Armenia, Egypt To Reinforce Trade-Economic Ties

ARMENIA, EGYPT TO REINFORCE TRADE-ECONOMIC TIES

Panorama.am
14:48 18/01/2010

Armenian-Egyptian intergovernmental committee sitting is due in Yerevan
in summer this year. The holding of the event was signified by the
Armenian NA Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan and his Egyptian counterpart
Ahmet Fahti Surur at a meeting.

A number of economic programs will be discussed at the sitting. When
discussing the bilateral cooperation, the interlocutors agreed to
reinforce Armenian-Egyptian trade-economic ties, NA PR department
reported.

Speaker H. Abrahamyan invited Mr. Surur to make an official visit to
Armenia. At the meeting the Armenian Speaker introduced the primary
issues of Armenia’s foreign policy, particularly referring to the
steps taken towards establishing peace and stability in the South
Caucasus, the Armenian-Turkish normalization without preconditions,
the relations with neighbor states.

Nesterenko: Russia Actively Participates In Nagorno-Karabakh Conflic

NESTERENKO: RUSSIA ACTIVELY PARTICIPATES IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION

armradio.am
15.01.2010 16:28

Russia actively participates in resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, Russian Foreign Ministry’s Spokesman Andrei Nesterenko was
quoted as saying by the Russian Vesti television channel.

"The OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairmen and interested sides, including
Russia, properly discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict," he said.

He said that the conflict has its own character, thus it has many
thin verges.

"The negotiations and consolidations on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
continue on a regular basis," he said.

Protocols On Diplomatic Ties With Turkey Comply With Armenian Law –

PROTOCOLS ON DIPLOMATIC TIES WITH TURKEY COMPLY WITH ARMENIAN LAW – COURT

Interfax
Jan 12 2010
Russia

Armenia’s Constitutional Court ruled on Tuesday that the
Armenian-Turkish protocols on the establishment of bilateral diplomatic
relations, which were signed by the two countries’ foreign ministers
in Zurich in October, are in compliance with the Armenian Constitution.

The ruling was announced by president of the Armenian Constitutional
Court Gagik Arutyunian, an Interfax correspondent said.

The court issued the ruling at a closed session. The case was heard
at written proceedings. The ruling cannot be appealed.

Now the protocols will be laid before the Armenian National Assembly
(Parliament) where it will have to be approved by the majority of
MPs to be ratified.

Meanwhile, protests organized by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
"Dashnaktsutyun" (ARFD) continued outside the Constitutional Court
building. They claim that the protocols are unconstitutional.

On Monday ARFD members handed over a letter to the president of the
Constitutional Court outlining how the protocols pose a threat to
Armenia’s national security.

If the Constitutional Court issues a positive judgment our fight will
continue, the ARFD members said.

The Armenian-Turkish protocols on the establishment of diplomatic
relations and development of bilateral relations were signed by the
Armenian and Turkish foreign ministers in Zurich on October 10, 2009.

Pashayev: Why Soviet Archives Over Baku Massacres Closed By Now?

PASHAYEV: WHY SOVIET ARCHIVES OVER BAKU MASSACRES CLOSED BY NOW?

Panorama.am
15:25 13/01/2010

20 years ago massacres were carried out in Azerbaijan’s capital January
13-19, killing or forcefully evacuating 5 thousand Armenians residing
in Baku. A number of NGOs are dealing with the issues of the destiny
and restoration of the rights of the refugees, those who managed to
flee during the terrible events.

We want compensation in the view of restoration of the rights,
the President of "Return to Hayk" NGO Robert Melik-Pashayev told
Panorama.am.

"No one at the moment is willing to return to Baku. We need a
compensation for the mobile and real estate we have left there,"
he urged.

We have to act, though, it’s hard to make calculations. It’s difficult
to say how much the compensation counts, nevertheless, it’s more than
vivid that a hundred thousands of houses have been confiscated.

"We raise the 1915 Armenian Genocide, but we do not demand to raise
Baku massacres, which actually come to be a continuation to the
Genocide. The papers wrote then how many people have been killed here
or there, though by now it’s not been revealed yet how many people
were killed during Baku genocide. The Soviet archives are closed
for this topic. Who do they conceal the information from and why?",
Robert Melik-Pashayev said.

