Parliament will start discussing protocols after Turkey ratifies

Interfax, Russia
Oct 12 2009

Armenian parliament will start discussing protocols after Turkey ratifies

YEREVAN Oct 12

Armenian parliament will debate the Armenian-Turkish protocols, signed
in Zurich, only after they have been ratified by the Turkish
parliament.

"The parliament will start the discussions and make a decision on the
Armenian-Turkish protocols only after they are confirmed by the
parliament of Turkey," Galust Saakian, the head of the majority
faction of the Armenian Republican Party, said at a news conference on
Monday.

This is because the border was in fact closed by Turkey, he said.

"The question is, the border must be opened by Turkey after the
parliament decides on this," the Armenian lawmaker said.

If Turkey dodges the accords, or comes up with amendments, the
Armenian parliament will not enter the discussion of the protocols on
its agenda, he said.

Meanwhile, no problems are expected to arise in the Armenian
parliament during ratification. Before the protocols were signed the
leaders of the parliamentary factions of the governing coalition – the
Republican Party, Orinats Yerkir and the Prospering Armenia parties –
made a joint statement in support of the government’s policy to
normalize Armenian-Turkish relations.

The protocols are opposed by the Dashnaktsutyun and Heritage
opposition parties, which have 23 votes – 16, and seven, respectively.

There are 131 seats in the Armenian parliament.

Ukrainian Turboatom Ready To Invest $200 In Modernization Of Armenia

UKRAINIAN TURBOATOM READY TO INVEST $200 IN MODERNIZATION OF ARMENIAN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT

ARKA
Oct 16, 2009

YEREVAN, October 16. /ARKA/. Turboatom, well-known Ukrainian turbine
maker, is ready to invest $200 million in modernization of Armenian
Nuclear Power Plant, Viktor Subbotin, director general of the holding,
said at a press conference on Thursday.

"We are ready to modernize Armenian Nuclear Power Plant’s turbines with
a 20-to-20-year under warranty. After the modernization, the nuclear
plant’s capacity will grow 10% to 1 million kilowatt/hour", he said.

In his opinion, it would be better to modernize the functioning power
plant instead of building a new one.

The modernization will take less time and money than construction,
and as a result, Armenia will get a nuclear plant not worse than
other new-built plants.

Subbotin said that modernization of 20- or 30-year nuclear plants is
common worldwide.

Developed countries, such as the United States and Russia, use
similar programs.

"Once nuclear power plants were exploited strictly until the end of
permitted exploitation term – 20 years, while now, under IAEA rules,
they are modernized for other 20 years," Subbotin said.

In his words, Turboatom will offer its turbines to Armenia, if the
Armenian government decides to build a new unit and even a new plant.

Established in the second half of the 20th century, Ukrainian Turboatom
took an active part in development of Armenia’s energy sector.

Turboatom has produced two steam turbines for Yerevan Thermal Plant and
four turbines with aggregate capacity of 1,045 megawatt for Armenian
Nuclear Power Plant over the period between 1964 and 1966.

The company can provide industrial turbines with 0.7- to 12-megawatt
back pressure and300-megawatt steam turbines.

The company can also modernize the functioning units by upgrading
technical characteristics of turbines and sending spares here.

Armenian Nuclear Power Plant sits near Metsamor (20 or 30 kilometers
south of Yerevan).

The plant started functioning in 1976, and now only the second,
407.5-megawatt unit operates.

INTER RAO UES belonging to Russian state-owned Rosatom runs the
plant’s funds from 2003 and will run them until 2013.

Specialists say the plant can operate until 2016.Armenia is planning
to build a new, 1000-megawatt unit. The energy ministry says the
project is estimated to cost $5 billion.To attract financial resources
from the outside, Armenian National Assembly repealed the sole state
ownership of new nuclear units in 2006.The construction is planned
to be launched in early 2011.

