BAKU; Armenian Lobby Has ‘No Influence’ On Moscow

ARMENIAN LOBBY HAS ‘NO INFLUENCE’ ON MOSCOW

news.az
April 5 2010
Azerbaijan

Vafa Guluzade Political scientist Vafa Guluzade has commented on the
intention of the Armenian lobby to influence Azerbaijan’s position
via Russia.

‘Armenian lobby has no influence on Moscow and no one there will
listen to them. But probably, if there is Kim Kardashian among them,
any official for the Foreign Ministry may invite her to the restaurant
and that is all’, said political scientist Vafa Guluzade commenting
on the information of Turkish mass media that the Armenian lobby is
going to visit Moscow to influence Azerbaijan’s position via Moscow.

‘There is another variant of intensification of the Armenian lobby
in the Russian direction for Moscow to agree on adoption of Madrid
principles by Armenia because the Armenian lobby has no political
weight in Russia. By the way, they have no political weight in the
United States, merely, the US administration sometimes uses this
factor for its interests when they need to press on Turkey.

Thus, the visit of the representatives of the Armenian lobby to Moscow
will be ineffective. I would like to repeat once again that Russia
does not build its foreign policy on the wishes of the Armenian lobby’,
said the political scientist.

New System Of Acquiring A Schengen Visa In Effect For Armenian Citiz

NEW SYSTEM OF ACQUIRING A SCHENGEN VISA IN EFFECT FOR ARMENIAN CITIZENS

Tert.am

A new system of obtaining visas to the Schengen Agreement countries
comes into effect beginning today.

Under this new system, in order to obtain a Schengen Visa, Armenian
citizens must show passports that haven’t been renewed past its
original 10-year time period. Besides, the passport must have at
least two free pages for the Schengen Visa. Another requirement is
that the passport should be valid at least three months after the
end of the intended visit.

According to the new system, from now on, a ten-day period is defined
for giving the Schengen Visa. If denied, the embassy in question
should provide the reason why a Schengen Visa was not given.

For individuals above 12, the cost of the visa will be 60 EUR; for
6-12 year-olds, it’ll be 35 EUR. This change in price does not refer
to those countries that have an agreement on simplification of visa
regime with the European Union.

BAKU: Azerbaijan Will Always Support Turkey In Its Struggle Against

AZERBAIJAN WILL ALWAYS SUPPORT TURKEY IN ITS STRUGGLE AGAINST DOUBLE STANDARDS – PRESIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATION HEAD

Trend News Agency
April 2 2010
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan`s delegation led by chief of the Presidential Administration
Ramiz Mehdiyev is continuing a visit to Ankara, AzerTAc state news
agency reported.

Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmet Davutoglu has today hosted
an official banquet in honor of the delegation.

Speaking to the event, Davutoglu reaffirmed Turkey`s backing of
Azerbaijan`s "just" position.

Mehdiyev, in turn, vowed Azerbaijan "will always support Turkey in
its struggle against double standards".

Following the banquet, the Azerbaijani delegation visited a Heydar
Aliyev Park and put flowers at a monument to the national leader.

Mehdiyev also met Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The two praised
the bilateral relations, noting reciprocal visits by Azerbaijani and
Turkish officials make "huge" contribution to further expanding of
cooperation. Mehdiyev and Erdogan exchanged views on international
and regional affairs.

The Azerbaijani delegation also met the Turkish Grand National Assembly
Speaker Mehmet Ali Sahin. The Turkish Speaker said the two countries`
parliaments enjoy "effective" cooperation. "MPs from Azerbaijan and
Turkey support national interests of both countries in international
events," the speaker said. Sahin hailed "rapid" progress the government
of Azerbaijan obtained in recent years. Mehdiyev said Turkey "plays
important role in world and regional politics".

The chief of the Presidential Administration praised the Speaker`s
statement that "protocols signed with Armenia will not be ratified
until territories of Azerbaijan are liberated."

