VTB Bank (Armenia) Branches In Hrazdan, Vedi, Artashat, Masis Get On

VTB BANK (ARMENIA) BRANCHES IN HRAZDAN, VEDI, ARTASHAT, MASIS GET ONLINE

/ARKA/
April 28, 2009
YEREVAN

VTB Bank (Armenia) having the largest branch network in Armenia (78
branches) has expanded its online network in the country’s regions. "On
April 28, another five branches in Hrazdan, Vedi, Artashat and Masis
have gone online," the bank’s press service reports.

All the Yerevan-based branches of VTB Armenia have joined the online
network. Two branches in Etchmiadzin went online in April, with the
bank continuing to expand its online network in Armenia.

"Our short-range objective is to ensure our customers are satisfied
with convenient services, including account management in any branch
of our bank, irrespective of its location and address," said General
Director of VTB Bank (Armenia) Valery Ovsyannikov.

"What we offer our citizens is to get an online access to our services
and make payments via our online branches," Ovsyannikov said.

According to the bank’s schedule, two or three branches will go online
every month by the end of the first half of 2009. VTB Bank (Armenia)
is enhancing its services with the help of advanced technologies.

VTB Bank (Armenia) (previously Armsavingsbank) joined VTB Group in
April 2004. VTB Bank is the absolute shareholder of VTB Bank (Armenia).

As of March 31, 2009, the bank’s capital totaled 23.9bln drams, with
its assets and20liabilities amounting to 105.8bln drams and 81.9bln
drams. The bank’s loan investments totaled 74.2bln drams. ($1-372.07
drams).

ANKARA: France Welcomes The Roadmap

FRANCE WELCOMES THE ROADMAP

Hurriyet
April 28 2009
Turkey

ISTANBUL – The Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs of France
welcomed the joint statement of Armenia, Turkey and Switzerland,
reported Public Radio of Armenia yesterday.

"France warmly welcomes the joint statement of Turkey, Armenia and
Switzerland on the development of a roadmap for normalization of
relations between Ankara and Yerevan," said a ministry spokesperson
in a statement.

ANKARA: Steps On Normalization With Armenia Will Not "sadden" Baku

Journal of Turkish Weekly
April 25 2009

Ankara"s Steps On Normalization Of Relations With Armenia Will Not
"sadden" Baku – Turkish Pm

Friday, 24 April 2009

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that official Ankara
will not make any step on normalization of relations with Armenia
which can ‘sadden’ Azerbaijan, RIA Novosti reported.

"There will not be any actions from Turkey which can sadden Azerbaijan
or create any difficulties for it", – said Erdogan on Friday,
receiving Azerbaijani Defense Minister General-Colonel Safar
Abiyev. NTV channel reported statements from the meeting, which took
place behind the closed doors.

Friday, 24 April 2009
Trend News Agency

A Century Of Genocide, 1915-2009

A CENTURY OF GENOCIDE, 1915-2009
Martin Shaw

Open Democracy
-genocide-1915-2009
April 22 2009

The Ottoman-era massacres of the Armenians also belong to a century of
"mass-death" episodes forged in war, state rivalry, ethnic targeting
and expulsion, says Martin Shaw. 23 – 04 – 2009

When Armenian leaders in Constantinople (now Istanbul) were massacred
on 24 April 1915, it was the signal for killings and deportations
of Armenians across eastern Anatolia, then the heartland of the
Ottoman empire and the core territory of what was in 1923 to become
the Republic of Turkey.

The historian Donald Bloxham summarises what happened to the
Armenians. They were, he said:

"either killed in situ, which was the fate of many of the men and
male youths, or deported to the deserts of modern-day Iraq or Syria
in the south. Along these deportation routes they were subjected
to massive and repeated depredations – rape, kidnap, mutilation,
outright killing, and death from exposure, starvation, and thirst –
at the hands of Ottoman Gendarmes, Turkish and Kurdish irregulars,
and local tribespeople. The Ottoman army was also involved in
massacres. The kidnapped and other surviving women, and many orphans,
were then subject to enforced conversions to Islam … ."

Together with deportations of Armenians from Cicilia and western
Anatolia, "these events comprise the Armenian genocide. Approximately
one million Ottoman Armenians died, half of the pre-war population
and two-thirds of those deported" (see The Great Game of Genocide:
Imperialism, Nationalism, and the Destruction of the Ottoman Armenians
[Oxford University Press, 2005]).

The campaign of destruction was instigated by the leaders of the
Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) government, which had been
formed out of the Young Turk movement. It led to what Armenians call
the "great catastrophe" – the end of the Armenian society that had
existed in Anatolia for thousands of years, and the dispersal of most
of the survivors.