EBRD Plans To Invest 16.2 Million Euros For Modernization Of Yerevan

EBRD PLANS TO INVEST 16.2 MILLION EUROS FOR MODERNIZATION OF YEREVAN SUBWAY

Noyan Tapan
Oct 15, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 15, NOYAN TAPAN. Mayor of Yerevan Gagik Beglarian
on October 15 received a delegation led by Jean-Patrick Marquet,
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) Director for
Municipal and Environmental Infrastructure.

As the PR Unit of the Yerevan Municiplaity reported, EBRD plans to
invest 16.2 million euros, including a loan of 11.2 million euros and
a grant of 5 million euros, for modernization of the Yerevan subway.

The mayor underlined the importance of investments in Yerevan subway
as the subway system has not undergone large-scale repairs since the
Soviet time and numerous problems have arisen in this period.

Noting that the new way of governing Yerevan is in line with EBRD
principles, the guests expressed their willingness to help with the
implementation of other programs in the city as well.

Armen Rustamyan: Whoever Comes Must Invalidate Process

ARMEN RUSTAMYAN: WHOEVER COMES MUST INVALIDATE PROCESS

News.am
21:09 / 10/16/2009

"If the authorities develop this process (Armenia-Turkey normalization
process), they will become operators of anti-Armenian programs –
whether they like it or not. Naturally, we will not stand such
authorities: they must go away for a force capable of resisting
to come to power," Armen Rustamyan, ARFD Executive Council member,
stated at a rally in Yerevan. He pointed out, however, that the ARFD
does not demand the President’s resignation.

"We are asked: why do you not demand the President’s resignation? There
is nothing easier. We can do so and ask them: what else are you
expecting from us? Some demanded resignation, but they are standing
aloof now… What is their aim? May be you want it (ratification)
to take place in order to come to power and say: ‘well, it is an
accomplished fact, it cannot be helped…’," Rustamyan said.

"No! Whoever comes to power after that must first of all invalidate
the process. If we have reached this stage, the people must vote
for the force that will clearly state its willingness to invalidate
everything. It is a criterion," Rustamyan said.

H pointed out they are not struggling "against", rather "for the sake
of", and their mottos are "No!" and "Do not give in!" "This is not
a demand for resignation though it may logically turn into such,"
he said.

"If we demand the President’s resignation today, we will face the
following question tomorrow: who is to fill the post of President?"

Davit Shahnazaryan: Armenian Parliament Should Ratify Protocols Firs

DAVIT SHAHNAZARYAN: ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SHOULD RATIFY PROTOCOLS FIRST

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.10.2009 14:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Statements that Armenia should ratify the Protocols
after to Turkey are erroneous, according to member of Armenian National
Congress (ANC) Davit Shahnazaryan.

Ratifying the Protocols first, Turkey will prove that it is ruling
the process while Armenia reacts only," he told a news conference
on Friday.

"Armenia should ratify the Protocols first, as time constraints will
deprive Turkey of the chance to link normalization of Armenian-Turkish
relations to Nagorno Karabakh process. If the Armenian parliament
doesn’t take action, it will mean that the republic’s leadership
agreed to Turkey’s terms," he said.

Commenting on Karabakh process, Mr. Shahnazaryan said that as far as
he knows Armenia and Azerbaijan are to sign a framework agreement by
the yearend.

Armenia Ready To Continue Peacemaking Mission In Kosovo

ARMENIA READY TO CONTINUE PEACEMAKING MISSION IN KOSOVO

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.10.2009 19:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian participated in
Armenia-Pristina TV bridge. In his opening speech, Edward Nalbandian
gave high assessment to the already traditional event, thanking USA
and Greece for support in space bridge organization.

According to RA FM, RA President Serzh Sargsyan has repeatedly
noted that Armenia, jointly with international community is ready to
continue its peacemaking mission, which is proved by increased number
of Armenian peacemakers in Kosovo in June 2008.

