Ankara’s Public Prosecutor To Forgo Pressing Charges Against Armenia

ANKARA’S PUBLIC PROSECUTOR TO FORGO PRESSING CHARGES AGAINST ARMENIAN APOLOGY CAMPAIGN INITIATORS

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.01.2009 15:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Ankara’s Public Prosecutor is reported to forgo
pressing charges against a group of Turkish intellectuals who, late
last year, asked the public in Turkey to sign a petition, which read,
"My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the
denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were
subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my share,
I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers and
sisters. I apologize to them."

When the petition first appeared, the Assembly welcomed the
development, noting that an "irreversible trend" had commenced
in Turkey. "This is another step in the right direction," stated
Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) Executive Director Bryan
Ardouny. "The Assembly continues to urge Turkey to come to terms
with its genocidal legacy and to open a new chapter in relations
with Armenia," Ardouny continued. "We continue to be concerned that
there will be a backlash. There is a long way to go yet, but this is
definitely a positive step, especially in light of the well known
abuses of Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code to muzzle citizens
for acknowledging the historical truth."

In a very short period of time, the petition garnered over 28,000
signatures and marked a real breakthrough in the progression of
encouraging developments that builds on the visit of Turkish President
Abdullah Gul to Armenia at the invitation of Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan, and the independent legal report issued by the International
Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) that concluded that the events
of 1915 constituted genocide under the criteria set forth by the
United Nations Genocide Convention.

President Serzh Sargsyan Meets With Prime Minister Of Russia, Turkey

PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN MEETS WITH PRIME MINISTER OF RUSSIA, TURKEY AND PRESIDENT OF SWISS CONFEDERATION

ARMENPRESS
Jan 30, 2009

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS: President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan on
January 29 met in Davos with Prime Minister of the Russian Federation
Vladimir Putin.

Presidential press service told Armenpress that the head of the
country and head of the Russian government registered the high level of
strategic relations and political dialogue between the two countries
and noted that frequent meetings and contacts give opportunity to
highly preserve the dynamics of development of cooperation.

The sides summed up the positive tendencies registered in 2008 in
economic partnership sphere, expressing hope that the annual trade
turnover between the two countries which exceeds 1 billion USD
gives good basis for further success. During the meeting the sides
also referred to a wide range of issues of the agenda of bilateral
relations.

On the same day Armenian president met with the Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The sides underscored the turning point
registered in the process of regulation of relations between the
two countries after the September 6, 2008 meeting of the president
of Armenia and Turkey which had its continuation with the further
meetings of the foreign ministers of the two countries.

President Serzh Sargsyan and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
positively assessed the results of their first meeting and assigned
the foreign ministers of the two counties to exert additional efforts
for the regulation of relations.

On January 29 Serzh Sargsyan also met with the President of Swiss
Confederation Hans Rudolph Merz. The presidents of the two countries
pointed out the high level of bilateral relations between the two
countries as well as cooperation within the frameworks of international
organizations.

Serzh Sargsyan expressed gratitude for the support of the Swiss
government to Armenia and pointed out the balanced position of
Switzerland in different international organizations over the issues
referring to Armenia. During the meeting the two presidents also
referred to the world financial-economic crisis and the regulation
of issues existing in the region.

VivaCell-MTS Mobile Operator Builds Its Own Optic-Fiber Networking I

VIVACELL-MTS MOBILE OPERATOR BUILDS ITS OWN OPTIC-FIBER NETWORKING IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Jan 29, 2009

YEREVAN, January 29. /ARKA/. The Armenian VivaCell-MTS mobile operator
is building its own optic-fiber networking in Armenia, the company’s
General Director Ralph Yirikian told reporters on Thursday.

He said the company built 100km of its own optic-fiber network in
Yerevan in 2008.

"We intend to continue building the network for connecting all base
stations to implement programs on data transfer," said Yirikian.

According to him, connecting the base stations will enable the company
to create a network for fast data transfers and will technically
create its own system for the future, specifically, for providing
broadband Internet services.

"We plan to provide Internet services, but no sooner than in 2010"
said Yirikian, at the same tim excluding the possibility of entering
the market of fixed connection.

VivaCell-MTS (K-Telecom CJSC) is the leading Armenian mobile operator,
providing a wide range of Voice and Data services. Company operates
in all regions of Armenia and has a license of GSM 900/1800 standard
until 2019.

Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) OJSC, the leading mobile operator in Russia
and CIS, holds the 80% of VivaCell-MTS shares with the other 20%
of shares held by a Lebanon investing group Fattouch Group.

The number of customers of VivaCell-MTS in Armenia reached 2.02mln
in 2008.

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan Received KPMG Consulting Company R

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan received KPMG consulting company representatives, led by Russian Federation and CIS Countries Senior Partner Andrew Crenston

Tue sday, 27 January 2009

Mr. Crenston briefed the Prime Minister on the ongoing Armenia
activities and future plans of the Company. He mentioned that KPMG
has a broad network of advisory entities in the auditing and fiscal
consulting areas providing expertise and advice to customers, partners
and emerging markets. Noting that a local office was installed in
our country as early as in 1997, Mr.

Crenston assured that the extended network of its field offices has
all the resources necessary for providing high-quality services. He
appreciated Armenia’s more favorable business environment as compared
to other CIS countries which allows the Company to look at expending
and furthering its involvement in our country. Mr. Crenston further
advised that the Company currently employs over 100 local staff and is
not going to cut them off in spite of the global economic and financial
turmoil (for instance, the number of local staff in Georgia has not
gone beyond 30 over the past two years of overall activities). He said
to be optimistic about developing business in Armenia for the long run.

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan wished KPMG every success in their
future activities and assured of his government’s readiness to back
the C ompany within the scope of the government’s mandate.

http://www.gov.am/en/news/item/4411/

Hovhannes Hovhannisyan: PACE Should Have Applied Sanctions

HOVHANNES HOVHANNISYAN: PACE SHOULD HAVE APPLIED SANCTIONS
Lena Badeyan

"Radiolur"
29.01.2009 15:50

President of the Liberal Party of Armenia Hovhannes Hovhannisyan,
who has been head of the Armenian delegation to PACE before, told a
press conference today that the Parliamentary Assembly should have
suspended Armenia’s voting right. He backs this opinion with several
factors. Why no sanction was applied this time? Hovhannes Hovhannisyan
analyzed and came to the conclusion that the situation at PACE and
the Karabakh negotiations are closely linked.

Won’t any sanctions be applied even if nothing changes in Armenia by
April? Hovhannes Hovhannistyan said "no." "When the co-rapporteurs last
visited the region, it was very clear that Serzh Sargsyan would not
agree to meet Ilham Aliyev if Armenia were deprived of the right to
vote. Therefore, there is breach of parity here. When we were joining
the Council of Europe in 2001, the whole organization was insisting on
one thing: Armenia could not join the Council of Europe alone. Armenia
and Azerbaijan had to join simultaneously. They started maintaining
parity because the two countries had a conflict. Serzh Sargsyan
would not meet Ilham Aliyev in case the parity was breached. Thus,
it was neither the victory of democracy, nor reforms," leader of the
Liberal Party of Armenia said.

Turkish Presidential Symphony Orchestra May Tour Armenia

TURKISH PRESIDENTIAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA MAY TOUR ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.01.2009 15:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ While diplomatic efforts continue for the
normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia, a cultural
rapprochement between the two nations is on the horizon as Turkey’s
Presidential Symphony Orchestra plans a visit to Yerevan, Hurriyet
Daily reports.

Music director of the orchestra, Rengim Gokmen, confirmed
the possibility of a visit. "The orchestra could travel to
Armenia. However, we should assess the process of improving relations
first," Gokmen said, adding that in the event of the normalization
of relations, such a tour could be held with the authorization of
President Abdullah Gul.

The rapprochement in the cultural arena between the two countries
dates back to 2005 when the Armenian State Opera and Ballet traveled in
Istanbul and performed at the Ataturk Cultural Center. However, due to
inadequate advertising, the performance did not attract large audience.

Naghdalyan To Remind Of An Important Lesson

NAGHDALYAN TO REMIND OF AN IMPORTANT LESSON
Karine Asatryan

A1+
[05:53 pm] 28 January, 2009

The member of the Armenian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly,
Hermine Naghdalyan is scheduled to address PACE parliamentarians in
a few minutes.

