Argentine Legislator Sergio Nahabetian Welcomed at Glendale City Hal

December 14, 2008

Armenian Rights Council of America, Western Region
1901 N. Allen Ave.
Altadena, CA 91001
Contact: Mr. Ara Aharonian
Tel: 626-296-2921
Fax: 626-296-2922
Email: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

Argentine-Armenian Legislator Sergio Nahabetian Welcomed at Glendale
City Hall

ALTADENA, CA – On Wednesday morning, November 26, 2008
Argentine-Armenian Legislator representing the Province of Buenos Aires
in Argentina’s Chamber of Deputies, the Honorable Sergio Nahabetian,
accompanied by his gracious wife Susanna and a delegation of board
members from the Armenian Democratic Liberal (ADL) Organization, Western
Region, was officially and warmly welcomed by municipal leaders at City
Hall in Glendale, California.

Upon arrival at Glendale City Hall, the delegation was greeted by
Glendale City Council members Bob Yousefian and Ara Najarian. Glendale
City Clerk Ardashes Kassakhian and Glendale Senior Assistant City
Attorney Lucy Varpetian joined the City Council members in graciously
welcoming Mr. and Mrs. Nahabetian to City Hall.

The delegation was immediately ushered to the Council Chambers where the
Glendale City Council conducts weekly meetings on Tuesday evenings.
While in the Council Chamber, Mr. Sergio Nahabetian was given the unique
honor of sitting on the Mayor’s chair, during which he and his hosts
exchanged information about the current challenges of their respective
cities, namely Buenos Aires, Argentina and Glendale, California. A
mutual presentation of gifts ensued between Sergio Nahabetian and
Glendale municipal officials, after which Mr. and Mrs. Nahabetian
invited their hosts to visit the province and city of Buenos Aires, and
meet members of its vibrant and active Armenian community.

Small And Average Business To Be Supported By State

SMALL AND AVERAGE BUSINESS TO BE SUPPORTED BY STATE

Panorama.am
18:06 11/12/2008

The Government has confirmed the program of 2009 to support Small
and Average Business, reported the information and public relations
department of the Government.

It was mentioned that the state support to SAB is adopted by the
economic policy of the country, and they contribute to the development
of economy in the farthest regions of the country.

The Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan mentioned that in 2009 current
aspect of economy will be in the center of state attention and the
development of SAB will be targeted to meet the crisis.

Appropriation Of Other’s Monuments, History And Language Is The Fate

APPROPRIATION OF OTHER’S MONUMENTS, HISTORY AND LANGUAGE IS THE FATE OF POLITICALLY UNDERDEVELOPED NATIONS
Karine Ter-Sahakyan

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.12.2008 GMT+04:00

Georgian leadership is consistent in one matter only – through Georgian
Orthodox Church (GOC) it appropriates Armenian churches and demolishes
Armenian monuments and tombs.

Hardly had the terror over Norashen calmed down, when Georgia or,
to be more exact, the Georgian Orthodox Church (GOC) resumed stirring
up the trouble. On December 11 the Christian Democratic Movement of
Georgia decided to hold a rally in front of the Armenian Embassy in
Tbilisi. According to Head of the movement Giorgi Andriadze, the rally
was staged to demand ‘return’ of Georgian churches situated in Armenia.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "A dozen of historically important Georgian
monasteries and churches are situated in the north of Armenia,
in Lore-Tashir. Unfortunately, they have been utterly robbed,
which proves that they belong to the Georgian Orthodox Church,"
declared Giorgi Andriadze. In his words, the Georgian Patriarchate
deliberately kept away from raising the issue in order to avoid
tensions and maintain the status quo. "However, the Armenian side
tries to aggravate the situation and unfairly demands the return of
churches. And since Armenians continue with their provocations, we
can do nothing but remind them about our legal rights to demand the
return of Georgian churches situated in the territory of Armenia,"
Andriadze said. He also assumed that all this story of clarifying
the church belonging is a provocation by a third side, which aims to
breed hostility between the two nations.

On the whole, appropriation of other’s monuments, history and
language is the fate of politically underdeveloped nations, which
in the course of their existence prove utterly unable to create
national values. These nations are incapable of forming their own
government; they can’t even preserve what really belongs to them. To
our great regret, Georgia is one of these nations. Still back in
90s American Political Scientist Nikolay Zlobin declared Georgia to
belong to the category of defective states that have no future. This
definition is quite right, and it can hardly undergo changes. The
history of the past 20 years proves the extreme subjection of any
president of this country. Georgian leadership is consistent in one
matter only – through Georgian Orthodox Church (GOC) it appropriates
Armenian churches and demolishes Armenian monuments and tombs. And
it would not be that unreasonable if these acts of vandalism were
not accompanied by statements of Georgia’s belonging to the European
civilization. Moreover, Georgians quite seriously speak of their
being one of the founders of the European civilization.

