Georgian court authorizes two-month arrest of suspected spies

Interfax, Russia
Jan 29 2009

Georgian court authorizes two-month arrest of suspected spies

TBILISI Jan 29

The Tbilisi City Court has authorized a two-month custody pending
trial for Grigory Minasian and Sergei Akopjanian, residents of the
Akhaltsikhe town seized on January 22 on charges of espionage.

The Georgian Interior Ministry’s constitutional security department is
investigating the case, the media said.

The men are also suspected of an attempt to organize an illegal armed
unit in the Samtskhe-Javakheti area.

Minasian is the head of the Armenian youth center in Akhaltsikhe,
while Akopjanian leads the Charles Aznavour Charity Organization.

Parents of the acclaimed French singer were born in Akhaltsikhe.

PACE Session Is Drawing To An End

PACE SESSION IS DRAWING TO AN END
Karine Asatryan

A1+
[02:06 pm] 30 January, 2009

No one has ever counted the "paper" thrown into wastepaper baskets
during the sessions of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe. The wastebaskets usually fill with "minutes, announcements,
reports and other documents" at the end of each session.

PACE winter session will be over at 1:00 (local time). Although the
session is still continuing, there is no one in the building. Most
delegates and journalists have already departed.

Today the Assembly considers the issues of E-democracy.

ANKARA: Erdogan Says Davos Provides Fruitful Talks On Financial Cris

ERDOGAN SAYS DAVOS PROVIDES FRUITFUL TALKS ON FINANCIAL CRISIS

Jan 30 2009

Turkish PM said he had very fruitful talks during the WEF meetings
in Davos.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he had very fruitful
talks during the World Economic Forum meetings in Davos where many
statesmen, businesspeople and representatives of international finance
organizations gathered.

At his return to Istanbul from Davos, Erdogan told reporters that
Davos meetings discussed global finance crisis erupted in the second
half of 2008 and ways to revive the global economy.

"I had chance to explain Turkey’s vision and priorities in these
meetings," Erdogan said.

"We also told our views on Central Asia and the Caucasus, as well as
the Gaza issue and future of the Middle East," he said.

Erdogan held talks with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin,
Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev, Azerbaijan’s President
Ilham Aliyev, Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha, Dutch Prime
Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, Colombia’s President Alvaro Uribe
Velez, former British Prime Minister and Special Envoy of the Quartet
for the Middle East Tony Blair, former U.S. Vice President Al Gore,
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Armenian President Serzh Sargsian
and Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian.

Erdogan said he also had a meeting with John Lipsky, First Deputy
Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund.

Erdogan said he called on international investors to invest in Turkey
at his talks with business circles.

"They see Turkey as a safe harbor, which is really good for us. I
heard from many of them that they were planning to invest in Turkey
this year," Erdogan stated.

www.worldbulletin.net

Possibility Of Third Airport Needs To Be Considered In Armenia, Prem

POSSIBILITY OF THIRD AIRPORT NEEDS TO BE CONSIDERED IN ARMENIA, PREMIER STATES

ARKA
Jan 30, 2009

YEREVAN, January 30. /ARKA/. RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan ordered
the consideration of possibilities of constructing a third airport
in Armenia.

"We need a new airport whose geographical location will not pose
any problems for pilots. It is also of importance for our country’s
security," the Premier said at the Government’s sitting that listened
to the ministries’ reports for 2008.

The Premier expressed his concern over the fact that Shirak airport
in Gyumri, Armenia, cannot receive planes from Europe because they
refuse to land there if the weather is bad in Yerevan. They prefer
landing in Georgia or in Turkey.

"We have to know what we need to have a third airport, which, on the
one hand, will meet the best international standards, with weather
changes considered on the other hand," Sargsyan said.

Chief of the Head Department of Civil Aviation Artyem Movsisyan
pointed out that the research of the climatic conditions will take
at least five years.

"The reason for the location of the airport is natural and artificial
obstacles, particularly the length of mountain range, wind direction
and visibility," Movsisyan said.

As regards the Shirak airport, he said that the representatives of
European airlines were twice invited and informed of the airport’s
potential during the certification process.

However, airlines did not wish to direct their planes to the Shirak
airport, considering it a high-level one, and the resultant obstacles
made them somewhat cautious, Movsisyan said.

He stressed that , as a signatory to an air agreement with the
countries in question, Armenia has no right to force their airlines
to land their planes at the Gyumri airport.

"The Shirak airport is capable of serving A-320-type planes,"
Movsisyan said.

The high-level airport Shirak in Gyumri is allocated 1,524 meters
above sea level. It has been operating since 1961.

BAKU: ‘We Can Never Leave Azerbaijan Alone In The Nagorno-Karabakh I

‘WE CAN NEVER LEAVE AZERBAIJAN ALONE IN THE NAGORNO-KARABAKH ISSUE:’ TURKISH PM

Trend News Agency
Jan 29 2009
Azerbaijan

"We can never leave Azerbaijan alone in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue,"
Turkish Prime Minister Receb Tayyib Erdogan told journalists in
Davos at the World Economic Forum, the Turkish MynetHaber News Agency
reported.

