Russian Gas Supplies To Armenia Resumed After Pipeline Repair

RUSSIAN GAS SUPPLIES TO ARMENIA RESUMED AFTER PIPELINE REPAIR

RIA Novosti
10:03 | 13/ 01/ 2009

YEREVAN/TBILISI, January 13 (RIA Novosti) – Russian gas deliveries to
Armenia via Georgia, suspended on January 9 for repair work to the
pipeline, resumed late on Monday, a spokesman for the ArmRosgazprom
joint venture said on Tuesday.

"Repair work to the pipeline has been completed, and gas supplies
to Armenia resumed at about 07:00 p.m. local time (03:00 p.m. GMT)
on Monday," he said.

The resumption of gas supplies to Armenia was confirmed by the Georgian
oil and gas corporation.

"Supplies were suspended due to technical problems caused by a serious
gas leak from a corrosive pipe. Workers kept their promise to repair
the damaged section within five days," the spokesman said.

Armenia currently consumes 8.5 million-9 million cubic meters of gas
daily, an ArmRosgazprom spokeswoman, Shushan Sardaryan, said, adding
that underground gas storage facilities had been used to supply gas
during the repair work.

The Armenian-Russian joint gas venture, ArmRosgazprom, has a monopoly
on Russian gas supplies and distribution in Armenia.

Russian energy giant Gazprom controls 75.55% in the joint venture,
the Armenian government holds a 20% stake, and Russia’s Itera company
another 4.44%.

Armenian Argentinean Benefactors Establish New Scholarship For Stude

ARMENIAN ARGENTINEAN BENEFACTORS ESTABLISH NEW SCHOLARSHIP FOR STUDENTS OF YEREVAN CONSERVATORY

Noyan Tapan

Jan 8, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 8, NOYAN TAPAN. A new scholarship "The Best Student"
was established for second-year and senior students of Yerevan
State Conservatory thanks to the sponsorship of Armenian Argentinean
benefactors Hrayr and Marta Albarians. The scholarship makes a sum
in drams equivalent to 50 USD.

NT correspondent was informed by the PR Department of the "Hayastan"
All-Armenian Fund that the student who has excellent results in studies
and took an active part in concerts and social activity during the
academic year will receive "The Best Student" scholarship. Every year
the best student will be selected by the benefactors and awarded a
scholarship in February.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011076

Eternal Damnation of the Spotless Mind; On the dangers of forgetting

Eternal Damnation of the Spotless Mind

On the dangers of forgetting

The New Republic
Wednesday, January 07, 2009

By Bernard-Henri Levy

I write this in remembrance of the renowned Turkish-Armenian journalist
Hrant Dink, murdered two years ago, on Jan. 19, 2007, for his comments
on the slaughter of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman forces during
WWI … in horror that the police officers guarding the 17-year-old
murder suspect, Ogun Samast, saw fit to take a video in which he proudly
held the Turkish flag as they recorded their brief association with him
for posterity … in solidarity with the brave group of 200 Turkish
writers and intellectuals who recently signed an online petition
apologizing for the massacre, risking their freedom to keep pressure on
the Turkish government.

Outrages like Dink’s murder will continue. They will continue as long as
Turkey, fearing the loss of prestige and alarmed by the possibility that
it will be obliged to pay reparations to survivors and their
descendants, continues to deny that the Armenian genocide took place.
This struggle will continue as long as there are no laws in place
penalizing genocide denial — and these laws are needed not only in
Turkey, but around the world.

Critics may say, "It is not for the law to write history." That is
absurd. History has been written a hundred times over. The facts have
been established, and new laws will protect them from being altered.

In 1929, the British statesman and author Winston Churchill wrote that
the Armenians were victims of genocide, an organized enterprise of
systematic annihilation. The Turks themselves have admitted it. In 1918,
in the aftermath of WWI, Mustafa Kemal — soon to be granted the
honorific "Ataturk" — recognized the massacres perpetrated by the Young
Turk government.

The laws already in place in many countries regarding Holocaust denial
do not touch historians — for them the question of whether the
slaughter of the Jews was or was not genocide is no longer at issue.
What is at stake is preventing the erasure of such crimes from our
society’s memory.