"We think the Russian-Georgian conflict serves as a good lesson
for others. It suggests that conflicts should be solved through
negotiations and not by force. This must be reminded every time when
Azerbaijan speaks of resolving the Karabakh issue through a military
way," Hermine Naghdalyan said to A1+.

Naghdalyan will remind from the PACE rostrum that every time the
international community urges the conflicting sides to resolve the
conflict through peaceful talks Azerbaijan’s President makes warlike
announcements and propagandises hostility. Azerbaijan’s leadership
continues instilling enmity among Azeris towards Armenia and its
people.

Exclusive: The Gaza Lesson Plan: Our Insane View of the Conflict

Family Security Matters, NJ
Jan 24 2009

Exclusive: The Gaza Lesson Plan: Our Insane View of the Conflict

by Nicholas Guariglia

The Israelis have withdrawn from Gaza seemingly faster than they
entered it. This particular round of violence between Hamas and Israel
is over. Yet judging from what the international press has printed,
and what the academia has published, I fear our present debate over
Israel and the Gaza Strip transcends collegiate-level discourse, and
trespasses on the emotionally irrational and intellectually infantile.

Historical precedent is nonexistent. Palestine, the ancient home of
Jewish peoples, has been conquered and subjugated by Persians,
Macedonians, Romans, Byzantines, Franks, Arabs, Ottomans, and the
British Crown ‘ amongst others ‘ but is now `occupied by the Zionist
entity.’ Israel, it seems, is an unparalleled example of supremacist
colonialism. Lesson No. 1: World history started in 1948.

Relativity is abundant. God, as it were, apparently told the patriarch
Abraham that the Jews could have Palestine. Centuries later, God,
wheelin’ and dealin’ as always, sends the winged-stallion Buraq to
lead his noble warrior-messenger Muhammad on a `night journey’ across
the sky, Aladdin-style. The flying horse takes a rest stop at the
Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Walah! ‘ the Islamic claim to the
neighborhood is born.

These two divinely-guaranteed, irreconcilable real estate deals are,
on their face, equally illogical. But whether in a New York Times
op-ed piece, the BBC green room, or a post-modern Western faculty
lounge, the Judeo-Christian claim brings rolled-eyes; the Islamic, all
the `respect’ and `deference’ mandated by multicultural
etiquette. Where else in the world do we consider granting an
unsubstantiated theological claim territorial dominion and state
sovereignty? Where else is the supernatural considered the
geopolitical? Lesson No. 2: Pat Robertson is, in fact, nuts; Hamas
killer and detonations-expert Ismail Haniyeh, however, is a
theological scholar.

Concerns about `occupation’ are selective. China swallowed up
Tibet. Greek Cyprus was ransacked by the Turkish. Morocco controls the
Western Sahara. Syria occupied Lebanon for three decades, killing its
bravest and brightest. Egypt occupied Gaza, Jordan the West
Bank. Kurdistan is the property of four states. Russia has yet to hand
over the Kurile Islands back to the Japanese from World War II.

The whole history of state relations is littered with examples where a
perpetually defeated adversary acquiesces and concedes because, to the
sane and sober, a settled resolution is preferable to unending
war. Germany reconciled itself to the loss of Prussia. Armenia dealt
with losing Azerbijian; Azerbijain, the loss of
Nagorno-Karabakh. Indonesia gave up East Timor; Tanzania, large swaths
of Uganda; the Serbs, and their beloved Kosovo; Argentina gave up the
Falklands.

The West Bank, Gaza, southern Lebanon, and the Golan were all captured
by Israel ‘ and subsequently withdrawn from ‘ as `buffers,’ after a
defensive war others started. It seems only the Arab world thinks
these rules don’t apply. Everywhere else on the planet, lost territory
is the bastard child of losing a conflict you started ‘ let alone as
an oil-rich subcontinent, humiliated in a half-dozen wars against
tiny, barren Israel.

But no, not here, not in the Middle East. The Madrid Conferences, Oslo
I and II, the Hebron Agreement, the Sharm el-Sheikh Memorandum, the
Camp David summits, the `Road Map,’ the Taba diplomacy, the talks at
Annapolis, etc., are all prerequisites to attacking the Israelis. In
this moral calculus, when a PLO leader is offered 97% of what he
demands, like Arafat was offered in 2000, the natural counteroffer is
an immediate intifada. Lesson No. 3: The only ongoing `occupations’
Americans should care about are the `illegal’ ones in Iraq ‘ legalized
by Res. 1546, 1637, 1723, of course ‘ and in Hamas-controlled,
Israeli-vacant Gaza.

