Darfur & Armenian Genocide: PM Erdogan "A Muslim Can Never Commit Ge

DAFUR & ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: PM ERDOGAN "A MUSLIM CAN NEVER COMMIT GENOCIDE."

EuropeNews
n/node/27361
Nov 9 2009
Denmark

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan: No dhimmi can judge a Muslim.

The Turks still refuse to come to terms with their history of genocide
of the Armenian people. Successive Turkish governments were responsible
for the state murder of over 2 million Armenians and 300 000 Greeks.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan: "It’s not possible for
a Muslim to commit genocide," he said. "That’s why we are comfortable
[with the visit of al-Bashir]."

Turkish PM,Tayyip Erdogan’s, statement is eerily reminiscent of
what OIC (Organization of the Islamic Conference) secretary general
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu stated to the Tundra Tabloids last year in
Helskini about Islamic anti-Semitism:

OIC sec-gen Ihsanoglu

"..you cannot speak about any Muslim, good or bad, as anti-Semitic,
this is a theory, this is not the case."

This is the exact same kind of denial as Recep Tayyip Erdog(an’s,
concerning the Armenian genocide by successive Turkish governments,
which shows an Islamic supremacist frame of mind. What is most likely,
is that these two Turks are exhibiting the same anger and frustration
over the fact that non-Muslims (read = Dhimmis) are holding Muslims
accountable for their actions, and that, for a Muslim, is something
that cannot be allowed under any circumstance. That, more than anything
else, including racism and genocide, is what bothers these two Muslim
leaders the most. KGS

Sudanese President Bashir’s visit to Turkey in limbo

Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has pushed back his planned
visit to Turkey, Turkish aviation officials said on Sunday, adding
that the controversial leader canceled his Sunday flight without
any explanation.

It was not clear whether al-Bashir will come to Turkey on Monday
or Tuesday for a summit of Islamic nations, the officials added,
according to a report by the Dog(an news agency.

The statement came hours after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdog(an
defended al-Bashir’s visit by saying, "A Muslim can never commit
genocide."

"Those world leaders who criticize us, have they ever visited Darfur?

Their information is solely based on what the rapporteurs are
reporting. These kinds of moves will not contribute to world peace,"
Erdog(an said Sunday in an address to party members.

"It’s not possible for a Muslim to commit genocide," he said. "That’s
why we are comfortable [with the visit of al-Bashir].

http://europenews.dk/e

Nikolay Ryzhkov Became Honorable Member Of "Nairit Plant"

NIKOLAY RYZHKOV BECAME HONORABLE MEMBER OF "NAIRIT PLANT"

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.11.2009 17:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Member of RF Federation Council and national
hero of Armenia Nikolay Ryzhkov visited Nairit plant on November 9,
within the frames of Armenian-Russian Intergovernmental Cooperation
Committee’s session which is taking place in Yerevan, the plant’s
press service reports

Accompanied by Nairit Plant CJSC directors, Russian official visited
the department repaired after recent explosion, as well as other
factory subdivisions, the plant says in release.

Nairit Plant CJSC board of directors made decision to grant Ryzhkov
the title of honorable staff members, says the release.

Cafesjian’s ‘Open Doors’ Closed Earlier Than Announced

CAFESJIAN’S ‘OPEN DOORS’ CLOSED EARLIER THAN ANNOUNCED

Tert
Nov 9 2009
Armenia

The Cafesjian Center for the Arts declared November 8 as an exclusive
‘Open Doors’ day for the public, where art-loving Yerevan citizens
could become familiar with the centre’s various contemporary art
collections, without having to pay an admission fee.

In all the glossy pamphlets published on the occasion of the exhibition
opening, Open Doors day was announced on November 8 from 10 am to 10
pm. In fact, the Cafesjian Center for the Arts closed the doors to its
exhibit halls a few hours earlier. Tert.am correspondents succeeded
in gathering information from neither the security guards nor the
young women working behind the first floor reception desk. All of them
stated that they’re not the ones in charge and could say nothing. The
only excuse was that the escalators’ hours of operation were mentioned
in the booklet. In fact, the numerous escalators within the Cascade
complex have always been in operation till 11 pm, irregardless of
the opening of the Cafesjian Center for the Arts.

While those arriving apparently "late" were angrily waiting before
the entrance, security guards were letting groups of what one could
assume to be VIP guests in.

Earlier, enthusiastic museum-goers were made to wait in long queues,
since, after all, the opening of this institution of contemporary art
was a long-awaited event, and there was a rush to become acquainted
with Gerard Cafesjian’s collection while it was still free of charge.

