Nato Secretary General Says Alliance Cooperates With South Caucasus

NATO SECRETARY GENERAL SAYS ALLIANCE COOPERATES WITH SOUTH CAUCASUS STATES

Panorama.am
17:00 24/08/2009

Samvel Lazarian, the chairman of Armenian Mission to NATO had a
meeting recently with the new appointed NATO Secretary General Anders
Fogh Rasmussen, Armenian MFA PR department reports.

Mr. Lazarian congratulated the Secretary General on behalf of the
Armenian President, Foreign Minister and Defense Minister.

It has been stated that Armenia is ready to reinforce relations with
the Alliance, and that the Individual Partnership Action Plan will be
chaired to serve that mission. The Ambassador emphasized that Armenian
side signifies participation in the NATO peacekeeping activities and
that Armenian servicemen would be engaged in support to Afghanistan’
Security Program.

The Secretary General has positively assessed NATO cooperation with
Armenia in the frames of acting formats. Mr. Rasmussen signified
Armenia’s participation in the activities chaired by the Alliance.

Head Of Armenia’s Mission In NATO Meets With Newly Appointed NATO Se

HEAD OF ARMENIA’S MISSION IN NATO MEETS WITH NEWLY APPOINTED NATO SECRETARY GENERAL

Noyan Tapan
Aug 24, 2009

BRUSSELS, AUGUST 24, NOYAN TAPAN. Head of Armenia’s mission in NATO
Samvel Mkrtchian met with newly appointed NATO Secretary General
Anders Fog Rasmussen on August 21.

According to the RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information Department,
Samvel Mkrtchian conveyed RA President’s, Foreign Minister’s, and
Defence Minister’s congratulations to NATO Secretary General on the
occasion of assuming his post.

Ambassador Mkrtchian mentioned that Armenia is ready to develop
partner relations with NATO, and the Individual Partnership Actions
Plan will be served for that purpose. The Ambassador emphasized that
the Armenian side attaches importance to participation in NATO’s
peacekeeping actions: soon Armenian servicemen will be also involved
in the international forces of the Security Assistance for Afghanistan.

NATO Secretary General positively assessed cooperation with Armenia
within the framework of the acting formats. Anders Fog Rasmussen
attached importance to Armenia’s participation in the actions
controlled by NATO and emphasized that cooperation with the South
Caucasian countries will be continued.

Azerbaijanis Accused Of Being Unpatriotic For Voting For Armenia In

AZERBAIJANIS ACCUSED OF BEING UNPATRIOTIC FOR VOTING FOR ARMENIA IN EUROVISION
Anne Lu – Celebrity News Service News Writer

AHN
allheadlinenews.com
August 19, 2009 9:59 a.m. EST

Baku, Azerbaijan (CNS) – Some Azerbaijanis have been accused of being
unpatriotic for voting for neighboring country Armenia’s entry in
the recently held Eurovision Song Contest.

According to the BBC, one man was accused of being a "potential
security threat" for sending a text message to vote for Armenia’s song
"Jan Jan."

Forty-three people in the nation reportedly voted for Armenia in the
continent-wide contest, although it is still unclear how many of them
were questioned by the authorities, who said they merely invited some
people to explain why they voted for the other country.

The two warring nations are clashing over the Nagorno-Karabakh region
since the 1990s.

During the contest’s semi-finals, the introductory "postcard" leading
into Armenia’s performance showed the We Are Our Mountains monument,
a statue located in the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. The
video clip was edited out after an official complaint by Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan’s entry, "Always," was performed by AySel and Arash. They
finished third place. For the tenth placer Armenia, Inga and Anush
performed "Jan Jan."

COAF NextGen To Host ‘Gatsby At The Bowery’

COAF NEXTGEN TO HOST ‘GATSBY AT THE BOWERY’

/coaf-nextgen-to-host-gatsby-at-the-bowery/
August 18, 2009

NEW YORK-The Children of Armenia Fund (COAF) NextGen, a new group
formed to educate and involve the next generation of philanthropists
in COAF’s work in rural Armenia, recently announced its premier
fundraising event, "Gatsby at the Bowery."