Moans and whines over `atrocities’ expose misplaced moral
outrage. Russia raids Muslim Grozny, massacring everyone. Syria
bulldozes the Muslim city of Hama, flattening more than 10,000. Jordan
green-lights Black September, killing upwards to 25,000 Palestinian
nomads. Angry Kuwaitis ethnically cleanse a third of a million
Palestinians, after their 1990-`91 alliance with Saddam
Hussein. Nothing much is said anywhere, by anyone. One could go on for
hours detailing Arab atrocities committed against the Middle East’s
own unfortunate `untouchables’ ‘ the Palestinian people ‘ whereby the
region’s leaders are their brethren in rhetoric, their overlords and
oppressors in practice.

Yet a few dozen Hamas hoods are mowed down by Israelis in the town
Jenin, and we have `Jeningrad.’ A few hundred Hamas dead? `Palestinian
holocaust.’ Lesson No. 4: We are to reserve our brave criticism of
slaughter only when it is committed by the under-siege democracy which
purposefully attempts to avoid it, which does so the least, most
infrequent, and most reluctantly; only when committed by those who can
legitimately call it self-defense and counterterrorism.

Intentions mean nothing, `proportionality’ everything. Israel’s
precision-guided missiles are targeted at Hamas leaders, like the late
Nizar Rayan (now in paradise). Hamas fires rockets at Israeli civilian
centers indiscriminately with intent on killing as many non-combatants
as possible, and then hides behind the human shields of their own
families and civilian population ‘ both of which are war crimes, in
their own right.

Anyone who has studied the basics of intentionalist and
consequentialist ethics can decipher the moral difference more or less
immediately: one seeks to kill unsuspecting civilians in peace, the
other avoids civilians in war ‘ indeed, going so far as to endanger
the lives of their own to avoid civilian deaths. With Israel and the
international press, however, this distinction has gone the way of the
dinosaur. That standard is so everybody else. (And I mean, what kind
of standard is it, really, if the Jews are not held to another one?)

Rather, for Israel, abstract notions of `proportionality’ are more in
vogue. The logic goes something like this: the Palestinians have
suicide-vests and the occasional rock-thrower, the Israelis have a
deadly Westernized-military (the beneficial fruits of an alliance with
the Great Satan). Therefore, since the Israelis invariably kill more
than their weaker adversaries, they are engaging in `disproportionate’
measures. Of course, according to this mode of thinking, by 1944-`45
it was the surrounded Axis powers who were in the right; the far
deadlier Allies, in the wrong.

The lethality of weaponry cannot be separated from the morality of the
society which devises and fields the arsenal itself: if the Dark Age
theocrats in Hamas were open to secular inquiry, scientific
deliberation, and equal-opportunity egalitarianism, they too would be
able to offer their people weapons of far greater worth. Ironically,
such liberality would defang the Palestinian polity to such an extent
that they would, alas, put down their weapons and begin to conduct
themselves like every other defeated adversary in history Lesson
No. 5: The justification for Israel’s wars rest no longer on issues
such as culpability, or questions as to who struck first, but rather
on a strange tit-for-tat fairness, whereby Israel must not kill a lot
‘ or get killed that much either ‘ lest they exercise the full might
and potential of their arms, and actually go do something crazy like
triumph over their enemies.

Victimization is paramount. In 2005, the international community gave
Gazans everything they requested: an Israeli withdrawal, economic
assistance, and free and fair elections. In return, the Palestinians
democratically elected anti-democratic Jihadists who swore they would
demolish the democratic mechanisms that brought them to power ‘ and in
2007, they did just that. Hamas subsequently declared a temporary
`truce’ (or hunda) with Israel, the country their founding charter
swears to destroy.

Since then, it’s been rocket attacks on the Israelis all day, nearly
every day. Tyrants like Hamas, of course, need external enemies to
maintain internal vulnerability, and to keep a lid on any possible
dissent. Who better than Israel? When confronted with an enraged
populace, it is far easier to publicly blame one’s own self-induced
failures on the Israelis, even as on the sidelines Hamas feebly asks
the evil Jews for their chemotherapy and dialysis machines.

