Revenue And Expenditure Of Armenia’s 2009 State Budget Enlarged By A

REVENUE AND EXPENDITURE OF ARMENIA’S 2009 STATE BUDGET ENLARGED BY AMD 1.7 BILLION

ARKA
Apr 24, 2009

YEREVAN, April 23. /ARKA/. Armenian Government decided Thursday
to enlarge the 2009 state budget revenue and expenditure by AMD
1.7 billion.

Armenian Finance Minister Tigran Davtyan, speaking at Thursday’s
governmental meeting, said that the decision was prompted by the
necessity to include expenses for recovering important roads and for
adding funds to the third program of Armenian social investments
fund. The program is being implemented under the agreement signed
between Armenia and International Development Association. ($1 =
AMD 371.42).

Local Armenians Form A Club To Help Preserve Their Culture

LOCAL ARMENIANS FORM A CLUB TO HELP PRESERVE THEIR CULTURE
By Mark Baker

The Register-Guard
s/sites/web/news/cityregion/11299072-41/story.csp
April 24 2009

The Register-Guard

Photo: Annette Gurdjian traces her root back to family in Armenia
generations ago, some of whom were killed in the "Forgotten Holocaust."

Photo: Gurdjian holds a photo taken in 1926 of priests in Der-Zor,
Syria, with the bones of people killed by the former Ottoman Empire.

Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard

"In the last week, I just discovered five more Armenians," says Sophia
Malkasian, pointing to the handwritten names on the back of her typed
club list that has now grown to 30 names. "They’re just coming out
of the woodwork."

It is April 5, and the Eugene native is sitting around a table of
lavash, pilaf, stuffed grape leaves and other Armenian favorites at
the home of Annette Gurdjian and Dennis Clay in south Eugene.

Malkasian and Gurdjian are part of a group they’ve helped start
called the Armenians of Eugene Club. It began last fall when they
and a few other local women of Armenian descent got together for
lunch at Eugene’s Ratatouille restaurant. They have since met monthly
at members’ homes for potlucks, where they share their food, their
stories, their history and a culture they do not want to lose.

It’s a history with an especially painful bond that can be traced
to an event that happened 94 years ago today in the Turkish city of
Constantinople, now Istanbul.

April 24, 1915, is the date Armenians recognize as the beginning of
what some call the "Forgotten Holocaust," the massacre of 1 million to
1.5 million Armenians during World War I and into the early 1920s by
the former Ottoman Empire, now modern-day Turkey. Ottoman authorities
are said to have arrested, and then executed, between 200 and 300
Armenian intellectuals and community leaders that day. Turkey has
acknowledged the killings over the decades, but maintains they were
casualties of war, not a systematic genocide.

The issue has been a political bombshell in recent years. In 2007,
a Democratic-backed resolution in the U.S. House of Representatives
to condemn the killings as genocide fizzled over concerns it would
antagonize Turkey, a U.S. ally and an important member of NATO,
and stall the mending of relations between Turkey and Armenia.

For Armenian-Americans, Turkey’s refusal to acknowledge the deaths
of their ancestors as genocide is a perpetual wound.

"We just want the recognition," says Gurdjian, a Eugene artist. "It’s
like the Holocaust deniers," she says of those who speak with doubt
about the 6 million Jews killed by Nazis in Europe during World War II.

Gurdjian grew up in Providence, R.I., learning to speak and write
Armenian before English, along with her sisters, Ardemis Gurdjian-Walsh
of Eugene and Adrianne Cady of Naples, Fla.

Their father, Antranik Gurdjian, was born in Istanbul in 1904. He came
to America in 1922 with his family through Ellis Island. Their mother,
Alice, was born in New Jersey but was also a descendent of Armenia,
the small mountainous country on Turkey’s eastern border that gained
independence in 1991 after centuries under Ottoman rule and decades
under the former Soviet Union.

Alice Gurdjian’s father, Ohannes Mardirosian, was from what is now
Van, Turkey, in the eastern part of the Ottoman Empire, a city whose
population was devastated during the mass killings, Gurdjian says. His
mother, all but one sibling, and nieces and nephews, were killed,
according to family history. Her grandfather survived because he was
out of town working that day, Gurdjian says.

Family stories of the mass killings, how Armenians, usually the men,
were rounded up and taken from their villages, or sometimes just
disappeared, have been passed down through the generations, she says.

