EU Urges Armenia And Azerbaijan To Achieve Progress Without Hesitati

EU URGES ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN TO ACHIEVE PROGRESS WITHOUT HESITATION

ArmRadio.am
05.12.2006 14:48

The European Union is inspired with the active dialogue between
Armenia and Azerbaijan directed at the settlement of the conflict,
Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja said at the OSCE Ministerial
meeting, Mediamax reports.

"The European Union welcomes the efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group
Co-Chairs directed at the resolution of the Karabakh conflict. The EU
is inspired with the active dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan. We
call on the parties to use the opportunity and achieve progress
without hesitation. We welcome the successes of the OSCE ad hoc
mission, which visited the areas that suffered of fire," added the
Foreign Minister of Finland.

The Foreign Minister of Romania Mikhay-Ravzan Ungurianu also referred
to the issue of the OSCE mission’s visit. He said in particular that
"Romania welcomes the efforts directed at the restoration of trust
between the two parties.

" "The work of the OSCE mission in Nagorno Karabakh and adjacent
territories was an effective initiative, and now this experience
should be used," said the Romanian FM.

In his speech Erkki Tuomioja expressed appreciation for the
ratification of the Action plans with Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
in the framework of the European Neighborhood Policy.

"We hope that the accomplishment of the Action Plan will endorse the
reinforcement of stability in the region and will strengthen EU’s
ties with the three countries of the South Caucasus," declared the
Finnish Minister.

The Chairman of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly Goran Lenmarker
declared in his speech that there is a "golden" opportunity for
the settlement of the Karabakh conflict and expressed hope that the
parties will use it.

Adoption of draft res. proposed by GUAM serious obstacle for NK negs

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Dec 1 2006

ADOPTION OF DRAFT RESOLUTION PROPOSED BY GUAM IN UN WILL CREATE
SERIOUS OBSTACLES FOR CONTINUING NEGOTIATIONS ON KARABAKH, V.OSKANIAN
SAYS

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanian positively estimated Armenia’s cooperation with European
structures speaking at the December 1 press conference. In his words,
"the most documentally registered is development of relations with
Europe, here we have documents signed within the framework of
cooperation with the European Union, NATO, as well as the Council of
Europe." In particular, he mentioned the Actions Plan signed lately
in Brussels within the framework of the New European Neighborhood
policy naming it a many-sided document.

V.Oskanian also highly estimated Armenian-Russian relations. In his
words, the murders of Armenians in Russia that have become frequent
lately have no impact on the level of bilateral relations. "These
murders are not an obstacle for our relations," V.Oskanian declared.

Meanwhile he emphasized that this situation should cause anxiety in
Russia, as they kill not only Armenians, but also representatives of
other nationalities in Russia.

As regards consideration of the draft resolution on December 7 in UN
on conflicts in the post-Soviet area proposed by GUAM countries,
V.Oskanian said that Armenia’s position in this issue remains
unchanged: "We think that consideration of this issue and adoption of
this resolution will result in inappropriate difficulties in the
negotiations process on Nagorno Karabakh settlement. If even this
resolution is passed, it will not add anything positive to the
negotiations. On the contrary, we consider that this will create
rather serious obstacles for continuing the negotiations process, in
which we have positive shifts and rather favorable atmosphere has
been formed at present," the Armenian Foreign Minister declared.

Armenian-Russian intergovernmental negotiations held in Moscow

Public Radio, Armenia
Dec 1 2006

Armenian-Russian intergovernmental negotiations held in Moscow
01.12.2006 15:20

The Armenian-Russian intergovernmental negotiations, featuring the
Prime Ministers of Armenia and Russia Andranik Margaryan and Mikhail
Fradkov, started in Moscow today.
`I’m sure your visit will promote the further deepening of ties
between the two countries,’ said Mikhail Fradkov, noting that the
main purpose of the Armenian Prime Minister’s visit to Russia is the
participation in the official closing ceremony of the Year of Armenia
to be held in Saint Petersburg.
RA Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan thanked for reception and
expressed confidence that that the constructive meetings and
negotiations will be continuous. He stressed the importance of the
Year of Armenia in Russia, which was the result of efforts of the two
countries.
`Today we can say that all the arrangements in the political,
economic and humanitarian spheres enabled to deepen bilateral
relations,’ said RA Prime Minister.
The intergovernmental negotiations were followed by the joint press
conference of the two Premiers.