The others, and those who appeared before the doors of the centre
after 7:30 pm on the ‘Open Doors’ day, will have to pay an admission
fee of 1,000 AMD to view all but the first two exhibit halls at the
Cafesjian Center for the Arts.

Exhibition Of Vilik Zakaryan’s Works Of Last 9 Years Opens In Yereva

EXHIBITION OF VILIK ZAKARYAN’S WORKS OF LAST 9 YEARS OPENS IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.11.2009 18:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Exhibition of Vilik Zakaryan’s works, created between
2000 and 2009, opened at the Exhibition Hall of the Union of Artists
of Armenia. The artist assess his work as a modernist platform for
fantasy: " I always leave room for imagination of spectators, who’s
perceptions create a complete picture of a painting."

"I did not restrict myself to any color scheme, and I know exactly
that I am right, when adhere to the policy of "let critics think how
to name my creative work, " Vilik Zakaryan said.

"Zakaryan managed to create his own style. However, unlike many others,
he does not stop there. In his work he is constantly experimenting,
perfecting his style, " Levon Lachikyan said at the opening of the
art exhibition.

Vilik Zakaryan was born in 1952. In 1975 he graduated from the Yerevan
Fine Arts and Theater Institute. Since 1984 he is a member of the
Union of Artists of Armenia, and since 1996 he is a member of the
Professional Artists of UNESCO.

Personal exhibition of Zakaryan’s works were held in Prague (1988),
Yerevan (1994 and 2000), Oberhausen (1995), Paris (1997), Moscow
(2002) and Marseilles (2004).

BAKU: Columbia University In New York Hosts Conference On 90th Anniv

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN NEW YORK HOSTS CONFERENCE ON 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF AZERBAIJAN’S DIPLOMATIC SERVICE

APA
Nov 6 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku. Lachin Sultanova – APA. Columbia University in New York
hosted a conference entitled "Azerbaijan in 21st century: prospects
and challenges" on Thursday, organized by the permanent mission of
Azerbaijan to UN and Harriman Institute. Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs of Azerbaijan Araz Azimov, permanent representative of
Azerbaijan to UN, Ambassador Agshin Mehdiyev, Azerbaijani Ambassador to
the United States Yashar Aliyev, Professor of International Diplomacy,
Ambassador Stephen Sestanovich, Professor Timothy Frye and others
attended the conference, the permanent mission of Azerbaijan to UN
told APA.

Azimov delivered report about the Azerbaijan’s security policy in
changing environment. Mehdiyev’s report was about the ways led to
independent, united, prosperous and democratic Azerbaijan. Ambassador
Aliyev delivered report about the Azerbaijani-U.S. relations.

Then reporters answered the questions of the participants and made
additional comments.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan submitted the collection
of UN documents about the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, as well as books containing details about the conflict to
the participants of the conference.

TOL: Reluctant Reformers

RELUCTANT REFORMERS
by Anush Babajanyan

Transitions on Line
uage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=346&NrS ection=3&NrArticle=20961
Nov 6 2009
Czech Repubic

A shakeup in Armenia’s schools was supposed to mean more lively
classrooms and a streamlined curriculum, but some habits die hard.

YEREVAN | Maritsa Abajyan was supposed to receive a set of colorful
children’s furniture this year for her second-grade classroom – just
one of the results of education reforms designed to create a more
playful, interactive environment for the country’s youngest pupils.

Instead, she was given just a few pieces and decided to give them away
to a colleague, leaving her charges to study at the same old-fashioned,
gray tables placed in traditional rows.

Yet the setting seems appropriate, given Abajyan’s own difficulties
in embracing the new system. "I find the former strictness of
classes correct," the 41-year-old says, dismissing the notion of
more creative, alternative activities. "The child should be strictly
within the borders of the lesson. If you don’t work that way, the
child doesn’t work."

"They learn the new methods, but they don’t start using them at once,"
Suqiasyan said. "They teach using both the traditional and the new
methods. Methods such as the group and interactive methods are great.

They’re good for developing the students’ critical-thinking qualities."

IMPATIENCE

Many parents remain dissatisfied with the current transition period.

"They broke down the old system without preparing the new one
thoroughly," says Lusine Vardanyan, the mother of a fifth-grader in
Yerevan. "The teachers still act the way they used to. They shout at
children and even parents; they turn up late to their classes." She
views the current situation as an incomplete mixture of the old
Soviet-era education system and the present one. And her son, Zhirayr,
still hasn’t received the new books required for the 12-year system.

