Square Of Russia Opens In Yerevan

SQUARE OF RUSSIA OPENS IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Oct 21, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 21, NOYAN TAPAN. Henceforth the territory between
Yerevan Mayor’s Office and Moscow House will be called Square of
Russia. RA President Serzh Sargsyan and RF President Dmitry Medvedev
being in Yerevan on an official visit on October 21 in solemn
conditions opened the memorial plaque symbolizing Square of Russia.

D. Medvedev estimated this event as significant mentioning that it is
evidence of the two states’ and peoples’ sincere, true feelings, open
and deep relations. The opening of Square of Russia, according to the
RF President, is a token of respect for both modern democratic Russia
and centuries-old friendship between the two peoples. The RF President
assured that everything will be done to strengthen and develop the two
countries’ strategic relations. He attached importance to coordinated
actions of the two states within the framework of international
organizations, which will strengthen the two states’ positions not
only in the Caucasian region, but also in the world. Russia is
interested in Armenian people’s living in a strong, prosperous,
and stable country. The RF President also assured that there is
a bilateral political will and striving for developing the common
business and cooperation, for implementing joint humanitarian programs.

RA President Serzh Sargsyan estimated the opening of the square as
a wonderful and important event, which symbolizes allied relations
between the two states, their historic and cultural communities. The
RA President also considered symbolic the fact that Yerevan fortress
used to be in the place of the square, where the flag of Russia was
first hoisted as far back as on October 1, 1827, and Yerevan Mayor’s
Office and Moscow House are also in this place today.

The decision to found Square of Russia in the above mentioned place
has been made by the Council of Yerevan Mayor’s Office as evidence of
centuries-old friendship of the two peoples and states and of their
strategic relations.

Lessons From The War In Georgia

LESSONS FROM THE WAR IN GEORGIA
By Herbert Bix

Asia Times Online
Oct 22, 2008
Hong Kong

The five-day Russo-Georgian war in the Caucasus brought into sharp
focus many conflicts rooted in the region’s history and in aggressive
US-North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) policies since the
collapse of the Soviet Union. Notable among these were the military
encirclement of Russia and attempts to control energy resources of
areas previously dominated by the Soviet Union.

The net effect of the conflict has been to hasten a dangerous new era
of rivalry between the world’s two most powerful nuclear states, one
that will be shaped hereafter by the current global recession and the
changes it is bringing about in the economic practices of all states.

Former US president Bill Clinton’s use of force in Kosovo in 1999

was crucial in precipitating this situation. At the time, the
United States thrust aside international law and the primacy of
the UN Security Council, with Clinton justifying war as a means of
establishing a more humane international order. Every civilian death
that resulted from it became "unintentional collateral damage",
morally justifiable because the end was noble.

By substituting a quasi-legal, moral right of humanitarian intervention
for the long-established principles of national sovereignty and
respect for territorial integrity, US-NATO aggression against Serbia
prepared the ground for US President George W Bush’s unilateral
military interventions.

Now, bogged down in illegal, unjust wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the
US government suddenly appears to have rediscovered the usefulness of
the international law norms it defied in Kosovo. But it has invoked
the principle of state sovereignty selectively, attacking Russia
for its intervention in Georgia while simultaneously sending its own
armed forces and aircraft on cross-border raids into Pakistan.

Quest for full dominance The search for causes of the Georgia conflict
has brought to the fore America’s quest for unchallengeable global
military dominance, which requires the Pentagon to plant military
bases at strategic places around the world and Congress to pass
ever-larger military budgets.

In 2002, Bush adopted the Pentagon strategy, which was first formulated
a decade earlier by Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz. It planned to
make the United States the world’s sole superpower, deterring foes
and allies alike from aspiring to even regional dominance. When,
in pursuit of this ultimate goal, the United States pushed NATO
further eastward toward the borders of Russia while pouring money
and armaments into Georgia and training the Georgian army, it paved
the way to the August war.

Or, more precisely: the Russo-Georgian war exhibited the features
of a proxy war pitting US-NATO imperialism against Russian
nationalism. Russian forces thwarted Georgia’s armed provocations and
issued a challenge to American and NATO policies in the borderlands.

Another disruptive trend highlighted by the war is the increasingly
fierce competition between US and Russian corporations for control
of Caspian Sea and Central Asian oil and gas resources. Georgians,
Ossetians, Azerbaijanis, Kazakhs and other peoples in the eastern
Caspian Sea basin are hapless pawns in this continuous struggle,
which affects their territorial and ethnic conflicts in ways they
cannot control.

