Seismic Protection Service To Create A Date Base Of Seismicity Of He

SEYSMIC PROTECTION SERVICE TO CREATE DATE BASE OF SEISMICITY OF HEALTH BUILDINGS OF YEREVAN

ARMENPRESS
MAY 6, 2009
YEREVAN

The National Seismic Protection Service of the Armenian Emergency
Situations is planning to create a date base of seismicity of health
institutions of Yerevan.

The head of the public relations and international cooperation
department of the service Hamlet Bisharian told Armenpress that
information about the buildings of the mentioned establishments will
be gathered. The service applied to the Armenian Health Ministry with
corresponding letter. In parallel with it training of the staff of
the health institutions on seismicity behavior will be implemented.

During the running year the Seismic Protection Service finished the
digitalization works of Yerevan Erebuni and Nor Nork districts –
an electronic map has been created which includes information about
the seismicity of buildings in the mentioned districts as well as
their location.

BAKU: Novruz Mamedov: The Forces Interested In Deterioration Of Turk

NOVRUZ MAMEDOV: THE FORCES INTERESTED IN DETERIORATION OF TURKISH-AZERBAIJANI RELATIONS WILL NOT REACH THEIR GOAL

Today.Az
2046.html
May 6 2009
Azerbaijan

Friendly and brotherly relations between Azerbaijan and Turkey create
envy among certain forces, said Novruz Mamedov, chief of department
of external affairs of the presidential administration of Azerbaijan,
in his interview to ATV channel, according to Interfax-Azerbaijan.

According to him, these forces are interested in the deterioration
of Turkish-Azerbaijani relations.

"I think they have developed a plan to complicate this
relationship. However, Azeri and Turkish peoples have common roots,
common history, and the coldness in their relationship can not be
long. It is not possible to spoil those relations", stressed Mamedov.

He believes that neither Azerbaijan nor Turkey will get to the trap,
on the contrary, Yerevan itself might get into the prepared trap
after these issues are settled.

As for the negative predictions that the agreement of Azerbaijan to
export its gas to Russia would have a negative impact on Nabucco,
N. Mamedov stressed that the draft has not yet been removed from the
agenda but time is needed for Nabucco to justify itself.

http://www.today.az/news/politics/5

ANTELIAS: Spanish journalist, advocate of The Genocide visits HH

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

SPANISH JOURNALIST AND ADVOCATE OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE VISITS HIS HOLINESS
ARAM I

On Friday May 1 2009, His Holiness Aram I received in his office José
Antonio Gurriarán. The journalist is well informed of the Armenian history.
He has visited Armenia and Karabagh, and currently visiting the
Catholicosate of Cilicia. He is also the author of two books in Spanish on
Armenians, La Bomba and Armenios: El Genocidio Olvidado.

The conversation between Catholicos Aram I and the journalist centered on
the recognition of the Armenian Genocide and the entry of Turkey into the
European Union. His Holiness told them that the Church has a role in
ensuring respect for Human Rights. Therefore, the main concern of the church
is the restoration of the rights of its people through Turkey’s recognition
of the Armenian Genocide. At the end of the meeting, Mr Gurriarán visited
the Memorial of the Martyrs of the Genocide.
##
View photo here:
tos/Photos382.htm#7
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/

New Trends Disturb An Old Balance

NEW TRENDS DISTURB AN OLD BALANCE
Obaida Hamad

Syria Today
com_content&view=article&id=1430:new-trend s-disturb-an-old-balance&catid=31:society& Itemid=6
May 5 2009

Aleppo is one of the oldest cities in the Middle East and has for
hundreds of years been a global centre for trade and culture. It has
also long served as a model for peaceful coexistence between Muslims,
Christians and other religions.

Today, however, the arrival of new communities from the countryside
is changing the social make-up of the city.

Original inhabitants of Aleppo – Christians, Muslims and Jews – live
side by side in mixed neighbourhoods like Jamaliyah. But as the city
has expanded, its fabric has changed. Areas that were once outlying
suburbs have now been absorbed into the city itself and, unlike the
old neighbourhoods, they are not mixed. Al-Furqan, a new and wealthy
part of Aleppo, is virtually exclusively Muslim, while Surian Jdeideh
is known as a Christian area. Newcomers from the surrounding villages
and the Jazeera area have also moved into the city, bringing with them
conservative ideas. Many of them have never met a Christian before and,
as a result, consider them to be foreigners.