Azerbaijan`s ambassador to Turkey Zakir Hashimov was present at
the meetings.

The delegation left Ankara for Istanbul.

The Banking System Is As Reliable As It Was Before The Crises

THE BANKING SYSTEM IS AS RELIABLE AS IT WAS BEFORE THE CRISES

Aysor
April 2 2010
Armenia

"I welcome the unification of the "Ameriabank" and "Cascadebank". It
was a correct decision taken by both banks of which will first of
all benefit the clients of both banks," Ararat Ghukasyan, Chairman
of the Union of Armenian Banks (UAB) said today on the meeting.

He made a call of calmness to the investors of the "Cascade bank"
assuring that the unification of two banks will not reflect negatively
on their interests, just on the contrary.

Best Way To Preserve Bio-Diversity Is To Broaden Protected Areas: Ar

BEST WAY TO PRESERVE BIO-DIVERSITY IS TO BROADEN PROTECTED AREAS: ARAM AGHASYAN

Tert.am
19:50 ~U 01.04.10

The cartography and reviewing of protected areas in Armenia are in
process, head of the Specially Protected Areas Division at the RA
Ministry of Nature Protection Aram Aghasyan told journalists at a
press conference today.

In his words, cartography and reviewing of those areas will make it
possible to organize their protection more effectively.

Aghasyan didn’t deny that the protection of certain reserves in
Armenia is carried out today on paper only.

"We shouldn’t forget that we live in a limited area, and we also have
social problems," Aghasyan tried to justify himself.

According to Aghasyan, new protected areas (75,000 hectares) were
designated last year. They are Lake Arpy, Arevik national parks and
Zangezur state reserve.

"The best way of preserving bio-diversity is to expand the specially
protected areas," said Aghasyan.

Armenia has 4 national parks and 30 state reserves.

ANKARA: Swedish PM Welcomes Turkey Envoy Return After Armenia Issue

SWEDISH PM WELCOMES TURKEY ENVOY RETURN AFTER ARMENIA ISSUE

April 1 2010
Turkey

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt welcomed return of Turkish
Ambassadress to Sweden Zergun Koruturk.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt welcomed return of Turkish
Ambassadress to Sweden Zergun Koruturk.

According to the Swedish newspapers, Prime Minister Reinfeldt said
that it was a good step to keep Turkey-Sweden relations vigorous. He
also highlighted importance of the bilateral relations.

Prime Minister Reinfeldt extended Sweden’s support to Turkey’s
membership to the European Union.

Meanwhile, Koruturk said in an interview with the Swedish news agency
TT that the Turkish government welcomed attitude of both Swedish
Prime Minister Reinfeldt and Foreign Minister Carl Bildt following
approval of the resolution about Armenian allegations.

"The Turkish government and I do not have any doubts that there would
be no changes in the foreign policy of the Swedish government. Prime
Minister Reinfeldt and Foreign Minister Bildt said in their statements
that it was the government, not the parliament which shapes Sweden’s
foreign policy," he added.

Turkey’s diplomat returned to Sweden on Tuesday after being recalled
to Ankara for consultations on the decision of the Swedish parliament
to adopt a resolution on the incidents of 1915. Swedish Parliament
approved the resolution on March 11. The resolution was approved
with 131 votes against 130. Turkey strongly rejects the genocide
allegations and regards the events as civil strife in wartime which
claimed lives of many Turks and Armenians.

www.worldbulletin.net

Erdogan: Turkey Has "Nothing In Its Past To Be Ashamed Of"

ERDOGAN: TURKEY HAS "NOTHING IN ITS PAST TO BE ASHAMED OF"

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.04.2010 13:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Prime Minister scorned Wednesday the adoption
of two resolutions by the Swedish parliament and a U.S. House panel
recognizing the Armenian Genocide, Anatolian News Agency reported.

"Turkey had nothing in its past to be ashamed of," Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said in a televised address to the nation.