"I don’t live in the past, but I think it helps to talk about it
and learn from it," says club member Anahid Bertrand, a Eugene music
teacher whose husband, Eric Bertrand, owns Ratatouille. "I think it
would be nice for people to know about it like they know about the
Jews. And I’m sure Turkey would feel better about it, too."

Anahid Bertrand was born in Varna, Bulgaria, on the western edge of
the Black Sea. Her Armenian grandparents, Ovanes and Annik Chahbazian,
had fled in about 1920 from their hometown of Ani in what is now
eastern Turkey, she says. Her parents, Harutyun and Agavni, were
also born in Varna, before migrating to New York City in the 1960s,
and then back to Bulgaria.

Bertrand came to the United States when she was 20 to study music at
Sonoma State University, where she received her bachelor’s degree,
and at San Francisco State University.

In summer 2007, a chance meeting between Bertrand, who moved to Eugene
with her husband three years ago from the San Francisco Bay area,
and Gurdjian-Walshplanted the seed for the Armenian Club of Eugene.

Gurdjian-Walsh, a mobile notary, had gone to the Bertrand’s home so the
couple could sign a loan to refinance their home. The women exchanged
phone numbers, then met for coffee, joined by Annette Gurdjian.

Then a mutual friend told Gurdjian-Walsh last year about another Eugene
woman, Malkasian, who grew up in Eugene but had gone to live in Armenia
as a volunteer aid worker with a program called Birthright Armenia.

"It’s stupendous, because I have a certain hunger for my roots,"
says club member Larry Hirons, whose family has operated Eugene’s
Hirons drug stores since 1935.

Hirons’ cousin, Greg Malkasian, is Sophia Malkasian’s father. Hirons’
grandparents, Ardashes and Sophia Malkasian, for whom the younger
Sophia Malkasian is named, left Armenia before the genocide and met
in Massa­chusetts about 1905, Hirons says. His grandparents lived
in Fresno, Calif., and Seattle before settling in Eugene by the early
1920s, he says.

"We just kind of started getting together," says Gurdjian, who left
Eugene on Easter to travel to Syria and Turkey for three weeks with
her son, Li Gurdjian-Clay, a recent University of Oregon graduate
who is considering volunteering for Birthright Armenia.

The trip, sponsored by a small Armenian tour group in California,
will include a visit to Istanbul, where Gurdjian plans to show her
son where his great-grandfather went to school as a boy. Gurdjian has
twice previously visited Armenia, in 1979, when it was still ruled
by the Soviet Union, and in 2007 when her sister, Gurdjian-­Walsh,
joined her.

Gurdjian-Walsh says that when she and her sister went to Turkey in
2007, and young Turks discovered the sisters were of Armenian descent,
they wanted to know what the sisters thought about the genocide,
if it was really true or not?

She says many young Turks are kept in the dark about the genocide,
and those of Armenian descent have lost track of their heritage,
in some cases their families have dropped the "-ian" from the end of
their last names to "blend in."

Annette Gurdjian says she hopes President Obama can help shed light
on the genocide. "He promised in his candidacy to recognize that,
so all eyes are on him in the Armenian community," she says.

Obama spoke before the Turkish Parliament in the capitol city of Ankara
on April 6. But he did not use the word "genocide" during that speech
— in which he sought to bridge the divide between America and much
of the Muslim world — drawing the ire of some Armenian-­Americans.

"President Obama missed a valuable opportunity to honor his public
pledge to recognize the Armenian genocide," Aram Hamparian, executive
director of the Armenian National Committee of America, said. Obama’s
remarks fell "far short of the clear promise he made as a candidate
that he would, as president, fully and unequivocally recognize this
crime against humanity," Hamparian said.

In Eugene, some 6,500 miles from the Turkey-Armenia border, the
Armenian Club of Eugene keeps the flame burning, just like the one that
burns at a holocaust memorial in Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan.

"Armenians are everywhere," Sophia Malkasian says. "We’re called
‘scattered beads,’â~@~I" she says. "So this group, to me, means
bringing it all together. And helping to preserve the culture."

$$$$$$

"I don’t live in the past, but I think it helps to talk about it and
learn from it."

HHHHHH

Anahid Bertrand Armenians of Eugene Club member

http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cm

Adam Schiff Commemorates Armenian Genocide

ADAM SCHIFF COMMEMORATES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

PanArmenian News
April 25 2009
Armenia

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The representative of California’s 29th
district Congressman Adam Schiff’s spokesman Sean Oblack reported
PanARMENIAN.Net that the Schiff issued the following statement today
to commemorate the 94th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide:

"From 1915 to 1923 the Ottoman Empire committed genocide against the
Armenian people in a campaign designed to wipe out an entire race. A
million and a half Armenians were killed, but the Armenian people
survive and today contribute in every field of endeavor, from math
and science, to law, medicine, and the arts. With every success and
through the vibrancy of the Armenian nation, a resilient people daily
remind the world of the failure of the Ottoman quest to destroy them
nearly a century ago.

