Demography Requires Serious Attention

DEMOGRAPHY REQUIRES SERIOUS ATTENTION

KarabakhOpen
31-03-2007 11:31:13

Demography is one of the eight global problems. This problem exists
everywhere. However, in one country the government seeks for ways of
controlling the growth of the population, such as in China, whereas
in other countries having children is encouraged.

As of January 1, 2007, the population of Karabakh was 137.7
thousand. 2102 children were born in 2006, which has increased by
98 or 4.9 percent compared with 2005. The rate of death dropped by
25 or 2 percent compared with the previous year. Figures state that
the population grows, but at what rate does it grow?

Migration also affects demography. For instance, officially 827 people
arrived in Karabakh in 2006, and 1310 left it. In fact, the population
declined by 445, which is not less for a country with a population of
137.7 thousand. " Many people leave to work abroad. It is impossible
to support a family without a job. I also lived in Russia for some
time. It was very difficult," says Never Mnatsakanyan, Stepanakert. "It
is easy to find a job there. Of course, it is sleepless nights,
discomfort, you get homesick, you miss your family, but at home,
which you defended from the enemy, you cannot find a job and you have
to find a "fortune" in other countries. I could not stay there long
but I managed to earn some money and I set up my small business here."

"The war is over, and it seems that the birth rate should
grow. However, it depends not only on peace but also on the social
state of the country," says Liana Karapetyan. "Today it is very
difficult to have a child, to support, educate and provide with an
apartment… All these things used to be free in the Soviet period,
now you have to pay. I have two children, I do not want to have the
third. Not because I do not like children. Simply I cannot afford. I
do not work, we live on my husband’s salary. You know how much the
salary in Karabakh is."

U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Adopted Resolution Condemnin

U.S. SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE ADOPTED RESOLUTION CONDEMNING HRANT DINK’S MURDER

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
March 29 2007

March 28 the Senate Foreign Relations Committee adopted human rights
legislation, authored by the panel’s chairman and presidential
candidate, Senator Joe Biden (D-DE), condemning the murder of
journalist and human rights activist Hrant Dink and calling on the
Turkish government to repeal the law, Article 301, under which he was
prosecuted, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

The measure was adopted unanimously by voice vote at the meeting
of the Committee. At its last meeting, on March 6th, the panel, at
the request of its Ranking Member Richard Lugar (R-IN), had deferred
consideration of the legislation for three weeks. During this time,
the measure came under heavy attack from both the Turkish government
and its allies in the Administration. Despite their efforts to cut
any reference to the Armenian Genocide, the resolution noted Dink’s
persecution because of his speech on the Genocide.

The legislation condemns Hrant Dink’s murder as "a shameful act of
cowardice perpetrated with contempt for law, justice, and decency,"
and honors his commitment to "democratic values, non-violence, and
media freedom." It specifically notes that he was "subjected to legal
action under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code for referring to
the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide." It also calls on the
Turkish government to repeal this anti-free speech law and "work
diligently to foster a more open intellectual environment."

"We want to thank Chairman Biden for his leadership in honoring Hrant
Dink’s memory by urging the Turkish government to repeal Article 301 –
the law under which he was prosecuted," said ANCA Executive Director
Aram Hamparian. "Article 301, and others on the books in Turkey,
reflect and encourage the environment of hatred and intolerance
that the Turkish government has long fostered against Armenians –
particularly those who speak truthfully about the Armenian Genocide."

"We were, of course, troubled by the Turkish Government and State
Department’s shameless opposition to this resolution condemning the
murder of Hrant Dink," added Hamparian. "We look forward to working
with Chairman Biden in the coming weeks toward the adoption of the
Armenian Genocide resolution and in sending a clear signal that
genocide denial will not be tolerated by the U.S. Congress or the
American people."

Turkish-Azeri Discussion Of The Genocide Of Azerbaijani Turks Perpet

TURKISH-AZERI DISCUSSION OF THE GENOCIDE OF AZERBAIJANI TURKS PERPETRATED BY ARMENIANS?
By H. Chaqrian

AZG Armenian Daily
28/03/2007

There are countries in this world, where violence has become an
idol. Turkey and Azerbaijan are two of those states. When they cannot
realize their vicious through violence, they start acting with lies,
intrigues and provocations, making a lot of noise around it.

Thus, the Turkish society welcomed the murder of Hrant Dink with
"We’re All Ogun Samast" slogans, and the Azerbaijani authorities
proclaimed a national hero Ramil Safarov, the villain assassin.

