Armenia, Russian Presidents Discussed CSTO And CRRF

ARMENIA, RUSSIAN PRESIDENTS DISCUSSED CSTO AND CRRF

News.am
19:25 / 10/12/2009

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and his Armenian counterpart Serzh
Sargsyan met in Moscow. The Presidents discussed the development
of trade and economic collaboration, strengthening of interregional
concert, military-technical cooperation as well as the prospects on
implementation of large joint projects in energy sector.

The officials touched upon Collective Security Treaty Organization
CSTO, including the functioning of Collective Rapid Reaction Forces,
particular in the light of CRRF "Cooperation 2009" military exercises
in Kazakhstan.

In the framework of elaboration of counteractions against global
crisis and support to innovation progress, Dmitry Medvedev and Serzh
Sargsyan considered the results of October 9 CIS Summit in Chisinau
and exchanged opinions on dialogue in the frames of EurAsEC.

Photos enclosed – from RF President’s website.

Sonentz: A Roadmap To A New ‘Final Solution’

SONENTZ: A ROADMAP TO A NEW ‘FINAL SOLUTION’
By Tatul Sonentz-Papazian

009/10/11/sonentz-a-road-map-to-a-new-final-soluti on/
October 11, 2009

Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians…?

-Adolf Hitler

As the whole world knows, on April 24,1915, the murderous process of
Armenocide that had started almost 50 years earlier culminated into the
horrendous bloodletting of the very first genocide of the 20th century.

Cloaked behind the dust and smoke of the Great War, after the Ottoman
Turks completed the slaughter of one and a half million Armenians,
Kemalist Turks, side-stepping the 1918 Armistice, defying and ignoring
international peace treaties and protocols, with the assistance of
several great powers devised and followed their own murderous roadmap.

Over the following three chaotic years, they succeeded to decimate
surviving Armenian communities from Smyrna to Adana, from Shushi to
Baku, and to reduce a fairly large, fledgling Armenian independent
state into a diminutive province of the Soviet Empire.

To this very day, succeeding governments of the Turkish Republic-true
heirs of that now defunct "Sick Man of Europe," the Ottoman
Empire-continue, unabated, the same policies of persecution against
Armenians, bordering on the genocidal within their own ill-gained
boundaries through institutionalized harassment and forced
assimilation.

Thus, along with a cynical denial of the Armenian Genocide, Turkey,
has chosen to perpetuate that same genocidal process which, come next
April, will complete its 95th year.

With these undeniable facts as a backdrop, the Turkish-Armenian
negotiations for the "normalization" of relations between the two
countries and the opening of borders were carried on behind a thick
veil of secrecy and misrepresentation.

Orchestrated by Switzerland-with the active participation and enormous
pressure exerted by Turkish oriented special interests in the United
States and the European Union-the Armenian side was sure to end up with
the short end of the stick. And sure enough, the resulting protocols,
drafted without the representational participation of the Armenian
people, paved the way for a "roadmap" that can lead only to the demise
of the Armenian Cause in its major aspects-namely, the recognition
of the Armenian Medz Yeghern as genocide with proper restitution,
and the rejection of the shameful and untenable terms of the Kars
Treaty, which imposes on Armenia her present boundaries with Turkey.

The political aims of the opponents of our nationhood and sovereignty
are clear and relentless. They are articulated with an ambitious
slogan: "The 21st century will be known as the Turkish Century!" This
may sound like wishful thinking, but no one can accuse it of lacking
in vision, direction, and national purpose.

Against this gauntlet, hurled at the face of our national existence,
at this critical juncture of our history, both homeland and
diaspora-lacking in unity and common purpose-are being offered,
by our own government, a policy that suggests nothing more than
"survival at whatever cost"-a call to mere existence.

The truth is that our nation, engaged in a life and death struggle
against powerful opponents needs, above all, the unity of homeland
and diaspora, gathered around a common national struggle based on
immutable historical rights. The present stance of the government in
Yerevan, alienated from its own people, now following foreign-conceived
roadmaps, has simply nowhere to go-for a call to mere existence based
on denial of history offers no direction, and no vision of any kind;
it merely perpetuates a status quo that threatens our very existence
as a viable nation.

