Sanctions For Economic Crimes To Be Toughened In Armenia

SANCTIONS FOR ECONOMIC CRIMES TO BE TOUGHENED IN ARMENIA

ArmInfo
2009-04-09 15:06:00

ArmInfo. Parliament of Armenia has made alterations and amendments
to the Criminal Code of Armenia in the first reading Thursday.

Solicitor General of Armenia Mnatsakan Sargsyan told parliamentarians
that the amendments to the Criminal Code are a call of time. Analysis
of the sphere showed that economic crimes charged by the articles
188-211 of the Criminal Code of Armenia grew from 193 cases in 2004
to 456 cases in 2008.

The most popular crimes were illegal business, false tax evasion, and
production of counterfeit drinks as well as use of false excise marks.

Similar dynamics of growth was registered also on other crimes. As a
result, the total damage to the state made up nearly 2 billion drams
including 680 million drams have been recompensed. Basing on the given
analysis, the bill proposes tougher sanctions. Earlier the punishment
for some of the above crimes was just compensation of the state damage
without further criminal proceedings. Now the bill proposes a certain
‘privilege’ only for the heads of small and medium-sized enterprises
that will get a right to continue their business after compensating the
state damage. As regards big companies committing economic crimes for
over 15 million drams, they will be brought to criminal responsibility.

Gul: Turkey Is In Talks With Armenia To Normalize Relations And Is

GUL: TURKEY IS IN TALKS WITH ARMENIA TO NORMALIZE RELATIONS AND IS HOPEFUL FOR A POSITIVE OUTCOME

ArmInfo
2009-04-06 16:59:00

ArmInfo. Turkey is in talks with Armenia to normalize relations and
I am hopeful for a positive outcome, President of Turkey Abdullah
Gul said at a joint press conference with US President Barack Obama.

Gul said that Turkey is ready to face with the historic events and
reiterated his country’s proposal of forming a commission of academics
and historians to investigate the issue. "These historic issues were
brought on the agenda on political grounds mostly by diaspora who
wants to protect its own identity," he said.

In his turn, Obama said: "My views (on 1915 incidents) are not
changed. What I have been encouraged by a series of negotiations in
place between Armenia and Turkey to resolve outstanding issues. I want
to be as encouraging as possible in moving negotiations move forward."

Mr. Obama and Turkey

tml?_r=3D1&ref=3Dopinion
EDITORIAL

Saturday, April 4, 2009
Mr. Obama and Turkey
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Published: April 3, 2009
President Obama has wisely decided to visit Turkey during his first
official trip to Europe. The United States needs Turkey’s cooperation

– in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as with Iran and efforts to broker
Middle East peace. But there are also very worrying trends in Turkey’s
relationship with Europe and its internal politics.

Related
Times Topics: Turkey
Mr. Obama must do all he can to help reverse those trends and anchor
Turkey more firmly in the West.

The Justice and Development Party scored an impressive re-election in
2007 after pursuing market-oriented policies that brought economic
growth and more trade ties with the European Union. That conservative
Muslim party also expanded human rights and brought Turkish law closer
to European standards.

Those reforms have since stalled – partly because of opposition from
civilian nationalists and generals who still wield too much clout.
(The trial of 86 people accused of plotting a military coup is a
reminder of the dark side of Turkish politics.) But Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan also seems to have lost enthusiasm for the
European Union bid and the reforms that are the price of admission.
President Nicolas Sarkozy of France has been especially unhelpful,
making clear that he will do all he can to keep Turkey out of the
European Union. Mr. Obama must persuade Mr. Sarkozy and others that
admitting Turkey – a Muslim democracy – is in everyone’s interest.
And he must persuade Ankara that the required reforms will strengthen
Turkey’s democracy and provide more stability and growth.

We are concerned about Mr. Erdogan’s increasingly autocratic
tendencies. His government’s decision to slap the media mogul Aydin
Dogan with a $500 million tax bill smacks of retaliation against an
independent press that has successfully exposed government corruption.

Ankara’s willingness to help rebuild schools in Afghanistan is
welcome. But the situation there is dire, and NATO also needs more
troops and needs access to Turkish military bases to facilitate the
transport of American soldiers and equipment into Afghanistan and out
of Iraq.

Ankara has played a positive role, mediating indirect talks between
Israel and Syria. With Washington’s encouragement, Mr. Erdogan could
also use his relationships with Iran, Sudan and Hamas to encourage
improved behavior.

