West Is Disappointed With Armenian Opposition

WEST IS DISAPPOINTED WITH ARMENIAN OPPOSITION

Lragir, Armenia
Aug 3 2007

Davit Shahnazaryan, member of the All Armenian Movement, shared his
opinion in a news conference on August 3 at the National Press Club why
the Western powers approved the parliamentary election of 2007 which
did not comply with the democratic standards at all and broke the law.

Davit Shahnazaryan says by condemning the results of the previous
elections the West gave the opposition a chance to act. He reminded,
for instance, the statement by Western observers that the Armenian
society rather than the West will detect the legitimacy of the
election.

"In fact, the international community realized that in the nearest
future the opposition cannot be an alternative to the Armenian
government. They understood it. The international community
is pragmatic. Let us suppose they continued to give negative
evaluations. It is ingenuous to think they are not aware what is
underway in Armenia. What if they gave a real evaluation? They would
push the Armenian government towards Russia and would create another
Lukashenko in Armenia. They do not need this. They showed, the West,
not the doors but at least the windows are open for Armenia because
there is no alternative. The opposition should acknowledge that it
is the result of its activity or inactivity," Davit Shahnazaryan says.

Raffi Hovannisian and Ambassador Smessow at the French Embassy

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

August 3, 2007

Raffi Hovannisian and Ambassador Smessow at the French Embassy

Yerevan–Heritage Party chairman Raffi K. Hovannisian met today with
French Ambassador Serge Smessow. They exchanged viewpoints on
Armenia’s international affairs and domestic challenges, Mountainous
Karabagh’s quest for freedom, and French-Armenian relations.

Founded in 2002, Heritage has regional divisions throughout the land.
Its central office is located at 31 Moscovian Street, Yerevan 0002,
Armenia, with telephone contact at (374-10) 536.913, fax at (374-10)
532.697, email at [email protected] or [email protected], and website
at

www.heritage.am
www.heritage.am

ANKARA: Appeals Court Backs Pamuk Case Dismissal

APPEALS COURT BACKS PAMUK CASE DISMISSAL

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Aug 3 2007

The Supreme Court of Appeals on Thursday upheld an Ýstanbul court’s
earlier decision to dismiss the case of Nobel Prize-winning Turkish
author Orhan Pamuk, who was on trial on charges of "denigrating
Turkishness."

The Second Court of First Instance in Ýstanbul’s Þiþli district had
earlier dismissed the charges on the grounds that the necessary
permission from the Justice Ministry to launch a probe into the
author had not been issued, a requirement under the former penal code,
which was being applied to Pamuk’s case.

The charges relate to a magazine interview in which Pamuk claimed that
30,000 Kurds and 1 million Ottoman Armenians were killed in Turkey.

The high-profile prosecution had caused a stir globally, raising
serious concerns about EU-hopeful Turkey’s commitment to the basic
democratic principle of free speech. A delegation of European
parliamentarians had traveled to Istanbul to observe the trial
alongside international human rights campaigners.

–Boundary_(ID_TWU/MQNWlPYljXg5UO0ez g)–

How Ethno-Politics Poisons Democracy

HOW ETHNO-POLITICS POISONS DEMOCRACY
Naresh Raghubeer, National Post

National Post (Canada)
National Edition
July 31, 2007 Tuesday

Last week, Ontario Auditor-General Jim McCarter reported that the
province’s Immigration and Citizenship Ministry has been dispensing
millions of dollars in grants to ethnic groups under a process that is
"not open, transparent or accountable." In many cases, groups got money
simply because their members were chummy with ministry insiders. "In
essence, the decisions behind ‘who got what’ were often based on
conversations, not applications," Mr. McCarter concluded.

But Mr. McCarter’s report does not merely highlight a failure of
process in an otherwise sound government disbursement program. What
the Auditor-General documents is nothing less than a taxpayer-funded
political black market based on "ethnic" and religious vote-buying.

Dalton McGuinty’s government marked the 2006 and 2007 fiscal year-end
by rushing $32.5-million dollars out the treasury’s door.

Destination: cultural and religious groups likely to vote Liberal in
the coming October elections.

