LETTER to Glendale News Press

LETTER TI GLENDALE NEWS PRESS
EVA GARNIER

Glendale News Press
May 3 2010
CA

Mailbag: Commemorate all genocide victims

Published: Last Updated Sunday, May 2, 2010 7:59 PM PDT This is an
answer to Councilman John Drayman regarding the Armenian Genocide
("Never forget the Armenian Genocide," April 22).

By all means our Congress must recognize the Armenian Genocide.

As our country is an utterly fair and unbiased nation, our Congress
must as well recognize genocide in various other nations, where
citizens were slaughtered for their faith, political bents or race.

Stalin was responsible for the death of his own countrymen, 2 million
of them, the communistic regime in Cambodia murdered 1 million,
Idi Amin of Uganda was guilty of killing 3,000 of his own people and
probably many other nations.

The U.S. Congress should legally establish some day in which all
these innocent martyrs will be commemorated.

Old Question, Different Tendencies: Armenia, Turkey Take Up New Appr

OLD QUESTION, DIFFERENT TENDENCIES: ARMENIA, TURKEY TAKE UP NEW APPROACHES TO NORMALIZATION
Naira Hayrumyan

03.05.10

In the wake of Armenia’s announcement of having suspended ratification
of normalization protocols with Turkey, some Armenian politicians want
to toughen demands on renewed negotiations, to include territorial
claims on land overtaken by Turkey during the Armenian Genocide.

According to vice-chairman of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia
Galust Sahakyan, Turkey does not admit the Ottoman-era genocide of
Armenians because it understands that legal claims will inevitably
be made by Armenia.

"The people who fell victim to the policies of bloodthirsty Turkish
authorities owned land and property. That is why we offer Turkey to
settle all these issues diplomatically. Otherwise, the very notion
of the Turkish state may be shaken," said Sahakyan.

In fact, Sahakyan has warned Turkey that unless it ratifies
the protocols without preconditions, Armenia will start making
territorial and other claims. So far, Armenia has officially advanced
no territorial claims to Turkey.

Head of the opposition Heritage Party’s faction in parliament Stepan
Safaryan believes that Yerevan should clarify its position regarding
the Treaty of Kars. It was that treaty signed in 1921 that defined
Turkey’s current borders and the treaty is not recognized by Armenia.

Safaryan says that a new process should be started with Turkey on
establishing diplomatic relations and opening the border. "And if
Ankara again sets preconditions, Yerevan should raise the issue of
compensation and borders," said the Armenian lawmaker.

Another major tendency in the process is barefaced attempts by
Turkey to link the Armenian-Turkish process with the settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

"We accept the concept of ‘without preconditions’ in Armenian-Turkish
normalization, but something else comes before it for us, namely
ensuring peace in the region, which is impossible without resolving
the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan," said Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan recently.

Armenia’s former Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, meanwhile, believes
that the suspension of the protocols ratification process has freed
Turkey from all commitments on opening the border.

"The Armenian side did that which is most desirable for Turkey:
neither ratified the protocols nor revoked them thus giving Turkey
the opportunity to continue to remain actively engaged in the Karabakh
process," wrote Oskanian in an opinion piece last week.

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan said: "If someone wants
to establish relations with their housemate, this does not mean that
all problems in the house or in the district must be solved for that.

According to this logic, we should have told the Turks that until
issues were resolved with Cyprus we would not engage in a relationship
with them."

The third important tendency observed recently is the activation
of the Nakhijevan factor. The currently Azeri exclave of Nakhijevan
was handed over to Azerbaijan under the Treaty of Kars for "temporary
protectorate". Now Turkey says that it is the guarantor of Nakhijevan’s
security, that Nakhijavan is alone facing the threats coming from
Armenia, said Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. He said that
the security and welfare of Nakhijevan is "our security and welfare."

Based on the current situation opposition parties in Armenia call for
revoking the signature of Armenia put to the protocols last October.

Secretary of the parliamentary faction of the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) Artyusha Shahbazyan stressed that the
decision of the Armenian authorities to suspend the Armenian-Turkish
protocols ratification process did not introduce any real changes
in relations between Ankara and Yerevan, because at any moment the
protocols may be again put on the agenda of parliament and ratified,
which is not favorable for the Armenian side.

The opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC), in its turn,
disseminated a statement in which it blamed the authorities for their
failure to dissociate the Armenian-Turkish process from the Karabakh
settlement. "Getting the [Armenian] renunciation of the genocide
without paying anything for that, Turkey is now building on its
victory, demanding the return of Aghdam and Fizuli [Armenian-controlled
districts surrounding Karabakh] to Azerbaijan.