On the whole it is all the same to Armenia what her neighbours
call themselves. What is important for us is that these carriers
of Â"civilizationÂ" keep away from Armenian churches. But in this
matter Europe gives way to Asia. It is not any more a secret that
after George Bush Turkey and Azerbaijan serve as models for Mikhail
Saakashvili, especially in the Armenian issue. The latest example is
the case of Norashen.

According to the Head of the GOC Press Service David Sharashenidze,
the belonging of the Church of St. Norashen situated in Tbilisi will
be established based on the conclusions of Georgian and Armenian
experts. "Armenian sources say that this monument belongs to the
Armenian Church. But there are also some other sources, including
Georgian ones, which call this claim into question. It is a matter
of expert-scientists’ consideration," declared Sharashenidze. Thus,
it is rather like the case with Turkey’s recognition of the Genocide
– forming a commission, making some facts more accurate, clarifying,
etc. However, we should admit that Ilham Aliyev acts more directly;
he simply destroys Armenian monuments preserved in Azerbaijan. And
since there are no monuments, there is no need to form different
kinds of commissions. The thing is that there is always a possibility
that an honest historian will turn up and tell the whole truth. Thus,
Turkey and Georgia should consider it well before they suggest forming
a commission.

And lastly, about 650 Armenian churches are presently counted in the
territory of Georgia. In the 19th century there used to be 29 Armenian
churches in Tbilisi but only two of them stand there today. To this
day in the territory of Georgia there are 6 Armenian churches whose
belonging is still unidentified. They were all confiscated at the
Soviet times. They are St. Norashen (XVc.), St. Nshan (XVIIIc.),
Shamkhoretsots St. Astvatsatsin (second name Karmir Avetaran, XVIIIc.),
Yerevantsots St. Minas (XVIII c.), St. Gevorg of Mughni (XIV c.),
and St. Nshan (XIX c.) situated in Akhaltskha. Unfortunately, it is
clear from past experience that there is very little these churches
will be returned to the Armenian Apostolic Church.

–Boundary_(ID_XfclxLejKIqFuh+TCY60fg)–

RA President’s Visit To Bulgaria Finishes

RA PRESIDENT’S VISIT TO BULGARIA FINISHES

Noyan Tapan

Dec 12, 2008

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN. Within the framework of RA President
Serzh Sargsyan’s official visit to Bulgaria, in the evening of December
10, with President of Bulgaria Georgi Parvanov he took part in the
concert of renowned Armenian and Bulgarian artists at the Bulgaria
concert hall of Sofia. Late in the evening an official dinner was
organized in honor of S.

Sargsyan at Bulgarian President’s residence.

In the morning of December 11 the opening ceremony of the
Armenian-Bulgarian business forum took place with S. Sargsyan’s and
G. Parvanov’s participation, where the two Presidents expressing
satisfaction with the high level of political dialogue betwen the
two states reiterated the necessity to promote business partnership
in various directions and expressed readiness to provide all-round
assistance to all initiatives.

Bilateral documents were signed within the framework of the
Armenian-Bulgarian business forum.

The two countries’ Presidents took part in the exhibition of Sergey
Parajanov’s collages at the National Gallery of Foreign Art of
Bulgaria.

According to the report provided to Noyan Tapan by the RA President’s
Press Office, S. Sargsyan’s official visit to Bulgaria was concluded
with a visit to the Embassy of Armenia in Bulgaria, after which he
returned to Yerevan.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1010525

TOL: One History For All

ONE HISTORY FOR ALL
by Vicken Cheterian

Transitions Online
nguage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=299&N rSection=2&NrArticle=20249
Dec 10 2008
Czech Republic

Georgian students speaking different languages will soon all have
the same, more inclusive textbooks.

Back in 2005 the Georgian Ministry of Education decided to introduce
new history textbooks for two minority communities, the Armenians of
Samtskhe-Javakheti and the Azeris of Kvemo-Kartli. These two regions
are loosely integrated into mainstream Georgian culture. In both, the
majority of the regional population still has difficulty communicating
in the Georgian language. During the Soviet era the lingua franca and
the language used at the level of local administration was Russian,
a situation that changed fundamentally when Georgia became independent
in 1991.

