Speaker Of Armenian Parliament Lays A Number Of Claims To German Amb

SPEAKER OF ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT LAYS A NUMBER OF CLAIMS TO GERMAN AMBASSADOR REGARDING THE PROTOCOL OF FORTHCOMING VISIT OF BUNDESTAG’S DELEGATION TO YEREVAN

arminfo
2007-08-29 17:48:00

The Speaker of the Armenian National Assembly, Tigran Torosyan, met
the newly appointed German Ambassador to Armenia, Andrea Joana-Maria
Wiktorin, Wednesday.

The Armenian parliamentary press-service told ArmInfo that the Speaker
congratulated the A.Wiktorin on the appointment to Ambassador’s
position and expressed hope that her activity in Armenia will
contribute to promotion of bilateral relations and consolidation of
inter-parliamentary cooperation.

T.Torosyan noted that these relations have been successfully
developing, though there are some problems to be solved.

For her part, the German Ambassador pointed out that the development
of inter-parliamentary relations will become one of the priority
tasks of her diplomatic activity. In this aspect, she stressed the
significance of the forthcoming visit of Bundestag’s delegation to
Yerevan. T.Torosyan expressed his content with German parliamentarians’
striving to deepen cooperation with their Armenian colleagues,
but at the same time he expressed bewilderment over some issues
of protocolar character. Particularly, the Armenian Speaker was
bewildered with the fact that initially Azeri mass media were informed
of the visit. T.Torosyan pointed out that Bundestag has excellent
organizational traditions, and he was surprised at the fact that
the date of the visit, its format and program of meetings were not
preliminarily agreed through administrative channels. The Ambassador of
Germany agreed that the order of holding meetings should be followed,
she expressed pity for what had happened and promised to find out
the reason.

The meeting also covered the issue of operation of German foundations
in Armenia, and in this connection T.Torosyan noted that the "Ebert"
and "Nauman" foundations are working exclusively with opposition
parties, while they should work with the parties whose activity has
similar ideology. He pointed out the significance of German experience
in establishing of multi-party system in Armenia, and said that the
one- sided activity of the foundations is incomprehensible. He also
noted that this issue was discussed with the pervious Ambassador
of Germany to Armenia, who explained it by the fact that the German
Government has no direct relations with German foundations and can’t
influence their activity. At the same time, taking into account
Germany’s great role in Europe and the good of studying the rich
German experience for Armenia, T.Torosyan pointed out the importance
of German foundations’ even work with Armenian parties.

Mia Farrow’s Exclusive Dispatch: I Am A Witness To Darfur’s Sufferin

MIA FARROW’S EXCLUSIVE DISPATCH: I AM A WITNESS TO DARFUR’S SUFFERING

The Independent/UK
Published: 27 August 2007

My first visit to Darfur was in 2004. It changed the way I needed
to live my life. I have just returned from my seventh trip to the
region. I don’t think I have the words to adequately represent what
I have seen and heard there.

Incomprehensibly, it has now been more than four years since the
killing began. Some experts believe half a million human beings have
died thus far.

Others bicker about the exact death toll – as if it makes a shred of
difference to how we must respond.

Only the perpetrators dispute that hundreds of thousands of innocent
men women and children have been killed, in ways that cannot be
imagined or described. It is all the more appalling that we cannot know
– that no one is yet able to count the dead. And the dying continues.

We can, however, know with certainty that more than four million
people are dependent on food aid because their homes, villages, and the
fields that sustained them, are ashes now. We also know that two and
a half million human beings are struggling to exist amid deplorable
conditions in squalid camps across Darfur and eastern Chad. I am a
witness to their suffering.

The stories of those who survived the attacks are numbingly
similar. Without warning, Antonov bombers and attack helicopters
filled the morning skies and rained bombs upon homes and families
as they slept, as they played, as they prayed, as they tended their
fields. Those who could run tried to gather their children and fled
in all directions.

Then the Janjaweed – government-backed Arab militia – attacked on
horseback and on camels (and more recently in vehicles). They came
shouting racial epithets and shooting. They shot the children as they
ran, they shot the elderly.

I spoke to mothers whose babies were shot from their backs, or torn
from their arms and bayoneted before their eyes, whose children were
tossed into bonfires. I met men whose eyes were gouged out with
knives. Strong women in frail voices described their gang rapes;
some were abducted and assaulted continuously over many weeks.

"No one came to help me," they said, as they showed me the brandings
carved into their bodies, and tendons sliced and how they hobble now.