Take France’s Gayssot law, which criminalized the denial of crimes
against humanity, and which as yet has been applied only to denial of
the Jewish Holocaust. This is a law that reins in the fringe and
extremist politicians who engage in lightly cloaked anti-Semitism and
who may be tempted to advocate Holocaust denial. This is a law that
prevents masquerades like that of historian David Irving’s trial in
London in 2000.

Irving brought a libel case against Deborah Lipstadt, author of "Denying
the Holocaust," who had labeled him a spokesman for Holocaust deniers.
Though the judge ruled in notably strong language that Irving was indeed
a Holocaust denier, in the absence of laws penalizing this offense,
Irving walked free. Meanwhile, the tabloid journalists and talking heads
muddied the issues and ultimately drew more attention to Irving’s work,
which may well have been his intention all along.

Critics will say, "Where will the law stop?" since technically we could
also extend this law to include the denial of the crimes that took place
during the colonial era, the publication of the Danish cartoons of the
Prophet Muhammad, even the sin of blasphemy. Must we forbid the
expression of opinions that do not mirror our own? This is a trap, for
two reasons.

First, the law would be focused specifically on genocide, a large-scale
criminal enterprise in which, as Hannah Arendt said, someone gets to
decide who has the right and who does not to inhabit this earth. Second,
the deniers don’t just have conflicting or nonconformist opinions. They
categorically deny that this horrific crime took place at all.

The logic and pattern of the crime of genocide was clarified and refined
over the 20th century, with the massacre of Armenians as a seminal
event. Hitler was impressed, nay, inspired by the scope of the Armenian
genocide. In August 1939, days before he invaded Poland, he said to his
generals, "Who still talks nowadays about the extermination of the
Armenians?"

It was a genocidal test firing. It was the basis for the Allies’ use of
the phrase "crimes against humanity" in their May 24, 1915 statement
regarding the massacre of Armenians "with the connivance and help of the
Ottoman authorities." It was a reference for the Polish jurist Raphael
Lemkin — who coined the term "genocide" and is responsible for
developing our understanding of this crime — when he was incorporating
the definition of "genocide" into the 1948 Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

I have spent some time perusing the Armenian genocide deniers’
literature, which is remarkably similar to the literature on the
destruction of the Jews. The same arguments minimizing the number of
deaths ("sure, there were some, but not as many as they say") and the
same reversing of roles — just as Holocaust deniers render the Jews
responsible for the war and their own martyrdom, their Turkish
counterparts claim the Armenians betrayed the Ottomans by allying with
the Russians, thus sealing their own fate.

Some may ask, "Can’t the truth defend itself?" No, I am afraid not.
Consider that in 1942, Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS, ordered the
formation of Sonderkommando 1005, whose mission it was to dig up the
dead, to burn their bodies and dispose of the ashes. In one of his
memoirs of the camps, Primo Levi recalled that the SS militiamen enjoyed
admonishing their prisoners that when the war was over, there would not
be a single Jew left to testify and if by chance one did survive, they
would do whatever was necessary to make sure his testimony would not be
believed.

A similar logic drives those who proclaim to Armenians, "No, your
brothers and sisters are not dead. Your parents, grandparents and
great-great-grandparents are not dead, as you’re so foolishly claiming."
Such statements betray the absolute, insane hatred they harbor, against
which factual evidence and debate are useless and the truth is impotent.

Laws prohibiting Holocaust denial are expressions of the fact that
genocide, a perfect crime, leaves no traces. In fact, the obliteration
of those traces is genocide’s final phase. Holocaust deniers are not
merely expressing an opinion; they are perpetrating a crime.

Bernard-Henri Levy’s new book, "Left in Dark Times: A Stand Against The
New Barbarism", was published in September by Random House. This article
was translated from the French by Sara Sugihara.

