Monte Melkonyan Could Have Become 52 Yesterday

MONTE MELKONYAN COULD HAVE BECOME 52 YESTERDAY

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.11.2009 19:00 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Hero of Karabakh war Monte Melkonyan (Avo) could have
celebrated his 52nd birthday on November 25. On that occasion, Martuni
regional center hosted events attended by NKR President Bako Sahakyan,
as well as commander’s companions-in-arms and inhabitants of Martuni.

Monte Melkonyan was born on November 25, 1957 in Varselia (a town
not far from Frezno), California. In 1969, his family moved to Spain.

After leaving school, Monte left for Turkey to see his ancestors’
lands. Later he moved to Lebanon. Upon his return to United States,
Monte entered Berkley Universit, to specialize in archaeology and
Asian history. After internship in Japan he worked as a teacher in the
Armenian schools of Iran and Lebanon (beginning 1957). Monte Melkonyan
knew 7 languages, and had the degree of Associate Professor of History.

In the 1970s, Monte Melkonyan took part in Lebanese Civil war. In
spring 1980, he joined ASALA. Monte planned and organized the seizure
of Turkish Embassy in France (known as Van operation) and several
other operations against Turkish representative offices in European
states. While ASALA member, he took part in the assassinations of
several Turkish diplomats in Europe during the early to mid-1980s
and was later arrested and sent to prison in France. In 1989, he
was released and in the following year, acquired a visa to travel
to Armenia.

Throughout his tenure, Melkonian carried several different aliases
including "Abu Sindi", "Saro", "Timothy Sean McCormack" and "Commander
Avo"; the last of which was the name addressed by troops under his
command in Nagorno-Karabakh.

One of the outstanding, talented and experienced commanders, Monte
Melkonyan died in strange circumstances on June 12 1993 in Marzilu
village. He is revered by Armenians as a national hero.

Youth Holds Rally Against Georgian Actions

YOUTH HOLDS RALLY AGAINST GEORGIAN ACTIONS

Aysor
Nov 24 2009
Armenia

Members of Ararat Youth Union of Armenian Apostolic Church and dozens
of other students gathered today in front of Georgian Embassy in
Armenian capital city to hold rally against anti-Armenian policy.

In particular, the demonstrates claim for legal status for Armenian
Church in Georgia, return Armenian Churches, save and hold in respect
Armenian cultural heritage. The protesters carry posters reading
‘Javakhk is my homeland’, ‘Say no to indifference’, ‘Return our
churches’, ‘Georgians, you are Christian’, Aysor’s correspondent
reported.

These actions and protests rise from last developing in Georgia when
Armenian St. Gevorg Church of the 13th century, as people called it
‘Mugnetsots’, ruined on November 19. All requests and claims voiced
before by Armenian Catholicosat in address to Georgian government
and Georgian Patriarchy, remained unanswered.

Youth delegation headed by Father Hakob Khachatryan stepped into
Georgian Embassy, Aysor’s correspondent reports.

Armenia-Turkey Protocols Discussed In RA CC

ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS DISCUSSED IN RA CC

news.am
Nov 24 2009
Armenia

RA President Serzh Sargsyan introduced Armenia-Turkey Protocols
signed October 10 in Zurich on establishment of bilateral relations
with Turkey to RA Constitutional Court.

The Protocols were submitted on November 19, Constitutional Court
press secretary Hovhannes Papikyan informed NEWS.am. Presently,
they are being studied by CC Judge Vladimir Hovhannisyan, who will
introduce the Protocols and his conclusions to CC President Gagik
Harutyunyan within 15 days. "The latter will call a session to set
a date of Constitutional Court sitting, the Protocols discussion
procedure and the respondent," said Papikyan.

Serzh Sargsyan Shouldn’t Have Participated In Munich Negotiations: V

SERZH SARGSYAN SHOULDN’T HAVE PARTICIPATED IN MUNICH NEGOTIATIONS: VAHAN HOVHANNISYAN

Tert
Nov 24 2009
Armenia

The statement made by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev before
Sunday’s meeting in Munich was not from a series of simple statements,
it was a threat in the manner of an ultimatum, after which Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan should have made the only correct step; that
is, not to have gone and participated in the negotiations in Munich.

This opinion was expressed by Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(Dashnaktsutyun, or ARF-D) bureau member, ARF-D parliamentary faction
leader Vahan Hovhannisyan during a press conference today. He is
sure that everything is done today for Armenia to make concessions
on Nagorno-Karabakh so that Turkey’s parliament ratifies the
Armenia-Turkey Protocols.