"Tell people what is happening here" implored one victim, Halima. Three
of her five children had been killed. "Tell them we will all die. Tell
them we need help." I promised her I would do my best to tell the
world what is happening there. In the years since 2004, over and
over and over, in camp after camp, and deep in my heart I have made
this promise.

In October, I will return to the region. People will tell me their
stories and again will ask for protection. I will listen, I will
take more photographs, and I will keep trying to tell the world what
is happening out there. The people of Darfur continue to plead for
protection, and still no one has come. What does this say about us?

Last week, on the Chad-Darfur border, in a region where genocide is
occurring now, we lit a symbolic Olympic flame. The flame honours
all those who have been lost, and those who suffer; it celebrates
the courage of those who have survived, and is a symbol of hope for
an end to genocide everywhere.

We lit the flame again in Rwanda where the agony of survivors is
palpable – and without end. We gathered strength from their strength.

In Kigali, survivors expressed their wish to join their spirits with
ours as we take the flame to other communities of survivors: Cambodia,
Armenia, Germany, Bosnia.

Today, I look at Rwanda and see the abysmal failure of the United
Nations and of all the nations of the world. Collectively and
individually, we failed in our most essential responsibility to
protect the innocent from slaughter and suffering.

We look to world leaders and our own governments and see that they
are mired in self-serving interests. What are we to do about this? I
tell my children that "with knowledge comes responsibility." Yet our
leaders do not reflect this at all.

Most of us do not want innocent people to be slaughtered. Most of us
wish others well and hope for a world in which all people everywhere
can be safe.

Yet, in the face of power and politics, we tend to feel overwhelmed,
so we step aside and attend to our own business. The future of the
world, if there is to be a future, surely lies in humility and in
human responsibility. Let us draw strength and courage from the
survivors of genocide and conviction from the voices of the dead.

After the Nazi Holocaust, the world vowed "never again". How obscenely
disingenuous those fine words sound today. As we look at Darfur and
eastern Chad – a region that has been described as "Rwanda in slow
motion" – are we to conclude that "never again" applies only to
white people?

I hope that caring people of the world will band together and with
one voice demand an end to the terrible crime of genocide.

For more information, go to

> > From Hollywood to human rights

Born to Catholic parents in 1945, Mia Farrow followed her film director
father and actress mother into the industry, appearing in a number of
critically acclaimed movies. Over the course of her career she has
won numerous awards including seven Golden Globes. Her very public
marriages and divorces to Frank Sinatra and later Woody Allen, in
whose films she regularly appeared during the 1980s, meant the Farrow
family were rarely out of the media spotlight.

One of Hollywood’s most prolific campaigners, she has been involved
in activism since the 1970s when she became an advocate of adoption
rights after adopting three children from south-east Asia with
her second husband André Previn. She has since gone on to adopt
11 children. A childhood survivor of the post-war polio epidemics,
she has also campaigned for the eradication of the disease which has
paralysed one of her adopted children.

After becoming a goodwill ambassador for Unicef, she has turned her
attention towards Africa and in particular, raising awareness of the
genocide in Darfur.

