Dead horse not hidden in reservoir

Panorama.am

18:42 31/10/2008

DEAD HORSE NOT HIDDEN IN RESERVOIR

`There are more sick people in Vanadzor than they tell us. Children
are taken to hospitals of Yerevan to be well cured. The thing is that
they hide from us that a dead horse fell into water reservoir,’ tells
a citizen of Vanadzor what the source of disease is in Vanadzor and
Alaverdi.

One thing is obvious something is seriously wrong otherwise the
Ministry of Healthcare and water companies would have discovered the
source of disease earlier. It was useless to get any comments from the
Ministries of Healthcare and Environmental Protection, as well as
private water companies. The structure here is so immerged into one
another that even the officials are not aware of who is responsible
for what.

Source: Panorama.am

NKR Pres: `In need, ready to transfer hostilities to heart of Azerb’

Regnum news agency, Russia
October 25 2008

The president of Nagornyy Karabakh: `In case of need, we are ready to
transfer hostilities into the heart of Azerbaijan’

"Over the recent years, we have said time and again that independence
and security of the NKR [the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic] are not a
subject to speculations and bargaining. We have always been for a
peaceful resolution to the Karabakh problem, but not at the expense of
our independence and freedom. We have paid the highest price for
independence and freedom and therefore, we have no right to jeopardize
it," Bako Saakyan, president of Nagornyy Karabakh, supreme commander
in chief, told journalists in Stepanakert [Xankandi] in a comment on
today’s tactical exercises of the NKR defence army, according to a
Regnum correspondent.

Having highly assessed the outcome of the exercises, the head of the
Karabakh state said: "Our armed forces have again displayed high
combat readiness and we again convinced ourselves that actions
demonstrated in the drills today can be applied in case if the
Azerbaijani army tries to settle a score with us by means of force. As
the NKR defence minister said today, in case of need our units are not
only ready to switch hostilities to the territory of the enemy but
also transfer them into the heart of Azerbaijan."

In reply to a question on the fate of the territories occupied in the
course of the hostilities, the NKR president said: "Those territories
were liberated in early 1990s and as of now, they are fixed in the
constitution of the NKR and are classified as a "security zone". Bako
Saakyan said that Stepanakert was ready to start negotiations with
Baku without any preconditions. "The current delay in the resolution
of the problem is conditioned upon the fact that we are not a
fully-fledged party in the negotiations," Bako Saakyan said, adding
that all the issues should be resolved with involvement of the people
of Nagornyy Karabakh.

We should say that Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, on a two-day
visit to Nagornyy Karabakh, accompanied by Armenian Defence Minister
Seyran Ohanyan, observed the military exercises of the NKR defence
army.

[translated]

Foreign Ministers Of Armenia, Azerbaijan And Russia To Meet On 31 Oc

FOREIGN MINISTERS OF ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN AND RUSSIA TO MEET ON 31 OCTOBER IN MOSCOW

ArmInfo
2008-10-30 16:46:00

ArmInfo. Foreign ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia –
Edward Nalbandyan, Elmar Mammadyarov and Sergey Lavrov will meet
on 31 October in Moscow to discuss the Karabakh conflict settlement
process, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan said at today’s
press-conference in Yerevan.

He also added the OSCE MG co-chairs will also meet up with the foreign
ministers on 1 November. The minister mentioned that Armenia thinks
the last visit of the Russian President Dmitriy Medvedev to Armenia is
very much important in the matter of the Karabakh conflict settlement
as well as his initiative on the meeting of Armenian and Azerbaijani
presidents. ‘We hope it will open a new way for activation of the
talks, which will lead to resolving of the conflict’, – Nalbandyan
concluded.

WB Approves New Loans For Georgia, Armenia

WB APPROVES NEW LOANS FOR GEORGIA, ARMENIA

ITAR-TASS
Oct 31 2008
Russia

WASHINGTON, October 31 (Itar-Tass) — The World Bank approved new loans
worth 20 million dollars each for Georgia and Armenia on Thursday.

In Georgia the money will go to upgrade the East-West highway from
Tbilisi to Rikoti and promote road safety, while in Armenia the loan is
intended for additional financing of the Municipal Water and Wastewater
Project to rehabilitate and improve water system, the bank said.

