Armenia Beyond Crisis

ARMENIA BEYOND CRISIS
by Maria Tsvetkova, Aleksei Nikolsky, Denis Malkov

WPS Agency
What the Papers Say (Russia)
December 26, 2008 Friday
Russia

POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE CRISIS UNDER WAY WILL DIFFER FOR
INDIVIDUAL CIS COUNTRIES; Analysis of how CIS countries weather the
economic and financial crisis.

Authors of the review organized by Petersburg Politics Foundation
point out that better developed and less isolated countries of the
Commonwealth have more reasons to fear political destabilization as a
corollary of the crisis than their less advanced neighbors. Analyzing
the effect the crisis is having on CIS countries, experts divided
them into several groups.

"The CIS informal summit in Kazakhstan (December 19 – Vedomosti)
resolved to set up a special trust and an advanced technologies
center," President Dmitry Medvedev said yesterday. Judging by reports
in the Kazakh media, Russia, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and
Armenia will pool $10 billion into a special trust. Insiders say that
Russia’s and Kazakhstan’s contributions will be the largest of all.

Political and economic crisis has more or less spared Belarus,
Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Moldova so far.

Kazakhstan, Georgia, Uzbekistan, and Azerbaijan are facing grave
economic difficulties which fortunately have no discernible effect
on these countries’ political stability. As far as specialists are
concerned, Georgia is the only representative of this group with a
political crisis unfolding. Even this crisis, however, was fomented
by the recently fought (and lost) war with Russia.

Economic difficulties worsen political destabilization in Tajikistan
and Ukraine. Following the principle "the worse, the better", Ukrainian
politicians perceive the crisis under way as an opportunity to crush
their political enemies. Tajikistan is even worse off. All but deprived
of export revenues due to the crash in the global cotton and aluminium
markets and seeing transactions from labor immigrants in Russia go
steadily down, Tajikistan is in trouble. Experts warn that the prospect
of serious social upheavals in this country is uncomfortably close.

Armenia is different. Facing no economic problems fomented by the
crisis under way, it only has to be on a lookout for potentially
menacing foreign political factors in connection with the unsolved
problem of Karabakh.

Andrei Grozin, an expert with the Institute of CIS Countries,
suspects that mass return of the so called Gastarbeiters from Russia
and Kazakhstan might complicate things enormously in Tajikistan and
Kyrgyzstan. "What I do not expect is a crisis-fomented destabilization
in authoritarian Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan," Grozin said.

Asked to estimate the possibility of crisis related mass disturbances
in CIS countries, political scientist Boris Shmelev gauged it
at 70% in Moldova, 65% in Tajikistan and Ukraine, and 30-35% in
Kazakhstan. (When informed of these estimates, Grozin accepted them
and attributed relative stability in Kazakhstan to the patience
typical of Asian mentality.)

Trying to cope, CIS countries seek assistance abroad. According
to Sergei Mikhalev of the Political Techniques Center, Kyrgyzstan
whose economy had always balanced on the edge of collapse chose the
simple way and asked Russia to loan it $2 billion. Serious risks are
perceived to exist for other countries where color revolutions took
place. That means Ukraine and Georgia whose economies have survived
so far only because of financial aid from international financial
institutions and the Western community.

Postcards With The Pictures Of Armenain Historic-Cultural Centers Of

POSTCARDS WITH THE PICTURES OF ARMENIAN HISTORIC-CULTURAL CENTERS OF TURKEY

AZG Armenian Daily
25/12/2008
Turkey

Armenian culture

An exclusive exhibition of postcards will be held in Armenia in
January 2009.

The exhibition will tell about the Armenian contribution and
historic-cultural centers in Turkey, which are presented today
as Turkish.

Publisher-editor of the exhibition, Turkish Osman Kiorker told
"Armenpress" that the exhibition embraces more than 2000 postcards
that are detached from 6000 samples belonging to Italian (Armenian
by half) Orlando Kalimeno.

The postcards depict Armenian churches, relics, monuments, many
constructions belonging to Armenians, including hotels that have
Armenian engravings proving their Armenian origin.