"Neither Sweden nor the United States had nothing to do with the
incidents that occurred nearly a century ago. And once you make history
a mere tool for politics, you might never be able to find the truth
again," he said. "Turkey has always stated that history should be
left up to historians."

Armenian National Congress Condemns Government’s Denial Of OSCE ODIH

ARMENIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS CONDEMNS GOVERNMENT’S DENIAL OF OSCE ODIHR REPORT

Tert.am
12:09 ~U 31.03.10

The Armenian National Congress (HAK) has released a statement
condemning the ruling authorities and governmental bodies for denying
a recent report by OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human
Rights (ODIHR) on the events of March 1, 2008.

The report, having thoroughly studied and evaluated the process
of about 100 criminal cases, revealed dozens of facts and tough
violations of such rights as a person’s right to freedom, presumption
of innocence, the principle of equality of sides, sentencing people
based only on evidence given by the police and extorted through
terrorizing and degrading treatment.

The HAK statement says that the RA Ministry of Justice denies "unlawful
actions and mistakes" committed by a law enforcement body (especially
the Prosecutor’s Office) which it has nothing to do with, while the
Ministry is forgetful of the fact that it has no such authority,
neither by the Constitution nor by law.

Further, the Armenian National Congress says that the RA Court
of Cassation, in turn, maintains its right to express opinions and
provide assessments in relation to March 1 events, while most of the
appeals weren’t even examined or heard in court.

"These two state bodies, unaware of March 1 cases, are shamelessly
objecting and trying to deny what happened in front of thousands
of citizens, they are faking known realities and facts, they
are distorting what is objective and real, they are trying to
smear and smother what international co-rapporteurs observed and
registered," reads the statement, adding that instead of hunting
down the perpetrators, the ruling authorities have settled down to
the short-sighted and disreputable task of denying what was stated
by the report.

Peter Bilezikian, 97, survivor of Armenian genocide

Peter Bilezikian, 97, survivor of Armenian genocide

March 30, 2010 06:49 AM

Peter Bilezikian

By Caitlin Castello, Town Correspondent

By trade, Peter Bilezikian, was an electrician, plumber, and business owner.
He was a self-educated philosopher and historian, but above all else he was
a storyteller.
"He would always leave people laughing, never crying," said his daughter
Bethel Bilezikian Charkoudian of Newton.
Mr. Bilezikian, a survivor of the 1915 Armenian genocide and a Newton
resident, died Wednesday at his home. He was 97.

Mr. Bilezikian was born in Marash, Western Armenia, which was occupied by
the Ottoman Turks at the time. He arrived in the United States in 1921-22,
his daughter said. He and his mother and siblings met his father in New York
before traveling and settling in Newton.

In 2005, on the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, Mr. Bilezikian
shared his story with Globe columnist Yvonne Abraham.

"All I remember is, we were hungry, and I thought that was a normal thing. .
. . There were so many people dying. . . . I remember children dying with
the big stomachs . . . dropping dead right in the middle of the street. And
a cart would come along, pick them up as if they were nothing, and throw
them up on the cart and keep going. There’d be a big hole somewhere, they’d
just dump it in there," he said. "When I came to this country I lived in
Newtonville. At night I used to find myself under the bed in a cold sweat.
The dream I used to have was, a Turk would cut my ears off, cut my nose,
pull my teeth, gouge my eye out. I would wake up all wet. . . . I never had
these dreams in the old country."

Mr. Bilezikian never shied away from telling his stories to his family, said
Bilezikian Charkoudian. He taught his three children not to hate the Turks,
she said.
"He brought us up to love those Turkish people who helped save the Armenians
who did survive," said Bilezikian Charkoudian. "We were not brought up with
hatred. We were brought up with facts."

