Opposition Armenian National Congress Calls For Early Presidential,

OPPOSITION ARMENIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS CALLS FOR EARLY PRESIDENTIAL, PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS

Interfax
Sept 12 2011
Russia

The opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC) has called for holding
early presidential and parliamentary elections.

“Our goal is to destroy the illegal ruling regime, for which we have
started a process aimed at forcing the authorities to call early
elections,” ANC coordinator Levon Zurabian said at an opposition
rally on Friday.

Zurabian announced the ANC’s plans to conduct a series of protest
rallies. “We will bring our rallies to a level at which the ruling
regime will have to retreat and concede the people’s victory,” he said.

Nikol Pashinian, an ANC activist and the editor-in-chief of the
opposition newspaper Aikakan Zhamanak, said the next rally should
gather “an unprecedented number of people.”

Observers estimated the number of participants in the Friday rally
at some 5,000. An opposition activist said the ANC leadership was
disappointed by this number.

“The problem is financial support. The [opposition] leaders are no
longer able to pay potential participants in rallies the usual fees,”
he said.

Sports: Armenia Participates In World Championship Of Bodyguards

ARMENIA PARTICIPATES IN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP OF BODYGUARDS

news.am
Sept 12 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN. – Armenia will participate in bodyguards’ world championship,
which will take place in Yalta on September 23-27.

During the Championship, VIP-person’s tactic competition accompanied by
technology and pedestrian, handgrip, shooting from different positions,
and neutralizing the “terrorists” will be hold.

There are participants from Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, Great Britain,
Italy, Norway, Bulgaria, Moldova, Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan,
Latvia, Latvia, Estonia, USA, Romania, India, Macedonia, Australia,
Belgium and France.

ANKARA: And This Is Israel’s ‘Plan B’

AND THIS IS ISRAEL’S ‘PLAN B’

Hurriyet
Sept 9 2011
Turkey

The Israeli press is reporting that the Israeli government is preparing
to take tough measures in reprisal for the sanctions Turkey has
announced. The reports suggest that Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman, an extreme right-winger, is planning radical steps such
as collaboration with the Armenian lobby in the United States and
contacts with the PKK.

According to a report published in Yedioth Ahronot, senior officials
of the Israeli Foreign Ministry met yesterday to prepare for the
meeting to be held with Lieberman on Saturday.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s recent comments about shipping
in the eastern Mediterranean and the course Israel should take will
reportedly be discussed at the meeting [on Saturday].

The daily reported that, at yesterday’s meeting, Foreign Ministry
officials concluded that, at this point, Turkey is not waiting for an
apology from Israel and that Ankara wants to improve its stature in the
Muslim world by taking advantage of the tension that has been created.

The report adds that, for this reason, rather than seeking new formulas
for apologizing to Turkey, Lieberman has chosen to focus on steps to
punish Ankara.

The daily reports that the Israeli Foreign Ministry has decided to
take a series of steps in the spheres of diplomacy and security in
this regard.

The first step to be taken is reportedly a travel warning to all
Israeli war veterans to avoid visiting Turkey.

‘Genocide,’ ‘Terrorism’ Cards

Another planned step is reportedly collaboration with “Turkey’s
historic rivals, the Armenians.”

The report says that Lieberman is expected to meet with leaders of
the Armenian lobby during his visit to the United States this month
and propose cooperation against Turkey in Congress.

The report also claims that Lieberman is planning to hold meetings
with PKK leaders in Europe with an eye to “cooperating” with the
terrorist organization “in every possible area. “It adds that, at
these meetings, PKK members may ask Israel for military aid in the
form of arms supplies and training.

The daily quotes Lieberman as saying: We will make Erdogan pay a price
that will prove to him that messing with Israel does not pay off.”

According to the report, Lieberman also said. “It would be beneficial
for Turkey to treat us with respect.”

‘Grave, Serious Threat’

Another comment about Prime Minister Erdogan’s remarks on shipping
in the eastern Mediterranean came from Deputy Israeli Prime Minister
Dan Meridor today.

Meridor described Ankara’s statement that “aid ships travelling
to the Gaza Strip will be accompanied by warships” as a “grave and
serious threat.”

In a statement to the Israeli Army Radio, Meridor said: “The remarks
of the Turkish prime minister are harsh and grave. However, it would
not be right to engage in a war of words with him via threats of war.”

He added that the best response is silence and expressed the hope
that this incident will blow over.

The Israeli deputy minister also said that the UN’s Mavi Marmara
report has refuted Turkey’s claims that the Israeli blockade [of Gaza]
is a violation of international law.

Israel Wants No Conflict With Turkey — Israeli Minister

ISRAEL WANTS NO CONFLICT WITH TURKEY — ISRAELI MINISTER

Kuwait News Agency (KUNA)
September 11, 2011 Sunday

Israel does not want any quarrel with Turkey, but is working on
regaining ties with Ankara, according to Israeli radio on Sunday.