New Book Promotes End to 75-year Split: Armenians Talk Peace, Unity

PR Newswire (press release), NY
Dec 23 2008

New Book Promotes End to 75-year Split: Armenians Talk Peace, Unity
After 1933 Christmas Eve Murder

BAKERSFIELD, Calif., Dec. 23 /PRNewswire/ — A new book by veteran CBS
News correspondent Terry Phillips is sparking grassroots peace talks
75 years after a brutal assassination split the Armenian Apostolic
Church in the United States.

Murder at the Altar, a historical novel published by Hye Books
(), investigates the Depression-era killing of
Archbishop Ghevont Tourian in New York City. On Christmas Eve 1933,
the spiritual leader of this ancient Christian denomination was
stabbed to death as he led a Sunday morning procession down the center
aisle of Holy Cross Church. The vicious crime was reported on the
front page of every Manhattan daily newspaper.

"For three-quarters of a century, Armenians have treated the murder as
a taboo subject," says author Terry Phillips. "To this day, the church
remains divided along political lines. But people are finally willing
to talk about that painful event, understand why it happened and move
toward possible reconciliation."

Since the book was published earlier this year, Phillips has been
leading unprecedented, coast-to-coast discussions about the Tourian
assassination.

"I am extremely gratified by the overwhelming public interest," he
says. "Except for a few fringe extremists, the book has been very well
received. Everywhere I go, people say it’s about time that someone
told this story."

Based on fact, Murder at the Altar is a dramatized account of the
Archbishop’s killing. It grew out of a dispute over the Armenian
movement for independence from the Soviet Union. Tourian was attacked
for refusing to take sides in the conflict. After his slaying, the
church separated into two factions, identical in every way except for
partisan politics.

"Seventy-five years later," Phillips notes, "church officials remain
divided by past animosities. Today, there is no Soviet Union. Armenia
is independent. Why stay split? Why stay silent?"

Phillips covered the fall of the Soviet Empire and reported conflicts
throughout the USSR as well as Afghanistan, Bosnia, Somalia and Haiti.

Murder at the Altar is available through retail bookstores and websites.

Contact:
Terry Phillips
c/o Hye Books
[email protected]
(661) 835-1497

http://www.HyeBooks.com

DALOGLU: The Armenian Tragedy

DALOGLU: THE ARMENIAN TRAGEDY
Tulin Daloglu

Washington Times
/24/the-armenian-tragedy/
Dec 24 2008
DC

Congress ponders genocide bill: But was it genocide?

In a recent action alert, Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA) wrote that "[t]he Turkish government, which has outlawed
discussion of the Armenian genocide within its borders, is exporting
its undemocratic free-speech restrictions to the United States by
imposing a ‘gag-rule’ on congressional consideration and adoption
of the Armenian Genocide Resolution." This kind of talk will soon –
once again – dominate the U.S.-Turkey relationship.

Armenia, the world´s oldest Christian nation, is best known for its
mountains and monasteries, but Yerevan abounds with urban diversions
and hums with a youth-driven café and disco scene. CNS Photo courtesy
of CM Communications.

President-elect Barack Obama will have to decide by April 24,
Armenian Remembrance Day, whether he will keep the promise he made
to his Armenian-American constituents to call their World War I loss
a "genocide." Congress will make its decision separately – either
before or after the president’s annual statement. This issue has
come before Congress many times over the last three decades, and for
various reasons those bills did not pass. President Reagan used the
word "genocide" once, in his 1981 annual statement. But he did not
continue to use it throughout his presidency. Some think Mr. Obama
will choose to follow in Mr. Reagan’s footsteps.

The issue of the Armenian "genocide" has proven to be a thorny one for
all sides. Winston Churchill once said, "A fanatic is someone who can’t
change his mind, and won’t change the subject." Unfortunately, this
issue has created fanatics. And in such an environment, the chance for
people to gain a fuller understanding of their past and hopefully begin
to heal is being delayed. It’s not clear whether people are demanding
an acknowledgement of past atrocities, or if they simply want revenge.