And judging by some reports, it has already received the support of
a number of states in this issue," the ANC said in the statement.

www.armenianow.com

‘Let’s Forget About Yerevan:’ Milliyet

‘LET’S FORGET ABOUT YEREVAN:’ MILLIYET

Tert.am
03.05.10

Armenians living in Armenia and in the Diaspora are not and will
probably never be our friends, Dogan Heper writes in Turkish local
daily Milliyet.

"Armenians living in Turkey are our friends. But Armenians in Armenia
and Diaspora are not and will probably never be our friends. Without
taking account their quantity they want to challenge Turkey. They
burn our flag. We have forgotten that they are the killers of our
diplomats, and they too are having difficulty in remembering it,"
writes the author, adding that the Armenia-Turkey boarder will open,
should Armenians, much in the same way as the Turks, forget about
the past and open "a new and white page."

"But let’s suppose Turkey opens the border, as some of our
intellectuals demand, and apologizes [from Armenians]. Whether there
will not emerge demands referring to territory and compensation? They
have fixed all that in their Constitution, haven’t they? If that is
the case, may the border not open, and let’s forget about Yerevan.

Let’s just suppose that they do not exist. This is the best version
for the moment," writes Heper.

Civilized Or Nationalistic? Decide Shakaryan And Shirinyan

CIVILIZED OR NATIONALISTIC? DECIDE SHAKARYAN AND SHIRINYAN

Tert.am
03.05.10

Azerbaijan is currently unable to solve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
politologist Levon Shirinyan said at a press conference today, adding
that Armenia should make its approach over the Karabakh issue stricter.

"We should change our viewpoint, we should get rid of our Armenianizm
to some extent: it is not they [Azerbaijani] who should constantly
threat us for us to explain to them, but rather Armenia should create
concrete threats," said Shirinyan, noting that even he considers the
talk about returning the territories to Azerbaijan as unallowable.

Turkologist Artak Shakaryan, another participant of the press
conference, expressed the opposite opinion, saying he considered the
approach of making Armenia’s stance stricter and attacking Azerbaijan
by its own initiative as wrong.

In his words Armenia has in the recent 20 years created a positive
image in the eyes of the international community, showing that it is
in favor of peaceful talks.

"A lot of political capital has been spent to create such a positive
image which enables us stand out of both Turkey and Azerbaijan,"
said Shakaryan, adding that "a little nationalistic accentuation will
spoil our long-term strategic plan."

Further Shakaryan said that instead of fighting against a wall, i.e.
fighting with Azerbaijan and Turkey, Armenia had better increase its
authority by cooperating with Iran and Georgia.

Cold facts fuel Armenia’s future

The National, UAE
May 1 2010

Cold facts fuel Armenia’s future

by Tamsin Carlisle

Last Updated: May 01. 2010 7:30PM UAE / May 1. 2010 3:30PM GMT Yerevan
// Tiny Armenia, a landlocked country with two closed borders and no
commercial petroleum reserves, faces a huge problem securing energy.

Its ageing nuclear reactor, which supplies 40 per cent of the
republic’s electricity, is due to be decommissioned in 2016; its
natural gas supply from Russia is unreliable; and it has almost
exhausted its hydro-electric potential.

Those, at present, are the only power and heating sources for the
mountainous South Caucasus country with snowy Eurasian winters.

`The number one problem for us in Armenia is the energy problem,’
Armen Movsisyan, the country’s energy minister, said recently.

Armenia has already survived one severe energy crisis after the
collapse of the Soviet Union, of which it was once a part.

Its Metsamor nuclear plant was shut down by Soviet authorities in
1989, just 13 years after it came online, probably due to
international pressure over safety concerns after the world’s worst
nuclear disaster at Chernobyl in Ukraine three years earlier. In that
instance a catastrophic explosion left the radioactive reactor core
exposed.

As with Chernobyl, the structures containing the Metsamor reactors are
single-walled. All modern reactors have double-walled containment
structures.

Armenia had also suffered a devastating earthquake in 1988, which
raised international awareness of the location of its atomic plant,
close to major seismic fault lines. Metsamor was only 75km from the
epicentre of the quake in north-western Armenia, which killed 25,000
people.

But Mr Movsisyan said the decision to close both of the plant’s
reactors had nothing to do with that event. `It wasn’t related to the
earthquake,’ he said, without elaborating.

Regardless of the exact reasons, the reactors were restarted six and a
half years later in 1995, under the watchful eyes of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the Armenian Nuclear Regulatory
Authority, which was established in 1993, just two years after Armenia
gained independence.

The power station is run by a consortium of the Russian electricity
utility RAO UES and the Russian nuclear operator Rosenergoatom.

The decision to restart the decommissioned nuclear reactors, a rare
occurrence anywhere, was made because Armenia simply could not do
without the power.