In Turkey, and especially in Azerbaijan, women do note take any
essential part in the political life. But that does not mean that
women stay far from the governmental intrigues. The latest example
of such kind of women’s activity is the "scientific" discussion
organized by the Turkish-Azerbaijani Womens’ Union on March 27 in
Baku and dedicated to the "Genocide of Azerbaijani Turks Perpetrated
by Armenians" (allegedly on March 31, 1918).

According to Turkish television, politicians and scientists from
Turkey, Azerbaijan, the "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus" and Iraq
took part in the conference. Most probably, the Iraqi participants
were Turkmens, who have pro-Turkish political orientation.

Participant of the conference Huseyn Avni Karsioglu, Turkish Ambassador
to Azerbaijan, demanded the historical events be studied and the
truth revealed to the world society. Others stated also referred
to the so-called Genocide of Khojalu and stated that this fact "is
neglected as well as other massacres committed by Armenians". The
conference participants came to conclusion that they must draw the
world’s attention to those events, as the West does.

The results of the conference ended up in a joint declaration. "The
present Republic of Azerbaijan, as a lawful successor of the
People’s Republic of Azerbaijan, formed in 1918-1920, shall punish
the perpetrators of the genocides and massacres of those years
and of the period after 1988. Armenia is a terrorist state, and
threatens the peace with its violent policy against Turks in eth
region and in the world. Without destroying that hotbed of terrorism,
without liberating the occupied territories of Azerbaijan and without
neutralizing Armenia’s territorial claims of Turkey and Azerbaijan,
peace cannot be established in the region," says the declaration.

France Lost A Friend, Jacques Chirac Said

FRANCE LOST A FRIEND, JACQUES CHIRAC SAID

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.03.2007 14:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ French President Jacques Chirac sent a condolence
message to the RA President on the death of Prime Minister Andranik
Margaryan, reports the Armenian Public Television. His message says,
in part, "With a deep sorrow I learned of the untimely death of Prime
Minister Andranik Margaryan. We lost a political figure and sincere
patriot devoted to his life-work.

Andranik Margaryan was France’s friend. Being at the head of the
government he promoted development of relations between our states
and peoples. On this sad day, I extend my condolences to Andranik
Margaryan’s family and all Armenian people."

Armenia Pays Last Tribute To Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margar

ARMENIA PAYS LAST TRIBUTE TO ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER ANDRANIK MARGARYAN

Arminfo
2007-03-28 15:34:00

Today Armenia paid the last tribute to Prime Minister Andranik
Margaryan.

An ArmInfo correspondent reports that Archbishop Navasard Kchoyan,
Locum Tenens of the Ararat Eparchy of the Armenian Apostolic Church,
made a prayer near A.Margayan’s grave at Pantheon after Komitas. During
a short mourning meeting, Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Tigran
Torosyan emphasized that A.Margaryan will enter the history of
independent Armenia as an outstanding statesman, politician and party
worker as he has headed the Republican Party of Armenia for 10 years
and led the Armenian Government for 7 years. During this period, great
economic progress was registered in Armenia, and the RPA became one of
the leading political parties of the country. Despite the bad weather,
thousands of people came to say farewell and pay a last tribute to
their prime minister, T.Torosyan said.

Present at A.Margaryan’s funeral were Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan, Defense Minister Serzh Sargsyan, Head of the Constitutional
Court Gagik Haroutyunian, as well as ministers, deputies, ambassadors
and foreign delegations.

A.Margaryan died of infarction on March 25.

‘Longetivity Was Not Margaryan’s Merit’

‘LONGEVITY WAS NOT MARGARYAN’S MERIT’
Interviewer Diana Markosyan

A1+
[07:11 pm] 27 March, 2007

"The prime minister’s post is a complete drama: out of 10 prime
ministers only 3 were able to survive the office. They were Gagik
Harutyunyan, Armen Darbinyan and Aram Sargsyan,’ RA ex-prime minister
Hrant Bagratyan mentioned taking into account the health state of
RA ministers.

He shared his contemplations with journalist of A1+.

– How do you see Andranik Margaryan both as a politician and economist?

– You know, besides being an Armenian, citizen of Yerevan, he was
also the figure to struggle for the RA independence. He had a gift
of balancing things in the government. He clearly cognized the issues
of our independence and respectively he would come to the conclusion
that independence, democracy and marketing were interrelated.

-What changes are due to come after his death?

– It is difficult to answer as I do not see any Armenian to have done
so much for the independence of the country. This doesn’t exclude
better prospective, either. In this respect, not only his family
suffers his loss but also the latter will still have its " yields"
for Armenia.

– The name of next prime minister is already circulating. Do you
think Serj Sargsyan is the right person to take over?

