Lawyer Of Bjni Company Says The Auction Was Illegal

LAWYER OF BJNI COMPANY SAYS THE AUCTION WAS ILLEGAL
Anna Nazaryan

"Radiolur"
17.02.2009 15:54

As it is known NA Deputy, President of the Football Federation of
Armenia Ruben Hayrapetyan has purchased Bjni Factory. He was the
only bidder and has already paid 5% of the 4 billion 441 million 358
thousand drams set for the property and property rights of the factory,
Press Secretary of the Judicial Acts Compulsory Enforcement Service
of Armenia Ruben Grdzeyan told "Radiolur."

Lawyer of Bjni Company Ara Zohrabyan considers the electronic auction
was illegal. He informed "Radiolur" that the company and the Cil
Concern have filed eight lawsuits at the Administrative Court. "The
cases have not been investigated and under those circumstances the
auctions could not have been organized, he said.

Food Safety Website To Be Developed In Armenia

FOOD SAFETY WEBSITE TO BE DEVELOPED IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Feb 13, 2009

YEREVAN, February 13. /ARKA/. A specialized website on food safety
will be launched in Armenia soon, reported Abgar Yegoyan, chairman
of the Protection of Consumers Rights NGO.

The organization is carrying out a relevant survey and is now
negotiating with the RA Ministry of Agriculture and authorized agencies
that have approved of the project.

The website will contain information about certificates issued buy
the country’s competent authorities, as well as the latest results
of laboratory research and expert appraisals.

Data on all shops that have been examined by the Metrological
Institute, RA Ministry of Economy, will be available on the website.

"Consumers can easily find goods that have undergone necessary
examination and received inspection certification, as well as inform
about food safety violations," Yegoyan said, adding a roundtable with
participation of inspections, expert laboratories and other examining
bodies will take place in March.

Turkey’s Israel Problem

TURKEY’S ISRAEL PROBLEM
by Daniel Larison

The Week Magazine
7/Turkeys_Israel_problem
Feb 13 2009

One of the most important and least noticed casualties of Israel’s
three-week offensive in Gaza was its alliance with the secular
Muslim nation of Turkey. As in 2006 during the bombardment of
Lebanon, Turkish public reaction to Israel’s operation in Gaza was
extremely negative. But this time the Turkish government was a much
more vociferous critic of its military partner, and Prime Minister
Erdogan went so far as to raise the possibility of Israel’s expulsion
from the United Nations. Erdogan was reportedly livid that Israeli
had launched the Gaza strikes without informing him, which was
particularly humiliating for the Turkish leader since the strikes
effectively sabotaged Erdogan’s efforts to mediate between Israel
and Syria. At the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, Erdogan
delivered a brief, angry rebuke to Israeli President Shimon Peres
and dramatically walked off the stage, winning plaudits in Turkey,
Gaza, and Iran.

The episode summed up the growing frustration in Turkey’s AKP (Justice
and Development Party) government with Israeli policy and showed the
strain that the conflict in Gaza had put on Israel’s only alliance
with a Muslim country. More than that, though, it reflected growing
Turkish disillusionment with all of its Western allies over the last
decade. The greatest danger to Turkey and the West now comes from
failing to recognize how Western policies have alienated the Turks
and misinterpreting their disillusionment as simple rejection.

The disillusionment is real and deep. Surveys of "anti-American"
sentiment reveal that Turkey is now the nation with the worst opinion
of the United States, even though it is one of our most strategically
important allies. According to the Pew Global Attitudes Project, 75
percent of Turks have a very unfavorable view of the United States. The
reasons for this are not hard to fathom. The U.S. invasion of Iraq was
deeply unpopular in Turkey from the beginning, as it was in most other
allied countries. But the war poses unique dangers to Turkey’s security
and territorial integrity, given the potential encouragement to Kurdish
separatism that the example of the Kurdish Regional Government in Iraq
offers. As the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK) rebellion has resumed
inside Turkey, using bases in northern Iraq and prompting Turkish
cross-border raids, Washington’s slow response to Ankara’s concerns
about the PKK in Iraq has infuriated the Turkish public.

