Spitak Is Still A Disaster Zone

SPITAK IS STILL A DISASTER ZONE

A1+
[07:34 pm] 06 December, 2006

18 years after the disastrous earthquake, the city of Spitak is still
considered a disaster zone. "The loss was too grave. Spitak which
was one of the most important industrial cities of the Soviet Union
now has the problem of unemployment", said mayor of the city Vanik
Asatryan in "Urbat" club today.

65% pf the 18 thousand residents of the city are unemployed. The major
problem in the city is that of housing: there are still 368 families
living in temporary houses. According to the mayor, till the end of
the year 28 families will be given new houses.

According to Mr. Asatryan, the information about a number of families
leaving their houses for good does not correspond to reality. "Several
families leave for abroad in order to work there". After the earthquake
the country compensated the loss of private house owners with bankbooks
which became merely a piece of paper after the inflation. Thus the
statement that the country has compensated for the loss of some of
the families is relative.

There are also a number of newly created families in Spitak that live
in temporary houses. "This is not the problem of the government. We
speak about those families who lost their houses in the earthquake",
the Spitak mayor said. He has realized that they cannot depend solely
on the government while seeking solutions to their problems. "We
created the fund "Revived Spitak" and started to build 8 houses with
the help of businessmen from abroad. We also carried out reconstruction
of streets. On the whole 380 thousand USD has been invested".

Parliament Discusses Issue Of Ratification Of Agreement On Surrender

PARLIAMENT DISCUSSES ISSUE OF RATIFICATION OF AGREEMENT ON SURRENDERING BETWEEN ARMENIA AND IRAN

Noyan Tapan
Dec 06 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 6, NOYAN TAPAN. On December 6, RA National Assembly
discussed the issue of ratification of a number of international
agreements. The voting was postponed due to lack of quorum. The
parliament, in particular, discussed the Agreement on Surrendering
between RA and IRI signed on 2006 July 5 in Tehran. According to this
agreement, each of the sides is obliged on the basis of the inquiry
of another side to surrender a person in its territory who committed
a crime or for executing the sentence is legally prosecuted by the
competent bodies of the other side.

New Ambassador Of Eurpean Committee To Armenia

NEW AMBASSADOR OF EUROPEAN COMMITTEE TO ARMENIA

A1+
[08:10 pm] 04 December, 2006

Head of the European Committee delegation to Armenia, Ambassador
Per Eklund handed his credentials to RA deputy Foreign Minister
Armen Bayburdyan.

Mr. Bayburdyan greeted the newly appointed Ambassador and wished
his good luck in carrying out his high mission. Ambassador Eklund
voiced his readiness to contribute to the relations between Armenia
and the EU.

During the meeting the sides referred to the Individual Partnership
Action Plan ratified on November 14 for Armenia. They discussed issues
about its realization.

Isolated Armenia Leads The Way In Using Cleaner Car Fuel

ISOLATED ARMENIA LEADS THE WAY IN USING CLEANER CAR FUEL
by Mariam Harutunian

Agence France Presse — English
December 3, 2006 Sunday 3:47 AM GMT

Cut off from world energy markets, the mountainous state of Armenia
is making a virtue of adversity and may be leading the world in using
cleaner car fuel, officials say.

While the European Union is looking at 2020 before 10 percent of
vehicles there will use alternative fuel, in Armenia up to 30 percent
of cars already run on clean compressed gas, officials here say.

This statistic includes about 45,000 private cars and 90 percent of
public transport.

Such high levels of clean fuel use are due "to the fact that Armenia,
which has no energy resources of its own, is trying to use the most
affordable alternative fuel," said Pavel Siradegian, a transport
ministry official.

In this the ex-Soviet republic appears be leading a trend. Around
the world some five million vehicles are run on compressed natural
gas and liquefied natural gas, according to the United States energy
department’s Internet site.

Natural gas vehicles are just as safe as conventional petrol
and diesel-fuelled ones and produce lower harmful emissions, the
department says.

In Armenia, the switch has its origins in the 1991 collapse of the
Soviet Union.

Before then, Armenia got petrol from its oil-rich neighbour
Azerbaijan, but after the two countries plunged into a war over the
Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorny Karabakh, Armenia cut ties with
both Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Armenia buys its gas from Russia for 110 dollars (77 euros) per 1,000
cubic metres, with 84 percent of the population having access to gas
at home.

The gas used for cars is three or four times cheaper than petrol and
half the price of diesel fuel "and so people convert to gas of their
own accord," Siradegian said.

The gas containers are usually imported from Russia or Italy and are
installed in the car’s trunk at licensed centres — an operation that
costs the equivalent of 700 to 1,000 dollars (530-760 euros).

"Even with such high installation prices it’s cheaper to use gas than
petrol. A 20-litre-canister of petrol would cost some 17 dollars,
while topping up with gas costs only four dollars," said the head
of Yerevan’s Ultra taxi service, Aram Hachian, who has converted all
his cars.