Hamas blows up innocents with impunity, and then boasts to its
domestic audience for doing so. But to the international news cameras,
they give us crocodile-tears as Israeli war planes rein hell over
their safe-houses. Poor babies, huh? To quote Victor Davis Hanson, `At
least the Japanese militarists did not cry out to the League of
Nations for help once mean Marines landed on Iwo Jima.’ Lesson No. 6:
One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter ‘ regardless of
any terrorist tactics used, or the `freedom fighter’s’ own
totalitarian views and objective hatred of democratic ideals. In this
view, the downtrodden Samir Kuntar, who crushes Israeli toddler’s
skulls, is more Mandela than Zarqawi, more Lech Walesa than bin
Laden. Western holy-rollers like Rick Warren are bigoted threats to
secular liberal democracy, yet murderous, homophobic, religiously
fanatic, rabid anti-Semite racists like Khalid Mashal are merely the
oppressed `other’ lashing out at the excesses of Western
globalization.

These are just some of the peculiar academic views regarding the
current situation in Gaza. I do not expect them to change, nor does
anyone who has any sense of moral and political clarity. Until then,
our allies in Israel will be held to a different standard than
everyone else in a comparable position. We have these historical
precedents, but not the intellectual capacity, moral fiber, and
backbone to state them aloud. What a shame.

FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributing Editor Nicholas Guariglia is a
polemic and essayist who writes on Islam and Middle Eastern
geopolitics. He can be reached at [email protected].

http://www.familysecuritymatt ers.org/publications/id.2353/pub_detail.asp

OSCE MG Co-Chairs Arrive In Yerevan

OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS ARRIVE IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
20.01.2009 15:00 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs, Ambassador Yuri
Merzlyakov of Russia, Matthew Bryza of the United States and Bernard
Fassier of France have arrived in Yerevan today.

The international mediators are scheduled to meet with the President
and Foreign Affairs of Armenia.

Earlier, Ambassador Yuri Merzlyakov said in Baku he believes that
Armenia and Azerbaijan can agree on basic principles of resolution
of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in the near future.

"If the sides demonstrate political will, we will be able to reach
agreement on the basic principles," he said, adding that the main
goal of the current regional visit is to promote adoption of Madrid
provisions and continuation of talks.

For his part, U.S. Co-chair Matt Bryza informed that the mediators
will negotiate a regular presidential meeting that is likely during
the World Economic Forum due in Davos from January 28 to February 1.

"The Sargsyan-Aliyev meeting depends on our talks in Yerevan and
Baku. This month holds a brilliant chance for talks," he said.

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian reiterated Monday Armenia’s
readiness to continue talks on the basis of Madrid principles and
the outcomes of Moscow and Helsinki meetings.

Mayor Left, So Did Alexander

MAYOR LEFT, SO DID ALEXANDER

A1+
[01:40 pm] 20 January, 2009

"I was playing for "Vitebsk" and was getting ready to continue to
play for the Belarus team in 2009, but the events that took place
forced me to leave the team," told "A1+" defender of the Armenian
football team Alexander Tadevosyan.

The Armenian player has returned to Yerevan and is getting ready to
sign a contract with the "Mika" team of Yerevan. Alexander noted that
it made no sense to stay in Belarus.

"The mayor of Vitebsk was removed from his post after which "Vitebsk"
club was in panic. The mayor was the one supporting and funding the
team. It was clear that the team would no longer be able to fulfill
the financial obligations. I talked with the club administration. I
got into problems with them and they granted me the status of player."

Alexander Tadevosyan will soon join "Mika" and will start preparing
for the 2009 Armenian championship. "I know that "Mika" has gathered
a team of strong players this year and I think the series will be
interesting."

Tadevosyan hopes that he will manage to prepare for the Armenia-Latvia
friendly match to take place February 11 in the Cypriot city of
Limasol. "It is very important for us to play a good game and I will
try to be in good condition." The 28-year old defender who has played
38 matches for the Armenian football team, has also played for the
"Ararat" and "Pyunik" teams of Yerevan. Tadevosyan has also played a
series of games in the "Bagh" team of Iran, after which he returned
to "Pyunik" and then transferred to the "Vitebsk" team of Belarus in
January 2008 in the city of Vitebsk.