After the collapse of the USSR, the two regions used history texts
imported from Armenia and Azerbaijan. In a sense, these ethnic
minorities were taught the history of neighboring states, but not
of Georgia. Following the Rose Revolution and the reaffirmation of
Georgian statehood Tbilisi was keen to see this situation in the
schools change.

A natural step was the introduction of new history texts. Accordingly,
the Georgian authorities decided to translate new texts being developed
for use in Georgian-language schools into Armenian and Azeri in
order to introduce the books as quickly as possible into linguistic
minority schools. The latest generation textbooks are supposed to
be distributed in Georgian-speaking schools in the coming months. In
minority regions, they should be introduced by 2010 or 2011 and will
replace the Armenian and Azeri texts.

When we at CIMERA – a Geneva-based non-profit organization which has
carried out bilingual education studies in Georgia – heard of the
Georgian authorities’ plans, we wondered how the images of minorities
were reflected in the pages of Georgian history textbooks, and whether
it was appropriate to introduce these books in minority schools. We
asked two experts to study these questions: Levan Gigineishvili,
a scholar from Georgia, and Latvian historian Ieva Gundare.

Their report, based on analysis of textbooks used at the time in
Georgia and interviews with the books’ authors, history teachers,
civil servants and parents in Tbilisi and the two regions of southern
Georgia, found something startling: Armenians and Azeris in Georgia
were by and large absent from Georgian history books. When they were
noted, it was in a negative sense.

For example, a ninth-grade history textbook in use in 2006 had this
to say about the substantial ethnic Armenian population of Tbilisi
of the 19th century: "There was a real threat that the international
bourgeoisie (mainly consisting of the Armenian bourgeoisie) would
gain supremacy over Georgian lands." At a time when Georgia was going
through mass privatization, at the height of globalization, Georgian
history textbooks continued to be suspicious of the "international
bourgeoisie," which turned out to be ethnic Armenian!

"Georgians have always been a peaceful and friendly nation, loved
and respected by other nations.

Always. This is also our shortcoming – the reason why everyone
abuses us."

– Georgian speaker interviewed for the CIMERA report

CIMERA organized a workshop in Tbilisi in December 2006 at which
specialists from the Georgian Education Ministry, textbook authors,
teachers and others were invited to discuss Gigineishvili and Gundare’s
findings. It is not easy to criticize the way history is narrated
in any society, and I was expecting harsh appraisals from various
sides. Instead, criticism was taken well, and we explored ways to
remedy the situation, circulating ideas on how to make minorities more
"present" in the pages of history textbooks to reflect the reality of
Georgia’s multiethnic, multilingual, and multiconfessional past. Guests
also talked of the need for historical research that embraced minority
groups’ contributions to Georgia’s past. One problem we confront today
in Georgia is the lack of material on the history of minorities; for
the past several decades historical research has been exclusivist,
looking at Georgian history from a narrow ethnic perspective.

DUELING HISTORIES

By the late 1980s history and historical discourse in Georgia,
as elsewhere in the Caucasus, had developed into an ideology of
nationalist mobilization and inter-ethnic confrontation – the result
of Soviet policies of ideological control over historical research
and discourse. Moreover, the Soviet system had a dual identity:
"Nationalist in form and socialist in content." Indeed, despite its
internationalist aspirations, the Soviet Union placed the national
question at the heart of its territorial setup.

The Soviets also encouraged research in and production of "national
histories" to justify their territorial policies. As a result,
historical research and teaching increasingly became a competition
between national narratives to legitimize certain territorial claims
and attack rival claims. For example, the dispute between Armenia and
Azerbaijan over the right to Nagorno-Karabakh led a competition between
historians (as well as archaeologists, ethnographers and linguists)
each claiming the existence of "their" nation-states going back
thousands of years and presenting such narratives as evidence for
"their" right to this land.

A similar duel took place over Abkhazia and South Ossetia, territories
Georgian scholars claimed for historic Georgia. Some historians went so
far as to dispute the existence of an Abkhaz ethnicity, and considered
the historic term "Abkhazia" to be a synonym for "Georgia." In the
words of Georgian historian Pavle Ingoroqva, the ancestors of the
Abkhaz were a "Georgian tribe with a Georgian dialect."

