Did Hayrenik Ask The Prime Minister?

DID HAYRENIK ASK THE PRIME MINISTER?

KarabakhOpen
17-05-2008 12:46:03

During the meeting of the members of the Hayrenik delegation to the
parliament Prime Minister Ara Harutiunyan told about large-scale
programs in the energy sector. He said in 2008 about 800 million
will be invested and small water power plants will be built. The
prime minister said ordinary citizens can become shareholders of the
business projects. He also said the country may start to export energy.

Since we were absent at the meeting we do not know whether the
prime minister was asked the following questions: is there a stock
exchange where the pensioners of Karabakh can buy shares? After all,
in Karabakh we speak about the stock market with great reservations.

Secondly, which countries is Karabakh going to sell electricity? To
Azerbaijan which is at war with us or Iran which is building together
with Armenia a major water power plant on the Arax?

Ahead Of Eurovision 2008 Song Contest

AHEAD OF EUROVISION 2008 SONG CONTEST

armradio.am
17.05.2008 14:04

Three days are left before the first Semi Final of the Eurovision
2008 Song Contest. On May 20 Sirusho will perform 14th among 19
participants. Head of Foreign Relations Department of the Public TV
Diana Mnatsakanyan informed that Sirusho will appear on the stage
in an expensive dress from Igor Chapurin. The dress Sirusho wears
during the rehearsals was authored by Arevik Simonyan. The singer
will also present clothes from collections of Dolce & Gabbana and
many famous designers purchased in London specially for the Eurovision
Song Contest.

It’s worth mentioning that Sirusho is leading in many pre-charts and
prediction. For their part, bookmakers predict Sirusho will be among
the top three.

The show has been staged by famous Russian choreographer Sergey
Mandrik.

Specialists say it’s a bright and interesting performance, which has
all chances to remain in the memory of the viewers.

According to the official Eurovision website, Sirusho astonished
everyone at her first rehearsal last Monday and her great
performance at the party thrown by the Russian delegation at the
Euroclub. "Sirusho and her three backing dancers once again delivered a
steady performance, opening with the dancers entangled around Sirusho’s
legs, making Sirusho wave in the air when she stoops. Sirusho did
not wear her final outfit for the semi-final on the 20th of May, but
it was revealed by a person from the Armenian delegation: Sirusho’s
dress is classy, sexy and shiny," the website writes.

A powerful support group has left for Belgrade with Sirusho, including
backup singers Tigran Petrosyan and Razmik Amyan, as well as Armenian
entrants in 2006 and 2007 Andre and Hayko.

In the framework of the promo-tour Sirusho visited Great Britain,
France, Czech Republic, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Spain, Greece,
Russia and Georgia.

Consumer Prices Index 109.7% In Nagorno-Karabakh In Jan-Apr

CONSUMER PRICES INDEX 109.7% IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH IN JAN-APR

ARKA
May 14, 2008

STEPANAKERT, May 14. /ARKA/. Consumer prices index was 109.7% in
Nagorno-Karabakh in January-April as compared with the same period
of the previous year. Foodstuff prices (including alcoholic drinks
and tobacco products) index was 115.7%, index for nonfoods prices
and service prices were 101.6% and 103% respectively.

The National Statistical Service of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
(NKR) reports that Consumer price index was 103.6% in Karabakh in
April this year against December last year with foodstuff (including
alcoholic drinks and tobacco products) price index being 105.2%,
nonfoods price index – 102% and service price index – 101.4%.

Rise in prices for a number of foodstuffs was recorded in the period
under review (bakery goods – 111.1%, meat products – 104.7%, fruits
– 105.6%, non-alcoholic drinks – 105.3%, vegetables and potatoes –
104.7% and vegetable and animal fats – 103.8%).

Consumer prices index was 112.2% in the NKR in April as compared with
the same period of last year.

Armenian Ambassador Meets With Syrian Ministers

ARMENIAN AMBASSADOR MEETS WITH SYRIAN MINISTERS

armradio.am
13.05.2008 18:05

On May 12 Armenian Ambassador to Siria Arshak Poladyan met with
the Minister of Tourism of the Arab Republic of Syria Saadalla Agha
al-Qala’a.