After Aliyev’s bellicose statements, Hovhannisyan thinks, the
clauses which are advantageous for the Armenian side in the
Meindorf Declaration are devalued. According to the declaration,
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict should be settled without war. Moreover,
the ARF-D MP also considered dangerous Meindorf Declaration "author"
Russia’s role in the processes of Armenia-Turkey reconciliation and
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement.

As an aside, Hovhannisyan noted that in his opinion, passing the
Armenian Genocide resolution in the US Congress will have a very
positive influence on the Armenian-Turkish process, but whether it
will be passed or not the ARF-D member can’t predict.

Davutoglu Talks To His Azerbaijani Counterpart On Results Of Munich

DAVUTOGLU TALKS TO HIS AZERBAIJANI COUNTERPART ON RESULTS OF MUNICH MEETING

ArmInfo
2009-11-24 12:06:00

ArmInfo. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu talked to his
Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov on the phone and received
information regarding the Munich meeting of Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh Sargsian, Anadolu reported.

Mammadyarov told Davutoglu that the process will continue in the
upcoming term and that the co-chairs of the Minsk Group may meet in
Athens as part of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in
Europe (OSCE) meeting.

During the phone conversation, Minister Davutoglu welcomed the
developments (between Azerbaijan and Armenia) and renewed his
invitation to Mammadyarov to visit Ankara.

Azerbaijani President Aliyev and Armenian President Sargsian met in
Munich on Sunday.

Fresno AYF Chapter Begins Winter Toy Drive

FRESNO AYF CHAPTER BEGINS WINTER TOY DRIVE

Asbarez
Nov 20th, 2009

FRESNO-The Armenian Youth Federation’s Fresno "Kevork Chavoush"
Chapter announced this week it has begun its 4th annual toy drive to
benefit troubled orphans in Armenia.

The chapter will be packaging boxes filled with toys and shipping
them to Armenia at the end of the year. Toys must be brand new and
in their original boxes.

Donation boxes have been at the Fresno Armenian Center (2348 Ventura
St. Fresno, CA 93721), as well as at local delis, restaurants, markets,
and bakeries.

To donate to the toy drive, contact Sevag Jierian
(559-301-2439) or Rita Marie Costanian (559-696-8358) or email:
[email protected].

Donors from the Los Angeles area can drop toys off at the AYF Western
Region office in Glendale (104 N. Belmont St., Suite 206, Glendale,
CA 91206). For information or direction, call (818) 507-1933 or email:
[email protected]

Glendale Donation Drop Off Location:

AYF-WR Office 104 N. Belmont St., Suite 206, Glendale, CA 91206

Fresno Donation Drop Off Locations:

Charlie Keyan Armenian Community School Located at Herndon and Villa

Medicine Shoppe Located at Fresno and Gettysburg

Fresno Armenian Community Center Located at Ventura and M Street

Hye Market Located at Bullard and West

Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church Located at Ventura and M Street

Nina’s Bakery Located at Shaw and West

Fresno Deli Located at Fresno and Gettysburg

Kern St. Cobbler Shoe Repair & Alterations Located at Kern and M Street

Armenian Student Organization (ASO-Fresno) Located at California
State University, Fresno.

The Armenian Studies Office in the Peters Building

PM on Economic Growth and Is Against Concessions in National Issues

Prime Minister Speaks on Economic Growth and Is Against Concessions
in National Issues

1/21.htm
November 21, 2009

The NKR Prime Minister Ara Haroutyunyan’s interview to "Reporter"
American paper correspondent Emil Sanamyan

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Emil Sanamyan: Mr. Prime Minister, earlier this week you made a
number of statements rejecting the territorial concessions envisioned
under what is known as the Madrid proposal for a Karabakh settlement,
unveiled by France, Russia, and the United States in July. At the time
the NKR Foreign Ministry broadly criticized the proposal, but your
comments were more specific. Could you elaborate on NKR’s position
with regard to that proposal?

Ara Haroutyunyan: The Nagorno Karabakh Republic has not been
formally presented with the Madrid proposal. We have seen the
statement and media commentary, but as long as we are not formally
presented with a proposal, we cannot officially accept or reject it.
That said, we have a position repeatedly articulated by our
president and other officials, a position that the international
community needs to appreciate.
First, the people of Artsakh have already exercised their right to
self-determination.
Second, in a popular referendum, we adopted our constitution,
which specifies that Artsakh’s territory is its present-day territory
comprising 11,400 sq km (4,400 sq mi), and it is not the territory of
the former Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast.
Of course, we support the negotiation process and understand that
negotiations imply mutual compromises. But in the end, the
negotiations can produce results only when Artsakh authorities become
involved. Without our full participation, there will be no results.