Erdogan said he will meet Armenian President Serzh Sarkisyan on
Jan. 29. He stressed the importance of his earlier meeting with
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Erdogan said his meeting with Aliyev defined the framework for the
meeting with Sarkisyan.

"We always do this and will continue to do so in future," he said.

"It is important for Armenia to understand several issues,"
Erdogan said. He noted that Turkey’s meetings with Armenia are
not only connected with Turkish-Armenian relations, but also the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

"If Armenia is sincere, then today’s meeting with Sarkisyan can be
a turning point in our relations," he said.

WB To Lend $525 Million In Four Years

WB TO LEND $525 MILLION IN FOUR YEARS

ARKA
Jan 28, 2009

YEREVAN, January 28. /ARKA/. World Bank intends to lend $525 million
to Armenia within four years for implementation of new programs and
for technical assistance and consulting services, Shigeo Katsu, WB
vice president on Europe and Central Asia, said in Yerevan on Tuesday.

He said that this credit is 2.5 times larger than that extended in
the previous four-year period.

Katsu told journalists that, taking into account ongoing reformation,
the quality of the government’s stable development program and the
challenges the country faces because of the global crisis, the World
Bank has decided to enlarge the amount.

WB press office says that Armenian has received $220 million from
the bank over the period between 2004 and 2008.

Katsu said that this amount may be enlarged thanks to the money given
by international organizations included in WB group, particularly
International Finance Corporation and Multinational Investment
Guarantee Agency.

He said that the amount may reach $800 million in four years. The
enlargement will depend on investment programs.

The vice president said that the World Bank is now negotiating over
five programs aimed at solving problems in rural areas and ensuring
incomes for rural residents, particularly in summer.

The credit will be targeted on construction of rural roads and
infrastructures.

The money will also be given for implementing a20program supporting
small and mid-scale businesses. Armenia will implement this program in
cooperation with International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

Katsu said that the money will also be spent for studies in geothermal
energy area.

According to the press office of the World Bank, three IDA programs
will be submitted to the WB Directorial Board by late February.

The programs target rural roads ($25 million). Besides, they include
extra financing for the third program of Social Investment Fund ($8
million) and additional financing of the program for developing rural
companies ($2 million).

The program supporting small and mid-scale businesses ($50 million)
and the geothermal program ($1.5 million) are included in the four-year
program as well.

The World Bank has extended credits totaling $1.1 billion under 50
programs since it began cooperate with Armenia in 1992.

ANKARA: Armenian Issue: Moving Forward

ARMENIAN ISSUE: MOVING FORWARD

Journal of Turkish Weekly
enian-issue-moving-forward.html
Jan 28 2009
Turkey

During the Senate confirmation hearings of the newly confirmed
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Senator Robert Menendez
(D. N.J.) lobbied the Obama administration to characterize the
tragic events of World War I as a "universally recognized" Armenian
"genocide". That official verdict was said necessary to "move
forward." The Secretary of State demurred on the characterization
question, but concurred with the idea of moving beyond the contentious
status quo.

Moving forward, however, requires recognition of facts, not fiction:
that the Armenian "genocide" is disputed by reputable scholars and
historians; that politicians are ill-equipped to deliver "genocide"
verdicts on matters light years beyond their ken; that Ottoman Muslims
also suffered horribly during WWI at the hands of Armenians fighting as
armed belligerents; and, that voicing sympathy for Armenian suffering
while ignoring the suffering of those whom Armenians slaughtered and
terrorized would reflect the Christian bigotry of yesteryear.

The Armenian "genocide" is hotly disputed within the universe
of genuine Middle East scholars versed in the Ottoman Empire, the
circumstances of World War I, and otherwise. An inexhaustive list of
doubters would include: famed Middle East expert Bernard Lewis of
Princeton University, the late Stanford Shaw of U.C.L.A., Guenter
Lewy of the University of Massachusetts, Justin McCarthy of the
University of Louisville, Norman Itzkowitz of Princeton University,
Brian G. Williams of the University of Massachusetts, David Fromkin
of Boston University, Avigdor Levy of Brandeis University, Michael
M. Gunter of Tennessee Tech, Pierre Oberling of Hunter College, the
late Roderic Davison of George Washington University, Michael Radu
of Foreign Policy Research Institute, and military historian Edward
J. Erickson. Outside of the United States even more scholars have
endorsed a contra-genocide analysis of the history of the Ottoman
Armenians, among them Gilles Veinstein of the College de France,
Stefano Trinchese of the University of Chieti, Augusto Sinagra of the
University of Romae-Sapienza, Norman Stone of Bilkent University, and
the historian Andrew Mango of the University of London. In addition
to these and other scholars, the United Nations, Great Britain,
and Sweden have refused to endorse the "genocide" label.