– He is likely to do it better than any other politician from
coalition.

– RA Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan has been in the post
the longest. Does this prove him to be the best or just the most
resilient one?

– We should realize two things: every period of prime ministry office
is both harder and more unique. After all, it is not the longevity
that should prove oneself. His principle merit was his strategic
viewpoints towards democracy and economy.

We should not make judgements on the longevity. He has lived both
hard times and good times: they are just incomparable.

Addis Ababa: Agency Approves Three Enterprise Privatisations

Addis Fortune, Ethiopia
March 27, 2007 Tuesday

Ethiopia;
Agency Approves Three Enterprise Privatisations

The Privatisation and Public Enterprises Supervisory Agency (PPESA)
has passed a decision to privatise three state enterprises with a
total cost of 34 million Br.

The Agency had floated a tender to privatise Adea Flour and Pasta
Factory, Yerer Flour SC and Debre Zeit Pig Farm but only one
interested candidate showed up for each of the enterprises.

The Agency’s decision to sell to those bidders that showed up to the
tender process, began with the sale of Adea, to Aynalem Abdulkedir, a
local investor who presented a bid amount of 19 million Br.

Aynalem and the Agency signed the agreement to finalise the sale of
the factory on April 15, 2007, after being notified that her offer
had been accepted. She has paid the required 35pc of the sale price
and will pay the remaining 65pc over the coming two years, according
to the agreement.

Adea, located in Debre Zeit (Bishoftu) 45Km east of Addis Abeba, was
established in 1967 by the Benesnilian family, Armenian investors
that moved to Ethiopia. The family continues its business in the
country, with the sons having established Hagbes, a major import firm
in the country.

The factory, established with a capital of 1.1 million Br, was run
using Italian and British machines that were purchased at a cost of
440,408 Br by the Armenian investors. In 1975, the factory was
nationalised by the Derg military regime.

While under the control of the state, a significant investment of 6.3
million Br in expansion projects was conducted. The factory’s balance
sheet shows that the company has annual revenues of 25 million Br and
the capacity to produce 362qt of flour and 42qt of pasta a day.

Yerer Flour SC, the other company that was put on the auction block,
found interest from Anwar Abdulkadir, the only investor to enter a
bid. The agency accepted his 10 million Br offer and informed Anwar
that he had been chosen for the sale, although an agreement between
him and the Agency is yet to be signed.

Yerer Flour SC, established 32 years ago, is located in Nazaeth
(Adama), 100Km east of Addis Abeba. Situated on the route from
Nazareth to the popular Sodere Resort, the factory employs 108
workers and produces 6,728tn of flour annually.

Debre Zeit Pig Farm, resting on an 11hct plot in Bishoftu town, the
third enterprise that PPESA decided to privatise, only captured the
interest of Mekia Enterprise, which offered five million birr.
Although the Agency has informed the Enterprise that it has been
selected for the sale, they have yet to sign an agreement.

Mekia Mamiyo, general manager of Mekia Enterprise, told Fortune that
they have not decided to take the Agency up on the offer that it has
made.

Mekia explained that the Enterprise wished to purchase the pig farm
to augment the bid that they had put in for the Dairy Enterprise,
another state owned institution that is being privatised by the
Agency.

"We wanted the farm so that we would be able to raise cattle for milk
supply for the Dairy Enterprise," said Mekia. "Until we know the
decision of PPESA regarding our other bid, we are not going to
respond to their offer."

Mekia Enterprise, along with five other contenders, bid in the tender
that was floated by PPESA to sell the Dairy Enterprise two months
ago. Known for its brand milk Shola, the Enterprise attracted high
bids from the interested candidates.

Although Mekia Enterprise made the highest offer of 47.7 million Br,
the Agency’s Tender Committee chose Kangaroo Plast, which offered
46.5 million Br.

When the Committee’s decision was passed on to the Board of the
Agency for approval it asked that another suggestion be made so it
could re-evaluate.

The sale of this enterprise is yet to find a solution.

Mekia Enterpirse, established by Mekia and members of her family, now
has 300 million Br capital, and has been involved in agriculture,
floriculture and livestock rearing for the past 27 years.

Chinese premier telephones Armenian president to express condolences

People’s Daily Online, China
March 26 2007

Chinese premier telephones Armenian president to express condolences
over PM’s death

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Monday telephoned the Armenian
President Robert Kocharyan to express his heartfelt condolences over
the death of Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margarian.

Also on behalf of the Chinese government, Premier Wen conveyed
sincere condolences over the death of the prime minister, to the
Armenian government and the Armenian people as well as members of
Margarian’s family.

