According To RA President’s Spokesperson, Amnesty Will Also Extend T

ACCORDING TO RA PRESIDENT’S SPOKESPERSON, AMNESTY WILL ALSO EXTEND TO PEOPLE COMMITTING CRIME DURING 2008 MARCH 1-2 EVENTS IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
June 17, 2009

YEREVAN, JUNE 17, NOYAN TAPAN. As it has been already reported,
one issue, RA President’s proposal on granting an amnesty according
to part 1, Article 81, RA Constitution, is on the agenda of the RA
National Assembly June 19 special session.

According to RA President’s Spokesperson Samvel Farmanian, all
conditions of amnesty are determined in detail in the proposal of
granting an amnesty. "President’s proposal also extends to people
committing crimes during the events occurred on March 1-2 2008 in
Yerevan," President’s Spokesperson told Armenpress correspondent.

Ankara: Turkey Has Definitely Not Lost Interest In EU Membership, FM

TURKEY HAS DEFINITELY NOT LOST INTEREST IN EU MEMBERSHIP, FM DAVUTOGLU

Anadolu Agency
June 16 2009
Turkey

BERLIN (A.A) – 16.06.2009 – Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
said Tuesday Turkey has definitely not lost interest in EU membership.

In a joint press conference with his German counterpart Frank Walter
Steinmeier in Berlin, Davutoglu said that "Turkey has not lost interest
in EU membership. One of the rare topics on which both the ruling
political party and the opposition agree on is the issue of Turkey’s
EU membership. Turkey’s EU membership is a topic always discussed by
the Turkish cabinet. We are working on many issues regarding Turkey’s
EU membership".

"We believe in Germany’s support of Turkey’s EU membership and thank
Steinmeier for his support," Davutoglu said.

"We do not think any other alternative for Turkey but EU
membership. Turkey is a crucial energy corridor," Davutoglu stressed.

Touching on the Cyprus issue, Davutoglu said that Turkey continues
to support the negotiations between the President of the Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) Mehmet Ali Talat and the leader
of the Greek Cypriot administration Demetris Christofias.

"We hope that a lasting solution is established in Cyprus that
is based on peace and welfare. As you know, we had reached such a
solution in 2004. The Greek Cypriot side rejected such a solution
and assumed an attitude that has caused today’s problems. We hope
that the Greek Cypriot administration leaves such an attitude and
can jointly make Eastern Mediterranean a region of peace. We also
hope that the issue of Cyprus will be lifted from being an obstacle
(in Turkey’s EU process)," Davutoglu said.

"We discussed with Steinmeier the developments in Iran and the
Caucasus. We thank Germany for its efforts in bringing Azerbaijan
and Armenia closer to each other," Davutoglu said.

"There are common interests between Turkey and Germany and there are
not any disagreements between Turkey and Germany. Our countries have
deep rooted relations. Germany is Turkey’s number one trade partner. We
decided on establishing working groups so that the strategic dialogue
between Turkey and Germany gets developed," Davutoglu said.

"Bilateral relations should be placed on a stronger base and we
need a strong cultural base. Accordingly, we will speed up efforts
for the Turkish-German University to be established in Istanbul,"
Davutoglu noted.

"We will cooperate strongly with Germany so that the Turks living in
Germany get accustomed to the German society and reach the respectable
status that they deserve. The Turkish community living in Germany is
an important bridge between the two countries," Davutoglu also said.

Steinmeier, in his part, said that "we discussed with Davutoglu the
developments taking place in the Caucasus and Middle East. We also
discussed bilateral relations".

"We not only wish to develop political and economic relations
but cultural relations as well. Many Turkish artists are known in
Germany. We want to conclude efforts to establish the Turkish-German
University in Istanbul," Steinmeier said.

"We talked about the Upper Karabakh problem and Azerbaijan’s
relationship with Armenia with Davutoglu," Steinmeier said.

