Politicians Tired…?

POLITICIANS TIRED…?

Panorama.am
16:56 14/11/2008

Today the head of Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) fraction
of National Assembly Vahan Hovhannisyan said in a briefing
that the statements to solve the NKR conflict in the frames of
"Madrid principles" should not be considered a source of "alarming
moods". "Currently we are speaking about principles, not about the
decision; hence there is no necessity to feel worried. We should
keep straight to make those principles under our interests," said
V. Hovhannisyn. Though Mr. Hovhannisyan says he does not feel satisfied
with those principles, final decision should be made based on them.

Styopa Safaryan, the secretary of "Heritage" fraction of the NA said he
is concerned with Moscow declaration. "Some certain points of Moscow
declaration are alarming at least for Armenian and Karabakh sides,
I mean this is the first document in the last decade signed without
official signature of Karabakh," he said. According to Mr. Safaryan
if the conflict is to be regulated in the frames of Minsk group, then
it is surprising that only one co-chairing country has subscribed
under that document.

Heghine Bisharyan, the head of Country of Laws NA fraction said that
they are not against compromises, and added that regarding liberated
7 territories it is early to speak about them and their return.

According to Avet Adonts of the Prosperous Armenia fraction, there
are no principles but only recommendations which should serve as
principle field for the negotiations.

The head of Republican fraction Galust Sahakyan expressed his view
point stating "when political field is tired, Karabakh issue is being
discussed." He has his personal opinion over Moscow declaration and
he considers it a document which says no to the war and will establish
stability in the region.

Oldest Armenian Daily Celebrates Centenary In Istanbul

OLDEST ARMENIAN DAILY CELEBRATES CENTENARY IN ISTANBUL

Agence France Presse
Nov 14 2008

ISTANBUL (AFP) — The oldest Armenian-language newspaper is celebrating
its 100th anniversary in Turkey, surviving a century of tumult in a
place where Armenians were massacred and reduced to a tiny community.

Founded by a man of letters, Misak Kocunyan, and his brother Sarkis,
Jamanak (Times in Armenian) was born on October 28, 1908 in Istanbul,
in the clamour of the Young Turk revolution that three months
earlier had forced the Ottoman sultan, Abdulhamid II, to restore
constitutional rule.

It was an epoch of enthusiasm when a myriad of parties, associations
and newspapers emerged in Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire,
encouraged by the end of draconian censorship.

The Armenian minority, the victim of pogroms under Abdulhamid II,
participated actively in the reformist movement.

"Jamanak was then an important actor for the Armenian community, both
in political and cultural terms," said Turkish-Armenian historian
Rober Koptas.

The daily, which had a circulation of 15,000 among the 160,000
Armenians estimated to live in Istanbul at the time, did not hesitate
to raise explosive subjects, narrating the killings of Armenians in
Anatolia in the 1890s in the form of a serial story.

To weather the black days of World War I, Jamanak had to keep a low
profile as hundreds of thousands of Armenians were killed in fresh
massacres across Anatolia, accused of siding with invading Russian
troops.

The killings, which Armenians say were a genocide, remain as a major
stumbling block in Turkish-Armenian relations today, with Ankara
fiercely rejecting the genocide label.

"From 1915 on, the paper would focus on cultural life and subjects
without political implications. That was the price it paid for
continuing to publish," Koptas said.

"We continued to go to press in 1915, but we lost a columnist,"
added Ara Kocunyan, grand grandson of Sarkis, Jamanak’s co-founder
and first editor.

The paper, like the Armenian community, witnessed other dark periods:
World War II, during which non-Muslims in Turkey suffered various
discriminations and the riots of September 6-7, 1955 when non-Muslim
properties were destroyed and looted.

"In 1955, we managed to survive because our porter told the rioters
that there were no Armenians or Greeks in our building," Kocunyan
recounted.

The most recent tragedy hit the community in 2007 when Hrant Dink,
an ethnic Armenian journalist who maintained the World War I massacres
were a genocide, was shot dead by a nationalist Turk in Istanbul.

Modern times have brought about further difficulties for Jamanak:
the size of the Armenian minority has dwindled to an estimated 80,000
people, with some — notably the younger — losing either the language
or interest in the community.

"In the past there were doctors, engineers who regularly wrote
articles for us. Such people no longer exist," said Nadia Kocunyan,
the daily’s manager and Ara’s mother.

