Kilikia Starts Training Session With Missing Sportsmen

KILIKIA STARTS TRAINING SESSION WITH MISSING SPORTSMEN

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.01.2010 17:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On Monday, January 11, Kilikia Yerevan Football
Club started its training session.

According to the team’s chief coach Abraham Khashmanyan six of the
team’s main players have quit the club. "Forward Roman Hovhannisyan
and fullback Avetis Kazaryan have been enlisted to army. Forward
Rafael Lazarian has signed a contract with Ulis and goalkeeper Armen
Khachatryan is participating in Mika’s training session," he told a
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

FC Kilikia (formerly, Armenian General Sports Union) was founded in
1992 by ARF Dashnaktsutyun. The same year participated in independent
Armenia’s first championship, gaining its first award. Kilikia is a
champion of Armenia (1992, 1995/96,1996/97), a silver prize winner
(1994, 1995) and holder of Armenian Cup (1995/96) and Super Cup (1998).

ANC Discovered Participation In Illegal Elections

ANC DISCOVERED PARTICIPATION IN ILLEGAL ELECTIONS

news.am
Jan 12 2010
Armenia

After the parliamentary by-elections, oppositional Armenian National
Congress (ANC) discovered that their candidate run for illegal
elections, ANC Coordinator Levon Zurabyan said at the Jan.

12 press conference. Zurabyan underlined that the outrage occurred
when fixing the elections day for January 10, 2010 instead of December
20, 2009.

According to him, it will be the major argument in RA CC where
the opposition intends to file an action demanding declaration of
election results invalid. However, Zurabyan outlined that ANC would
not be confined to it and will lodge a complaint with European Court
as well as Council of Europe. "It is an unprecedented violation,"
ANC representative stated, informing that presently ANC is disputing
the election in two polling districts.

Imprisoned ANC representative, the Haykakan Zhamanak daily Chief
Editor Nikol Pashinyan lost the Jan. 10 parliamentary votes to National
Unity MP Ara Simonyan (authority candidate). A number of violations,
such as beating up of journalists and opposition supporters were
registered in 10th polling district.

Kurdish Activist To Keynote Evening Of Tribute To Turkey’s Heroes Of

KURDISH ACTIVIST TO KEYNOTE EVENING OF TRIBUTE TO TURKEY’S HEROES OF CONSCIOUS

Asbarez
Jan 11th, 2010

UHRC ‘Opposite of Silence’ to Spotlight Growing Resistance to
Oppression in Turkey

LOS ANGELES-The United Human Rights Council (UHRC) will hold a "Moment
of Noise" this Friday, January 15, to pay tribute to the activists of
Turkey who have been targeted, harassed and even murdered for their
efforts to advance Kurdish human rights, Armenian Genocide recognition,
and freedom of speech and equality. The event, titled "The Opposite
of Silence", will feature a blend of art, music, video and speeches.

The program’s keynote speaker, Kani Xulam of the American Kurdish
Information Network, will discuss the ongoing plight of Turkey’s 30
million Kurds and their decade’s long struggle for liberation against
Turkish oppression. The evening will also feature musical performances
from Raffi and the Palm of Granite, slam poetry by Armen Soudjian and
others. Socially conscious art by Ani Ishkhanian, Cynthia Kossayan,
and Gayaneh Novshadian will also be on display.

"Xulam’s appearance will be all the more relevant considering the
current conditions of Kurds in Turkey. We see the same oppressive
practices of rounding up political leaders, violently crushing
demonstrations and choking free speech that have marred recent Turkish
history. Oppressed minorities such as Kurds and Armenians must work
in concert to show Turkey’s true nature as a brutal occupier and
violator of human rights," said UHRC Director Sanan Shirinian.

The event will coincide with the third anniversary of the assassination
of Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink. It will begin at
8:00pm at The Glendale Armenian Youth Center, located at 211 West
Chestnut St. Glendale CA 91204 (Behind St. Mary’s church).

Charged, on more than one occasion, with the crime of insulting
"Turkishness" under Article 301 of the Turkish penal code, Hrant Dink
was a champion of truth in a country plagued by denial and repression.

He used his pen to speak out against the denial of the Armenian
genocide, all the while advocating for reconciliation between Armenia’s
and Turks. A firm believer in free speech, Dink was shot to death at
the doorstep of his office in Istanbul on January 19, 2007.