Israeli radio quoted Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman as saying
he hopes to recover ties with Ankara, although “will not wave a
white flag”. In addition, he refuses to apologize for the attack on
Gaza-bound flotilla that occurred last year, which led to the death
of nine Turkish civilians.

This comes after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
yesterday that Israel has no desire to see strained relations with
Turkey continue.

Lieberman claimed in his press releases that Israel’s actions have
been and will continue to be in line with international law, adding
that the Palmer Commission report on the boarding of the Mavi Marmara
considered Israel’s actions as legal.

Meanwhile, Lieberman evaded questions about “punishing” Turkey,
assisting Kurds, and Armenian rebels.

Musique Arménienne à N.-Dame-de-la Rominguère

MIDI LIBRE, France
10 septembre 2011 samedi

Musique Arménienne à N.-Dame-de-la Rominguère

Après des chants et des musiques russes, l’église
Notre-Dame-de-la-Rominguère accueillera ce samedi à partir de 18 h 30
(entrée libre) le trio Oshakan.Ce trio, à la manière des
miniaturistes, vous invite à un voyage musical dans les Jardins de
Paradis d’Arménie aux travers de la poésie mystique et lyrique du
moine Grégoire de Narek, Xe siècle, et de l’auteur Grigoris
Akhtamartsi au XV Ie siècle. Poésie décrivant avec tristesse l’instant
où son me, comparée à un jardin, quittera ce monde. Dans ce concert
le chant tient une place prépondérante, puisque c’est lui qui est
l’instrument soliste. Avec les deux instruments, on obtient ainsi un
chatoiement de timbres et une palette de couleurs instrumentales
riches et variées, qui évoquent d’une façon imagée, les miniaturistes
arméniens. Tous les amateurs de cette musique et ceux qui veulent la
découvrir sont invités à venir assister à ce concert original.

Turkish-Egyptian alliance: Israel faces regional isolation

Turkish-Egyptian alliance: Israel faces regional isolation
Netanyahu can either prepare for another war or accept that Israel can
no longer impose its will on its neighbours

Editorial
guardian.co.uk,
Sunday 11 September 2011 22.47 BST

Monday’s visit to Egypt by Turkey’s prime minister, Reccep Tayyip
Erdogan, will be watched like no other. It comes just three days after
thousands of Egyptians stormed the Israeli embassy in Cairo.
Eighty-six Israelis inside fled, and six security guards trapped
inside a strong room had to be freed by Egyptian commandos, but only
after intervention from the White House. What those diplomats felt was
the wrath of an Egyptian people humiliated by the killing of five
soldiers at the Israeli border three weeks ago. A sixth soldier died
at the weekend. Mr Erdogan will bring with him the support of a
regional power and Nato member whose citizens were also killed by
Israeli soldiers on the Gaza flotilla last year, and who is now
threatening to send warships to protect the next one. If
post-revolutionary Egypt and an economically resurgent Turkey make
common cause against their former common ally – and there is every
indication that they will – Israel’s isolation in the region will be
profound.

The pace of events has surprised everyone. The pro-Palestinian
sentiment of the thousands who thronged Tahrir Square was latent
rather than explicit. Analysts then expected that major foreign policy
changes would have to await domestic ones like elections and a new
civilian government. Israel on the other hand found itself looking the
wrong way, gearing up for protest on the West Bank and on its Syrian
and Lebanese borders after the declaration of statehood at the UN
later this month. No one expected the forces unleashed by the Arab
spring to turn this suddenly on an Israeli flagpole in Cairo.

The popular wrath is a result of two factors. First, seven and a half
months after the downfall of Hosni Mubarak’s regime, the Egyptian
street is still the cutting edge of change in the country. Its ruling
military council, with elements of the former regime, are playing a
double game. Assuring continuity of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty
to some, and using the gradual breakdown of that treaty to reassert
lost Egyptian pride and sovereignty in the Sinai to others. It may not
have been accidental that during the weekend’s drama in Cairo no one
in the White House could get the head of Egypt’s ruling military
council, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, on the end of a
telephone in an effort to rescue the trapped security guards. Second,
Israel’s old alliances were with regimes, usually despotic ones, not
their people. Now that popular opinion is once again making itself
felt in the region, Egypt will never again stand quiet – as it did
when Israel launched its military campaign against Gaza in 2008 – if
another war breaks out.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu now faces a real choice. He must
realise that humiliating Turkey by refusing to apologise for the
deaths on the Mavi Marmara was a colossal error. The strategic
consequences for Israel of a hostile Turkish-Egyptian alliance could
last years. They far outweigh the advantages of a tactical victory in
the UN Palmer report, which lasted exactly days. Israel needs to
repair relations with Turkey and do it quickly. The price of such a
rapprochement will have gone up in the last week, but it is still
worth paying. The Israeli premier’s reaction on Saturday to events in
Cairo was, by his standards, measured and moderate, so maybe even he
now realises this.