Jamanak, which is also Turkey’s oldest newspaper to have been published
without interruption since its creation, employs eight people today.

With a circulation of 1,500 to 2,000, its four pages offer complete
information about community life as well as domestic and international
news.

For Jamanak, the hope of a brighter future lays in overcoming the
enmity between Turkey and Armenia.

"If the relations normalise, our community will have a very
constructive role to play," Ara Kocunyan said. "If commercial links
begin between the two countries, we may even attract advertisments
to the newspaper."

Turkey has refused to establish diplomatic ties with Armenia since
the ex-Soviet nation gained independence in 1991 and keeps their
border shut.

A prospect of reconciliation emerged in September when President
Abdullah paid a ground-breaking visit to Yerevan to watch a World Cup
qualifying football match between the two countries on the invitation
of his counterpart Serzh Sarkisian.

Vladimir Bukarsky: Moldova Must Drop Its Shameful Membership In GUAM

VLADIMIR BUKARSKY: MOLDOVA MUST DROP ITS SHAMEFUL MEMBERSHIP IN GUAM

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.11.2008 14:40 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Moldova’s GUAM membership is an obstacle for the
country’s reintegration, a Moldovan political scientist said.

"GUAM is an organization formed with the assistance of the U.S. and
EU. The assessment given by Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin is
absolutely correct: unlike the CIS and EurAsEC, it’s a bloc without
any economic constituent," Vladimir Bukarsky said.

"Each day in GUAM postpones the Transnistrian settlement. This
organization brings nothing but damage. We must drop this shameful
membership," he said, 1news.az reports.

Cyprus Willing To Facilitate Armenia-EU Relations Development

CYPRUS WILLING TO FACILITATE ARMENIA-EU RELATIONS DEVELOPMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
13.11.2008 18:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ As a member of the President of the European
Union, Cyprus is willing to facilitate development of the Armenia-EU
relations, President of the House of Representatives of Cyprus. Marios
Garoyan told a news conference in Yerevan today.

"We should offer and work out special programs to deepen cooperation
between Armenia and the European Union," he said.

For his part, RA parliament speaker Hovik Abrahamyan said Armenia is
aspired to join the European family. He also informed that Mr. Garoyan
invited him to Cyprus.

"An agreement on the Armenian-Cypriot cooperation, covering economy,
trade and culture, will be signed during my visit," Abrahamyan said.

Commenting on the possibility to open Cypriot diplomatic outposts
in Armenia and vice versa, the officials said interparliamentary
consultations can be held on the issue.

Being In Line With International Standards Extremely Important For A

BEING IN LINE WITH INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT FOR ARMENIAN PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY

Noyan Tapan

Nov 12, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN. A conference on development of
Armenia’s pharmaceutical industry started its work in Yerevan on
November 12. Issues related to the main principles of the proper
production activity, their introduction in Armenia, as well as
development of the pharmaceutical sector will be discussed during
the two-day conference.

According to Emil Gabrielian, the director of the Expert Center of
Medicines and Medical Technology, today many countries exports and
import only medicines in line with the proper production activity
standards which ensure the correspondence of medicines with
international standards and control their quality.

In the opinion of E. Gabrielian, there are numerous problems
in Armenia’s pharmaceutical sector which is in need of serious
reforms. "Medicines are the key healthcare factor, they are a weapon
of doctors. In this connection special requirements are made regarding
their production and use," he said.

In his words, the proper production conditions are absent at many
enterprises, which results in the low quality of products and their
packing.

E. Gabrielian said that if the current situation continues, no country
will buy medicines from Armenia in the future.

"Being in line with international standards is extremely important
for Armenia’s pharmaceutical industry," the chief competitiveness
expert of the USAID-financed Competitive Armenian Private Sector
(CAPS) Alan Saffery said.

He added that the use of proper production activity standards will
increase competitiveness in the sectior because by improving their
production, the domestic manufacturers of medicines will be able to
compete more successfully with importers and to export their products
to more countries.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009663

Armenian Government Getting Ready To Meet New Economic Challenges

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT GETTING READY TO MEET NEW ECONOMIC CHALLENGES

ARKA
Nov 13, 2008

YEREVAN, November 13. /ARKA/. Armenia’s government is taking extra
precautions to tackle new economic challenges, RA Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan said during Wednesday’s parliamentary session.

"Fortunately, the first wave of crisis has passed Armenia’s financial
system, but we have to meet new challenges, as an economic slowdown
usually follows a financial crisis," the premier was quoted saying.

The prime minister has charged to set up a commission to discuss
business proposals. "We will announce bids for those programs in
order to fulfill business objectives and provide job placement
opportunities," Sargsyan added.

The government will offer state guarantees for enterprises. "The
government will have a share in the capital enterprises, so that it
can have a clear idea of their business programs and control them," the
prime minister said, adding this can help local business avoid losses.

"Following the example of developed countries, we will increase
subsidies to the private sector in order to meet possible challenges,"
Sargsyan continued.

The government will make public all those programs, according to
the premier.

"Unfortunately, we have few business programs," Sargsyan said, adding
a few months ago the government charged the governors to study business
environment in their regions.

"We have asked the National Academy of Science to make its own
suggestions," Sargsyan said.

The commission under the prime minister’s supervision will try to
find practical and effective solutions to existing problems.

U. S. Trade Boards Stand For Open Border Between Armenia And Turkey

U. S. TRADE BOARDS STAND FOR OPEN BORDER BETWEEN ARMENIA AND TURKEY

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.11.2008 17:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The U. S. trade boards in both Armenia and Turkey
have announced they are in favor of an open border between the two
countries, as they believe this will foster economic growth and
improved living conditions on both sides.

In a recent joint statement, the chairmen of the American Chamber of
Commerce in Armenia and the American Business Forum in Turkey, both
affiliates of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, voiced strong support for,
"the unprecedented efforts recently undertaken by President Serzh
Sargsyan and President Abdullah Gul to normalize relations between
Armenia and Turkey."

Turkey should have taken steps toward the normalization of relations
with Armenia 10 years ago, Galip Sukaya, chairman of the American
Business Forum in Turkey, or ABFT, told the "Turkey is one of the
biggest countries in the region and due to its position, can assume
an important role," he said.

Explaining how he and David Atanessyan, chairman of the American
Chamber of Commerce in Armenia, came up with the idea of engaging
in joint activities, Sukaya said they had met frequently at the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "If Turkish-Armenian diplomatic relations
are normalized, we could work together in a consortium of regional
states, including Georgia," he said, adding that during meetings they
also exchanged opinions with Azerbaijani representatives.

"Products exported from Turkey to Armenia are carried via Georgia. This
results in a major economic loss. Another important point is that
the development of good neighborly relations and trade between Turkey
and Armenia would also contribute to the development of east Turkey,"
Sukaya said.

"Undoubtedly this will have a tremendous economic and political
impact on the region. These developments encourage increased economic
cooperation while fostering greater regional security and engagement
among business, political, economic, cultural, and social spheres,"
it said, Hurriyet Daily News reports.

ANKARA: In The Aftermath Of An Election

IN THE AFTERMATH OF AN ELECTION

Cumhuriyet website
Nov 6 2008
Istanbul

The United States has elected Barack Obama as its next president.

We watched it live on television. When Obama rose to the podium to
thank the hundreds of thousands of people flooding the square in
Chicago, more whites applauded him than blacks.

The people of the United States are essentially celebrating their
deliverance from President Bush and the beginning of a hope-inspiring
"era of change."

The world is celebrating its deliverance from an incompetent president
who started wars out of religious obsessions and using lies (e.g. Iraq)
and who created an economic and financial crisis that has ruined the
American people and virtually all countries of the world over the
past four years.

Will the black leader who is looking through a window of hope realize
the hopes that are pinned on him?

Or will Obama follow the lead of virtually all other US presidents
and refuse to step out of the orbit defined by the deep state, which
upholds US national interests above all political ideologies?

All news and commentary broadcasts about Obama’s election on virtually
all [Turkish] television channels were marked by unbounded joy and
excitement.

Much praise was heaped on Obama, but there was not a single commentator
or news report that could fully answer the question of how the new
US president views Turkey.

Narratives that raise suspicions but also inspire hope
aâ~B¬Â¦. [Obama’s] unequivocal promise that he will recognize the
Armenian genocide casts a shadow on his view of Turkey [sentence
as received].

We are consoled, however, to hear that all presidential candidates
promise to recognize the genocide in their election campaigns in
order to win the support of Armenian voters.

It has been underscored that Obama would not risk losing Turkey given
that the Turkish economy is reportedly the sixth largest in Europe
and the 15th largest in the world and in view of its critical location
in the Middle East.

However, Obama may not behave like his predecessors. If he will not
risk losing Turkey, it will obviously not happen because of economics
or the importance he attaches to Turkey’s friendship. Unlike Bush,
he may pursue a policy that may favour Turkey in practice – if this
is what US interests require – but he might also recognize the alleged
genocide by arguing that this is a time of change.

We must not forget that Democrats perceive Turkey quite differently
from the Republicans.

Barack Obama finds that "restoring the strategic partnership with
Turkey is an important interest," as pointed out on his campaign
website.

However, will he choose to use his strategic partner to attain his
aims in the Middle East like Bush? Will he continue to see Turkey as
a weapon that can be used as part of the Greater Middle East Project?

Now let us turn to the question that stems from the real
problem. President Bush help to undermine the foundations of the
secular republic by citing the Turkish democracy as an exemplar to
Islamic countries using the paradigm of moderate Islam. He contributed
substantially to the RTE [Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan]
government to realize this goal.

The AKP [Justice and Development Party] has been able to survive
and remain in government mainly because of President Bush’s policies
favouring moderate Islam and the support he has provided to the AKP
along those lines.

To what extent will [Obama] respect the tradition of a secular
Turkey? In our opinion, this is the most sensitive aspect of the
policies Obama will pursue.

In view of these realities, we have to ask Obama questions that
are of paramount interest to Turkey: Will he retain the "moderate
Islam policy" current President Bush has applied to Turkey? Will he
continue offering US support to the RTE government, which has acted
out of religious instincts, which has paid lip service to secularism,
and which has used every opportunity to eradicate the basic conditions
of secularism?

As long as President Obama does not demonstrate that he is pursuing
a policy that can comfort Turkey on this basic concept, the "change"
he has promised will at least not apply to us.

–Boundary_(ID_4xjqIU0/FbUL5OtMlw7zZw)–

Turkish PM Congratulates Obama, Stresses Armenian Issue

TURKISH PM CONGRATULATES OBAMA, STRESSES ARMENIAN ISSUE

Agence France Presse
November 5, 2008 Wednesday 11:38 AM GMT

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Wednesday congratulated US
president-elect Barack Obama, stressing Turkey’s expectations that
America’s policy of not recognising the Ottoman massacres of Armenians
as genocide would continue.

"We hope that some theses raised during the election campaign will stay
there (in the past) as campaign issues," Erdogan told reporters here.

His remarks were a reference to an election pledge Obama made to
his Armenian-American supporters to recognise the mass killings of
Armenians during World War I as genocide if elected president.

Washington traditionally condemns the killings on their anniversary
each year, but has so far refrained from dubbing them a "genocide",
wary not to strain relations with Turkey, a NATO member and a key
ally in the Middle East.

Both outgoing president George W. Bush and his predecessor Bill
Clinton have used their clout over the US Congress to stop bills
aimed at recognising the massacres as genocide.

"The relations between Turkey and America are determined not by
changing (US) administrations but by the strategic nature of our ties,
which we believe will continue," Erdogan said.

He also stressed that Obama has now shouldered the "burden" of tackling
the global financial crisis.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their people were systematically
killed by Ottoman Turks in an act of genocide between 1915 and 1917
as their empire fell apart — a claim supported by several other
countries.

Turkey rejects the genocide label, arguing that 300,000-500,000
Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when
Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
with invading Russian troops.

Armenia And Belgium Agree To Activate Cooperation In Diamond Cutting

ARMENIA AND BELGIUM AGREE TO ACTIVATE COOPERATION IN DIAMOND CUTTING

ArmInfo
2008-11-06 21:09:00

ArmInfo. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Belgian Prime Minister
Yves Leterme have agreed to activate cooperation in the sphere of
diamond cutting.

As the Public Television of Armenia reports, Serzh Sargsyan said that
Belgium is an important partner for Armenia among the EU countries. The
commodity turnover between Belgium and Armenia exceeds 0.25 bln USD and
the lion’s share in the commodity turnover falls on diamonds. (Editor:
Belgium is both the supplier of rough diamonds and buyer of the
finished product).

The sides agreed to diversify the cooperation in this sphere.

Leterme said that, despite the financial crisis, the Armenian
economy was stably growing, which was an additional stimulus of
Belgian investors.

Recently, Belgium and Armenia set up a commerce chamber in order to
intensify their trade cooperation.