Touching on Turkey’s EU membership, Steinmeier said that the chapter on
"taxation" will soon be opened to negotiations.

"The EU negotiations are open ended. Yet the goal of the negotiations
is Turkey’s full membership in the EU," Steinmeier said.

Asked about what he thinks on the February decision of the European
Court of Justice (ECJ) in regard to visa procedures for Turkish
truck driver Mehmet Soysal, Steinmeier said that "as every European
country, we do respect the decision of the European Court of Justice. I
believe that the interior ministers of our two countries will soon
begin discussing on the (visa) issue".

Region Needs Stabilized Iran

REGION NEEDS STABILIZED IRAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
15.06.2009 15:48 GMT+04:00

Stability in Iran is important for the entire region, a Turkish
expert said. "Opposition’s clashes with the police are the first
signs of instability for the past 30 years," Sinan Ogan, head of
the Ankara-based International Relations and Strategic Analysis
Center (TURKSAM), told PanARMENIAN.Net "With support of Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Ahmadinejad was confident of his
victory. However, he did not expect his rival Mir-Hossein Mousavi
to enlist support of the youth and women. I think the authorities
will crack down on oppositionists," he said and added that Iran has
entered a new era. Ogan also noted that Ahmadinejad’s re-election will
be another headache for the U.S. administration. "Although President
Obama voiced readiness to improve relations with Iran, he hoped to
deal with a new leader," he said. Ahmadinejad was re-elected with 62.6
percent of the vote, against 33.7 percent for his main rival Mousavi.

Issue Of Genocide To Be Included In Massachusetts School Programs

ISSUE OF GENOCIDE TO BE INCLUDED IN MASSACHUSETTS SCHOOL PROGRAMS

NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY
JUNE 15, 2009
VASHINGTON

In a major blow to Turkey’s global campaign to suppress the truth
about the Armenian Genocide, U.S. District Court Chief Judge Mark
Wolf ruled in favor of the Massachusetts Department of Education,
allowing it to continue teaching the facts of the Armenian Genocide
and other crimes against humanity in schools’ history books and speak
about this in public schools.

According to the Azg daily, the Armenian Assembly of America (AAA)
appreciates the court’s decision emphasizing that it sends a clear
message to Turkey and its revisionist allies that history cannot be
rewritten to further Ankara’s state-sponsored denial campaign. Carolyn
Mugar, the Board’s President stressed that owing to the overwhelming
historical and legal evidence documenting the incontestable fact
of the Armenian Genocide, this ruling is a victory for all those
concerned about genocide education and prevention of such crimes.

DigiTec Business High Technologies Exhibition To Be Held In Yerevan

DIGITEC BUSINESS HIGH TECHNOLOGIES EXHIBITION TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN ON 19-20 JUNE

ArmInfo
2009-06-15 12:15:00

ArmInfo. DigiTec Business high technologies exhibition, dedicated to
integration of business and projects of Armenian IT-companies, will
be held in Yerevan on 19-20 June. The main sponsor of the exhibition
is ArmenTel company (brand Beeline). The UITE of Armenia and Microsoft
office in Armenia have organized the exhibition, in which 25 Armenian
IT-companies and about 1500 guests will take part. Armenian Prime
Minister Tigran Sarkisyan and Economy Minister Nerses Yeritsyan will
make speeches at the opening ceremony of the forum, over which the
following topics will be discussed: "Monopoly as the main obstacle
on the way of informational and telecommunicational technologies
implementation in business’, "Creation of all-national computer net>,
etc. Various seminars will be also held during the forum.

One day personal participation in the forum costs 5thsd drams (about
$15), two-day – 8thsd drams. A small company should pay 10 thsd drams
(5 tickets) to take part in the forum, a medium-sized – 150thsd
(10 tickets) and a big one – 200 thsd (20 tickets). The corporative
package costs 300 thsd drams (30 tickets).

Turkey’s New Political Landscape – Can The Kurds Still Be Ignored?