The choice he faces is clear. He can either prepare for another war
(Avigdor Lieberman’s response to Turkey was to suggest that Israel arm
the PKK) or he can accept that Israel can no longer impose its will on
hostile and weaker neighbours. For one thing, the neighbours are
growing stronger. The Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz put it more bluntly.
In an editorial about the harassment of Israeli passengers on a
Turkish Airlines flight in retaliation for similar treatment Israeli
authorities meted out to Turkish passengers, it suggested that Israel
needs humiliation in order to respect others. No one needs further
humiliation, but respect of its neighbours is in short supply.

MG Co-Chairs met in Vienna to coordinate their program of activities

Minsk Group Co-Chairs met in Vienna to coordinate their program of activities

armradio.am
09.09.2011 12:17

The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Ambassadors Bernard Fassier of
France, Robert Bradtke of the United States, and Igor Popov of the
Russian Federation, released the following statement:

“The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group (Ambassadors Bernard Fassier of
France, Robert Bradtke of the United States, and Igor Popov of the
Russian Federation) and Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk (Personal
Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office) met on September 7
in Vienna to discuss and coordinate their program of activities,
leading up to the Vilnius Ministerial Council of the OSCE in December.

The Co-Chairs also briefed the OSCE Minsk Group on the continued
high-level engagement with the sides by all three Co-Chair
governments, as well as on concrete efforts to strengthen the
ceasefire and to reach endorsement of the Basic Principles as a
framework for a comprehensive peace agreement. On September 8, the
Co-Chairs met with OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier to further
discuss these and other aspects of the peace process.”

Yerevan kindergarten children play solely with good-quality toys

news.am, Armenia
Sept 10 2011

Yerevan kindergarten children play solely with good-quality toys –
Armenian experts

September 10, 2011 | 02:19

YEREVAN. – Armenian Consumers’ Association Chairman Armen Poghosyan’s
information that, during their monitoring at the kindergartens of
Yerevan’s Central and Davitashen administrative regions they had come
across out-of-date toys, is not true, Davitashen’s prefect Arthur
Gevorgyan and Central region prefect’s staff member Gayane Ohanyan
told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Arthur Gevorgyan informed that no monitoring was conducted at the
kindergartens of their administrative regions. He also assured that,
at the beginning of the year, they announce a tender for the supply of
new toys during which it is specified that the winning company must
supply good-quality toys to the kindergartens.

In her turn, Gayane Ohanyan noted that directors of all 20
kindergartens of the Central administrative region had assured that no
one, including Armen Poghosyan and is staff, had recently conducted
monitoring of toys.

Poghosyan likewise told Armenian News-NEWS.am that no monitoring was
held at kindergartens of the two aforesaid administrative regions, and
thus contradicted his statements made during a press conference on
Thursday.

`Aznavour’s Square’ film won at Buenos Aires International Film Fest

news.am, Armenia
Sept 9 2011

`Aznavour’s Square’ film won at Buenos Aires International Film Festival (Video)

September 09, 2011 | 18:40

The film `Aznavour’s Square’ won at the 10th International Youth Film
Festival and received the `New approach’ nomination, given for
documentary films. The film was shot in 2010.

Authors are the students of Gyumri city Ecoclub Foundation for the
Preservation of Wildlife and Cultural Assets. The film is about their
investigation of their city’s garbage problems.

According to them, scavenging is a big problem nowadays, not only in
Gyumri but also in Yerevan’s central streets. In the film they present
not only the polluted image of the city, but also try to understand
how the responsible figures deal with that problem. Watch the film
HERE: [tt_news]=114&cHash=cfd93a66ddac5c6c53d9fb4ab51b959e

http://tv.sunchild.org/index.php?id=31&L=2&tx_ttnews

After WikiLeaks disclosures Armenian Opp will not make new tension

news.am, Armenia
Sept 10 2011

After WikiLeaks disclosures Armenian opposition will not make new tension – MP

September 10, 2011 | 12:43

YEREVAN. – Leader of oppositional Armenian National Congress (ANC),
former president Levon Ter-Petrosyan is in a difficult situation
because of WikiLeak’s publications and the dialogue with authorities,
and he can no longer continue his strategy, Heritage party MP Stepan
Safaryan informed to Armenian News-NEWS.am.

`Everything is revealed about ANC and Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s tactics.
He tried to worsen Serzh Sargsyan’s situation with the help of foreign
policy issues, and he used every election opportunity to generate
post-election processes. I don’t think that after such disclosure,
Levon Ter-Petrosyan will make new tension. It was also obvious from
his speech by which the leader of ANC was trying to comment on his
view of revolution, and that it’s not a revolution for him. It’s
obvious from his yesterday’s speech that he is changing his strategy,’
assumed the MP.

The WikiLeaks published American diplomats cables, a significant part
of which was about ANC and Levon Ter-Petrosyan.