Armenian CB rep wins Interbank chess tournament

Armenian CB rep wins Interbank chess tournament

YEREVAN, May 31. /ARKA/. Ashot Avetisyan, an officer of the Central
Bank of Armenia (CBA), proved winner in the Bank Officers category of
an interbank chess tournament.

The CBA pres service report that the second and third places were won
by Arsen Naghdalyan (Conversebank), and Gevorg Tedevosyan (Araratbank)
respectively.

As regards the Bank Officers’ Children category, Karen Namalyan
(Conversebank) won the first place. Levon Karamyan and Hayk Martikyan
(Ardshininvestbank) won the second and the third places respectively.

The 6th interbank chess tournament was held at the Yerevan Chess
Palace, on May 28, on the occasion of the Day of the First Republic and
International Children’s Day.

Among the participants were thirty-five officers of the CBA and nine
officers of Armenian commercial banks (Araratbank, Inecobank,
ArmSwissbank, Conversebank, Ameriabank, Ardshininvestbank, VTB Bank
Armenia, Unibank, and HSBC Bank Armenia). Twenty-eight children of the
bank officers took part in the tournament as well.

Two prizes were instituted by the organizers, Trade Unions of the
Armenian commercial banks and of the CBA. The first prize (50,000 AMD),
the second prize (30,000 AMD) and the third prize (20,000 AMD). `0–

Baku proposes creating Russia-Georgia-Azerbaijan-Russia energy ring

Baku proposes project on creating Russia-Georgia-Azerbaijan-Russia
energy ringway
30.05.2009 17:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In CIS Energy Council’s 35th session held yesterday
in Baku, Azerbaijan proposed several initiatives. According to
Azerenerji LLC President Etibar Pirverdiev, discussion focused on
important issues concerning energy flow via Russia-Azerbaijan-Iran and
Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey energy lines.
`Parties also considered the project aimed at creating
Russia-Georgia-Azerbaijan-Russia ringway,’ Pirverdiev said, adding
that Azerbaijan’s already completing construction of long electric
power transmission line (with a length of 350 km.) which will form the
continuation of Russia-Azerbaijan-Iran line.
`We completed our investments in the project, and hope Russia will
also will comply with its investment commitments on its territory. ‘
Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey energy line project is currently in the
process of elaboration. Its technical-economic justification was given
by US Agency for International Development (USAID).
The Council held its Session with the participation of representatives
from Turkmenistan, Georgia and Armenia. Iranian delegation did not
attend the discussion, Fineko/abc.az reports.

World Boxing Championship: Eight Armenian Boxers To Meet Challenge

WORLD BOXING CHAMPIONSHIP: EIGHT ARMENIAN BOXERS TO MEET CHALLENGE

Panorama.am
16:22 27/05/2009

AIBA World Youth Boxing Championship preliminary stage was over on
26 May. After four-day long matches Armenian boxing team occupies
second horizontal among 42 countries.

Today the fourth finals should be launched and 8 boxers of our national
team take part in it. Russian team occupies the first horizontal
due to the number of its victories. Kazakhstan team closes the best
three chain.

Cuba occupies 4th, USA – 5th and Turkey – 6th horizontals.

Since 2001 Russian boxing team leads the current championship, Armenia
participated in Youth Boxing Championship in 2002 and gained one
silver medal. Today our eight boxers have serious challenge to meet.

The Armenian Media In Lebanon: Pre-Election Divisions

THE ARMENIAN MEDIA IN LEBANON: PRE-ELECTION DIVISIONS

Menassat
news-articles/6578-look-armenian-media-lebanon
May 28 2009

Between 1915-1920, Armenians living under the Ottoman Empire were part
of a genocidal policy that took the lives of an estimated 1.5 million
people and led to the emigration of hundreds of thousands of survivors
to the Levant. They settled in countries like Iraq, Syria, Lebanon
and Palestine to become an important cultural component of the region
as a whole. Armenians in Lebanon are seen as the swing vote in this
years June parliamentary elections, and as part of MENASSAT’s election
coverage, we survey the Armenian media sector in Lebanon. By HANI NAIM

Armenian media fall into Lebanese political divisions, though community
members say Armenian issues will always prevail

BEIRUT, May 28, 2009 (MENASSAT) – Marking the 94th anniversary of
the Armenian genocide on April 24 this year, Armenians in Lebanon
have become a significant force in Lebanese politics.