Turkey’s cooperation with Iraqi Kurds has vastly improved. There are
also reports that Turkey and Armenia may soon normalize relations.
We have long criticized Turkey for its self-destructive denial of the
World War I era mass killing of Armenians. But while Congress is again
contemplating a resolution denouncing the genocide, it would do a lot
more good for both Armenia and Turkey if it held back. Mr. Obama, who
vowed in the presidential campaign to recognize the event as genocide,
should also forbear.

The Bush administration’s disastrous war in Iraq fanned a destructive
anti-Americanism in Turkey. Mr. Obama’s visit is likely to soothe
hostile feelings. But he must go beyond that to secure a relationship

with an important ally and an important democracy in danger of
backsliding.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/04/opinion/04sat1.h

Turkey Blocks Europe’s Candidate To Head NATO

TURKEY BLOCKS EUROPE’S CANDIDATE TO HEAD NATO

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.04.2009 11:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey fired a broadside against Danish Prime
Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen’s bid to head NATO as U.S. President
Barack Obama and allied leaders gathered for a 60th anniversary summit
on Friday.

Rasmussen, strongly backed by the main European powers and supported
by the United States, told his cabinet on Friday morning he was a
formal candidate for the post of NATO secretary-general, held by
Dutch diplomat Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan later criticized the Danish
leader’s handling of a 2006 crisis over cartoons of the Prophet
Mohammad in a Danish newspaper, and questioned whether he could
contribute to peace with the Muslim world.

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, seen as the likeliest
candidate to replace Jaap de Hoop Scheffer as NATO secretary-general
Aug. 1, infuriated some Muslims by speaking out in favor of freedom
of speech during an uproar over Danish publication of cartoons of the
Prophet Muhammad in 2006. He has also angered Turkey by opposing its
membership in the European Union.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, leader of the Islamic-rooted
ruling party, told NTV television in an interview late Friday that
he had spoken to Fogh Rasmussen and informed him about opposition to
his candidacy. "We don’t want NATO to be damaged and we don’t think
it is right that you as prime minister should be damaged in this
process," Erdogan said he told Fogh Rasmussen. He did not say when
the conversation took place.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul had said Friday that Ankara had nothing
against Fogh Rasmussen and described him as "one of the most successful
prime ministers" in Europe, Reuters reports.

Wall Street Journal Joins The Border Opening Chorus

WALL STREET JOURNAL JOINS THE BORDER OPENING CHORUS

;ASBSC=Closed
Thursday April 2, 2009

In its Thursday edition, the Wall Street Journal published a news
item authored by Marc Champion about the an imminent announcement by
Armenia and Turkey on the opening of their border.

The newspaper, which has joined a recent chorus of speculators on this
matter, most of them Turkish sources, alleges that Armenia has agreed
to this plan, which also includes the establishment of a commission
to address disputes between the two countries. WSJ also reported that
April 16 was being discussed as a date the agreement would be signed.

During the last week and on several occasions since the so-called
Turkish-Armenian rapprochement began, we have called on the
Armenian government to make concise and clear announcements on this
matter. As press attention on this fundamental issue increases such
a clarification becomes more important.

Below is the WSJ Article:

******

Turkey and Armenia Pave Way for Historic Accords

BY MARC CHAMPION

BRUSSELS — Turkey and Armenia could soon announce a deal aimed at
reopening their border and restoring relations, according to diplomats,
a move that could help stabilize a region that’s increasingly important
as a transit route for oil and gas.

The timing of the deal is being choreographed with the schedule
of U.S. President Barack Obama, who visits Turkey next week, these
people say.

The Turkish and Armenian governments have agreed on terms to open
formal talks in three areas: opening and fixing borders, restoring
diplomatic relations and setting up commissions to look at disputes,
including one on the tense history between the two nations, according
to the diplomats, all of whom declined to be named due to the
sensitivity of the talks.

There is strong opposition to a deal in both countries, as well as in
Armenia’s neighbor Azerbaijan. Turkey closed its border with Armenia in
1993 to protest Armenia’s occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave in
Azerbaijan, following a bloody war. That conflict remains unresolved.

Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses the media
at the headquarters of his Justice and Development Party, the AKP,
in Ankara, Turkey, on Sunday.

.But an accord would be seen in Western capitals as a major potential
success that could help to open up and stabilize the Caucasus. The
region is studded with unresolved conflicts and hostile borders,
and saw war between Russia and Georgia in August.

Normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia would "create a new
and positive dynamic" in relations across the region, "as well as
in developing the economic and transport links we have been pursuing
ever since the collapse of the former Soviet Union," said U.S. Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State Matthew J. Bryza, the State Department’s
point man in the Caucasus.

Mr. Bryza travels to Azerbaijan Thursday to discuss how a
Turkish-Armenian agreement could help revive efforts for a settlement
on Nagorno-Karabakh.

Announcement of a Turkish-Armenian pact is also being influenced by
Mr. Obama’s campaign promise to support a Congressional resolution
that would recognize as genocide the Ottoman Empire’s 1915 killing
of up to 1.5 million Armenians in what is now central and eastern
Turkey. Turkey fiercely denies the killings were genocide. The White
House traditionally makes a statement to mark Armenian Remembrance
Day on April 24.

Analysts say Turkey’s government hopes progress in reviving its
relations with Armenia could prompt the White House not to recognize
the killings as genocide and to block the Congressional resolution.

If the U.S. proceeds with the genocide resolution, "I cannot imagine
any Turkish government opening the Armenian border," said ?zg?r
?nl?hisarcikli, director of the Ankara office of the German Marshall
Fund of the United States, a think tank.

A Senior Turkish foreign-policy official said the U.S. is trying to
facilitate the agreement with Armenia. Turkish and Armenian officials
declined to comment on the status of their talks.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey said on Turkish
television last week he would discuss Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian
"genocide" and relations between Russia and Georgia with the
U.S. president, among other issues.

Mr. Obama’s decision to make Turkey the final, two-day stop on his
European tour has been welcomed in Ankara as a sign of the country’s
strategic importance.

Turkey, a secular Muslim nation of 70 million people, is taking on a
growing role as a regional player in the Caucasus and the Middle East.

Turkey opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 and refused to let
its territory be used for the assault. Now the U.S. again wants to
use its bases in Turkey for Iraq, but this time to withdraw troops —
something much easier for Ankara to accept.

Turkey could also prove a helpful ally in the Mideast, where it has
played a mediating role between Syria and Israel and has offered to
mediate with Iran.

One date under discussion for signing the deal with Armenia, diplomats
say, is April 16. But Mr. ?nl?hisarcikli said he believes Turkey and
Armenia won’t be ready to sign the deal before April 24, and Turkey
instead will "signal" its commitment to reopen the borders in the
hope that will be enough for Washington.

Russia’s invasion of Georgia last August opened the door for Turkey
to become more heavily engaged in the Caucasus. The war showed
the limitations of U.S. and EU influence in the region and exposed
the extent of Armenia’s isolation. When Russia cut Georgia’s main
East-West railway by blowing up a bridge in August, it also cut off
the dominant supply route to Armenia, a close Russian ally.

The war in Georgia also showed the vulnerability of pipelines that have
been carrying oil and natural gas from Azerbaijan to Western markets
via Georgia since 2006. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline carries 1
million barrels of crude per day to Turkey’s Mediterranean coast. The
pipelines were targeted unsuccessfully during the Georgia war.

www.asbarez.com/#AMC=Open&amp

Iran Pushes Persian Pipeline As European Alternative To Russian Gas

IRAN PUSHES PERSIAN PIPELINE AS EUROPEAN ALTERNATIVE TO RUSSIAN GAS

Eurasianet

April 1, 2009

Iran’s proposed Persian pipeline could be the perfect alternative to
Europe’s reliance on Russian gas, Iranian Oil Minister Gholam Hossein
Nozari says.

Nozari said that negotiations with European partners were underway
and that Syria, Iran and Iraq should sign a cooperation agreement to
realize the project, the Russian news agency RIA Novosti reported
on April 1. "In accordance with a project being developed, Iranian
gas will be supplied to European countries via Iraq, Syria and the
Mediterranean Sea, and further onto Greece and Italy," Nozari said
April 1 during a visit to Syria.

Iran has the potential to rival Russia as a gas exporter, if it
meets its stated goal of tripling production to 475 billion cubic
meters (bcm) a year by 2020. The Persian pipeline would use existing
infrastructure, the I-Gas 9 pipeline, to transport the fuel as far as
the Turkish border. The I-Gas 9 pipeline has the capacity to carry
40 bcm of gas annually. Iranian officials say the country has 28
trillion cubic meters of proven natural gas reserves.

http://www.eurasianet.org

PACE Monitoring Committee Takes Positive View Of Amendments To Artic

PACE MONITORING COMMITTEE TAKES POSITIVE VIEW OF AMENDMENTS TO ARTICLES 225 AND 300 OF ARMENIAN CRIMINAL CODE

ArmInfo
2009-04-01 07:43:00

ArmInfo. PACE Monitoring Committee has taken positive view of the
amendments the Parliament of Armenia has made to Articles 225 and
300 of the Armenian Criminal Code, Naira Zohrabyan, a member of the
Armenian delegation to PACE, parliamentarian representing Prosperous
Armenia Party faction, told ArmInfo.