Orion Ensemble Leads Off With Robust, Thoughtful Program

ORION ENSEMBLE LEADS OFF WITH ROBUST, THOUGHTFUL PROGRAM
By Wynne Delacoma

Chicago Classical Review
Tue Oct 13, 2009 at 12:50 pm

Thoughtful programming has been a major strength of Chicago’s Orion
Ensemble since its founding 17 years ago. That virtue is clearly on
display in the program assembled by the group to open its 2009-10
season of concerts in Geneva, Evanston and Chicago.

A former church auditorium, Nichols Hall at the Music Institute
of Chicago in Evanston is an intimate, resonant space, and Orion’s
sound was sinewy and robust Sunday night as they dug into works by
Martinu, Schubert and the Armenian composer Alexander Arutiunian. The
ensemble–founders Kathryne Pirtle, clarinet; Florentina Ramniceanu,
violin, and Diana Schmuck, piano along with violist Jennifer Marlas
and cellist Judy Stone–played with the energy of longtime colleagues
still excited by the prospect of making music together.

The first two works, Martinu’s Sonatina for clarinet and piano and
Arutiunian’s Suite for violin, clarinet and piano, share a restless
sensibility. A dark undercurrent runs through both, though they also
have their playful moments.

Martinu fled his Czech homeland in the wake of World War II and
felt its loss keenly until his death in 1959. Composed in 1957,
the Sonatina is full of the spicy harmonies and syncopated rhythms
of Czech folk music. In the slow middle movement, Pirtle’s clarinet
glided and swooped in a bluesy klezmer-style dance over Schmuck’s
heavy, tolling piano. The final movement was a heady race, with Pirtle
darting and leaping over Schmuck’s non-stop, swirling piano lines.

The world’s massive weight seemed to press on the players
in the opening moments of Arutiunian’s Suite, a work from
1992. Entering first, Schmuck brooded over the steady tread of low
octaves. Ramniceanu’s violin picked up their outline, adding another
dark voice to the lament. When Pirtle’s clarinet appeared, however,
its pure, penetrating opening note floated into the gloom like a rede

Moods shifted constantly in the Suite. The third movement, titled
"Dialog," was slow and ardent, a conversation full of longing between
violin and clarinet. In the finale, Schmuck’s piano, pumping cheerily
away like an accordion in a polka band, set off a fiery dance.

Schubert’s Trio in B-Flat seemed to harness all this restlessness in a
grandly scaled yet emotionally vibrant work. Stone’s cello added rich
color, bringing a dark, velvety texture to Schubert’s lilting rhythms.

The program will be repeated 7:30 p.m. Oct. 21 in the Fazioli Piano
Showroom, 410 S. Michigan. ; 630-628-9591.

www.orionensemble.org

Gaza War Still Strains Israel Ties With Turkey

GAZA WAR STILL STRAINS ISRAEL TIES WITH TURKEY

The Jewish Week
10/13/2009

"Supporting the war on terror is not an anti-Palestinian act," says
former Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, left. Turkish Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu implied that Israel’s military action in
Gaza last year led toa cancellation of NATO exercises.

by Stewart Ain Staff Writer

One of Israel’s best regional friends, Turkey, is apparently having
second thoughts about their relationship.

Just days before the two countries were to participate in a NATO
military exercise this week, Turkish officials informed Israel that
it would not be allowed to participate. The U.S., the Netherlands
and Italy then withdrew in protest and the exercise was canceled.

Turkey, one of the few Muslim nations to have diplomatic relations
with Israel, has had a testy relationship with the Jewish state
since January.

That was when Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, speaking at
the World Economic Forum in Switzerland, publicly criticized Israeli
President Shimon Peres over Israel’s military offensive in Gaza last
winter and then stormed out of the meeting.

Turkish Foreign Minister Values To Heal America Ahmet Davutoglu
implied last weekend that his country barred Israel from the NATO
military exercise in Turkey this week because of the Gaza operation.