Margarian died of a heart attack on Sunday. He had been hospitalized
several times in recent years.

Source: Xinhua

PACE Rapporteur Welcomes The Reconstruction Of The Armenian Church I

PACE RAPPORTEUR WELCOMES THE RECONSTRUCTION OF THE ARMENIAN CHURCH IN TURKEY

ArmRadio.am
22.03.2007 12:12

PACE General Rapporteur for the Cultural Legacy of the South Caucasus
Edward O’Hara welcomed the reopening of the Armenian Church of the Holy
Cross (Akhtamar Island) scheduled March 29, Mediamax agency reports.

"Participation of the Turkish Government, the Armenian Church, experts
of Turkish and international universities is an exceptional evidence
of cooperation directed at preservation of the cultural legacy of
the region," PACE Rapporteur said.

Edward O’Hara noted that "the reconstruction of the Armenian Church
on Akhtamar Island shows what we are aspiring to attain in the whole
region. The PACE Rapporteur expressed hope that Armenian authorities
will have the opportunity to participate in the opening of the Church.

Where History Isn’t Bunk

WHERE HISTORY ISN’T BUNK

The Economist Newspaper
Financial Express, India
March 21 2007

Across the world, approaches to teaching children about their nation’s
past are hotly contested-especially at times of wider debate on
national identity

If the past is a foreign country, the version that used to be taught
in Irish schools had a simple landscape. For 750 years after the first
invasion by an English king, Ireland suffered oppression. Then at
Easter 1916, her brave sons rose against the tyrant; their leaders
were shot but their cause prevailed, and Ireland (or 26 of her 32
counties) lived happily ever after.

Awkward episodes, like the conflict between rival Irish nationalist
groups in 1922-23, were airbrushed away. "The civil war was just an
embarrassment, it was hardly mentioned," says Jimmy Joyce, who went
to school in Dublin in the 1950s.

These days, Irish history lessons are more sophisticated. They deal
happily with facts that have no place in a plain tale of heroes and
tyrants: like the fact that hundreds of thousands of Irish people,
Catholic and Protestant, fought for Britain during the two world wars.

Why the change? First because in the 1980s, some people in Ireland
became uneasy about the fact that a crude view of their national
history was fuelling a conflict in the north of the island. Then
came a fall in the influence of the Catholic church, whose authority
had rested on a deft fusion between religion and patriotism. Also
at work was an even broader shift: a state that was rich, confident
and cosmopolitan saw less need to drum simple ideas into its youth,
especially if those ideas risked encouraging violence.

As countries all over the world argue over "what to tell the
children" about their collective past, many will look to Ireland
rather enviously. Its seamless transition from a nationalist view of
history to an open-minded one is an exception. A history curriculum is
often a telling sign of how a nation and its elites see themselves: as
victims of colonialism or practitioners (either repentant or defiant)
of imperial power. In the modern history of Mexico, for example, a
big landmark was the introduction, 15 years ago, of text-books that
were a bit less anti-American.

Many states still see history teaching, and the inculcation of
foundation myths, as a strategic imperative; others see it as
an exercise in teaching children to think for themselves. And the
experience of several countries suggests that, whatever educators and
politicians might want, there is a limit to how far history lessons
can diverge in their tone from society as a whole.

Take Australia. John Howard, the conservative prime minister, has
made history one of his favourite causes. At a "history summit" he
held last August, educators were urged to "re-establish a structured
narrative" about the nation’s past. This was seen by liberal critics
as a doomed bid to revive a romantic vision of white settlement in
the 18th century. The romantic story has been fading since the 1980s,
when a liberal, revisionist view came to dominate curricula: one that
replaced "settlement" with "invasion" and that looked for the first
time at the stories of aborigines and women.

How much difference have Australia’s policy battles made to what
children in that cosmopolitan land are taught? Under Mr Howard’s
11-year government, "multicultural" and "aboriginal reconciliation",
two terms that once had currency, have faded from the policy lexicon.

But not from classrooms. Australia’s curricula are controlled by the
states, not from Canberra. Most states have rolled Australian history
into social-studies courses, often rather muddled. But in New South
Wales, the most populous state, where the subject is taught in its
own right, Mr Howard’s bid to promote a patriotic view of history
meets strong resistance.

Judy King, head of Riverside Girls High School in Sydney, has students
from more than 40 ethnic groups at her school. "It’s simply not
possible to present one story to them, and nor do we," she says.

"We canvass all the terms for white settlement: colonialism, invasion
and genocide. Are all views valid? Yes. What’s the problem with that?