Strong Armenia To Apply To Human Rights Ombudsman

STRONG ARMENIA TO APPLY TO HUMAN RIGHTS OMBUDSMAN

Panorama.am
14:40 29/11/06

Strong Armenia party believes it is unacceptable to set a vote
threshold in the election code as the amendments suggest. However,
the vice chairman of the party, Shirak Torosyan, said in case of
fair elections, they will collect 5% vote. The vice chairman did not
exclude setting up alliances. The party leader said if the elections
are not free, they will ignore the "civilized" way of combat currently
professed.

Torosyan is also concerned with the composition of election committees
saying out-of-parliament forces are ignored. The vice chairman said
they may apply to human right ombudsman as he believes human rights
are violated.

Papal Visit: On A Wing And A Prayer

PAPAL VISIT: ON A WING AND A PRAYER
Peter Popham reports from Ankara

Independent, UK
Nov 29 2006

As the Pope arrived in Turkey yesterday, he stepped into the middle
of a cultural war: between Christianity and Islam; between Asia
and Europe.

Pope Benedict took the most momentous steps of his pontificate
yesterday. They carried him, as he said, across a "bridge", from one
world to another: from Europe to Asia, from Christianity to Islam, from
the tender embrace of Catholic Europe – the Italian state sent him on
his way with ministers and high officials, they closed Rome’s airport
and escorted him out of Italian airspace with air force fighters –
to a nation that has left no possible doubt that it views his arrival
with the greatest diffidence.

Immediately he was ambushed. He came down the steps of the papal flight
in an elegant but extravagantly long double-breasted ivory overcoat
that fell to his ankles. (This pope will never, it seems, stop trying
to live down his first appearances in the job last year, when his
cassock barely came below his calves.) For weeks the Vatican had been
bracing itself for a nasty snub: the Prime Minister, Tayyip Erdogan,
a devout Muslim whose wife does not go outdoors without a headscarf,
would be away in Latvia at the Nato summit, it was explained, and
could not meet Benedict.

But the Pope is a head of state, and Turkey’s sights are still set on
the European Union; why give more ammunition to those countries – the
Austrians and French and Germans – who want the Turkish shadow banished
from the EU? And so an airport meeting was arranged at the last
minute. They sat, Benedict and Erdogan, under a portrait of Ataturk,
father of the modern Turkish state. Mr Erdogan had unaccountably failed
to button his jacket. No matter. They exchanged gifts, a painting for
the Pope, a medal for the Turk. And they had a little, sotto voce chat.

Afterwards Mr Erdogan briefed the press on what they had said. "I
welcomed him," he said, "and said that I hoped his visit would be
fruitful for world peace… As you know, we never build upon hate,
but I gave my condolences for the murder" – of an Italian Catholic
priest, in February – "in the city of Trabzon. But I said that this
should not be seen as a Muslim doing this to a Catholic."

All quite unexceptionable. But then he pounced. "I asked the Pope for
his help with our application to join the European Union," said the
sly Mr Erdogan. As everybody in Turkey and many people elsewhere know,
the Pope (when he was still Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) is on the record
as strenuously opposing Turkey’s joining the EU, because its Muslim
religion made it too "strongly contrasted" with Christian Europe.

Still, the Prime Minister popped the question: would the Pope help?

Yes, according to the Prime Minister. "And the Pope said, as you know
we are not political, but we will help Turkey’s case."

Is that what Benedict said? Is the Holy See going to give Turkey’s
EU application an obliging shove? It took about three hours for an
embarrassed Vatican to produce its own version. Then out it came,
a scrupulous, lawyerly, clause-by-clause clarification. The Pope
"has neither the power nor the specific political duty to intervene
on this precise point," said the spokesman, Federico Lombardi, in a
written statement. "But he sees positively and encourages the passage
of dialogue for the inserting of Turkey in the EU, on the basis of
specific common values."

Phew: one missile dodged. The reply hauled the Pope back from a
position 180 degrees distant from his stated view on the subject
to the carefully finessed, multiply interpretable type of ambiguity
which is the Holy See’s favourite diplomatic ground.