"Original inhabitants coexist with Christians and are more open than
those who came from the countryside and who have never met or lived
with Christians," Boutros Marayati, head of the Armenian Catholic
Church in Aleppo, said. "They don’t have the same position as the
Aleppans. They don’t know what a Christian is and maybe they feel we
are not original citizens, that we are from Europe and maybe these
people adopt a fanatical position. They don’t want to coexist. It’s
not all of them – some of them."

Coexistence threatened

Moderate Muslim leaders in Aleppo are also concerned about a trend
they fear could lead to an increasingly segregated society prone to
extremism. Such tendencies are being fuelled, they say, by a few
intolerant preachers and community leaders who have arrived from
rural areas and who espouse a more radical form of Islam.

"I’m afraid for the future," Mahmoud Ali Akam, one the city’s senior
Islamic figures and a member of one of its oldest families, said. "We
cannot control the newcomers who live around Aleppo, we cannot control
their speakers."

Akam, who preaches at the Tawhid mosque in the Christian-dominated
Aziziyeh area of Aleppo – a mosque located between two churches –
said he was trying to counter the ultra-conservative interpretation
of Islam.

"In our Friday speeches we talk about coexistence and unity to
counter their talk," he said. "We always come with evidence that
when Christians and Muslims were living together Islam was strong;
that Islam is stronger with coexistence, not weaker because of it."

Not far from the city centre lies the neighbourhood of Beni Zaid,
an impoverished illegal settlement for newcomers that stands in stark
contrast to the surrounding areas. It sits uneasily in modern Aleppo,
like a village, complete with traditional habits, fashion and tribal
practices. In old Aleppo churches and mosques stand together. In
Beni Zaid – named after a Jazeera tribe – there are no churches,
just dozens of small mosques. The infrastructure is rudimentary;
roads are not paved, there is no running water, no sewers.

Most of Beni Zaid’s residents are uneducated and the children do not
go to school. Adults try to find menial work in restaurants, factories
or as drivers. Those who fail to get a job live by scavenging from
waste dumps.

"These places are hidden from the view of original Aleppans, they just
don’t know about these poor suburbs because they never have to come
here," Khalid Zinklo, correspondent for the daily Syrian newspaper
Al-Watan, said. "These areas have problems with poverty, and there
are all the associated issues, perhaps drug abuse and conservatism,
the things that happen in deprived areas."

Mar Gregorious Yohanna Ibrahim, head of Aleppo’s Orthodox Syriac
community, said city leaders had to vigorously push the ideas of
tolerance and coexistence.

"There is coexistence but that doesn’t mean everyone agrees," Ibrahim
said. "Our enemy, both Muslims and Christians, is one and the same:
ignorance. We have to continue our participation together as a single
community, not divided religious communities. Dialogue should be
encouraged, in schools, hospitals and in the theatre of daily life."

Fears overblown

While perhaps more conservative than Aleppo’s traditional families,
there is disagreement about whether recent immigrants pose a threat
to the city’s tolerant nature. Even some senior Christian figures
are sceptical about the claim.

"Christians are a minority and can have a minority complex about
this," Reverend Haroutune Selimian, president of the Armenian
Evangelical Community, said. According to Haroutune, newcomers might
be conservative, but that does not make them extremists.

Likewise, Mohammad al-Shami, the former director of Aleppo’s Religious
Affairs Department, said his city’s religious devotion ultimately
guaranteed tolerance and coexistence between Muslims and Christians.

"If some people believe Aleppo is a fanatical city, I say ‘yes’,"
Shami, who has served in the post for some two decades, said. "But
what does that mean? When Christians are committed to their religion,
Christianity teaches them how to respect and love the other. If Muslims
are committed to Islam, Islam also teaches them that all creatures
are from God and the person who is closest to God is closest to the
people. So how can Aleppo be an intolerant city when it is full of
sincerely religious people?"

http://www.syria-today.com/index.php?option=

Baku: Turkish Ambassador Hulusi Kilic: "Turkey-Armenia Borders Will

TURKISH AMBASSADOR HULUSI KILIC: "TURKEY-ARMENIA BORDERS WILL NOT OPEN, UNLESS NAGORNO KARABAKH PROBLEM IS SOLVED"

APA
May 5 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku. Viktoria Dementieva – APA. "Turkey-Armenia borders will not
open, unless Nagorno Karabakh problem is solved," Turkish ambassador
to Azerbaijan Hulusi Kilic told journalists, APA reports.