Stepan Grigoryan Predicts Rapid Developments In The Armenian-Turkish

STEPAN GRIGORYAN PREDICTS RAPID DEVELOPMENTS IN THE ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS
Alisa Gevorgyan

"Radiolur"
14.01.2010 16:04

Political scientist Stepan Grigoryan predicts rapid developments
with regard to the Armenian-Turkish relations. The developments
have already started with the decision of the Constitutional Court
of Armenia, the visit of the Turkish Prime Minister to Moscow and
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s visit to Yerevan, Stepan
Grigoryan told a press conference today.

"The Turkish Prime Minister’s visit to Moscow and the Russian
Foreign Minister’s visit to Armenia are tied. The visits have to
do exceptionally with the Karabakh issue. Erdogan talked only about
Karabakh in Moscow, Lavrov will talk about Karabakh in Yerevan. It’s
a common practice for Turkey to solve issues in the South Caucasus
through Russia at times of crisis," the political scientist said.

"Turkey and Azerbaijan always lose to Armenia on the battle field, and
then solve issues on the diplomatic field through Russia. An attempt
is being made to apply the same mechanism now," Stepan Grigoryan said.

Serzh Sargsyan To Host Russian FM

SERZH SARGSYAN TO HOST RUSSIAN FM

Panorama.am
17:30 12/01/2010

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov is going to pay visit on 13-14
January to Armenia on the invitation of Armenian FM Edward Nalbandyan,
Armenian MFA PR department reported. It’s reported that Russian FM
will be hosted by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan also. In the
frameworks of the official visit the Foreign Ministers will have
negotiations over some issues and make a joint news conference.

Dynamically developing federative cooperation between Armenia and
Russia, conflicts of South Caucasus, the processes over NKR issue,
as well as political, military, trade-commercial and humanitarian
issues will also be discussed.

Avatar And The Genocides We Will Not See

AVATAR AND THE GENOCIDES WE WILL NOT SEE
by George Monbiot

The Guardian
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
UK

Cameron’s blockbuster half-tells a story we would all prefer to forget

Avatar, James Cameron’s blockbusting 3-D film, is both profoundly
silly and profound. It’s profound because, like most films about
aliens, it is a metaphor for contact between different human cultures.

But in this case the metaphor is conscious and precise: this is the
story of European engagement with the native peoples of the Americas.

It’s profoundly silly because engineering a happy ending demands a
plot so stupid and predictable that it rips the heart out of the film.

The fate of the native Americans is much closer to the story told in
another new film, The Road, in which a remnant population flees in
terror as it is hunted to extinction.

But this is a story no one wants to hear, because of the challenge it
presents to the way we choose to see ourselves. Europe was massively
enriched by the genocides in the Americas; the American nations were
founded on them. This is a history we cannot accept.

In his book American Holocaust, the US scholar David Stannard documents
the greatest acts of genocide the world has ever experienced(1). In
1492, some 100m native peoples lived in the Americas. By the end of
the 19th Century almost all of them had been exterminated. Many died
as a result of disease. But the mass extinction was also engineered.

When the Spanish arrived in the Americas, they described a
world which could scarcely have been more different from their
own. Europe was ravaged by war, oppression, slavery, fanaticism,
disease and starvation. The populations they encountered were healthy,
well-nourished and mostly (with exceptions like the Aztecs and Incas)
peacable, democratic and egalitarian. Throughout the Americas the
earliest explorers, including Columbus, remarked on the natives’
extraordinary hospitality. The conquistadores marvelled at the
amazing roads, canals, buildings and art they found, which in some
cases outstripped anything they had seen at home. None of this stopped
them from destroying everything and everyone they encountered.

The butchery began with Columbus. He slaughtered the native people
of Hispaniola (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic) by unimaginably
brutal means. His soldiers tore babies from their mothers and dashed
their heads against rocks. They fed their dogs on living children. On
one occasion they hung 13 Indians in honour of Christ and the 12
disciples, on a gibbet just low enough for their toes to touch the
ground, then disembowelled them and burnt them alive. Columbus ordered
all the native people to deliver a certain amount of gold every three
months; anyone who failed had his hands cut off. By 1535 the native
population of Hispaniola had fallen from 8m to zero: partly as a result
of disease, partly as a result of murder, overwork and starvation.