Still wearing the wonderful coat, Benedict was whisked in a white
stretched Chevrolet limousine – not rock-star stretched, to be sure,
but considerably longer than necessary – to the secular cathedral at
the heart of Ankara, which was no more than a dusty provincial town
in the middle of arid Anatolia until Ataturk made it his fortress and
headquarters during Turkey’s war of independence. That cathedral is
of course the mausoleum of the Great Man himself, and Benedict would
have found the architecture familiar because it is startlingly similar
to the Fascist architecture of Rome.

The Pope will not use his Popemobile on this trip, for there is no
need of one.

No well-wishers lined his way, nobody waved flags. Heavily armed riot
police stood guard, but they had nothing to do, no one to protect him
from. Neither well-wishers nor evil-wishers turned up. For the leader
of 1.1 billion Catholics, visiting the land where Abraham walked and
where live the last, vestigial communities of Christians speaking
the same Aramaic language as Jesus Christ, it was a lonely progression.

Inside the mausoleum he paused for several moments before the tomb,
his hands clasped in prayer.

In the run-up to the Pope’s Turkish visit, attention has concentrated
on the perils of the trip, perils made very much worse by Benedict’s
use of the words "evil and inhuman" – quoting a 14th-century
Byzantine emperor – to characterise Islam, in a speech he gave in
September. Today in Ankara such apprehension seems overblown. Ankara
barely turned its head for the Pope. There were traffic nuisances,
hours of news coverage, and that was about it.

But there was an argument to be had and to be won, and the Pope
was not going to be allowed to escape it. He had said – who in the
Islamic world cares, really, that he was quoting someone else? –
that Islam was evil and inhuman. He had expressed his regrets,
but he had not eaten those words. And the Turks, in the four days
that he is among them, are going to do their best to make him eat
them. He had been on Turkish ground only a matter of minutes – he
declined to follow his predecessor’s example and kiss the Tarmac –
when the Prime Minister had a go. "I told him," said Mr Erdogan,
"that Islam is full of tolerance, love and peace, and I see that he
shares this view. He has a warm approach to Islam."

Then in mid-afternoon Professor Ali Bardakoglu, the most important
Islamic cleric in the land and head of the state’s religious affairs
department, had another try.

"We Muslims condemn all types of violence and terror," he said,
dressed not unlike the Pope in long cream robes, but in his case
topped off by a high-standing cream-coloured hat, called a saruk.

"However during recent times we observe that Islamophobia, which
expresses the conviction that Islam contains and encourages violence,
and that Islam was spread all over the world by the sword… is
increasing."

These views – the views voiced in Regensburg two months ago by the
Pope, though he ascribed them to a long-dead Byzantine – "are not based
on any scientific and historical researches and data," he went on,
"and are not compatible with justice and reason".

The Pope, in that now infamous address, had distinguished "reasonable"
Christianity (which attempted to win converts by force of argument)
with "evil and inhuman" Islam, which believed in spreading the faith
by the sword, by violence instead of persuasion.

Now Turkey’s most important cleric had thrown the words back in his
face. The stage was set for a ferocious debate.

But the Pope and his advisers have a lively awareness of how easily
it would be for this polemical Pope to fly off the rails again. So
Benedict did not take up the challenge to prove his thesis. Instead
he rummaged again in ancient ecclesiastical history and came up with
somebody very different from the Byzantine Manuel II Paleologus. His
name was Pope Gregory VII, and in 1076 he was addressing an (unnamed)
Muslim prince of North Africa "who had shown great benevolence to
Christians under his jurisdiction".

"Pope Gregory VII spoke of the special charity which Christians and
Muslims must reciprocate," said the Pope, "because we believe and
confess one God, though in different ways, and every day we venerate
and praise him as the Creator of the ages and the Governor of the
world."

Back to basics, then: forget the Great Schism of 1054 that rent apart
the one church, forget the Crusades, the long centuries of vicious
antagonism between Christians and Muslims; shunt aside, if only for
a few days, the louring, menacing shapes of Bin Laden and Al-Zawahiri
(who have no shortage of supporters in Turkey). Forget that the Pope
said what he said.

The paranoid, and those with their trigger fingers twitching, are on
high alert for what Pope Ratzinger does during the next three days.

Will he raise the Armenian genocide during his meeting with the
Armenians? Will he use the word "ecumenical" when he meets the Orthodox
patriarch, a word so harmless in Europe but which here is shorthand
for the bid to bring back Byzantine? Will he make the sign of the
cross as he enters the doors of Hagia Sophia?