"I am proud that in Congress more than a hundred members have
cosponsored the genocide resolution, House Resolution 252, including
the House Majority Leader, the House Republican Whip and the chairman
of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Although the President today
acknowledged the deaths of a million and a half Armenians during the
Armenian Genocide, I am deeply disappointed by his decision not to
use the word "genocide" in his statement. Nonetheless, our work will
go on undaunted. We will not become complicit in Ankara’s campaign of
denial. We will persevere until it is the policy of the United States
to recognize genocide wherever and whenever it occurs, and to do all
in its power to prevent this scourge from tarnishing the human race
ever again."

Obama Brands Armenian Killings ‘Great Atrocities’

OBAMA BRANDS ARMENIAN KILLINGS ‘GREAT ATROCITIES’
By Desmond Butler And Ben Feller

Associated Press
24 April 09

President Barack Obama on Friday refrained from branding the massacre
of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey a "genocide," breaking
a campaign promise while contending his views about the 20th century
slaughter had not changed.

The phrasing of Obama’s written statement attracted heightened scrutiny
because of the sensitivity of the issue and because Turkey and Armenia
are nearing a historic reconciliation after years of tension. The
Obama administration is wary of disturbing that settlement.

Marking the grim anniversary of the start of the killings, the
president referred to them as "one of the great atrocities of the
20th century."

"I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915, and
my view of that history has not changed," Obama said. "My interest
remains the achievement of a full, frank and just acknowledgment of
the facts."

"The best way to advance that goal right now," Obama said, "is for
the Armenian and Turkish people to address the facts of the past as
a part of their efforts to move forward."

For Obama, referring to the killings as genocide could have upended
recent pledges of a closer partnership with Turkey, a vital ally in
a critical region. Steering around the word, however, put him at odds
with his own pledges to recognize the slaughter as genocide.

Obama said the Armenians who were massacred in the final days of the
Ottoman Empire "must live on in our memories." He said unresolved
history can be a heavy weight. "Reckoning with the past holds out
the powerful promise of reconciliation," he said.

"I strongly support efforts by the Turkish and Armenian people to
work through this painful history in a way that is honest, open,
and constructive," he said.

The administration closely coordinated its statement about the apparent
breakthrough with the Turkish government and Swiss mediators. Turkey
and Armenia announced on Wednesday they were closing in on some kind
of reconciliation.

At least one Armenian-American group said it felt let down by Obama.

"Today’s statement does not reflect the change the president promised,"
said Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly of
America. He said Obama "has needlessly delayed the cause of genocide
affirmation and diminishes U.S. credibility with regard to genocide
prevention."

To Lincoln McCurdy, president of the Turkish Coalition of America,
which advocates close U.S.-Turkish ties, Obama sent "a clear message
to America and the world that his administration will not sacrifice
long-term strategic allies for short-term political gains."

The dispute involves what scholars widely view as the first genocide of
the 20th century. Turkey denies that the deaths constituted genocide,
contending the toll has been inflated and that the casualties were
victims of civil war and unrest.

During a trip to Turkey this month, Obama emphasized U.S. support for
the reconciliation efforts and avoided the term genocide in a speech
to the Turkish parliament.

Turkey and Armenia agreed Wednesday on a road map for normalizing
relations and reaching reconciliation. But it was not immediately
clear how they would tackle the bitter dispute over the Ottoman-era
killings of ethnic Armenians.

On Thursday, Vice President Joe Biden spoke by telephone with Armenian
President Serge Sarkisian and welcomed that announcement.

Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic ties, and their border has been
closed since 1993 because of a Turkish protest of Armenia’s occupation
of land claimed by Azerbaijan.

In September, Turkish President Abdullah Gul became the first
Turkish leader to visit Armenia, where he and Sarkisian watched their
countries’ soccer teams play a World Cup qualifying match. The Armenian
government appears to be interested in further talks.

Armenian-American groups and supporters in Congress are focused on
passing a resolution that describes the killings as genocide and
argue that it should not undermine diplomatic efforts.