"Opening of Turkey-Armenia borders and Nagorno Karabakh conflict are
separate processes. But the borders will not open, unless Azerbaijan’s
occupied territories are released. We have stated this openly,"
he said.

Reconciliation With Turkey Causes Crisis In Armenian Ruling Coalitio

RECONCILIATION WITH TURKEY CAUSES CRISIS IN ARMENIAN RULING COALITION

Interfax
April 27 2009
Russia

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) has decided to
quit the ruling coalition, a source on the federation told Interfax
on Monday.

The breakup follows the adoption of the roadmap of settling
Armenian-Turkish relations approved by Yerevan and Ankara.

The coalition also includes the Republican Party, the chairman of
which is the Armenian president, the Rule of Law party the chairman
of which is the Security Council secretary, and Prosperous Armenia
party chaired by a leading businessman, Gagik Tsarukian.

Coalition Partner Leaves Armenian Government Over Deal With Turkey

COALITION PARTNER LEAVES ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT OVER DEAL WITH TURKEY
by Natalia Leshchenko

World Markets Research Centre
Global Insight
April 28, 2009

The junior partner in the Armenian government, Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) pulled out of the coalition yesterday over
quot;insurmountable fundamental disagreementsquot; with President Serzh
Sarkisian over his policy of improving ties with Turkey. In particular,
they fear the government will make compromises over the massacre of
Armenians in 1915 and the Nagorny Karabakh conflict. The party returned
three ministerial posts it held: agriculture, education and labour,
and withdrew its members from parliamentary committee positions saying
it will operate as a fully-fledged opposition party from now on. The
three other parties comprising the Armenian government defended the
policy of reconciliation with Turkey.

Significance:Dashnaktsutyun is a strongly nationalist party, and an
agreement with Turkey will deprive it of much of its raison d’etre,
hence the reaction is not unexpected. If not for the subject of the
disagreement itself, the transfer into opposition would be a healthy
move for Armenia’s political system. Currently all the parties
represented in the parliament are also present in the government,
a design meant to claim popular legitimacy of the parliament and the
cabinet. This is now breached, as the government will face genuine
opposition in the legislature. However, the subject of disagreement
is an arguably healthy development; the recently adopted roadmap
to reconciliation with Turkey is something both countries would
benefit from economically. The staunch non-compromising position of
Dashnaktsutyun which Armenia has pursued since the 1990s has not yet
led to any positive or feasible results. Dashnaktsutyun’s opposition
will certainly take away some energy from the Armenian government but
by itself should not interrupt the reconciliation process altogether.

First 350mln Drams Worth Tranche Of Discount Bonds Of Armenian Ineco

FIRST 350MLN DRAMS WORTH TRANCHE OF DISCOUNT BONDS OF ARMENIAN INECOBANK COMPLETELY PLACED

/ARKA/
April 29
YEREVAN

The first tranche of discount bonds of Armenian Inecobank closed
joint stock company for 350mln Drams has been completely placed.

7,000 bonds of the first tranche were placed in the period from March
25 to April 27 2009, the bank’s press service reported.

Bond nominal value is 50,000Drams with redemption period being 365
days and annual yield at 9.5%.

The bonds of Inecobank were issued as per the agreement signed between
the bank and the USAID. Under the agreement, the USAID, in the name
of the U.S. Government, guarantee up to 50% of the risks in favor of
bond holders.

The bonds are to be registered on NASDAQ OMX Armenia stock exchange and
will be circulated on the secondary market. Capital Asset Management
company is the underwriter and the market-maker of the securities of
the bank.

According to the report, Inecobank continues implementing its
programs as per the schedule despite the unfavorable investment
environment. Today, the bank’s specialists are developing principles
for the next tranche bond issue.

At least another tranche is to be issued by the end of this year,
the bank’s press service reported.

Inecobank closed joint stock company was registered on February 7,
1996. The biggest stockholders of Inecobank are members of KfW group
DEG company (De utsche Investititions-und Entwicklunsgesellschaft mbH)
with 13.5% and the International Financial Corporation with 10%.

