Gyumri Technopark To Specialize In Machine Building And Instrumentat

GYUMRI TECHNOPARK TO SPECIALIZE IN MACHINE BUILDING AND INSTRUMENTATION

Noyan Tapan
Apr 26 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The technopark to be created at
Analitsark Plant under the RA government’s decision of March 2006
will mainly specialize in instrumentation and machine building. NT
correspondent was informed about it from Ashot Khandanian, Head of
the Science, Technologies and Innovation Policy Department of the
RA Ministry of Trade and Economic Development. According to him,
the localization of small enterprises engaged in production and
scientific developments in the area of the technopark is important
in terms of job creation. It was noted that Analitsark has operating
machine-tools and some areas suitable for localization of small
enterprises. He noted that it is possible that starting 2007,
financial resources will be allocated by the state program on
innovation activity assistance for the purpose of creating some
infrastructures at the Gyumri technopark. Such annual programs are
envisaged by the draft law on state assistance of innovation activity,
which will be adopted by the RA National Assembly during the next
four-day session. Besides, the state is likely to provide additional
funds for the technopark’s development from the financial resources
to be used for small and medium business assistance. Some of these
resources have already been allocated to the operating technopark
“Andron” in Yerevan. A. Khandanian said that the New Investments
organization, which was founded by the RA Ministry of Trade and
Economic Development with the aim of assisting the process of
relaunching the enterprises currently standing idle, will promote
the technopark’s development. He expressed confidence that as soon
as the state starts the work on creation of the Gyumri technopark,
the UN Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) Armenia Office
and other donor organizations will offer their assistance.

Salt Lake City: Rally Held On Anniversary Of Massacre

RALLY HELD ON ANNIVERSARY OF MASSACRE

KSL-TV, UTAH
April 24 2006

(KSL News) — Demonstrators marched in downtown Salt Lake today to
rally on the anniversary of a massacre in Armenia.

April 24th marks the 91st anniversary of the genocide in Armenia. The
event took place in 1915 during World War I. Event organizers say
one and a half million Armenian men, women and children were killed.

Today, those who rallied at the Federal Building in Salt Lake pushed
for regonition of the massacre.

Agnesa Bakhshyan, Demonstration Organizer: “You can’t find this in
any history book, and you know, people should know what happened.”

Protesters say 37 states across the US recognize the Armenian massacre
as a genocide. They hope to get legislation passed in Utah recognizing
the mass extermination.

