House-Senate Conferees Approve Aid Levels $41 Million For Armenia An

HOUSE-SENATE CONFEREES APPROVE AID LEVELS $41 MILLION FOR ARMENIA AND $8 MILLION FOR KARABAKH

ArmInfo
2009-12-11 12:29:00

ArmInfo. Finalizing its work on six different appropriations measures,
the Conferees in the House and Senate approved a Consolidated
Appropriations Bill for 2010, which provides $41 million for Armenia
and $8 million for Nagorno Karabakh, reported the Armenian Assembly
of America (Assembly).

The bill also maintained parity with respect to Foreign Military
Financing (FMF) to Armenia and Azerbaijan at $3 million each. The
Conferees did not delineate funding to either country regarding
International Military Education Training (IMET). "The Assembly
appreciates the continued support of its friends in the House and
Senate in helping secure a positive outcome," said Assembly Executive
Director Bryan Ardouny. "Given Turkey’s ongoing blockade of Armenia,
which is reinforced by Azerbaijan, U.S. assistance remains critically
important," added Ardouny. The Conferees stated that they "expect
the Department of State to continue to emphasize the use of civil
society in implementing programs and activities in Armenia." The $41
million approved reflects a $7 million drop from the Fiscal Year (FY)
2009 level, but is $11 million over the Administration’s request. On
assistance to Artsakh, the "conferees direct[ed] that up to $8,000,000
be made available for programs and activities in Nagorno-Karabakh."

This matches the level of funding allocated by Congress in FY 2009.

Earlier this year, in support of robust assistance to Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh, Board of Trustees Member Van Krikorian testified
before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on State, Foreign
Operations, and Related Programs, outlining the Assembly’s priorities
with respect to funding and U.S. policy in the South Caucasus region.

With the work of the Conferees completed, the full House is expected to
vote on the Consolidated Bill as early as this friday. Once voted on by
the House and Senate, the Bill will be sent to President Barack Obama
for his signature into law. Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly
of America is the largest Washington- based nationwide organization
promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The
Assembly is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

People Scared Of ‘Swine Flu’ Visit Polyclinics

PEOPLE SCARED OF ‘SWINE FLU’ VISIT POLYCLINICS

ArmInfo
2009-12-10 16:13:00

ArmInfo. Since H1N1 flu appearance in the country citizens have started
visiting polyclinics 3-4 times often than earlier, representative of
Armenian Health Ministry, Vahan Petrosyan, told journalists today.

He also added that the number of calling a doctor has also risen over
the last period of time. Moreover, doctors of polyclinics are on duty
on Saturdays and Sundays because spreading of respiratory infection.

‘All the polyclinics are provided with the necessary medicine including
Tamiflu, which is given to such people free’, – he said and recalled
that an Operative Headquarters was set up under Health Ministry,
which twice per day receives information about the flu situation in
the country. Here are the telephone numbers of the hot line in Health
Ministry : 52-88-72 and 56-53-23.

For his part, the head of the State Sanitary Inspection under Health
Ministry, Artavazd Vanyan, said taking into consideration the flu
situation in the country, additional preventive measures have been
taken, in particular, visits to patients at hospitals have been
limited, special rooms for the people such of flu have been set up
in polyclinics.

To note, 54 cases of H1N1 flu have been registered in Armenia.

Georgia To Withdraw CIS Interpaliamentary Assembly On January 22

GEORGIA TO WITHDRAW CIS INTERPALIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY ON JANUARY 22

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.12.2009 20:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Chairman of CIS Inter-Parliamentary Assembly Sergei
Mironov said Georgia would cease to be a member of this organization
from January 2010. "Under Assembly’s mechanisms, Georgia’s notification
on withdrawing membership will enter into force six month after
joining the organization," he said.

CIS Secretary Sergey Lebedev announced earlier that such step would
be the detriment of Georgia rather than the Assembly.

According organization’s Secretary General Mikhail Krotov, the country
intends to continue participation 75 treaties and agreements, including
the one concerning free trade, Georgiatimes.info reports.