But forget all that. Remember instead the instances of benevolence
and charity: the fact that the Ottoman empire, Christendom’s long
antagonist, actually had a reasonable record in tolerating and
succouring the non-Muslim communities in its midst.

Then remember Giuseppe Roncalli, the Holy See’s apostolic delegate to
Turkey and Greece who lived in Istanbul from 1935 to 1945, who loved
the Turks and was loved by them in return, and later became Pope John
XXIII. In Turkey, neither the Muslims nor the now-tiny Christian and
Jewish communities have forgotten him (the Jews call him a "righteous
gentile" for his role in saving thousands of Jews during the war).

And when he was beatified in 2000, the street where he had lived in
Istanbul was renamed Roncalli Street, in his memory.

Pope Benedict took the most momentous steps of his pontificate
yesterday. They carried him, as he said, across a "bridge", from one
world to another: from Europe to Asia, from Christianity to Islam, from
the tender embrace of Catholic Europe – the Italian state sent him on
his way with ministers and high officials, they closed Rome’s airport
and escorted him out of Italian airspace with air force fighters –
to a nation that has left no possible doubt that it views his arrival
with the greatest diffidence.

Immediately he was ambushed. He came down the steps of the papal flight
in an elegant but extravagantly long double-breasted ivory overcoat
that fell to his ankles. (This pope will never, it seems, stop trying
to live down his first appearances in the job last year, when his
cassock barely came below his calves.) For weeks the Vatican had been
bracing itself for a nasty snub: the Prime Minister, Tayyip Erdogan,
a devout Muslim whose wife does not go outdoors without a headscarf,
would be away in Latvia at the Nato summit, it was explained, and
could not meet Benedict.

But the Pope is a head of state, and Turkey’s sights are still set on
the European Union; why give more ammunition to those countries – the
Austrians and French and Germans – who want the Turkish shadow banished
from the EU? And so an airport meeting was arranged at the last
minute. They sat, Benedict and Erdogan, under a portrait of Ataturk,
father of the modern Turkish state. Mr Erdogan had unaccountably failed
to button his jacket. No matter. They exchanged gifts, a painting for
the Pope, a medal for the Turk. And they had a little, sotto voce chat.

Afterwards Mr Erdogan briefed the press on what they had said. "I
welcomed him," he said, "and said that I hoped his visit would be
fruitful for world peace… As you know, we never build upon hate,
but I gave my condolences for the murder" – of an Italian Catholic
priest, in February – "in the city of Trabzon. But I said that this
should not be seen as a Muslim doing this to a Catholic."

All quite unexceptionable. But then he pounced. "I asked the Pope for
his help with our application to join the European Union," said the
sly Mr Erdogan. As everybody in Turkey and many people elsewhere know,
the Pope (when he was still Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) is on the record
as strenuously opposing Turkey’s joining the EU, because its Muslim
religion made it too "strongly contrasted" with Christian Europe.

Still, the Prime Minister popped the question: would the Pope help?

Yes, according to the Prime Minister. "And the Pope said, as you know
we are not political, but we will help Turkey’s case."

Is that what Benedict said? Is the Holy See going to give Turkey’s
EU application an obliging shove? It took about three hours for an
embarrassed Vatican to produce its own version. Then out it came,
a scrupulous, lawyerly, clause-by-clause clarification. The Pope
"has neither the power nor the specific political duty to intervene
on this precise point," said the spokesman, Federico Lombardi, in a
written statement. "But he sees positively and encourages the passage
of dialogue for the inserting of Turkey in the EU, on the basis of
specific common values."

Phew: one missile dodged. The reply hauled the Pope back from a
position 180 degrees distant from his stated view on the subject
to the carefully finessed, multiply interpretable type of ambiguity
which is the Holy See’s favourite diplomatic ground.

Still wearing the wonderful coat, Benedict was whisked in a white
stretched Chevrolet limousine – not rock-star stretched, to be sure,
but considerably longer than necessary – to the secular cathedral at
the heart of Ankara, which was no more than a dusty provincial town
in the middle of arid Anatolia until Ataturk made it his fortress and
headquarters during Turkey’s war of independence. That cathedral is
of course the mausoleum of the Great Man himself, and Benedict would
have found the architecture familiar because it is startlingly similar
to the Fascist architecture of Rome.

The Pope will not use his Popemobile on this trip, for there is no
need of one.

