Foreign Minister To Receive Matthew Bryza

FOREIGN MINISTER TO RECEIVE MATTHEW BRYZA

Panorama.am
10:36 18/04/2009

The Foreign Minister of Armenia Edward Nalbandyan received yesterday
the OSCE Minsk Group American co-chair Matthew Bryza and the Ambassador
of the United States to Armenia Marie Yovanovich, the press and
information department of the Foreign Ministry reports. According to
the source, the parties have discussed Armenian-American relations and
their development, the negotiating processes of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, Armenian-Turkish relations and a few other regional issues.

Karabakh Talks No Place For Turkey, Says Nalbandian

KARABAKH TALKS NO PLACE FOR TURKEY, SAYS NALBANDIAN

Gaziantep Haber 27
April 17 2009
Turkey

Armenia’s Foreign Minister, Edward Nalbnadian, reiterated on Thursday
his government’s strong opposition to direct Turkish involvement
in international efforts to settle the Nagorno Karabakh conflict,
ArmRadio reported.

17 Nisan 2009 Cuma 16:18

"Turkey will not play the role of a mediator in the Karabakh peace
process," Nalbandian said in a joint press conference in Yerevan with
Azerbaijan’s Deputy Foreign Minister Mahmud Mamedguliev.

Nalbandian’s remarks came after Turkish President Abdullah Gul said his
country is involved in efforts to solve the conflict between Azerbaijan
and Armenia, in addition to discussions over the normalization process
with Yerevan.

"Within this framework, as discussions on issues with Yerevan continue,
we are also involved in efforts to solve the problems between
Azerbaijan and Armenia," Gul said, adding that diplomacy did allow
him to speak publicly about the steps being taken regarding the issue.

Nalbandian, in contrast, expressed Armenia’s support for the integrity
of the OSCE Minsk Group as the chief mediating body for the conflict,
noting that "the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations are underway between
Armenia, Azerbaijan and Nagorno Karabakh" and not with Turkey.

The Turkish government appeared ready to drop that linkage when
it embarked on an unprecedented dialogue with Yerevan last year to
establish diplomatic relations and reopen its border with Armenia,
which it closed in 1993 out of solidarity with Azerbaijan.

But the recent rapprochement between Turkey-Armenia has hit a major
bump in recent weeks, with Ankara echoing Baku’s stern opposition
to the establishment of diplomatic relations with Yerevan before a
resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The shift follows threats by Baku to cut off gas supplies to Turkey,
which it says is jeopardizing Azerbaijani national interests with
its negotiations to lift the embargo on Armenia before a Karabakh
settlement.

Mamedguliev on Thursday reiterated Baku’s strong opposition to the
normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations before a Karabakh peace
is reached. "Our position is the following: the restoration of links
between Turkey and Armenia may only be conditional on the resolution
of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan," he said.

Nalbandian and Mamedguliev were speaking to journalists after the
meeting of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) organization
in Yerevan. Western and Turkish media had speculated that the
Armenian Foreign Minister and his visiting Turkish counterpart, Ali
Babacan, would use the meeting to announce an agreement on a gradual
normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations. But that announcement
never came.

Babacan, for his part, refrained from making any public statements to
that tune during his one-day trip, which ended with a meeting with
President Serzh Sarkisian. He did, however, reaffirm the linkage
between the Karabakh conflict and the establishment of diplomatic
ties with Yerevan as he spoke to CNN-Turk television on his way to
Yerevan. According to the Turkish Hurriyet Daily News, he said the
Turkish-Armenian dialogue must run parallel with international efforts
to settle the Karabakh conflict.

Filmmaker to debut documentary on Christian Armenia

Filmmaker to debut documentary on Christian Armenia

01:00 AM EDT on Friday, April 17, 2009

By Richard C. Dujardin

Journal Staff Writer

PROVIDENCE — Armenian filmmaker Arsen Aslanyan says Armenians have
always taken pride in their nation’s being the first in the world to be
formally declared a Christian nation, in 301 A.D.

And if asked, he says, nearly all in his homeland will tell you they are
Christian.