2007 grant recipients included: – Islamic Institute of Toronto
($500,000) – St. George Arab Cultural Centre ($300,000) – Bengali
Community Centre ($250,000) – Armenian Community Centre ($500,000)
– Six Sikh temples ($750,000) – Chinese Professional Association
($250,000 ) – Museum of Hindu Civilization ($200,000) – Sri Sathya Sai
Baba Centre of Toronto, ($250,000) – United Jewish Appeal ($15 million)

Most astonishingly, the McGuinty government also threw a million dollar
grant at the Ontario Cricket Association — a sum that was $850,000
more than the Association itself had requested. The Iranian-Canadian
Community Centre’s $200,000 grant was disbursed despite there being
"no written request for funding." In some cases, the spectre of
a political quid pro quo was overt: The $250,000 that went to the
Chinese Professional Association of Canada (CPAC) was delivered just
a few months after 10 CPAC board members attended a fundraiser for
the Minister of Immigration and Citizenship, Mike Colle (who has
since resigned). A CPAC board member also worked in the Minister’s
office. Small world.

Awestruck Sikhs beheld $250,000 landing in a temple that was embroiled
in a court battle over the alleged mismanagement of funds.

Meanwhile, two grants of $100,000 each went to Sikh gurdwaras in
Malton and Rexdale, where certain Sikh devotees promote the Khalistan
movement and push to break up India. Photos of Sikh "martyrs" cover
the Malton Gurdwara’s walls. Even an image of Talwinder Singh Parmar
is posted there, despite his masterminding 329 murders –including
280 Canadians and 136 children — in the 1985 Air India bombing, the
worst terrorist attack in this nation’s history. It is the equivalent
of funding a mosque that venerates Osama bin Laden.

The quest for votes means politicians are less willing to differentiate
between moderates and extremists: Whoever is seen to control the
microphone at the local temple — and is therefore in a position
to guide voting decisions — gets the cash. Hence, federal and
provincial politicians now shamelessly attend Sikh and Tamil events
where terrorists are glorified. The same phenomenon may well explain
why Liberal leader Stephane Dion had his party vote down crucial
expiring provisions of the Anti-Terrorism Act, a law introduced by
his own party in 2001. This placated the Muslim and Sikh supporters
who helped him win the Liberal leadership. They know the Act’s demise
will help scuttle the RCMP’s last chance to definitively fix guilt
in the Sikh terrorist plot against Air India Flight 182, and thereby
deny any sense of closure to the families of the murdered victims.

Canada’s federal Conservatives can’t resist, either, it seems. Last
October, Mr. Harper turned over $30-million and Ottawa’s venerable
old War Museum building to establish the Centre for Global Pluralism.

The Centre is to be captained by the Aga Khan, the spiritual leader
of 15 million Shia Ismaili Muslims. How will our government react
when much larger religious groups, such as Sunni Muslims, Hindus,
Sikhs, Jews or Christians show up, wanting to establish similar
international centres?

Meanwhile, back in Ontario, how have things gone since former citizen
and immigration minister Mike Colle fell on his sword? In response
to aggressive lobbying by Muslim and Jewish community members,
Conservative Leader John Tory is promising $400-million to religious
schools — with the hope that religious votes will carry him to
Ontario’s premiership in October.

Whose interest is served when politicians play vote-bank politics with
Canadian tax dollars? We risk importing into Canada the tribal politics
that afflict the countries from which many of our immigrants have fled.

We also risk melding the realms of state and religion. This is a
mixture that apparently appalls "progressive" Canadians when the
religion at issue is Christianity. Why should the phenomenon be any
less pernicious when the faith is Islam, Hinduism, Judaism or Sikhism?

Mr. McCarter’s report is a warning that should be heeded not only
in Ontario, but all across Canada. Canadians are justly proud to
live in a country where people can practice their privately held
faiths freely. The private sphere is where such matters should remain:
Publicly funded programs that subsidize religious and ethnic groups may
benefit a handful of well-connected organizations. But our democracy
as a whole becomes impoverished in the process. – Naresh Raghubeer
is executive director with the Canadian Coalition for Democracies, a
non-partisan, multi-ethnic, multi-religious organization of concerned
Canadians dedicated to human rights, national security and the
promotion of democracy.