Gul said Friday in Ankara that he expected Obama to deliver a
statement that would reinforce the reconciliation talks. "I believe
that (Obama’s statement) should be one that is supportive of our good
intentioned efforts," Gul told reporters.

BAKU: Serzh Sarkisian: "Russia’s Position On NK Conflict Remains Unc

SERZH SARKISIAN: "RUSSIA’S POSITION ON NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT REMAINS UNCHANGED"

APA
April 23 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku. Lachin Sultanova – APA. "I am grateful to Russia and to
you personally for your great contribution to the solution to
Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Basing on the results of Azerbaijani
President’s visit I want to note that your position is unchanged,
strong and aims to solve the conflict basing on all principles of the
international law," Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian said at the
meeting with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, APA reports quoting
RIA Novosti. Sarkisian said he was pleased that there was one more
state in the South Caucasus that calls Russia its strategic partner.

"It means that Russia’s role in the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh
problem is increasing," he said.

Serzh Sarkisian underlined that after the construction of new Atomic
Power Plant in Armenia with participation of Russian companies,
Russia’s investment would reach $5 billion. He also said 1250 companies
had been registered in Armenia with Russia’s investments.

"Any country should be proud of a partner like Russia and we are
proud of it," he said.

Students Enter The BHK

STUDENTS ENTER THE BHK

A1+
06:31 pm | April 22, 2009 | Politics

More than 700 students of 17 state and non-state institutes of higher
education will receive party cards on April 23.

A solemn ceremony will be held tomorrow to honour the students’
entry into the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK). The ceremony will be
attended by BHK Leader Gagik Tsarukyan.

Why Clinton Assures Only Azerbaijan

WHY CLINTON ASSURES ONLY AZERBAIJAN
HAKOB BADALYAN

LRAGIR.AM
11:58:34 – 23/04/2009

While everyone waits to see what president Obama will say on April
24, the U.S. state secretary Hillary Clinton says that she hopes
that the Nagorno-Karabakh question will somehow be solved within
the upcoming months. This statement cannot be considered news. A lot
were those who hoped hope now and will hope in the future. Perhaps,
it is not that meaningful to go into details of their hope, because
those who hope are quite well-informed people and, probably, the
grounds for their hope is not known to the public at least in form
of hints for them to assess the reality. Therefore, considering that
we deal with political figures and diplomats, it should not be ruled
out that they are able to consciously express unreasonable hopes
having a lot of prospects from it. In other words, the phenomenon
"bluff" may be carried into life, which, in reality, may solve a
diametrically opposite question. However, we can only make forecasts,
guess on this whole and it is even difficult to analyze because hopes
are very unthankful to analyze.

The interesting thing is that Hillary Clinton stated that "they
assured Azerbaijani government that their efforts in connection with
the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue will be enhanced". Why
Hillary Clinton mentions only Azerbaijan. Why she does not say that
they assured the Armenian government too, moreover, the head of the
Armenian state Serge Sargsyan states that the Karabakh settlement is
his dream and as soon as it happens, he will give up politics. Perhaps,
the U.S. does not want Serge Sargsyan to give up politics, the
U.S. may think that Serge Sargsyan’s job is not only the settlement
of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue and being the president of Armenia he
has a lot of other things to do. But, in this case, the U.S. cannot
settle the question for Azerbaijan, and leave it unsolved for Armenia.

Should we be sure in this connection? Probably no. It is absolutely
possible for the Karabakh conflict to be settled for Azerbaijan
and remain unsettled for Armenia. The point is that what is called
Nagorno-Karabakh issue is a process rather than a concrete state. This
process will go on unless the process of replacement of forces and
positions is going on in the world. Consequently, in this state what is
presumed by settlement supposes a settlement according to interests,
in other words, each of the sides solves its own questions in this
process. Consequently, a state may be shaped when the questions of
Azerbaijan will be more settled that those of Armenia, but the issue
itself will not be settled. What is called proposals of Madrid supposes
right this, when the Karabakh issue is spoken to be postponed. In
addition, it is not only Aliyev to state this, but first of all the
OSCE Minsk group co-chairs.

Even if we assume that it is not the decision of the status of
Nagorno-Karabakh to be postponed but the implementation of an already
decided version, all the same, only the Azerbaijani questions are
settled in the end. The point is that Azerbaijan gains two important
factors: time and strategic superiority to serve the time in its
interests in the form of those territories which are to be retuned
to Azerbaijan for some agreements on the Nagorno-Karabakh status. In
this phase, Azerbaijan does not need more. Unlike Bender, Aliyev
thinks to take everything but by parts. In other words, unlike Serge
Sargsyan, Aliyev does not only think to solve the Karabakh question,
but, probably, realizes that this is a process and the important is to
gain advantage in it. Perhaps, just for this reason the U.S. assures
only Azerbaijan that they are going to settle the conflict because it
notices that the ideas of Armenia about the settlement are completely
different and fit into the framework of trade ideas – we give this
and take this one and live happy and satisfied.