No well-wishers lined his way, nobody waved flags. Heavily armed riot
police stood guard, but they had nothing to do, no one to protect him
from. Neither well-wishers nor evil-wishers turned up. For the leader
of 1.1 billion Catholics, visiting the land where Abraham walked and
where live the last, vestigial communities of Christians speaking
the same Aramaic language as Jesus Christ, it was a lonely progression.

Inside the mausoleum he paused for several moments before the tomb,
his hands clasped in prayer.

In the run-up to the Pope’s Turkish visit, attention has concentrated
on the perils of the trip, perils made very much worse by Benedict’s
use of the words "evil and inhuman" – quoting a 14th-century
Byzantine emperor – to characterise Islam, in a speech he gave in
September. Today in Ankara such apprehension seems overblown. Ankara
barely turned its head for the Pope. There were traffic nuisances,
hours of news coverage, and that was about it.

But there was an argument to be had and to be won, and the Pope
was not going to be allowed to escape it. He had said – who in the
Islamic world cares, really, that he was quoting someone else? –
that Islam was evil and inhuman. He had expressed his regrets,
but he had not eaten those words. And the Turks, in the four days
that he is among them, are going to do their best to make him eat
them. He had been on Turkish ground only a matter of minutes – he
declined to follow his predecessor’s example and kiss the Tarmac –
when the Prime Minister had a go. "I told him," said Mr Erdogan,
"that Islam is full of tolerance, love and peace, and I see that he
shares this view. He has a warm approach to Islam."

Then in mid-afternoon Professor Ali Bardakoglu, the most important
Islamic cleric in the land and head of the state’s religious affairs
department, had another try.

"We Muslims condemn all types of violence and terror," he said,
dressed not unlike the Pope in long cream robes, but in his case
topped off by a high-standing cream-coloured hat, called a saruk.

"However during recent times we observe that Islamophobia, which
expresses the conviction that Islam contains and encourages violence,
and that Islam was spread all over the world by the sword… is
increasing."

These views – the views voiced in Regensburg two months ago by the
Pope, though he ascribed them to a long-dead Byzantine – "are not based
on any scientific and historical researches and data," he went on,
"and are not compatible with justice and reason".

The Pope, in that now infamous address, had distinguished "reasonable"
Christianity (which attempted to win converts by force of argument)
with "evil and inhuman" Islam, which believed in spreading the faith
by the sword, by violence instead of persuasion.

Now Turkey’s most important cleric had thrown the words back in his
face. The stage was set for a ferocious debate.

But the Pope and his advisers have a lively awareness of how easily
it would be for this polemical Pope to fly off the rails again. So
Benedict did not take up the challenge to prove his thesis. Instead
he rummaged again in ancient ecclesiastical history and came up with
somebody very different from the Byzantine Manuel II Paleologus. His
name was Pope Gregory VII, and in 1076 he was addressing an (unnamed)
Muslim prince of North Africa "who had shown great benevolence to
Christians under his jurisdiction".

"Pope Gregory VII spoke of the special charity which Christians and
Muslims must reciprocate," said the Pope, "because we believe and
confess one God, though in different ways, and every day we venerate
and praise him as the Creator of the ages and the Governor of the
world."

Back to basics, then: forget the Great Schism of 1054 that rent apart
the one church, forget the Crusades, the long centuries of vicious
antagonism between Christians and Muslims; shunt aside, if only for
a few days, the louring, menacing shapes of Bin Laden and Al-Zawahiri
(who have no shortage of supporters in Turkey). Forget that the Pope
said what he said.

The paranoid, and those with their trigger fingers twitching, are on
high alert for what Pope Ratzinger does during the next three days.

Will he raise the Armenian genocide during his meeting with the
Armenians? Will he use the word "ecumenical" when he meets the Orthodox
patriarch, a word so harmless in Europe but which here is shorthand
for the bid to bring back Byzantine? Will he make the sign of the
cross as he enters the doors of Hagia Sophia?

But forget all that. Remember instead the instances of benevolence
and charity: the fact that the Ottoman empire, Christendom’s long
antagonist, actually had a reasonable record in tolerating and
succouring the non-Muslim communities in its midst.

