:00

According to the decision of the Supreme Body of “ARF” Dashnaktsutyun,
they will not nominate their own candidate in the next presidential
election, but they do not come out of the policy and will be more
careful, consistent and objective.

Today Lurer.com asked the vice president of ARF Supreme Body Arsen
Hambardzumyan how the activity of ARF is manifested in the campaign
ahead of the presidential elections, in which the latter replied:

“With the notion of active participation, we were interested in the
representation of our society by all available means of the position
of our party during the election campaign, a review if necessary,
under some circumstances, to ensure fair and equitable elections with
the help of our representatives in election commissions.”

The question what ARF thinks about the candidates’ hunger strike,
Arsen Hambardzumyan said that though it is their right, he does not
think that the hunger strike can be the solution of the raised issues.

“As for the candidates we have no specific position. This is their
strategy, they can decide what kind of struggle to choose. We take
this into account. I do not think a hunger strike can solve the raised
issues, but that is their right. Time will tell what type of result
this hunger strike gives.”

Lurer.com also asked Arsen Hambardzumyan about the rumors that members
of ARF work for Serzh Sargsyan. “The party has taken its decision, and
the members of the party follow this decision. I deny the
participation of any member of ARF in the campaign, in particular
Serge Sargsyan.

And in case of such cases, however, they will be registered, of course
the party will take appropriate measures. I do not know such cases,
and that information is another attempt to discredit the ARF, as
people are constantly trying to find something in common between our
party and other political forces, but the truth says that “ARF”
differs”.

Nelli Avetisyan

http://lurer.com/?p=72064&l=en

Kajaran governor back to ruling party to endorse president

Kajaran governor back to ruling party to endorse president

tert.am
19:51 – 27.01.13

The governor of Kajaran (Syunik region) has resumed his membership in
the ruling Republican Party of Armenia after around a year’s interval
to endorse Serzh Sargsyan in the upcoming presidential polls.

Together with his community members, Rafik Atayan extends support to
the incumbent president who banned the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum
plant from exploiting the village’s lands for mining purposes.

`Yes, I had withdrawn from the party, but they said no one is going to
harm the village, so I am back. It isn’t as though the president had
said `I stand behind your backs as a mountain’, so we stand by him. I
have always pinned great hopes on my president,’ the governor told
Tert.am.

The president’s earlier decision to hand over the Kajaran lands to the
Copper Molybdenum Plant had sparked a wide discontent in the village.
Yielding to the protests, Sargsyan later issued a decree for not
implanting the decision.

Atayan, who recently attended Sargsyan’s campaign meeting in Kajaran
said his village has no other expectations from the president.

He denied the subsequent media reports that the Kajaran residents
asked the president to develop mining industries in the village.

The Kajaran governor said their population is unlikely to draw
benefits from mining. `We’d better breed our cattle,’ he explained.

Commenting on the reports that Syunik Governor Surik Khachatryan has
signed a bilateral economic cooperation agreement with his counterpart
of Iran’s East Azserbaijan province (over the rent of a pasture for
5,000 cows in return for Iran’s Iran’s agricultural equipment and
fertilizers), Atayan said he isn’t aware of such a deal and ruled out
the possibility of such a practice in his village.

First week of presidential campaign in Armenia was `fun’ – ARF

First week of presidential campaign in Armenia was `fun’ – Dashnaktsutyun

news.am
January 27, 2013 | 19:19

YEREVAN. – ARF Dashnaktsutyun that has not nominated a candidate for
the presidential elections in Armenia, a few days before the
elections, scheduled for February 18, will make a special appeal to
their supporters, an ARF member Arsen Hambardzumyan informed Armenian
News-NEWS.am.

He noted that now intraparty debates are in progress and approaches
are discussed.

`At the moment, our approach is the following: we will turn to our
supporters to actively participate in the elections, regardless of the
fact that we do not participate in them, as we appreciate the
importance of the electoral institution, and have no right to
discriminate against it. We once again ask our supporters to vote
based on the call of conscience. Exclude the incumbent president, but
if there is no candidate checked, the ballot will be found invalid,
because our legislation removes the option `against all’,’ Arsen
Hambardzumyan said.

He also noted that the issue of support for a candidate is not a goal in itself.

The first week of the campaign Arsen Hambardzumyan described in one
word `it was fun.’ None of the candidates’ campaigns has impressed the
party.