Turkish public opinion has likewise turned strongly against the
West over the question of Turkey’s proposed membership in the
European Union. Resistance from France and Germany has indefinitely
delayed Turkey’s admission into the E.U., marking one of the more
significant setbacks for Erdogan’s government, which came to power on
a platform calling for entry into the E.U. Ironically, the Turkish
popular backlash against Israel’s strikes in Gaza now gives Israel
an incentive to want to keep Turkey out of the E.U., where public
opinion already runs quite heavily against Israel.

There are some prospects for improving U.S.-Turkish ties, but this
may hinge on President Obama breaking one of his campaign pledges,
namely his support for the House resolution recognizing the Armenian
genocide of 1915. President Obama has the opportunity to undo some
of the damage to America’s image in Turkey if he follows through on
his promise to end the war in Iraq, and he may be able to use Turkey
as a mediator in negotiations with Iran. But this would be much more
difficult if the resolution passed the House with his support. The
resolution is a purely symbolic and historically valid recognition of
the genocide, but the issue remains highly charged within Turkey. In
2008, Turkey threatened to cut off supply routes to U.S. forces in
Iraq if the resolution passed, and it is likely that the same threat
would be made again this year. Unfortunately, the Obama administration
will first need to repair the substantive policy breaches with Turkey
before it can address that historic injustice as it should.

As for the crisis in Turkish-Israeli relations, Israel’s elections
earlier this week seem likely to only make matters worse. While it
remains unclear which party will ultimately run the next government,
the conservative Likud Party and ultra-nationalist Our Home party
both made big gains, a trend that threatens the Middle East peace
negotiations that Erdogan has been trying to facilitate. While strong
military and institutional ties will keep the Israel-Turkey alliance
from completely fracturing, the diverging directions of the two
electorates are sure to chill relations between their governments
and create many more occasions for diplomatic disputes.

– DANIEL LARISON is a Ph.D. student at the University of Chicago and
contributing editor at The American Conservative. He also writes on
the blog Eunomia.

http://www.theweek.com/article/index/9324

Neither Pact Nor Bloc: Moscow Formed A Post-Soviet Military Alliance

NEITHER PACT NOR BLOC: MOSCOW FORMED A POST-SOVIET MILITARY ALLIANCE
by Gennadi Charodeyev

WPS Agency
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
February 11, 2009 Wednesday
Russia

NEW MILITARY STRUCTURE OF THE CIS COLLECTIVE SECURITY TREATY
ORGANIZATION IS INTENDED TO FORTIFY POLITICAL ALLIANCE OF POST-SOVIET
COUNTRIES; New collective forces of the CIS Collective Security
Treaty Organization are formed to deal with threats to member states’
national security, not with NATO.

Some Western experts hastened to call the new organization
Medvedev’s Pact and even a military bloc. CIS Collective Security
Treaty Organization Secretary General Nikolai Bordyuzha pointed
out, however, that "… before transforming it into a fully-fledged
military alliance, leaders of these countries ought to make sure that
participation in the Collective Forces does not collide with national
legislations." Constitutions of some countries prohibit involvement
in military blocs and alliances. Participants in the summit believe
that the problem should be addressed to rule out discrepancies.

Neither for nor against NATO

Results of the talks between the presidents of Russia, Armenia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan were
announced right after the negotiations.

Unlike its drafts, the document the summit signed does not acknowledge
NATO or installation of the American missile shield in East Europe.

Experts present at the summit even warned journalists against "being
overly dramatic" and emphasized that reinforcement of the military
component of the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization "shouldn’t
be regarded as the development of a counterweight to the Alliance."

As matters stand, the collective security framework is regional. There
exist three regional army groups: Russian-Belarussian (East European),
Russian-Armenian (Caucasus), and Central Asian.

Leaders of the involved countries decided to quarter the Collective
Forces on the territory of Russia.