These depredations took place amid the great war of 1914-18, in
which the Ottomans were allied to Germany against Britain, France
and Russia, and Turkish leaders saw Armenians as a fifth column for
Russia. But unlike other events of this period, only the Armenian
genocide is a live political issue today. The Ottoman empire did not
survive its defeat in the war, but the genocide was a step towards
the consolidation of the modern Turkish state. Although the new
Turkey tried some of the CUP leaders after the war, campaigns against
non-Turkish minorities continued under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal
(Ataturk), the revered father of the secular Turkish republic.

Even now the Turkish state and most Turkish institutions continue
to deny that the Armenians suffered genocide: as recently as 2004,
novelist Orhan Pamuk was imprisoned and in 2007, journalist Hrant
Dink was murdered for acknowledging this crime.

In recent decades, organisations of the Armenian diaspora have
mounted a powerful campaign for genocide recognition, linking
the destruction of the Armenians in the first world war to the
holocaust of Jews in the second. The European parliament and many
national legislatures (including the United States congress) have
now recognised the genocide; although US presidents, mindful of the
strategic importance of Turkey, have so far refused. Barack Obama,
who voiced support for recognition as a senator, could well become
the first to do so, as Taner Akcam – a rare Turkish historian of the
genocide – has argued he should. More important, an increasingly number
of Turkish intellectuals have urged Turkey to apologise for 1915,
and the government has also developed a more conciliatory attitude,
moving to normalise relations with (post-Soviet) Armenia.

Contextualising genocide

That the genocide remains politically potent after almost a century
should not be surprising. Historical wrongs powerfully influence
national memories, and as Turkish leaders are finally beginning to
recognise, sustained denial only compounds the harm. Yet it would
be wrong to take this political morality tale as the end of the
matter. This is also because the campaign to recognise the Armenian
genocide as one of the most terrible such episodes risks skewing our
understanding of genocide, both then and now.

The destruction of the Armenians was undoubtedly one of the largest,
most murderous genocides in history, and it is fully justified
to compare it to the Nazi holocaust and Rwanda. Yet none of these
"mega-genocides" (as Mark Levene has called them) were stand-alone
events. Rather they were the most concentrated and totally murderous
among many episodes of mass death in their times. There were other
victims of Ottoman and Turkish genocide – mainly Greeks and other
Christians but also, especially later, Kurds; and there were other
perpetrators in the same historical period, and other victims.

Indeed, as Donald Bloxham argues in his seminal study, the Armenian
genocide was the climax of a whole period in which, as the Ottoman
empire declined and eventually collapsed, new nation-states sought to
establish themselves by establishing ethnic homogeneity – and therefore
expelling, and sometimes killing, members of ethnic groups that they
didn’t want in their new states. The southeastern European version
of the "great game" was not just a system of rivalry among states and
empires, but a system of conflicting ethnic expulsions and genocide.

To recognise this wider picture should not detract from the particular
depths of the violence against the Armenians. Contextualising does
not mean condoning; nor does it mean buying the false balancing of
the deniers, who say in effect that since Turks and Muslims were
also killed and expelled (and they were, by Armenians, Greeks,
Russians and other Christian Slavs, as well as by the Ottoman
state), then why so much fuss about the Armenian victims? It is
important to recognise the differences between the largest-scale,
most murderous campaigns, such as the Ottomans’ against the Armenians,
and the smaller-scale or less murderous campaigns and more isolated
massacres, carried out by other parties. Yet all belong with the scope
of genocide – classically defined as the deliberate destruction of
a social group. The destruction of the Armenians was the largest,
most ruthless, concentrated genocide during a series of wars in the
region where many parties developed, at times, genocidal aims.

At the same time, this should not be seen as a purely "near-eastern"
and Balkan problem.

The great game involved the rivalry of the European empires (including
Britain, France and Germany), and was part of the European system that
led to two world wars. In the second world war, the extent of genocide
was even greater than in the first; but to view this in terms of the
holocaust alone – its vast scale notwithstanding – would again be
to skew the historical picture, just as if the genocide of the first
world war only in terms of the Armenians.

The Nazis attacked, expelled and killed many groups, not just the
Jews, although the latter were singled out with special murderousness
in the later stages. Hitler’s empire involved a generally genocidal
plan to expel undesirable Jews, Gypsies and Slavs and install German
settlers in conquered eastern territories, and Germany’s allies all
had their own genocidal plans to expel out-groups (see Mark Mazower,
Hitler’s Empire: Nazi Rule in Occupied Europe [Penguin, 2008]).