The Bowery Hotel Terrace will be host to the event on Sept. 10
from 8-11 p.m. and will benefit the children of COAF’s cluster of
villages. There will be an open bar, passed hors d’oeuvres, a raffle,
1920’s themed entertainment, and more. Tickets are $75 each or $100
with a signed limited edition photograph taken in one of COAF’s
villages by acclaimed photographer Hrair Hawk Khatcherian. Ticket
prices will increase after Aug. 28.

To purchase tickets for the event, visit , call (212)
994-8234, or mail a check to COAF at 162 Fifth Avenue, Suite 900,
New York, NY 10010.

One-hundred percent of the net proceeds from the event will benefit
the children and youth in rural Armenia.

Founded in 2000, the COAF is an independent, nonprofit, nongovernmental
(501)(c)(3) organization. COAF seeks to reverse the impoverished
conditions affecting significant numbers of Armenia’s children by
revitalizing Armenia’s villages and implementing projects that provide
immediate and sustainable benefits to children and youth. Since its
founding, the COAF’s activities have focused on revitalizing rural
Armenia, with a comprehensive approach to addressing the critical
needs of children together with economic development activities,
which enable people to acquire the necessary tools to help themselves.

http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/08/18
www.coafkids.org

Armenian Government Seriously Approach Sausage Matter

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT SERIOUSLY APPROACH SAUSAGE MATTER

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.08.2009 21:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan held a meeting
to summarize the outcomes of the recent visit of Armenian delegation
to Indian meat processing plants.

Head of the State and Legal Department of the RA Government’s Ashot
Vahanyan informed, that the Armenian delegation visited India between
August 2 and 9, and particularly familiarized with the work of local
enterprises processing meat products. The delegation observed, that
most of the visited enterprises lack basic hygienic conditions, meat
is usually purchased from the uncontrolled territories, meat products
are transported in vehicles do not corresponding to sanitary-hygienic
norms.

Mainly buffalo meat is imported from India which is used in production
of sausages. He said, that there are a number of enterprises which
have all necessary conditions.

According to Tigran Sargsyan, these enterprises should have at least
5-year-experience and work in line with international standards, have
own slaughterhouses, as well as quality certificates. 17 companies,
covering 85 per cent of India’s meat market correspond to these
criteria. Meanwhile, only 21 per cent of meat delivered from India
to Armenia meet the above-mentioned criteria.

RA Ministry of agriculture is mandated to strengthen the control
over the imported meat products and jointly with the Revenue
committee to carry out work to identify and reveal violations by the
importer-companies, press service of the RA Government reports

Walter Shwimer: NKR Conflict Can Only Be Resolved On Basis Of Compro

WALTER SHWIMER: NKR CONFLICT CAN ONLY BE RESOLVED ON BASIS OF COMPROMISE

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.08.2009 12:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ NKR conflict resolution can be achieved only on
basis of compromise as the more the parties will seek to fully ensure
their interests, the more will dangerous neglect last," former CoE
Secretary General Walter Shwimer said.

Schwimmer recalled that the very fact that Azerbaijan and Armenia were
admitted to the Council of Europe at the same time in January 2000,
and that "was linked with the hope that both countries as members
of the family of European democratic states will be able to reach a
settlement suitable for both parties."

"The solution to this conflict will be in the interests of both
countries which, no doubt, instead of confrontation, deserve regional
cooperation. People expelled from their homes deserve a safe return,"
Interfax quotes Shwimer as saying.

PM Tigran Sargsyan met with editors of regional newspapers.

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan met with editors of regional
newspapers.

Wednesday, 12 August 2009

The Prime Minister welcomed this initiative of the Armenian Union of
Journalists. Chairwoman of the Union Asthik Gevorgyan thanked the Prime
Minister for his openness to dialog with local media representatives.
She stressed the need for activating mass media at the local level.