To Invite The Former Presidents

TO INVITE THE FORMER PRESIDENTS

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
31 Oct 08
Armenia

In an interview to radio station "Liberty", Samvel Nikoyan, Head
of the interim parliamentary committee investigating the March 1-2
incidents and their causes, promised that their committee will send
official letters to former presidents Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Robert
Kocharyan, inviting them to participate in the sessions and express
their viewpoints.

Mr. Nikoyan read out the invitation from the tribune of the National
Assembly as well and even enumerated the questions he was anticipating
to hear the answers of. Now, the Head of the Committee is also going
to send a written notice to the former presidents, "We’ll send them
the invitation in written form. I am very sorry that I have sent
several written messages to the first president in anticipation of
getting the answer to very primitive questions but haven’t received
any reply so far," Mr. Nikoyan mentioned.

Iran Offers Mediation Between Russia And Georgia

IRAN OFFERS MEDIATION BETWEEN RUSSIA AND GEORGIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.10.2008 17:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Educational and
Research Affairs Manuchehr Mohammadi expressed Iran’s protest to the
extension of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to the East.

Mohammadi said the regional governments should distance themselves
from competitive and hostile policies which have remained from the
cold war era.

"NATO’s presence in a region it is not familiar with would not be
to its benefit because it has already experienced an unsuccessful
presence in Iraq and Afghanistan," he said.

U.S. President George W. Bush signed papers Friday to formally
declare U.S. support of NATO membership for Albania and Croatia. Bush
also reiterated U.S. support for prospective NATO members Ukraine,
Georgia, Montenegro, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Bush added, "The door
to NATO membership also remains open to the people of Serbia should
they choose that path."

NATO leaders agreed at a summit earlier this year in Romania to
invite Albania and Croatia into the alliance. However, NATO rebuffed
U.S. attempts to begin the process of inviting Ukraine and Georgia,
both former Soviet republics, to join.

Despite strong U.S. backing to bring them in, Germany, France,
and some other alliance members opposed the move, fearing it would
provoke Russia which has made it clear it would regard such a move
as something close to a hostile action by NATO.

France’s minister for European affairs on Wednesday said he was
opposed to Georgia and Ukraine entering the NATO military alliance
for now because it would not benefit Europe.

NATO foreign ministers are set to once again examine Georgia and
Ukraine’s candidacy for membership in December.

Russia launched a military attack on Georgia on August 8 in response
to a Georgian military offensive to take the region of South Ossetia
back under the government control.

Mohammadi said the recent conflict between Russia and Georgia is one
of the most important events since the September 11 attacks on the
United States which would have a great influence on the international
relations.

He said the 16th conference of the Central Asia and Caucasus, due to
be held in Tehran this week, will specifically focus on the Caucasus
conflict and its effects on the world.

Mohammadi said experts from different countries including the United
States, Britain, Armenia, Ukraine, Germany, Italy, Russia, India,
Sweden, Georgia, Japan, Turkey, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Poland
will attend the conference.

He insisted that Iran believes the Caucasus conflict has not yet
ended and expressed Tehran’s readiness to mediate between Russia and
Georgia to resolve the issue, Tehran Times reports

EU Is Offered To Organize Budget Envisaging Assistance To Ukraine, M

EU IS OFFERED TO ORGANIZE BUDGET ENVISAGING ASSISTANCE TO UKRAINE, MOLDOVA, BELARUS AND SOUTH CAUCASUS

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.10.2008 18:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the framework of the Eastern Partnership
initiative, Ukraine should have the same status as the other EU
aspirant states, according to the Ukrainian public council at the
Ukraine-EU cooperation committee.

The European Union is expected to draw a decision on the Eastern
Partnership initiative in December 2008.

While Brussels is thinking what it can offer the six Eastern
Partnership aspirant countries, Ukrainian experts have already worked
out new ways for cooperation with the EU.

They suggest the European Union should coordinate its finance plans
with a glance to assistance to Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus and South
Caucasus countries, Deutsche Welle reports.

Russia To Boost Ties Within CSTO, Form Joint Air Defense Network

RUSSIA TO BOOST TIES WITHIN CSTO, FORM JOINT AIR DEFENSE NETWORK

RIA Novosti
16:54 | 28/ 10/ 2008

MOSCOW, October 28 (RIA Novosti) – Russia is planning to expand
military-technical cooperation with members of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization and build a CSTO integrated air defense network,
the president said on Tuesday.