"If we used petrol, many people here wouldn’t be able to afford a
taxi," he said.

Armenia currently has 140 filling stations equipped with gas
compressing equipment.

"Drivers have no fear of being left without fuel," Siradegian said.

But some admit the choice has been forced on them.

"If I were rich, I’d fill my car with petrol because gas is bad
for your engine and it is not very nice carrying an 80-kilogramme
container in your trunk," said one Yerevan resident, 37-year-old Artem.

At the country’s environment ministry, officials hail the benefits
of increased gas use after the damage done to the environment in
the 1990s.

"Switching to gas has been a real salvation for… Armenia, whose
forests suffered very much during the energy crisis," said environment
official Martin Tsarukian.

"Gas-using cars emit half the amount of nitric oxide than petrol-driven
cars," he said. "Conversion to gas was an economic necessity, but
there have been ecological benefits as a result."

The ministry is aware that the popularity of compressed gas could be
time-limited if the country pulls itself out of economic hardship —
the average salary is currently 100 dollars a month.

But it is now looking at ways of ensuring drivers stick to compressed
gas — for example through tax benefits.

The Colour Of Blood Is Snow

THE COLOUR OF BLOOD IS SNOW
Prasenjit Chowdhury Kolkata

HardNews Magazine, India
Dec 4 2006

The trial of Orhan Pamuk, Nobel Laureate for Literature this year,
was also a trial of his native Turkey, a country unwilling to face
its hoary past

Orhan Pamuk’s trial was, to the larger world, also a trial of the
progressiveness of the entire nation of Turkey. Did Pamuk become a
Nobel Laureate at the expense of exposing his own country’s culture
of silence and oppression, genocidal record and state assault on
constitutional freedom to the whole world?

The most famous author from Turkey and Literature Nobel Laureate for
2006 spoke in February 2005 to the Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger about
the Turkish genocide of Armenians. He has met with unmitigated hatred
ever since. His books were burned at a nationalist demonstration in
Bilecik; a district administrator ordered them to be removed from
libraries; and his photo was ripped apart at a rally in Isparta
province. Hurriyet, Turkey’s largest newspaper, called Pamuk an
"abject creature". He was initially forced to flee Turkey because of
the hate campaign being waged against him. But, then, there was an
international outcry, with Amnesty International, PEN (the worldwide
association of writers) and a collection of renowned authors (including
Gabriel García Marquez, John Updike, Gunter Grass, Salman Rushdie and
Umberto Eco) denouncing Turkey’s actions to curtail Pamuk’s right to
free speech. Pamuk was able to return to his country, possibly because
of this international outcry, as Turkey was afraid muzzling Pamuk would
undermine its chances for becoming a member of the European Union (EU).

Somehow, the trial of Pamuk has become more symbolic than the literary
oeuvre of a man who brought to light the traditionalist core of a
society covered over with a thin layer of ill-seated modernity.

Many commentators have stressed on the politics of the Nobel-Pamuk
being among the first writers to be put on trial for mentioning
the Armenian massacres of 1915, etc. Although Pamuk’s literary
excellence is indubitable, his trial got more attention than what he
does best-writing.

Pamuk’s writings focus on the religiosity and backwardness of
Turkey and its Ottoman roots, mixed with a harking back to lost
Islamic glory. They speak, too, of Ataturk’s legacy-without his elan
and vision-that tries to disown its past of the Kurd and Armenian
massacres, but is keen to be seen as a forward-looking nation-state
built on the remnants of a decadent empire. One gets most of this in
his eight novels, the most notable being My Name Is Red, The Black
Book, The New Life, The White Castle and Istanbul.

In his explosive comments published early last year, Pamuk was
quoted as saying, "Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians
were killed in these lands and nobody but me dares to talk about
it." This was a not-so-oblique reference to the conflict between the
Ottoman Armenians and the Empire’s armed forces during World War I,
as well as the hostilities ongoing since the mid-1980s between the
Turkish Republic and Kurdish separatists. For his remarks on the
alleged genocide of Kurds and Armenians in Anatolia between 1915 and
1917, he was charged by Turkish state prosecutors with "insulting
Turkishness"-a new offence, which carries a prison sentence of up
to three years as penalty. Pamuk’s trial opened on 16th December,
2005, and was rescheduled for 7th February, 2006-it posed a serious
question about the secular democratic credentials of Turkey pending
its entry into the European Union (EU). In <Snow> and <Istanbul>, too,
Pamuk punched a hole into the fragile nationalist pride by disclosing
Turkey’s hoary past. The lure of gaining access to the EU seemed to
act for him, as the Turkish government did not want to undermine its
human rights record; charges of insulting Turkishness against Pamuk
were dropped over a technicality earlier this year.