Then remember Giuseppe Roncalli, the Holy See’s apostolic delegate to
Turkey and Greece who lived in Istanbul from 1935 to 1945, who loved
the Turks and was loved by them in return, and later became Pope John
XXIII. In Turkey, neither the Muslims nor the now-tiny Christian and
Jewish communities have forgotten him (the Jews call him a "righteous
gentile" for his role in saving thousands of Jews during the war).

And when he was beatified in 2000, the street where he had lived in
Istanbul was renamed Roncalli Street, in his memory.

Jarangutiun Hopelessly Applies To Courts To Restore Its Rights

JARANGUTIUN HOPELESSLY APPLIES TO COURTS TO RESTORE ITS RIGHTS

Panorama.am
14:57 28/11/06

The general prosecutor’s office refused to file a case against illegal
invasion of the office of Jaragutiun (Heritage) party and getting into
its computer database. On March 8, 2006 unknown people entered the
sealed office of Jarangutiun party and entered into their computer
database. The fact was registered at the law enforcement bodies but
the case was not opened. The general prosecutor’s office also refused
to open a case.

Vardan Khachatryan, board chairman of Jarangutiun, told a press
conference at Pakagits Club that they intend to apply to all court
instances. In case they fail at all levels, they will apply to
European Court on Human Rights. Jarangutiun is sure the power
structures administered the illegal office invasion.

For Republican Majority It Is Unfavorable To Listen To Rafik Petrosy

FOR REPUBLICAN MAJORITY IT IS UNFAVORABLE TO LISTEN TO RAFIK PETROSYAN

Lragir, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

Recently the Constitutional Court of Armenia has declared some
government decisions and provisions of some laws unconstitutional.

Apparently, the system of public administration, which drafts and
implements laws, is not aware of the Constitution of Armenia. The
majority of this system are Republicans, therefore we asked Republican
Member of Parliament Rafik Petrosyan, lawyer, chair of the State and
Legal Committee, if the public men in charge of public administration
do not know the Constitution.

"Making laws is work, and the one who works may make mistakes.

Similarly, the National Assembly makes mistakes in adopting the laws
due to unawareness or political expediency. The Constitutional Court
was set up, and taxpayers pay their salary, to make the laws comply
with the Constitution," Rafik Petrosyan says.

With deep respect for the opinion of the parliamentarian lawyer,
we nevertheless dared to ask why in that case the lawyers of the
government and the National Assembly get salaries from the taxes that
people pay.

"In the National Assembly, the members of parliament allegedly,
as well as the government, have the right for legislative action.

Usually, the members of parliament are not professional lawyers,
they do not hire assistants to help them through drafting laws, and
sometimes they offer things to the committees that either you have to
draft it anew or you have to throw it away. The government presents 70
percent of bills. They also make mistakes, the National Assembly is a
political body, and sometimes it is not taken into account whether it
is right or wrong, if the majority decides that it should be adopted,
it is adopted," Rafik Petrosyan says.

It means that the lawyers hired at the National Assembly, the
government agencies, the ministries are absolutely redundant, if in
adopting laws the Republican majority places the political aspect
superior to the legal aspect.

"There are lawyers, and I am one of them. When, for instance, the
law on expropriation was adopted, I warned for several times at
the rostrum that they will go to the Constitutional Court and two
provisions will be defined as unconstitutional," Rafik Petrosyan says.

And why does the majority refuse to listen to Republican Rafik
Petrosyan? Petrosyan says they need to do so. In other words, the
majority apparently needs to overlook the Constitution. "No, they
think they are right. In most cases they listen, in 80 percent of
cases. In this particular case, they did not listen because it is
not favorable," Republican Rafik Petrosyan confesses.

Armenian Prime Minister Leaves For Minsk To Participate In CIS Membe

ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER LEAVE FOR MINSK TO PARTICIPATE IN CIS MEMBER COUNTRIES’ PRIME MINISTERS’ SITTING

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Nov 27 2006

YEREVAN, November 27. /ARKA/. The Armenian delegation led by Prime
Minister Andranik Margaryan left for Minsk on Thursday to participate
in the CIS member countries’ prime ministers’ regular sitting, the
press service of the Armenian government reported.

On November 24, the prime ministers will discuss issues of CIS
countries’ cooperation in different spheres and sign over 20 documents
prepared by different CIS structures.

In particular, it is planned to examine issues related to the
implementation plan of the most important activities, aimed at
developing and improving cooperation of CIS countries in the economic
sphere in 2003-2010, implementing the plan of actions on CIS countries’
cooperation development until 2005, studying the report on activity
of the CIS antiterrorist center and the one budget of CIS structures.