If the "genocide" bill in Congress is written with a moral duty in
mind, why is it so focused on the Armenian tragedy and not those
suffered by others – for example, the Ukrainians? Studies show that
an estimated 25,000 people died daily at the height of the Ukrainian
famine in 1933. By the end of that year, nearly 25 percent of the
Ukrainian population is thought to have perished. Russia refuses to
call this a "genocide." Or, take a look at how many American Indians
were killed on this land. Sen. Daniel Inouye, Hawaii Democrat, once
said, population levels are 90 percent below what they were when
Columbus landed. For that matter, what about North Korea? Congress
passed the North Korean Human Rights Act almost three years ago despite
significant criticism. Yet since then, Congress has not been able to
use the bill as leverage, or as a tool to end human rights abuses in
North Korea – because it feared that North Korea would withdraw from
nuclear talks.

The White House and Congress need to clarify why they believe a
"genocide" bill would help people to move on, and what other good it
would do.

The ANCA seems to regard all developments in Turkey as tu quoque. It
is, however, no longer taboo to discuss the issue in public. But
it took a long time, and many unfortunate incidents, to get to
this point. The issue is now being discussed in every household, in
universities and in the newspapers. Now almost everyone feels pressured
to take sides. Recently, 100 Turkish academics and journalists started
an Internet campaign, "We apologize" (), which
stated that they apologize for the Great Tragedy that Armenians
suffered under the Ottoman rule. So far, more than 15,000 Turks
have publicly offered their support by attaching their names to
this statement.

University professor Cengiz Aktar, the father of this idea, told
me that since the murder of Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of the
Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, he has felt a duty to start a dialogue
– and to do something about the issue. "This is a private, civilian
expression of our feelings about what happened to the Armenians who
once lived on this land," he told me. "This has nothing to do with
the bills that are before the U.S. Congress. … If the U.S. Congress
passes the bill this year, then we will think what to say about
it." University professor Soli Ozel agreed, saying, "If they were to
free Turkey of the pressures [of these bills], we would be able to
talk about the issue in a more desirable way." Turkey still has issues
when it comes to freedom of speech, but on this matter, it’s like a
free-for-all for people to say whatever they wish. Unfortunately, that
freedom hasn’t always extended to the U.S. Pressure from the Armenian
community forced Georgetown University to cancel a speech to students
by Archbishop Mesrob II Mutafyan, the Armenian patriarch of Istanbul,
last year. There was concern that the archbishop might challenge the
notion that Armenians were innocent victims of the Ottomans.

If Mr. Obama’s presidency will be defined by change, his first order
of business with NATO ally Turkey should not be about whether to
call what happened to the Armenians "genocide." It should be about
bringing definitive clarity both to the end of World War I for Turkey,
and about how Turkey and the West move forward into the 21st century.

–Boundary_(ID_qS4R7ycLugNQHNuoOnzmug)–

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/dec
www.ozurdiliyoruz.com

Armenian Mining Industry Could Grind To A Halt – Ministry

ARMENIAN MINING INDUSTRY COULD GRIND TO A HALT – MINISTRY

Interfax
Dec 23 2008
Russia

Armenia’s mining industry could grind to a halt if metal prices do
not start to recover at the beginning of next year, Armenian Energy
and Natural Resources Minister Armen Movsisian told Interfax.

The drop in world metals prices has forced Armenian mines to scale
down production and exports, Movsisian said. Jobs and salaries are
being cut. "We could be looking at two scenarios if prices don’t
rise by February: either mining enterprises will be forced to shut
down indefinitely, or they will have to find additional investment
to reorganize production," he said.

The government will re-address the crisis in the country’s mining
industry in February, he said.

The government has already decided to intervene in resolving the
future of three major crisis-hit mining enterprises – the Zangezur
and Agarak copper-molybdenum plants and Kapan Mining, which operate
in Armenia’s Southern Ore Belt.

Movsisian said in the middle of November that agreement had been
reached with management at the three mines to avoid laying off staff
and to keep salaries intact if possible in the next three months.

