Ombudsman: Refugee problem must remain focus of Government attention

news.am, Armenia
Jan 15 2010

RA Ombudsman: Refugees’ problem must remain focus of Government’s attention

14:43 / 01/15/2010The Armenian refugees’ problem must remain the focus
of the Armenian Government’s attention. On the hand, `it must not be
made a fetish of,’ which is the case in Azerbaijan, RA Ombudsman Armen
Harutyunyan stated at a function on the occasion of the 20th
anniversary of Armenian pogroms in Baku, Azerbaijan.

`We must focus our attention on the refugee problem, but we must not
lose adequate thinking ability, which taking place in Azerbaijan,’
Harutyunyan said.

He pointed out that the pogroms put an end to the 250,000-string
Armenian community in Baku, and hundreds of thousands of Armenians
were forcibly displaced from Azerbaijan. The Armenian Ombudsman
stressed that `adequate thinking’ served as a basis for the incumbent
Armenian authorities initiating the Armenia-Turkey normalization
process.

T.P.

Common Crane Recognized As Bird Of 2010

COMMON CRANE RECOGNIZED AS BIRD OF 2010

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.01.2010 19:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ As a result of a recent public opinion poll conducted
by the Armenian Society for the Protection of Birds (ASPB) and LOLO
children’s journal, the Common Crane was recognized as `Bird of 2010
` in Armenia.

The poll was conducted in Yerevan, as well as in settlements situated
within the Important Bird Areas (IBAs).

Of the total number of 1025 respondents, 481 (47%) voted for the
Crane. The second popular bird was Golden Eagle (297 votes, 29%);
Kestrel (184 votes, 18%) came next.

Crane is a very rare bird in Armenia, breeding only in the southern
and south-western provinces. The population of this species is in
critical condition; according to the current data, there are only 2
to 6 pairs within the surroundings of Arpi Lake.

"There is no doubt", says Luba Balyan, ASPB National IBA Coordinator,
"that cranes merit serious attention and care If proper measures are
not taken, they will be at risk of becoming vanishing species the
nearest future."

The common crane is a large, stately bird at 110-120, with a wingspan
of 220-245 cm. It breeds in wetlands in northern parts of Europe
and Asia. The global population is in the region of 210,000-250,000,
with the vast majority nesting in Russia and Scandinavia. It breeds
in wetlands in northern parts of Europe and Asia.

The Common Crane is one of the species to which the Agreement on the
Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies.

ASPB is the representative of BirdLife International in Armenia.

LOLO is a children’s intellectual journal intended for children. as
well as their parents. Adhering to the motto "Gay, Smart and Bold", the
magazine is aimed at broadening children’s scope of mind, developing
their taste and boundaries of cognition. It covers various themes
including sports, music, painting, literature, zoology, science,
history and intellectual games.

S. Safaryan: The Processes Move Parallel

S. SAFARYAN: THE PROCESSES MOVE PARALLEL

Aysor, Armenia
Jan 15 2010

The regulation process of the Armenian – Turkish processes and
the Karabakh issue can be independent from one another, said Stepan
Safaryan today commenting on the statement of Russian foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov in Yerevan yesterday saying that the tow processes are
separate from one another.

According to the deputy the position of Russia was clearly expressed
by the Russian PM Vladimir Putin.

The head of the Russian government announced that the processes of
regulation of the Armenian – Turkish relations shouldn’t be tied to
the Karabakh issue.

S. Safaryan thinks that there is no sensation in the statement of V.

Putin. "It is a statement which is not different from any other
statement done by him",- the deputy said and added: "The processes
move parallel and can be accelerated."

S. Safaryan thinks that in the atmosphere of the Russian – Azerbaijani
cooperation Moscow can speed up the processes.

ANKARA: Solution Of Dink Murder Still In The Dark After Three Years

SOLUTION OF DINK MURDER STILL IN THE DARK AFTER THREE YEARS

BIAnet
Jan 14 2010
Turkey

The murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink can only be solved by
merging cases and pooling all facts from before and after the murder,
joint attorneys Cetin and Tuna declared. "This murder cannot be solved
by the measures taken until the present", the lawyers said.