"We hope that the situation in Gaza will be improved, that the
situation will be back to the diplomatic track," he said. "And that
will create a new atmosphere in Turkish-Israeli relations as well. But
in the existing situation, of course, we are criticizing this approach,
[the] Israeli approach."

But Anat Lapidot-Firilla, a specialist in Turkish politics and society
who teaches in the Department of International Affairs at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem and runs a Turkish forum as a senior research
fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, said the Gaza offensive
was only "used as an excuse" by Turkey.

"You can see a consistent trend in Turkish foreign policy that has
to do with many issues but not with Gaza — Gaza is just an excuse,"
she said. "If you have to pick one event from which problems started,
it was November 2002" when Edrogan and his AK Party were elected.

Lapidot-Firilla pointed out that Erdogan quickly began using Davutoglu
as a foreign policy adviser.

"He ran the show" even before being made foreign minister, she said,
adding that the new foreign policy course he steered for Turkey
collided with that of Israel.

"Israel did not want to allow Turkey to position itself as the regional
broker — the mature parent in the neighborhood," Lapidot-Firilla
explained.

Nevertheless, she said, "Turkey has a very interesting, very aggressive
foreign policy, a very active foreign policy that aims to regain some
kind of strategic cards in a very problematic area that since 2003 has
the United States as a regional player since the occupation of Iraq,"
she said.

"It’s positioning itself as a state that is a moral leader of the
Muslim world and the region," Lapidot-Firilla added, pointing out that
the current administration is "quite secure" after three elections
and a majority of the parliament.

Internal politics has proven a lot more difficult than foreign affairs,
however, and some reforms that were promised were never fulfilled
because of a strong constitution and legal obstacles.

"The only place where they could play with free hands and voice an
Islamic agenda was in foreign policy," she said.

Israeli opposition leader Tzipi Livni appeared on Turkish television
Monday to urge that there not be a crisis between the two countries
over Israel’s actions in Gaza.

"I am saying to the people of Turkey and their leaders: Supporting the
war on terror is not an anti-Palestinian act; it is an anti-terrorism
act," she said. "Hamas does not represent the national aspirations of
the Palestinians. It is not acting on their behalf or promoting them."

It is no coincidence that the row with Israel occurred just as Turkey
and its longtime nemesis A ent establishing diplomatic relations,
Lapidot-Firilla observed.

"It was more important to sign the agreement with Armenia, but because
of the reaction from inside the country — to block the opposition –
it was easier to voice opposition to Israel and Israeli aircraft and
thus regain the moral ground in internal politics," she said. "This
government wanted to come to an agreement with Armenia for financial
reasons — because of oil and gas and a lot of money. … It is easier
to appease the opposition [parties] by having aggressive rhetoric
towards Israel."

But the reaction of NATO in canceling the exercise took Turkey by
surprise.

"I don’t think they realized what the reaction would be,"
Lapidot-Firilla said.

Asher Susser, a senior fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle
East Affairs at Tel Aviv University, said he believes Turkey’s action
against Israel is emblematic of a "shift taking place in Turkey’s
foreign policy that has far-reaching ramifications."

"Turkey is undergoing an historic change since the 2002 election and
is taking more of an Islamic identity and policy," he said. "All of
this has to do with the rise of an Islamic party [in Turkey], the fact
that Turkey has not been admitted into the European Union and is going
back to the Middle East because it has been pushed out of Europe."

With the Europeans giving Turkey the "cold shoulder," Susser said,
"Turkey is becoming more Islamist in political identity. The Iraq
problem next door and the relative weakness of Arab states gives
Turkey a sense it must play a greater Middle Eastern role, and in so
doing it is shifting its relationship with Israel. The secular country
that had a common cause with Israel is not the Turkey we have today."

He said Israel’s relationship with Turkey is "critically important
for Israel — perhaps more than it is for Turkey — and Israel has
every reason to not let this [tension] escalate. It doesn’t have many
friends in the region and will try to keep things on an e

"Turkey too is trying to calm things down because the U.S. is siding
with Israel. It has no interest in taking this any further. It’s
difficult to say how this will play out."