TURKEY’S NEW POLITICAL LANDSCAPE – CAN THE KURDS STILL BE IGNORED?

Kurdish Herald
cle01.php
June 11 2009

The land that comprises present-day Turkey has reinvented itself many
times over the centuries, undergoing a number of extreme changes which
yield today’s Republic and all of its inherent contradictions. In past
incarnations, the ancient city of Istanbul (formerly Constantinople),
has been the capital of a number of officially Christian empires
(beginning with the Roman Empire under Theodosius I) and the capital
of a Muslim empire that also functioned as a caliphate (the Ottoman
Empire). Today it is the business and cultural center of Turkey,
a state founded on staunchly secular principles which officially
places limitations on public expressions of religious belief.

More than ever, Turkey today is a land in flux. It’s imperfect
democratic system, complete with various measures that help insure
that the military has some measure of control over the policies of the
country, has yielded a number of interesting and noteworthy changes
over the past few decades. On a number of occasions, Turkish citizens
have cast their votes and overturned the existing political system,
and, on a number of other occasions, the Turkish military has stepped
in to enforce its will upon the democratically-elected government.

Results of the 2009 nationwide local election in Turkey.

Over the past few years, we have witnessed the rise of a new
powerhouse in Turkish politics, the Justice and Development Party
(AKP), a party which by definition as an Islamist party contradicts
the founding ideology of the secular, Western Turkish Republic. Indeed,
the AKP rose to power democratically by receiving votes not only from
religious voters but also from those looking for a protest vote and
finding it in a party that preached moral values. Even many Kurds,
motivated by either religious fervor or anger at the establishment
reflected by the Republican People’s Party (CHP), cast their votes
for the AKP.

Since it’s founding in 2001, the AKP has solidified its role as
Turkey’s dominant political party. The AKP is no longer a curious
newcomer to the world of politics, it is a major part of the Turkish
political framework. And while dominant, it is but one player in the
complicated, high stakes game that is Turkish politics. The results of
the recent municipal elections in Turkey explain the current state of
Turkey’s political system, and, in many ways, are the culmination of
a number of interesting developments in the Turkish political scene
over the last few years.

Whole swaths of Turkey are now firmly in the camp of one political
party or another. While the AKP received far more votes than any of
its opponents, it failed in its stated goal of breaking into the
old strongholds of other political parties, such as Izmir for the
CHP (where the CHP won 55% of votes for greater municipal mayor)
or Diyarbakir for the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP)
(where they won 66% of votes for greater municipal mayor). The CHP
came out in control of much of the western coast of Turkey, spanning
all the way from Icel to Edirne. This reflects a strong backing from
Turkey’s Kemalist elite, who have traditionally been staunch adherents
of the Republic’s founding ideology and, in keeping with this ideology,
are generally Western-leaning and secular. Many in this group are
fairly wealthy, relatively speaking, and are genuinely alarmed
and even dismayed by the rise of the AKP, a group that they fear is
steering Turkey dangerously far from its founding principles. The more
right-wing Nationalist Action Party (MHP) won a number of provinces in
the west and, together with the CHP and CHP offshoot DSP (Democratic
Left Party), controls much of Turkey’s northern border.

Meanwhile, much of the rest of Turkey, throughout Anatolia, cast
their votes for the AKP, demonstrating a clear division between
the secular elite of certain regions who have been members of the
Kemalist establishment for decades and a newly resurgent class of more
traditional Turkish citizens who, over the past decade, have become
more educated and more mobilized. While the CHP and MHP represent
certain regions on Turkey’s borders, the Anatolian heartland is
dominated by the AKP.

The one exception to this general rule is the predominantly
Kurdish southeast, a land which many Kurds identify as northern
Kurdistan. Despite the best efforts of the AKP, the poorly-funded
but well organized DTP emerged as the voice of the southeast, scoring
victories by large margins in certain strongholds such as Diyarbakir
and capturing others previously held by other parties, such as Igdir
near Turkey’s border with Armenia. A cursory glance at Turkey’s new
political map makes it difficult to deny that the DTP is the voice
of the Kurds of Turkey.