Presidential whims

Moscow all but admits that the new military structure is supposed to
strengthen the political alliance against efforts of certain Western
states to exert clout with some members of the CIS Collective Security
Treaty Organization in order to secure their own military presence
on the territories of these countries. All the more alarming is the
fact that no Russian neighbor has ever stepped forward with offers
of help against the Georgian incursion into South Ossetia. Russia’s
allies keep treating its actions in the Caucasus with caution even
now. Moreover, some leaders of the CIS Collective Security Treaty
Organization indulge in whims…

Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus kept objecting to establishment of
the Strategic Response Collective Forces and to participation of the
Belarussian regular army in them. Talks over energy deliveries to
Belarus meanwhile continued. It was finally confirmed at the meeting
of the Supreme State Council of the Russian-Belarussian Union that the
parties had signed supplementary agreements to gas contracts. Rough
estimates show that the average price of gas for Belarus in 2009
will amount to about $150 per 1,000 cubic meters. It is going to be
the lowest tariff throughout the Commonwealth. Lukashenko in return
waived his objections to the Strategic Response Collective Forces and
to establishment of the Belarussian-Russian joint antiaircraft defense.

One other trouble was encountered right away. The development of
a similar antiaircraft defense framework with Armenia might and
probably will disturb Azerbaijan that is always jealous of the
military-technical cooperation between Moscow and Yerevan.

President of Tajikistan Emomali Rakhmon displayed his temperament
two days before the summit and refused to attend it. His Kyrgyz
counterpart Kurmanbek Bakiyev called Rakhmon and talked him into coming
to Moscow after all. Rakhmon turned up in the Russian capital and –
if his mood were an indicator – settled all issues in the relations
with the Kremlin to his satisfaction.

As for Uzbekistan’s "individual opinion", Press Secretary Vitaly
Strugovets said Uzbek President Islam Karimov must have had personal
reasons to disagree with the situation where all security structures
even including the Emergency Ministry were elements of the collective
forces to be mustered.

Expert opinion

Presidential Aide Sergei Prikhodko: It is the Central Asian armed
forces that are regarded as the nucleus of the future forces because
threats to security of the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization
originate in the south. I mean the situation in Afghanistan, conflict
potential we know existing in Pakistan, and activeness of all sorts
of extremist groups operating in the region.

Vladimir Batyuk of the Institute of the USA and Canada (Russian Academy
of Sciences): The assumption that the alliance is intended to become
a kind of counterweight to NATO is absolutely wrong. Members of the
CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization are facing threats to
their security to deal with. I’m talking about extremism in these
countries and in Afghanistan nearby. I’m talking about the swelling
drug trafficking from Afghanistan. It is these threats the Collective
Forces are supposed to negate. Sure, membership in the CIS Collective
Security Treaty Organization costs Russia but Russia must endure this
financial strain because there is practically nothing in terms of
serious barriers between the Russian state borders and the borders of
Afghanistan. Supporting its Central Asian partners, Russia strengthens
its own security. There are no alternatives to this support.

Legendary Armenian Gymnast Albert Azaryan Marks 80th Birthday

LEGENDARY ARMENIAN GYMNAST ALBERT AZARYAN MARKS 80TH BIRTHDAY

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.02.2009 16:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President of the Armenian Olympic Gymnastics
Federation Albert Azaryan is marking his 80th birthday today.

"I receive congratulations all day long. I feel perfect, as if I
am 40. I haven’t received presents yet but I do not like presents,
to tell the truth. There is nothing better than congratulations
from relatives and friends," Azaryan said in a conversation with a
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

"Today, I received a congratulation message from the President
of Armenia. When I was 70, I received congratulation from late
Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan. Then-President Robert Kocharian
congratulated me on the 75th birthday. This year, President of the
Olympic Committee Gagik Tsarukyan promised to organize an event
dedicated to my jubilee on February 17. As to future plans, you know
that our gymnasts did not participate in the Beijing Olympiad. Now,
we are training sportsmen for the next Olympiad due in London in 2012,"
he said.

Albert Azaryan (born February 11, 1929 in Yerevan) is an Armenian
artistic gymnast who competed internationally representing the
Soviet Union. He is the 1956 and 1960 Olympic champion on the still
rings. He was the first person to do one of the most famous exercises
on the rings called the Iron Cross, Crucifix, or Azarian Cross in an
international competition. He is the 1954 and 1958 World Champion on
the rings and 1958 silver medalist on the horizontal bar.