NKR: Tribute To Earthquake Victims’ Memory Was Paid

TRIBUTE TO EARTHQUAKE VICTIMS’ MEMORY WAS PAID

NKR Government Information and
Public Relations Department
December 07, 2009

Today, in Stepanakert, a tribute was paid to the memory of victims of
great Earthquake in Spitak. Thousands of representatives of public,
as well as the NKR state and political higher authority have visited
the memorial complex of the capital, laid wreaths to the monument of
the disaster victims. Requiem mass was performed. The NKR NA Chairman
A.Ghoulyan, the Prime Minister A.Haroutyunyan, officials of higher
legislative, executive and judicial authorities were present at
the ceremony.

Edward Nalbandian: Armenia Attaches Great Importance To Cooperation

EDWARD NALBANDIAN: ARMENIA ATTACHES GREAT IMPORTANCE TO COOPERATION WITH THE EUROPEAN UNION

armradio.am
08.12.2009 15:38

Today the foreign ministers from the EU and the six countries
involved in the Eastern Partnership are meeting in Brussels. This
is the first meeting of foreign ministers since the partnership
was launched in May. Ahead of today’s meeting, se2009.eu put three
questions to Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

– What are your expectations of the meeting? What are the most
important issues for Armenia?

– Armenia attaches great importance to cooperation with the European
Union and its Member States. The Eastern Partnership initiative
provides a new framework for this relationship through enhanced
political dialogue, increased trade opportunities and people-to-people
contacts. Another added value of the Eastern Partnership is that
it supports cooperation among the partner states, which is can be
critical to the overall success of the initiative. At this first
ministerial meeting we will take stock of the progress achieved and
I look forward to productive discussions with my colleagues on the
perspectives of our future cooperation.

Armenia’s relations with the European Union are regulated by the
Partnership and Cooperation Agreement. The latter was signed in 1996
and entered into force in 1999. Since then the political landscape of
Europe has changed significantly, new challenges and opportunities
have come into being. The Eastern Partnership not only reflects the
progress achieved in relations between Armenia and the EU in the last
decade, but also offers the perspective of an Association Agreement,
which will adapt our cooperation to the new realities and will take
into consideration the aspirations of each partner state and the
European Union.

– What are your hopes for the Eastern Partnership in the short run
and the long run?

– I think in the short term the Eastern Partnership should develop
appropriate mechanisms of cooperation and establish the atmosphere
of mutual understanding that will be conducive to accomplishing
the goals of the initiatives. The thematic platforms, have made a
certain progress this year, and I hope that their working plans
will be successfully implemented. It is also important that the
partner countries build their capacities so that they can absorb
the implications that derive from the intensive contacts within the
Eastern Partnership and can serve the goals of cooperation such as
an Association Agreement and a deep and comprehensive Free Trade
Agreement.

– How do you think the EU can benefit from the partnership? How can
Armenia benefit?

– Partnership means a common set of values, interests, trade and
human contacts. The ultimate beneficiaries of this process will be
the peoples of Armenia and the European Union, who are united in
their diversity, as each of them has different traditions, history
and language, but they share the same vision of a Europe based on
cooperation, peace and prosperity. They want to trade with each other
and enrich knowledge of each other’s culture. To this end, one of
our common priorities is facilitating visa arrangements in order
to gradually remove obstacles to people-to-people contact between
our societies.

Ameriabank Launches Large-Scale Business Financing Project

AMERIABANK LAUNCHES LARGE-SCALE BUSINESS FINANCING PROJECT

ArmInfo
2009-12-08 13:12:00

ArmInfo. Ameriabank launches a new large-scale business financing
project. As Ameriabank’s press-service told ArmInfo, the project
will assure the terms of crediting, having no analogues, for all
the businessmen with annual turnover of 5 mln to 5 bln drams and the
number of employees not exceeding 250 people.

Credits are provided to the sum of up to $1.5 mln and are available
for both legal persons and individual entrepreneurs. The policy,
laid in the bank’s strategy, supposes an individual approach to each
client with account of the client’s business specifics. The new project
also envisages a similar approach to each borrower. The credits are
provided at 12% annual interest rate with 7-year repayment period,
including a 2-year period of grace, during which only the interest
on credit is repaid. Ameriabank offers an opportunity of crediting
on preferential terms to the borrowers who properly fulfill their
obligations: the interest rate on credit will reduce every six
months during the first three years of the credit, irrespective of
the financial market state. The new business financing project aims
at assistance in promotion of the business-activity and development
of different sectors of Armenia’s economy.