The struggle over oil and gas has led the US Central Command,
originally established to deal with Iran, to extend its operations
from the Middle East to the oil-and-gas-rich Central Asian and Caspian
Sea states of Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan,
underlining the geopolitics that lay behind the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars, and now the Russo-Georgian war.

When Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dimitry
Medvedev ordered Russian forces to move through South Ossetia and cross
the border into Georgia, they violated the UN charter. Their initial
justification – defense of the Ossetians’ right of self-determination
– was as arbitrary as the one the United States and NATO put forward
for their attacks on Kosovo and Serbia, where unlike in Russia’s case
their self-defense was never involved.

So, in responding unilaterally to a very real threat that had actually
materialized, did Russia commit an act of aggression? Neither the
UN Security Council nor the General Assembly could make that legal
determination. Even if they had, Russia wouldn’t have taken seriously
a US-NATO charge of aggression that served only to emphasize its
accusers’ egregious double standards.

In the course of conducting the war, Georgian ground troops, tanks
and some South Ossetian militia deliberately targeted civilians,
committed acts of ethnic cleansing and wantonly destroyed civilian
property in Tskhinvali, the South Ossetian capital, and in villages
along South Ossetia’s border with Georgia proper.

Legal scholar Richard Falk argues that Russia too targeted "several
villages in the region populated by Georgians". If so, there is little
evidence that Russia carried out anything like ethnic cleansing. If
Russians committed war crimes, they pale in comparison to the crimes
the United States and its allies perpetrate every day on Iraqi and
Afghan civilians. But, as Falk says, all such charges should be
investigated regardless of their magnitude.

The crisis in the Caucasus highlighted the narrow, nationalist mindset
of Western policymakers and many of their publics’. Secessionist
movements exist in many of the multiethnic satellite states of the
former Soviet Union, where Russians are in the minority. American and
NATO policymakers and neo-conservatives have been only too eager to
exploit them.

But once Russian tanks and ground forces moved into Georgia,
abruptly halted US-NATO encirclement, and exposed the limits of
American military power, the Western mass media immediately poured
fiery scorn on "brutal Russia", while ignoring, firstly, Georgia’s
role in starting the conflict, and secondly, US and Israeli military
support for Georgia.

President Mikheil Saakashvili made it easier for them to cover the
war by hiring Aspect Consulting, a European public relations firm
that sent in a top executive to disseminate daily, sometimes hourly,
falsehoods about rampaging Russians attacking Georgian civilians.

American journalists fostered Russophobic sentiment by disseminating
completely one-sided war news, demonizing Russia as the evil aggressor,
and championing "democratic", peace-loving Georgia. The American
business magazine Fortune decried the bear’s "brutishness" and its
threat to an interdependent world; Forbes labeled Russia "a gangster
state" ruled by a "kleptocracy".

TV newscasters likened the Russian Federation to Nazi Germany at
the time of the 1938 Munich crisis. Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice even asserted an American moral right to lecture Russia on
how a "civilized country" should behave in the 21st century. All of
which led Russia’s former president Putin to comment sarcastically,
"I was surprised by the power of the Western propaganda machine
… I congratulate all who were involved in it. This was a wonderful
job. But the result was bad and will always be bad because this was
a dishonest and immoral work."

The war Virtually everything about the Russo-Georgian war is contested,
especially the question of who started it. But an abundance of
published evidence contradicts Georgian propaganda and indicates that
Saakashvili provoked the war with encouragement and material support
from the Bush administration.

Years earlier, Saakashvili’s regime had drawn up plans for invading
South Ossetia, which had been seeking independence from Georgia
continually since 1920. He was emboldened to implement those plans –
in the midst of the Beijing Summer Olympic Games – because he expected
aid from American and NATO allies, whose Afghanistan and Iraq wars
he was supporting with 2,000 Georgian troops.

Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe military
observers stationed in landlocked South Ossetia reported that
"shortly before midnight on August 7", Georgian forces fired the first
shots. Before that time Russian jets had occasionally entered Georgian
airspace. There had been minor skirmishes between South Ossetians
and Georgians, and Georgian spy drones had flown over Abkhazia,
which has important ports on the Black Sea.

These actions didn’t start the war. What did was the late-night
bombardment and ground offensive, ordered by Saakashvili, in which
US and (to a lesser extent) Israeli-trained Georgian army units used
rockets, heavy artillery and Israeli-supplied cluster bombs to attack
Tskhinvali and kill Russian soldiers.

It’s hard to gauge the resulting scale of death and physical
destruction from the Georgian army’s bombardment and land assault,
which targeted not only Russians and Ossetians but also fellow
Georgians living in South Ossetia. Russian officials initially claimed
that the Georgian attack killed an estimated 2,000 South Ossetians
who were Russian citizens.