Joint attorneys of the Hrant Dink murder case Fethiye Cetin and
Deniz Tuna highlighted the fact that three years have already
passed since the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
then editor-in-chief of the weekly Armenian Agos newspaper. The
assassination will not be solved by the investigations and inquiries
carried out till the present, lawyers Cetin and Tuna pointed out.

The lawyers repeated that the time before and after the murder on 19
January 2007 should be approached as an entity in order to merge all
side tracks with the main lawsuit tried before the Istanbul 14th High
Criminal Court.

The joint attorneys mentioned that vital information was conveyed by
the "determination" not to protect Hrant Dink although it was known
that he was going to be killed and by treating the murder suspect
like a hero.

All pieces of evidence should be assessed, parts must be put into
place * We have come to a point where the mistakes in cooperation and
coordination of the responsible people of the National Intelligence
Agency (MIT), the Gendarmerie and the police became crystal clear. The
organizations have obviously hidden information from each other and in
order to save themselves they blamed each other. It is remarkable that
despite the clashes between the three institutions being at loggerheads
with each other they do harmonize on two topics and act united.

* For revealing this extremely professional organized structure all
embodied pieces of evidence must be gathered, every single part that
might potentially be embodied must be put together, all hints which
could decipher the organization should be assessed. This is also
crucial for an efficient and effective investigation.

Where are the ones who facilitated the murder?

* There are several issues that should be evaluated altogether and:
the people who, together with the triggerman, made Dink an open
target during the preparation period of the murder; the people who
isolated him from society; the elements of the plan in the media,
the positions of the members of the judiciary in this campaign; the
people who facilitated the murder by not fulfilling their duty. Their
roles in this criminal action and the relation to the organization
should be investigated

* The organization moved according to a certain plan and realized the
murder step by step by actions stretched over a period of time. The
entire actions of this organization could be determined by analysing
them under the microscope.

* In the light of the revealed evidence it shows that the stones that
paved the way to the murder of Hrant Dink were laid by the people
who put Dink into the position of the target and by the security
forces whose duty it was to prevent the murder. It is neither wrong
nor exaggerated to say that the triggermen suspects proceeded in the
same way with the murder of Dink.

General Staff, government, media, politicians…

* Judicial authorities of the General Staff Presidency, security
units of the government spokespeople and paramilitary forces from
the media and all official and political people involved each bear
responsibility for Dink’s murder since they were not able to prevent
the murder and to find the real perpetrators.

* We indicated that starting from the phase of investigation all
cases and investigations related to the murder should be handled by
one single lead at all stages of the litigation. We said that it is
impossible to reveal concrete facts in a case and in investigations
that merely deal with fractions of the whole picture. Unfortunately,
all our requests to merge the relevant cases were rejected by the
courts.

* We filed criminal complaints about officials of the Trabzon Police,
the Trabzon Gendarmerie and the Istanbul Police at the Istanbul
Chief Prosecution. All the complaints were dropped because of lack of
jurisdiction. We sent the complaints to places said to be in charge and
they were dropped once more due to lack of grounds for legal action.

* Considering all developments one clear and precise conclusion can
be drawn: This murder will not be solved by the means that could be
observed until the present.

Armenian Government Approves Industrial Development Concept

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CONCEPT

ARKA
Jan 14, 2010

YEREVAN, January 14, /ARKA/. The government of Armenia has approved
today the industrial development concept.

‘The goal of this concept is to create an appropriate environment
that will allow to transform Armenia into an industrially developed
country through annual increase of industrial share in GDP,’ economy
minister Nerses Yeristian told the government session. He also singled
out formation of a developed export-oriented industrial system.

U.S. Watchdog Sees No Change In Armenia’s Rights Record

U.S. WATCHDOG SEES NO CHANGE IN ARMENIA’S RIGHTS RECORD
By Alex DerAlexanian

Asbarez
Jan 13th, 2010

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Armenia remains a "partly free" country with scant
government respect for political and civil rights, a U.S. human rights
watchdog said in its latest survey of freedom around the world.