Ameriabank CJSC is an investment bank which offers corporate,
investment and limited retail services in form of a complex package.

Troika Dialogue Group of companies, being one of the biggest
investment-banking companies of Russia, is Ameriabank’s strategic
partner.

Economist: Testy Erdogan; Turkey and the West

The Economist

December 5, 2009
U.S. Edition

Testy Erdogan; Turkey and the West

Claims that Turkey is drifting away from the West seem exaggerated

WHEN Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, meets Barack Obama
in the White House next week, he will insist on his country’s Western
credentials. He will be greeted with a request for more troops to back
the American surge in Afghanistan. Turkey, which has NATO’s
second-biggest army, has 1,700 soldiers on Afghan soil and Turkish
generals have led allied forces there. Yet Mr Erdogan’s mildly
Islamist Justice and Development (AK) Party dislikes American calls to
fight fellow Muslims in Afghanistan. Turkey has opted to train Afghan
security forces and build roads and schools instead. Mr Erdogan will
spurn demands for combat troops.

His Western critics may seize on this as confirmation of Turkey’s
supposed drift away from the West under seven years of AK rule. Mr
Erdogan’s cosiness with Iran and Sudan, plus his salvoes against
Israel, feed claims that he is an Islamist firebrand at heart. His
behaviour has spawned a flurry of hand-wringing in the West.

Yet to Turkish jihadists, who are surfacing in Afghanistan and
Chechnya, Mr Erdogan is an American poodle. It was these home-grown
militants, with links to al-Qaeda, who in November 2003 killed over 60
people in suicide bombings against British and Jewish targets in
Istanbul. If Turkish troops started shooting at fellow Muslims, that
would swell the ranks of Islamist radicals in Turkey. "This is what
America and the West needs to understand," complains an AK official.
America also relies heavily on Turkey for its operations in Iraq. The
Incirlik airbase in southern Turkey is a supply hub for American
troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. As it begins to withdraw from Iraq,
America is turning to Turkey to help Iraqis rebuild.

Indeed, Mr Erdogan may have a harder task explaining to Mr Obama his
reluctance to back new sanctions against Iran. Turkey holds a rotating
seat on the UN Security Council. "Should sanctions come to a vote,
that is when we will know whose side Turkey is on: ours or the other,"
comments a Western diplomat. Iran will be critical for future
relations with America.

Mr Erdogan’s enemies claim that AK’s moves to trim the army’s powers
are not to do with its European Union aspirations but with a desire to
cement religious rule. The Ergenekon case against alleged
coup-plotters was, they argue, cooked up as part of this plan. Their
views have been echoed in some Western newspapers, which have also
condemned a crushing tax slapped on Turkey’s largest media
conglomerate, Dogan. Many note that the fine came only after some
Dogan titles began exposing corruption implicating AK party officials.
The argument is that Mr Erdogan wants to silence a free press to help
Turkey’s move towards Islamic dictatorship.

Mr Erdogan undoubtedly has autocratic instincts. He has taken
journalists and even cartoonists to court. His embrace of Sudan’s
president Omar al-Bashir, charged with war crimes against his own
people, was a disgrace. And he favours a somewhat greater role for
Islam in public life. But he seems committed to Turkey’s EU accession
process, even to pursuing liberalising reforms in Turkey if its EU
hopes are dashed. He wants to resolve Turkey’s problems with its
Kurds. And he is pursuing reconciliation with Armenia. These are
hardly signs of a shift from the West.

And what of his opponents? Deniz Baykal, the leader of the Republican
People’s Party, spends most of his time attacking laws that could help
Turkey’s bid for EU membership. Devlet Bahceli, the leader of the main
nationalist party, said that "swine flu doesn’t exist", though it has
killed almost 200 Turks. As for the army, incriminating documents that
were seized during an investigation show that a group was indeed
hoping to topple Mr Erdogan by, among other things, assassinating
Christians and placing the blame on AK. Why not send them to
Afghanistan?

Armenia and UAE share similar positions on many issues

Armenia and UAE share similar positions on many issues
05.12.2009 17:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ United Arab Emirates (UAE) supports Armenian-Turkish
rapprochement, according to UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs
Mohammed Anwar Gargash.