Russian pundits baffled by defence minister’s definition of wars

Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Russia
Dec 23 2008

Russian pundits baffled by defence minister’s definition of wars

[Viktor Litovkin report: "Serdyukov Is Reconsidering Strategy: the
Minister’s Statements on Three Regional Wars Require Competent
Explanations"]

The statement of Defence Minister Anatoliy Serdyukov that he made last
week in Severomorsk at a conference with the command and officers of
the fleet and also other units deployed in the region has given rise
to numerous comments from the military community. The head of the
defence department said that "a key purpose of the reform is… the
formation of a performance-capable, mobile, and maximally armed army
and navy ready to participate in three regional and local conflicts,
at a minimum." The minister made such a statement, experts emphasize,
for the first time. There had prior to this been talk about one
conflict and one large-scale war.

It was confirmed for us in the MoD press office that Anatoliy
Serdyukov really did utter such words, but it had difficulty when it
came to commenting on them. NG attempted to ascertain from military
experts what precisely is meant by regional and local conflict and how
much in the way of men and equipment is required for success in such
an armed confrontation.

General of the Army Makhmut Gareyev, president of the Academy of
Military Sciences, told us that the term "local or regional conflict"
does not have precise quantitative evaluations. The combat operations
on Damanskiy in 1969 and the operation to enforce peace on the
Georgian aggressor in South Ossetia in 2008 may be called local
conflicts. Although in the same local-conflict category were the
Korean War at the start of the 1950s, in which approximately 2.5
million men on both sides participated, and also the 1973 war between
Israel and Egypt, in which 6,500 tanks were employed. The same number
that the Soviet Army also had when it stormed Berlin in 1945.

"The Americans class as local and regional conflicts," the general
said, "medium-intensity conflicts." The present operation in
Afghanistan, in which more than 50,000 NATO servicemen are engaged,
may be included among these also. "Local conflicts generally," the
president of the Academy of Military Sciences remarked, "customarily
imply such armed confrontations as have limited strategic and
political goals and are conducted on a comparatively small territory."
Such a war does not affect the fundamental interests of the
state. "And if you recall Vladimir Putin’s precepts that he made for
the Russian Army when he was president, they say that our fighting
forces have to be prepared to fight local and large-scale wars." A
large-scale war could imply several regional wars.

Major-General Vladimir Zolotarev, deputy director of the Russian
Academy of Sciences United States and Canada Institute, referred our
question to the wording of the Russian Federation Foreign Policy
Blueprint approved by the then president Vladimir Putin on 28 June
2000. "It says," Zolotarev quoted, "’The Russian Federation Armed
Forces should in their force composition in peacetime be capable of
providing for the sure defence of the country against air attack and
the accomplishment together with other combat troops and military
elements and agencies of assignments in the repulse of aggression in a
local war (armed conflict) and also strategic deployment for the
accomplishment of assignments in a large-scale war.’ This proposition
is part of the Military Doctrine," the general said. "No other new
doctrinal objectives have been formulated at the presidential level."

One further source of ours – a professor of the General Staff Military
Academy who wished to remain anonymous – said that the wording
reproduced in the press is not all that accurate. "It is not
inconceivable that the minister was simply let down by his
speechwriters, who do not entirely clearly know what they meant to
say." "There are no clear-cut boundaries in local and regional
wars. These conflicts may be of varying intensity and of varying
spatial scale. If two states are participating in them, we’ll call
them Armenia and Azerbaijan or Turkey and Greece, for example, this is
a local or regional war. And if there is an armed conflict between
Russia and, for example, China? Between Russia and NATO? If nuclear
weapons are employed? This would then be a subregional war," the
scholar emphasized.

"It is not inconceivable," he says, "that the minister meant regional
or local wars such as armed conflicts that could be fought by one
military district, in the future a regional strategic command, without
the enlistment of men and equipment from other districts and fleets."
"In this case we could agree with the figure of three regional and
local conflicts. But they could hardly be confined in individual
operational sectors merely to a local war, as was the case in South
Ossetia. The situation for Russia is such that if interstate military
elements are mixed up in this conflict, this war would rapidly become
a broad-based war," the general emphasized.