The country lost its gas supply from Russia for more than two years
after the Soviet break-up, leaving its people dependent on firewood to
survive freezing winters. In short order, the young nation also lost
of most of its forests.

Today, small armies of volunteers and agricultural workers in a
country that exports cherries, pears and walnuts are replanting
orchards and formerly wooded areas. Armenia is also looking at
developing wind and geothermal power to augment its hydro-powered
renewable energy sector, but that will take time.

In the medium term, said Mr Movsisyan, `our energy options are nuclear and gas’.

Armenia’s eastern and western borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey have
been closed since 1993 due to the dispute over the breakaway enclave
of Nagorno-Karabakh, so any gas must come from Russia to the north, or
Iran to the south.

Those two countries respectively possess the world’s largest and
second-largest gas reserves, but that does not mean importing gas from
either is easy.

The existing Russian gas supplies to Armenia must pass through
Georgia. That nation has rocky relations with Russia, with which it
briefly went to war in 2008.

The Armenian government worries that the gas flow through the poorly
maintained cross-border pipeline could be cut with little warning.
Consequently, it has negotiated with Tehran a second import corridor
from northern Iran. A small pipeline joining the two countries opened
in 2006, and another is being built.

But Iranian efforts to develop its vast gas resources have lagged
behind domestic demand, with the result that Iran is a net gas
importer, reliant on additional supplies from Turkmenistan.

Analysts say Iran’s gas situation is unlikely to change until Tehran
takes the politically unpopular step of cutting fuel subsidies and
resolves its dispute with the West over its controversial nuclear
programme. That casts doubt on the success of Armenian efforts to
secure gas imports from its southern neighbour.

The sole remaining option for Armenia is to build a nuclear plant. It
is planning to do that by 2017, under an energy policy launched in
2007 with backing from Russia, the US, the EU and the IAEA.

The EU and Turkey are growing especially nervous about the state of
the existing Metsamor plant, although authorities in the capital
Yerevan insist they are rigorously addressing all safety concerns.

Last year, Yerevan awarded a US$460 million (Dh1.68 billion)
management contract for the nuclear development to the Australian
engineering company WorleyParsons.

Last December, the Armenian energy ministry approved the formation of
Metzamorenergoatom, a joint venture with Russia’s nuclear contractor
AtomStroyExport, to build a 1,060 megawatt plant at Metsamor that
would have a 60-year service life. Construction of the $4bn project is
due to start next year or the year after.

In March, the joint venture ordered equipment from Rosatom, the
Russian state energy company.

With Georgian airspace closed to Russian traffic, a major issue is how
to move between 12,000 and 13,000 tonnes a year of enriched uranium
fuel for the plant reliably from Russia into Armenia.

Does Armenia have contingency plans to cope with any hold-ups to its
crucial nuclear programme?

`The plan is that the project should not be delayed,’ said Mr Movsisyan.

l/article?AID=/20100501/BUSINESS/705019944/1005

http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dl

Nabucco main construction to be held regardless of NK settlement

news.am, Armenia
May 1 2010

Nabucco main construction to be held regardless of Karabakh conflict
settlement: Azeri expert

17:03 / 05/01/2010Nabucco main construction will be held no matter the
disputes over Nagorno-Karabakh will be settled or not, Director of the
Centre for Strategic Studies under the Azerbaijani President Elhan
Nuriyev told Deutsche Welle.

He emphasized that the project is not a political deal, but an
economic initiative, thus there is no obstacle to Russia’s
participation in it. `This transnational project should not be taken
as an anti-Russian move,’ the expert stressed.

Nuriyev also deems that the project is not Azerbaijanian or European.
`Through Nabucco Azerbaijan will make a significant contribution to
the solution of Europe’s energy security issue and assist EU in
diversification of its energy policy,’ he concluded.

S.T.

Armenian Deputy FM Attends Security Conference In Berlin

ARMENIAN DEPUTY FM ATTENDS SECURITY CONFERENCE IN BERLIN

Panorama.am
17:43 30/04/2010

Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosyan attended conference
on "The European security dialogue, arms control and military
confidence-building" in Berlin, Germany April 28-30, according to MFA.

The conference was hosted by Germany’s Federal Foreign Office and
the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies. High
officials of European Foreign and Defense Ministries, accredited
diplomats in Germany, politicians participated in the conference.

In his address Deputy FM Arman Kirakosyan mainly referred to the
South Caucasus security issues. A. Kirakosyan presented national
security priorities of the Republic of Armenia, as well as the
country’s official disposition over Nagorno-Karabakh settlement and
Armenian-Turkish normalization processes.