In this multi-confessional country of 3 million, estimates put the
Armenian-Lebanese population somewhere around 150,000. And after
voting reform laws were introduced last year, Armenians are uniquely
placed in key electoral districts and are expected to be the swing
vote in Lebanon’s June 7 parliamentary elections.

Armenian media has played a significant part in defining Armenian
political platforms where Lebanese politics is concerned, and both
main Lebanese political camps in Lebanon – the pro-western March 14
movement and the Hezbollah-led opposition – have been careful to make
concessions to the Armenians.

Fiercely attached to their political, historical, and cultural legacy
post-Genocide, Armenians have always had a powerful internal media
element.

Early on in their arrival to Lebanon between 1915 and 1920, Armenians
began publishing Armenian language newspapers. Between 1927 and 1937
is described by Armenian historians in Lebanon as the golden era
of Armenian press when all three of the Lebanon’s major Armenian
newspapers were founded.

The first Armenian newspaper called Aztag began in 1927. The paper
was, and still is the mouthpiece of the largest Armenian party,
the Tashnak party (The Armenian Federal Revolutionary Party).

In today’s current political climate, the Tashnak party is aligned
with the March 8 coalition, the opposition political alliance with
Christian supporters loyal to Lebanese Army general, Michel Aoun,
and Shia supporters of Hezbollah.

9 years before Lebanon’s declaration of independence, a second
Armenian-language paper – Ararat – was established in 1937.

Named after the famed Mount Ararat in present day Turkey, the
Mt. Fuji-like symbol for Armenians, Ararat has emerged as the
mouthpiece for the Hanshak party, the Socialist Democratic Party.

The other major Armenian newspaper of record, Zartonk (The Renaissance)
was also founded in 1937 and represents the Armenian Liberal Democratic
Party, Ramgafar.

Both papers are aligned with the pro-western March 14 coalition –
currently the majority in government.

Aztag newspaper

Aztag describes itself as "a daily political and literary newspaper,"
and its headquarters in a Tashnak-owned building in the Armenian
district north of Beirut called Borj Hammoud – a swamp area first
settled by Armenian genocide survivors in 1915.

During the Lebanese civil war between 1975 and 1990 that cost some
200,000 Lebanese lives, the volume of the newspaper was reduced but
it never stopped publishing.

The newspaper consists of ten pages, divided into different subjects,
mainly concerning the Republic of Armenia and its various national
causes.

The op-ed and the first page usually contain Lebanese, Armenian,
regional and international news.

The internal pages are divided into Lebanese political news, Armenian
cultural and political news from the Armenian Diaspora, including
international genocide recognition campaigns and cultural and artistic
news, features and opinion.

The newspaper issues a monthly special dedicated to children between
5 and 15 years old, comprised of writings and drawings from Armenian
students around the world.

Aztag also publishes two yearly publications: the first at the
beginning of each year, which reviews the major events that occurred
during the passing year and analysis for the next year.

The second yearly publication is issued on April 24th of each year,
on the anniversary of the Armenian genocide. It includes sections on
preserving Armenian history and culture, and includes artistic and
written features about the Armenian cause, in addition to interviews
with genocide survivors.

The newspaper was also the first to issue an Arabic publication in
1996, but soon stopped because "the Lebanese general opinion has
their media, and what concerns us is to address the Armenians,"
former Aztag editor Armin Abdlian told MENASSAT.

Ararat newspaper

In 1937, Ararat entered the newspaper fray, and immediately injected
a fresh voice into Armenian general politics and opinion.

Representing the Hanshak party, the newspaper suffered from harassment
from the Lebanese political authorities in the 1950s and 1960s because
of the papers editorial opposition to the Lebanese government.

The paper suffered from frequent government closures as a result.

In 1978, three years after the beginning of the 1975-1990 Lebanese
civil war, militiamen affiliated with the Lebanese Forces and
other right-wing Christian parties attacked the headquarters of
the newspaper.

The attacking militiamen also destroyed Ararat’s entire newspaper
archive.