Ambassador Of Armenia To Georgia Visits Javakhk To Get Acquainted Wi

AMBASSADOR OF ARMENIA TO GEORGIA VISITS JAVAKHK TO GET ACQUAINTED WITH SITUATION AT PLACE

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 19 2006

AKHALKALAK, APRIL 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Hrach Silvanian,
the RA Ambassador to Georgia visited the Samtskhe-Javakhetsi region on
April 15-16. The goal of the visit was to meet with representatives of
the regional administration, regional authorities as well as of public
organizations to get acquainted with the situation at place. First,
the RA Ambassador visited the Saint Gregory the Illuminator church
of Akhaltskha, then a meeting with high grades students, teachers and
representatives of the intellectuals of the region took place at the
Akhaltskha Armenian school. The RA Ambassador presented the meeting
participants the present state of the Armenian-Georgian relations,
programs implemented and envisaged by the authorities of Georgia
and Armenia to improve the social-economic state of the region, he
also touched upon a number of issues causing anxiety of the Armenian
society of Georgia, including the educational reforms implemented in
the country. Then a meeting with the Georgian President’s Authorized
Vice-Representative to the Samtskhe-Javakhetsi, the Akhatskha Mayor,
heads of the legislative and executive bodies of the region took
place in the building of the Mayor’s Office. Issues relating to the
social-economic state of the region were discussed. The Akhaltskha
Mayor proposed to discuss the idea of establishing a close cooperation
between Akhaltskha and a city of Armenia. The Ambassador’s next meeting
was with Giorgy Khachidze, the Authorized Representative of Georgia to
the Samtskhe-Javakhk region which took place in Akhalkalak. Hamlet
Movsisian, a deputy elected at the Parliament of Georgia from
Akhalkalak and Melik Raisian, a deputy elected by proportional order
participated in the meeting as well. G.Khachidze presented programs
addressed to settlement of the social-economic problems of the region,
events implemented during the recent period of time. Then he touched
upon the new law on electing the local self-govenrment bodies,
taking into account that those elections will take place already
this autumn. The necessity of establishing a close cooperation
between the administration of the region and the Embassy was also
discussed at the meeting. The RA Ambassador also raised the issue of
founding the Armenian-Georgian University in the region about which
the agreement was reached between the RA and Georgian Prime Ministers
during 2005. At the end of the conversation Khachidze thanked the RA
authorities for constant assistance shown to Javakhk. Late the same
day, the RA Ambassador visited Ninodsminda where he participated
in the Easter liturgy celebrated in the Surb Sargis Church. Then,
as Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA Foreign Ministry’s Press
and Information Department, a meeting took place with heads of the
executive and legislative bodies of Ninotsminda, the Mayor and Henzel
Mkoyan, a member of the Georgian Parliament elected from the region of
Ninotsminda. The RA Ambassador’s meeting with representatives of public
organizations of the region took place the next day, on April 16, in
Akhalkalak. At Ambassador Silvanian’s request, participants presented
problems of the society of Javakhk. The RA Ambassador also visited the
Surb Khach (Saint Cross) church of Akhalkalak and participated in the
Easter Liturgy and the following celebration. Georgian President’s
Authorized Representative G.Khachidze participated in the church
service as well. A.Amirkhanian, the Georgian President’s Authorized
Vice-Representative to the Samtskhe-Javakhetsi region accompanied
the RA Ambassador during the visit to the region. The visit was held
during the days of the Easter holiday and took place jointly with
the visit of Bishop Vazgen Mirzakhanian, primate of the Virahayots
Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The RA Ambassador returned
Tbilisi on late April 16.

CIS Unified Air Defense System To Have Exercises On April 25

CIS UNIFIED AIR DEFENSE SYSTEM TO HAVE EXERCISES ON APRIL 25

ITAR-TASS, Russia
April 18 2006

MOSCOW, April 18 (Itar-Tass) — The CIS unified air defense system
will have exercises on April 25, a source at the Russian Air Force
press service told Itar-Tass on Tuesday.

“The exercises are on the plan approved by the Council of CIS Defense
Ministers. They will involve air force and air defense units of eight
CIS member states, namely Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine,” the source said.

“About 70 aircraft – MiG-31, Su-24, Su-25, Su-27, A-50 airborne
radar systems, strategic aircraft, and Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopters –
will be engaged in the exercises,” he said.

First Consignment Of Nitric Fertilizer Distributed To Farms In Arara

FIRST CONSIGNMENT OF NITRIC FERTILIZER DISTRIBUTED TO FARMS IN ARARAT MARZ

Noyan Tapan
Apr 18 2006

ARTASHAT, APRIL 18, NOYAN TAPAN. The spring sowing of 350 ha with
wheat and barley has been almost completed in Ararat marz. 3,400 tons
of nitric fertilizer, which will be sold to farms for 3,700 drams,
was provided by Azotinvest CJSC. The first consignment (2,300 tons)
of nitric fertilizer has already been transported to the marz and
distributed to farms.

BAKU: OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairman Arrives To Baku This Week

OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRMAN ARRIVES TO BAKU THIS WEEK
Author: E. Huseynov

TREND Info, Azerbaijan
April 17 2006

The OSCE Minsk group co-chairman, Steven Mann is planning to visit
Baku by the end of this week, the head of foreign affairs department
at the US embassy, Jonathan Henik told Trend.

The exact agenda of the visit is not yet known, though it is expected
that Mann will visit Yerevan and probably Tbilisi before arriving to
Baku. In Baku he will discuss the current stage of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict peaceful resolution.

Mann has previously said that his visit to the region will start on
April 18.

A PBS Documentary Makes Its Case For The Armenian Genocide,With Or W

A PBS DOCUMENTARY MAKES ITS CASE FOR THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, WITH OR WITHOUT A DEBATE

New York Times
April 17 2006

TV Review

It is impossible to debate a subject like genocide without giving
offense. PBS is supposed to give offense responsibly.