It is also planned to sign the CIS strategy on computerization and the
plan of actions on its implementation until 2010, the project of the
CIS program on combat against human traffic for 2007-2010, the CIS
countries’ cooperation project, the document on forming a working
group for elaboration of the project of target intergovernmental
programs on implementation of joint activities aimed at creation of
one system of registering foreigners arriving at the CIS territory,
and the decision on allocation of funds for creation and development
of the integrated air defense system of CIS countries in 2007.

Azeri Experts: Separatists Manifest Military Activeness

SEPARATISTS MANIFEST MILITARY ACTIVENESS
by R. Manafly

Source: Echo (Baku), November 22, 2006, p. EV
Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
November 27, 2006 Monday

Azerbaijani experts explain this by the visit of Arkady Gukasyan to
the US and increase of military expenditures of Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani Experts Point At Growing Military Activeness In
Nagorno-Karabakh; Lately, Armenian separatists started taking active
military measures.

Azerbaijan should express decisive protest about actions of Armenian
separatists on the occupied territories. Well-known military expert
Uzeir Dzhafarov said this in a conversation with Echo.

Lately, Armenian separatists started taking active military measures.

For instance, on November 20, units of the armed forces of Armenia
started large-scale military exercises on the occupied territories of
the Agdam District of Azerbaijan. The exercises are conducted mostly
in Uzunder village. Explosions are heard on the territories where
the armed forces of Armenia are having military exercises.

In the framework of the combat training plan of the armed forces of
the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic for 2006, competition of commanders of
mechanized infantry and tank companies was conducted in one of the
training military units. For five days commanders demonstrated their
skills in use of armament and improved their field skills. Regnum
reports that such events are organized in the armed forces of
Armenian separatists regularly with participation of commanders of
various levels.

Really, Dzhafarov points out that now the separatist armed forces
manifest excessive military activeness on the occupied territories of
Azerbaijan. Along with this, the military expert does not rule out
that this time rattling sabers is connected with trip of leader of
Armenian separatists Arkady Gukasyan to the US. Dzhafarov stresses,
"It is possible that the exercises about which we hear today are a
part of a military plan developed by Armenian separatists."

According to Dzhafarov, military exercises are conducted on the
occupied Azerbaijani territories that incur serious damage on
environment of the region. Dzhafarov warns that this damage is much
bigger than the damage from the summer arsons.

The expert says that he is amazed by the indifference of the Foreign
Ministry and Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan. Official stance of the
ministries remains unknown still.

In turn, Ilgar Mamedov, another military expert, presumes that growing
activeness of Armenian separatists in the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
is connected primarily with statements of Azerbaijani authorities
about regaining the occupied territories in a military way that have
grown more frequent. The expert presumes, "Such statements of state
officials have sounded very often lately and it is possible to say
that this scares Armenia."

According to Mamedov, the growing Armenian military activeness is
also a result of the statements of Azerbaijani authorities regarding
an intention to spend up to $1 billion on military needs of the
country. Mamedov points out, "How can Armenian military stay quiet
if their budget, according to the most optimistic forecasts, will not
exceed $300 million? That is why Armenian separatists try to manifest
activeness in the military field."

UCLA Engineering Celebrates Accomplishments at Annual Awards Dinner

UCLA Engineering

Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
News Center
ds%20Dinner%202006.htm

[Photo]
2006 Alumnus of the Year Linda Katehi and Dean Vijay K. Dhir

UCLA Engineering Celebrates Accomplishments at
Annual Awards Dinner

The UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
celebrated the accomplishments of alumni, students, and faculty at this
year’s annual awards dinner, held on Friday, November 3, at the Four
Seasons’ Beverly Wilshire Hotel ballroom.

With nearly 450 colleagues and friends in attendance, awards were
presented to 13 individuals, including provost and vice chancellor for
academic affairs at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
Linda Katehi, honored as the 2006 Alumnus of the Year.

KNBC 4 reporter and engineering alumnus Patrick Healy, along with UCLA
Engineering Dean Vijay K. Dhir, emceed the event.

`We’re proud of the work our faculty and students do. The work we do
today makes a difference in the world tomorrow,’ Dhir told the crowd.
`In the past, they used to say the sun never set on the British Empire.
I say that the sun is always shining on UCLA Engineering, through its
exceptional alumni living and working all over the world.’