She said the PACE Monitoring Committee Co-rapporteurs for Armenia
George Colombier and John Prescott will assess the fulfillment
of the PACE Resolution No.1643 by Armenia only after the above
amendments are applied in practice. PACE Monitoring Committee met
in Valencia on March 30. The Committee discussed the amendments
to Articles 225 (mass disorders) and 300 (power usurpation) of
the Armenian Criminal Code as well as the proceedings in ‘the Case
of the Seven’. Armenian parliamentarians, the head of the Armenian
delegation to PACE David Haroutiunyan, a member of ARF Dashnaktsutyun
Party faction in the Armenian Parliament Armen Rustamyan, a member of
the Heritage opposition party faction Raffi Hovannisian and non-party
parliamentarian Avet Adonts were present at the meeting.

Ara Aghishyan Elected Hayastan All Armenian Fund U.S. Branch Chairma

ARA AGHISHYAN ELECTED HAYASTAN ALL ARMENIAN FUND U.S. BRANCH CHAIRMAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.03.2009 19:35 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On Mar. 26 Hayastan All Armenian Charity Fund
unanimously elected Ara Aghishyan as Regional Department Head, Hayastan
Fund Press Service reported to PanARMENIAN.Net. The election meeting
was attended by RA Consul General in US Grigor Hovhannesyan, US
Representatives of Armenian Apostolic Church and other public figures.

According to Hayastan Fund Executive Director Ara Vardanyan, Ara
Aghishyan has been a permanent partner to Hayastan All Armenian Fund
and his new post will allow him to further contribute to the welfare
of Armenia.

Like A Sly Fox, Turkey Was Trapped With Two Legs At Once

LIKE A SLY FOX, TURKEY WAS TRAPPED WITH TWO LEGS AT ONCE
Karine Ter-Sahakyan

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.03.2009 GMT+04:00

The events of 1915 were a good rehearsal for the Holocaust, and Israel,
that persistently denies the Armenian Genocide, has to remember
it always.

Much has changed in the world since the beginning of 2009, and
for these changes we, above all, owe the new US President Barack
Obama. Still his first decision as a president to close the jail at
Guantanamo made it clear to everyone that now Washington has someone
who keeps his word. And all the following steps of the President have
proved it – from the withdrawal of troops from Iraq to reconsideration
of the war strategy in Afghanistan.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ However, it is also essential to mention that in
foreign policy of the United States the statements are still only
declarative. Â"FriendshipÂ" with Iran and Â"restartÂ" of relations with
Russia – these are enough to trust the seriousness of intentions of the
White House. Obviously not accidentally did Barack Obama put forward
the candidacy of Philip Gordon for the position of Assistant Secretary
of State for European and Eurasian Affairs. During the hearings of
the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Senator Robert Menendez
asked a range of questions to Senior Fellow for the US Foreign Policy
at the Brookings Institution Dr. Philip Gordon, who in an article
published in November 2007 noted the important role of Turkey for
the US and called in question the necessity to recognize the Armenian
Genocide. Menendez particularly expressed concern over the fact that
a foreign country is trying to impose a veto over domestic policies of
the United States and those of the US Congress. "I have a real concern
that those who would be in a position of authority would actually seek
to fashion that… You suggested the need for balance and I absolutely
agree. I agree that the United States and Congress and citizens,
including in Turkey, need to recognize that a terrible tragedy took
place, that more than a million and a half people were driven from
their homes and massacred. People need to recognize that and honor
the victims of that tragedy. And that sort of balance is necessary,
as I say, not only here but in Turkey," stated Gordon. Possibly,
Armenians can be reproached with increased attention to the goings-on
in the US-Turkey relations, but it shouldn’t be forgotten that for many
years the United States has encouraged Turkey’s policy of denying the
Armenian Genocide. No doubt, Turkey plays a great role in the Near
East, she is a NATO member and an alleged strategic ally, without
which Â"neither withdrawal of American troops from Iraq nor struggle
against the Kurdish terrorists is possibleÂ". At first glance it
is true. But Washington ought to remember how many times Turkey has
turned down this or that project of the United States, referring to
Â"the Armenian lobby that has been forcing a wedge between the United
States and Turkey, between Turkey and ArmeniaÂ".