At the same time the Soviets also pursued similar policies against
groups like the Volga Germans and Chechens who were seen as unreliable,
and developed their own master-plan to murderously expel whole
populations, mainly but not only Germans, while redividing Europe
at the end of the war. Stalin had no gas-chambers, but he competed
with Hitler in genocide, and even the post-war Czechoslovak and
Polish governments had their policies of revenge expulsions against
Germans. Overall half a million German civilians may have died
as about 12 million were forced to moved in 1945-49. Nor were the
western allies innocent – Roosevelt and Churchill condoned the Soviet,
Czechoslovak and Polish moves.

To recognise this larger picture does not minimise the holocaust
of the Jews. Rather it shows that Nazi violence was not a terrible
historical accident, but the culmination of the European system of
the 19th and 20th centuries, and the catalyst for a wider pattern of
genocide (see Mark Levene, Genocide in the Age of the Nation State
[IB Tauris, two volumes, 2005]).

Genocide today

This larger perspective is particularly necessary to establish the
full present-day significance of the Armenian anniversary. Genocide
was squeezed out of the Euro-Atlantic core of the international
system after 1945, so that it now happens mainly on the "periphery",
practiced by smaller states, armies and paramilitaries, mainly through
policies of ethnic expulsion ("cleansing") of varying durations and
degrees of murderousness. In the early 1990s, it reappeared on the
edges of Europe – in Yugoslavia, and in the Caucasus, where Armenian
and Azeri nationalists destroyed each other’s communities in the
conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh (see Thomas de Waal, "The Caucasus:
a region in pieces", 8 January 2009).

The historian Dirk Moses has suggested that the history of colonialism
gave rise to repeated "genocidal moments" (see A Dirk Moses ed.,
Empire, Colony, Genocide: Conquest, Occupation, and Subaltern
Resistance in World History [Berghahn, 2008]). Something similar is
true of parts of the "post-colonial" world today. There are still some
large-scale genocidal campaigns, like that of the Sudanese regime
against the non-Arab people of Darfur. But more commonly, genocide
rears its head quite locally, and sometimes briefly: as for example
in January 2008 in Kenya, when opposition-linked militia attacked
the Kikuyu, presumed supporters of the election-stealing government,
killing over 1,000 and terrorising half a million from their homes in
the Rift valley; and in August 2008 in South Ossetia, where Ossetian
militias sought revenge for Georgia’s attack by murdering and driving
thousands of Georgian villagers from their homes.

In both these cases, genocidal violence was carried out by local
paramilitaries, not central states. It was eventually brought under
control by their political sponsors, as the Kenyan opposition sought
to share power through international mediation and the Russian regime
concluded that it had taught Georgia enough of a lesson.

Being concerned about genocide is not just about preventing
mega-genocides: such episodes are by definition rare. It is also about
stopping smaller-scale genocidal campaigns and genocidal massacres,
which if unstopped may to lead to mega-genocides. 1915 was after all
preceded by smaller-scale, less coordinated massacres of Armenians
in the 1890s and 1900s, and by other massacres and expulsions in the
Balkans in the same period. The 1994 Rwanda genocide was preceded
by other massacres of Tutsis from 1959 onwards and the Burundian
genocide (against Hutus) in 1972. Not all localised episodes threaten
to lead to mega-genocides. But to prevent "another Armenia" requires
being concerned about every ethnic massacre and expulsion, and about
stopping the wars and political violence that produce them.

Martin Shaw is a historical sociologist of war and global politics, and
professor of international relations and politics at the University of
Sussex. His books include The New Western Way of War: Risk-Transfer War
and Its Crisis in Iraq (Polity, 2005) and What is Genocide? (Polity,
2007). His website is here

http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/a-century-of
www.martinshaw.org

Speaker Of The National Assembly Hovik Abrahamyan Visits Krakow And

SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY HOVIK ABRAHAMYAN VISITS KRAKOW AND OSWENCIM

National Assembly
April 23 2009
Armenia

On April 22 the Speaker of the National Assembly Mr. Hovik Abrahamyan
left for Krakow within the framework of his official visit.

At Krakow airport Malopolska (Lesser Poland) voevoda (head of regional
administration) Mr. Jerzy Miller met the delegation of the National
Assembly. Contacting him and the heads of the local authorities
of Krakow the Speaker of the Parliament noted that he considered
encouraging the relations between the territorial administration and
local self-government bodies of Poland. Then the delegation of the
National Assembly was familiarized with the rich historical-cultural
heritage of Krakow, visiting the royal palaces and cathedral of Wawel.