–Boundary_(ID_OgduhTZkrjqyhzVkpyjcEw)–

www.miafarrow.org

Without the Third Version

Hayots Ashkharh, Armenia
Aug 25 2007

WITHOUT THE THIRD VERSION

Either Legal Successor Or Instability

The discussions and debates regarding the leading candidate for
presidency during the forthcoming 2008 presidential elections become
hotter. But the word `debate’ is far not suitable for our reality.
Here the truth is born due to not debates but scuffles. Though as a
result of scuffles not the truth but invalids are usually born.
Anyway some people become nervous when the thing comes about the
legal successor of the president. According to `ardent pro-democrats’
it is only the king that can have a successor and in the countries
governed by a president it is the people that elect the new leader of
the country.
If we go through the international experience we will see that the
issue of successorship is not that primitive. For example in 1990
Margaret Thatcher successively appointed a not very famous Deputy
Minister John Major on different high positions, later she helped him
to become a Prime-Minister.
We can bring fresher examples. After Blair’s resignation his
successor Gordon Brown became the Prime Minister of Great Britain.
Jacque Shirak’s successor Nicola Sarkozy became President of France.
Does this mean Great Britain and France are non-democratic
countries?
Let alone the fact that there is another serious argumentation for
Armenia to support successorship. In our reality this version
doesn’t’ have any other alternative – either successorship or
instability, with all the dangers coming from it, both in internal
and external political spheres. The leaders, in the present-day West,
are though important, but anyway only screws in the huge state
machine. And in Armenia the President is the bearer of the political
system, which lays clear responsibilities on his shoulders, even if
they are not envisaged by the constitution.
Lets consider the president takes a neutral role in the elections
of the future president of the country. What will happen in that
case? Victory of democracy? Quite impossible! Most probably the state
will face an uncountable fight for power – dangerous for the country.
The radicals say if the government officials’ insist on
successorship the only thing left to do is revolution. What
revolution? What is revolution in general? Lets try to understand.
The famous formulation `scientific revolution’ given by science
methodologist Tomas Kun gives us a great opportunity to understand
the essence of revolution. The refusal of one paradigm by the
scientific society and the adoption of another more or less
acceptable one is what they call revolution.
Very often, by mistake, they link revolution to the violence
against the acting government. But it is far not like that.
French great revolution has its exact astronomical moment of
implementation. It is far not the Bastille occupation that is
mentioned as the memorable day, and not the beheading of the king.
The great revolution took place at the moment when on June 17, 1789
the General Staffs refused to work `according to layers’ and declared
themselves a National Assembly and on June 20, entering the first
private hall (ball-game) they swore to keep their working style,
until a Constitution is elaborated for France.
The 1917 February revolution (that was the real revolution,
because what happened in October was a coup d’état) took place when
Nicolay the 2nd heard the clear attitude of the fighting army about
the necessity of his resignation, he agreed.
The revolutionaries believe they give an end to the absolute
power. But it is only an anarchistic dream. Revolution gives an end
to that concrete absolute power. And after some period of time
another necessity for revolution appears.
Thus, Armenian stormy petrels must put up with the idea that
during the 2008 presidential elections on February, the power will be
shifted to the successor of the acting president and better if they
forget about their adventurism.
Walks – instead of marches, medicine – instead of things, ward –
instead of flats, wisdom – instead of brains, and an extremely
healthy lifestyle that will replace the basic life.

GAGIK MKRTCHYAN

Oskanyan’s trip schedule finalized

Panorama.am

19:27 24/08/2007

Oskanyan’s trip schedule finalized

On August 26-27 Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan will depart for the
Slovenian city of Bled, to take part in the monthly forum `European
Union 2020 Integration.’ Planning to attend are Georgian president
Mikhael Sahakashvili, Khovatian prime minister Ivo Sanateri, Latvian
prime minister Gediminas, Macedonian prime minister Nikola Grunski,
Marti Ahtisasari, who represents the United Nation in Kosovo
negotations, as well as foreign ministers from several other
countries, representatives from various organizations, and
politicians. They will discuss issues facing Europe, including
integration into the European community.

Under the title `Concerning the southern Caucasus and Central Asia:
European Union role,’ a presentation by Vardan Oskanyan is
scheduled. The Georgian prime minister will also take part in this
segment of the forum, as will Azeri Foreign Minister Vagif Sadikov,
Gevorgi Baramitsen, minister of `European Integration,’ and Peter
Semnepi, special representative of the European Union in the South
Caucasus.

Also, on September 2-3, Oskanyan will take part in the European
Commission meeting, in which he will meet with prime ministers of
member countries, as invited by Pedia Ferero-Valdnier, who oversees
issues facing the countries. The participation of 16 foreign ministers
is foreseen. Free trade and energy issues will be discussed, as well
as the issue of climate change.

Source: Panorama.am

President Of The American University Of Armenia Rewarded With The Me

PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY OF ARMENIA REWARDED WITH THE MEDAL OF ST. SAHAK AND ST. MESROP
By Marieta Makarian

AZG Armenian Daily
22/08/2007

On August 18, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of all Armenians
Garegin II awarded the President of the American University of Armenia,
Dr. Harutyun Armenian for the productive scientific-pedagogical and
public activities with the medal of St. Sahak and St. Mesrop.

The Supreme Patriarch highly appreciated Harutyun Armenian’s decades
of services in the sphere of health care.

"This medal is a great honor to me, but I share this award with all
of them, whose care and attention have seen and continue to see many
people in different geographical parts and at all times".

"Results Of Presidential Elections Of Turkey Will Have No Influence

"RESULTS OF PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS OF TURKEY WILL HAVE NO INFLUENCE ON ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS," AMERICAN-ARMENIAN ANALYST BELIEVES

Noyan Tapan
Aug 21, 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 21, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Today Turkey is
not what it was 10 years ago, where military revolutions always took
place or the people were trying to follow the boundary the state
indicated. Today there is a civil society in Turkey. This conviction
was made by Aspet Kuchikian, a political scientist and a professor
in the university of Florida, at the press conference held on August
21. According to him, there are such forces and movements in Turkey,
which can be used in the interests of Armenia.