In a wider sense, nothing already depends on what Barack Obama will say
on April 24. Like a sly fox, Turkey has been trapped with two legs at
once. Ankara kept repeating that in 1915 there was only a deportation
and not genocide, but as a result she proved that for martyring 1.5
million Armenians responsibility is borne not only by Turkey but also
by Imperial Germany which so unsuccessfully drew the Ottoman Empire
into the World War I. Let us once again quote Ambassador Morgenthau:
"…For centuries the Turks have ill-treated their Armenians and all
their other subject peoples with inconceivable barbarity. Yet their
methods have always been crude, clumsy, and unscientific. They excelled
in beating out an Armenian’s brains with a club, and this unpleasant
illustration is a perfect indication of the rough and primitive methods
which they applied to the Armenian problem. They have understood the
uses of murder, but not of murder as a fine art. But the Armenian
proceedings of 1915 and 1916 evidenced an entirely new mentality. This
new conception was that of deportation. The Turks, in five hundred
years, had invented innumerable ways of physically torturing their
Christian subjects, yet never before had it occurred to their minds
to move them bodily from their homes, where they had lived for many
thousands of years, and send them hundreds of miles away into the
desert. Where did the Turks get this idea? Admiral Usedom, one of
the big German naval experts in Turkey, told me that the Germans had
suggested this deportation to the Turks. But the all-important point
is that this idea of deporting peoples en masse is, in modern times,
exclusively Germanic. Any one who reads the literature of Pan-Germany
constantly meets it…"

There are many archive documents, which confirm the participation
of Germany in the destruction of the Armenian population of the
Ottoman Empire. It is understandable that the Armenians, as always,
were of interest to the Great Powers, but it is necessary to note
that in 1915 the USA behaved more properly than Germany. "…In
order to curb Armenian espionage and to prevent new Armenian mass
uprisings, Enver Pasha, by putting the state of war (or emergency)
forward as a pretext, intends to close a large number of Armenian
schools, to suppress Armenian newspapers, to prohibit Armenian postal
correspondence and to resettle in Mesopotamia all those families from
the recently insurgent Armenian centres who are considered to be not
quite unobjectionable. He urgently requests us not to hinder him in
doing so… Of course, the Turkish measures will again cause great
excitement in the whole of the enemy world and will be used against
us. Also the measures will certainly mean great hardship for the
Armenian population. But I am of the opinion that we should moderate
the measures in their form, but not basically hinder them. Wangenheim,
German Ambassador to Istanbul, 31 May 1915".

There are many written materials about participation of Imperial
Germany in the massacre and deportation of the Armenians. Particularly,
there was published a collection of documents in 1995, called "The
Armenian Question and the Armenian Genocide in Turkey. Materials of
Imperial Germany MFA Political Archive." The events of 1915 were
a good rehearsal for the Holocaust, and Israel, that persistently
denies the Armenian Genocide, has to remember it always.

As for the German Bundestag Resolution "Commemoration Day of Armenians
on occasion of the 90th anniversary of the massacre of 24 April 1915 –
Germany should contribute to reconciliation of Turks and Armenians"
adopted on 15 June 2005, it says: "Over 1 million Armenians were killed
in the deportations and mass murders. Numerous independent historians,
parliaments, and international organizations have described the
expulsion and the extermination of the Armenians as genocide." Turkey
yet has no courage for such recognition. but Germany admitted her
guilt for the Holocaust, i.e. for the death of 6 million Jews…

BAKU: 4 Armenian soldiers killed in occupied Azerbaijani territories

Today.Az , Azerbaijan
March 29 2009

4 Armenian soldiers killed in occupied Azerbaijani territories

28 March 2009 [23:57] – Today.Az

4 Armenian soldiers died in occupied Azerbaijani territories at around
5.30 am on March 27, Armenian tert.am informs citing to "Defense
Ministry" of self-proclaimed Nagorno Karabakh republic, according to
ANS-Press.

The information says servicemen died as the result of accident
without giving any details.

Armenian Forces have been conducting military exercises in occupied
Azerbaijani territories since March 26. Guns, tanks and "Grad"
Multiple Launch Rocket System are used in trainings to shoot at
targets near Shahbulaq height.

/Day.Az/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/51164.html