Issues related to the perspectives of development of cooperation
between the two countries in the field of tourism were discussed
during the meeting.

Reference was made to the necessity of signing a practical program of
cooperation in the field of tourism for 2008-2011, which is currently
in the stage of discussion.

Minister Saadalla Agha al-Qala’a noted that the Silk Road Festival
will be held in Damascus in October, and an invitation to participate
in the event will soon be conveyed to the Armenian side.

The same day the Armenian Ambassador met with the Minister of
Culture of Syria Ali Saad. The parties discussed the Armenian-Syrian
cooperation in the sphere of education, as well as the details of RA
Minister of Education and Science Levon Lazarian’s visit to Syria.

Minister Saadi attached importance to the necessity of the meeting with
his Armenian counterpart, noting that a close and mutually beneficial
cooperation has always existed between the two countries, and the
Syrian side is interested in the perspectives of developing those.

Sony Pictures Picks Up Distribution Rights To Atom Egoyan’s Film

SONY PICTURES PICKS UP DISTRIBUTION RIGHTS TO ATOM EGOYAN’S FILM

Noyan Tapan

Ma y 13, 2008

TORONTO, MAY 13, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. Sony Pictures has
picked up the distribution rights to Atom Egoyan’s latest film,
Adoration, starring Arsinee Khanjian and Scott Speedman. The movie,
set to premiere at the Cannes Film Festival on May 22, centres on a
teenager, who creates a fake internet identity and pursues a family
secret.

This film marks the seventh collaboration between the Toronto filmmaker
and producer Robert Lantos. Egoyan has previously said the movie was
inspired by a true story about a man who talks his pregnant girlfriend
onto an El Al flight, where she is found with a bomb in her handbag.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=113254

Shirak Torosyan: "Georgian Armenians May Grow Impatient"

SHIRAK TOROSYAN: "GEORGIAN ARMENIANS MAY GROW IMPATIENT"

Panorama.am
16:32 13/05/2008

Shirak Torosyan the chairman of "Javakhq" union and the NA deputy
said that there are no serious reforms carried out in the social
and economic life of Georgian Armenians. "The problems which were
much talked about still exist," he said in a press conference,
today. According to the deputy the ongoing pre-election mood influences
on the social and political life of Georgian Armenians.

The main difference is that according to the new adopted law the
number of deputies in Georgian Parliament is cut from previous
235 to 150. Hence, not a single opposition or governmental
body has recommended a deputy protecting the rights of Georgian
Armenians. According to him minimum two and maximum four Armenian
deputies will enter Georgian Parliament.

Torosyan mentioned that Georgia has adopted Armenians banishment
policy. The road linking Armenia with Georgia is in furious
conditions. Sometimes the aids provided to Javakhq meet obstacles
while arriving.

There are problems at the border customs units every time. "I’m sure
that one day the Georgian Armenians may grow impatient, if serious
measures are taken to meet the problem," he said.

West ‘In A Slough Ignorance Of Islam’

WEST ‘IN A SLOUGH IGNORANCE OF ISLAM’

Alalam News Network
sp?newsid=039180120080512145553
May 12 2008
Iran

Once again the CIA and MI6 are publishing dire warnings of the vitality
of Al-Qaeda. Once again the Islamic world as a whole is being tarnished
by association.

US presidential contender John McCain is saying that America needs
a leadership to confront the transcendent challenge of our time:
The threat of radical Islamic terrorism.

And the words still ring in our ears from Samuel Huntington’s treatise,
"The Clash of Civilizations", the book that in many ways triggered
this paranoia that infects the politicians, the press and the public
discourse. "The underlying problem for the West is not Islamic
fundamentalism, it is Islam", he wrote.

Few, if any, in the Western leadership seem to make the point
that Al-Qaeda is a deviant phenomenon within the Islamic world,
just as Hitler was a deviant phenomenon within the Christian world
(commentators seems to overlook Hitler’s early speeches calling
on Catholic principles). But Islam has a much better record
over the ages of dealing with its deviants who take violence to
excess. Islamic culture has never been tolerant of Nazism, fascism
or communism. Christianity has spawned all three. Buddhism failed to
resist Japanese militarism and Confucianism provided hospitable to
Maoism. Yes, there was Saddam Hussein but he was an atheistic brute
without an ideology.