This year the program will be spotlighting the injustices of the
Turkish government and how Article 301, despite Dink’s murder,
continues to promote an atmosphere of intolerance and prejudice,
denying the citizens of Turkey their fundamental rights to free speech
and truth.

Enacted in 2005, Article 301 of the Turkish penal code has made
it illegal for any citizen or resident of Turkey to give credence
to the Armenian genocide. Numerous journalists and scholars have
been prosecuted for "denigrating Turkishness" under that statute,
beginning with Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, who was charged for stating,
"A million Armenia’s were killed in these lands." Dink, himself,
was prosecuted three times for criticizing the Turkish government’s
longstanding policy of denying the Armenian genocide.

"Hrant Dink, Eren Keskin, Ayse Gunaysu, Akin Birdal and Leyla Zana
are just a few of the many brave individuals in Turkey who have
been targeted by the state and ultranationalist groups for breaking
Article 301 with their dedicated work in support of human rights,"
said Shirinian. "There’s a growing wave of dissent against injustice
inside Turkey as more and more people begin to question and counter
the official facts dictated to them about the Armenians and Kurds and
it’s our responsibility to stand in solidarity with this budding free
speech movement."

The United Human Rights Council is a committee of the Armenian Youth
Federation. By means of action on a grassroots level, it works toward
correcting and exposing the human rights violations of governments
that distort, deny, and delude history to disguise past and present
genocides, massacres, and human rights violations. For more information
about the Opposite of Silence or on the activities and mission of
the UHRC, contact [email protected]

Why Eastern Europe’s Future Was Not Orange

WHY EASTERN EUROPE’S FUTURE WAS NOT ORANGE
By Steven Eke

BBC NEWS
urope/8452559.stm
2010/01/11 16:59:43 GMT

The colour orange was the most memorable symbol of the Orange
Revolution, the chain of events that led to regime change in Ukraine
at the end of 2004. That colour put Ukraine on the map for millions
of people across the world.

In the aftermath of the Orange Revolution, there were many in the
West and the countries of the former Soviet Union who predicted
a domino-type wave of revolutions, that would bring democracy and
liberalisation and reverse the authoritarianism that was widespread
and consolidated in the region.

Amusing lists began to appear on the internet: Russia would have a
"vodka revolution"; Belarus, a "potato revolution"; Kazakhstan, an
"oil revolution", etc.

National stereotypes aside, many suggested that Alexander Lukashenko,
the strongman leader of Belarus (who has now been in power for 16
years) could not hold out much longer.

Others thought that Armenia and Azerbaijan would follow the pattern
set by Georgia’s Rose Revolution, and throw off rulers whose political
legitimacy had hardly been established by free and fair elections.

Predictions that the particularly repressive regime in Uzbekistan
would end abounded.

These predictions were wrong.

They were based on the idea that democratisation was an inevitability;
they took little account of the fragility of the newest democracies.

More seriously, they ignored Russia’s determination to restore
its influence in the "near abroad" using, among other factors,
a pre-emptive approach to stop pro-Western leaders taking power.

Little regime change

In retrospect, in much of the former Soviet Union, Ukraine’s Orange
Revolution actually helped strengthen already entrenched authoritarian
regimes.

It was also reflected in what human rights groups say were
crackdowns on media freedom, and particularly unofficial youth and
non-governmental groups.

" In Belarus, nearly four years later, the opposition is fractured;
the president’s popularity, if polls are to be trusted, remains high.

There was no regime change, let alone revolution "

Even in Georgia, whose Rose Revolution started the upheavals,
incumbent governments have moved hard to silence critical voices in
the electronic media.

The Central Asian republic of Kyrgyzstan was the first domino to fall
after Ukraine.

Three factors sparked off what became known as the "Tulip Revolution":
allegedly fraudulent elections; resentment at a president (and
ruling family) widely considered corrupt; and grinding poverty and
unemployment among the young.

Unlike Georgia and Ukraine, there was no organised opposition movement,
no figurehead, and the unrest quickly became chaotic and at times,
very violent.

President Askar Akayev fled the country, and regime change took place.

But these events are now most often seen as violent demonstrations
against poverty. The country remains prone to serious political
instability.

Belarus also witnessed post-Orange Revolution attempts to appropriate
colours as political symbols.