Theories behind the attack center around the political alliances
the paper’s editorial support of Lebanon’s leftist political and
Muslim-oriented militias (grouped together in the Lebanese National
Movement), that supported and received support from the Palestinian
Liberation Organization headed then by Yasser Arafat.

The newspaper continued its daily publishing until 2002 when it
switched formats and began published weekly until 2005, when it
resumed daily distribution again.

In 2009, the paper turned to a compact four-page daily news and
analysis format, and based the layout redesign on a Armenian readership
poll that posed the question: "What does the Armenian reader want in
a newspaper?"

According to Ararat’s managing editor, Aharon Shikherdimian, the polled
said, "The reader doesn’t like reading news because he receives them
from other media. He is looking for political and cultural analysis"

The newspaper covers the Lebanese political movement, the essential
activities of the Hanshak party, Armenian Diaspora news and local
Armenian current events. It also focuses on analysis concerning local,
regional and international political events.

Ararat also focuses on news from Armenia and its neighboring countries.

Zartonk newspaper

The Ramgafar party newspaper Zartonk appeared on the Lebanese newspaper
scene the same year as Ararat in 1937.

It remained active as a daily until the end of 2006, when it scaled
back distribution and then stopped publishing in a daily format in
the end of 2007.

Zartonk re-launched in May 2008 on a semi-monthly basis, and in March
2009, it increased its publication to three issues per week.

Managing director of Zartonk, Sarkis Savrian told MENASSAT, "The real
difficulties with our paper, in terms of publishing and distribution
have mainly been political problems. But we’ve had major reshuffling
of the administrative team over the years – as well as internal
issues with the Ramgafar party," although he wouldn’t elaborate on
what those internal issues were.

Savrian said Zartonk issued an Arabic version of the newspaper
between 2004 and 2007, and pledged by years end that they would resume
republishing it. "We will also restart our daily publishing schedule
again by the end of the year after a little more organizational
restructuring," he said.

It is worth noting that the new newspaper format has also begun
publishing smaller editions and has been praised in the Armenian
Diaspora for its international journalistic standards and lack of
partisanship.

Like the rest of the Lebanese media, partisan reporting tends to
dominate the editorial lens for what is published.

Voice of Van

The Armenian parties have continued to address Armenian general opinion
through the newspapers, but in 1986, the domination of the newspaper
as a medium in the Armenian community changed when a member of the
Tashnak party established an independent radio station – the Voice
of Van (a lake in ancestral Armenian land in eastern Turkey).

Two years later in 1988, the radio fell under the managerial control
of the Tashnak party and became its official radio outlet.

This radio station is diverse with its political, cultural and social
programs, in addition to the political programs about Armenian history
and what concerns the Armenian cause as a whole.

It also broadcasts a daily program in Arabic treating political and
cultural subjects important to Armenians.

Voice of Van remained an only child until the beginning of February
2008, when Sevan (a lake in the Armenian Republic) broke radio silence.

Sevan radio was considered the first non-partisan Armenian media outlet
in Lebanon when it launched, but has slid increasingly towards the
pro-government March 14 coalition, a political talk show programmer,
Shiraz Jarhajian told MENASSAT.

During the street violence between Lebanon’s rival political camps
in May 2008, militiamen aligned with the Hezbollah-led opposition,
burned the offices of the radio station, and for one month after
the cessation of violence and the signing of the May 2008 Doha peace
accord the station was off the air.

In the summer of 2008, Sevan re-launched from an Armenian majority
neighborhood in eastern Beirut.

Jarhajian explained, "This region was safer and easier for the
guests to get to. It also allowed reporting from the main Armenian
neighborhood, Borj Hammoud"

The TV stations: Armenian journals

In the early 2000s, as the Lebanese-Armenian political and business
influence began to have more sway in the country’s political scene,
Lebanese television networks began catering to the Armenian audience.

In 2001, the national Lebanese Television network began broadcasting a
daily 10-minute news Journal in Armenian, in addition to its journals
in French and English.

Today, the journal has been extended to a proper 30 minutes show,
divided into three categories: Lebanese, Armenian and international
news items.