Later underestimates in London’s Financial Times suggested the assault
killed "at least 133 civilians" and 59 Russian peacekeeping forces. The
same article estimated 146 Georgian soldiers and 69 civilians were
killed in the subsequent Russian mass invasion and bombardment. Russia
lost four planes and an unknown number of airmen in that attack. Some
30,000 South Ossetians who fled into North Ossetia, plus the Georgians
living in Abkhazia and South Ossetia who were driven from their homes,
must also be counted among the victims of the war.

On October 9, at the World Policy Conference in Evian, France, Medvedev
announced that Russia had vacated the buffer zones in Georgia a day
in advance of the deadline specified in the armistice agreement. For
this he was commended by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who,
for the first time, publicly censured Georgia for its "aggression".

But tensions between Europe and Russia are certain to continue as
long as the United States persists in using Georgia and Ukraine to
advance its national policies, while tensions between Georgian forces,
Ossetian soldiers and Russian peacekeepers also remain undiminished.

A new chapter in the conflict between NATO and Russia, however,
has definitely opened, signaled by Mevedev’s speech to Europe’s
leaders. He reiterated that Russia was "absolutely not interested
in confrontation" and called on them to forge "a new global security
framework that would challenge the United States’ ‘determination to
enforce its global dominance’".

Meanwhile, the Russian people have lost their remaining illusions about
the West, and Russia’s leaders must now worry about zones of ethnic
conflict spreading from the North Caucasus through the Black Sea region
to Central Asia and beyond, returning to the limelight other potential
flashpoints like Nagorno-Karabakh and Yakutia in the Far East.

Behind the war Russia’s conflicts with the non-Russian peoples of the
Caucasus go back centuries, but the developments that led directly
to the Russo-Georgian war start with the breakup of the Soviet
Union. The Soviet collapse ignited euphoria among the American and
European elites. Many felt they would now be able to redesign Europe
without having to take into account the preferences of the Russian
giant on their doorstep. While admitting Russia to full membership
in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, and
making hard currency loans to it, they quickly began to chart a new
offensive mission for NATO.

Russia plunged into a protracted, multi-sided decline. It abandoned its
dominant position on both the Baltic and Black Sea coasts. Azerbaijan,
Armenia and the five ex-Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan emerged as independent
states, eager to attract Western investment, and some even receptive
to hosting American military bases. Ukraine, which owns the Crimea,
where Russia bases its Black Sea fleet, proclaimed its independence
in 1991 and soon thereafter expressed a desire to join NATO. Poland
joined both NATO and the European Union (EU) in 1996.

Once Eastern Europe became wide open to Western economic intervention,
Russia could do little to prevent the region’s elites from gravitating
towards full incorporation in the US empire.

Economically, Russia was sorely beset. Under former president
Boris Yeltsin it had chosen to shift rapidly from over-reliance on
central planning to embracing capitalist markets. Its huge economy
contracted. Its armed forces and navy decayed. Social pathologies
of every kind deepened. Many Russians experienced acute economic
hardship while a handful seized opportunities to purchase state-owned
enterprises, enrich themselves overnight, and enter the class of
Russia’s new elite.

This era of rapid economic redistribution, national humiliation
and social disintegration lasted for about eight years. By 1999
expectations began to rise, driven by rapid economic growth. Russia
soon paid off its debts. It didn’t, however, recover from its

enormous demographic decline. No longer a military superpower, its
leaders saw themselves as a nation-state faced with special security
concerns because it spanned Eurasia from the Baltic Sea to the Pacific
coast, shared borders with 14 other states, and had nuclear weapons
capability. Over the next few years Russia’s self-confidence grew
and its booming market economy allowed it to reappear on the world
stage as a major energy exporter to Europe.

Popular protests in Georgia led to the toppling of its government in
2004. Dubbed the "Rose" revolution", this political change was funded
partly by the State Department, the National Endowment for Democracy (a
semi-official non-governmental organization and Cold War relic from the
Ronald Reagan era), and the billionaire investor and political activist
George Soros. Overnight, American propaganda turned the autocratic
state of Georgia into a "beacon of liberty", a "democracy" with a
"free-market economy" deserving to be supported for NATO membership
despite its ongoing ethnic conflicts with Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Americans, through their "democracy-promoting" organizations,
played a similar role in funding the peaceful "Orange" revolution"
in Ukraine. First, they helped the anti-Russian Viktor Yushchenko
rise to the presidency in a politically divided country, less than
half of which leaned toward the West; then, they supported Ukraine’s
right to apply for NATO membership.