As always, the Washington-based Freedom House rated countries on a
seven-point scale for political rights and civil liberties, with 1
representing the most free and 7 the least free. As was the case in the
previous survey released a year ago, Armenia received 6 and 4 points in
the "political rights" and "civil liberties" categories respectively.

According to Christopher Walker, director of studies at Freedom House,
the ratings based on the events the past year keep it dangerously close
to being judged "not free." "It’s actually right on the border between
‘partly free’ and ‘not free,’" he told RFE/RL by phone on Tuesday.

"On the sorts of things that are fundamental for democratic
accountability, we really haven’t seen any meaningful steps forward,"
Walker said. One of the key reasons for that is a continuing "very deep
relationship between politics and economics" in the country, he said.

Walker also pointed to the lingering fallout from the February 2008
presidential election and the deadly unrest in Yerevan that followed
it. "I think all of these things have contributed to a bigger picture
in Armenia that really is one of great concern for political rights
and civil liberties," he said.

Walker welcomed in that regard a general amnesty which was declared by
the Armenian authorities in June and led to the release of dozens of
opposition members arrested in the wake of the disputed 2008 election.

"But I think if you look at some of the other issues connected to
the events of 2008 … there are some real concerns about how the
Armenian authorities pursued this," he cautioned.

"And this included the dissolution of the independent expert group that
was looking into the events of that year and other issues connected to
how the aftermath of the events was handled, which I think continues to
raise some serious concerns about the degree to which the judiciary and
other rules-based bodies in Armenia can function outside of executive
control and with transparency and accountability," he said.

The Armenian government will hardly agree with this evaluation.

"Freedom House is taking a bit extreme approach to us," Razmik
Zohrabian, a deputy chairman of the ruling Republican Party, told
RFE/RL on Wednesday. "It is putting psychological pressure."

But Aram Manukian, a senior member of the opposition Armenian National
Congress, said the watchdog should have been even more critical of
Armenia’s rights record in its annual report. "The reality in which
we live is much harsher and telling," he said.

"They just want to treat [the Armenian government] a little leniently
in the hope that things could change," Manukian told RFE/RL. "But
dictatorial manifestations in Armenia are only becoming more evident."

ARF Dashnaktsutyun Contented: CC To Take Their Remarks Into Notice

ARF DASHNAKTSUTYUN CONTENTED: CC TO TAKE THEIR REMARKS INTO NOTICE

Panorama.am
13:46 12/01/2010

ARF Dashnaktsutyun is contented with the Constitutional Court
(CC) having taken into notice their remarks and documents over the
Armenian-Turkish protocols and having attached them to the materials
under discussion, ARF Supreme Body representative Armen Rustamyan
told reporters after the Counstitutional Court sitting.

He said he is particularly pleased and voiced hope that that their
remarks would be taken into consideration by the CC.

As far as the closed-door discussion is concerned, A. Rustamyan said
he saw nothing odd over it since it is CC’s right to hold either an
open- or a close-door discussion.

Rustamyan highlighted that the issue is very complicated and
significant; hence, it will take time.

Armavia Reduces Yerevan-Moscow Two-Way Ticket Price

ARMAVIA REDUCES YEREVAN-MOSCOW TWO-WAY TICKET PRICE

ArmInfo
2010-01-11 18:42:00

ArmInfo. Armavia national air carrier has announced reduction of the
Yerevan-Moscow two-way ticket price starting January 1 2010.

"In addition, on occasion of the upcoming holidays, Armavia by
tradition offers a 15% discount to men (January 28 – February 23 – army
days) and women (March 8 – April 7 – women’s day) for all the direct
flights. This makes Armavia flights the best reasonable choice," says
the company’s press release. For more details visit Armavia website:

http://www.armavia.aero.

The New York Times publishes article about Fethiye Cetin

The New York Times publishes article about Fethiye Cetin
07.01.2010 17:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The New York Times published an article about
Fethiye Cetin, Turkish layer of Armenian heritage, who was a young law
student when her grandmother Seher took her aside and told her a
secret she had hidden for 60 years.
She, the grandmother, was born a Christian Armenian and had been saved
from a death march by a Turkish officer, who snatched her from her
mother’s arms in 1915 and raised her as Turkish and Muslim.