Politicians, including Members of Congress or the President, are
ill-suited to decide the issue pivoting on century-old happenings that
sharply divide experts. They have neither the time nor inclination
to undertake intellectual labors commensurate with the importance of
a "genocide" charge. And they do not sit like members of a jury to
listen to both sides present their respective cases. Senator Menendez
exemplifies why politicians should shy from deciding ancient historical
controversies. He rendered judgment without examining all the credible
evidence and analyses.

Moving forward on the "genocide" question requires placing the decision
with an international commission of impartial experts with access to
all relevant archives. The most important archives that remain closed
belong to Armenian organizations. Turkey’s Prime Minister has agreed to
the international commission solution to the Armenian "genocide" issue.

Moving forward further requires reciprocal apologies by both Turks and
Armenians for the mutual devastation wrought upon each other. What is
customarily ignored are World War I’s harrowing Ottoman Muslim deaths
effectuated by numerous bloody Armenian revolts; raids and slaughters
by Armenian extremist revolutionaries; treasonous defections in the
hundreds of thousands to fight for invading Russian and French armies;
and, austere wartime conditions that occasioned starvation, disease,
epidemics, and deaths from acute shortages of medical personnel and
medicine. According to research reports, nearly 524,000 Ottoman Muslims
perished from the actions of Armenian revolutionaries during the war.

Armenians have never acknowledged any culpability for their side’s
atrocities of World War I. Instead, they apotheosize to this day
those Armenians who murdered scores of Turkish diplomats in the 1970’s
and 1980’s.

William Shakespeare’s "The Merchant of Venice" descried the bigoted
hierarchy of human suffering that would be reflected by expressing
moral outrage over historical Armenian suffering or killings
while remaining silent over the counterpart suffering and deaths of
Ottoman Muslims or Turks. To paraphrase from an immortalized passage:
"Hath not a Turk eyes? Hath not a Turk hands, organs, dimensions,
senses, affections, passions? fed with the same food, hurt with the
same weapons, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same
winter and summer, as a Christian is? If you prick a Turk, does he not
bleed? If you tickle a Turk, does he not laugh? If you poison a Turk,
does he not die?"

In sum, to honor her pledge to move forward on the Armenian
"genocide" question, Secretary Clinton should promote the ideas of
an international commission of experts and reciprocal apologies. It
is also the best formula for Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.

http://www.turkishweekly.net/op-ed/2471/arm

Center of accounting services for SMEs opened in Yerevan

Center of accounting services for small and medium entrepreneurship
opened in Yerevan

2009-01-24 14:44:00

ArmInfo. A Center for Accounting Services for small and medium
entrepreneurship was opened in Yerevan, Saturday. Armenian Prime
Minister Tigran Sargsyan, Economy Minister Nerses
Yeritsyan, Finance Minister Tigran Davtyan, Head of State Revenues
Committee Gagik Khachatryan and other officials attended the
ribbon-cutting ceremony.

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan said that the state attaches
much importance to SME sphere and facilitation of the latter’s
relations with the state, including the taxation field. "Therefore the
government decided to provide an area for this Center where SME will
receive qualified, available, and, which is the most important,
consistent accounting services for unobstructed business conduct",- the
prime minister said.

Economy Minister Nerses Yeritsyan said the creation of the Center is
one of the strategic goals of the state – integration of high
technologies in every day public life, including the sphere of
business-state relations. One of the main obstacles in this way is the
insufficient confidence in the state. "Many businessmen think that the
state imposes deception and waste of money on them under the pretence
of services. However, businessmen should realize that the state is
interested in honest and partner relations with them. Only by trusting
each other we’ll manage to carry out our tasks",- Yeritsyan said.

To note, the premises for the Center for Accounting Services were
provided by the state in accordance with a governmental decision. The
Center is located at 49/3, Komitas Avenue. At the moment, a total of 11
accounting organizations selected as a result of a contest are
operating in the Center.

President Received Director Of Brandy Company

PRESIDENT RECEIVED DIRECTOR OF BRANDY COMPANY

Panorama.am
19:30 22/01/2009

Today the President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan received the executive
director of "Pernod Ricard Eastern Europe" company Erik Labord,
the new appointed general director of Yerevan Brandy Company Ara
Grigoryan and the former director Sedrik Retaio, reports the press
service of the President’s Administration.

The President thanked the former director of the company for his
mission in Armenia. During the meeting the new programs and the
perspective of development of the company have been discussed.

BAKU: Head Of Helsinki Association Of Armenia: Armenia Has No Indepe

HEAD OF HELSINKI ASSOCIATION OF ARMENIA: ARMENIA HAS NO INDEPENDENT MASS MEDIA

Trend
Jan 23 2009
Azerbaijan

Armenia has no independent mass media, the local mass media are
divided into the pro-power and oppositional ones, Head of the Helsinki
Association of Armenia Mikael Danielyan told ArmInfo.

He said some electron mass media are trying to demonstrate certain
impartiality from time to

time. One event is covered objectively, while another one –
non-objectively and one-sidedly. ‘Discontent of the Armenian president
administration with one or another mass media is not an indicator of
objectivity for me either. Independence of mass media is important
for me, however, it is absent in Armenia’, – M. Danielyan said.