"They said it would be easier for students to study," Vardanyan said.

"Now it’s only harder. The books haven’t been changed; class hours
haven’t been reduced. Moreover, they added new subjects, increasing
the difficulty."

Education officials counsel patience and note the progress already
made, saying students do have less class time, with first-graders
attending 20 hours instead of 23. Students in the upper grades already
have six or seven classes a day instead of eight, and the new system
should facilitate the addition of new subjects to the curriculum,
they say.

The ministry’s website also reports that 65 new textbooks were printed
in 2008, in time for the current school year, covering topics such
as technology and the environment.

"The new mathematics book for fourth-graders is wonderful," math
teacher Karapetyan says. "It’s made things easier and explains
everything in detail."

But the textbooks have not met with universal approval. "They’ve made
everything much more difficult," complained Anna Avetisyan, a geography
teacher from the northern city of Gyumri. "The geography book for the
seventh grade is really hard. So is the book for natural sciences for
the fifth and sixth grades – the children don’t understand it at all."

END OF THE TUTOR PERIOD

Some educators have started to speculate that another part of the
reforms – the restructuring of schools – will eventually lead to the
disappearance of private tutors, who benefit the students who can
most afford them.

Under the new rules, schools must separate their years of study into
primary, middle, and high schools. Before there was no division;
the students simply studied for 10 years. Now they leave after middle
school and go to a different, specialized high school, more in tune
with their interests and professional ambitions. The supposition
is that these schools – 48 of which opened their doors this fall –
will provide their students with the knowledge necessary to enter
university afterward, eliminating the need for tutors.

Suqiasyan, the high school principal, hopes that soon her students
will be able to enter universities without studying with tutors.

"Little by little the private tutor will disappear," Suqiasyan said.

"Parents already feel that soon they will not have to spend those
additional funds."

Julietta Weiss is a tutor of mathematics and physics who helps students
prepare for their university entrance exams. She sees little change
in the number and quality of her students since 2006, when the new
system began. "My situation is even better than before," she said.

"Because schools are unstable, parents are worried. So they bring
their kids here."

Weiss, who tutors five students from Suqiasyan’s school, is not ready
to call it quits quite yet. She says tutoring is a response to the
difficulty of university entrance exams, noting that even parents who
send their children to top college preparatory high schools also send
them to tutors.

Although already a high school student in the new system, Ani
Vardanyan will start studying with tutors this year, preparing for
university exams.

"Some of my classmates have left school," Ani said. "But they didn’t
do it to go to a specialized high school. They left to find a school
where they won’t have to study too much, so they have time for studying
with tutors."

Hovhannisyan acknowledges the current challenges but contends it
would have taken too long to organize all aspects of the system before
launching it.

"It could have lasted for years if we prepared for it beforehand and
then began it," she said. "We had the objective of moving on together
with the rest of the world."

Many teachers also remain hopeful that the system will eventually
bring large-scale improvements.

"Everything is new, and naturally it causes confusion," Karapetyan
said. "But once one gets used to it, it is a wonderful system."

"The teacher’s job is difficult," she added. "But they will get used
to it, and students will get used to it. The new method isn’t bad."

Story and photos by Anush Babajanyan, a freelance journalist and
photographer in Gyumri and editor of TOL’s Patchwork blog.

A student studies a textbook on the history of the Armenian Apostolic
Church.

By now, Abajyan’s students should be receiving a different type of
education, and she should be a different type of teacher. But three
years into the changes brought about by Armenia’s shift to a 12-year
education system, more in line with European standards, many teachers
like Abajyan remain entrenched in the old ways. If previously the
problem was a lack of trained teachers, now the issue is that some
of the trained teachers have not bought into the system they were
taught to implement.

HAND-HOLDING

Some say the new system’s requirement that a teacher adopt an
individual approach to students can be unrealistic. "In the case
of 12 students, which is how many students I have, you can do it,"
Abajyan says. "Everyone speaks in class every day. But in the first
grades we have 33 students [per class]. And with 33 students it is
impossible to hold their hands and take them through the class."

Abajyan is also not a big fan of the decision to make Wednesday a
designated relaxation day for 5-year-old first-graders, feeling
that the break stunts their development as students. "Honestly,
I don’t honor that day, on my own initiative," she admits. "I study
mathematics with them on those days. I think that’s the right thing
to do, and we’ve completed the curriculum just in time."