`We know this is a rather complicated process having a historical
background, but we wish good luck to your efforts,’ he told today a
news conference organized jointly with Armenian FM Edward Nalbandyan.

With regard to Karabakh conflict settlement, Mr. Gargash reiterated
his country’s efforts towards assisting in the process in accordance
with the norms of international law.

Turkey revels in past: Ottomania uniting secular nationalists and…

The International Herald Tribune
December 4, 2009 Friday

Turkey revels in its past;
‘Ottomania’ is uniting secular nationalists and religious Muslims alike

by Dan Bilefsky

ABSTRACT
The latest manifestation of a new "Ottomania" overtaking Turkey is
harking back to an era of conquest, influence and cultural splendor in
which sultans ruled an empire stretching from the Balkans to the
Indian Ocean.

FULL TEXT
More than eight decades after his family was unceremoniously thrown
out of Turkey, thousands of mourners came in September to pay homage
to Ertugrul Osman, the oldest heir to the Ottoman throne, who died at
97 after having lived most of his life in exile in a modest Manhattan
apartment above a bakery.

Mr. Osman, an opera-loving businessman who at one time kept 12 dogs in
his home, was the grandson of Sultan Abdul Hamid II. He was given a
funeral worthy of his royal lineage in the garden of the majestic
Sultanahmet Mosque. Government officials and celebrities competed with
pious Muslims to kiss the hands of surviving dynasty members, who
appeared genuinely shocked at the outpouring of adulation.

Historians said the reverence for the man who might have ruled an
empire marked a seminal moment in the rehabilitation of the Ottoman
era, long demonized in the modern Turkish Republic created by Mustafa
Kemal Ataturk in 1923 because of the empire’s decadence and
humiliating defeat and partition by Allied armies in World War I.

Sociologists said Mr. Osman’s send-off was just the latest
manifestation of a new ”Ottomania” overtaking Turkey – a harking
back to an era of conquest, influence and cultural splendor in which
the Ottoman sultans ruled an empire stretching from the Balkans to the
Indian Ocean, claiming spiritual leadership of the Muslim world. At
the apex of their power in the 16th and 17th centuries, they governed
what was then arguably one of the most powerful states on earth.

”Turks are attracted to the heroism and the glory of the Ottoman
period because it belongs to them,” said the director of Topkapi
Palace, Ilber Ortayli, who, as the keeper of the sumptuous residence
that housed the Ottoman sultans for 400 years, is also the zealous
unofficial gatekeeper of the country’s Ottoman legacy. ”The sultans
hold a place in the popular consciousness like Douglas MacArthur or
General Patton have for Americans.”

The current vogue of all things Ottoman, from the proliferation of
historic docudramas to the popularity of porcelain ashtrays adorned
with half-naked harem women, is manifesting itself in different ways,
some of which would surely have made a real sultan blanche.

During Ramadan, Burger King introduced a special ”Like a dream
Sultan” menu, featuring Ottoman staples like Ayran, a popular Turkish
yogurt drink. In the television commercial promoting the meal, a
turbaned Janissary, or elite Ottoman soldier, exhorts viewers not to
”leave any burgers standing” – just as Ottoman soldiers had been
ordered not to leave any heads standing on the necks of their enemies.

Ottomania has also infected the nation’s youth; twentysomethings at
hip dance clubs here can be seen wearing T-shirts emblazoned with
slogans like ”The Empire Strikes Back” or ”Terrible Turks” – the
latter turning the taunt Europeans once used against their Ottoman
invaders into a defiant symbol of self-affirmation.

Kerim Sarc, 42, owner of Ottoman Empire T-Shirts, noted that the
nostalgia for a mighty empire that once reached the gates of Vienna
reflected a backlash by Turks humiliated by Europe’s seeming
unwillingness to accept them. ”We Turks are tired,” he said, ”of
being treated in Europe like poor, backward peasants.”

The Ottoman renaissance is equally prevalent in the nation’s highest
political circles, where the Muslim-inspired ruling Justice and
Development government has been aggressively courting former Ottoman
colonies, including Iraq and Syria, in a reorientation of foreign
policy toward the east that some Turkish analysts have labeled as
”Neo-Ottoman.”

That shift has alarmed some in Europe and Washington, where Prime
Minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan will meet with President Barack Obama at
the White House on Monday, seeking to reassure him that Turkey has not
abandoned its Western course.