The conquistadores spread this civilising mission across central
and south America. When they failed to reveal where their mythical
treasures were hidden, the indigenous people were flogged, hanged,
drowned, dismembered, ripped apart by dogs, buried alive or burnt. The
soldiers cut off women’s breasts, sent people back to their villages
with their severed hands and noses hung round their necks and hunted
Indians with their dogs for sport. But most were killed by enslavement
and disease. The Spanish discovered that it was cheaper to work
Indians to death and replace them than to keep them alive: the life
expectancy in their mines and plantations was three to four months.

Within a century of their arrival, around 95% of the population of
South and Central America had been destroyed.

In California during the 18th Century the Spanish systematised this
extermination. A Franciscan missionary called Junipero Serra set
up a series of "missions": in reality concentration camps using
slave labour. The native people were herded in under force of arms
and made to work in the fields on one fifth of the calories fed to
African-American slaves in the 19th century. They died from overwork,
starvation and disease at astonishing rates, and were continually
replaced, wiping out the indigenous populations. Junipero Serra,
the Eichmann of California, was beatified by the Vatican in 1988. He
now requires one more miracle to be pronounced a saint(2).

While the Spanish were mostly driven by the lust for gold, the
British who colonised North America wanted land. In New England they
surrounded the villages of the native Americans and murdered them
as they slept. As genocide spread westwards, it was endorsed at the
highest levels. George Washington ordered the total destruction of
the homes and land of the Iroquois. Thomas Jefferson declared that
his nation’s wars with the Indians should be pursued until each tribe
"is exterminated or is driven beyond the Mississippi". During the Sand
Creek Massacre of 1864, troops in Colorado slaughtered unarmed people
gathered under a flag of peace, killing children and babies, mutilating
all the corpses and keeping their victims’ genitals to use as tobacco
pouches or to wear on their hats. Theodore Roosevelt called this event
"as rightful and beneficial a deed as ever took place on the frontier."

The butchery hasn’t yet ended: last month the Guardian reported that
Brazilian ranchers in the western Amazon, having slaughtered all the
rest, tried to kill the last surviving member of a forest tribe(3).

Yet the greatest acts of genocide in history scarcely ruffle our
collective conscience. Perhaps this is what would have happened had
the Nazis won the second world war: the Holocaust would have been
denied, excused or minimised in the same way, even as it continued.

The people of the nations responsible – Spain, Britain, the US and
others – will tolerate no comparisons, but the final solutions pursued
in the Americas were far more successful. Those who commissioned or
endorsed them remain national or religious heroes. Those who seek to
prompt our memories are ignored or condemned.

This is why the right hates Avatar. In the neocon Weekly Standard, John
Podhoretz complains that the film resembles a "revisionist western"
in which "the Indians became the good guys and the Americans the
bad guys."(4) He says it asks the audience "to root for the defeat
of American soldiers at the hands of an insurgency." Insurgency is
an interesting word for an attempt to resist invasion: insurgent,
like savage, is what you call someone who has something you want.

L’Osservatore Romano, the official newspaper of the Vatican, condemned
the film as "just … an anti-imperialistic, anti-militaristic
parable"(5).

But at least the right knows what it is attacking. In the New York
Times the liberal critic Adam Cohen praises Avatar for championing the
need to see clearly(6). It reveals, he says, "a well-known principle
of totalitarianism and genocide – that it is easiest to oppress those
we cannot see". But in a marvellous unconscious irony, he bypasses
the crashingly obvious metaphor and talks instead about the light it
casts on Nazi and Soviet atrocities. We have all become skilled in
the art of not seeing.

I agree with its rightwing critics that Avatar is crass, mawkish and
cliched. But it speaks of a truth more important – and more dangerous –
than those contained in a thousand arthouse movies.

Notes:

1. David E Stannard, 1992. American Holocaust. Oxford University
Press. Unless stated otherwise, all the historical events mentioned
in this column are sourced to the same book.

2.
miracle28-2009aug28,0,2804203.story

3.
http://www .guardian.co.uk/world/2009/dec/09/amazon-man-in-ho le-attacked

4.
ent/Public/Articles/000/000/017/350fozta.asp

5.
h ttp:// atican-hits-out-at-3D-Avatar.html

6. tml

George Monbiot is the author of the best selling books The Age of
Consent: a manifesto for a new world order and Captive State: the
corporate takeover of Britain. He writes a weekly column for the
Guardian newspaper. Visit his website at

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Cont
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/26/opinion/26sat4.h
www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/2802155/V
www.monbiot.com

Next Cardboard ‘Government In Expulsion’ To Appear In Azerbaijan

NEXT CARDBOARD ‘GOVERNMENT IN EXPULSION’ TO APPEAR IN AZERBAIJAN

ArmInfo
2010-01-12 13:57:00

ArmInfo. "Modern Musavat" Azerbaijani oppositional party keeps on
preparing for creation of the Community of western Azerbaijanis and
Yerevan government in expulsion.