In the Lebanese section, it focuses on the main local political
news. The Armenian section includes news of official political events
in Armenia-proper.

On the official day of commemoration for the Armenian genocide
this year (April 24), and on the eve of the Lebanese parliamentary
elections, the Christian opposition Free Patriotic Movement-affiliated
TV station – OTV – started broadcasting a 30-minute Armenian news
program.

Future TV broadcaster Grace Domanian al-Helu who works with a
longer-standing 30-minute Armenian news program on the Pro-March
14 Future TV network, says the OTV decision was a purely political
decision. "Because we are on the eve of the elections," he told
MENASSAT.

Abdalian agrees with Domanian saying "OTV wins from this journal on
the political, electoral and even commercial levels. This affair is
political on the first place."

A "light" political conflict

It could be said that there is no independent Armenian media. The
Armenian press is primarily partisan, as seen with the two radio
stations, Tashnak and Seven.

However, despite the Armenian parties being divided on the political
level between the opposition and the majority, the media does not
mirror this division as much as Lebanese media outlets do.

For example, the Armenian media stayed away from using rhetoric of
mistrust and accusations commonly found in Lebanese outlets since the
assassination of former Lebanese PM, Rafiq Hariri on February 14, 2005.

The division is existent, says Abdalian, but "we are more evolved in
the media and in the way we deal with it than the others."

Shirkhardimian also agrees that there is a schism and criticizes the
Lebanese media which uses "accusatory speech that started in 2005."

He also said that he appreciates the Armenian journals on Lebanese
channels, but criticized OTV for its attack against March 14 and the
Armenian parties supporting the majority.

"If the aim is to open a front, this is the wrong way," he said.

Abdalian on the other hand criticized the Future TV Armenian
journal. "Similar to the Hanshak and the Ramgafar journal, they
are attacking us constantly," referring to those who sided with
the opposition.

However, as Safarian says, there is a greater issue at hand for
Armenians.

"The Armenian parties are united on Armenian causes. Their problem
in Lebanon is being reduced to being part of a battle over power."

http://www.menassat.com/?q=en/

BEIRUT: Pakradounian To Al-Manar: Armenians Might Not Vote Heavily F

PAKRADOUNIAN TO AL-MANAR (HEZBOLLAH): ARMENIANS MIGHT NOT VOTE HEAVILY FOR MURR

Al-Tayyar
PoliticalNews/en-US/128879178989591973.htm
May 27 2009
Lebanon

Tashnak MP Hagop Pakradounian said on Wednesday that the Change and
Reform ticket in the Metn district will win six seats, noting that
MP Michel Murr might break the list thanks to the Armenian support.

Speaking to Al-Manar, Pakradounian noted, however, that there was
some nervousness within the Armenian bases over the support for
Murr. He said that some Murr spokesmen were assailing the Armenians,
"and therefore I cannot guarantee that the popular bases will vote
in favor of Murr in an intensive way."

While noting that the Tashnak’s leadership will vote for Murr, he
said he wishes this leadership would not change its mind at the last
moment. "We just hoped MP Murr and his son, Defense Minister Elias
Murr, denied what they were quoted as saying against the Armenians,"
he added.

Pakradounian said that the Tashnak party will decide whom to vote
for on the list, after he discusses it with Free Patriotic Movement
leader MP Michel Aoun two days before elections.

http://www.tayyar.org/Tayyar/News/

Prime Minister Erdogan Finally Admits Turkey Practiced Ethnic Cleans

PRIME MINISTER ERDOGAN FINALLY ADMITS TURKEY PRACTICED ETHNIC CLEANSING
By Harut Sassounian

AZG Armenian Daily
28/05/2009

Turkey

2009/05/prime-minister-erdogan-finally-admits.html

In a daring statement, Prime Minister Rejeb Erdogan admitted for
the first time, that the expulsion from Turkey of tens of thousands
of ethnic Greeks in the last century was a "fascist" act, Reuters
reported.

Some commentators viewed Erdogan’s remarks as a reference to the
expulsion of 1.5 million ethnic Greeks from Turkey to Greece in
1923. The large-scale population exchange between the two countries
also included the transfer of more than 500,000 ethnic Turks from
Greece to Turkey.