He graduated from Watertown High School in 1932, and was a recipient of a
full scholarship to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He could not
attend because he needed to earn money for his family, said Bilezikian
Charkoudian. He instilled the importance of education in his children.
"Through his love of reading and relating, and his talent for being
extremely creative, Daddy built up a successful business, married the woman
of his dreams and he provided the best for his family, making sure that they
all went to college and graduate school (even though in those days, the old
timers would tell him not to waste his money educating his daughters)!"
wrote his daughter Martha McCool, of Gainesville, Texas, for a memorial
service for Mr. Bilezikian at Watertown Evangelical Church.

Mr. Bilezikian established and ran Newtonville Electrical Company Inc., in
Newtonville. He would often forgo payments from people whom he knew did not
have the extra money to pay the bill, said his children. He would answer the
phone in the middle of the night, often in the dead of winter to assist
families whose heat had failed, said his son, James of Miami.

"Because he and his family were rescued so many times while trying to
survive Marash and the war against humanity, as rescuer, it never occurred
to Dad to send a bill to those he rescued. Dad would have said that Jesus
rescued us from our bondage to sin, and never sent us a bill, because He
paid for the rescuing and the sin on the cross of Calvary. Dad and mom were
examples of those who grew in conformity to the image of Christ, to the mind
of Christ," wrote his son, in the eulogy for Mr. Bilezikian.
Mr. Bilezikian, met his wife Lucille Mae (Vartanian), while living in
Newton. They were married for 51 years; she died in 1991.

His wife had a legendary singing voice, said James. Mr. Bilezikian and his
family would sing hymns on Sunday, and his favorite was "Amazing Grace." He
belonged to Watertown Evangelical Church. His uncle, Rev. Vartan Bilezikian
was the first pastor of this church, which was built in 1939 by their
family, said McCool.
"He was the most religious man I’ve ever known. He lived the Christian
life," said McCool. "We would also go to Uncle Vartans’s house, we sang
hymns. It was a very religious day for us, Sunday. He worked extremely hard
to provide a good life for us."

In addition to his children, Mr. Bilezikian leaves a sister, Gulenia
Sulahian of California; 12 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.

Services have been held.

WTO: Trade To Expand By 9.5% In 2010 After A Dismal 2009

WTO: TRADE TO EXPAND BY 9.5% IN 2010 AFTER A DISMAL 2009

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
30.03.2010 18:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ After the sharpest decline in more than 70 years,
world trade is set to rebound in 2010 by growing at 9.5%, according
to WTO economists.

"WTO rules and principles have assisted governments in keeping markets
open and they now provide a platform from which trade can grow as the
global economy improves. We see the light at the end of the tunnel
and trade promises to be an important part of the recovery. But we
must avoid derailing any economic revival through protectionism,"
said Director-General Pascal Lamy.

Exports from developed economies are expected to increase by 7.5%
in volume terms over the course of the year while shipments from the
rest of the world (including developing economies and the Commonwealth
of Independent States) should rise by around 11% as the world emerges
from recession.

This strong expansion will help recover some, but by no means all,
of the ground lost in 2009 when the global economic crisis sparked a
12.2% contraction in the volume of global trade – the largest such
decline since World War II. Should trade continue to expand at its
current pace, the economists predict, it would take another year for
trade volumes to surpass the peak level of 2008. Measuring trade in
volume terms provides a more reliable basis for annual comparisons
since volume measurements are not distorted by changes in commodity
prices or currency fluctuations, as they can be when trade is measured
in dollars or other currencies.

One positive development in 2009 was the absence of any major increase
in trade barriers imposed by WTO members in response to the crisis.

The number of trade-restricting measures applied by governments
has actually declined in recent months. However, significant slack
remains in the global economy, and unemployment is likely to remain
high throughout 2010 in many countries. Persistent unemployment may
intensify protectionist pressures.

"During these difficult times, the multilateral trading system has
once again proven its value. WTO rules and principles have assisted
governments in keeping markets open and they now provide a platform
from which trade can grow as the global economy improves. We see the
light at the end of the tunnel and trade promises to be an important
part of the recovery. But we must avoid derailing any economic revival
through protectionism," WTO Director-General said.