Pamuk has touched the raw nerves of the secular right-wing of Turkey.

Not that Turkey disputes the deaths of ethnic Armenians in the
conflicts that saw the Ottoman Empire fall. But it takes care to
stress that the killings were never part of a genocidal campaign,
arguing that many ethnic Turks also lost their lives during that
period. It also repudiates claims that its efforts to contain Kurdish
separatist uprisings can be classed as genocide. No two issues are
more loaded-political or divisive-and using any of them as fuel in
the anti-EU campaign is deemed risible in Turkey.

Apart from its past, Turkey, in more ways than one, is the brand
ambassador of the success of a Western-style secular Muslim state and
is, as such, considered a foil to radical Islam. Pamuk, in his novels,
writes about the crisis of identity that originates from living in a
Westernised fashion in a society that is essentially non-Western in
its ethos. He admits that, following the occidental, secular reforms
introduced by Kemal Ataturk, Turkish culture was divided into two:
the modern culture influenced by Europe and the Ottoman Islamic
heritage. From the 16th to the 19th centuries, all the cultural and
material wealth of the Middle East flew towards Istanbul. Turkey has
a highly-educated secular elite class. The founders of the modern
Republic of Turkey, Pamuk says, "naively" thought that a shortcut to
modernity-to Europe-would be to forget about the past; they crudely
suppressed Ottoman Islamic cultural history. "I write modern, some say
post-modern, avant-garde-inspired novels, which is a Western form, but
they carry that suppressed Ottoman culture, Islamic culture," he says.

Do present-day Turks see themselves as the grieving heirs of what
was once a world empire? In his novel, My Name Is Red, Pamuk paints
a picture of Istanbul the way it was at the height of Ottoman power.

The Ottoman period is, for most Europeans and Americans-and perhaps
for many Turks as well-a poorly-understood time. The Ottoman Turks
were the last of the great Eastern invaders-a group including the Huns,
the Arabs and the Mongols that swept into Europe. The images that have
trickled down are of moustachioed janissaries, pillaging in the name
of Islam, contrasted with the perceived opulent licentiousness of the
harem-images that have become synonymous with Islam in much-popular
thought. A murder mystery and love story, My Name Is Red is set among
the artistic intrigues of the Islamic miniaturists of the Ottoman court
in 16th-century Istanbul. It is a rich and complex work, narrated by
a range of voices that explores the tension between East and West,
Islam and Christianity.

Pamuk, therefore, serves as the much-needed bridge between the West
and the East, between an ancient Islamic culture and the contemporary
dream of an economically prosperous nation. His memoir, Istanbul,
for instance, chronicles the pervasive sadness and anger that attended
the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the wholesale cultural imitation of
the West. Snow is a tryst between tradition and modernity, the East
with the West, and the cultural encounters between Europe and the
turbulent Ottoman Empire, which underlined the European aspiration of
a Muslim nation. At some point in history, Istanbul was the centre
of both Islam and Christianity, and Pamuk’s work is often about the
melting of the two.

Pamuk is looked upon as the West’s mouthpiece in the Islamic world,
which believes that it is this dubious distinction that earned him
the Nobel. In 1989, when the fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeini was
haunting Rushdie, Pamuk had the guts to rise up in Rushdie’s defence.

To do so, from a Muslim country, called for courage. His refusal to
accept the Turkish government’s award of ‘state artist’, in protest
against its repressive role in the treatment of his fellow writers and
the Kurdish freedom fighters in December 1998, is, again, a comment
on his political conviction.

A purveyor of the theme of clashes between civilisations and the role
of Islam, Pamuk’s works give us an understanding of the origins of
these clashes and the rise of political Islam.

2/684

–Boundary_(ID_cZFlnelbQRYvsn1oWYeeNQ)–

http://www.hardnewsmedia.com/portal/2006/1

Turkish President Vetoes EU-Inspired Law On Non-Muslim Properties

TURKISH PRESIDENT VETOES EU-INSPIRED LAW ON NON-MUSLIM PROPERTIES

Agence France Presse — English
November 29, 2006 Wednesday 3:49 PM GMT

Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer on Wednesday sent back
to parliament for reconsideration a bill aimed at improving the
property rights of Turkey’s tiny Christian and Jewish communities,
a key European Union demand.

Sezer’s veto coincided with a European Commission recommendation to
suspend membership talks with Turkey in several areas as a result of
a trade row over Cyprus.

Christian minority rights are expected to figure high on the agenda
of talks between Pope Benedict XVI, currently on a visit to Turkey,
and community representatives he will meet in Istanbul late Wednesday
and Thursday.

Sezer objected to nine provisions in the overhauled Foundations Law,
which, he said, give foundations broad economic rights that go beyond
the objective of charity work.