Media representatives briefed the Prime Minister on their concerns
concerning the efficiency in the use of yearly subsidies, the
establishment of a printing base, organized newspaper subscription,
assistance from local self-government authorities. Tigran Sargsyan was
asked about his government’s regional welfare programs. He was also
suggested to call the attention of Armenia’s public television and
central media on regional issues.

The head of the RA government pointed out that special emphasis should
be given to regional media with a view to providing prompt response to
local concerns. Enhanced local media efficiency was said to have been
stipulated in the government’s program of balanced territorial
development.

http://www.gov.am/en/news/item/4841/

Has Matthew Bryza Sorted Out The U.S. Policy?

HAS MATTHEW BRYZA SORTED OUT THE U.S. POLICY?

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
15.08.2009 12:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Completing his work as the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair
the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian
Affairs Matthew Bryza commented on the rumors that the Co-Chairs
conduct in Azerbaijan and Armenia their state policies, and therefore
they are not allowed to go beyond these limits, and maneuver. Bryza
said no mechanism dictated him from afar, what to do.

"diplomat from the United States has enough room to maneuver. It was
very important for the post, I served, because I am responsible not
only for our efforts in the Minsk Group, but also for our policy in
relation to the South Caucasus, as well as Turkey, Greece, Cyprus,
energy issues in Europe," he told an APA reporter.

Mr. Bryza also said, that he has not felt that some mechanism gave
him understand what is the U.S. policy, and he has not worked through
a limited channel for implementing this policy, because he has been
in the midst of the policy. Though partially, he was responsible for
that policy.

According to him, the Minsk Group helped both presidents having large
advances to complete the structure agreement with a view to attain
a lasting peace.

New Rules For Rough Play

NEW RULES FOR ROUGH PLAY
By Albina Kovalyova

Russia Profile.org
August 12, 2009

A New Law Has Russia’s Neighbors Worried about War, and
Parliamentarians Concerned about Further Consolidation of the
President’s Power

The President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Medvedev has introduced
a new bill to the Russian Parliament that would revise the current Law
on Defense, and would broaden the conditions for Russia’s military
action abroad. The introduction comes as a consequence of last
year’s August war with Georgia, and sends a worrying message to the
CIS countries, some of which already have a strained relationship
with Russia.

The current Law on Defense allows Russia’s armed forces to take
military action outside Russian territory only in response to
aggression that is directed toward the country and poses a threat to
Russia’s territorial integrity. The revised law will allow Russia to
use military force "to return or prevent aggression against another
state, to protect citizens of the Russian Federation abroad, to
fight piracy and to ensure the safety of the shipping industry,"
the outline of the bill on the Kremlin Web site states.

The president made it clear that the reform to this law has to
do with the military conflict with Georgia. "It is tied to the
well-known events of last year," Medvedev told the Interfax news
agency. The announcement has been timed to coincide with the one year
anniversary of the war, along with the appointment of the new Head
of Military Training of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
Valery Yevnevich.

Some may be forgiven for thinking that these moves are meant as a
warning to Russia’s neighbors. Anatoly Tsiganok, the head of the Center
for Military Prognosis of the Institute of Political and Military
Analysis, believes that the new revision to the Law on Defense is a
demonstration of Russia’s power to the Caucasus and to Ukraine. "This
law is only being introduced in order to be able to bring the military
to fighting mode if any of the Russian peacekeepers are attacked by
Georgia in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, without the say of Parliament,"
he said.

As a result the revision is likely to upset the international
community, which is already starting to worry about what these
revisions could imply. "When the bill was first introduced by Dmitry
Medvedev, I immediately got worried telephone calls from colleagues
in Armenia, Moldova and Ukraine," Tsiganok said. Russia used the
precedent of protecting its own citizens to justify the fighting in
August of last year, and the issue of citizen protection now raises
the question of what will constitute such protection. Will it be used
as an excuse to attack other countries if some misfortune befalls a
Russian national there?