For more than a decade, Russian leaders had repeatedly objected to US
efforts to turn its neighboring states into US clients. But recognizing
their own national weakness and the growing interdependence of nations,
Russian leaders knew their options were limited. They had to work with
Washington and, in principle, were committed to doing so. However, as
American leaders pursued their quest for global military dominance,
and as they and EU leaders pushed NATO ever closer to Russia’s
borders, the leadership in Moscow came to believe they had made too
many compromises on vital security interests to stay in Washington’s
good graces. Just how far could statesmanship and international law
go in safeguarding Russia’s borders? Or in preventing Georgia from
being turned into the "Israel of the Caucasus"?

Consequences Fallout from the war was felt first in the Caspian Sea and
Black Sea regions. Azerbaijan, which since 1994 had allowed Western
companies to develop its gas and oil resources, decided to lower its
reliance on the trans-Caucasus oil pipeline from its port of Baku
to Georgia, and make a small but permanent increase in oil shipments
to Russia and Iran. "We don’t want to insult anyone … but it’s not
good to have all your eggs in one basket, especially when the basket
is very fragile," said the vice president of Azerbaijan’s state oil
company. Kazakhstan’s reaction was to enter into talks with Moscow on
"new export pipelines to Russia" now that their Georgia route had
become less secure.

Georgia, which the United States valued primarily to control gas
and oil pipelines to Azerbaijan and Central Asia, and which Israel
supported as a market for arms sales and in hope of obtaining
use of airbases from which to attack Iran, has been shorn of
its small autonomous enclaves. Although its impetuous strongman,
Saakashvili, has redoubled his efforts to secure membership in NATO
and military-economic assistance from the West, neither the EU nor
NATO is likely to admit Georgia in the near future, let alone allow
Saakashvili to manipulate them. Georgia’s resounding defeat has
diminished the importance of its pipelines.

Russia showed the world that it would shed blood to prevent further
security threats from developing on its own borders, though it would
not wage war on a genocidal scale for the sake of controlling foreign
oil, as the United States has done in Iraq. Russia also demonstrated
that it could at any time end Georgia’s role as a secure energy
corridor through which gas and oil was piped, via Turkey, to the
West. At the same time, Putin took pains to reiterate points he and
other Russian leaders had been making to Washington for years: namely,
there was no need for confrontation and certainly "no basis for a
cold war" or "for mutual animosity". Putin insisted that "Russia has
no imperialist ambitions".

Indeed, Russia’s aims were very limited. For nearly two decades it had
tried unsuccessfully to get the United States and EU to recognize its
national security needs and build a real partnership. South Ossetia,
which had long been pro-Moscow, didn’t want to become part of Russia,
though Abkhazia did. But Russia had no intention of annexing either
region and exposing itself to the charge of territorial expansionism.

Russia’s answer to the Kosovo precedent was to grant formal recognition
of their de facto independence and to sign friendship treaties
with South Ossetia’s leader, Eduard Kokoity, and Abkhazia’s Sergei
Bagapsh. The treaties included pledges to defend them by stationing
troops in each region and building military bases. At the signing,
Medvedev reiterated, "We cannot view steps to intensify relations
between the [NATO] alliance and Georgia any other way than as an
encouragement for new adventures."

But did the Georgian military campaign make Russia more secure from the
threat of a nuclear attack? Did it shatter the curve of encirclement
the United States and NATO were constructing around it? The Georgian
aggressor was easily "punch[ed] in the face" (Putin’s stern words).

Yet when looking at US-NATO policy, Russia’s leaders see that they
have not stopped NATO’s eastward drive and the American implantation
of anti-ballistic missiles in Poland. The danger remains of the
United States spreading an arms race through the Caucasus and in
Europe generally.

NATO defense ministers, coming at this from a confrontational angle,
recently reviewed plans to establish a "rapid-response" military force
to fight Russia’s future military actions. Medvedev’s September 26
announcement that Russia would build a "guaranteed nuclear deterrent
system" and a new "aerospace defense system" – and have it in place
by 2020 – should be read as a response to the Georgian war and Western
encirclement, even though the planning preceded the crisis. Just when
Russian leaders need to invest more in modernizing infrastructure
and improving the lives of the Russian people, they’re forced to cope
with the determined efforts of the top US and EU leaders to surround
them with military bases and nuclear missiles.

Russia can’t ignore the threat of economic and diplomatic isolation
for the South Ossetians and Abkhazians. Their inability to secure
international recognition will make it harder for them to prosper,
whereas Georgia is already the recipient of a large IMF loan and new
promises of EU and American aid. To see Georgia made into a Western
showcase state while Ossetia and Abkhazia languished would further
harm Russia’s image in the West.