At this juncture, now that we stand on the crossroads of history
once more, being led to the slippery road of accommodating our avowed
enemy who is knocking on the doors of Europe, begging to be admitted
in the European Union, in need of our cooperation to succeed, we must
not lay down our weapons in abject defeat. On the contrary, we must
reassess our own stance, and the true intentions of our opponents. We
must objectively evaluate the methods of reactivation of our national
cause pursued relentlessly over the last 34 eventful years, starting
with the global commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the genocide,
whose veracity is now being put to the test by protocols signed by
a misguided government of oligarchs who have, in truth, ceased to
represent the Armenian people.

Let this be a wakeup call to all Armenians around the world, to step
back from the precipice and rally around the banner of our national
struggle for justice too long denied, for a future with honor that
befits a nation that has crossed the millennia with its unique culture
and civilization.

http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2

2011 UEFA European Under-21 .Turkey 1 – 0 Armenia

Match report by Evgeni Polyakov from Atatürk Stadium
UEFA.com

Aydın Yılmaz scored the only goal four minutes into added time as
Turkey marked their first home game in 2011 UEFA European Under-21
Championship qualifying with a victory against Armenia.
Bouncing back
Hami Mandirali’s side began Group 2 with three-goal victories away to
the Republic of Ireland and Armenia before a 4-0 defeat in Georgia
last time out stopped them in their tracks. They were confident of
bouncing back against an Armenia team which had conceded ten goals in
three point-less outings in the section, only to be frustrated by
indifferent shooting and stubborn defending until Aydın scored with
virtually the last kick of the match
from outside the box.
Half chances
The first half was even with Armenia’s opportunities chiefly being of
the half variety and from range. Turkey were more threatening, and
central defenders Demir Aiykut and Serdar Aziz both headed Ferhat
Kiraz corners narrowly wide. Coach Mandirali signalled his intent by
using all three substitutes
within 12 minutes of the restart, although his new-look XI failed to
trouble Edvard Hovhannisyan in the Armenia goal. The keeper had to be
at his best, however, to deny Mustafa Pektemek on the hour and Burak
Ã=87alık in the 77th minute, but could do nothing about Aydın’s
precise strike in added time.

NATO’s Regular Week To Be Held Within Framework Of Armenia-NATO IPAP

NATO’S REGULAR WEEK TO BE HELD WITHIN FRAMEWORK OF ARMENIA-NATO IPAP

Noyan Tapan
Oct 12, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN. NATO’s regular week will be held
(for the third time) between October 12 to 16 in Armenia within the
framework of the Armenia-NATO Individual Partnership Actions Plan
(IPAP). According to the RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information
Department, visits of NATO representatives to Yerevan, an international
conference, a photo exhibition dedicated to Armenian peacekeepers,
Yerevan-Pristina TV bridge are scheduled within the framework of
the week.

NATO’s week is one of the most important event held this year by RA
within the framework of RA IPAP and pursues the goal of presenting
the main directions of Armenia-NATO cooperation, modern condition
and content of NATO’s activity to Armenia’s society.

Serzh Sargsyan Participates In ‘Erebuni-Yerevan: 2791’ Fest

SERZH SARGSYAN PARTICIPATES IN ‘EREBUNI-YEREVAN: 2 791’ FEST

Aysor.am
October 12, 2009

Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan attended yesterday’s celebrations
of City Day "Erebuni-Yerevan: 2791".

President walked around the city’s center, watched performances,
talked with livers, and participated in a closing festive concert at
the Republic Square, reports Cabinet’s press office.