Of course, there have been many incidents in the long history of
Islam when there have been large-scale losses of life. The massacres
and starvation of the Armenians in 1915 still stirs the waters of
contemporary debate. But Islam has never spawned anything comparable
with Hitler’s systematic genocide of the Jews – indeed throughout
its history Islam has been protective of the Jews, regarding them as
"people of the book" to whom it had a special responsibility. Nor has
it settled other parts of the world and systematically obliterated
other civilizations as did Christian Spain with the Aztecs and
Incas. Nor have Islamic societies created anything equivalent to
South Africa’s apartheid or the racist culture of the old American
South. Unlike many Christian churches, the mosque has never separated
people by race. Even today Americans confess that nowhere is there
more segregation in their society than at the Sunday noon hour.

Western memories are highly selective. When at Easter time the Greek
peasants of the Peloponnese began to kill all the Muslims in the
land there was silence. But fifty years later when there were mass
killings of Christians in Bulgaria there was a great outpouring of
moral outrage. Delacroix immortalized the massacre in his painting,
"Massacre of Chaos", with Christian women pursued by Turkish lancers
and Gladstone wrote a best-selling pamphlet in which he described the
Ottomans as leaving "a broad line of blood marking the track behind
them, and as far as their domination reached civilization vanished
from view".

Almost forgotten today is that it was the Ottomans who gave refuge to
the Jews when they were expelled from Iberia, as were fleeing German,
French and Czech Protestants, but every cultivated Westerner knows
Voltaire’s "Fanaticism or Muhammad the Prophet" or Dante’s portrayal
of Muhammad in hell.

Christianity has always been led or dominated by people of European
descent. But the leadership of the Muslim world has been much
more fragmented – between AD 661 and 750 it was the Arab Umayyad
dynasty. Between 750 and 1258 it was the multiethnic Abbasid
dynasty. And from 1453 to 1922, the Turkish-dominated Ottoman
Empire. In India there was the separate Moguls and in Persia the
Safavids. In sub-Saharan Africa there were the Muslim empires of Mali
and Songhai.

Despite their relative poverty today, with great teaming cities like
Cairo, Dakha and Jakarta, criminal violence is much, much lower than
in Christian-influenced societies.

Muslim countries, according to the UN’s annual Human Development
report, have the world’s lowest murder and rape rates. In Tehran,
the capital of Iran, and according to the CIA (allegations) the
most important single source of terrorism today, you can go out at
11 or 12 pm at night and find families with children picnicing in
city parks. When my daughters’ friends ask me where can they safely
travel alone in an interesting Third World city I say Cairo. Certainly
not Catholic Rio or Protestant Cape Town. Not only are murders and
muggings comparatively rarer, there is much less prostitution and
hard drug use. Neither is there that much AIDS.

The Western debate about Islam is frankly infantile. Even Barack
Obama, with his own personal experience to go off, either is ignorant
or just scared of going into battle on these issues. I have not read
one speech by one Western politician who seriously attempts to educate
public opinion. We live in a slough of ignorance.

http://www.alalam.ir/english/en-NewsPage.a

EDM: West Can Respond More Effectively to Russia in Georgia, part 3

Eurasia Daily Monitor

May 9, 2008 — Volume 5, Issue 89

THE WEST CAN RESPOND MORE EFFECTIVELY TO RUSSIA’S ASSAULT ON GEORGIA:
PART III

by Vladimir Socor

International silence about the ethnic cleansing of Georgians from
Abkhazia is a striking feature of the continuing debate on the
Russia-Georgia conflict. Moscow’s overt moves in recent days to annex
Abkhazia politically and militarily capitalize on that ethnic cleansing and
would render it irreversible. The international silence on this issue
resembles that surrounding the cleansing of Azeris with Russian support from
Armenian-occupied districts of Azerbaijan.

The current crisis over Abkhazia offered Western officials and
international organizations a chance to break their long silence and address
this issue at the policy level. None did so, however, in contrast to the
same officials’ and organizations’ successful insistence on reversing the
ethnic cleansing in Kosova. Only the European Union’s External Affairs
Commissioner, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, made a reference to EU humanitarian
aid for -internally displaced persons- from Abkhazia, responding to
questions during the debate just held the European Parliament on the
Abkhazia crisis (EP press release, May 7).