Abajyan attributes the achievements of the 12-year system in Europe to
cultural differences. "There’s a big difference between our children,"
Abajyan says. "Their children are more liberal, more independent."

Jemma Karapetyan, a teacher at another Yerevan elementary school,
is 10 years older than Abajyan but appreciates some of the reasoning
behind the reforms.

"I consider the group discussion method a good one," said Karapetyan,
a veteran mathematics teacher. "But because of my age, I can’t bear
noise. Young and enthusiastic teachers can make this system work
well." She also worries that the changes, in which 5-year-olds go to
school instead of kindergarten, have placed a greater burden on the
younger ones.

"We have to make the classes easier so that they can grasp them,"
Karapetyan says.

The Education Ministry says it will not negotiate with reluctant
teachers.

"Starting in March we will implement teacher certification,"
says Narine Hovhannisyan, the head of the ministry’s department of
general education. "I think these issues will be solved through the
certification process. Teachers who don’t measure up will [have to]
leave schools."

Hovhannisyan adds that school headmasters are responsible for the
implementation of the new teaching methods. "The principals should
want their teachers to have good qualities. It is also an issue of
the school’s reputation."

Bella Suqiasyan, the principal of a Yerevan high school, approves
of the new methods but says that teachers in her school have not
fully adjusted.

"They learn the new methods, but they don’t start using them at once,"
Suqiasyan said. "They teach using both the traditional and the new
methods. Methods such as the group and interactive methods are great.

They’re good for developing the students’ critical-thinking qualities."

IMPATIENCE

Many parents remain dissatisfied with the current transition period.

"They broke down the old system without preparing the new one
thoroughly," says Lusine Vardanyan, the mother of a fifth-grader in
Yerevan. "The teachers still act the way they used to. They shout at
children and even parents; they turn up late to their classes." She
views the current situation as an incomplete mixture of the old
Soviet-era education system and the present one. And her son, Zhirayr,
still hasn’t received the new books required for the 12-year system.

"They said it would be easier for students to study," Vardanyan said.

"Now it’s only harder. The books haven’t been changed; class hours
haven’t been reduced. Moreover, they added new subjects, increasing
the difficulty."

Education officials counsel patience and note the progress already
made, saying students do have less class time, with first-graders
attending 20 hours instead of 23. Students in the upper grades already
have six or seven classes a day instead of eight, and the new system
should facilitate the addition of new subjects to the curriculum,
they say.

The ministry’s website also reports that 65 new textbooks were printed
in 2008, in time for the current school year, covering topics such
as technology and the environment.

"The new mathematics book for fourth-graders is wonderful," math
teacher Karapetyan says. "It’s made things easier and explains
everything in detail."

But the textbooks have not met with universal approval. "They’ve made
everything much more difficult," complained Anna Avetisyan, a geography
teacher from the northern city of Gyumri. "The geography book for the
seventh grade is really hard. So is the book for natural sciences for
the fifth and sixth grades – the children don’t understand it at all."

END OF THE TUTOR PERIOD

Some educators have started to speculate that another part of the
reforms – the restructuring of schools – will eventually lead to the
disappearance of private tutors, who benefit the students who can
most afford them.

Under the new rules, schools must separate their years of study into
primary, middle, and high schools. Before there was no division;
the students simply studied for 10 years. Now they leave after middle
school and go to a different, specialized high school, more in tune
with their interests and professional ambitions. The supposition
is that these schools – 48 of which opened their doors this fall –
will provide their students with the knowledge necessary to enter
university afterward, eliminating the need for tutors.

Suqiasyan, the high school principal, hopes that soon her students
will be able to enter universities without studying with tutors.

"Little by little the private tutor will disappear," Suqiasyan said.

"Parents already feel that soon they will not have to spend those
additional funds."

Julietta Weiss is a tutor of mathematics and physics who helps students
prepare for their university entrance exams. She sees little change
in the number and quality of her students since 2006, when the new
system began. "My situation is even better than before," she said.

"Because schools are unstable, parents are worried. So they bring
their kids here."

Weiss, who tutors five students from Suqiasyan’s school, is not ready
to call it quits quite yet. She says tutoring is a response to the
difficulty of university entrance exams, noting that even parents who
send their children to top college preparatory high schools also send
them to tutors.

Although already a high school student in the new system, Ani
Vardanyan will start studying with tutors this year, preparing for
university exams.

"Some of my classmates have left school," Ani said. "But they didn’t
do it to go to a specialized high school. They left to find a school
where they won’t have to study too much, so they have time for studying
with tutors."

