NKR President Pays Homage To The Memory Of The Armenian Genocide Vic

NKR PRESIDENT PAYS HOMAGE TO THE MEMORY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE VICTIMS

armradio.am
24.04.2009 17:40

On 24 April, on the day of the Great Armenian Genocide President
of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Bako Sahakyan accompanied by top
officials of the republic visited Stepanakert memorial complex and paid
homage to the memory of innocent martyrs of this grave crime, Central
Information Department of the Office of the NKR President reported.

On the same day the President sent an address in connection with the
Genocide victim day. The address reads:

"Respected compatriots,

Today we commemorate the 94th anniversary of the Great Armenian
Genocide planned and brutally executed at the beginning of the 20th
century by the authorities of Ottoman Turkey and pay homage to the
memory of all innocent victims of this sinister policy.

In the face of humanity the entire nation was slaughtered, thousands
of settlements were destroyed and deserted, millions of Armenians
lost their homeland and found refuge in all quarters of the world. The
year of 1915 was one of the most tragic periods in our centuries-old
history.

However, the Armenian people have found strength to rebirth, restore
independent statehood and independently determine its future. The
developing Republic of Armenia, free and independent Artsakh, strong
Armenian Diaspora are the best evidence of that.

Every single Armenian must always remember our martyrs.

And every developed and democratic state should recognize and condemn
the genocide. This is one of the most efficient means to be committed
to universal values and prevent similar crimes. The denial of genocide
is the continuation of genocidal policy.

I am confident that the entire progressive mankind will recognize
the fact of this grave crime against the Armenian people sooner or
later and historical justice will be finally restored."

Massachusetts House Of Representatives 82 Members Call Upon U.S. Con

MASSACHUSETTS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 82 MEMBERS CALL UPON U.S. CONGRESS TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan
Apr 24, 2009

BOSTON, APRIL 24, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Over 82 Members of
the Massachusetts House of Representatives, including the Speaker
of the House Robert A. DeLeo filed a House Resolution urging the
U.S. Congress to renew their efforts in recognizing the Armenian
Genocide of 1915. State Representative Peter J. Koutoujian, a
descendent of the Armenian Genocide, led his fellow colleagues in a
final push, just one day before April 24th, the day Armenians around
the world recognize and commemorate this tragic event, reported the
Armenian National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts.

The Resolution urges the United States Congress to approve House
Resolution 252 and recognize the Armenian Genocide. Currently 9 of
the 10 Congressional members in the Massachusetts Delegation are
cosponsors.

ANCA reminds that earlier this week, Congressman McGovern (D-3),
who represents Worcester, MA and neighboring cities, urged President
Obama to recognize the Armenian Genocide. In his remarks he commented
"When is the right time? When the last survivor, the last witness,
is no longer with us?"

Action Of Protest With Alarm-Clocks And Placards "Time Of Changes Ha

ACTION OF PROTEST WITH ALARM-CLOCKS AND PLACARDS "TIME OF CHANGES HAS COME" HELD IN FRONT OF U.S. EMBASSY IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Apr 24, 2009

YEREVAN, APRIL 24, NOYAN TAPAN. An action of protest was organized on
April 23 in front of the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan on the initiative of
the first Armenian social website, hayland.am in memory of the victims
of the 1915 Armenian Genocide and as a mention to the United States, in
the person of its newly elected President Barack Obama, to remain loyal
to his promise, to recognize the fact of Armenian Genocide. A number
of NGOs and youth organizations had joined hayland.am’s initiative.

Demonstrants stood in silence in front of the Embassy with the placards
"The time of changes has come," "Join the truth, recognize the
Genocide," "Remember your promise, recognize the Genocide," then the
"time of changes" was announced with 100 alarm-clocks’ bells. At the
end of the action the demonstrants let off balloons with the writing
"When will the time of changes come?"

Turkey Is Missing Yet Another Opportunity With Armenia

TURKEY IS MISSING YET ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY WITH ARMENIA
Vartan Oskanian

Daily Star
April 23 2009
Lebanon

The onetime Israeli foreign minister, Abba Eban, used to say of
the Palestinians that they never missed an opportunity to miss an
opportunity. Turkey, sadly, seems to be falling into that same habit
in its relations with Armenia. And, as with Palestine, failure to
act only breeds wider regional instability. In the two weeks before
US President Barack Obama’s recent visit to Turkey, there was almost
universal optimism that Turkey would open its border with Armenia. But
Obama came and went, and the border remained close.

Turkish-Armenian relations remain more about gestures than
substance. Indeed, Turkish President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s dismissive recent statements hint that Turkey
may even be backtracking on its plans to establish more normal
bilateral ties.

Those ties have been strained since 1993, when Turkey closed its border
with Armenia in solidarity with Azerbaijan in the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. When Erdogan and Gul came to power
in 2003, nothing changed. The border stayed closed.