Member Of Pan-Armenian National Movement [PANM] Board: Turkey’s Pre-

MEMBER OF PAN-ARMENIAN NATIONAL MOVEMENT [PANM] BOARD: TURKEY’S PRE-CONDITIONS ARE HIDDEN IN THE ROAD-MAP

ArmInfo
2009-04-23 13:35:00

ArmInfo. Turkey’s pre-conditions are hidden and presented in
the road-map, member of PANM board Hovanes Igityan told ArmInfo
correspondent when commenting on the road-map defined by foreign
ministries of Armenia and Turkey.

‘I am sure that extension of the Armenian-Turkish disagreements by
the package way is impossible. It is possible only stage by stage
and demands certain time. If to consider about the information in
mass media, the road-map is not a contact but a protocol of future
actions of the two states. For this reason I think its achievement
is more beneficial for Turkey than Armenia’, – he said.

Igityan thinks anyway an intention protocol should be singed before
opening of the Armenian-Turkish border and steps to establish
diplomatic relations should be made, as unblocking of the border
is practically impossible without establishment of the diplomatic
relations.

‘Turkey is the first interested in the Armenian-Turkish relations
in the two aspects. The first is in Turkey’s aspiration to make
Armenia recognize its territorial integrity. The second aspect is
regarding the negotiating process itself. Turkey is trying to hold
the negotiating process with Armenia independently, and makes the
whole world understand it’, – he said.

‘But Erdogan’s recent statement, in which he connects the Karabakh
conflict with the border opening problem, was more an ultimatum than
a diplomatic language’, – Igityan concluded.

US Department of State welcomed Armenia’s and Turkey’s statement about
normalization of the bilateral relations without pre-conditions and
within the frames of reasonable period of time.

Turkey is known to make three preconditions for establishment of
bilateral relations with Armenia: Armenia’s refusal from the policy
towards international recognition of Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman
Empire; settlement of Karabakh conflict in favor of Azerbaijan;
ratification of the Kars Treaty.

Ogassapian : Armenian Parties Back Tour-Sarkissian’s Candidacy

OGASSAPIAN : ARMENIAN PARTIES BACK TOUR-SARKISSIAN’S CANDIDACY

iloubnan.info
April 22 2009
Lebanon

Beirut – Future Movement MP Jean Ogassapian expected on Wednesday
that the Armenian seat problem in Beirut I district would be resolved
before the weekend. However, he confirmed to Voice of Lebanon radio
station that Armenian parties insist on backing the candidacy of MP
Serge Tour-Sarkissian in said district.

Moreover, Ogassapian pointed out that the Cabinet would convene next
Friday and possibly raise the issue of the administrative appointments,
mainly the provincial heads and Interior ministry general director
appointments, adding that some names were being discussed. He hoped
the Cabinet reaches a consensus over in the State Budget, since the
amount was approved while the problem concerned the party to be in
charge of managing the expenses.

ANKARA: Turkey Assures Azerbaijan No "Behind Closed Doors" Deal With

TURKEY ASSURES AZERBAIJAN NO "BEHIND CLOSED DOORS" DEAL WITH ARMENIA

Anadolu Agency
April 20 2009
Turkey

A Turkish government spokesman has sought to give assurances to
Azerbaijan over Turkish-Armenian talks which have prompted an
expectation for re-establishing diplomatic ties between Ankara and
Yerevan.

"It is not possible for us to take any step which could hurt
Azerbaijan’s interests in our talks with Armenia or with any other
country," Cemil Cicek told reporters on Monday after a cabinet meeting.

High-level talks between Ankara and Yerevan began last year and
expectations have been rising of a deal that could include the opening
of the border gate.

Armenia said last Thursday it was close to establishing diplomatic
relations with Turkey as Azerbaijan has expressed opposition over
such a prospect.

"Turkey has never been in a behind-closed-doors move that would
disregard Azerbaijani interests, which should be acknowledged by
everyone," Cicek said.

Turkey cut all diplomatic ties with Yerevan and closed a border gate
with its northeastern neighbour in 1993 after Armenia occupied Upper
Karabakh.