Eglises chretiennes de Jerusalem appellent a la fin des violences

Le Figaro, France
Mercredi 31 Décembre 2008

Eglises chretiennes de Jerusalem appellent a la fin des violences

Fauvet-Mycia, Christine

« Profondément inquiets, peinés et choqués par la guerre qui fait rage
dans la bande de Gaza », les patriarches des principales Églises
chrétiennes de Jérusalem ont exhorté hier Israéliens et Palestiniens à
cesser les violences à Gaza et à régler leurs différends par des
moyens pacifiques. Dans un communiqué conjoint, signé notamment par le
patriarche grec-orthodoxe Theophilos III, le patriarche latin Fouad
Twal et le patriarche arménien Torkom II, ces dirigeants religieux
appellent à une « journée pour la justice et la paix » en Terre
sainte, dimanche.

Chair Of Armenian Language To Open Soon At Trakya University

CHAIR OF ARMENIAN LANGUAGE TO OPEN SOON AT TRAKYA UNIVERSITY

Noyan Tapan

Dec 19, 2008

TRAKYA, DECEMBER 29, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. The rector of
Trakya University (Turkey) Enver Duran announced that a Chair of
Armenian Language will open at the university’s Department of Foreign
Languages next year.

Besides, Chairs of Romanian and Russian will be established. "Thus
the Department of Foreign Languages will expand. It is a dream that
will become true," the rector said.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011069

7,000 Cash Registers Installed In Trade Centers Of Armenia By Dec 1

7,000 CASH REGISTERS INSTALLED IN TRADE CENTERS OF ARMENIA BY DEC 1

ARKA
Dec 30, 2008

YEREVAN, December 30. /ARKA/. About 7,000 network cash registers were
installed in trade centers of Armenia as of December 1, Chairman of
State Revenues Committee Gagik Khachatryan told a press conference
Monday.

Specialists of the Committee helps organizations get cash registers
registered in territorial tax inspectorates, Khachatryan said.

Currently works are carried out to develop software for the network
of cash registers, he said.

He also pointed out that an unprecedented mechanism of encouraging
the public in introduction of cash registers is currently used in
Armenia. In 2009, a drawing will be held on cash receipts given to
the population.

The cash register installation that lasted a couple of years is
finally solved, the Chairman said.

On August 21, Armenian Parliament amended the country’s law about trade
and services that provides amendments also to the law cash registers.

The amendments bind trade centers with area of 7 square meters in
Yerevan and 10 square meters in other settlements to install cash
registered. On September 1, a requirement was put also for fairs to
install cash registers.

This raised discontent among businessmen.

Robert Fisk: Broken promises and an unfolding tragedy

Broken promises and an unfolding tragedy

Armenians may find that by April, Time?s ‘Person of the Year’, Obama,
will change his mind on the usage of the word ‘genocide’

Independent.ie WebSearch By robert fisk
Saturday December 27 2008

If reporting is, as I suspect, a record of mankind’s folly, then the
end of 2008 is proving my point. Let’s kick off with the man who is not
going to change the Middle East — Barack Obama — who last week, with
predictably, became ‘Time’s’ "person of the year". But buried in a long
and immensely tedious interview inside the magazine, Obama devotes just
one sentence to the Arab-Israeli conflict: "And seeing if we can build
on some of the progress, at least in conversation, that’s been made
around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will be a priority."

"Building on progress?" What progress? On the verge of another civil
war between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority, with Benjamin
Netanyahu a contender for Israeli prime minister, with Israel’s
monstrous wall and its Jewish colonies still taking more Arab land, and
Palestinians still firing rockets at Sderot, and Obama thinks there’s
"progress" to build on?

I suspect this nonsensical language comes from the mental mists of his
future Secretary of State. "At least in conversation" is pure Hillary
Clinton — its meaning totally eludes me — and the giveaway phrase
about progress being made "around" the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is
even weirder. Of course, if Obama had talked about an end to Jewish
settlement building on Arab land, relations with Hamas as well as the
Palestinian Authority, justice for both sides in the conflict, along
with security for Palestinians as well as Israelis, then he might
actually effect a little change.