In my first meeting with Gul, who was Turkey’s foreign minister
in 2003, he acknowledged that Turkey had not benefited from its
policy of linking Armenia-Turkey relations to a resolution of the
Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict. Turkey, he said, wanted to establish
normal bilateral relations with all neighbors. That was music to my
ears, and I told him so.

But Azerbaijani pressure prevailed, and Turkish policy did not
change. Of course, at that time, Turkey’s own interests were not
what they are today. Accession talks with the European Union had not
begun; Turkey wanted an oil pipeline from Azerbaijan; the resolution
condemning the Armenian genocide had not gathered steam around the
world; Turkey’s economy was not in crisis; and Georgia-Russia tensions
were not in a free-fall.

Today, the world is so different that even Russia and the United States
agree about opening the Turkish-Armenian border. Indeed, in the face
of Russia-Georgia strains, Turkey can benefit from a new role in the
Caucasus. Its proposed "Platform for Cooperation and Security in the
Caucasus" is a first step. And public opinion in Turkey is more ready
than ever for a rapprochement with Armenia.

Such a move would make Europe happy, too. Although Erdogan likes to
call Turkey a natural bridge between East and West, Europe is waiting
for Turkey to assume the function that geography has bestowed upon
it. As for Azerbaijan, now that a pipeline from Baku to the Turkish
port of Ceyhan is operational, Azerbaijan needs Turkey more than
Turkey needs Azerbaijan.

And, this month, Turkey has a deadline. Obama committed himself during
his presidential election campaign to calling the violence against
the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire by its name – genocide. The
anniversary of those events is April 24.

One would think that these developments provide Turkey with a great
opportunity to act in its own best interests and open its border with
Armenia. But Turkey has already missed two such opportunities. The
collapse of the Soviet Union was the right time to establish
diplomatic relations with Armenia. Turkey did not, instead offering
mere recognition of Armenia’s independence. No functioning relationship
could come from that.

Then, in 2004, with the beginning of EU accession talks, Turkey had
ample cause to explain to Azerbaijan why improved relations with
Armenia were inevitable. It did not do so, allowing the opportunity
slip away.

History is now offering Turkey a third chance to play a greater
regional role. By actually opening borders, or at least announcing a
real date and actual modalities, Turkey would open doors to a shared
future. But Gul and Erdogan are signaling that they cannot. Before
Obama made it back to Washington, they forcefully and repeatedly
announced – presumably to appease Azerbaijan – that they would not act
to open the border until the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was resolved.

But Turkey and Azerbaijan are wrong. Keeping the border closed will not
solve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. On the contrary, an open border
would facilitate resolution of the conflict – not because it would be a
tradeoff for something else, or come with strings attached, but because
an open border demonstrates evenhandedness towards all neighbors.

An open border between Armenia and Turkey would mean that Azerbaijan
could not shirk negotiations. My grandmother from Marash would have
said that Azerbaijan today believes that, with Turkey, it "has an
uncle in the jury," and thus that it can persist in its petulance
and intransigence.

An environment of compromise requires a regional environment devoid
of threats and blackmail. Without Turkey tipping the scale for the
benefit of one side in this conflict, both sides must become more
accommodating, especially on security issues. The Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict is about security. Armenia, sandwiched between two
hostile states, is unlikely and unable to agree to security
compromises. Closing a border is an act of hostility. Opening that
border would mean creating a normal regional environment.

History is offering Turkey the opportunity to take regional relations
to a new level. Symbols and gestures are insufficient. And waiting
for a Nagorno-Karabakh solution is no solution at all. It is merely
one more missed opportunity.

Vartan Oskanian, president of the board of the Yerevan-based Civilitas
Foundation, was Armenia’s foreign minister from 1998 to 2008. THE
DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with Project
Syndicate (c) ().

www.project-syndicate.org

Road-Map Identified

ROAD-MAP IDENTIFIED

A1+
01:42 pm | April 23, 2009 | Official

Turkey and Armenia, together with Switzerland as mediator, have
been working intensively with a view to normalizing their bilateral
relations and developing them in a spirit of good-neighborliness, and
mutual respect, and thus to promoting peace, security and stability
in the whole region.

The two parties have achieved tangible progress and mutual
understanding in this process and they have agreed on a comprehensive
framework for the normalization of their bilateral relations in a
mutually satisfactory manner. In this context, a road-map has been
identified.

This agreed basis provides a positive prospect for the on-going
process.

Christian Armenia" To Be Screened In Yew York

CHRISTIAN ARMENIA" TO BE SCREENED IN YEW YORK

A1+
02:11 pm | April 22, 2009 | Culture

Under the patronage of New York’s Saint Vartan Cathedral and Grigor
Zohrap Center, a New York hall hosted the presentation of the film
"Christian Armenia" by Arsen Aslanyan, an operator-director of Armenian
Public TV-H1.

The film is dedicated to the 1700 anniversary of the adoption of
Christianity in Armenia.

The film shooting began in 2002. It was first screened in Yerevan in
2007. The film has toured in many cities of Switzerland, Netherlands,
Georgia, USA, Russia, etc.

It was screened at three international festivals and won an award.