Hovhannisyan acknowledges the current challenges but contends it
would have taken too long to organize all aspects of the system before
launching it.

"It could have lasted for years if we prepared for it beforehand and
then began it," she said. "We had the objective of moving on together
with the rest of the world."

Many teachers also remain hopeful that the system will eventually
bring large-scale improvements.

"Everything is new, and naturally it causes confusion," Karapetyan
said. "But once one gets used to it, it is a wonderful system."

"The teacher’s job is difficult," she added. "But they will get used
to it, and students will get used to it. The new method isn’t bad."

Story and photos by Anush Babajanyan, a freelance journalist and
photographer in Gyumri and editor of TOL’s Patchwork blog.

http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLang

HSBC Bank Armenia Continues "Green Bank" Campaign

HSBC BANK ARMENIA CONTINUES "GREEN BANK" CAMPAIGN

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2009 18:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ HSBC Bank Armenia cjsc has pledged to sponsor
planting up to 1000 trees in Yerevan to encourage its customers
to opt to receive their statements electronically and for signing
up to Personal Internet Banking services, thus helping to preserve
the environment.

Continuing the good tradition of tree planting initiated in 1996, on
November 8, HSBC Bank Armenia staff and their families will plant 500
trees in "Huisi Avan" residential community together with specialists
from Armenia Tree Project and community members.

Tree planting is only one aspect of a comprehensive "Green Bank"
campaign which the Bank has initiated. Following the launch of
Telephone Banking in March 2009 and Internet Banking in July 2009,
the availability of electronic statements is aimed at reducing paper
consumption and helping to preserve the environment.

"To further encourage our customers and community to use green
channels and sign up for Telephone or Internet Banking services and
switch to e-statements, today we go green with tree planting. It is
also important to mention that all HSBC Armenia staff do their daily
banking via direct channels, acting as role models for the community",
said Tim Slater, HSBC Bank Armenia Chief Executive Officer.

The area where the tree planting will take place was also chosen
with care. "Huisi Avan" is a shelter for 76 underprivileged Armenian
families, mainly refugees, with a minimum of three children. By
planting decorative trees and donating much needed fruit trees,
the Bank is helping to improve the lives of people in need.

rmenia – Georgia Friendship And Collaboration Have No Alternatives

ARMENIA – GEORGIA FRIENDSHIP AND COLLABORATION HAVE NO ALTERNATIVES

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2009 19:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On November 6, newly-appointed Georgian Ambassador
to Armenia Grigol Tabatadze presented his credentials to RA President
Serzh Sargsyan. Congratulating the Ambassador on his appointment,
RA President especially noted the age-long friendship and relations
of the two states. "Our relations need permanent attention and
improvement. This is a reason our Ambassadors have to intensify their
efforts," the President emphasized.

According to Grigol Tabatadze, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
supports development of relations with Armenia and believes bilateral
friendship and collaboration have no alternatives. At the same time,
he noted, that Georgian government gives high assessment to Armenian
President’s political views, considering him a politician who looks
into the future without forgetting about the past.

The parties agreed there isn’t a problem the two states would be
incapable to resolve through bilateral dialogue.

The parties also discussed issues on Armenia-Georgia collaboration’s
and joint intergovernmental committee’s agenda.

BAKU: Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict Solution Is One Of Most Important Qu

NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT SOLUTION IS ONE OF MOST IMPORTANT QUESTIONS, EVEN MOST IMPORTANT FOR ARMENIA: FM

Trend
Nov 5 2009
Azerbaijan

Armenia’s position on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict remains unchanged –
the conflict must be resolved peacefully," said the Foreign Minister
of Armenia Eduard Nalbandian, News-Armenia reported.

"The settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is one of the
most important questions, even the most important for Armenia. Our
approaches to the settlement of the Karabakh conflict remain unchanged
– we see no alternative to peaceful solution of the conflict. The
conflict must be resolved through negotiations," said Nalbandian on
Nov. 5 during discussions on the project of the country’s 2010 budget
at the parliamentary standing committees on foreign relations and
financial-credit and budgetary affairs.

According to the Foreign Minister of Armenia, the Karabakh conflict
must be resolved based on the principles and norms of international
law.

The Armenian Foreign Minister said that the principal in the
negotiations on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict solution is the status
of Nagorno-Karabakh, providing security guarantees to Nagorno-Karabakh,
ensuring land border with Armenia.

The Minister also remembered that the co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk
Group will arrive in Armenia on Nov. 6.