"It is not possible to define foundations… as economic actors
or models of political and social organization or non-governmental
organizations," he said.

The main aim of the bill passed by parliament in early November was
to pave the way for mainly Greek, Armenian and Jewish foundations to
recover properties seized by the state since 1974 under a controversial
court ruling.

Community representatives welcomed the bill, but said it fell short
of fully meeting their expectations.

The legislation also aimed to loosen tight state control over all
foundations in the country and broadening their rights on property
and administration.

PM Leaves For Moscow To Close Year Of Armenia In Russia

PM LEAVES FOR MOSCOW TO CLOSE YEAR OF ARMENIA IN RUSSIA
By Nana Petrosian

AZG Armenian Daily
30/11/2006

Armenian delegation headed by PM Andranik Margarian is leaving
for Moscow today to close the Year of Armenia in Russia. They will
meet Russian PM Mikhail Fradkov then they will visit the All-Russia
Exhibition Center.

On Dec. 2, the Armenian delegation will participate in the opening of
"Armenian History" exhibition in Hermitage in St. Petersburg. The
official closing ceremony of the Year of Armenia will follow at
Ekaterina’s Palace.

Russian Control Of Iran-Armenia Pipeline ‘Not A Certainty’

RUSSIAN CONTROL OF IRAN-ARMENIA PIPELINE ‘NOT A CERTAINTY’
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Nov 30 2006

The widely anticipated handover to a Russian company of a pipeline
that will supply Armenia with Iranian natural gas is not a forgone
conclusion, Prime Minister Andranik Markarian claimed in a Russian
newspaper interview published on Friday. He also reiterated Yerevan’s
hopes that Russia will defuse its festering confrontation with Georgia.

"The construction of the pipeline is not yet complete, and it is still
too early to speak of its transfer or non-transfer to any operator,
including Gazprom," Markarian told the Moscow daily "Kommersant,"
referring to the Russian state gas monopoly. He said the pipeline’s
first Armenian section will come on stream "soon."

Gazprom makes no secret of its desire to control the pipeline which is
supposed to reduce Armenia’s strong dependence on Russia for energy
resources. Last April the company confirmed but then refuted reports
that it will get hold of the first 40-kilometer stretch of the facility
as part of an agreement that allowed Armenia to temporarily avoid a
hike in the price of Russian gas.

Armenian officials insist that the Russian giant will only get an
incomplete thermal power plant in Hrazdan and a controlling stake in
Armenia’s national gas distributor, ArmRosGazprom (ARG), as a result of
the deal. According to Energy Minister Armen Movsisian, the government
will choose the owner of the under-construction pipeline next spring.

Still, Markarian himself strongly hinted on October 31 that the
pipeline will be incorporated into ARG, 58 percent of which is now
owned by Gazprom. "It would be illogical to have two gas distribution
networks in Armenia," he said.

The pipeline from Iran is taking on a greater significance in the
light of the mounting Georgian-Russian tensions that increasingly
threaten continued Russian gas supplies to Georgia. Armenia, which
imports Russian gas through Georgian territory, might also be affected
as a result.

"We are interested in a quick resolution of the problematic aspects
of Russian-Georgian relations because cooperation between Russia and
Georgia is one of the most important components of stability in our
region," Markarian told "Kommersant."

The Armenian authorities signaled earlier their frustration with the
continuing Russian transport blockade of Georgia which is hurting
Armenian companies trading with Russia.

Opposition Should Run Under Majority System

OPPOSITION SHOULD RUN UNDER MAJORITY SYSTEM

Lragir, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

Should the opposition run for parliament under the majority system?

The Lragir conducted a poll among its readers to find out their
opinion on a question which has become one of the focal topics of the
internal political developments. During the poll that lasted for two
weeks, 93.8 percent of our readers think the opposition should name
candidates from constituencies. 6.2 percent of the participants of
the poll answered no.

Arkady Ghukasyan and Matthew Bryza met in the US

Public Radio, Armenia
Nov 25 2006

Arkady Ghukasyan and Matthew Bryza met in the US
25.11.2006 16:00

During yesterday’s meeting in the US NKR President Arkady Ghukasyan
and the American Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Matthew Bryza
exchanged views on the current stage and perspectives of settlement
of the Karabakh conflict.
During the conversation held in a constructive atmosphere the
interlocutors emphasized the necessity of resolving all the questions
at the bargaining table.
The same day in Los Angeles NKR President participated in the dinner
organized by benefactor Albert Boyajian.
Acting Press Secretary of the NKR President informs from the US that
speaking at the dinner, Arkady Ghukasyan expressed gratitude to the
organizers and participants of the Telethon.
The President noted that the Telethon succeeded due to the joint
efforts of all the Armenians.
NKR President was accompanied by Armenian Consul General in Los
Angeles Armen Liloyan and NKR Permanent Representative in the US
Vardan Barseghyan.