Unwittingly the EU came close to condoning the forcible population and
border shifts in Abkhazia by extending travel visa facilitations to Russian
passport holders there, while denying those facilitations to all Georgian
passport holders (including those driven out of Abkhazia). The EU can no
longer plead absent-mindedness on this issue, and the Commission seems to be
working now on visa facilitation for Georgian citizens, despite continuing
reluctance of several European governments.

With Western governments seemingly reluctant to irritate Russia over
Abkhazia, the unresolved issue of ethnic cleansing can be approached at this
stage at the level of humanitarian law, human rights, and property rights. A
first initiative in this regard would seem particularly appropriate for the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe’s (PACE) session next month.
Such an issue belongs indisputably to the core of PACE’s responsibilities.
Even the Russian delegation’s usual allies there would find it hard to
dispute that substantive point. Procedurally, its scheduling as an urgent
item for the June session would seem a natural response from PACE to the
current crisis in Abkhazia. The Russian veto can and does prevent the OSCE
from addressing that issue, but Russia has no such power in the Council of
Europe and PACE.

The recent international conference in Baku on conflicts on the
territories of GUAM states (April 15-16) helped identify opportunities for
legal action in international courts on behaf of the victims of ethnic
cleansing. For example, Georgian expellees and their associations can
initiate legal action to challenge the unlawful takeover of their properties
by Russian or Abkhaz authorities in that territory.

The Russian military, not the Abkhaz (17 percent of the region’s
pre-conflict population) evicted the Georgian population (45 percent of the
pre-conflict population) from Abkhazia by force. Yet Moscow has put an
Abkhaz face on that act, thereby turning the Abkhaz from ad hoc allies into
long-term hostages to Russian policy. Using a similar method, Russia is now
attempting to put an Abkhaz face on the downing of one or more Georgian
unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) in internationally recognized Georgian air
space.

Following the downing of one UAV on April 20, the only proven case in
the current crisis, Abkhaz authorities claimed to have downed two Georgian
UAVs on May 4 and another one on May 8, using -Abkhaz- ground-based
antiaircraft installations. (Interfax, Itar-Tass, Apsnypress, May 4-8).

The three latter cases seem to be empty propaganda claims. In the
April 20 incident, a Russian MIG-29 was filmed destroying the Georgian UAV
and was then tracked flying into Russian air space (see EDM, April 21). In
that incident, Russia initially denied the facts strenuously, then changed
its story and attributed the shooting to -Abkhaz air defenses.- Abkhaz
political and military authorities then took up that tack for the other
purported incidents in that series.

Georgia has requested the United Nations Secretary General’s Special
Representative for Georgia, Jean Arnault, political head of the United
Nations Observer Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG) deployed in Abkhazia, to
institute immediately an investigation regarding the presence and use of air
defense systems by -Abkhaz- forces and to report on the investigation’s
results (press release, May 5). UN action is paralyzed, however, by Russia’s
veto power. Moscow will use this power to prevent the UN from ascertaining
that nominally Abkhaz combat hardware is, in fact, Russian-supplied and
Russian-manned.

This situation raises major issue of international law and air safety
that seem to be relegated to oblivion by international organizations and
governments. Even the United States hesitated for two weeks before
acknowledging through the White House spokeswoman that a Russian plane had,
in fact, downed the UAV in Georgian air space (press release, May 6).

Moscow’s statements that the Abkhaz possess air defense systems need
to be investigated for their ramifications. These statements signify that
Russia is, by its own admission, arming an unlawful force, a non-state,
rogue actor by any definition, with weapons that can potentially threaten
the safety of any type of flight over that part of Georgia’s air space. The
purported -Abkhaz- military cannot be assumed to use those missiles
competently when they, or Russian crews on loan, decide to use them. It can
be assumed that civilian flights are at risk. Along with Russia’s retention
of the Gudauta base with its airport in the same area, from which the MIG-29
apparently took off, and the -unaccounted-for treaty-limited equipment- of
Russian heavy weaponry in Abkhazia, the militarization of this region is
another major issue that is overdue for open international discussion.