In September 2005, during an unauthorised demonstration by opposition
and unofficial youth groups (marking the disappearance of a popular
opposition leader back in 1999), militia snatched white-red-white
national flags from participants as their display was illegal.

One of the demonstrators ripped off his blue denim shirt and, holding
it aloft, proclaimed that was to be the symbol of protest.

The demonstrations that followed the March 2006 presidential election
in Belarus were quickly branded "the jeans revolution" by foreign
media.

While initially large, they, like blue jeans, faded and were quickly
cleared by the authorities.

Nearly four years later, the opposition in that particular country
is fractured; the president’s popularity, if polls are to be trusted,
remains high. There was no regime change, let alone revolution.

Failed opportunities?

But what about Russia?

One Ukrainian commentator memorably referred to the Orange Revolution
as "Moscow’s 9/11".

Yet the same people who were involved with Russia’s policy in Ukraine
at that time – in particular Gleb Pavlovskiy, the spin doctor once
banned from Ukraine on national security grounds – are now still
close to the government, even key shapers of the media scene.

Their approach differs now, though.

There will be no repetition of Russia’s visible, partisan involvement
in the 2004 Ukrainian presidential election.

Indeed, Mr Pavlovskiy has since concluded that Russia must pursue its
aims through the media, institutions, social networks and societies –
not by siding blatantly with its favoured candidates in other states’
elections.

And how does the West look in all this? Is there actually a failure
by the West, first and foremost the EU, to seize the opportunities
presented by the Orange Revolution? After all, Poland pushed hard for
the EU to provide Ukraine with some sort of viable roadmap towards
membership.

Yet the EU now appears to have finally discounted whatever membership
aspirations Ukrainians (and, for that matter, Georgians or Moldovans)
felt at the end of 2004.

Plans to sign a new Association Agreement have been repeatedly delayed,
and Ukraine is now grouped together with countries like Belarus and
Armenia, as part of the EU’s Eastern Partnership, whose goals are,
in the main, modest.

Nonetheless, the EU highlights co-operation in business and trade,
which have grown remarkably. The EU is Ukraine’s largest trading
partner, and is by far the largest investor in Ukraine.

And, for many people in the West, Ukraine is a much closer, and
more accessible country, owing to factors like visa-free travel,
Eurovision and, of course in the future, Euro 2012.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/e

Armenian Midfielder Signs Contract With FC Ural

ARMENIAN MIDFIELDER SIGNS CONTRACT WITH FC URAL

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.01.2010 13:50 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Midfielder of Armenian national football team Artak
Aleksanyan has signed a contract with Russian FC Ural, the club’s
official Web site reported.

According to Russian team’s chief coach Vladimir Fedotov, the club
is becoming replenished with new sportsmen.

The contract with Pyunik ended in December and Artak Aleksanyan
conducted a training session with Ural in Yekaterinburg. On January 13,
the team will leave for Turkey to participate in endurance training
exercises.

Artak Aleksanyan was raised in Spartak’s sports school and in January,
2009 was transferred to Armenian club Pyunik. Apart from being a
midfielder of Armenian national team, he is also a member of the
Armenia U-19 and Armenia U-21 teams.

FC Ural is a Russian football club based in Yekaterinburg. It was
founded in 1930 and was known as Avangard (1930-1943, 1947-1948,
1953-1957), Zenit (1944 -1946), Mashinostroitel (1958-1959), and
Uralmash (1949-1952, 1960-2002). The club participated in the Soviet
championships beginning in 1945 and reached the quarterfinals of the
Soviet Cup in 1965/66, 1967/68, and 1990/91.

Dynasty Regime Of Aliyevs Seeking An Occasion To Complain To The UN

DYNASTY REGIME OF ALIYEVS SEEKING AN OCCASION TO COMPLAIN TO THE UN

ArmInfo
2010-01-11 12:38:00

ArmInfo. On January 8 Azerbaijan shuddered with another "sensation"
of own agitprop and Baku mass media reported that Armenians allegedly
desecrated the cemetery in the Gazakhi region in Azerbaijan. It is
noteworthy that quite doubtful photos were enclosed to some of the
reports. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry had nothing to do but comment
on the tragic but too doubtful incident. Elkhan Polukhon, Sokesman for
Foreign Ministry told APA that the ministry was expecting the results
of the investigation. "Azerbaijan will appeal to the international
organizations if it is proved that it was committed by Armenians,"
he said.