Her grandmother revealed to her that her real name was Heranus and
that her biological parents had escaped to New York. Heranus, Ms.
Cetin learned, was just one of thousands of Armenian children who were
kidnapped and adopted by Turkish families during the genocide of up to
1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1918. These
survivors were sometimes called `the leftovers of the sword.’

`I was in a state of shock for a long time – I suddenly saw the world
through different eyes,’ said Ms. Cetin, now 60. `I had grown up
thinking of myself as a Turkish Muslim, not an Armenian. There had
been nothing in the history books about the massacre of a people which
had been erased from Turkey’s collective memory. Like my grandmother,
many had buried their identity – and the horrors they had seen – deep
inside of them.’

Now, however, Ms. Cetin, a prominent member of the estimated
50,000-strong Armenian-Turkish community here and one of the country’s
leading human rights lawyers, believes a seminal moment has arrived in
which Turkey and Armenia can finally confront the ghosts of history
and possibly even overcome one of the world’s most enduring and bitter
rivalries.
`Most people in Turkish society have no idea what happened in 1915 and
the Armenians they meet are introduced as monsters or villains or
enemies in their history books,’ she said. `Turkey has to confront the
past but before this confrontation can happen, people must know who
they are confronting. So we need the borders to come down in order to
have dialogue.’

Ms. Cetin, who was raised by her maternal grandmother, said the
borders in her own Muslim Turkish heart came down irrevocably when
that grandmother revealed her Armenian past.

`My grandmother was trembling as she told me her story,’ Ms. Cetin
said. `She would always say, `May those days vanish never to return.”

Ms. Cetin, a rebellious left-wing student activist at the time of her
grandmother’s revelation, recalled how confronting Armenian identity,
then as now, had been taboo. `The same people who spoke the loudest
about injustices and screamed that the world could be a better place
would only whisper when it came to the Armenian issue,’ she said. `It
really hurt me.’

Ms. Cetin, who was imprisoned for three years in the 1980s for
opposing the military regime in Turkey at the time, said her newfound
Armenian identity inspired her to become a human rights lawyer. When
Hrant Dink, editor of the Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, was
prosecuted in 2006 for insulting Turkishness by referring to the
genocide, she became his lawyer. On January 19, 2007, Mr. Dink was
assassinated outside his office by a young ultranationalist.
Ms. Cetin published a memoir about her grandmother in 2004. She says
she purposely omitted the word `genocide’ from her book because using
the word erected a roadblock to reconciliation. `I wanted to
concentrate on the human dimension. I wanted to question the silence
of people like my grandmother who kept their stories hidden for years,
while going through the pain.’

When Heranus died in 2000 at age 95, Ms. Cetin honored her last wish,
publishing a death notice in Agos, in the hope of tracking down her
long-lost Armenian family, including her grandmother’s sister
Margaret, whom she had never seen.
At her emotional reunion with her Armenian family in New York, several
months later, `Auntie Marge’ told Ms. Cetin that when her father had
died in 1965, she had found a piece of paper carefully folded in his
wallet that he had been keeping for years. It was a letter Heranus had
written to him shortly after he had left for America.
`We all keep hoping and praying that you are well,’ it said.

BAKU: Armenia under time pressure on diplomatic front

news.az, Azerbaijan
Jan 6 2010

Armenia under time pressure on diplomatic front
Wed 06 January 2010 | 08:26 GMT Text size:

Ziyafet Askerov Intensive negotiations on the resolution of Karabakh
conflict in 2010 must continue, said vice speaker of the Azerbaijani
parliament Ziyafet Askerov.

If the intensive negotiation process on the resolution of the Karabakh
conflict continues and Armenia disavows its unjust position in 2010,
the final solution of peace talks can be expected.

"Intensive negotiation processes must continue in 2010. The presidents
of Azerbaijan and Armenia had six meetings in 2009 and there is a need
to continue this intensiveness", first vice speaker of the Azerbaijani
parliament Ziyafet Askerov has said.

"In the result of President Ilham Aliyev’s farsighted policy based on
science, Armenia is under time pressure on the diplomatic front",
Askerov noted adding that the Azerbaijani parliament is working in
this direction.

Novosti-Azerbaijan