–Vladimir Socor

A case of Muslim deviance?

The Statesman (India)
May 9, 2008 Friday

A CASE OF MUSLIM DEVIANCE?

Once again the CIA and MI6 are publishing dire warnings of the
vitality of Al Qaida. Once again the Islamic world as a whole is being
tarnished by association. US presidential contender John McCain is
saying that America needs a leadership to confront the transcendent
challenge of our time: the threat of radical Islamic terrorism. And
the words still ring in our ears from Mr Samuel Huntingtons treatise,
The Clash of Civiliza-tions, which in many ways triggered this
paranoia that infects the politicians, the press and the public
discourse. The underlying problem for the West is not Islamic
fundamentalism, IT IS ISLAM, he wrote.

Few, if any, in the Western leadership seem to make the point that Al
Qaida is a deviant phenomenon within the Islamic world, just as
Hit-ler was a deviant phenomenon within the Christian world
(commentators seem to overlook Hitlers early speeches calling on
Catholic principles). But Islam has a much better record over the ages
(despite its founder being far more warlike than the founder of
Christianity) of dealing with its deviants who take violence to
excess. Islamic culture has never been tolerant of Nazism, fascism or
communism. Christian-ity has spawned all three. Buddhism failed to
resist Japanese militarism and Confucianism proved hospitable to
Maoism. Yes, there was Saddam Hussein, but he was an atheistic brute
without an ideology.

Of course, there have been many incidents in the long history of Islam
when there have been large-scale losses of life. The massacres and
starvation of the Armenians in 1915 still stirs the waters of
contemporary debate. But Islam has never spawned anything comparable
with Hitlers systematic genocide of the Jews ~ in-deed throughout its
history Islam has been protective of the Jews, regarding them as
people of the book to whom it had a special responsibility. Nor has it
settled other parts of the world and systematically obliterated other
civilizations, as did Christian Spain with the Aztecs and Incas. Nor
have Islamic societies created anything equivalent to South Africas
apartheid or the racist culture of the old American South. Unlike many
Christian churches, the mosque has never separated people by
race. Even today Americans confess that nowhere is there more
segregation in their society than at the Sunday noon hour.

Western memories are highly selective. When at Easter time the Greek
peasants of the Pelo-ponnese began to kill all the Muslims in the land
there was silence. But 50 years later when there were mass killings of
Christians in Bul-garia there was a great outpouring of moral
outrage. Delacroix immortalised the massacre in his painting, Massacre
of Chaos, with Chris-tian women pursued by Turkish lancers and the
19th century Liberal British Prime Minister William Gladstone wrote a
bestselling pamphlet in which he described the Ottomans as leaving a
broad line of blood marking the track behind them, and as far as their
domination reached civilization vanished from view.

Almost forgotten today is that it was the Otto-mans who gave refuge to
the Jews when they were expelled from Iberia, as were fleeing Ger-man,
French and Czech Protestants, but every cultivated Westerner knows
Voltaires Fanati-cism or Mohammed the Prophet or Dantes portrayal of
Mohammed in hell.

Christianity has always been led or dominated by people of European
descent. But the leadership of the Muslim world has been much more
fragmented ~ between 661 AD and 750 AD it was the Arab Umayyad
dynasty. Between 750 and 1258 it was the multi-ethnic Abbasid
dynasty. And from 1453 to 1922, the Turkish-dominated Ottoman
Empire. In India there was the separate Mughals and in Persia the
Safa-vids. In sub-Saharan Africa there were the Mus-lim empires of
Mali and Songhai.

Despite their relative poverty today, with great teaming cities like
Cairo, Dhaka and Jak-arta, criminal violence is much, much lower than
in Christian-influenced societies. Muslim countries, according to the
UNs annual human development report, have the worlds lowest murder and
rape rates.

In Teheran, the capital of Iran and according to the CIA the most
important single source of terrorism today, you can go out at 11 or 12
at night and find families with children picnicking in city
parks. When my daughters friends ask me where they can safely travel
alone in an interesting Third World city I say Cairo. Certainly not
Catholic Rio or Protestant Cape Town. Not only are murders and
muggings comparatively rarer, there is much less prostitution and hard
drug use. Neither is there that much of AIDS.