Information That European Court Delivered Third Verdict Against Arme

INFORMATION THAT EUROPEAN COURT DELIVERED THIRD VERDICT AGAINST ARMENIA DOES NOT CORRESPOND TO REALITY

arminfo
2007-07-30 14:28:00

Information disseminated by Armenian media on a third verdict of
European Court against Republic of Armenia in RA citizen Gevorg
Chghlyan’s case does not correspond to reality.

Justice Ministry Press Secretary Lana Msetsyan reports that the country
and G. Chghlyan had arrived at an agreement yet before the trial at
the European Court. It was the country’s initiative to pay G. Chghlyan
$150,000. To recall, G. Chghlyan applied to the European Court against
alienation of his facility by Republic of Armenia for public needs. The
European Court has already declared two verdicts against RA.

Armenian Public Radio Refuses To Re-Sign Contract For RFE/RL Program

ARMENIAN PUBLIC RADIO REFUSES TO RE-SIGN CONTRACT FOR RFE/RL PROGRAMS

Statement by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
July 25 2007

(Washington, DC–July 24, 2007) Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
(RFE/RL) and its oversight agency, the U.S. Broadcasting Board of
Governors (BBG), expressed dismay at Armenian Public Radio’s rejection
of a new contract to continue carrying programs of RFE/RL’s Armenian
Service.

RFE/RL Armenian programs have been aired on Armenian Public Radio —
Armenia’s top radio network — since 1998, where they have earned
the trust of a significant number of listeners. Survey data shows
that 15 percent of Armenian adults listen to RFE/RL programs each week.

Three days of discussions in Yerevan, Armenia last week between U.S.

and Armenian broadcast officials ended without agreement on a new
contract to replace one that had lapsed in February.

"Our delegation was asked to go to Yerevan to iron out some minor
technical issues and conclude a contract to extend this successful
partnership," said BBG Chairman James K. Glassman. "All these issues
were resolved. Our delegation was told there are no deadlines, and
no threat was made to take RFE/RL programs off Public Radio. Yet
the contract remains unsigned, and our offers to make payment were
refused. It seems clear that whatever is holding up an agreement has
nothing to do with legal, contractual, or technical issues."

"We value our relationship with Armenian Public Radio," added Glassman,
"and certainly want it to continue. We look forward to signing the
contract, and making all payments stipulated in the contract, as soon
as our partners in Armenia tell us they are ready."

The Armenian parliament on July 3 did not adopt amendments to the
country’s media regulations that would have banned RFE/RL and other
foreign broadcasters from public airwaves. One week later, Armenian
Public Radio indicated that it planned to stop RFE/RL broadcasts on
August 9, citing contractual and payment issues. Last week’s visit
to Armenia by RFE/RL and BBG contracting officials was intended to
resolve these issues.

"The potential end of our very fruitful relationship with Public
Radio has no economic or other legitimate justification," said
RFE/RL President Jeffrey Gedmin. "Armenians go to the polls in
eight months to choose their next President, and therefore it is
particularly important that RFE/RL’s broadcasts, which are widely
respected for their accuracy, objectivity and timeliness, reach the
largest possible audience. Our coverage of the May 12 parliamentary
elections was singled out for praise by OSCE observers for its balance
and thoroughness."

RFE/RL’s Armenian Service has been on the air since 1953 and
produces more than three and one half hours of Armenian-language
programming daily in Prague and its Yerevan Bureau. Armenian
Service programming is available via satellite, local affiliates
and the Internet, at the service’s website
and at ; English-language news about
events in Armenia can be found on the RFE/RL website, at
menia.html

http://www.azatutyun.am
http://www.rferl.org
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarchive/country/ar

Russian Expert: For Baku Victory Over Armenia And NKR Is Unrealistic

RUSSIAN EXPERT: FOR BAKU VICTORY OVER ARMENIA AND NKR IS UNREALISTIC

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.07.2007 13:10 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Politicians in Nagorno Karabakh have reached a
national consensus that the republic must be an independent state,
that’s why the victory of this or that candidate in presidential
elections will not principally influence on the general position, head
of Caucasian department at the CIS Institute Mikhail Alexandrov stated.