An interesting test of Obama’s gumption is going to come scarcely three
months after his inauguration when he will have a little promise to
honour. Yup, it’s that dratted April 24 commemoration of the Armenian
genocide when Armenians remember the 1.5 million of their murdered
countrymen on the anniversary of the day in 1915 when the first
Armenian professors, artists and others were taken off for execution.

Bill Clinton promised Armenians he’d call it a "genocide" if they
helped to elect him. George Bush did the same. So did Obama. The first
two broke their word and resorted to "tragedy" rather than "genocide"
once they’d got the votes, because they were frightened of all those
bellowing Turkish generals, not to mention — in Bush’s case — the US
military supply routes through Turkey, the "roads and so ," as Robert
Gates called them, in one of history’s more gripping ironies — these
being the same "roads and so on" upon which the Armenians were sent on
their death marches in 1915.

So I bet you that Obama is going to find that "genocide" is "tragedy"
by April 24.

I browsed through Turkish Airlines’ in-flight magazine while cruising
into Istanbul earlier this month and found an article on the historical
Turkish region of Harput.

"Asia’s natural garden", "a popular holiday resort", the article calls
Harput. And you have to shake your head to remember that Harput was the
centre of the Christian Armenian genocide, the city from which Leslie
Davis, the brave American consul in Harput, sent back his eyewitness
dispatches of the thousands of butchered Armenians. But I guess that
all would spoil the "natural garden" effect. It’s a bit like inviting
tourists to the Polish town of Oswiecim — without mentioning that its
German name is Auschwitz.

But these days, we can all rewrite history. Take Nicolas Sarkozy, who
not only toadies up to Bashar al-Assad of Syria but is now buttering up
awful Algerian head of state Abdelaziz Bouteflika who’s just been
"modifying" the Algerian constitution to give himself a third term in
office. There was no parliamentary debate, just a show of hands — 500
out of 529 — and what was Sarko’s response? "Better Bouteflika than
the Taliban!" Not least when former Algerian army officers revealed
undercover soldiers as well as the Algerian Islamists (Sarko’s
"Taliban") were involved in the brutal village massacres of the 1990s.

Talking of "undercover", I was amazed to learn of the training system
adopted by the Met lads who put Jean Charles de Menezes to death on the
Tube. According to former police commander Brian Paddick, the Met’s
secret rules for "dealing" with suicide bombers were drawn up "with the
help of Israeli experts". What? Who were these so-called "experts"
advising British policemen how to shoot civilians on the streets of
London? The same men who assassinate wanted Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza?

Not that our brave peace envoy, Lord Blair, would have much to say
about it. He’s the man, remember, whose only proposed trip to Gaza was
called off when yet more "Israeli experts" advised him that his life
might be in danger. Anyway, he’d still rather be president of Europe,
something Sarko wants to award him. That, I suppose, is why Blair wrote
such a fawning article in the same issue of ‘Time’ which made Obama
"person" of the year. "There are times when Nicolas Sarkozy resembles a
force of nature," Blair grovels. will Blair now tell us he’s going to
be involved in those "conversations" with Obama to "build on some of
the progress" in the Middle East?

‘Converse Bank’ Directs 500 Mln Drams To Improvement Of The Work Con

‘CONVERSE BANK’ DIRECTS 500 MLN DRAMS TO IMPROVEMENT OF THE WORK CONDITIONS AND TECHNOLOGICAL BASIS IN 2008

ArmInfo
2008-12-26 14:58:00

ArmInfo. ‘Converse Bank’ directed 500 mln drams to improvement of
the work conditions and technological basis in 2008. As director
General of Converse Bank Ararat Gukasyan told journalists today,
this sum was directed to repairing of the branch offices and buying
modern equipment and technologies.

‘New servers have been implemented in the bank on the basis of
modern technologies. This gives an opportunity to our clients to
make operations more operatively’, – he said. Converse Bank has
got 25 offices, 13 of which have been functioning in the regions of
Armenia. At the beginning of December the number of cash machines of
the bank amounted to 41, 10 of which in the regions.

The bank has been functioning since 1993. Its shareholders are:
‘Advanced Global Investments’, owned by the Argentinean businessman
Eduardo Eurnekian (95%) and Cathedral Church of Armenian Apostolic
Church (5%).