In the process of defending its borders from a real security threat
Russia, partly through its own actions, has suffered a setback in the
court of world opinion. Only tiny Nicaragua joined it in formally
recognizing the two breakaway republics. The major Western powers
refused to accept the validity of the border changes that the war had
brought about. South Ossetia and Abkhazia met the factual criteria
for statehood, but not the European and American political criteria
for recognition.

The consensus of US and NATO leaders was that they lacked real
independence from Russian control and didn’t respect the rights of
their minorities, as if the Kosovar Albanians in Europe’s new colony
respected the rights of their Serb and Roma minorities. One cannot
fail to see the blatant hypocrisy of this stance given US-NATO practice
with respect to the successor states of the former Yugoslavia.

On the other hand Russia’s position, which holds that Georgia forfeited
its claim to these territories by its abuse of the Ossetians and
Abkhazians, is equally hypocritical in the light of Putin’s brutal
suppression of Chechnya’s secession movement. It also looks two-faced
to Serb eyes, especially because recognition of the new Caucasus
states appears to violate the principle of territorial integrity, thus
undermining Russia’s previous moral opposition to the Kosovo precedent.

Confrontational response What may be one of the most dangerous outcomes
of the Georgia-Russian war is the hectoring, confrontational way
the Bush administration and American politicians have responded to
it. While locked into a self-defeating "war on terror", overstretched
militarily and weakened by the deepening global economic crisis,
the United States persists in extending its sphere of influence into
the Black Sea region.

The Bush administration wants to hold on to Georgia as a
"transportation route for energy" and a staging base from which
to pursue US interests in the Eurasian region. It refuses to see
the Georgian war as a historically rooted territorial dispute and
continues to encourage Georgia and Ukraine in their bid for eventual
NATO membership.

Presidential candidates Republican Senator John McCain and Democratic
Senator Barack Obama have publicly endorsed the Bush confrontation
with Russia, and neither offers any principled critique of US foreign
policy. In fact, they seem as willing as Bush to take virtually any
action that will keep "Russia bogged down in the Caucasus if it saps
Russia’s capacity to play an effective role on the world stage".

The major European governments, on the other hand, pursue a slightly
saner approach only because they depend on energy supplied by Russia
and are less unified in their foreign and domestic policies. But
they are deeply divided on how to treat Moscow, with only Germany
apparently eager to continue deepening amicable relations.

Ironically, Russia remains for the time being a US "strategic
partner". The United States needs its continued cooperation in
Afghanistan, and in dealing with Iran, Iraq and North Korea. Putin and
Medvedev are not denying the US military the right to ship non-military
supplies though Russian territory to NATO forces in Afghanistan,
though that option is available to them. But they have weakened US
and UN sanctions on Iran, against which the Bush administration is
waging economic and covert war.

Russia also sells weapons to Iran and is completing construction of
Iran’s Bushehr atomic reactor complex. In July, Russia strengthened
oil ties with Iran with a cooperation agreement the giant state
corporation Gazprom signed to develop Iran’s oil and gas fields. It
recently concluded similar deals with Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

In short, when it comes to dealing with hostile US-NATO actions in
Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan and especially in its "near abroad", Russia
has on its side geography as well as many diplomatic options.

America’s future leaders need a new approach to Russia and to the
rest of the world. As they consider how to rebuild at home and
regain trust abroad, they should work with Moscow on all aspects
of their relationship. The next president should strive to build a
new global security system and to move in the direction of nuclear
disarmament. This will require, however, the repudiation of all past
US national security strategies, predicated on the idea that America
has a god-given duty to police the world and meddle in the affairs
of other nations.

Herbert Bix, a Foreign Policy In Focus contributor, is the author of
Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan (HarperCollins), which won
the Pulitzer Prize. He teaches at Binghamton University, New York,
and writes on issues of war and empire.

Yerevangelism

YEREVANGELISM

The Reality-Based Community
October 9, 2008 Thursday 12:29 AM EST

Oct. 9, 2008 (The Reality-Based Community delivered by Newstex) —
No quarrels with Mark’s assessment of the politics of recognizing
the Armenian genocide, other than to note that it may well
become a non-issue. Not for Armenian-American organizations,
but for the Armenian and Turkish governments. Unhatched Caucasian
chickens shouldn’t be counted more confidently than any others, but
Armenia-Turkey relations have been warming at a dizzying pace, with
Turkish President G???l visiting Yerevan recently. As one Armenian
analyst observesAnkara and Yerevan are reportedly close to overcoming
another Turkish precondition for normalizing bilateral ties: an end
to the decades-long Armenian campaign for international recognition
of the World War One-era massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
as genocide.