Armenian Editor Blames Georgia Police Official For Assault

ARMENIAN EDITOR BLAMES GEORGIA POLICE OFFICIAL FOR ASSAULT
Tatevik Lazarian

2029364.html
30.04.2010

Armenia — Journalist Argishti Kivirian at a press conference,

Argishti Kivirian, an Armenian media editor who was badly beaten
in Yerevan last year, accused on Friday an ethnic Armenian police
official in Georgia of masterminding the still unsolved assault.

Kivirian, 37, was attacked outside his apartment in the city center
in the early hours of April 30, 2009. He was rushed to hospital and
kept in intensive care for several days. The attackers apparently
used wooden sticks to inflict serious injuries on his head and body.

The criminal investigation into the incident was initially conducted
by the Armenian police under a Criminal Code clause that deal with
violent attacks resulting in "light injuries." A resulting media
outcry led Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) to take over
the inquiry and essentially back the Kivirian family’s belief that
the attack was a murder attempt.

The NSS arrested two men, identified as Vladik Serobian and Gurgen
Kilikian, on related charges in July. According to Kivirian, they
both were released from pre-trial custody last month.

An NSS spokesman declined to confirm or deny this when contacted by
RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Friday. Nor did he agree to divulge any
details of the probe, saying that it is still not over.

Speaking at a news conference held on the first anniversary of the
incident, Kivirian pointed the finger at Samvel Petrosian, the police
chief of the Akhalkalaki district in southern Georgia mainly populated
by Armenians. He argued that his Armenia Today and Bagin online news
services repeatedly accused Georgian authorities and the Akhalkalaki
police in particular of unleashing repressions against local Armenian
activists campaigning for the region’s greater autonomy.

Petrosian was personally blamed for the 2008 arrests of some of those
activists. Three of them were subsequently tried and given lengthy
prison sentences on controversial charges.

Kivirian, who is a native of Georgia’s breakaway republic of Abkhazia,
alleged that Serobian and Kilikian, the apparently freed suspects,
met Petrosian and received clear instructions from him two days before
the April 2009 assault. He also claimed that Serobian is related to
the Akhalkalaki police chief.

"I have no personal enemies. And so I link [the attack] only with my
journalistic activities," said the editor.

Kivirian went on to question the Armenian authorities’ commitment to
solve the case. "The presidential press service is saying that the case
is under the president’s strict control. Were those two individuals
set free as a result of that strict control?" he asked with sarcasm.

"Some time later, this criminal case will be suspended and put into
a drawer," he added.

Kivirian’s beating was one of the most serious instances of violence
ever committed against Armenian journalists. It was condemned by
more than a dozen Armenian non-governmental organizations involved
in media freedom and human rights advocacy. They said it was made
possible by the authorities’ failure to punish the perpetrators of
previous attacks on journalists.

http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/

Armenian Economy Overcomes Crisis

ARMENIAN ECONOMY OVERCOMES CRISIS

Aysor
April 30 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased by 9,5% in
January-March of 2010 and estimated to be 10% in industry, nearly 6%
in the services, and 3% in the agriculture, according to reports by
chief of the Parliament Finance and Budget Commission Gagik Minasian.

He told journalists that this is the first time Armenian economy didn’t
register decline. The export increased by 60%, import increased by
23%. During the reported period revenue is estimated to be increased
by 17%, while expenses increased by 10%.

"During the reported period Armenia is overcoming the crisis and is
moving to the pre-crisis figures," said Gagik Minasian.

RA Education And Science Minister’s Visit To Iran Intended May 14-18

RA EDUCATION AND SCIENCE MINISTER’S VISIT TO IRAN INTENDED MAY 14-18

ARMENPRESS
APRIL 30, 2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, APRIL 29, ARMENPRESS: RA Education and Science Minister
Armen Ashotyan will pay an official visit to the Islamic Republic
of Iran May 14-18. An official from the PR office of RA Education
and Science Ministry told Armenpress that the Iranian Ambassador
to Armenia Seyed Ali Saghayan handed the invitation of the Iranian
Minister of Science and Technologies to Armen Ashotyan. Not only
officials from the Ministry, but also the rectors of the two Armenian
higher educational establishments will be in the Armenian delegation.

The rectors will arrive in Iran for promoting the cooperation between
the Armenian and Iranian higher educational establishments. Within
the frames of the visit, the delegation will visit the Armenian
schools, higher educational establishments of Tehran and will meet
with representatives of the Armenian community and parents of Iranian
students studying in Armenia.

The issues on recognizing the diplomas of higher educational
establishments of the two states will be discussed at the meeting
of the counterparts. There are over 24 Armenian schools operating in
Tehran. Armenian educational establishments operate as well in Tabriz,
Urmia and Isfahan.