The various factions that comprise the Turkish establishment,
including the government (AKP), the Kemalist political establishment
(CHP), and the military, have, in the past, taken great pains to
ostracize members of the DTP, accusing them of being complicit in
"terrorism", a reference to the activities of the Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK). Many MPs, including the Prime Minister, refused to
shake hands with DTP parliamentarians and military generals refused
to appear at events attended by DTP members. Now that the DTP has
truly established itself as the voice of Turkey’s Kurdish citizens
and the dominant power in a whole section of the country, it is a
lot more difficult to ignore. Slowly but surely, it seems that some
of the larger factions in the Turkish establishment are realizing
this as recently CHP Deputy Secretary General Mesut Deger met
with DTP chairman Ahmet Turk to discuss the Kurdish issue. Almost
concurrently, a report which stated that Prime Minister Erdogan
himself was preparing to meet representatives of the DTP. At nearly
the same time, the Turkish newspaper Milliyet published an interview
with PKK military leader Murat Karayilan following journalist Hasan
Cemal’s visit to the Qendil mountains with the headline, "Karayilan:
we have hope for peace." In another interesting development, following
the publication of this interview, Cemal was reportedly contacted by
the offices of several of Turkey’s most influential policymakers to
discussions – President Gul, Prime Minister Erdogan, and Minister of
Foreign Affairs Ahmet Davutoglu, though his meetings with all three
were apparently postponed.

The results of this year’s municipal elections were no surprise
and were not revolutionary. Rather, they were an accurate snapshot
of the new political map of Turkey, a summary of the complex and
ever-evolving reality of one of the world’s more curious democratic
systems. As the heirs of the legacy of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and the
powerbrokers of Turkey’s political world react to these developments,
it seems that they may indeed be forced to address Turkey’s Kurdish
question in a more direct manner than ever before. Indeed, this may
already be happening.

http://www.kurdishherald.com/issue/002/arti

ANKARA: US Diplomat Warns Armenia-Turkey Talks Can’t Go On Forever

US DIPLOMAT WARNS ARMENIA-TURKEY TALKS CAN’T GO ON FOREVER

Today’s Zaman
June 11 2009
Turkey

A senior US diplomat has called on estranged neighbors Armenia and
Turkey to make progress in reconciliation talks aimed at mending
relations and reopening their border.

Philip Gordon, the US assistant secretary of state for European and
Eurasian affairs, speaking at a press conference held on Tuesday
in Yerevan, said talks should be concluded within a "reasonable
timeframe."

"The process can’t go on forever. But I think the parties understand
that both sides appreciated this — they need to go forward and they
will," he said. "There should be no preconditions [in the talks],"
he added, underlining that the normalization of diplomatic ties
between the two neighbors "would benefit Turkey, Armenia and the
entire region."

Ankara and Yerevan announced in April that they had agreed to a roadmap
for normalizing relations, but there have been few signs of progress
since the announcement. Gordon, who assumed his post last month, was
due to visit the two other ex-Soviet republics of the South Caucasus,
Georgia and Azerbaijan, on Wednesday and Thursday.

As of Monday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu stated that
all actors in the southern Caucasus have a joint future that should
be worked on together. His remarks came when he was reminded of
recent remarks by Armenia’s foreign minister, Edward Nalbandian, who
last month suggested that it is now Turkey’s turn to contribute to
the ongoing joint efforts with his country for the normalization of
bilateral relations between the two estranged neighbors when he said,
"The ball is in Turkey’s court now."

"It is not a ball rolling around in the field, it is a joint future,"
Davutoglu said, citing Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Russia and Turkey
as the main regional actors who should work together to build a joint
future. An online English-language Armenian news portal, meanwhile,
reported that Gordon also criticized the Armenian authorities’
handling of the May 31 municipal elections in Yerevan after holding
what he called "excellent and productive talks" with President Serzh
Sarksyan and Nalbandian.