According to American-Armenian analyst Richard Kirakosian, the other
participant of the press conference, Turkey has an alternative
in the face of the West and the East. He is of the opinion that
it will be safer for Armenia if Turkey becomes a member of the
European Union. However, according to Richard Kirakosian, the recent
observations showed that Turkey is looking at the East.

In the opinion of Richard Kirakosian, the results of the presidential
elections being held in Turkey (irrespective of the fact who will
be elected) will have no influence on Armenian-Turkish relations,
as Turkey still has internal problems to solve.

Azeri Clerics Praise Iranian President’s Visit To Baku

AZERI CLERICS PRAISE IRANIAN PRESIDENT’S VISIT TO BAKU

Vision of the Islamic Republic of Iran Sahar TV
21 Aug 07
Tehran

The TV quoted the deputy chairman of the pro-Iranian Islamic Party of
Azerbaijan (IPA), Haci Vaqif Abdullayev, as saying that Iran was one of
the first countries to have recognized Azerbaijan’s independence and
has always recognized Armenia as an aggressor while no other country,
even the USA, has ever recognized Armenia as an aggressor. Iran has
always insisted at all Islamic conferences and other international
meetings that Armenia pull out of Azerbaijan’s occupied lands,
Abdullayev was quoted as saying. Abdullayev added that the two
countries’ leaders are "sincere and friendly" and that the visit will
boost "sincerity and friendliness" in relations, the TV said.

The TV also quoted a spokesman for the IPA, Haci Qurban Cabrayil, as
saying that the visit is "topical and significant". Cabrayil added
that the visit will be of "major importance" in preventing discord
between the two countries.

The TV also quoted Haci Ilqar Ibrahimoglu, chairman of the Centre
to Protect Religion and Freedom of Conscience and head of the Cuma
religious community in Azerbaijan, as saying that the visit taking
place in the current situation in the world is of "major importance"
for the region. He added that Azerbaijan decides on its own with whom
it should establish relations, the TV said.

Ibrahimoglu said that the visit will yield "important regional and
international results". The fact that the Iranian president has been
invited to Baku in current conditions shows that Azerbaijan does
not want to participate in any action against Iran, Sahar TV quoted
Ibrahimoglu as saying. The visit shows that relations between the
two countries are friendly, and it may be important in terms of the
Karabakh peace process, he added, according to Sahar TV.

The Iranian president is paying a two-day official visit to Azerbaijan
on 21-22 August at the invitation of his Azerbaijani counterpart.

Russia Builds Highly Effective Pechora Surface-To-Air Missiles

RUSSIA BUILDS HIGHLY EFFECTIVE PECHORA SURFACE-TO-AIR MISSILES

RIA Novosti
19:09 | 20/ 08/ 2007

MOSCOW. (Military commentator Nikita Petrov for RIA Novosti) – The
final stage of the Combat Fraternity 2007 military exercise will be
held at the Ashuluk firing range in the Astrakhan Region (southern
Russia) on August 22.

Defense ministers from ten CIS states will fly to the range after
the opening ceremony of the MAKS 2007 aerospace show, which opens in
Zhukovsky near Moscow on August 21. They will see the operation of the
S-125 Pechora (NATO reporting name SA-3 Goa), S-300PMU (SA-10 Grumble)
and other air defense missile systems, as well as the flights of the
Su-27 Flanker interceptors and Su-25 Frogfoot close support aircraft.

In fact, the ministers will see in action in the lower reaches of the
Volga what they saw on stands in Zhukovsky. The Joint Air Defense
System includes the absolute majority of CIS states, even Ukraine,
which is not a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO). Seeing it in action makes a strong impression on air defense
specialists and defense ministers, who are political leaders rather
than generals.

However, some systems will not take part in field firing exercises. One
of them is the Pechora-2M SAM system, which Egypt has bought after a
long period of dealing with other countries’ military exporters. About
a dozen countries outside the CIS want to buy Pechora. Among the former
Soviet republics Tajikistan has bought it, Uzbekistan is negotiating
the acquisition, and Armenia is considering a deal. What attracts them?

Vyacheslav Korotayev, deputy director general of the Defense Systems
company that produces Pechora-2M, said it is a revamped version of
the S-125 Pechora, which seven CIS countries still have, along with
missiles for it.

Although Pechora-2M is supplied together with new 5V27D and 5V27DE
missiles, which have an improved radio detonator and warhead, it can
also use the older 5V27 missiles, which is quite economic for any army.