‘A decision has already been made on preparation of a list of
western Azerbaijanis, covering all the regions, for creation
of a Western Azerbaijani government in expulsion’, the party’s
press-service told the Trend News. According to the statement of
the Azerbaijani oppositionists (there are such in the republic, as
it happens), during the alleged mass deportation of Azerbaijanis
from the territory of Armenia in XX century, as the data of the
Azerbaijani statistics and some mysterious archive documents say,
‘over 1,5 million Azerbaijanis, living in the territory of Armenia,
were expelled from their historic lands’. In conclusion, the opponents
of Aliyevs’ dynastic regime claimed of their decision to activate the
signatures collection campaign for return of the western Azerbaijanis,
expelled from their ‘native lands’, to these lands or return of the
property they lost, as well as for their recognition as refugees by
international organizations. No need to add that all these signatures
will be naturally forwarded to the Council of Europe, OSCE and UN
and everywhere they can be read.

Armenian Football Midfielder Signs Deal With Russia’s FC Ural

ARMENIAN FOOTBALL MIDFIELDER SIGNS DEAL WITH RUSSIA’S FC URAL

Tert.am
15:59 ~U 11.01.10

Artak Alexanyan, playing for the Armenian national youth team, has
signed a deal with Russian FC Ural, said Ural’s manager Vladimir
Fedotov.

Alexanyan, who during the 2009 season, played in Yerevan’s FC Pyunik,
was a student of Spartak sports school in Moscow. The Armenian football
midfielder signed the deal with the Russian First Division club
representing the Russian city of Yekaterinburg (formerly Sverdlovsk).

Le Figaro: Turkish authorities nostalgic for country’s imperial past

Le Figaro: Turkish authorities nostalgic for country’s imperial past
10.01.2010 16:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Le Figaro French daily newspaper published an
article relating about Turkish authorities’ nostalgia for country’s
imperial past, Hurriyet reported.
According to the article, everything related to Ottoman past is
gaining popularity in Turkey.

Muslim bourgeoisie, which strengthened during the years Justice and
Development Party was in power, is pushing aside the elite,
traditional carrier of Kemalist ideals. At the same time, in foreign
policy, dubbed neo-Ottomanism in the article, imperial trends become
increasingly perceptible.

As the article notes, Turkish audience showed great interest to
`Ottoman Republic’ historical-fictional movie, portraying events in
Turkey, still ruled by Ottoman sultan. The past is imagined by average
men in Turkey as Pax Ottomana golden age, with peace, prosperity and
creed tolerance prevailing in the Mediterranean.
Such moods become prevalent in view of Europe’s refusing EU membership
to Turkey, the article concludes.

The Ottoman Empire or Ottoman State, also known by its contemporaries
as the Turkish Empire or Turkey, was an empire that lasted from 1299
to November 1, 1922 (as an imperial monarchy) or July 24, 1923 (de
jure, as a state). It was succeeded by the Republic of Turkey which
was officially proclaimed on October 29, 1923.

At the height of its power (16th-17th century), it spanned three
continents, controlling much of Southeastern Europe, Western Asia and
North Africa. The Ottoman Empire contained 29 provinces and numerous
vassal states, some of which were later absorbed into the empire,
while others gained various types of autonomy during the course of
centuries. The empire also temporarily gained authority over distant
overseas lands through declarations of allegiance to the Ottoman
Sultan and Caliph, such as the declaration by the Sultan of Aceh in
1565; or through the temporary acquisitions of islands in the Atlantic
Ocean, such as Lanzarote (1585).

The empire was at the centre of interactions between the Eastern and
Western worlds for six centuries. With Constantinople as its capital
city, and vast control of lands around the eastern Mediterranean
during the reign of Suleyman the Magnificent (ruled 1520 to 1566), the
Ottoman Empire was, in many respects, an Islamic successor to the
Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.