The bank is cooperating with the EBRD, USAID, KfW, the
Black Sea Trade and Development Bank and other international
organizations. ($1=372.07Drams).

An Electricity Cutoff Occurred In Georgia Resulting In Internet Conn

AN ELECTRICITY CUTOFF OCCURRED IN GEORGIA RESULTING IN INTERNET CONNECTION LOSS IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.04.2009 16:30 GMT+04:00

Today at 3.20 p.m. (Armenian time) an electricity cutoff occurred in
Georgia resulting in internet connection loss in Armenia, FiberNET
Communications Technical Department reported to PanARMENIAN.Net
. According to Georgian part, malfunctions will be removed within
2 hours. At the moment Armenia’s internet connection is provided
through satellite system.

In Armenian Enclave, Turkish Deal Arouses Suspicion

Wall Street Journal
April 25 2009

In Armenian Enclave, Turkish Deal Arouses Suspicion

Ethnic Leaders in Glendale, Calif., See Detente Announcement as a Ploy
on Day Commemorating 1915 Killings

By NICHOLAS CASEY

GLENDALE, Calif. — Turkey and Armenia may be about to embark on a
historic diplomatic thaw, but in the large community of Armenian
expatriates here, distrust remains high.

"There’s been a lot of disappointment," said Andrew Kzirian, executive
director of the Armenian National Committee’s Western region, speaking
from his office here.

The two nations’ announcement Thursday that they agreed on a framework
for restoring relations came just ahead of the annual April 24
commemoration of the 1915 killing of Armenians at the hand of the
Ottoman Turks, an event many refer to as a genocide. On Friday,
hundreds gathered for a religious gathering at a park in nearby
Montebello, a prelude to larger protests planned for the evening in
Los Angeles.

Mr. Kzirian sees the latest development not so much as a detente
between the countries, but as another public-relations effort by the
Turks to deflect attention from the killings. "Any politico would see
that [the statement] was directly designed to push back recognition of
the Armenian genocide," he said.

This Los Angeles suburb is home to one of America’s most robust
Armenian diaspora communities, with 80,000 to 100,000 ethnic Armenians
making up about a third of the population. Community leaders estimate
500,000 ethnic Armenians dwell in California, many of them and their
forbears drawn here by the dry landscape’s likeness to the Middle
East.

Many residents are descendants of expatriates who fled the Ottoman
Empire after the 1915 killing and deportation of some 1.5 million
ethnic Armenians. The massacre — and Turkey’s insistence that it was
a consequence of World War I rather than a deliberate policy — offer
a common reference point for a heterogeneous community of Armenians
who trace their roots from Lebanon to the former Soviet Union. On
Friday, some stores closed here for the annual memorial of the
killings.

Many residents of the area — including Rep. Adam Schiff, their voice
in Congress — are pushing in Washington for the adoption a nonbinding
resolution, introduced in 2007, that characterizes the event as
genocide. Glendale is also watching Yerevan, the Armenian capital, as
it negotiates with Turkey to reopen its borders with the country. That
could bring added wealth to Armenia, where many send remittances to
family members.

At the Armenian cafe Urartu off Broadway, Appo Jabarian scans his
email inbox for news of what he dubs the recent "secret agreement."
The 51-year-old managing editor of U.S.A. Armenian Life Magazine said
he has been placing calls to journalists abroad to learn more about
developments between Turkey and Armenia.

For Mr. Jabarian, who said more than 84 members of his family were
lost in the slaughter, "Turkey is always trying to shortchange the
Armenians." He is currently mulling the angle of an editorial for next
week’s magazine that will address the agreement.

For Vache Thomassian, 24, the timing of Turkey’s announcement, falling
a day before the commemoration, is "some sort of ploy." The chairman
of the Armenian Youth Federation’s Western region said the Turkish
government has no sincere intention of reconciling with his people,
and is simply "trying to take our attention from the April 24
commemoration."

On Friday, Mr. Thomassian prepared for a protest at the Turkish
consulate in Los Angeles that day, an event he said was attended by
some 10,000 people last year. Mr. Thomassian, who believes two of his
great-grandparents were killed by the Turks, said the Ankara
government is involved in an effort to "reverse history" by denying
the crimes ever occurred. Still, he said, he counts many Turkish
people among his friends and spent a recent summer at the Armenian
town of Gyumri, near the Turkish border.

5040554283.html

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB12406108