On the same day the delegation of the National Assembly left
for Oswencim and visited Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp
memorial-museum. Mr. Hovik Abrahamyan laid a wreath, respecting
the memory of the victims of the tragedy that took place in that
concentration camp. After walking around in the memorial-museum the
head of the Armenian legislative power wrote down in the guests’ book.

After getting acquainted with the history of Auschwitz-Birkenau
concentration camp the Speaker of the National Assembly Mr. Hovik
Abrahamyan said: "I am simply shocked. In this concentration camp
about one million people were killed. They have been exterminated
by industrial methods. The reason was that they belonged to other
nationality. I condemn the Jews’ Holocaust. On April 24 we will
commemorate the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide. I get
convinced once again that if the Armenian Genocide were condemned in
time, maybe during the World War II this tragedy would not take place."

On April 23 in the evening the delegation headed by the Speaker of
the National Assembly Mr. Hovik Abrahamyan will return to Yerevan.

Commemoration Of Adana Massacres In Amsterdam

COMMEMORATION OF ADANA MASSACRES IN AMSTERDAM

AZG
April 22 2009
Armenia

A commemoration ceremony dedicated to the 100th anniversary of Armenian
massacres in Adana took place at Moses and Aaron Church in Amsterdam.

An exhibition under heading "Adana – past and present" opened here
presents the Armenian buildings and institutions that were perished
because of the Armenian Genocide.

Armenian Ambassador to Belgium Vigen Chitechian, Amsterdam University
Professor, Researcher of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies
Dr. Ton Zvan, Dutch Parliament deputy (Socialist Party) Harry van
Bommel, Ruhr University Director of the Institute for Diaspora and
Genocide Studies Dr.-Prof. Mihran Dabag, prose-writer and poet Recep
Marashly, publicist Osman Koker, and Director of Center for Information
and Documentation on Israel Ronny Navtaniel delivered speeches during
the ceremony.

ANKARA: Could There Be Crisis B/W Two Brotherly Countries? Azeri Amb

"COULD THERE BE A CRISIS BETWEEN TWO BROTHERLY COUNTRIES?" AZERBAIJANI AMBASSADOR

Andolu Agency
April 23 2009
Turkey

ANKARA (A.A) – 23.04.2009 – Azerbaijan’s Ambassador in Ankara Zakir
Hasimov said Thursday Turkey and Azerbaijan share relations based
on the idea of "two states and one nation". Speaking at the April 23
National Sovereignty and Children’s Day reception held at the Turkish
Parliament, Ambassador Hasimov said "could there be a crisis between
two brotherly countries?".

Answering questions of journalists, Hasimov said that "as an
independent state, Turkey has the right to establish bilateral
relations with any country it wishes. However, Turkey-Armenia relations
should be parallel to the developments taking place in Upper Karabakh".

"President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made
assurances to us in this direction," Hasimov said.

Reminding the words of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk that "Azerbaijan’s
happiness is our happiness" and the words of late Azerbaijani President
Haidar Aliyev that "Turkey and Azerbaijan are two states of one
nation", Ambassador Hasimov said that Turkish-Azerbaijani relations can
not go out of such principles and no one can disturb such principles.

Stressing that windows between Turkey and Azerbaijan are open, Hasimov
said that the Azerbaijani Defense Minister Safar Abiyev will pay a
visit to Turkey on Friday.

"President Gul and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev had a positive
phone conversation today (Thursday)," Hasimov said.

Asked about when Azerbaijan will accept the opening of the
Turkish-Armenian border, Hasimov said that Armenia must withdraw
from five towns out of seven and Azerbaijani refugees must go back to
their homes in these territories. "Only then will Azerbaijan accept
the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border".

Armenian troops must also withdraw from the remaining two towns and
Upper Karabakh and Azerbaijani refugees must be able to go back to
their homes in these regions, Hasimov said.

We can then discuss the status, Hasimov also said. (SOL)

GDP To Reduce 5% In Armenia In 2009

GDP TO REDUCE 5% IN ARMENIA IN 2009

/ARKA/
April 23, 2009
YEREVAN

The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is to reduce by 5% in Armenia this
year, says the report of the International Monetary Fund on prospects
of world economic development in April 2009.

0% economic growth is expected in the country in 2010, the IMF
experts say.

According to the report, a 3.4% reduction in GDP is expected in
Moldova. The IMF forecasts GDP growth in some CIS countries –
Uzbekistan (7%), Tajikistan (2%), Georgia (1%) and Kyrgyzstan (0.9%).