"The matter is about nuances. Let us suppose that Bako Sahakyan
occupies a moderate stance and is oriented towards relations with
Armenia and talks with Azerbaijan. Masis Mailyan is tougher. He
is against returning the seven occupied regions to Azerbaijan
and supports more autonomous negotiation positions from Yerevan,"
Alexandrov noticed adding that in any case, politicians in Stepanakert
consider dialog as the main vector for settlement. At the same time
he added that Aliev’s hopes to return Karabakh via dialog are naïve.

"Forceful solution is an adventure, which will result in Azerbaijan’s
break-up as a state. For Baku victory over Armenia and NKR is
unrealistic irrespective of his increasing military budget,"
Alexandrov says.

After all, the matter is not only in money, but also in fighting
efficiency of army, he noticed. "In addition, Armenia is tied with
Russia by military agreements, which supplies the republic with the
most modern military equipment by much lower prices.

Azerbaijan even cannot buy some kinds of armament in foreign markets,
nobody will sell it to Baku. Thus, it is groundless to rely on
blitzkrieg and superiority," Alexandrov underlined adding that such
a "cycling" may result in a situation, when Azerbaijan will forever
lose the seven regions that serve as a security belt around NKR.

He thinks that still there exists a chance to realize the formula known
as "peace in exchange for territories", that is, Azerbaijan recognizes
the independence of NKR, which in his part returns regions. "However,
currently the time does not act in Baku’s favor. The Kosovian
precedent, which most likely will end by unilateral recognition of the
province’s independence by West, will only contribute to intentions
of Karabakh. The "fifth colony" and overturn of power in Stepanakert
are impossible, since there is not a single Azeri there," Mikhail
Alexandrov concluded, Nakanune.ru reports.

–Boundary_(ID_8DnG3vtf3t3BQK9PVpgu/Q)–

70,000 Armenians To Visit Georgian Ajaria

70,000 ARMENIANS TO VISIT GEORGIAN AJARIA

ARMENPRESS
Jul 24, 2007

BATUMI, JULY 24, ARMENPRESS: Some 70,000 Armenians are expected
to spend a week or more in Georgia’s autonomous region of Ajaria,
situated on the Black Sea coast, that has become a very popular
destination for Armenian holiday-makers in the last couple of years.

According to Ajarian authorities, 45,000 Armenians preferred to spend
their holidays in this region last year. For comparison, only 8,000
Azeris spent their holidays in Ajaria in 2006.

Teymuraz Diasamidze, head of Ajaria tourist department, said along
with greater number of Armenians and Azeris this year they expect a
surge in the number of Ukrainian tourists.

Local authorities expect 1 million holiday-makers to visit their
region in 2009-2010.

French Publishing House To Proofread Anti-Armenian Article In Book T

FRENCH PUBLISHING HOUSE TO PROOFREAD ANTI-ARMENIAN ARTICLE IN BOOK TELLING ABOUT TURKEY

Noyan Tapan
Jul 24, 2007

PARIS, JULY 24, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The famous French
"Hashet" publishing house has decided to proofread a book, which
does not recognize the Armenian Genocide, under the pressure exerted
by the French-Armenian community. The publishing house has recently
published a cognitive book telling about Turkey, in which the tragic
events of 1915 have been neglected, instead, the false statements of
the Turkish side are included in it.

Aleksi Govchian, the coordinator of the Armenian unions of France,
has sent a letter to the above-mentioned publishing house on
behalf of the French-Armenian community and local Armenian unions,
mentioning that the article titled "The defeat of Armenia" in the
"Blue guide-book" book published by the "Hashet" publishing house
denies the Armenian Genocide in an indirect way and claimed that
the publishing house should change it. The "Hashet" publishing house
answered this letter, mentioning: "We want to inform you that we do
not defend such viewpoints, which deny the Genocide."

With the same letter the publishing house makes assertions that this
article will be proofread in the new book to be published in 2009.