Issue Of Armenia Not To Be Discussed At PACE Spring Session

ISSUE OF ARMENIA NOT TO BE DISCUSSED AT PACE SPRING SESSION

ArmInfo
2009-04-22 14:36:00

Issue of Armenia will not be discussed at PACe spring session, head
of the Armenian delegation to PACE David Harutyunyan told ArmInfo.

It is scheduled that the problem of fulfillment of the earlier
adopted resolutions by Armenia will be discussed at the sitting of
the Monitoring Commission.

To note, sitting of the PACE Monitoring Commission took place in
Valencia on 30 March, where the changed articles 225 and 300 of
Armenian Criminal Code as well as the process on the ‘case of seven’
were discussed. PACE Monitoring commission positively assessed
alterations to the above mentioned articles.

To recall, PACE spring session will be held in Strasbourg on 27-30
April.

6.1 Per Cent Of Economic Downturn Was Observed In Over The First Qua

6.1 PER CENT OF ECONOMIC DOWNTURN WAS OBSERVED IN OVER THE FIRST QUARTER IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
April 22, 2009
Yerevan

Within the first quarter of this year the economic growth of Armenia
reached 93.9 per cent, which means 6.1 per cent of downturn of
economy. According to the statistical data of the National Statistical
Service, decline was observed in all basic spheres of economy, except
retail trade. The retail trade turnover reached 192.9 billion AMD
ensuring 3.9 per cent growth over the year.

The sharpest drop was observed in the construction business,
which reduced by 21.9 per cent shrinking to 40.1 billion
AMD. Industrial production decreased by 9.5 per cent to 133.1 billion
AMD. Particularly, electricity production reduced by 16.2 per cent
declining to 1.4 billion AMD. The agriculture sphere dropped by 5.1
per cent declining to 39.6 billion AMD, and services (except retail
trade) declined by 0.7 per cent to 157.5 billion AMD.

Annual price growth reached 2 per cent, meanwhile price growth compared
to December is 0.7 per cent.

Foreign trade turnover reduced by 27.7 per cent to 782 million USD.

Particularly, exports decreased by 47.3 per cent and totaled 123.4
million USD, while the decrease of imports was only 22.2 per cent and
imports reduced to 658.5 million USD. This means that over the three
month of this year the imports surpassed exports more than 5.3 times.

The number of officially registered unemployed totaled 78.7 thousand
at the end of March, which indicates a 5.3 per cent increase in the
annual unemployment level.

The average nominal salary (without taking into account the price
growth factor) reached 97 899 AMD, growing by 16.4 per cent per
annum. A consumer price index grew 0.7 per cent in the first quarter,
compared with the previous year.

Wind Power Plants Generated 2 Mln KWh Of Electric Energy Upon Result

WIND POWER PLANTS GENERATED 2 MLN KWH OF ELECTRIC ENERGY UPON RESULTS OF FIRST THREE MONTHS, 2009

ArmInfo
2009-04-21 15:30:00

ArmInfo. Upon the results of the first three months, 2009, the wind
power plants of Armenia generated 2 mln kWh of electric energy,
Director General of "High-Voltage Electric Networks" CJSC Sahak
Abrahamyan told ArmInfo.

He said this is a high result as compared to the similar period, 2008,
when 1,2 mln kWh of electric energy were generated. ‘The nature itself
created the necessary conditions for normal functioning of the power
plant>, the director general said. At present, no new projects in the
wind power industry are yet available, S. Abrahamyan said. To note,
the wind power plant, consisting of 4 units, is kept in the account
of ‘High- Voltage Electric Networks’. Its design capacity makes up
2,6 MW. Construction of the wind power plant was completed in 2005
by the granted funds of Iran to the sum of $3,5 mln.

What Are The Concrete Signs?

WHAT ARE THE CONCRETE SIGNS?

A1+
01:55 pm | April 17, 2009

Official

The Foreign Affairs Ministers of CSTO-member countries praised
Armenia’s effective work as s CSTO presiding country.

Serzh Sargsyan met today with Foreign Affairs Ministers of CSTO-member
countries and CSTO Secretary General Nikolay Bordyuzha who are in
Yerevan to participate in the session of the Foreign Affairs Ministers
of CSTO-member countries.

Serzh Sargsyan expressed confidence that the results of the Yerevan
session will contribute to the strengthening of the organization
and will increase the level of effectiveness of cooperation between
member countries.

Sargsyan also said that many of the recent programs have turned the
CSTO activities more dynamic.

Presenting the agenda, the CSTO Secretary General Nikolay Bordyuzha
remarked that the discussions took place in an environment of mutual
understanding and the issues mainly concerned modern issues facing
international security, synthesis of foreign policies of CSTO-member
countries, as well as key courses for cooperation between the CSTO,
regional and international organizations. The package of documents
will be presented for confirmation of presidents of CSTO-member
countries during the summit be held in June.

Serzh Sargsyan expressed with satisfaction that there are certain
signs of work aimed at coordinating the foreign policies within the
range of CSTO.