Consumer prices are to grow by 3.6% in Armenia in 2009 and by 7.2%
in 2010.

The lowest growth of consumer prices among CIS countries is to be
recorded in Moldova – 2.6% in 2009 and 4.7% in 2010.

Highest growth of consumer prices is expected in Uzbekistan – 12.5%
in 2009 and 9.5% in 2010.

The report also says that the global economy is in deep recession
due to a large-scale financial crisis and dramatic decline in
confidence. Yet, economic decline rates are expected to slow down as
from the second quarter.

Global production output is to reduce by 1.3% in 2009 and to then
gradually grow by 1.9% throughout 2010.

According to the revised program of the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA)
on monetary and credit policy for the first quarter 2009, the GDP
is to decline by 3% in real terms in Armenia in 2009. Inflation is
expected to be 5.9% in Armenia by the end of 2009.

According to the state budget of Armenia, 9.2% GDP growth is expected
in 2009.

Yerevan Launched An Exhibition In Memory Of Adana Massacres

YEREVAN LAUNCHED AN EXHIBITION IN MEMORY OF ADANA MASSACRES

PanArmenian
April 21 2009
Armenia

RA National Archive hosted an exhibition in memory of Adana massacres.

The exhibition featured over 100 documents and photos, testifying to
tragic events in Cilicia in the beginning of 20th century.

According to Amatuni Virabyan, RA National Archive Director, such
events have gained special importance now that intensive negotiations
over Armenian- Turkish border opening are in process. "We have to be
very careful, and every step we take towards normalization of ties with
Turkey should be well considered and carefully weighed," he stated.

In his turn, Yerevan’s Armenian Genocide Museum Director, Hayk Demoyan
stressed that Armenian population in Cilicia witnessed 3 massacres: in
1909, during Genocide of 1915 and in 1918 when massacres were initiated
by Turkish leaders who became the founders of present-day Turkey.

Dwelling on assertions about restricted number of Genocide documents
in Armenian archives, preventing the Armenian part from countering
Turkish negation policy, Hayk Demoyan stated, "Today’s exhibition
proved the opposite."

Governor Schwarzenegger Proclaims Armenian Genocide Remberance Week

GOVERNOR SCHWARZENEGGER PROCLAIMS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REMBERANCE WEEK

armradio.am
17.04.2009 11:52

California’s Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger proclaimed April 19-26,
2009, as "Days of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide," the Armenian
Council of America reports.

In part, the proclamation reads: "This week, we honor that commitment
as we stand with our Armenian friends and neighbors here and across
the world in remembering and acknowledging the genocide, the families
it destroyed and the history it changed. We do not like to recall
such sorrows, but we must, so that we can learn from history and
renew our efforts to make sure nothing like this ever happens again."

Since being elected Governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger has
issued a proclamation every year. "The Armenian American community
appreciates Governor Schwarzenegger for his continuous leadership
and commitment on the remembrance and recognition of the Armenian
Genocide", said Peter Darakjian Armenian Council of America Board
Member. In addition to an annual proclamation, Governor Schwarzenegger
was the first in the nation to sign a bill four years ago that
permanently recognized the "Days of Remembrance of the Armenian
Genocide".

As home to the largest Armenian community in the United States,
the State of California has been at the forefront on the Armenian
Genocide issue. For over four decades, California has issued official
gubernatorial and legislative proclamations. President Obama’s home
state of Hawaii this month recognized the Armenian Genocide, making
it the 43 state that has taken an affirmative position on recognition.

The full text of the proclamation is presented below.

"On the night of April 24, 1915, more than 200 leaders in the Armenian
community, in the city known today as Istanbul, were arrested. Sent
to prison, most were executed, beginning a horrible, systemic killing
and forced relocation of the Armenian people that would last until
1923. During these years, the government of the Ottoman Empire
claimed the lives of 1.5 million Armenians and forced 500,000 more
from their homeland.

Those who escaped death had to flee, and many of them settled right
here in California. They and their descendants have become leaders
in all walks of life and have made extraordinary contributions to
our state. While their presence has been and continues to be a great
blessing to California, it also reminds us of the incredible evils
that brought them far from their ancestral homes.

Four years ago I signed a bill that permanently recognized the Days
of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide. This week, we honor that
commitment as we stand with our Armenian friends and neighbors here and
across the world in remembering and acknowledging the genocide, the
families it destroyed and the history it changed. We do20not like to
recall such sorrows, but we must, so that we can learn from history and
renew our efforts to make sure nothing like this ever happens again.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, Governor of the State
of California, do hereby proclaim April 19-26, 2009, as "Days of
Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide."