Honored Economy Worker’s Title Bestowed Upon Hrant Vardanyan

HONORED ECONOMY WORKER’S TITLE BESTOWED UPON HRANT VARDANYAN

armradio.am
21.01.2009 16:51

According to President Serzh Sargsyan’s decree, President of the
"Grand Holding" Company, businessman Hrant Vardanyan was bestowed the
title of Honored Economy Worker for his long and productive work in
the field of industry and his considerable personal contribution to
the development of economy.

Bestowing an order to Hrant Vardanyan, the President highly appreciated
his outstanding service for the sake of revival and development
of traditional branches of economy, as well as in the direction of
promoting export.

President Sargsyan emphasized the businessman’s great contribution
to the creation of jobs and hailed his constant attention towards
children.

For his part, President of the "Grand Holding" Company thanked
President Sargsyan for this high title, adding that it is very
binding and is a stimulus for working with greater vigor. Hrant
Vardanyan informed the President about his business initiatives and
future programs.

2,02 Mln Vivacell-MTS Subscribers By The End Of 2008

2,02 MLN VIVACELL-MTS SUBSCRIBERS BY THE END OF 2008

ArmInfo
2009-01-19 17:55:00

ArmInfo. The number of Vivacell-MTS subscribers amounted to 2,02 mln
people by the end of 2008.

As press-release of the Vivacell-MTS says, total number of OJSC
‘Mobile TeleSystems’ amounted to 91,33 mln people. The number of
users increased by 1,66 mln people in December 2008.

To recall, Vivacell-MTS is one of the leading mobile phone operators
of Armenia.

12 Out Of 14 Participants In Armenian Men’s Chess Higher League Cham

12 OUT OF 14 PARTICIPANTS IN ARMENIAN MEN’S CHESS HIGHER LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP ARE GRAND MASTERS

Noyan Tapan

Jan 19, 2009

YEREVAN, JANUARY 19, NOYAN TAPAN. 4th tour’s games took place on
January 15 in the men Higher League 69th Championship held at Yerevan
Tigran Petrosian Chess House. Ashot Anastasian, Avetik Grigorian,
Tigran Kotanjian, and Arman Pashikian are the leaders with 3 points
each.

12 out of 14 participant chess players are grand masters and 2
international masters. Elina Danielian is also among them. The 5th
member of RA men’s national team will be determined by tournament’s
results.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011364

Turkish Apology Petition Signatories Mostly Students

TURKISH APOLOGY PETITION SIGNATORIES MOSTLY STUDENTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.01.2009 16:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 27 516 people have already signed the Turkish
apology petition which reads, "My conscience does not accept the
insensitivity showed to and the denial of the Great Calamity that
befell the Ottoman Armenians in 1915. I reject this injustice and
for my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian
brothers. I apologize to them."

As freelance French journalist Jean Eckian told PanARMENIAN.Net,
over 6 300 signatories are students, over 1 700 are professors, over
1 200 are engineers, over 1 000 are workers and retired people, less
than 700 are attorneys and housewives, less than 600 are journalists,
less than 500 are physicians, less than 400 are craftsmen, accountants,
authors and educators, less than 300 are unemployed persons, less than
200 are architects, researchers, computer specialists, less than 150
are bankers and foremen.

The geography of signatories varies. In Turkey, Istanbul is the first
(9 937) followed by Ankara (2 129), Izmir (1 823) and Diyarbakir
(1 423). Then follow Mersin (482), Bursa (415), Adana (394), Antalya
(382), Van (375) and Mardin (334).

As to foreign countries, 3 793 signatures were registered from 63
states. 1 729 signatures came from Germany, 343 from the U.S., 324 from
the United Kingdom, 310 from France, 231 from Switzerland. Then Poland,
Austria, Sweden, Canada, Belgium, Australia, Denmark and Holland come.

5 signatories are from Japan and Saudi Arabia, 4 from Azerbaijan
(2 politicians & 2 journalists), 2 from UAE, 1 from Armenia, 1
from Karabakh, 1 from China, 1 from Qatar, 1 from Colombia, 1 from
Greenland, 1 from Kosovo, 1 from Ecuador, 1 from Kenya and 1 from
Singapore. Two dozens of cities or countries were not identified.

ANKARA: Ergenekon investigation saved Turkey’s future

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Jan 18 2009

Ergenekon investigation saved Turkey’s future

A number of weapons caches found at sites throughout the country in
last week’s Ergenekon operations, a clandestine terrorist organization
charged with attempting to overthrow the government, have brought to
mind the question of what would have happened if this organization had
not been exposed.

The Ergenekon operation started with the discovery of a house being
used as a munitions depot in İstanbul in June 2007. Since then,
more than 100 people have been detained, including retired
generals. Many such caches have been found in the course of the
investigation, but police raids last week yielded the most weapons
thus far, with most of them found not in a closed storage area, but
outside on our streets or buried underground.

Last Friday the police discovered a weapons cache buried in a forest
in Ankara’s GölbaÅ?ı district based on a map found
in the home of one of the newest suspects. At this location police
discovered 30 hand grenades, three light anti-tank weapons (LAW),
plastic explosives, ammunition for Uzi machine guns and other
ammunition buried close to a road near the capital. Another weapons
cache was found in an İstanbul house belonging Lt. Col. Mustafa
Dönmez, who turned himself in earlier this week after running
from the police for two days following last week’s operations. Hand
grenades, bullets, Kalashnikovs, LAWs and explosives have been found
in various locations during police searches based on new evidence
gathered in the previous week of detentions, which revealed that the
group was planning to assassinate Alevi and Armenian community
leaders, the prime minister and members of the Supreme Court of
Appeals, acts that would have dragged Turkey into utter chaos if they
had been carried out. Thirty-seven individuals were detained last week
in the police operations staged in various cities as part of the
ongoing investigation. Seventeen of these people have been arrested,
with most of the remainder released pending trial.

Experts say had these weapons been used to carry out the plots of the
organization, the country would have been thrown into a chaotic period
similar to that before the Sept. 12, 1980 coup, where there were
clashes, bloodshed and carnage every day on the streets between
opposing ideological groups.

What would be the cost of not exposing the deeper branches of
Ergenekon? Å?amil Tayyar, the Ankara bureau chief of the Star
daily and author of the book `Operation Ergenekon,’ gives a brief
answer: `According to the Ergenekon organization, the Justice and
Development Party [AK Party] and everybody who voted for the AK Party
are traitors. Any political party which did not collaborate with them
or vote in line with them are traitors. Everyone who wants Turkey to
join the European Union is a traitor. This is why the front they hate
is very great. If the games they planned to play had not bee exposed,
Turkey could have really turned into a bloodbath. Major murders could
have been committed.’

Tayyar gave the example of the Council of State attack in 2006 that
left a senior judge dead. The act was blamed on Islamist groups at the
time, but now the prosecution has compelling evidence that it was
masterminded by Ergenekon. `They should erect a statue of the cop who
captured the Council of State hit man Alparslan Arslan. Today this
might sound too exaggerated, but thinking in terms of the conditions
of the day, the impact of the attack was huge. ErtuÄ?rul
Ã-zkök had referred to the case as `Turkey’s 9/11.’ If
Ergenekon had not been exposed, the AK Party could have been thrown
out of power somehow, and the European Union negotiation process would
have been halted.’

Tayyar claims that after two previous failed coup attempts, made
public by the now-defunct Nokta newsweekly, Ergenekon had to go
underground and reorganize using its connections in different
terrorist groups and clandestine intelligence organizations. This
collaboration was the force behind the Council of State shooting, the
killing of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and the killing of
an Italian priest in his church in the Black Sea city of Trabzon.

`The reason they carried out these underground operations was to drag
Turkey into chaos, damage political and economic stability and finally
stage a coup d’état under those conditions. This is because in
a country where everything was on the right track, there wouldn’t be
the motivation or support for a coup d’état. Their plan was to
stage a coup in 2009, and ultimately, create a country cut off from
the world by the year 2023 and that had cut ties completely with the
European Union,’ Tayyar said.

Potential Alevi-Sunni conflict

Another very likely outcome if the Ergenekon terrorist organization
had succeeded would be a conflict between Turkey’s Alevi and Sunni
communities. It is now known that Ergenekon was preparing to
assassinate Alevi leader Kazım Genç. The organization
also had assassination plans against Kurdish deputies. Some experts
claim that had Ergenekon not been exposed, Turkey could have been
dragged into civil war and ultimately divided. `A Turkey that ends its
European Union accession process, that annihilates its democratic
actors and that replaces economic development with chaos and
destruction will be dragged into social chaos. Under such
circumstances no one can stop Kurds from dividing the country,’
DaÄ?ı said.

AK Party KahramanmaraÅ? deputy Avni DoÄ?an states that if
the Ergenekon organization was not discovered, Turkey would have
turned into the Syria of not too long ago. `This was the target of the
organization. They planned to create a country of anarchy and chaos,’
he told Sunday’s Zaman. Columnist Mehmet Altan referred to other
dictatorial countries that Turkey would look like and said the Turkey
envisaged by Ergenekon would strengthen `authoritarian republicanism.’

Sunday’s Zaman has published several articles on the issue, noting
that if the AK Party and the Democratic Society Party (DTP) were
closed down, Turkey’s Kurdish citizens would lose their faith in
democracy and the country would practically be divided in two since an
overwhelming majority of southeastern Anatolia voted for the two
parties in the last elections. Had Ergenekon succeeded in toppling the
AK Party, its next target would be the DTP and other Kurdish political
groups. This would hasten the country’s disintegration.

AK Party Batman deputy Afif Demirkıran says even if the
Ergenekon terrorist organization reached its target of a secularist
coup, the post-coup Turkey would not be like the Turkey of the
post-1960 and post-1980 coups. `We would probably not be able to
return to democracy. We would remain an isolated country, cut off from
the world,’ he told Sunday’s Zaman.

AK Party Samsun deputy Suat Kılıç does not think
Ergenekon would be capable of staging a coup. `They don’t have enough
power for that. But Turkey would continue to be a country of chaos and
we would not know the real perpetrators of many crimes committed in
the recent past,’ he said.

AK Party Bursa deputy Mehmet Ocaktan, who chaired the parliamentary
commission that investigated the Hrant Dink murder, told Sunday’s
Zaman that had Ergenekon not been discovered, Turkey would `be a
country that takes care of its affairs in the dark and would never be
a transparent society.’

DTP MuÅ? deputy Sırrı Sakık agrees that
Turkey would have regressed to conditions in the pre-1980 era if
Ergenekon had not been exposed. `Ergenekon is an organization that fed
on the Kurdish question. It has its hands everywhere in the filthy war
in the Southeast. ¦ its political elements absolutely have to be
exposed. If not, Turkey will continue to move within the dark tunnel
it is in. `

18 January 2009, Sunday
ERCAN YAVUZ ANKARA

Russian ambassador provides explanations to Baku on Arms to Armenia

Interfax, Russia
Dec 15 2009

Russian ambassador provides explanations to Baku on Russia’s alleged
transfer of weapons to Armenia

BAKU Jan 15

Russian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Vasily Istratov has handed
explanations to the Azeri Foreign Ministry, given Azerbaijan’s
concerns about alleged supplies of Russian weapons to Armenia.

After that, the Azeri side formulated questions to define the matter,
the Russian embassy reported on Thursday. "We expect answers to these
questions to arrive soon," the embassy said.

Earlier on Thursday, the Azeri foreign ministry made a statement in
the wake of media reports claiming that Russia had handed armaments
worth 800 million to Armenia.

"A study of these reports provided sufficient reason to believe that
the weapons were indeed provided," the statement says.

"America obstacle to Armenian-Turkish dialogue" says Ali Babacan

Panorama.am
15:58 17/01/2009

`AMERICA OBSTACLE TO ARMENIAN-TURKISH DIALOGUE,’ SAYS ALI BABACAN

`We have started a new phase of activities with Armenia, which was
being kept secret for some time. After the football game the
information became public. We have never been so close to solving the
problems. In order to do the final step, both sides should put forth
the efforts,’ announced the Foreign Minister of Turkey Ali Babacan
during a live broadcast of one of Turkish TV stations.

According to the Ministry, the American Armenians conduct serious
lobbyist activities to have the Armenian Genocide recognized. `In this
stage if the US Government recognizes Armenian Genocide it will become
an obstacle to Armenian-Turkish dialogue,’ said the Foreign Minister
of Turkey.

Source: Panorama.am

Archeologists Unearth Oldest "Old World" Brain

ARCHEOLOGISTS UNEARTH OLDEST "OLD WORLD" BRAIN
By Jaya Jiwatram

Popular Science
-01/archeologists-unearth-oldest-old-world-brain?p age=
Jan 14 2009
NY

As part a two-year excavation in one of southeastern Armenia’s caves,
archeologists discovered a well-preserved brain of a young girl,
announcing it as the oldest known human brain from the Old World

The oldest known human brain from the Old World–comprised of Europe,
Asia, Africa and contiguous islands–has been discovered in Armenia,
announced UCLA researcher Gregory Areshian at an annual archeological
conference Sunday.

The brain dates back to the Copper age, which ran approximately 5,500
to 6,500 years ago in Eastern Europe and the Near East. Archeologists
discovered the brain, believed to be that of a young girl, while
excavating for relics in the past two years inside and outside of
Armenia’s 600-square-meter Areni-1 cave across the border from Iran.

Scientists also found an extensive array of other artifacts, including
some that showed evidence of a winemaking enterprise, which suggested
that significant cultural developments happened during the Copper age
outside of southern Iraq, Areshian said. Many people believe southern
Iraq to be the centre of civilization’s developments.

The skull that had the shriveled, yet well-preserved brain was found
with two others, each of which was buried in separate niches in the
cave. All the skulls belonged to girls between the ages of 12 and 14.

The brain from one of the skulls (along with several artifacts)
managed to keep so well because of the cave’s extremely dry and
stable-temperature conditions and the hard, carbonate crust of the
soil layers.

Scientists have already removed red blood cells from vessels on the
brain’s surface for further investigation.

http://www.popsci.com/scitech/article/2009

Jubilee Events On Occasion Of 20th Anniversary Of Withdrawal Of Sovi

JUBILEE EVENTS ON OCCASION OF 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF WITHDRAWAL OF SOVIET TROOPS FROM AFGHANISTAN TO BE HELD IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan

Jan 13, 2009

YEREVAN, JANUARY 13, NOYAN TAPAN. The plan of jubilee events on the
occasion of the 20th anniversary of withdrawal of Soviet troops
from Afghanistan was approved at the January 13 sitting of the
interdepartmental commission on organization and holding of the jubilee
events. The plan, in particular, envisages an exhibition under the
title Afghan War, meetings with servicemen, students of military-sports
colleges, teachers and pupils of comprehensive schools, joint visits
of Afghan war and Artsakh liberation struggle veterans to memorials
in Yerevan, regional centers and communities of those perished in
the war, a visit to the Yerablur military pantheon and Victory park,
show of archives films and video materials, concert events, serving
Saint Liturgy at the Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA Defence Ministry, at the end
of the sitting RA Defence Minister Seyran Ohanian emphasized the
importance of such events mentioning that they contribute to younger
generation’s military-patriotic education.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011228

The Caucasus: A Region In Pieces

THE CAUCASUS: A REGION IN PIECES
By Thomas de Waal

ISN
rs/Security-Watch/Detail/?coguid=25BB1D72-0F46-B60 6-6244-ABCF85D374AE&lng=en&id=95227
Jan 12 2009
Switzerland

The political tensions of the Caucasus are reflected on the ground in
a range of obstacles – from roadblocks and closed markets to polarized
attitudes, Thomas de Waal writes for openDemocracy.

The Caucasus region is a small and troubled place. It should be
a common endeavor where its small and diverse nationalities – in
Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan as well as Russia’s north Caucasus –
work together to build an integrated region. Instead, no sense of
common purpose is discernible: the sad reality is, that with its
tangle of closed borders and ceasefire lines, the Caucasus more
resembles a geopolitical suicide-pact.

Nowhere in the world can there be so many roadblocks. The two long
borders – Armenia-Azerbaijan and Russia-Georgia are almost permanently
closed (the latter even more tightly controlled since the war of August
2008 between the two countries). Only two neighbors – Azerbaijan and
Georgia – can be said to have a genuinely close relationship, and even
that is based primarily on energy politics rather than common values;
it does not translate into many tangible benefits for ordinary people.

A tale of two markets

Yet, given the chance, the everyday folk of the Caucasus eagerly
take the opportunity to do business with one another. A tale of two
markets confirms this. The first was the one at Ergneti, right on the
administrative border between Georgia and the breakaway territory of
South Ossetia, where the busiest wholesale market in the Caucasus
used to flourish. The Ossetians brought untaxed goods from Russia
(everything from cigarettes to cars) to sell there, in return for
(mainly) agricultural produce brought by the Georgians. The Georgian
government of Mikheil Saakashvili that came to power in January 2004
argued that since Ergneti was unregulated it was knocking a big hole
in the state budget and had to be shut down; the market was duly
closed in June 2004.

The closure of Ergneti may have been justified on strict legal grounds,
but the decision lacked imagination; for, in the words of Georgia’s
former conflict- resolution minister Giorgy Khaindrava, "If Ergneti
didn’t exist it would have to be invented." Ergneti was possibly the
widest "confidence-building measure" in the entire Caucasus region,
with people of all nationalities doing business. It is arguable
that the day it closed was the day the countdown to war in South
Ossetia began.

The second market was located at the Georgian village of Sadakhlo on
the Georgia-Armenia border. It was another astonishing spectacle:
a mass Armenian-Azerbaijani market on Georgian territory, which
paid no heed to the bitter relations at state level between the
two countries and which moreover was conducted with virtually no
Georgians in sight. There, Azerbaijanis bought Armenian produce
and Armenians purchased Azerbaijani goods that would then flood the
shops of Yerevan. Sadakhlo, though not forced to shut down entirely
as Ergneti was, has been curtailed by governmental pressures. Again,
a magnificent example of inter-ethnic cooperation has been suppressed.

A tale of bad politics

What politics drives apart, common economic and security interests
should drive together. The south Caucasus is a delicate mechanism
in which the malfunctioning of one part affects what is going in
the others.

That became obvious during the August 2008 war in Georgia. Azerbaijan’s
prime revenue-earners, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Supsa
pipelines, were shut down. When the Grakali railway bridge in central
Georgia was blown up on 16 August, the effect was also to block
the only railway-line linking Armenia to the Black Sea coast. The
result was to cut off landlocked Armenia’s entire imports for a week,
costing the country at least US$500 million in revenue.

The political responsibility for this unfortunate state of affairs
is widely shared.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have adopted intransigent positions which
mean they have failed to resolve the prime source of tension between
them as well as the biggest obstacle to peace and prosperity in
the Caucasus: the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Georgia, in its push
towards Euro-Atlantic integration since 2004, has generally ignored
its neighbors and Russia. In the words of Georgian analyst Archil
Gegeshidze, one reason for Georgia’s problems is that the Saakashvili
government unwisely "put all its eggs in the basket of mobilizing
western support" and did not pay sufficient attention to its neighbors.

Europeans and Americans have often paid lip-service to the idea of
regional integration in the Caucasus, though in practice they have
generally pursued narrower goals. Europe’s grand communication and
transport project designed to link the Caucasus to Europe – Traseca,
billed as a new "silk road" – has received less than â~B¬200 million
($270 million) of investment since it was inaugurated in 1993; its
effects so far are negligible.

Instead, projects such as Nato expansion, energy security and the
claims of Armenian diasporas have all tended to divide Caucasian
policy into different segments. In Washington, it seems at times that
different agencies are running different policies with a different
primary focus – the Congress on Armenia, the Pentagon on Azerbaijan,
and the state department on Georgia.

Moreover, several Washington strategists have suggested that Russia
could be "contained" in the Caucasus, overlooking the fact that the
region has figured in Russian minds and plans for two centuries and
that much of the Russian elite has family or childhood ties to places
that westerners barely know.

For good or ill, Russia still has a special role in the Caucasus. Its
own policies have done it no favors. Russia continues to see the region
in colonial terms, seeking to intimidate or control resources rather
than use the soft power of trade or – its biggest asset in the region,
if a diminishing one – the Russian language, to help form a new and
friendly neighborhood.

People-to-people ties are still in place, often despite (as Ergneti and
Sadakhlo show) the best efforts of governments. Russians and Georgians
are tied together by innumerable ties of history, culture and business
(see Donald Rayfield, "Georgia and Russia: with you, without you",
3 October 2006). Hundreds of thousands of Georgians continue to
work in Russia, despite the August conflict. "(Russian and Georgian)
leaders have tried to wreck a good relationship between two peoples,"
says Georgian analyst Ivlian Khaindrava.

This was understood by Mikheil Saakashvili’s predecessor as Georgian
president, Eduard Shevardnadze, who returned to Georgia after
serving as Soviet foreign minister in the perestroika years of the
late 1980s. During his term in office in Tbilisi, Shevardnadze was
frequently unable to appease the harder-line elements of the Russian
elite; though in a December 2008 interview with the Institute for War
and Peace Reporting (IWPR) he rebuked his successor by saying that he
had always paid the Russians maximum respect. Shevardnadze cited the
decision in 2002 to invite American troops to Georgia as part of the
groundbreaking "train and equip" program, when he had been careful to
inform President Vladimir Putin in advance. Putin went on the record as
saying that a United States troop presence was "no tragedy" for Russia.

"I always tried to emphasize that Russia for us is not a secondary
country, that it is a great neighbor with big military and economic
potential", said Shevardnadze.

A rooted tendency of conflict – something in evidence too in the war
of 2008-09 in Gaza – is that it gives birth to polarized and zero-sum
thinking, the view that if your opponent is suffering that is a good
thing. In the case of the crisis of relations between Georgia and
Russia, says Ivlian Khaindrava, "many in Georgia are just keeping
quiet and waiting for the situation in Russia to deteriorate, the
oil price to go down, tensions in the north Caucasus to escalate."

That approach, he believes, could be a disaster for Georgia. For an
economic downturn in Russia will hurt Georgian migrants there and
the families back home they send remittances to, while new violence
in the north Caucasus could spill over into Georgia.

A tale of the future

This kind of zero-sum thinking is most acute in the region between
Armenians and Azerbaijanis, many of whom seem content to see
their respective country suffer so long as the other side in the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is feeling pain too.

It is hard for locals to transcend these divisions, even more so at a
time of economic pressure and downturn when resources become scarcer
and livelihoods more fragile. It is up to outsiders to offer a sense
of a big picture and a broad vision of how the Caucasus could begin
to function more harmoniously – as a political and economic entity
rather than merely a dysfunctional geographical region.

At the beginning of 2009, it seems likely that only one
big international organization – the European Union – has the
transformative power to treat these countries as a single region and
promise them benefits that make it worthwhile for them to overcome the
divisions and obstacles that hold them and their neighbors back. The
experience of the Balkans since the wars of the 1990s provides good
proof of this.

At the same time, the current signs are that the EU is still
too distant and too inward-looking to care sufficiently about the
Caucasus. A positive development is that European monitors are now on
the ground in Georgia – though the fact that they are there because
of war is a tragic reminder of the region’s dangers. It must be hoped
that they become the advance-guard of a much broader engagement –
not just confirmation for Europeans that this beautiful mountainous
region is a permanent headache that can never be cured.

–Boundary_(ID_e/1KxF6jCmsEfzFFd+wLew)–

http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affai