The reason for disseminating such an absurd report was nothing but
the supposition of Adalet Sadigov, the Deputy Head of the Gazakhi
Regional Police Office, that "the act of vandalism was Armenians’
doing." It is noteworthy that the cemetery is in the territory of
Gazakh which is under control of Azerbaijan. It is at least not clear
how could Armenians reach the Azerbaijani cemetery and fight against
the deceased. It is not clear either how should Armenians cross the
front line. It is ridiculous to think that Armenians would risk their
lives just to destroy the Azerbaijani cemetery.

Evidently we deal with a classical display of the Azerbaijani agitprop
led personally by the Azerbaijani president-for-life. Azerbaijani
agitprop had no better choice than to blame the "centuries-old enemy"
for the destructions made by the own citizens. The supporters of
the Aliyevs regime did not have to search for a regular propagandist
tragicomedy given the rich experience of the Azerbaijani militaries
in desecrating the Armenian gravestones in Old Jugha.

The European Court for Human Rights has been considering the case on
desecration of the Armenian cemetery in Old Jugha in the territory of
Nakhijevan for over a half year. There are documental proofs testifying
that desecration of the Armenian khachkars by Azerbaijanis started yet
in 1998. After European countries condemned the facts of vandalism,
the desecration was suspended and then resumed in 2003 and in December
of 2005. There were 10,000 Armenian gravestones before December 2005,
including 3500 khachkars were fully liquidated with bulldozers and
the others were destroyed, buried or thrown to the River Araks by
Azerbaijanis.

Germany urges Turkey to stay on EU reform track

Agence France Presse, France
Jan 7 2010

Germany urges Turkey to stay on EU reform track

ankara, Jan 7 2010

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle urged Turkey Thursday to
press ahead with reforms to bring it closer to the European Union and
denied Berlin was blocking Ankara’s bid to join the bloc.

Westerwelle, on a two-day trip to Turkey, dismissed fears that
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s new centre-right government was throwing up
hurdles for Turkey.

"Some have asked whether the new German government wants to close the
door to (EU) membership for Turkey," he told a conference of Turkish
ambassadors.

"I will tell you quite clearly: what the EU and Turkey have agreed
stands. And that applies to this German government too. I am committed
to that."

Merkel’s conservative Christian Union would prefer to see Turkey
granted a "privileged partnership" with the EU while Westerwelle’s
pro-business Free Democrats are seen as more open to Ankara’s
ambitions.

Westerwelle, who is also vice-chancellor, quoted from the October
coalition pact in which Berlin pledges its support for "open-outcome"
accession talks with Turkey.

Asked later at a press conference with his counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu
whether his statements meant Merkel had dropped her opposition to
Turkey eventually joining the EU, Westerwelle said he spoke for
Berlin.

"I am not here as a tourist in shorts — I am the German foreign
minister and what I say counts," he said with a smile.

"We are reliable partners. That is why Germany has such a good
reputation in the world."

He noted that Turkey had as yet failed to meet key EU criteria such as
opening its borders to member country Cyprus but also called on
Nicosia to contribute to a solution, and praised Ankara for its
democratic reforms.

"I encourage you to press on," particularly in the areas of freedom of
religion, expression and the press and its treatment of the Kurdish
minority.

Westerwelle hailed Ankara’s "key role" in trouble spots such as Iraq,
Lebanon, Afghanistan and Pakistan and efforts to heal long-standing
rifts with neighbours such as Armenia.

Davutoglu said Ankara hoped to deepen trade, security and political
ties with Europe’s biggest economy.

"And we of course plan to implement all the necessary EU reforms," he said.

The glacial progression of EU accession talks has been a major source
of frustration for Ankara.

The island of Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkey occupied
the north in response to an Athens-engineered coup in Nicosia aimed at
uniting the island with Greece.

Ankara has since 2004 refused to open its frontiers and ports to
Cyprus under an EU-Turkish accord.

Since it began EU accession talks in 2005, Turkey has managed to open
12 of the 35 so-called chapters and successfully negotiate and close
just one.

On top of its row with Cyprus, there is a bigger, more fundamental
issue, raised by EU powerhouses France and Germany and others: whether
such a large, mainly Muslim country on the borders of Asia has a place
in Europe.

Germany has the largest ethnic Turkish population outside Turkey with
nearly three million members. In 2008, bilateral trade volume reached
nearly 25 billion euros (36 billion dollars).