This was not an innocent, detached scientific observation based on
a coherent methodology and the study of material evidence. It was
part of an ideological battle in which history was transformed into a
weapon. In the early 1990s, historian Mariam Lordkipanidze wrote that
the 1921 act creating the Abkhaz Soviet Socialist Republic (downgraded
10 years later to an autonomous republic within the Georgian SSR)
was "illegal, for it had no historical or juridical basis."

Russian anthropologist Victor Shnirelman has studied the debates
over history among social scientists in the Caucasus. In his The
Value of the Past: Myths, Identity and Politics in Transcaucasia,
he concluded, "Differences in approaches to early history were by no
means insignificant to the creation of the ideology of confrontation,
which played a major role in the Karabakh, Abkhazian and South
Ossetian tragedies."

Historians, it seems, bear a heavy responsibility for preparing the
ground for ethnic mobilization and the wars of Soviet succession.

SLOW PACE OF CHANGE

A workshop held in November for 30-odd history teachers, textbook
authors, and ministry and international experts concluded that the
Georgian Education Ministry is moving forward in its efforts to change
the way history is taught. At the event, organized by the European
history educators’ association EuroClio, Georgian educators presented
their ongoing project to develop new textbooks with the aim of giving
more space to minorities in the official version of history presented
to youngsters from majority and minority linguistic communities.

These new texts should begin appearing soon in Armenian and Azeri
schools, and be in use in all history classes in Samtskhe-Javakheti and
Kvemo-Kartli by 2011. Some of Tbilisi’s planned classroom changes have
raised concerns among linguistic minorities, but so far representatives
of these groups have not commented on the new texts.

"If a history textbook is written, this means that there is some
consensus among nations.

How can a book be wrong? … Armenians do not misinterpret the history
of Georgia! How would it be possible to do so?"

– Armenian speaker interviewed for the CIMERA report

As we wait to see how the books will be received by pupils and
teachers, we should not underestimate the difficulties ahead. At
this stage, Georgian history teachers and authors are moving from a
position of negation of ethnic minorities to one of recognition. But
important obstacles remain in the path toward an integrated narrative
of history in which minorities move from being the "other" coexisting
with "us" into being part of society.

For this, history teachers need space to meet and debate the changes,
and the numerous practical problems they pose. Moreover, Georgian
historians need to develop new research projects – looking at the
biographies of prominent personalities, and micro-histories of places
and institutions – and structure their findings through an integrated
approach that develops a new narrative.

One thing is clear: In spite of all the difficulties fulfilling the
promises of the Rose Revolution, in a turbulent political climate
following the catastrophic August war, Georgian education authorities
and many educators continue to press for change.

Vicken Cheterian is director of programs at CIMERA. He is a former
member of TOL’s advisory board. His book War and Peace in the Caucasus:
Russia’s Troubled Frontier has just been published.

http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLa

Armenia, Georgia To Build Second Bridge Linking Markets

ARMENIA, GEORGIA TO BUILD SECOND BRIDGE LINKING MARKETS

ARKA
Dec 10, 2008

YEREVAN, December 10. /ARKA/. The second "customs bridge" linking
Armenian and Georgian markets will be built soon, RA Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan said, citing the Armenian-Georgian Intergovernmental
Commission on Economic Cooperation.

"This will simplify import-export procedures, setting up common tax
and customs regimes and creating more favorable conditions for border
crossing," the premier said on Tuesday, summing up the seventh meeting
of the intergovernmental commission.

Stressing the importance of customs services and border crossing,
Sargsyan said Armenia will make efforts to improve customs procedures
to save time.

"The task is accomplished by 70 percent, with the rest of the issues
to be settled soon," he added.

Discussing delimitation of the Armenian-Georgian border,
the commissions of both countries agreed on achieving the set
goals.

Armenian-Bulgarian Business Forum In Sofia

ARMENIAN-BULGARIAN BUSINESS FORUM IN SOFIA

Panorama.am
21:39 09/12/2008

Tomorrow the President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan leaves for Sofia on
two-day working visit. The President will have a separate meeting
with his Bulgarian counterpart Georgi Prvanov, reported the press
service of the President’s Administration.

It is planned to sign a report on organizing Bulgarian Culture Days
in Armenia in 2009 and Armenian Culture Days in Bulgaria in 2010, etc.

By the participation of the Presidents Armenian-Bulgarian business
forum will take place. The President of Armenia will also have a few
other meeting with the high ranking officials of Bulgaria.

CSTO National Security Secretaries Meet In Armenia

CSTO NATIONAL SECURITY SECRETARIES MEET IN ARMENIA
Karen Ghazaryan

"Radiolur"
10.12.2008 17:45

The sitting of the National Security Council Secretaries of CSTO
member states was held in Armenia today. The seven Security Council
Securities presented the results of the meeting to journalists during
a press conference.