Armenian Parliament Approves 2008 Budget Execution Report

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT APPROVES 2008 BUDGET EXECUTION REPORT

ARKA
June 12, 2009

YEREVAN, June 12. /ARKA/. Armenia’s National Assembly approved Tuesday
the report on the 2008 state budget execution. According to RA Finance
Minister Tigran Davtyan, the country was able to fulfill the state
budget with an excess amid the global financial recession.

"2008 was a specific year that started with an economic upturn in
Armenia and ended with a crisis. By end-2008, the economic situation
changed drastically, affecting the budget execution," the minister
was quoted as saying.

Despite the impact of the global financial crisis, Armenia posted tax
proceeds of 621bln drams, exceeding the parliament’s program thanks
to shrewd reforms.

Armenia’s Chief Treasurer and Deputy Finance Minister Atom Janjughazyan
said budget receipts totaled 746bln drams, with expenditures amounting
to 822bln drams. The budget deficit reached 71bln drams.

"Armenia reviewed the state budget in 2008, increasing receipts up
to 803.7bln drams and fulfilling them by 97.7%. Thus, real proceeds
amounted to 785.4bln drams, with internal sources censuring 770.4bln
drams worth proceeds," Janjughazyan added.

He pointed out a slowdown in foreign assistance programs, citing
citied up to 860.6bln drams worth budget expenditures (94.2%
fulfillment). According to the treasurer, foreign investors injected
some 51bln drams into programs in Armenia, against the expected 82bln
d rams.

According to Janjughazyan, Armenia’s state budget deficit totaled
57bln drams in 2008. ($1- 370.17 drams)

McDonalds will not set up fast-food chain in Armenia

McDonalds will not set up fast-food chain in Armenia
11 Jun 2009 17:06

Baku. Elnur Huseynguluyev – APA-ECONOMICS. McDonald’s Corporation, the
world’s largest chain of fast food restaurants, has no plan to expand
its network to Armenia, said Magsud Mirzayev, CEO of
McDonalds-Azerbaijan.

`McDonald’s doesn’t have a chain in Armenia and will not have in the
coming years. The main reason is the lack of political and
socio-economic stability in this country. This indicates the lack of
business environment there. With regard to Azerbaijan, the situation
is quite different here. Here we see political and economic stability
and business enabling environment,’ he added.

McDonalds has had presence in Azerbaijan since 1999.

McDonald’s primarily sells hamburgers, cheeseburgers, chicken
products, french fries, breakfast items, soft drinks, milkshakes, and
desserts. More recently, it has begun to offer salads, wraps and
fruit.

McDonald’s restaurants are found in 119 countries and territories
around the world and serve nearly 47 million customers each
day. McDonald’s operates over 31,000 restaurants worldwide, employing
more than 1.5 million people

"Eastern Partnership" to create favorable Conditions For EU Members

"EASTERN PARTNERSHIP" TO CREATE FAVORABLE CONDITIONS FOR EU MEMBERS AND EASTERN PARTNERS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
11.06.2009 19:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Eastern Partnership will ensure steady bilateral
cooperation with each country and create conditions for regional
partnership among EU partners in the East, said Peter Semneby, EU
Special Representative in South Caucasus.

"The principal goal of Eastern Partnership program is to create
relevant conditions for speeding up political association and future
economic integration between EU and interested partner states. Eastern
Partnership is a special kind of Eastern program aimed at assessing
European Neighborhood policy," the European diplomat noted. The program
will promote political and social-economic reforms in partner states
and harmonize their policies with EU standards. Four thematic platforms
will promote regional cooperation among six EU partners. They include
democracy, good governance and stability, economic integration and
harmonization with EU sectoral policy, as well as energy security
and interpersonal contacts, 1news.az. quotes Semneby as saying.