Other observers thought that Erdogan was referring to the pillaging
of thousands of Greek shops and houses by Turkish mobs in Istanbul on
Sept. 6-7, 1955, following the spread of false reports that Ataturk’s
house in Thessaloniki, Greece had been burned down.

Beyond the expulsion of Greeks, Erdogan made an indirect reference
to the tragic fate of other ethnic groups, such as Armenians, in
Turkey. "For years, those of different identities have been kicked
out of our country…. This was not done with common sense. This was
done with a fascist approach," Erdogan said on May 23, during the
annual congress of the Justice and Development Party, held in the
western province of Duzce.

"For many years," Erdogan continued, "various facts took place in this
country to the detriment of ethnic minorities who lived here. They
were ethnically cleansed because they had a different ethnic cultural
identity. The time has arrived for us to question ourselves about
why this happened and what we have learned from all of this. There
has been no analysis of this right up until now. In reality, this
behavior is the result of a fascist conception. We have also fallen
into this grave error."

The Turkish Prime Minister’s candid remarks were harshly criticized by
opposition parties. Onur Oymen, vice president of the main opposition
Republican People’s Party (CHP) said that associating Turkey’s history
with terms like fascism based on hearsay was not right. He also said
that no Turkish citizen had ever been expelled because of his or her
ethnic background. Oktay Vural of the opposition MHP party added:
"Erdogan’s words are an insult to the Turkish nation."

In sharp contrast, liberal Turkish commentators praised Erdogan
for his conciliatory remarks: "For the first time you have a prime
minister who wants to admit that mistakes were made in the treatment of
religious minorities. This is historic," wrote journalist Sami Kohen
in Milliyet. "But whether this rhetoric will be followed with deeds,
remains to be seen." Hurriyet Daily News added: Erdogan’s speech was
historic; it was the first time that a high official accepted there
have been unlawful and undemocratic practices against minorities in
the past. This sentiment was echoed by Prof. Halil Berktay in Vatan
newspaper: "That statement was the most courageous thing ever said by
Erdogan." Baskin Oran, another academic well-known for his liberal
views, told Star newspaper that he was "proud of a prime minister
who denounces ethnic and religious cleansing."

CNN-Turk News Director Ridvan Akar was more skeptical about Erdogan’s
true intentions. He wrote in Vatan: "Minority rights as well as
those of religious foundations are a structural problem within the
Turkish state. Of course, Erdogan has taken a step forward with this
declaration. But the sincerity of his words will depend on facts to
back them up, such as the restitution of rights to those who have
been expelled, the return of confiscated properties, or compensation."

The Prime Minister’s statement is encouraging, if it is an indication
that Turkey’s leaders have finally decided to face the ugly chapters
of their country’s past.

However, it would be wrong to draw overly optimistic conclusions from
this single statement. Erdogan has made similar comments about the
Kurds in Turkey, only to have their hopes dashed by taking unexpected
repressive measures against them.

The fact is that Erdogan is not the master of his political domain. The
"fascists" he attacks are not buried in an Ottoman historical grave,
but are alive and well in Turkish society and occupy the highest
echelons of the military and judiciary.

Yet, Erdogan is politically shrewd enough to realize that his
condemnation of fascism would resonate at home and in the West, and
win him accolades and support against his powerful domestic opponents.

Erdogan’s battle against the ghosts of the Turkish past is in fact a
fight for his political survival against those in today’s Turkey who
view him and his Islamic party with deep suspicion, and are determined
to counter his every move, ultimately seeking his downfall from power.

http://www.armengenocide.org/

Armenia To Be Discussed On June 24

ARMENIA TO BE DISCUSSED ON JUNE 24

A1+
09:56 pm | May 26, 2009

Politics

Co-rapporteurs John Prescott and Georges Colombier will present the
functioning of democratic institutions in Armenia during the PACE
summer sitting.

Discussions on Armenia are scheduled for June 24, yet there is still
no document in circulation. It will most probably be ready after the
session of the Monitoring Committee, which is scheduled for early June.

On June 23, a day before the discussion on Armenia, the PACE Delegates
will elect the new secretary of the Council of Europe.