ANKARA: Samatya residents protest attacks on Armenians

Samatya residents protest attacks on Armenians
All the speakers condemned the police department and accused it of
covering up the reality behind the attacks.

27 January 2013 Sunday

World Bulletin / News Desk

Residents, civil society groups and political party representatives
gathered in the central square of İstanbul’s Samatya neighborhood on
Sunday to protest a number of attacks committed against elderly
Armenian women in their homes over the past few months, one of which
resulted in a death, with police failing to capture the assailants.
`Don’t touch my neighbor’ and `I will not let you hurt my brothers and
sisters’ read some of the signs held by the protesters. Dozens joined
the rally, including Mersin independent deputy ErtuÄ?rul Kürkçü and
Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) İstanbul deputy Sebahat Tuncel. She
attended in her capacity as a representative of the Peoples’
Democratic Congress (HDK), a Kurdish civil society organization that
also organized Sunday’s rally.
The crowd also lay carnations in front of the apartment building of
one of the victims, presumably that of Maritsa Küçük, who was brutally
murdered in her apartment.
All the speakers condemned the police department and accused it of
covering up the reality behind the attacks.
Five women were attacked in the past two months. Police say there is
no ethnic targeting, claiming that only three of the women attacked
were Armenian. But civil society groups insist that the events were no
ordinary cases of robbery, as nothing valuable was taken from the
houses of the attacked women. There were also claims that the attacks
could have been perpetrated by construction mafia seeking to prevent
elderly homeowners from holding up new constructions in the region.
However, the message in Sunday’s march was clear, with most protesters
saying they did not buy the police’s interpretation of the events.
On Saturday, a group of 30 members of the Freedom and Democracy Party
(Ã-DP) protested the attacks in front of the KocamustafapaÅ?a Train
Station. Ã-DP İstanbul provincial branch secretary Çiçek Çatalkaya in a
speech she made here referred to the attacks as `racist and fascist,’
and asserted that these were not isolated incidents. `We know that
these attacks are not related to profit seekers from urban renewal
projects. We know this because the blood that was shed on this land
100 years ago has still not dried,’ Çatalkaya said, in reference to
the 1915 massacre of Armenians in Turkey’s Southeast.
The first attack in the past few months was on Nov. 1, 2012. A woman
named Gönül A. was beaten by an intruder, and her valuables were
stolen. On Nov. 28, Tuivat A. (87) was attacked inside her house. She
lost one eye in the attack and her valuables were also taken. On Dec.
28, Maritsa Küçük (85) was brutally murdered in her house, where she
lived alone. In the fifth attack, Sultan Aykar (80) was stabbed as she
entered her house.

http://www.worldbulletin.net/?aType=haber&ArticleID=102418

Hollande to visit Armenia on April 24

Hollande to visit Armenia on April 24
PARIS

President Francois Hollande. ABACA photo
French President François Hollande is planning to visit Armenia on
April 24, the date Armenians commemorate the alleged Armenian genocide
in the last days of the Ottoman Empire, daily Hürriyet has reported,
citing sources in the Elysee.

Hollande accepted the invitation of Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
in November 2012 to visit Armenia in 2013, the report said, adding
that Hollande aims to issue a `strong genocide message’ to the
Armenian community living in France before local elections in 2014.

However, the French president will not bring forth the bill that
criminalizes denial of Armenian genocide allegations to the Senate due
to `technical difficulties’ in the Constitution. The French
Constitutional Council annulled the bill last year.
January/27/2013

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/hollande-to-visit-armenia-on-april-24.aspx?pageID=238&nID=39914&NewsCatID=351

Un bloc timbre dédié au 300e anniversaire de la naissance de Sayat-N

PHILATELIE ARMENIENNE
Un bloc timbre dédié au 300e anniversaire de la naissance de Sayat-Nova

Le 27 décembre la Poste arménienne émettait un bloc timbre a
l’occasion du 300e anniversaire de la naissance de Sayat-Nova
(1712-1795). Le bloc timbre d’une valeur de 560 drams est émis en 30
000 exemplaires représente une sculpture dédiée à Sayat-Nova. Né à
Tiflis (l’actuelle Tbilissi) Sayat-Nova fut tué par les troupes perses
dans le monastère de Haghpad. De son vrai nom Haroutioun Sayatian,
Sayat-Nova fut le troubadour auprès de la cour d’Irakli II (Héraclius
II de Géorgie) chantant l’amour et la beauté.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 27 janvier 2013,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=86463