Yet, on a visit to Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian Apostolic Church on
Tuesday to promote his documentary about Christianity in Armenia,
Aslanyan said he suspects most of his fellow countrymen have only a
limited knowledge of what the religion is about – the result, he says,
of years of Soviet rule when an atheistic government turned churches
into museums, prohibited the printing of Christian books and barred
clergy from visiting people’s homes.

"When I was growing up, I would go to church sometimes to light a
candle," he recalled. "But I didn’t understand a lot. That’s also true
of most others."

But the award-winning director says there’s a chance that his
documentary film, Christian Armenia, which will have its U.S. premiere
Sunday at the Columbus Theater, will give people a better understanding
of their history and Christian heritage.

Armenia, which regained its independence from the Soviets in September
1991, has a history that dates to centuries before the time of Christ. A

key moment came in 301 A.D. when King Tiridates was converted by the
first patriarch of the Armenian Church, Gregory the Illuminator, and
proclaimed Christianity the sole religion in Armenia.

Aslanyan, who began his career as a cameraman for Armenian television
and won various awards as a filmmaker for films about Armenian composer
Ohan Duryan and the 1980 Armenian earthquake, says his idea for the film

came in 2001 when Armenia celebrated the 1,700th anniversary of
Christianity in Armenia.

He said he assumed someone else would make a film about it, but when no
one did, "I felt I should make it."

Making a film without having to deal with Soviet censorship made his
work both easier and more difficult, he says. The Soviets would never
have allowed him to even show a cross, but at least they paid for his
work, he observed, while under the new system he can do what he wants
but is not paid.

It took him five years working off and on to complete the documentary,
which visits all of the sites significant to Armenia’s Christian
history.

With actor Vladimir Msryan playing the role of a sort of cosmic
commentator who comes in and out of scenes dressed in a long robe, the
film has so many facts squeezed in that people may find it hard to
absorb.

But Aslanyan says the film received "only positive" reviews in the
places it has been shown – the Netherlands, Switzerland, Georgia and in
Moscow and St. Petersburg in Russia where it won awards, and in Armenia.

In making the film, "I learned a lot more things I wouldn’t have known
otherwise," he says, and he thinks it will help his countrymen better
understand their faith and heritage as well.

"In Armenia right now, it is still not possible for young people to
learn their Christian history from reading books because the books
haven’t been printed yet. This film can be an introduction and help them

feel proud."

Sponsored by the cultural committee of Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian
Church, Christian Armenia will be shown at the Columbus Theater twice on

Sunday – in English at 3 p.m. and in Armenian with English subtitles at
5 p.m. The donation is $10.

[email protected]

Only 60-70 Thsd People Of The Total Number Of Those Visiting Armenia

ONLY 60-70 THSD PEOPLE OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF THOSE VISITING ARMENIA EMPLOY SERVICES OF TOUR OPERATORS: EXPERT

ArmInfo
2009-04-16 17:12:00

Only 60-70 thsd people of the total number of those visiting Armenia
employ the services of tour operators, they arrive so to say by the
rules of the organized tourism, Chairman of the Association of Hotels
of Armenia Hakop Hakopyan told journalists today.

‘The remaining flow of the people visiting Armenia is divided into
different groups. This flow includes even the people who regularly
leave the country for earnings and return to the Motherland with the
same regularity. As for the tourists arriving in Armenia from abroad
and having no Armenian citizenship, they are divided into two groups:
the tourists and Armenians who live in the countries of the Diaspora
and arrive in Armenia to see their relatives’, he said.

According to H. Hakopyan, these people do not employ the services
of the hotel business for quite clear reasons, so, conventionally,
they are not considered tourists. ‘In view of the crisis, the rates
of hotel construction notably slowed down, no new investments are
received and many building projects in the regions have already been
frozen. Only the hotels at the stage of completion will be finished and
opened, since their owners will lose more if suspend the construction
launched’, H. Hakopyan resumed.

To note, according to the data of the National Statistical Service
of Armenia, 558,000 tourists visited Armenia in 2008.