A joint declaration was adopted at the sitting, which states that the
participants of the sitting of the National Security Secretaries of
CSTO member states confirm their support for the initiative of the
Russian Federation about a legally binding European Security Treaty,
which would allow creating a joint and secure system of collective
security over the Euro-Atlantic area.

"Deriving from the necessity of working out that document with equal
participation of all countries and international organizations
functioning over the Euro-Atlantic area, the countries member to
the CSTO welcome the Russian-French initiative of holding a summit
over OSCE area with participation of the CSTO, CIS, the European
Union and NATO to discuss the architecture of future security,"
the document reads.

The CSTO Security Council Secretaries adopted decisions on preventing
illegal drugs trafficking, resisting terrorism and illegal migration,
ensuring information security, tax control.

Speaking about the opportunities of the expansion of the organization,
the Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization,

Nikolay Bordyuzha, declared that the issue of mechanically involving
new countries is not on the agenda. At the same time, he informed that
besides the seven member states, another 22 countries participate
in the "Kanal" operation against drugs trafficking. The Secretary
General assured that the organization will intensify the activity in
all directions.

Turning to the opportunities of coming forth with a common stance on
different issues within international organizations, the Secretary
of the National Security Council of Armenia, Arthur Baghdasaryan,
said the issue been discussed many times on the level of CSTO
Foreign Ministers. "We will always exchange views on the issue,
which immediately refer to our national security, the CSTO member
states and the organization, as a whole," Arthur Baghdasaryan said.

According to Mr. Baghdasaryan’s assessment, the discussions in Armenia
pave the way for the improvement of the Organization. In his words,
rather ambitions programs with good perspectives of development have
been presented.

Armenian Premier Discusses Construction Of Armenia-Iran Railroad Wit

ARMENIAN PREMIER DISCUSSES CONSTRUCTION OF ARMENIA-IRAN RAILROAD WITH HIS RUSSIAN COUNTERPART

ARKA
Dec 8, 2008

MOSCOW, December 8. /ARKA/. Armenian Premier Tigran Sargsyan discussed
construction of Armenia-Iran railroad with his Russian counterpart
Vladimir Putin.

The railroad is of particular importance for development of Armenian
economy, Sargsyan said adding that he introduced the goals and terms
of the project to Putin.

"Surely, we are ready to cooperate with our partners in implementation
of this project," Sargsyan said.

Armenian Premier left for Moscow on a one-day official visit Friday.

BAKU: The CoE Culture Ministers adopted the Baku Declaration

Azerbaijan Business Center, Azerbaijan
Dec 3 2008

The Council of Europe Culture Ministers adopted the Baku Declaration

Baku, Fineko/abc.az. Today The Council of Europe Culture Ministers’
Conference adopted the Baku Declaration on Assistance to the
Intercultural Dialogue.

An attachment to the declaration says that the Conference participants
agreed to strengthen the co-operation process started in Baku within
so-called the Council of Europe White Book on Cultural Dialogue
adopted in May 2008. The Ministers agreed to encourage signing,
ratification and fulfillment of the UNESCO Convention on Protection
and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Self-Expression Forms as
well as the Council of Europe Convention in the Area of Heritage and
Landscapes. It has been also decided to strengthen co-operation
between the Council of Europe, European Union, OSCE and the UN in
development of the intercultural dialogue and tolerance.

`I think the Conference was a success. It will assist development of
the intercultural dialogue,’ Azerbaijan’s Minister of Culture and
Tourism Abulfaz Garayev said.

He expressed confidence in the Baku process to initiate a new coil of
cultural interaction between European countries.

Gabriella Battaini-Dragoni, Director General of Education, Culture and
Heritage, Youth and Sport and Coordinator for Intercultural Dialogue
of the Council of Europe, noted that the upcoming Culture Ministers’
Conference within ISESCO to be held in Baku city will help to
contribute to implementation of the Baku Declaration.

At the same time the Conference has not involved representatives of
Armenia.

`Azerbaijan has guaranteed security to Armenia, but nevertheless
Armenia decided not to participate,’ Garayev emphasized.

`Armenia has not used an opportunity to attend the conference, but we
hope it will follow the document adopted in Baku,’ Gabriella
Battaini-Dragoni underlined.

Besides the Council of Europe countries, the Conference was attended
by representatives of Islamic countries as well.