The evening’s big honor was given to Katehi, Alumnus of the Year, for
distinguishing herself in both academia and in integrated circuits and
systems.

`Linda Katehi’s work has been described as visionary, pioneering, and
innovative,’ said Dhir in his introduction. `She is a truly
extraordinary researcher and educator.’

Katehi, provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, thanked the school for
honoring her achievements and talked of her journey to the United States
to attend school early in her career.

A humble Katehi said she was simply an average student who had an
extraordinary mentor during her time at UCLA. Her successes at UCLA, she
said, led her on to even greater things.

Dwight Streit, vice president of electronics technology at Northrup
Grumman and Ronald Sugar, chairman and chief executive officer of
Northrop Grumman took the stage together to present the 2006 Northrup
Grumman Excellence in Teaching Award to computer science assistant
professor John Cho and civil and environmental engineering assistant
professor Steven Margulis. The award honors junior faculty who
demonstrate a commitment to high teaching standards, reflected in the
positive course evaluation scores from students, as well as the
professor’s contributions to the curriculum.

Electrical engineering professor Behzad Razavi received the 2006
Lockheed Martin Excellence in Teaching Award from Lockheed’s
Aeronautical Engineering Director Larry Pellett. The award was given to
Razavi for dedication to his students; a vigorous commitment to high
academic standards; and his many contributions to electrical engineering
education.

James Plummer (BS ’66), dean of the Stanford School of Engineering,
received the Alumni Achievement in Academia Award from Associate Dean
Steve Jacobsen for his many contributions to engineering education.
Plummer was honored for his major contributions to the field of silicon
devices and technology, including the integration of CMOS logic and high
voltage lateral DMOS devices on a single chip, the development of
silicon process modeling standards, and designing nanoscale silicon
devices for logic and memory.

Associate Dean Greg Pottie introduced the Lifetime Contribution Award,
which he presented to computer science Professor Emeritus Gerald Estrin.
Dean Boelter recruited Estrin in 1956 to develop a computer engineering
research program. Estrin was honored for leading substantial research
activities in computer architectures, parallel processing, computer
instrumentation and computer networks, and importantly, for laying the
groundwork for the development of what is now the department of Computer
Science.

Last year’s winner of the 2005 Professional Achievement Award, Jeff
Lawrence, founder, president and CEO of Clivia Systems (BS ’79), this
year presented the 2006 award to the founders of Blizzard Entertainment:
Allen Adham(BS ’90), Michael Morhaime (BS ’90), and Frank Pearce (BS
’90). The three were honored for founding Blizzard Entertainment
(originally Silicon & Synapse) in 1991, just a year after they received
their bachelor degrees from UCLA Engineering. The company has since
become one of the most successful game development studios in the world.

Asad Madni, president of the Engineering Alumni Association, presented
the Distinguished Young Alumnus Award to Ani Garabedian (BS ’99) with a
heartfelt introduction. He cited Garabedian’s exceptional technical
skills, as well as an extraordinary drive to give back to UCLA. She
currently serves as chair of the UCLA Society of Women Engineers Alumnae
Advisory Committee, a member of the electrical engineering alumni
advisory board, and is active in the UCLA Alumni Association.

Friend of the school Edward K. Rice himself presented this year’s Edward
K. Rice Outstanding Student honors, which recognize excellence both in
and outside the classroom: 2006 Outstanding Undergraduate Student, Baley
Akemi Fong, 2006 Outstanding Master’s student, Christine Lee, and 2006
Outstanding Doctoral Student, Alireza Mehrnia.

The evening also included a video showcasing innovative faculty research
and new developments over the past year, featuring mechanical and
aerospace engineering professor Greg Carman and his work with thin film
nitinol heart valves for children, research on beach sand bacteria
conducted by civil and environmental engineering professor Jennifer Jay,
and electrical engineering professor Abeer Alwan’s efforts to develop a
computer speech program for kids whose native language is not English.

The film shared innovative new work by computer science professor Majid
Sarrafzadeh on computerized medical treatment devices, and focused on
two new interdisciplinary research centers headquartered at the School,
the Western Institute of Nanoelectronics and the NIH Nanomedicine Center
for Cell Control.

###

11.06.06
-M.Abraham

http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/news/2006/Awar