Nikolay Bordyuzha: We Are Pleased That Many Countries And Not Only I

NIKOLAY BORDYUZHA: WE ARE PLEASED THAT MANY COUNTRIES AND NOT ONLY IRAN SHOW INTEREST TO PRACTICAL ACTIVITY WITHIN THE FRAMES OF CSTO

ArmInfo
2009-04-15 12:49:00

ArmInfo. CSTO Secretary General Nikolay Bordyuzha proved Iran’s
interest to the activity of Collective Security Treaty Organization
[CSTO] activity at today’s press-conference in Yerevan within the
frames of the sitting of CSTO Internal Affairs Ministers.

Asked how CSTO treats possible cooperation with Iran, he replied:
‘I can reiterate what I said several days ago. Iran really shows
interests to the CSTO activity. Moreover, special services of
Iran effectively participated in our several operations, including
‘Kanal’, since they gave a big number of subdivisions and employees
for shutting off narco-traffic channels from Afghanistan. Fro this
reason we can just express satisfaction by the fact that today not
only Iran shows interest to practical activity within CSTO. I mean
the problems connected with narcotics and illegal migration and other
directions. The more countries join practical steps of CSTO the higher
the security and effectiveness level to resist specific challenges’.

Assets Of Ameriabank Grow By 65,1% In First Quarter 2009

ASSETS OF AMERIABANK GROW BY 65,1% IN FIRST QUARTER 2009

ArmInfo
2009-04-14 19:25:00

ArmInfo. The assets of Ameriabank grew by 65.1% in the first quarter
of 2009 and amounted to 80.9 bln AMD by March 31. As Ameriabank
press-service told ArmInfo, as compared with the first quarter of 2008,
the bank’s assets grew 3.8 times over the period under review.

In the first quarter of 2008 Ameriabank’s assets grew by 56,3% and
amounted to 21.1 bln AMD by March 31, 2008, and throughout 2008 the
assets grew 2.3 times and amounted to 49 bln AMD by the end of 2008.

To note, Ameriabank CJSC focuses on investment banking and also
provides the whole spectrum of universal banking services. The
strategic partner of the bank is Troyka Dialog, one of the largest
investment-banking companies in Russia.

US Embassy Marks Re-Opening Of The Yerevan American Corner

US EMBASSY MARKS RE-OPENING OF THE YEREVAN AMERICAN CORNER

armradio.am
14.04.2009 17:52

On April 14, the U.S. Embassy marked the re-opening of the Yerevan
American Corner at the City Central Library’s new location by the
Republic Square Metro Station. The inauguration also marks the Corner’s
fourth year of operations in Yerevan.

In her remarks, Ambassador Marie L. Yovanovitch said, "The United
States has a longstanding commitment to spreading the ideas and values
of American democracy, and to engaging and maintaining an open dialogue
with people throughout the world."

American Corners are small American-style libraries that provide
information about America in a variety of formats, including reference
books, works of fiction, journals, and videos. The Corners also provide
computers with Internet access, and offer a variety of public programs
including speakers and workshops. The American Corners are open to the
general public and access is free of charge. A network of over 400
American Corners is operating globally through partnerships between
the U.S. Department of State and local host organizations.

The American Corner program officially began in Armenia in April 2005
when the U.S. Embassy inaugurated the first Corner in Yerevan. Over the
past four years, over 35,000 people have visited the corner. Additional
Corners are located in Gyumri, Vanadzor and Kapan.

NPR: Genocide is a Matter of Opinion

National Public Radio (NPR)
April 11, 2009 Saturday
SHOW: Weekend Edition Saturday 12:00 PM EST NPR

Genocide is a Matter of Opinion

SCOTT SIMON, host:

When President Obama was beginning his run for office, he said he
believed the 1915 slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians by Turkey was not
war but genocide, that the American people deserve, quote, "a leader
who speaks truthfully about the Armenian genocide and responds
forcefully to all genocides."

But when President Obama addressed the Turkish parliament this, he
referred only to, quote, "the terrible events of 1915."

I was part of a PBS program called "The Armenian Genocide." There was
no question mark in the title. I think there are times when you have
to say genocide to be accurate about mass murder that tries to
extinguish a whole group. That’s why the slaughter of a million Tutsis
in Rwanda is not called merely mass murder. An American politician who
got to Germany, for example, and called the Holocaust of European Jews
merely killings would be mocked.