Focus News – BBC: Clinton reaches UK on Europe tour

Focus News

BBC: Clinton reaches UK on Europe tour

11 October 2009 | 03:18 | FOCUS News Agency

London. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has arrived in the UK on
the second leg of a five-day tour of Europe, BBC reports.The Afghan
war and concerns over Iran’s nuclear programme are expected to be high
on the agenda when she meets Prime Minister Gordon Brown on
Sunday. Mrs Clinton arrived from Zurich in Switzerland, where she
attended the signing of a historic pact between Turkey and
Armenia. The two countries normalised relations after a century of
hostility. US Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian
Affairs Philip Gordon said that while in Britain, Mrs Clinton would
"talk with senior UK officials on a wide range of bilateral and
transatlantic issues, including Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan".
Britain has the second largest troop deployment in Afghanistan after
the US. President Barack Obama is currently reviewing the strategy for
Afghanistan and spoke with Prime Minister Gordon Brown on Thursday to
discuss the issues.

Armenian Azeri pullout would help accord -Erdogan

Armenian Azeri pullout would help accord -Erdogan
11 Oct 2009 11:33:13 GMT
Source: Reuters

ISTANBUL, Oct 11 (Reuters) – Turkey’s Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
said on Sunday that Armenia’s withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh in
Azerbaijan would help gain his parliament’s approval for a peace accord
signed between Turkey and Armenia.

"We as a government paved the way for this co-operation, but whether or
not it will be applied is up to parliament to decide," he told a party
congress in Ankara.

Turkey would not look favourably on the accords, signed in Zurich on
Saturday, unless Armenia withdraws from Azerbaijani land, he said.

"If that issue is solved our people and our parliament will have a more
positive attitude towards this protocol and this process."

Turkey cut ties and shut its border with Armenia in 1993 in support of
Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan which was then fighting a losing battle
against Armenian separatists in Karabakh.

(Writing by Alexandra Hudson)

Swiss Foreign Ministry: Protocols To Be Signed On October 10

SWISS FOREIGN MINISTRY: PROTOCOLS TO BE SIGNED ON OCTOBER 10

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.10.2009 13:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Protocols on normalization of relations between
Turkey and Armenia will be signed on October 10 in Zurich, the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland announced.

"Protocols will be signed at Zurich University if no new changes appear
at the last moment in the program," Hurriyet writes. Protocols will be
signed by the Foreign Minister of Turkey and Armenia Ahmed Davutoglu
and Edward Nalbandian, " Turkish Hurriyet writes.

Serzh Sargsyan To Meet Russian Armenians

SERZH SARGSYAN TO MEET RUSSIAN ARMENIANS

rostov-on-don
08:15 pm | October 07, 2009

Politics

On October 7, Serzh Sargsyan left Beirut for Rostov-on-Don to meet
representative of Armenian community.

This will be Serzh Sargsyan’s last stop within the range of his
Pan-Armenian tour.

To note: a number of Russian Armenian organizations have appealed
Armenian leadership not to ratify the pre-signed Armenian-Turkish
Protocols.

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2009/10/7/

Turkish Court Rules Nobel Laureate Pamuk Can Be Sued For Comments

TURKISH COURT RULES NOBEL LAUREATE PAMUK CAN BE SUED FOR COMMENTS

DPA
GMT 10-7-2009 19:17:40

Istanbul – Turkey’s Supreme Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday that Nobel
Laureate Orhan Pamuk can be sued for remarks made several years ago
about the alleged massacres of Armenians and Kurds in during World
War One, the semi-official Anatolian Agency reported.

‘Thirty-thousand Kurds and a million Armenians have been killed and
almost nobody dares to mention that, except for me,’ Pamuk was quoted
as saying in a Swiss magazine in 2005.

Nationalist activists filed suit against Pamuk, saying his remarks
had insulted them and demanding compensation.

Although lower courts in Istanbul have twice rejected the case,
the higher court ruled that the case should be heard again.

Pamuk, the widely-acclaimed author of ‘Snow’ and ‘My Name is Red,’
won the Nobel prize in literature in 2006, the first Turkish author
to do so.

After he made his comments in 2005, charges were brought against him
that he had ‘insulted Turkishness.’ The charges were later dropped
for technical reasons.