It Is Proposed Adding New Article – 301/1 To Criminal Code Of RA

IT IS PROPOSED ADDING NEW ARTICLE – 301/1 TO CRIMINAL CODE OF RA

Noyan Tapan

Feb 11, 2009

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 11, NOYAN TAPAN. During the February 11 sitting of
the working group which was set up with the aim of developing a bill
on amendments and additions to Articles 225 and 300 of the Criminal
Code of Armenia, the head of the group, chairman of the RA National
Assembly Standing Committee on State and Legal Issues David Harutyunian
proposed adding a new article – 301/1 to the Criminal Code. In the
new article, actions aimed and not aimed at usurping power will be
separated and different punitive measures will be envisaged for these
actions. The new article defines forcing the president of Armenia,
the National Assembly, the government, the Constitutional Court (by
committing violence against them or threatening to commit violence)
to take or not to take a power-involving action as a new type of
crime which is not aimed at usurping power.

D. Harutyunian proposed stipulating clearly in Article 225 on mass
disorder what mass disorder is. In the version that the working
group is currently discussing, mass disorder is a group action which
is accompanied by violence, pogroms, arson, destruction or damage
of property, use of fire-arms, explosive substances or devices,
and armed resistance to representatives of authorities and poses a
threat to public security. The expression "accompanied by kilings"
was removed from the article (it will be stipulated in Article 104),
and a new punitive measure (arrest of up to 3 months) for participation
in mass disorder was added. The matter concerns people who did not
take actions described in the article on mass disorder.

According to the National Assembly PR Department, the next sitting
of the working group will be held at the beginning of next week.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1012083

CE Secretary General Voices Concern About Warlike Statements Voiced

CE SECRETARY GENERAL VOICES CONCERN ABOUT WARLIKE STATEMENTS VOICED BY AZERBAIJANI LEADERSHIP

ArmInfo
2009-02-10 14:48:00

ArmInfo.CE Secretary General voiced concern about warlike statements
voiced by Azerbaijani leadership in an interview with Azerbaijan
Day.az agency.

The CE Secretary General also spoke of the CE position on the Karabakh
conflict.

"The position of the Council of Europe should be very clear not only
on this conflict but on other conflicts as well. We believe that
all international and domestic internal disputes should be solved by
peaceful means and it was agreed by both Azerbaijan and Armenia when
they joined the Council of Europe. Now the mediation between Azerbaijan
and Armenia about Nagorno Karabakh is a responsibility of the Minsk
Group – a part of a different organization – OSCE. And we try not to
interfere with the work of the Minsk Group", noted he and said he hopes
the meetings between the Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia will
be fruitful and result in the settlement of this conflict very soon.

He also noted that there is absolutely no policy of double standards
towards Azerbaijan and voiced concern about the warlike statements
voiced in the region. Although Terry Davis did not mentioned whose
statements he is concern about, but it is only Baku that threatens
‘to settle Karabakh conflict by force’.

I think that there have been some progress in terms of democracy
and holding better elections but I am very concerned about freedom
of expression and freedom of media in Azerbaijan, said CE Secretary
General Terry Davis.

"The democracy does depend on freedom of expression and freedom of
media and I am also concerned about a number of journalists who are
being put under pressure in Azerbaijan", said he.

Speaking about the proposed amendments to the Constitution of
Azerbaijan to be introduced via a referendum, the secretary general
noted that he considers it reasonable to submit amendments to the
Constitution and to have a referendum on these amendments.

"I do not think its a very good idea to rush into a referendum. I am
also disappointed that the government of Azerbaijan did not ask for
the opinion of experts of the Council of Europe".

"I do not accept that the Council of Europe applies double standards
or different standards in different places. The Council of Europe
always supported the territorial integrity of its member-states and
that applies to Moldova, or Cyprus or Azerbaijan. I regret very much
that the way people in Azerbaijan draw attention to pointing out
difficulties in Armenia. I think Armenia does the same thing about
Azerbaijan. The fact is that both countries – both Azerbaijan and
Armenia – need to improve. There is an old saying in the Christian
Bible that before you start drawing attention to a speck of dust in
the eye of someone else, you should take out a stone from your own
eye. And I do wish that both Armenia and Azerbaijan concentrate on
solving their own problems and raising standards of democracy and
civil rights in their own country", concluded the CE Secretary General.