The Turkish Foreign Ministry released a statement Monday that sought to
play down the NATO exercise, saying it was cancelled in consultation
with other participants and that nothing further should be read
into it.

"Therefore, it is not correct to impose political meanings to Turkey’s
decision to cancel the international part" of the exercise," it said,
adding that Israeli officials "should act with common sense in their
statements and attitudes."

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak issued a statement Monday in which
he spoke of Turkey’s importance in the region and added that there is
"no reason to be dragged into words of harsh criticism against it."

And Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon made similar comments,
saying: "Our interest is not to reach a point of friction or crisis
with Turkey. We consider Turkey an important strategic partner of
Israel’s and an anchor of stability."

Susser noted that Turkey has "shown a measure of sympathy with Hamas,
which has caused a crisis with Israel in the past. There is still a
residue of that crisis in the relationship."

He was referring to Turkey’s effort to serve as a mediator between
Hamas and Israel, just as it had served as a mediator between Syria
and Israel. But Israel refused this summer to allow Davutoglu to enter
Gaza from Israel for talks with Hamas officials, and then return for
talks in Jerusalem with Israeli officials.

Turkish officials were visibly steamed by Israel’s decision.

Asked if she believed the friction between Turkey and Israel would soon
ease and if the NATO maneuvers might be rescheduled, Lapidot-Firilla
said that had a lot to do with American pressure.

"I’m pretty sure that with a lot of pressure it will be only a
postponement and nothing else," she said. "It’s a political game and
they’re checking the boundarie ce in a while they discover they have
made the wrong move. So if Israel were to do something politically
correct in their eyes, it would be a good excuse to restore the
exercise."

One Of Yerevan Schools To Be Named After Armenian Benefactor Galust

ONE OF YEREVAN SCHOOLS TO BE NAMED AFTER ARMENIAN BENEFACTOR GALUST GULBENKIAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.10.2009 17:28 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ As a part of the "Our great" program one of Yerevan
schools will be named after the Armenian benefactor, the largest oil
tycoon of mid XX century Galust Gulbenkian in 2010, RA Minister of
Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan said during the meeting with the delegation
of the "Galust Gulbenkian" Foundation.

According to the minister, a documentary film about the life
of Gulbenkian is to be shot, it will be aired on Armenian Public
Television. Schools in Armenia will give introductory lectures devoted
to the life of Galust Gulbenkian.

Galust Gulbenkian was an English businessman and a millionaire
of Armenian origin, the largest oil tycoon of mid XX century and
philanthropist. He was born March 23, 1869, in Istanbul (Turkey). At
the beginning of XX century he was actively involved in organization
of world oil production, helping the largest companies in the world
to optimize production.

In 1907, the result of his work was a merger of the Danish and British
oil companies into Royal Dutch Shell, for that work Galust Gulbenkian
received a 5 per cent stake in the new company. Later Gulbenkian
participated in the creation of other oil companies (Turkish Petroleum
Company, Iraq Petroleum Company …), always receiving a 5% reward in
new companies, for which he earned the nickname "Mr. 5 per cent". He
founded the Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon.

In 1922 he built the Church of St. Sarkis in London. In 1929, he
restored the church of the Holy Sepulcher, and gave a significant
part of ancient Armenian art works from private collections to
the Patriarchate. In 1932 he donated 4000 pounds sterling for the
construction of the Armenian church and school in Tripoli (Libya).

In late 1920th , when the Soviet Government, experiencing deficit
in foreign currency, decided to fill the budget by selling out the
museum collections, the first buyer of the Hermitage’s masterpieces
was Galust Gulbenkian.

Gulbenkian w the biggest holder of the world’s largest private
numismatic collections. Galust Gulbenkian died July 20, 1955 in Lisbon
(Portugal).