Photo: Two Cats Productions
A scene from “The Armenian Genocide” on PBS; a follow-up panel will
not be shown on many PBS stations.

Readers’ Opinions
Forum: Television
And that was the idea behind a panel discussion that PBS planned
to show after tonight’s broadcast of “The Armenian Genocide,”
a documentary about the extermination of more than one million
Armenians by the Turkish Ottoman Empire during World War I.

The powerful hourlong film will be shown on most of the 348 PBS
affiliate stations. But nearly a third of those stations decided to
cancel the follow-up discussion after an intense lobbying campaign
by Armenian groups and some members of Congress.

The protesters complained that the panel of four experts, moderated
by Scott Simon, host of “Weekend Edition Saturday” on NPR, included
two scholars who defend the Turkish government’s claim that a genocide
never took place. The outrage over their inclusion was an indication
of how passionately Armenians feel about the issue; they have battled
for decades to draw attention to the genocide.

But the fact that so many stations caved is a measure of something
else: PBS’s growing vulnerability to pressure and, perhaps accordingly,
the erosion of viewers’ trust in public television.

The camera lends legitimacy, but as Senator Joseph R. McCarthy’s
performance on Edward R. Murrow’s “See It Now” famously showed, it
also can undermine credibility. Panel discussions in particular give
people with outlandish views a hearing – and also an opportunity to
expose the flaws in their arguments.

That is certainly the case with the discussion program “Armenian
Genocide: Exploring the Issues.” It turns out that there is only one
articulate voice arguing that Armenians died not in a genocide but
in a civil war between Christians and Muslims – that of Justin A.

McCarthy, a history professor at the University of Louisville. His
Turkish counterpart, Omer Turan, an associate professor at the Middle
East Technical University in Ankara, tries ardently to back him up,
but his English is not good enough to make a dent. And the two other
experts, Peter Balakian, a humanities professor at Colgate University,
and Taner Akcam, a visiting professor of history at the University
of Minnesota and a well-known defender of human rights in Turkey,
lucidly pick Mr. McCarthy’s points apart.

Mr. Balakian, who is one of the experts cited in the documentary,
gets the last word. “If we are going to pretend that a stateless
Christian minority population, unarmed, is somehow in a capacity to
kill people in an aggressive way that is tantamount to war, or civil
war,” Mr. Balakian says, “we’re living in the realm of the absurd.”

Tone and appearance on television can be as persuasive as
talk. Mr. McCarthy mostly sounds condescending and defensive, while
Mr. Balakian is smooth and keeps his cool.

“The Armenian Genocide ” which was made by Andrew Goldberg in
association with Oregon Public Broadcasting, does not ignore the
Turkish government’s denial, or its repression of dissidents in Turkey
who try to expound another point of view. One of the film’s merits
is that it tries to explain both the circumstances that led to the
atrocities of 1915 and the reasons why Turkish officials are still
so determined to keep that period unexplored. “There is a feeling
that Turkey would be putting itself permanently in the company
of Adolf Hitler,” Samantha Power, the author of “A Problem >>From
Hell: America and the Age of Genocide,” says. “That same stain would
envelop Turkey as it seeks, of course, to be a major player on the
international stage.”

Several of the experts in the film, including Turkish scholars,
argue that because Turkey is seeking admission to the European Union,
its leaders will eventually have to bend to international will and
acknowledge responsibility. But official Turkish denial remains fierce,
and intellectuals and even well-known writers like Orhan Pamuk can
still be brought to trial for mentioning the treatment of Armenians
and Kurds.

The documentary, which is partly narrated by Julianna Margulies,
Ed Harris and others, includes rare clips of Turkish scholars
acknowledging the anti-Armenian campaign as genocide as well as Turkish
villagers recounting their ancestors’ stories about participating in
the killings. “They caught Armenians and put them in a barn and burned
them,” a man in a town in eastern Turkey says to an interviewer. There
are also shots of ordinary Turks who insist their ancestors were
incapable of that level of barbarity.