ES: Another issue generating a lot of debate is the terms of the
Armenia-Turkey protocols signed on October 10. The Armenian government
has invested a lot of effort into that diplomatic initiative and there
has also been a lot of criticism of the protocols both in Armenia and
the diaspora. What is your view of that process?

AH: Generally we would welcome any step that contributes to
Armenia ‘s economic development. But such a step should not come with
preconditions or disregard our national dignity and identity.
The future of our country depends on economic development.
Armenians are business savvy, and if they don’t have opportunities in
the homeland, they will find them elsewhere; emigration leads to
demographic problems.
It is obvious that a Turkey-Armenia border opening would create
new opportunities for development. Those who argue that [Turkish
imports] would damage our economy are not correct. The same argument,
after all, could be made against countries we have open borders with,
Georgia and Iran . But that is not the case, and reflects a
backward-looking policy.
Border opening with Turkey is important economically, but once
again it should come without preconditions, without historical
revisionism, and without a link to Artsakh negotiations.
If any one of these conditions is not met, we will be opposed and
will find the signing of these documents to be senseless. But as far
as I know, the president of the Republic of Armenia , in all his
statements, has ruled out any compromises on these issues.
I would stress once again that a solution to the Artsakh issue
depends on Artsakh itself. Any deals reached contrary to the will of
Artsakh people will remain on paper.
You will recall this is what happened when former Armenian
President Levon Ter-Petrosian agreed to the return of Kelbajar [after
its capture in April 1993]. Those efforts were in vain. Moreover, our
army was able to liberate Tigranakert, Kovsakan, and other areas
[later in 1993].

ES: As Prime Minister you deal mostly with economic issues, but
economics and security are quite interconnected. Azerbaijan is
continuing to arm itself and has repeatedly expressed aggressive
intentions. But there is little Armenian criticism of this
militarization and there is virtually no criticism of countries
selling weapons to Azerbaijan . Why not?

AH: We of course do not welcome Azerbaijan ‘s policy that
allocates so much money for its armed forces and weapons purchases,
but there is also little we can do to influence this process.
Instead, we do what we can to make Azerbaijan think twice before
launching hostilities. We have an efficient defense system that is not
limited to today’s standing army. Every citizen of Artsakh is a
[reservist] soldier and will defend his motherland the way we did in
the early 1990s.
Additionally, it is important to note that, say, the price of a
modern tank is in millions of dollars, while antitank weapons cost
only several thousand. We are not preparing for an aggression; we are
preparing for defense [so our costs are lower]. However, we also have
serious counterattack capabilities.
Each year, we implement large-scale programs aimed at increasing
capabilities of our army, and strengthening our defense perimeter.
Azerbaijan can make the calculations and knows that the Artsakh
Army will remain a guarantor of regional peace and stability for a
long time. We have made it clear that a new war would be very damaging
for Azerbaijan not just in human and financial terms, but also through
loss of territory.
We are confident about our capabilities and ready to confront any
aggressor.

ES: Earlier today I visited the Artsakh History Museum where a
guide showed me a picture of your older brother who was killed in the
war. This subject of war of course remains very close to everyone in
Artsakh.
But for many others, including in the diaspora, the war has become
a relatively distant memory and the sense of danger to Artsakh, to
Armenians, has largely passed. Why is Artsakh still important?

AH: It must be harder to maintain the attachment to your
motherland when you live far from it rather than when you live here.
>From far you miss it, but nostalgia alone can be exhausted over the
years.
To preserve this attachment to Armenia, to Artsakh, we encourage
diaspora Armenians to visit the motherland more often. Once you visit
and experience Artsakh, you will fall in love with Artsakh, live
Artsakh. Our policy now is to promote such visits.
In part for this purpose, we are now constructing an airport,
improving roads, improving the access to our historical and cultural
monuments. Excavations are underway at Tigranakert, which has a
significant meaning for the whole Armenian people. Works are also
underway at Amaras, Dadivank, and in Shushi. There are more and better
hotels, restaurants, and transportation in Artsakh than ever before.
The more our compatriots visit Artsakh, the stronger the
connections become. We understand that time can have an effect. But
even from far away, you do not stop loving your family or your
motherland.

ES: What are your priorities for the Armenia Fund Telethon on November 26?