Opinion is generally divided between those who, like Tsiganok,
believe that there should be no law giving the president the right
to use military action abroad, and those who think that such powers
may be justified in certain circumstances. The State Duma Deputy and
Deputy Chairman of the Security Committee Gennady Gudkov believes
that such a law may be necessarily to give the president a certain
power of protection against the threats of foreign military attacks
and terrorism. However, the existence of the law does not necessarily
imply that it must be put into action. "The question of how we will
act on the law is a question of future political situations and the
relationship that we have with our neighbors and other countries,"
he said.

Another debate surrounding the Law on Defense is that of the
president’s role. Many are concerned about the increasing power that
the president will have to make such serious military decisions without
consulting the Parliament. "We are constantly rolling toward total
monarchy as the constitution and the law get replaced by the will
of the monarch. This has led to various catastrophes and cataclysms
several times now, and I am absolutely against this kind of model of
government," Gudkov said.

Tsiganok agreed. "When you talk about a law that would allow Russians
to fight abroad, I do not think it acceptable that this right is
given solely to the president. I believe that the decision to use
force abroad should be made only by the Parliament," he said.

There are also problems with the Russian constitution, which is vague
on the procedures for responding to acts of aggression against the
country. It does not seem to be clear who would be authorized to
make decisions – the Parliament or the president, who would only
inform the Parliament of what he had already decided and possibly
even acted upon. This absence of a coherent code of conduct needs to
be rectified. "The constitution must be developed thoroughly to take
into account the various cases that may arise," Tsiganok said.

Although it is not yet clear how the law will influence Russia’s
future actions, the decision to amend the existing law in this way
may lead to discontent among other CIS countries. Georgia and Ukraine
are particularly worried about Russia’s intentions, and this news
will certainly increase their apprehension.

The mounting tension in the Caucasus was further intensified on
Wednesday, when the Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, while on
a trip to Abkhazia, announced plans to spend around $500 million on
military bases and the building of a protective border guard system
in the region.

Meanwhile, Russia’s problematic relationship with Ukraine this week
was further jeopardized by Medvedev in an address to the Ukrainian
President Victor Yushchenko. In his video blog, Medvedev criticized
the Ukrainian authorities for hindering the development of cultural and
economic relationships between the two countries and taking "an openly
anti-Russian position in relation to the military attack on South
Ossetia by Saakashvili’s regime." Medvedev repeated the accusation
that weapons used to kill innocent civilians and Russian peacekeepers
were Ukrainian, and said that there would not be a Russian ambassador
in Kiev until the relationship between the two countries improved.

Mikhail Alexandrov: Replacement Of Matthew Bryza, Is A Signal To Aze

MIKHAIL ALEXANDROV: REPLACEMENT OF MATTHEW BRYZA, IS A SIGNAL TO AZERBAIJAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
12.08.2009 17:41 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Replacement of Matthew Bryza, Deputy Assistant to
the Secretary of State by the former U.S. Ambassador to Kosovo Tina
S. Kaidanow is a quite interesting signal for Azerbaijan", Mikhail
Alexandrov , head of Caucasus Department of the CIS Institute told
a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

According to him, the fact of Tina Kaidanow’s appointment, who authored
Kosovo’s plan of independence, testifies to the decision of the United
States to finally assign an experienced professional familiar with
a problem, similar to Karabakh issue.

"Matthew Bryza hasn’t acquired a good reputation," the Russian expert
said, noting that Mr. Bryza often created nervous atmosphere during
talks.

According to Mr. Alexandrov, if Tina S. Kaidanow would be appointed as
co-chair of OSCE Minsk Group, it would not affect the settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict much. "The resolution of the Karabakh
conflict depends on the people of Nagorno Karabakh first of all and
on the support of Armenia and Russia", Mikhail Alexandrov said.

OSCE Minsk Group co-chair Matthew Bryza declared on August 10 in
Tbilisi, that U.S. diplomat Tina Kaidanow, will assume the office of
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs,
replacing him.

Successor of Mattew Bryza, Tina Kaidanow has worked for
U.S. diplomatic mission in Kosovo for two years, then she assumed
the office of the US ambassador in Kosovo. Earlier she worked
as Deputy Chief of U.S. mission in Sarajevo for three years.