PACE Delegates have put into circulation a document, which
proposes a clear definition for properly identifying "political
prisoners". Authors of the document mention that at the present time,
there are real concerns that there are no clear criteria for defining
political prisoners.

They consider appointing a rapporteur to present a report that contains
a clear criterion and a benchmark for who should be regarded as a
genuine political prisoner.

"The process of appointing a rapporteur is in the interest of all
member states of the Council of Europe. We also request that this
be done and a report adopted by the Assembly before any report on
political prisoners is prepared in respect of Azerbaijan, Armenia,
Moldova or any other country," as stated by the authors.

The document has been signed by 25 PACE Delegates, including head
of the Russian delegation. There are no Armenian delegates among
the signatories.

Euroset To Quit Armenian Market

EUROSET TO QUIT ARMENIAN MARKET

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
27.05.2009 12:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia’s largest mobile phone retailer Evroset is
quitting Armenian and Moldovan markets. "Shops in Armenia have already
closed. Final closing procedures may last 2-3 months. The company took
such decision considering profit volumes, which do not exceed 1% of
the company’s total income in both countries," Euroset Press Secretary
Natalya Aristova told a PanARMENIAN.Net correspondent. According to
her, the company plans to focus on the markets operating in Russia,
Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Bealrus.

In 2006, Euroset launched its services in Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan,
Moldova, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Armenia, Georgia and
Azerbaijan. It quitted the latter country’s market having worked there
for less than 6 months. The company accounted for such decision by the
fact that Azerbaijan drew more profit from second hand phone sales,
considering the large number pirate copies.

Armenian Church in Malatya needs repairs.

Domestic

Armenian church in Malatya needs renovation, residents say

Anatolia News Agency

MALATYA -The 18th century Toshoron Armenian church in the
Ã=87avuÅ=9FoÄ=9Flu neighborhood of Malatya is in ruins, in need of
care and renovation. Ã=87avuÅ=9FoÄ=9Flu is the birthplace of Hrant
Dink, the former editor of daily Agos, who was assassinated in 2007.

Mustafa Å=9Eahin, headman of Ã=87avuÅ=9FoÄ=9Flu, spoke to the Anatolia
news agency and said the church is in need of repairs and that people
in the neighborhood are being disturbed by the homeless who have taken
residence inside. `It would be nice if the church is renovated. We do
not have any Armenians left living in our neighborhood,’ he said. `The
community dissolved; they migrated to big cities. However, there are a
few Armenian families living in Salköprü, the neighborhood next to
us. If the church was restored, it would be nice for them, too.’
Officials from the provincial Directorate of Culture and Tourism said
they wrote a note to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism about
renovating the church. Although it is on the program for 2009, the
lack of funding prevents the work from starting.

26 Mayıs 2009

Karen Ohanjanyan: Independent Civil Minsk Process Is A Serious Chall

KAREN OHANJANYAN: INDEPENDENT CIVIL MINSK PROCESS IS A SERIOUS CHALLENGE TO ALL FORMATS OF TALKS

ArmInfo
2009-05-25 16:56:00

ArmInfo. Coordinator of Nagornyy Karabakh Committee ‘Helsinki
Initiative – 92’ Karen Ohanjanyan took part in constitutive conference
on setting up of Independent Civil Minsk Process held in Tbilisi on
20-23 May.

As Ohanjanyan told Arminfo correspondent in Stepanakert, Civil Minsk
Process was set up to assist peaceful and fair settlement of the
Azerbaijani-Karabakhi conflict. Its purpose is to promote attracting
of civil society in the civil process. ‘It is obvious that despite
optimism of official authorities of Armenia and Azerbaijan official
talks on Karabakh settlement within the frames of the OSCE Minsk Group
are far from agreement which would satisfy all the parties to the
conflict. Moreover, official talks are close and the societies of our
countries are deprived of the real information about the course of the
talks. This causes various rumours which poison the idea of peaceful
talks. For this reason there is a serious necessity of revisiting the
whole negotiating process in which the societies of our countries will
play more weighty part in searching the ways of peaceful settlement
of the Karabakh conflict. This new process is a serious challenge to
all the formats of the talks on Karabakh settlement’, – Ohanjanyan
said and added that the Declaration was adopted unanimously.