AH: This year, donations made to the Fund will help development of
Shushi. Projects there include reconstruction of the former Shushi
girls’ school, which will house NKR’s Ministry of Culture. It is also
planned to move the local branch of [ Armenia ‘s] Agriculture
University to Shushi.
We already began work to relocate NKR’s Supreme Court and other
judicial entities to Shushi. We hope to see these projects completed
in the next five to seven years.

ES: Last weekend the Free Motherland party had its congress and
elected you as its leader. What is the history and political plans of
this party?

AH: The Free Motherland party was established in January 2005 and
I was one of its founders. We participated in 2005 parliamentary
elections, and at the time came in second.
We also took part in the [2007] presidential elections and
supported the current president, Bako Sahakian. The main theses of our
party’s program were reflected in the election program of President
Sahakian.
Today, our party has the biggest faction in the National Assembly,
holding 12 of 33 seats. We are now preparing for parliamentary
elections due next year and will have a new election program. Should
we win, we will present our program to the president and after
receiving his approval we will implement it.

ES: Is the president a member of your party?

AH: No.

ES: Are you already the main ruling party?

AH: No. In the last presidential elections, four parties including
Free Motherland, Artsakh Democratic Party, ARF (Dashnaktsutiun), and
Movement 88 supported the president. Today they all are represented in
parliament and are part of government.

ES: How does President Sahakian’s administration differ from
former president Arkady Ghukasian’s in 1997-2007? Are there
significant differences, or is it the continuation of the past
administration?

AH: Of course the differences are significant. The [incumbent]
president has his own election program, working style, team, and ideas
for development. Of course all this is reflected in the country’s
economic indexes and demographic changes. Today Artsakh’s economy is
growing at a good pace in spite of the world economic crisis.

ES: Is that a result of the president’s efforts and foreign investments?

AH: Yes, investments, economic policy, and implementation of
anti-corruption programs have all resulted in those indexes, and we
are working for this dynamic of development surely to continue.

ES: Thank you.

http://www.karabakh.net/engl/inform/2009/1

Will Armenia-Turkey Protocols Make It To Constitutional Court?

WILL ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS MAKE IT TO CONSTITUTIONAL COURT?

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

Republican Party of Armenia vice-president and parliamentary faction
leader, Galust Sahakyan, announced today that in the issue of ratifying
the Armenia-Turkey Protocols, the Armenian side will move according
to its already announced approach.

That approach, reiterated by Sahakyan, stipulates that the Armenian
side is waiting for Turkey’s Grand Assembly’s assessment, because the
border can’t open only through Armenia’s discussion and ratification
of the Protocols.

Sahakyan made this statement in response to Tert.am’s question whether
it’s possible that the Armenia-Turkey Protocols might not make it
into the Consitutional Court of the Republic of Armenia, which is
the first to give its conclusion in the ratification of the Protocols.

From New York Times, Music Listings

Classical Music
November 15, 2009

NAREH ARGHAMANYAN

(Sunday) A fine recording of the Liszt Sonata and Rachmaninoff’s
Sonata No. 2 shows this young, Armenian-born pianist to be a
thoughtful, technically polished player, and explains why she has won
prizes in several recent competitions, including the Montreal
International Music Competition in 2008. She makes her New York
recital debut with a program that includes Bach’s Partita No. 3,
Beethoven’s Sonata No. 31 in A flat (Op. 110), Liszt’s Ballade No. 2
and Schumann’s `Humoresque.’ At 5:00 p.m., Frick Collection, 1 East
70th Street, Manhattan , (212) 547-0715, frick.org. (Alan Kozinn)

Armenia’s Largest Tax Payers Report 11.3% Decline In Sales In Septem

ARMENIA’S LARGEST TAX PAYERS REPORT 11.3% DECLINE IN SALES IN SEPTEMBER

/ARKA/
November 19, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, November 19, /ARKA/. According to a monthly study of Armenia’s
largest tax payers conducted by the State Revenue Committee, some
of them reported an 11.3% decline in sales in September 2009 from a
year before.

The companies which earned less from their sales are the Zangezour
Copper and Molybdenum Combine, Pure Metal Factory, Armenian-Canadian
Grand Tobacco venture, the Armenian Copper Program, Mikmetall, the
Armenian Molybdenum Production, the Yerevan Brandy Company and the
Agarak Copper and Molybdenum Plant, whose sales declined by 12.6
billion Drams.

The State Revenue Committee conducts monthly studies among 325 largest
companies to ensure unified tax conditions for all large companies
and improve tax and customs administration. ($1 – 387.41 Drams).