The Sargsyan administration seems ready to accept a Turkish proposal
to form a commission of Turkish and Armenian historians that would
jointly study the mass killings and deportations. Many in Armenia and
especially its worldwide Diaspora oppose such a study, saying that
it would call into question the very fact of what many historians
consider the first genocide of the 20th century. They also view
the Turkish proposal as a ploy designed to scuttle the genocide’s
recognition by more foreign nation. Sargsyan appeared to dismiss
such concerns as he addressed hundreds of influential members of the
Armenian-American community in New York on September 24. "We must talk
about all topics," he said. "Only those people who have nothing to say
and suffer from complexes avoid contacts, conversations." The Turkish
government, meanwhile, says thatIf we manage to make rapid progress
in our initiative to solve the problems…then there will be no need
for third country parliaments to discuss these issues. We can tell
them: "Mind your own business. Armenia and Turkey are getting along
well."Let’s hope that in 2012 the presidential candidates won’t have
to lie to Armenians or Jews. Newstex ID: TRBC-0001-28628862

AGBU EU Conference: Armenian Heritage in Turkey

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) – Europe
Email: [email protected]

«A Journey of Cultural Rediscovery: Armenian Heritage in Turkey ».
Thursday November 13, 2008 at the European Parliament, Brussels

On November 13 AGBU Europe will host a conference in the European Parliament
entitled
« A Journey of Cultural Rediscovery: Armenian Heritage in Turkey ».

The conference, which is part of the official European Year for
Intercultural Dialogue, will review the recent public debate in Turkey on
the country’s forgotten Armenian Heritage in the light of recent
groundbreaking artistic and intellectual contributions on the subject and
will examine the significance of Armenian cultural heritage in Turkey from a
European perspective.

Speakers at the conference will include Fethiye Cetin, author of the book
"My Grandmother", Osman Köker, creator of the groundbreaking exhibition "My
Dear Brother", art historian Professor Patrick Donabedian as well as
historians Vahe Tachjian and Ara Sarafian. The conference will be opened by
Michael Leigh, Director General at the European Commission in charge of
enlargement.

The conference will conclude with a panel debate. A reception will follow
the conference.

This event is organized under the Aegis of Bernard Lehideux MEP, with the
support of the Heinrich Böll Foundation’s Brussels office.

The conference is open to all but prior registration is indispensable to
access the European Parliament’s building.

Registration deadline: 4 November 2008.

The conference brochure and registration form can be downloaded at:
< <;
> (direct access:
& lt; s/#more-135>

For registration and further information, please contact AGBU at:
Tel +331 45 20 03 18. Email: [email protected]

http://www.agbueurope.org/
http://www.agbueurope.org/&gt
http://en.ugab.fr/2008/10/02/conference-brussels
http://en.ugab.fr/2008/10/02/conference-brussel
www.agbueurope.org

FAR: Dedication Ceremony at FAR Children Support Center in Yerevan

PRESS OFFICE
The Fund for Armenian Relief
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Simon Y. Balian
Tel: (212) 889-5150; Fax: (212) 889-4849
E-mail: [email protected]

Archbishop Khajag Barsamian and Prime-Minister Tigran Sargsyan attend
Mardigian Dedication Ceremony at the FAR Children Support Center
(CSCF) in Yerevan

"Considering the size of our country the number of children we can
save might be large; however, the number is not large enough if we
consider the number of abandoned children on the street whose future
still looks colorless and gloomy," said Mira Antonyan, the director of
the FAR Children Support Center in Yerevan. "This is why we are truly
blessed to have humanitarians like the Mardigian family in our midst.
Philanthropists who believe in what we are doing and support our
important work here."

A number of guests expressed their deep appreciation during the
dedication ceremony on September 28th, honoring the long-term
commitment of Edward & Janet Mardigian – highlighted by a pledge of $1
million toward the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR) Homeless Children’s
Center. Speakers included Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of
Armenian Church in America (Eastern Diocese) and President of Fund for
Armenian Relief; Armenian Prime-Minister Tigran Sargsyan; the Minister
of Labor and Social Affairs, Arsen Hambardzumyan; and Randy
Sapah-Gulian, Chairman of Fund for Armenian Relief.

Initially, the FAR Children’s Support Center served as a short-term
sanctuary for homeless children. Street children were brought to the
FAR facility in Yerevan and cared for by trained professionals who
would find them suitable placements.