It is a sign of the Ottoman Empire’s continuing hold on the popular
imagination that when Mr. Erdogan publicly rebuked the Israeli
president, Shimon Peres, over the war in Gaza, at a debate at Davos,
Switzerland, last January, he was greeted enthusiastically by his
supporters back in Turkey with the chant, ”Our Fatih is back!” The
allusion was to Fatih Sultan Mehmet II, the towering and heroic sultan
who at age 21 conquered Constantinople, now Istanbul, in 1453.

Pelin Batu, co-host of a popular television history program, argued
that the glorification of the Ottoman era by a government with roots
in political Islam reflected a revolt against the secular cultural
revolution undertaken by Ataturk, who outlawed the wearing of Islamic
head scarves in state institutions and abolished the Ottoman-era
Caliphate, the spiritual head of Sunni Islam.

”Ottomania is a form of Islamic empowerment for a new Muslim
religious bourgeoisie,” she said, ”who are reacting against
Ataturk’s attempt to relegate religion and Islam to the sidelines.”

While Ottomania has paradoxically united secular nationalists and
religious Muslims alike, not everyone welcomes the phenomenon. Some
critics accuse its proponents of glossing over the empire’s decline
and of glorifying an anachronistic system that, at the very least, in
its later years, had been mired by financial ruin, corruption and
infighting. The massacre of Ottoman Armenians in 1915 stands as a
particular dark spot in the history of the empire.

”The religious Muslims now in power are trying to feed the Turkish
people an Ottoman poison,” said Sada Kural, 45, a housewife and
staunch supporter of Ataturk. ”The Ottoman era wasn’t a good period –
we were the Sick Man of Europe, rights were suppressed and women only
got the vote after Ataturk came to power.”

Mr. Ortayli, the director of Topkapi Palace, argued that the attempt
by some religious Muslims to appropriate the Ottoman period for
political ends smacked of revisionism. The empire, he said, had
combined both Islamic law and a civil code, had granted autonomy to
religious minorities and had looked West as well as East. ”Those who
are trying to misuse the Ottoman period are little more than parvenus
and poseurs,” he said.

Murat Ergin, a sociologist at Koc University in Istanbul, noted that
those buying Ottoman history books or hanging $5 fake Ottoman
miniatures in their homes were not actually reading the books.
”Ottomania,” he said, ”is turning the Ottoman era into a theme
park.”

While some bemoan what they consider the crude commercialization of a
nation’s history, others like Cenan Sarc, 97, who was 10 years old at
the time of the empire’s collapse in 1922 and is the descendant of an
Ottoman pasha, cautioned against idealizing an era of dictatorship.

Mrs. Sarc recalled her idyllic childhood in an old Ottoman mansion on
the Bosphorus, a poetic time, she said, when fathers ruled, mothers
stayed at home and Islam held sway. But, she insisted, ”we can never
go back to that time.”

Ertugrul Osman, the Ottoman heir, himself had accepted obscurity. When
he visited Turkey in 1992, for the first time in 53 years, and went to
see the 285-room Dolmabahce Palace, which had been his grandfather’s
home, he insisted on joining a public tour group.

Asked if he dreamed about restoring the empire, he emphatically
answered no. ”Democracy,” he once said, ”works well in Turkey.”

Border Protection Essential Factor In Armenia-Russia Relations: RA P

BORDER PROTECTION ESSENTIAL FACTOR IN ARMENIA-RUSSIA RELATIONS: RA PRESIDENT

news.am
Dec 4 2009
Armenia

Dec. 4, RA President Serzh Sargsyan received the Deputy Head of
Frontier Service of RF general-lieutenant Vladimir Streltsov. The
latter introduced Sargsyan the new chief of RF Border Guard directorate
of the Federal Security Service (FSB) in Armenia, general-lieutenant
Viktor Vlasov.

RA President highly appreciated the expansion of Armenia-Russia
military cooperation and outlined the progress in this field, RA
Presidential press service informed NEWS.am. Sargsyan considers
frontier service and protection of Armenian border one of the major
constituents of national security and one of essential factors in
Armenian-Russian allied relations.

"We are content with border guards’ service, our joint cooperation
and their professionalism," underlined Sargsyan.