Asian Development Bank To Provide One Million Dollar Grant To Armeni

ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK TO PROVIDE ONE MILLION DOLLAR GRANT TO ARMENIA

NOYAN TAPAN

Dec 23, 2008
YEREVAN

The RA minister of economy Nerses Yeritsian and the RA minister
of transport and communication Gurgen Sargsyan on hehalf of the
Armenian government signed with the Asian Development Bank (ADB)
an agreement on provision of technical assistance for preparation
of the North-South Motorway Construction Program, by which the ADB
will provide a grant of 1 million USD from the Technical Assistance
Special Fund to the Armenian government.

The program on technical assistance included the Armenian side’s
proposal to take into consideration the opportunity of simultaneous
construction of a railway and a motorway in the southern section of
the North-South road corridor, while developing a ten-year action
plan within the framework of the indicated program.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1010884

Defendant On "Case Of Seven," NA Deputy Hakob Hakobian Moved From Ho

DEFENDANT ON "CASE OF SEVEN," NA DEPUTY HAKOB HAKOBIAN MOVED FROM HOSPITAL TO KENTRON PENITENTIARY INSTITUTION

NOYAN TAPAN

Dec 23, 2008
Yerevan

Defendant on the "case of the seven," NA deputy Hakob Hakobian was
moved from convicts’ hospital, where he stayed due to health problems,
to Yerevan’s Kentron penitentiary institution. According to Melania
Arustamian, H. Hakobian’s lawyer, it is not known, on the basis
of which the decision to move him to the penitentiary institution
was made.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1010875

Armenian Side Opposes Formation Of Commission On Surb Norashen

ARMENIAN SIDE OPPOSES FORMATION OF COMMISSION ON SURB NORASHEN

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.12.2008 13:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian side is against formation of a
commission to be charged with a task to clear up whom Surb Norashen
belongs to. This church is Armenian, said bishop Vazgen Mirzakhanyan,
head of the Georgian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

"Five churches should be returned to the AAC, namely Surb Norashen,
Surb Nshan, Shamkhoretsots Surb Astvatsatsin (Karmir Avetaran),
Yerevanots Surb Minas and Mugni Surb Gevorg. The fact that these
churches are Armenian is not questioned. Georgia’s claims that the
foundation of the churches is Georgian are absurd. If there is a
Georgian archeologist of genius who could define whom a church belongs
to, he would undoubtedly be worth of Noble Prize," the bishop said.

He also refuted the Georgian Patriarchate’s statement that an agreement
on formation of a commission was achieved during the November 26
meeting in Tbilisi. "More than 20 Armenian churches have been already
transformed into Georgian ones in 1990ies. The Armenian side could
agree to form a commission if the problem of these churches is also
addressed," bishop Mirzakhanyan said, Bagin.info reports.

Presently, 32 reconstructed Armenian churches function in
Georgia. Majority of them are situated in Samtskhe Javakheti and
Kvemo Kartli.

Edward Sharmazanov: Democratic Values Have No Alternative In Armenia

EDWARD SHARMAZANOV: DEMOCRATIC VALUES HAVE NO ALTERNATIVE IN ARMENIA
Karen Ghazaryan

"Radiolur"
22.12.2008 16:58

"The perspective of whether Armenia will be deprived of voting
right at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe is
very dim," Spokesman for the Republican Party of Armenia, member of
the Republican faction Edward Sharmazanov told a press conference
today, speaking about the latest proposal of the PACE Monitoring
Committee. The Spokesman agrees that the proposal is not a favorable
one. However, according to him, the application of double standards is
also evident. "Generally, if the European partners want to see Armenia
more democratic, the application of sanctions is not the best way,"
Sharmazanov noted.

"Of course, there are problems. Problems arise in any state after
an attempt of a coup d’etat," the Spokesman noted, adding that these
problems have lessened during President Sargsyan’s tenure in office;
reforms have been implemented in different spheres.