If the prime minister wants a single narrative instead, then speaking
as someone who’s taught history for 42 years he’ll have an absolute
fight on his hands."

Tom Ying, head of history at Burwood Girls High School in Sydney,
grew up as a Chinese child in the white Australia of the 1950s. In
a school where most students are from non-English-speaking homes,
he welcomes an approach that includes the dark side of European
settlement. "When you have only one side of the story, immigrants,
women and aborigines aren’t going to have an investment in it."

Australia is a country where a relatively gentle (by world standards)
effort to reimpose a sort of national ideology looks destined to
fail. Russia, by contrast, is a country where the general principle
of a toughly enforced ideology, and a national foundation story,
still seems natural to many people, including the country’s elite.

In a telling sign of how he wants Russians to imagine their past,
President Vladimir Putin has introduced a new national day-November
4th-to replace the old communist Revolution Day holiday on November
7th. What the new date recalls is the moment in 1612 when Russia,
after a period of chaos, drove the Catholic Poles and Lithuanians
out of Moscow. Despite the bonhomie of this week’s 25-minute chat
between Mr Putin and Pope Benedict XVI, the president is promoting
a national day which signals "isolation and defensiveness" towards
western Christendom, says Andrei Zorin, a Russian historian.

Because trends and ideas take time to trickle down from the elite to
the classroom, Russian schools are still quite liberal places. In a
hangover from the free-ranging tone of Boris Yeltsin’s presidency,
teachers can portray the past pretty much in whatever way they
choose. But they are bracing for a change. As one liberal history
teacher frets: "I can imagine that in a year’s time we will be obliged
to explain the meaning of the new holiday to first-year pupils." And
part of the meaning is that chaos-be it in the Yeltsin era or prior
to 1612-is a greater evil than toughly enforced order.

In South Africa, where white rule collapsed at the same time as
communism did, the authorities seem to have done a better job at
forging a new national story and avoiding the trap of replacing one
rigid ideology with another. "The main message of the new school
curriculum is inclusion and reconciliation," says Linda Chisholm,
who helped design post-apartheid lessons. "We teach pupils to
handle primary sources, like oral history and documents, instead of
spoon-feeding them on textbooks," adds Aled Jones, a history teacher
at Bridge House school in Cape Province. It helps that symbols and
anniversaries have been redefined with skill. December 16th was
a day to remember white settlers clashing with the Zulus in 1838;
now it is the Day of Reconciliation.

By those standards, parts of the northern hemisphere are far behind.

A hard argument over history is under way in places like south-eastern
Europe: this battle pits old elites that see teaching history as a
strategic issue against newer ones that hope for an opening of minds.

In modern Turkey, classrooms have always been seen as a battleground
for young hearts. Every day, children start the day by chanting:
"I am a Turk, I am honest, I am industrious"-and woe betide the tiny
tot who stumbles because Turkish is not his main tongue. Secondary
schools get regular visits from army officers who try to instil
"national-security awareness".

In such a climate, it is inevitable that "history is considered
a sensitive matter, to be managed by the state," says Taner
Akcam, a Turkish-born historian, whose frank views on the fate of
Ottoman Armenians in 1915 have exposed him to harassment by Turkish
nationalists, even in America where he now lives. But text-books have
changed recently, under pressure from the European Union: the latest
still call the British "sly and treacherous" but are a little kinder
to the Greeks. Neyyir Berktay, an educationalist, calls the new books
"significantly better" than what went before; but they are still
far from accepting the idea of more than one culture within Turkey’s
borders. In neighbouring Greece, there is a bitter controversy over
a new textbook for 12-year-olds. Its approach is a challenge to some
historical vignettes that are dear to modern Greek hearts: for example
the idea of "secret schools" where priests taught youngsters to read
and write in defiance of their Ottoman masters.

While Ireland’s religious nationalism is in retreat (because the
Catholic Church has lost influence), Greece’s Orthodox leaders, like
Archbishop Christodoulos of Athens, are putting up a harder fight to
preserve the nationalist spirit which their predecessors embraced,
reluctantly at first, in the 19th century. Ranged against them is a new
school of Balkan history that reflects a cross-border dialogue between
scholars. The net result is a fairer story-though when books try to
be fair there’s always a risk of being bland, says Thalia Dragona,
a Greek educational psychologist.

Meanwhile some Greeks retort that 11 or 12 is too young to go
looking for facts. In a web-discussion of the new Greek textbook, one
participant thunders: "At university, the goal of historical research
is the discovery of truth. But in primary schools history teaching
has an entirely different aim-to form historical consciousness and
social identity!"