The CSTO is a security grouping comprising Armenia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

"New opportunities are opening through our contacts with CSTO member
states, primarily in work to form a joint air defense network and a
regional command, control and communications network. For us, this is
probably one of the central aspects of cooperation," Dmitry Medvedev
told a meeting of the Commission for Military-Technical Cooperation.

Ex-Soviet states already have an integrated air defense system. The CIS
integrated air defense network was set up by 10 CIS member countries
on February 10, 1995. Georgia withdrew from the alliance after its
brief military conflict with Russia over South Ossetia in August.

The CIS air defense network comprises seven air defense brigades,
46 units equipped with S-200 and S-300 air defense missile systems,
23 fighter units equipped with MiG-29, MiG-31 and Su-27 aircraft,
22 electronic support units and two detachments of electronic warfare.

During the meeting Medvedev also called for expanded cooperation
with other CSTO member-states in the development of new types of
military hardware.

"I have already discussed this with the CSTO member-states. Cooperation
with them must be placed on a solid foundation of coordinated programs,
including medium-term cooperation," Medvedev said.

Rival monks keep constant watch in enduring feud over sacred site

Arizona Daily Star, AZ

Rival monks keep constant watch in enduring feud over sacred site
The Associated Press

Tucson, Arizona | Published: 10.26.2008

JERUSALEM – Two rival monks are posted at all times in a rooftop
courtyard at the site of what is believed to be Jesus’ crucifixion: a
bearded Copt in a black robe and an Ethiopian sunning himself on a
wooden chair, studiously ignoring each other as they fight over the
same sliver of sacred space.

For decades, Coptic and Ethiopian Christians have been fighting over
the Deir el-Sultan monastery, which sits atop a chapel at the ancient
Church of the Holy Sepulcher. The monastery is little more than a
cluster of dilapidated rooms and a passageway divided into two
incense-filled chapels, an architectural afterthought alongside the
Holy Sepulcher’s better-known features.

And yet Deir el-Sultan has become the subject of a feud that has gone
far beyond the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City. The Ethiopians control
the site, but the Egypt-based Copts say they own it and see the
Ethiopians as illegal squatters.

The quarrel has erupted into brawls ‘ in 2002, when the Coptic monk
moved his chair into the shade and too close to the Ethiopians, a
dozen people were hurt in the ensuing melee. And nowadays, the
Ethiopians claim the fight could result in the monastery’s collapse
and even in damage to other parts of the church, one of the holiest
sites in Christendom.

Since the 1970s, the Israeli government has refused to allow
renovations or significant repairs at the disputed monastery until the
Ethiopians and the Copts come to terms. That hasn’t happened, and the
Ethiopian Church says the years of neglect have put the structure in
danger. The Copts suggest the Ethiopians are merely trying to further
cement their hold.

The Ethiopian Church commissioned a report from an Israeli engineer
backing up its claim, and in early October the Ethiopian patriarch,
Archbishop Matthias, asked the Israeli government to carry out urgent
repairs. The archbishop attached the engineer’s assessment that the
humble monastery structure could collapse ‘ and possibly damage the
chapel below ‘ if steps are not taken to repair it.

The report, compiled by Yigal Berman of the Milav engineering firm,
cited "safety hazards" that "endanger the lives of the monks and the
visitors," according to a report in the daily Haaretz
newspaper. Yifredew Getnet, a spokesman for the Ethiopian Embassy to
Israel, confirmed the report. A committee made up of embassy
representatives, churchmen and lay leaders has been appointed to
oversee the monastery, he said.

Outside the monastery, Coptic monk Antonious El-Orshlemy said his
church owns Deir el-Sultan, and that the Ethiopian claim that the
monastery is about to collapse is false. "The building is very fine
and not dangerous to someone," he said.

The most recent round of the feud began in 1970 when Ethiopian monks
changed the locks while the Copts were at services on the eve of
Easter and moved in.

The Ethiopian Church has six monasteries and 70 monks in the Holy
Land, according to the office of the patriarch. A handful are
stationed at Deir el-Sultan. The main parts of the Holy Sepulcher are
divided between the Catholics, Armenians and Greek Orthodox.