The new Pechora is mobile and can be redeployed within 20-25 minutes,
compared with three hours needed to move the old version. This is of
crucial importance for an air defense system, because air battles
do not last long, and the system also needs to evade return enemy
fire. The sooner it moves away, the more chances it has to survive
until the next battle.

Besides, Pechora-2M has cutting-edge microprocessors, with
their service life advanced from 30-40 to 2,000 and even 10,000
hours. Moreover, the new jam-resistant system can successfully cope
with enemy ECM (Electronic-Counter-Measures) systems and missiles.

Experts recall that the United States had used Shrike anti-radar
missiles against targets in Vietnam. But things have changed since
then, and even the sophisticated HARM anti-radar missile is unable
to hit Pechora-2M aerial posts because they simply vanish off the
screen. Unlike its predecessor, which had a 26 km (16 miles) range,
the new SAM system can hit enemy aircraft 35 km (22 miles) away.

The new system’s aerial and command posts are located up to 300
meters from missile launchers. Commanders relay orders via telecode
and optronic networks, which shield telecommunications and engagement
control equipment from enemy ECM systems and enhance personnel survival
in case of air strikes.

The Pechora-2M features an optronic network comprising one TV
channel and one thermal imaging channel, allowing it to attack and
destroy aerial targets day and night in conditions of electronic
warfare. Consequently, the Pechora-2M can hit F-16 fighters at a
30-km (19-mile) range and larger aircraft at a range of up to 35 km
(22 miles).

The revamped Osa-AKM, Tor-M1 and Buk-M1-2 SAM systems have similar
optronic networks, but one Pechora-2M can cover an area assigned to
six or eight Osa or Tor systems. This is a serious advantage in terms
of the price-combat efficiency ratio.

It is for the latter reason that the CIS countries are buying
Pechora-2M, rather than S-300 or more expensive S-400 systems. Military
experts claim that it is more profitable for Russia to sell the
cheaper Pechora to its CIS and CSTO partners. Why?

To begin with, Russia does not have enough modernized S-300 and
the cutting-edge S-400 systems for its own armed forces. Second,
Pechora-2M can deal with many air targets, including some types of
ballistic and cruise missiles, no less effectively than S-300 or S-400,
and for less money.

And lastly, a fence of modernized Pechora SAM systems along the Russian
border (Belarus has a similar system) deprives the potential air
aggressor or terrorist of the surprise factor. The incoming targets
can be destroyed long before they reach the country’s industrial,
economic or cultural centers.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s and do not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

RA President Received Vice President Of Iran

RA PRESIDENT RECEIVED VICE PRESIDENT OF IRAN

arminfo
2007-08-20 12:50:00

Today, RA President Robert Kocharyan received vice President of Iran,
Chairman of the Organization of Physical Education Mohammad Aliabadi
who arrived in Yerevan for participation in the ceremony of opening
of IV Pan-Armenian Games, the presidential press-service told ArmInfo.

The parties highly appreciated the present level of the
Armenian-Iranian relations and further development of two countries
in sports. The interlocutors emphasized importance of signing a
Memorandum of understanding between RA Ministry of Sports and Youth
and the Organization of Physical Education of Iran.

RA Vice Prime Minister Met Vice President Of Iran

RA VICE PRIME MINISTER MET VICE PRESIDENT OF IRAN

arminfo
2007-08-20 10:13:00

RA vice Prime Minister Hovik Abramyan met vice President of Iran,
Chairman of the Organization on Physical Culture Mohammad Aliabadi
on August 18.

As RA governmental press-service told ArmInfo, H. Abramyan emphasized
that M. Aliabadi’s visit talks about warm and friendly relations
between the two countries and peoples. Having noted importance of
meetings of the two states’ top officials at the official level,
H. Abramyan emphasized that forthcoming visit of the Iranian president
to Armenia at the end, 2007, will become a stimulus for further
development and extension of bilateral cooperation in political,
economic and cultural spheres.

For his part, M. Aliabadi confirmed readiness of his country for
extension of cooperation with Armenia and noted that the Armenian
community plays a great role in it. He also emphasized importance
of further extension of the two countries’ cooperation in sports,
having noted the role of the Iranian delegation in IV Pan-Armenian
Games. During the meeting, the parties discussed the issues of
bilateral contacts in sports, having attached importance to the
experience exchange. Moreover, the interlocutors touched on the
prospects of further development of sports in two countries, having
informed about the state policy carried out in this direction. Other
issues of mutual interest were discussed as well.