The Western debate about Islam is frankly infantile. Even Mr Barack
Obama, the Demo-cratic presidential candidate, is either ignorant or
scared of going into battle on these issues. I have not read one
speech by one Western poli-tician who seriously attempts to educate
public opinion. We live in a slough of ignorance.

Salesian University Confers PhD on Patriarch Karekin II

Bosco Information Service, India
May 8 2008

Salesian University Confers PhD on Patriarch Karekin II

By C.M. Paul

Kolkata, May. 8. ROME, 8 May, SAR News – The Salesian Pontifical
University (UPS) conferred honoris causa doctorate in Youth Pastoral
Theology on Patriarch Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians, at a
ceremony held at the university`s Paul VI Hall, 7 May. It marked the
patriarch`s official visit to the Vatican and Pope Benedict XVI along
with his entourage of 18 bishops of the Catholicosate of all Armenians
and a group of 75 Armenian Apostolic faithful.

Present at the 90 minute function were three cardinals, several
bishops, civil and military representatives, as well as staff and
students from the six faculties of the Salesian University.

In his welcome words the Vatican Secretary of State and former UPS
Rector Salesian Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone recalled how Pope Benedict
XV stood by the persecuted Christians of Armenia denouncing the
genocide by Ottoman Turks in 1915. About one-and-a-half million
Armenian Christians were massacred over a period of six years.

The president of the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian
Unity Cardinal Walter Kasper praised the patriarch`s sincere and
sustained ecumenical efforts. The cardinal enumerated patriarch`s
outstanding contribution in rebuilding the Armenian Church over the
past 30 years and particularly in the post Communist era taking bold
initiatives to revive youth ministry as well as laity and clergy
formation.

The dean of the Theology Faculty Fr Giorgio Zevini read out the
doctoral decree in Latin. In his acceptance speech, the patriarch gave
a brief description of the 250 year persecution of the Armenian Church
evangelized by the Apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus. Armenia was the
first Christian nation since the year 301 even before Christianity
became a state religion in the Roman Empire in 313.

The ceremony was interspersed with renditions by 40-member
Inter-university choir under the baton of director Salesian Fr Massimo
Palombella of the Rome Vicariate`s University Ministry Office. The
selections sung in Latin from 16th century composer Palestrina
included Exaltabo te, Credo (from the Mass of Pope Marcello) and Tu Es
Petrus.

This is the fifth honoris causa doctorate that the 70 year old
Theology Faculty has conferred to-date. Other degrees were conferred
on Nobel laureate Bishop Belo of Timor (Feb.1998); Governor of the
Italian Bank Dr Antonio Fazio (Dec 2003); Theology and Biblical
scholar Fr Sylvanus Sngi Lindogh of Shillong (August 2005) and
Theology and Biblical scholar Prof. Wolfgang Gruen of Belo Horizonte
Brazil (Feb 2006).

Born in Armenia in 1951, he was elected 132nd Supreme Patriarch and
Catholicos of All Armenians in 1999. In November 2000 he visited Pope
John Paul II. During his visit, Pope and Catholicos Karekin II
presided over a liturgy of the Word in St. Peter`s Basilica, during
which the Holy Father has returned to Catholicos the relic of
St.Gregory the Illuminator (Krikor Loosavorich) Father and Patron
Saint of the Armenian Church. St Gregory was the most significant of
the 104 Armenian saints because in 301 A.D. he converted King
Tiridates III to Christianity and Christianity was declared the
national religion.

Pope John Paul II made a visit to Armenia in 2001 and was hosted by
the Catholicos in his residence at Etchmiadzin.

More than 90% of Armenian Christians are under the Armenian Apostolic
Patriarchate, which separated from Rome after the Council of Chalcedon
in 451. A key step toward overcoming this division was taken in 1996
when Pope John Paul II and Patriarch Karekin I signed a joint
declaration on the nature of Jesus.

Photo: His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos and Supreme Patriarch of
All Armenians.

bis/default_ms.php?newsid=1951&pno=1&newsi dlist=,1952,1951,1950,1949,1948,1795,1947,1946,194 5,1944,

http://www.donboscoindia.com/english/