Three years before the Easter takeover, Israel captured the Old City
from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast War and found itself in charge of the
Holy Sepulcher.

The Copts appealed to an Israeli court, which ruled that the
Ethiopians should not have altered the fragile status quo at the
church but said it was the government’s job to decide what to do. The
government decided not to take action, according to Daniel Rossing,
director of the Jerusalem Center for Jewish-Christian Relations and an
expert on the city’s fractious religious mosaic.

International politics likely played a role in the decision: At the
time, Israel had warm ties with Ethiopia and was at war with
Egypt. Later that was reversed: Communists came to power in Ethiopia
and cut ties with Israel, and Egypt and Israel signed a peace
agreement. But Israel still did not act.

Israel’s interior minister, Meir Sheetrit, now plans to mediate the
dispute, and the government will help renovate the site as soon as the
sides can agree on a course of action, said spokesman Ilan
Marciano. But with each side entirely rejecting the other’s claim to
the monastery, it is unclear if an agreement is possible.

Naturalized voters critical in elections

The Merced Sun-Star (California)
October 24, 2008 Friday
ALL EDITION

NATURALIZED VOTERS CRITICAL IN ELECTIONS;
EXPLODING IMMIGRANT POPULATION WILL PLAY GREATER ROLE IN FUTURE.

BY MICHAEL DOYLE, SUN-STAR WASHINGTON BUREAU
WASHINGTON

Naturalized citizens in the San Joaquin Valley could decide future
elections, immigrant advocates conclude in a revealing report issued
Thursday.

Nearly one in six voting-age residents in some Valley congressional
districts are foreign-born naturalized U.S. citizens, the new report
shows. This is twice the national average and could shape Valley
politics for years to come.

"We have the ability to carry an election," Tuyet G. Duong, the
daughter of Vietnamese immigrants, declared Thursday. "We’re a force
to contend with." Duong is senior staff attorney with the Asian
American Justice Center, which helped release the new immigrant voting
study.

The report is apparently the first to tally both naturalized citizens
and the children of immigrants, a combined population the report’s
authors dub the New Americans.

"This new immigrant population is just exploding," said research
analyst Rob Paral, the report’s chief author.

This is certainly the case in California, where two years ago 24
percent of all registered voters were naturalized Americans or the
children of immigrants who have arrived since 1965. This far exceeded
any other state and marked an increase from 22 percent in 2004.

California’s 18th Congressional District exemplifies the trend,
stretching from Stockton to Merced and into a sliver of Fresno
County. Nearly 16 percent of the district’s voting-age residents are
naturalized U.S. citizens, the new report shows.

By contrast, only 7.5 percent of voting-age residents nationwide are
naturalized citizens.

The population is similar in the neighboring 20th Congressional
District, which includes Kings County and portions of Fresno and Kern
counties. Slightly more than 14 percent of the district’s registered
voters are naturalized U.S. citizens, the study shows.

"It’s not that everyone comes from Mexico," noted Mike Lynch, a
Modesto-based public policy consultant and former congressional
staffer. "This part of the country has an enormous number of ethnic
groups. We have Armenians. We have Sikhs. We have Ukrainians. We have
Portuguese." Populations, in turn, drive political agendas. Attuned to
Armenian-American voters, the Valley’s lawmakers have always been in
the forefront of efforts to pass a controversial Armenian genocide
commemoration. Heeding conservative Hmong residents, Valley
politicians denounce the socialist Laotian government. The
Congressional Portuguese Caucus is rooted in the region.

"The Portuguese culture is thriving in the San Joaquin Valley, and
there are many festas (cq) throughout the year, family reunions, the
exchanges of those traditions and the ties that bind us quite well,"
Rep. Jim Costa, D-Fresno, said last month as the House passed a
resolution commemorating Portuguese immigration.

Naturalization also burdens Valley congressional offices, where
staffers report they spend considerable time helping immigrants
navigate citizenship hurdles. Latino and Asian immigrants dominate the
rolls of recently naturalized U.S. citizens living in California.

In some parts of the state, the so-called New Americans are even more
of an electoral force — at least, they could be. Naturalized citizens
account for more than one-third of the voting-age populations in some
San Francisco Bay Area and Southern California congressional
districts, according to the study based on Census Bureau data and
surveys.