ASALA And ‘Ukht Ararati’ Union Of Former Political Prisoners And Fre

ASALA AND ‘UKHT ARARATI’ UNION OF FORMER POLITICAL PRISONERS AND FREEDOM-FIGHTERS AGAINST INITIATIVE BY SYDNEY UNIVERSITY DOCTOR ARMEN KAKAVYAN

ArmInfo
2009-02-10 15:21:00

ArmInfo. Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) and
"Ukht Ararati" (Oath of Ararat) union of former political prisoners
and freedom-fighters have come out with an indignant protest against
the initiative by Sydney University Doctor Armen Kakavyan.

Earlier A. Kakavyan apologized for the actions by ‘ASALA’ that resulted
in innocent victims. However, Turkish and Azerbaijani media distorted
the given initiative interpreting it as ‘apology to Turks’. A. Kakavyan
has already refuted the given interpretation as well.

However, the above organizations demanded Kakavyan to name the
instigators of such a strange initiative. ‘It is a brazen attempt
to justify a criminal and present him as an innocent victim hereby
criminalizing the arbiter of justice. Both the instigator and Kakavyan
have commited crime by propagating genocide with confidence that
the instigator will not be exposed and with hope for the protection
of the western justice. But crimes against humanity have no period
of limitation and everyone who planed, committed, and propagated
a crime must be brought responsible as well as those who are still
enjoying the bloody spoil of their predecessors. Western democracy
has to think well and take measures to prevent new crimes against
humanity by punishing for the previous crimes and liquidating their
aftermaths’, the statement says.

The authors of the statement urge Kakavyan to name the instigators:
‘Armenian justice can guarantee Kakavyan’s life if he refuses from the
given order in public and apologizes to the victims of the Genocide of
1915-1923 and their successors that had to spread across the world, as
well as if he applies to the law- enforcement and name the instigator
who made him commit a crime’.

Regular Sitting Of Armenian, Belarusian Intergovernmental Commission

REGULAR SITTING OF ARMENIAN, BELARUSIAN INTERGOVERNMENTAL COMMISSION IN MINSK ON MARCH 2-4

ARKA
Feb 9, 2009

YEREVAN, February 9. /ARKA/. A regular sitting of Armenian and
Belarusian intergovernmental commission will take place in Minsk on
March 2-4, the press service of the RA Ministry of Economy reported
on Monday.

The sides agreed upon the sitting during the meeting of RA Minister of
Economy Nerses Yeritsyan, who also is co-chairman of intergovernmental
commission from Armenian side, and Belarusian Ambassador to Armenia
Stepan Sukhorenko.

The Ambassador suggested Minister Yeritsyan to include number of
activities in the agenda of the visit, specifically visits to large
industrial, agricultural and other enterprises, as well as meetings
with big Armenian businessmen in Belarus.

BAKU: OSCE To Monitor Contact Line Between Azerbaijani, Armenian Arm

OSCE TO MONITOR CONTACT LINE BETWEEN AZERBAIJANI, ARMENIAN ARMIES

Trend
Feb 9 2009
Azerbaijan

Monitoring will be held on the contact line between Armenian and
Azerbaijani armed forces north-west of the Sarijali village in
Azerbaijan’s Agdam region on Feb. 11, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry
told Trend News. The monitoring will be held after a mandate by the
special envoy of the OSCE chairman.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan
lost all of Nagorno-Karabakh except for Shusha and Khojali in December
1991. In 1992-93, Armenian armed forces occupied Shusha, Khojali and 7
districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed
a ceasefire in 1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia,
France, and the U.S. – are currently holding the peace negotiations.

The monitoring will be held on the Azerbaijani side by OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Personal Representative field assistants Imre
Palatinus and Vladimir Chountulov.

The monitoring will be held on the opposite side, which the
international community recognizes as Azerbaijani territory, by OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Personal Representative field assistants Pieter
Ki and Irji Aberli.