It is written in the part, which is regarded as subject of the problem,
that Armenians killed a great number of Turks and Kurds by joining
the Russians during the World War I and the Ottoman Turkey organized
a slaughter in Van in 1915 for that reason.

No Alternative For Democracy In Nagorno Karabagh Republic

NO ALTERNATIVE FOR DEMOCRACY IN NAGORNO KARABAGH REPUBLIC
By Karine Mangassarian

Yerkir.am
July 20, 2007

On July 19 presidential elections were held in Nagorno Karabagh. Before
the elections we asked some political leaders in Armenia to comment
on what impact these elections can have on the Karabagh settlement
negotiations.

Secretary of the ARF’s parliamentary faction Artashes Shahbazian stated
that holding fair elections is very important to ensure a stronger
position for Karabagh in the negotiation process and reassure that
the country has the right to be independent and can have to connection
with Azerbaijan.

"Karabagh can have no connections with a country with an authoritarian
and militaristic regime," Shahbazian stated.

Chairman of the Christian Democratic Party of Armenia Khosrov
Harutyunian believes democratic elections in Nagorno Karabagh are
especially important against the background of Azerbaijan’s internal
political situation.

Democracy in Nagorno Karabagh has a high political value against the
background of undemocratic elections and pressure against the media
in Azerbaijan.

"The situation would have been much more favorable had the internal
life in Azerbaijan been as democratic as n Artsakh. In this case we
would be able to say that chances for success in the negotiations
process would be much higher.

We should use this situation to raise our concerns with the
international community by contrasting the democratic developments in
Artsakh with the non-democratic developments in Azerbaijan. We should
state that no long-term peace is possible if one of the parties is
an authoritarian state," Harutyunian said.

Commenting on the elections in Karabagh, Harutyunian noted that the
free and fair elections will have a positive impact on the negotiation
process. Any deviations from democracy can have a negative impact on
Artsakh’s reputation. Harutyunian believes the Armenians in Artsakh
believe in their country’s democratic future.

Commenting on the statements made by international structures
Harutyunian reminded that they had made similar statements before
every election but every time they continued negotiations with the
elected authorities.

"The position of the international structures derives from the fact
that there are no political alternatives because stating that they
recognize the results of the elections would mean to state that they
recognize Nagorno Karabagh’s independence.

Therefore, they are trying not to create tensions and state that
the elections can have no impact or consequences. However, let us
agree that if the elections fail to meet the expectations of the
international community they will immediately start reproaching the
legitimate authorities in Artsakh.

These statements are much more political rather than having any
legal-political implications. This is why the most important thing
for the Armenians in Artsakh is to be confident that democratization
of their public life has no alternatives. This is the only way to
achieve success in the negotiation process and in defending their
rights vis-a-vis the international community," Harutyunian said.

"I do not agree with the opinion voiced by Azerbaijan and the
international community that no matter how the elections in Nagorno
Karabagh are held they will have no impact on the negotiation process.

On the contrary, I believe that Karabagh should show to the world its
democratic nature, its commitment to integration with the international
community," leader of the New Communist Party of Armenia Yuri Manukian
said. Manukian believes the settlement of the Karabagh conflict
largely depends on the political developments in Karabagh.

Member of the Republican Party’s parliamentary faction Galust Sahakian
does not treat the statements made by the representatives of various
international structures seriously. "These statements should be
treated as opinions of individual political figures and not positions
of international organizations," Sahakian said.

Sahakian believes that if the international community follows the
principles of democracy, the impact of the democratic elections in
Karabagh will be that Karabagh will once again prove that it is a
democratic country. This is the most important factor in the Karabagh
settlement process.

Chairman of the National Self-Determination Union Paruyr Hayrikian
believes everyone in Karabagh, including the presidential candidates,
realize that the elections will be very important because they
will show to what extent Artsakh adheres to the principle of
self-determination.

Ex-member of the parliament Albert Bazeyan believes that free, fair
and democratic elections will contribute to the complete consolidation
of the Nagorno Karabagh Republic and will create favorable conditions
for the Republic’s international recognition.