Mostly, however, the film painstakingly makes the case that a genocide
did take place, relying on archival photographs, victims’ memoirs
and the horrified first-hand accounts of diplomats, missionaries and
reporters. The forced deportations and killings did not take place
unnoticed – public figures like Theodore Roosevelt and H. L. Mencken
spoke out about the horrors. In 1915, The New York Times published
145 stories about the systematic slaughter of Armenians.

Even after World War II, the fate of Turkey’s Armenian population was
high on the list of crimes against humanity. The film includes a clip
from a 1949 CBS interview with Raphael Lemkin, a law professor who
in 1943 coined the term genocide. “I became interested in genocide
because it happened so many times,” he tells the CBS commentator
Quincy Howe. “First to the Armenians, then after the Armenians,
Hitler took action.”

The documentary honors the victims of the Armenian genocide and also
pays tribute to dissidents in Turkey who are brave enough to speak
out despite government censorship. And that makes it all the odder
that so many public television stations here censored the follow-up
program as soon as a few lobby groups complained.

The Armenian Genocide

PBS, tonight at 10 Eastern and Pacific times; 9 p.m., Central time.

Written, directed and produced by Andrew Goldberg. Produced by Two
Cats Productions in association with Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Narrated by Julianna Margulies, Ed Harris, Natalie Portman, Laura
Linney and Orlando Bloom.

evision/17stan.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx= 1145253012-5IP/u2P2UMOiY01zgtOe0A&oref=login

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/17/arts/tel

BAKU: Azerbaijan to protest US registration of NKR Rep. Office

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 15 2006

Azerbaijan to express protest to US State Department for registration
of `Nagorno Karabakh Republic representative office in Washington’

[ 15 Apr. 2006 16:05 ]

The Embassy of Azerbaijan in the United States will express a protest
to the US Department of State regarding the US Justice Department
registering `Nagorno Karabakh Republic representative office in
Washington’.

The spokesman of the Foreign Ministry Tahir Taghizadeh told APA that
the Embassy will protest to the word `republic’ in the representative
office. He said that Nagorno Karabagh office in Washington has been
functioning as a non-governmental organization since the 90s of the
last century.
`Every year when the office try to include the word `republic’ during
the registration Azerbaijan prevents it .If the office was registered
as a diplomatic mission, the Department of State not the Justice
Department would have registered it,’ Taghizadeh underlined./APA/

Who Is To Pay?

Panorama.am

12:31 14/04/06

WHO IS TO PAY?

The workers of Public Defender’s office finally received their
salaries for 21 months. Yet this was not their only problem.

The question of photo-copying the files of criminal cases is a serious
problem for the defenders. If in all the other cases the relatives of
the accused are to pay for the photo-copying then, in fact, there is
no one to pay for the insolvent section of population, and the state
budget hasn’t envisaged such expenses. In the end the defenders have
to pay form their own pocket to have the files of the cases
photo-copied. Yet, sometimes those files are voluminous and the
photo-copying becomes quite a serious problem. Defenders are not able
to cover all those expenses with the salary of 150-180 drams a month.

If the question is not solved the public defenders will simply not
have the files photo-copied, will not get acquainted with them and the
defence of the accused in the Court will have a formal character
only. /Panorama.am/

Armenian Body Claims 130 POWs In Azeri Prisons

ARMENIAN BODY CLAIMS 130 POWS IN AZERI PRISONS

Regnum, Moscow
11 Apr 06

As of today there are 130 Armenian prisoners of war in Azerbaijan,
deputy chairman of the Community and Law public organization, Suren
Ovannesyan, has said.

He said that the Armenian Defence Ministry had elaborated a list of
missing people and their whereabouts. However, the process of their
return is practically impossible. Azerbaijan had also published
information about the Armenian prisoners of war. But information
about the prisoners of war has not been made public since [Azerbaijani
President] Ilham Aliyev came into power.

“Access to prisons in Azerbaijan is even barred for international
organizations,” Suren Ovannesyan said and added that Armenian prisoners
of war are exploited as free labour force in Azerbaijan.

Suren Ovannesyan noted that there are no Azerbaijani prisoners of war
in Armenian prisons as they were returned to Azerbaijan unilaterally.