More than 4,000 troubled children from across Armenia and Karabagh
have been helped at the center since its founding in 2000. Today the
FAR Children’s Support Center is becoming a full-service facility for
children at risk and their families. By expanding its assistance and
adding new locations, the center constantly confirms its role as the
child protection pioneer in Armenia.

In a country where 48% of families with infants still live in extreme
poverty – a level well below the poverty line – there is an alarmingly
growing trend of parents abandoning their children. This abandonment
results in many being placed in institutions, such as orphanages,
boarding schools and specialized training institutions. Many others
are destined to live on the street.

"It is heartbreaking to see what is happening to Armenian children,"
said Janet Mardigian following her tour of the FAR Children’s Support
Center in July 2007. "Anyone who visits cannot leave without shedding
tears. It was very difficult coming home from there. I love children
and have a soft spot for them. They are the ones who need help."

FAR’s social workers, psychologists, and healthcare professionals will
use the pledged funds to care for Armenia’s at-risk children. The gift
will provide immediate funding for the prevention of child abandonment
by enhancing and expanding the Center’s family and
community-strengthening programs.

"We chose FAR’s Homeless Children’s Center because of FAR’s strong
experience as child welfare advocates in Armenia and its track record
as pioneers in effecting positive change in children’s lives," Edward
Mardigian said. "It is our family’s duty to support the children of
Armenia, Karabagh and Javakhk."

In recognition of the gift, the FAR has established the Child
Protection Foundation. As part of the event Edward and Janet Mardigian
unveiled a special plaque – an elegant basalt stone with the
inscription "Helen and Edward Mardigian Family Child Protection
Foundation."

"They taught us to want to give back, communicating that this country
was good to them and so they wanted to give back to the community,"
Edward Mardigian said. "My father focused on the Armenian community,
however, he wanted to serve everyone, which is why our family started
the foundation."

Established in 1955, the Helen and Edward Mardigian Foundation has
provided significant support to various religious, cultural and
educational philanthropies, including a major contribution to the
building of St. John’s Armenian Church of Greater Detroit, the
Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU), the Armenian Assembly of
America, and the restoration of many historic Armenian churches and
monasteries worldwide. It has funded three museums: the Edward and
Helen Mardigian Museum in the Armenian quarter of Jerusalem, the
museum in the Armenian monastery in Geghard, Armenia, and others. It
also created the Helen and Edward Mardigian Institute, a highly
successful training program for educators, particularly for Sunday
School teachers without a professional education background.

Major benefactors to the University of Michigan- Dearborn, the campus
library was rededicated the Helen and Edward Mardigian Library in
their honor. More recently, the Mardigian Foundation has donated to
the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center and Geriatrics
Center Building, the Royal Oak Beaumont Hospital’s Mardigian Family
Surgery Center in Michigan, and the River Otter Exhibit at the Detroit
Zoo. It also provides grants for cardiac research at the University
of Michigan and lymphoma research at the Mayo Clinic.

For more information on FAR or to send donations, visit
or contact at 630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016;
Tel: (212) 889-5150 or email: [email protected]

Click here for photographs of the event. – -xumLRy7lZJ_zV8x3xrAWYsjUhn7kbuZNX7SgWW_3QlVQ1c0Bu 6K_76_lURitXeDyk9XQM7jlfsESa9_1V0fcNW2uB0ca5cqLlhA PDpt1pt9CbT8kkbB3u0xq2xNdTcG3q_RskXVMBpWwVddLGHxLv gPWlDE0gQ==

Fund for Armenian ReliefGarnik A. NanagoulianExecutive Director
email: [email protected]: (212) 889-5150

http://farusa.org
http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001LrMMonmJ-S_gSS9mryFa_DY

Armenian-Turkish Reconciliation Real

ARMENIAN-TURKISH RECONCILIATION REAL

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.10.2008 13:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish-Armenian reconciliation has become a reality,
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs,
Daniel Fried, told a news conference in Yerevan.

"President Sargsyan’s football diplomacy encouraged the dialog between
the two states. We welcomed the Mr. Sargsyan’s invitation and were
glad that it was accepted. I am hopeful that the process will move
forward, despite the existing problems," the U.S. official said.

Lecture on Sasun Epic at NAASR Oct. 22

PRESS RELEASE
National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)
395 Concord Ave.
Belmont, MA 02478
Tel.: 617-489-1610
Email: [email protected]

LECTURE ON THE SASUN EPIC AT NAASR BY VISITING SCHOLAR FROM ARMENIA

Prof. Azat Yeghiazaryan, Director of the Manuk Abeghyan Institute of
Literature at the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia, will give a
lecture entitled "Daredevils of Sasun: The Poetics of the Armenian
National Epic," on Wednesday, October 22, at 8:00 p.m., at the National
Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) Center, 395
Concord Ave., Belmont, MA.