According to Edward Sharmazanov, application of double standards
is noticeable in the suggestion of the Monitoring Committee, which
is not the best way for reinforcement of democracy. In any case,
irrespective of the developments, the authorities of the Republic
of Armenia will continue the reforms in the direction of democratic
development and there is one reason for that: "It’s a fact for us that
the=2 0democratic values should have no alternative in Armenia. I
hope that when PACE representatives arrive in Armenia in January,
they will see that serious work has been done. The fair probe into the
"Case of 7" can contribute to that."

According to Sharmazanov, Armenia respects the commitments it has
assumed before the Council of Europe. At the same time he added
that the amnesty is out of question until the courts announce the
final verdict.

"We need strong Armenia, and to have it we should put aside the
personal ambitions," Sharmazanov said

Colorado State University Student Takes Key Role In International He

COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY STUDENT TAKES KEY ROLE IN INTERNATIONAL HEALTH ISSUES IN ARMENIA
Dell Rae Moellenberg, [email protected]

US Fed News
December 16, 2008 Tuesday 6:11 AM EST

Colorado State University issued the following press release:

A veterinary student in Colorado State University’s College of
Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences is playing a key role in
international health and trade. The student, Litto Suu, is helping
to establish a national animal health program in Armenia along with
Dr. Mo Salman, professor in the college and expert in international
veterinary medicine affairs.

Salman and Suu, along with an Armenian and U.S. Department of
Agriculture team members, tested animals in two villages, Aragatsavan
and Nor Yer Znka, and then provided education to farmers there about
the diseases that were present in their animals.

"Our goal is to establish sound and scientifically based national
animal health program in Armenia that includes the food safety issues,"
Salman said. For the past 30 years, Salman has been traveling and
sharing his expertise in countries throughout the world.

"Many of the farmers didn’t know that so many of their animals
were infected with various diseases," Suu said. "By showing them the
prevalence of these diseases in their animals, especially brucellosis,
we were able to provide them with context to the importance of
preventative medicine in their herds."

The two diseases for which they tested in particular were
foot-and-mouth disease and brucellosis. Brucellosis is a zoonotic
disease, which means that humans can contract it from infected
animals or animal products. Brucellosis is a disease that can cause
spontaneous abortion in animals. Testing for brucellosis is especially
important because of Armenia’s cheese production industry. When spread
to humans, it causes remittent fever. If cheese is not pasteurized,
which it often is not in rural Armenian villages, the disease can be
passed from cheese to the humans who eat it.

The presence of foot-and-mouth disease in animals drastically limits
a country’s trade options.

Suu had the opportunity to run two town hall meetings and provide
the results, brochures about consumer awareness and the importance of
preventative medicine to the surrounding community. The opportunity
for a student to have this much involvement in an international
program is rare.

"She was the best ambassador for CSU in Armenia," Salman said. He saw
that she worked well with many types of people and had a determination
and a willingness to learn that made her successful in Armenia.

"Although we can provide information to the villagers, the government
must play a major role in controlling these diseases," Suu said.

Salman is the university’s point person for the cooperative agreement
between Colorado State and the U.S. Department of Agriculture for this
project in Armenia. Salman and the team of researchers also reached out
to the Armenian government with information on animal health issues.

Salman hopes that Armenia will be able to trade animal and animal
products nationally and internationally with less risk of spreading
animal diseases, including those that can be transmitted to humans.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the USDA monitor food
and drug safety, but Armenia does not have an equivalent to those
organizations.

Suu found this opportunity to study abroad and apply her skills when
she heard Salman speak. Suu, 23, is grateful for the opportunity to
work in Armenia.

"She approached me after she listened to my campus wide presentation
related to our international involvement," Salman said. "She was eager
to be involved in international activities to increase her knowledge
about veterinary medicine and its application in developing countries."

"Being able to work with the farmers and learn first-hand about
epidemiology from Dr. Salman’s team in a foreign country that
lacks strong disease control programs was a one-of-a-kind learning
opportunity for me," Suu said. "I enjoyed being able to work with
the local people and do work that related to my field."

Suu is originally from North East India in Nagaland. She has already
completed her undergraduate studies at Colorado State, and she decided
to attend Colorado State because of its renowned veterinary program.