Westerwelle was also to meet Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
other government ministers on trade ties, Iran’s nuclear programme,
the stability of Afghanistan and the threat posed by Al-Qaeda in
Yemen.

President Abdullah Gul cancelled planned talks due to illness.

After meeting with Kurdish politicians, Westerwelle was to travel to
Istanbul before continuing on to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United
Arab Emirates.

ISTANBUL: French court fines Turkish woman in `genocide’ case

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Jan 7 2010

French court fines Turkish woman in `genocide’ case

A French court has rejected a complaint of discrimination from an
ethnically Turkish woman who had to withdraw her candidacy in a local
election last year amid pressure to publicly recognize claims of an
Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Sırma Oran Martz
was also sentenced to pay a fine of 1,500 euros, reportedly for abuse
of the right to petition.

`The ruling is shameful,’ Oran Martz, who has been living in France
for 19 years, told the Anatolia news agency on Wednesday. `It is a
completely political decision that goes well beyond law, and I don’t
think it will do anyone any good,’ she said, explaining that the
ruling will have negative effects in France, Turkey and Armenia and
for Armenians living in Turkey and Turks living in France.

Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols in October to normalize their
relations, agreeing, among other things, to establish a board of
scholars to study Armenian claims of genocide, rejected by Turkey.
Oran Martz said the reconciliation process did come up during court
debates but the judges did not take it into consideration when ruling
on the case.

Oran Martz had to withdraw her candidacy for city council in
Villeurbanne, Lyon, after she had been pressed by Mayor Jean-Paul Bret
to visit an Armenian `genocide’ monument in Lyon and make a public
statement backing the genocide charges. Oran Martz, the daughter of
Professor Baskın Oran, a liberal who campaigns in Turkey for
reconciliation with Armenians, then filed a complaint against Bret at
a Lyon court on charges of discrimination, saying no other candidate
had been subject to a similar treatment.

`If you translate this ruling, it means the court is telling me `Who
the hell do you think you are?” Oran Martz said, promising to appeal
the ruling first in France and eventually at the European Court of
Human Rights.

07 January 2010, Thursday
TODAY’S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL

Armenia and Iran railroad work to begin by 2010

SteelGuru, India
Dec 30 2009

Armenia and Iran railroad work to begin by 2010

Iran Daily reported that Armenia is set to begin work early next year
on a large scale project aimed at connecting Armenia and Iran through
a north south railroad.

Mr Gurgen Sargsyan transport and communications minister of Armenia
said that the Phase I of the project will involve a feasibility study,
scheduled to begin in April 2010.

"An agreement to grant a loan of USD 1 million has been reached with
the Asian Development Bank for implementing the feasibility study of
this project. An international tender for the provision of consulting
services will be declared in early 2010 and we will begin the direct
implementation of the feasibility study in spring."

The minister said that the project’s Phase I will be carried out in 2
stages. The first will study whether the Yerevan Ararat and Yerevan
Ashtarak passes are safe for rail travel; the second will begin work
on restoring the Ashtarak Gumri rail section and the third stage
envisages construction of a new Goris Kapan railroad.

As per report the Armenian government has registered a corporation
titled "Directions for Iran and Armenian Railroad Construction to
implement the project.

Mr Sargsyan noted that Iran has demonstrated its readiness to finance
the project.

(Sourced from Iran Daily)

Armenia-Diaspora Cooperation Became A Style Of Work And Thinking

ARMENIA-DIASPORA COOPERATION BECAME A STYLE OF WORK AND THINKING

Aysor
Dec 29 2009
Armenia

When asked to sum up the outgoing year, Armenia’s Minister of Diaspora
Mrs. Hranush Hakobian, turned to the story of establishing the Ministry
for Diaspora Affairs.

It was established for liaising with a great human resource which
is Diaspora, she said. "The Ministry, firstly, contributed to the
formation of the Pan-Armenian mentality. Armenia-Diaspora cooperation
became a style of work and thinking," said Mrs. Hakobian.

Armenian Diaspora, or Spourq, consists of 7 million people world-wide
with more than 50 000 organisations and foundations which were
involved in numerous meetings, forums, conferences in the outgoing
year. All these Diaspora’s representatives are "Armenia’s Ambassadors
to different countries" according to Minister.

Besides, this year marked opening of the Faculty for Duaspora Studies
at the Yerevan State University.