Now, I don’t doubt that President Obama is still outraged by the
Armenian genocide. When he ran in the presidential primaries, it was
important to win support from people concerned about human rights, and
perhaps Armenian- Americans in California.

Now, President Obama may feel it is more important for the United
States to win Turkey’s cooperation on a range of issues than it is for
him to be consistent on a controversy that may seem like old
history. But it’s not. Almost every year the Turkish government has
charged reporters and writers, including the Nobel Laureate Orhan
Pamuk, for insulting national identity by referring to the massacre of
1.5 million Armenians as genocide.

Peter Balakian, the preeminent scholar of the genocide and
co-translator of a new widely-lauded family memoir called "Armenian
Golgotha: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide," told us this week he
admires President Obama for telling Turkish leaders that confronting
the past and restoring good relations with Armenia is important. But
he believes that Turkey’s campaign against acknowledging its genocide
raises questions about their reliability.

Mr. Balakian told us a country that spends millions of dollars a year
in an effort to stop the facts about the Armenian genocide from being
known and that persecutes and prosecutes its own citizens for speaking
truthfully about the extermination of the Armenians is hardly a
government to trust to broker honest and just foreign policy.

In a way, the president’s choice to say killings in front of his host
may just remind us it might be wise to regard what any politician says
as the words of a suitor who coos I love you during courtship. They
mean it at the moment, but any adult should know they may not mean it
in just a few weeks.

BAKU: Azerbaijani NGOs Appeal To Turkish Public

AZERBAIJANI NGOS APPEAL TO TURKISH PUBLIC

State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan
April 8, 2009 Wednesday

A meeting of the Forum of Azerbaijan National Non-governmental
Organizations was held Tuesday.

President of the Forum Rauf Zeyni said Azerbaijani public is deeply
concerned about media reports on Turkish government`s intention to
open borders with Armenia.

Representatives of over 300 Azerbaijani NGOs adopted an appeal to
their Turkish colleagues. The appeal was later handed over to the
Embassy of Turkey in Baku.

The reason why we appeal to you is the latest news on intensive
discussions to open Turkish-Armenian border. Extensively spread by
the media and not definitely refuted by the Turkish leadership, these
reports made Azerbaijani non-governmental organizations seriously
concerned, appeal reads.

We consider actions towards normalization of relationship with
Armenia and opening of borders as contradicting common interests in
the light of accusations against Turkey and Azerbaijan, 100-year long
genocide claims by Armenia and Armenian Diaspora. It is well known that
Azerbaijan-Turkey relationship began from time immemorial and continued
to date after undergoing trials of centuries, the appeal notes.

Unfortunately, after the Justice and Development Party`s coming to
power, the Turkish government started taking steps, unilaterally
compromising, towards rapprochement with Armenia, which raise
territorial claims against our countries. We urge you the Turkish
government, which has always supported fair position of our peoples,
Turkish NGOs and media to voice your protest against steps towards
opening of borders with Armenia. We are confident that you will not
remain indifferent to our appeal, the appeal said.

ANKARA: Turkish Minister Notes Progress In Talks With Armenia

TURKISH MINISTER NOTES PROGRESS IN TALKS WITH ARMENIA

Anadolu Agency
April 7 2009
Turkey

Istanbul, 7 April: Turkish foreign minister said [on] Tuesday [7 April]
that Turkey and Armenia have been in talks for months to normalize
relations and that the two countries have come a long way.

At a press conference after the Second Forum of the Alliance of
Civilizations in Istanbul, Ali Babacan said different problems between
Turkey and Armenia were discussed in detail in this normalization
process.

"We are working on a comprehensive solution and our talks are going
well. We have made significant progress so far and both parties have
declared satisfaction over the process several times," Babacan told
reporters.

"I think third countries should act sensitively during this ongoing
process," he said.

Azerbaijan and Armenia are also holding talks to resolve the Upper
Karabakh dispute, Babacan recalled.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan met three times so far for a resolution.

Babacan said what Turkey aimed was peace, stability and prosperity
around Turkey.

"This is already the theme of the forum of the Alliance of
Civilizations," he said.