Daredevils of Sasun (also known as David of Sasun) was passed down for
centuries before being written down in the late 19th century. The epic
presents a rich legacy of accumulated folk wisdom and creative insight
on the human condition.

Evolving from ancient mythic roots through folkloric antecedents up to
its main period of gestation (8th-12th centuries A.D.), it tells the
tale of the life, loves, and heroic struggles of four generations of the
House of Sasun to establish their patrimony and uphold the weal of their
community against the onslaught of imperialist invaders. Water-born and
fiery-eyed, they embody their society’s ideals of freedom and guileless
nobility, empathy toward the stranger, and a spiritual affinity with all
living things. Vividly sketched with not a little humor, these hardy
mountaineers evolved imperceptibly with the community that transmitted
them, bridging the heroic era and the present day.

Prof. Yeghiazaryan has authored several monographs including Literary
Narrative: A Theoretical Review (1986) and T’umanyan’s Poetics and its
Popular Roots (1990). He has organized two international conferences on
the Armenian epic tradition and edited their collected papers. He is
also founder-editor of the institute’s official journal Handes.

The NAASR Center is located opposite the First Armenian Church and next
to the U.S. Post Office. Ample parking is available around the building
and in adjacent areas. The lecture will begin promptly at 8:00 p.m.

More information about the lecture is available by calling 617-489-1610,
faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or writing to NAASR, 395
Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.

www.naasr.org

Armenian Genocide Cross Stone Erected In Ukraine

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CROSS STONE ERECTED IN UKRAINE

AZG Armenian Daily
17/10/2008

Armenian Genocide

Opening ceremony of a cross stone dedicated to the Armenian Genocide
was held October 11 in the central park of Nikopol (province of
Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine).

The cross stone is erected on the initiative of the Armenian
community of Nikopol. The anointment rite was administered by the
priest Ter Hamazasp of the Armenian Church of Nikopol and priest
Roman Katsnovetski of the Russian Church.

The Mayor of Nikopol Sergey Starunin that was present at the ceremony
mentioned in his speech that the Genocide committed against Armenians
is a crime against humanity, and raising of the cross stone also
plays an important role in preventing from such tragedies.

GUAM Futility Is Conditioned By Lack Of Economic Foundation

GUAM FUTILITY IS CONDITIONED BY LACK OF ECONOMIC FOUNDATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.10.2008 18:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Ukraine’s benefit from GUAM is vague, a Ukrainian
political scientist said.

"During Leonid Kuchma’s presidency, GUAM was represented as an economic
structure. However, in 2000, our country rejected the idea of formation
of peacekeeping contingent, thus expressing unwillingness to make
the organization political and anti-Russian," Mikhail Pogrebinsky said.

"The situation changed with the shift of power. The Ukrainian
diplomacy started viewing GUAM as a restraint of Russian interest
in the Caucasus and Black Sea countries as well as in Central
Asia. However, GUAM is mostly a U.S. project and its futility is
conditioned by lack of economic foundation, the Caspian oil," he said,
Analitika.at.ua reports.

Central Bank Of Armenia Leaves Interest Rate Unchanged In October

CENTRAL BANK OF ARMENIA LEAVES INTEREST RATE UNCHANGED IN OCTOBER
by Venla Sipila

World Markets Research Centre
Global Insight
October 6, 2008

The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) has decided to leave its policy
interest rate, the annual refinancing rate unchanged at 7.75% in
September, ARKA News reports. The decision follows eight successive
months of 25-basis-point interest rate rises, the latest of those
having taken place in September (see Armenia: 3 September 2008:
). The CBA based its October decision to leave the policy rate stable
on weakening external inflation pressures in the third quarter of
the year, noting that domestic prices for fuel and some foods have
decreased. In addition, the CBA indicates that inflation pressures
from domestic demand remained modest. The board of the CBA sees that
while fuel and food prices are only easing slowly, this development
should continue. The latest inflation data for Armenia showed annual
price growth moderating to 11.3% in September, after standing at 11.5%
in August (see Armenia: 3 October 2008: ).

Significance: Easing of annual inflation is likely to continue in
Armenia, with moderating world market prices of commodities. However,
the CBA would be well advised to be cautious in further monetary
loosening, before further signs of easing of domestic demand-side
pressures are seen. Armenian economic growth still remains in double
digits, and is driven by domestic spending, boosted for example by
fiscal expenditures.