New Karabakh Documentary Premiere On Youtube

NEW KARABAKH DOCUMENTARY PREMIERE ON YOUTUBE

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27 October 2008

Dear Colleague,

You are invited to be among the firsts to see a new documentary on
Nagorno Karabakh Republic, Artsakh "The Struggle for Freedom", which
is now posted on our Artsakh Online YouTube Channel.

Produced by director Peter Musurlian of the Globalist Films, the film
was first screened last month at a congressional event on Capitol Hill
(Washington, DC, USA) "Nagorno Karabakh Republic/Artsakh: 20 Years
of Freedom, Democracy, and Progress.".

Again, here is the link to watch The Struggle for Freedom or

Off ice of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic in the United States

http://www.noravank.am/en/?page=news&amp
http://www.youtube.com/user/ArtsakhOnline.

"Expert Data-Gathering Group New Impulse For Parliamentarian Committ

"EXPERT DATA-GATHERING GROUP NEW IMPULSE FOR PARLIAMENTARIAN COMMITTEE"

Panorama.am
16:44 24/10/2008

"We are keeping the position of law, we are guided by law and we greet
activities proceeding from law," announced Sergey Kapinos the head of
OSCE Office in Yerevan. According to him if the authorities prohibit
conducting meetings and demonstrations it does not correspond to the
law. Hence court instances are established to appeal the decision of
the Municipality which does not authorize this or that meeting. "I know
that recently the court invalidated the decision of the Municipality,"
said OSCE representative.

Sergey Kapinos greeted the decision of the President of Armenia to
from an expert data-gathering group. "It is an important element that
the members of that group are from opposition and Ombudsman Office. I
guess that group will serve as a new impulse for the Parliamentarian
committee and will increase its efficiency," said S. Kapinos.

Moscow Awaiting Baku Response To Medvedev’s Proposal

MOSCOW AWAITING BAKU RESPONSE TO MEDVEDEV’S PROPOSAL

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.10.2008 14:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia’s activation in the Nagorno Karabakh process
is conditioned by its regional interests, said Vasily Istratov,
Russia’s Ambassador to Azerbaijan.

"Moscow is awaiting Baku’s response to President Medvedev’s proposal
for a trilateral presidential meeting. The OSCE Minsk Group has worked
out a number of solutions, but they have not been accepted as they did
not satisfy all of the sides. There should be no competition between
the formats. They should complement each other," Amb. Istratov said.

"The situation in the Caucasus is complicated" he regretted. "This
means that we should seek for solutions and reach an agreement,"
he said, Trend Azeri news agency reports.

When in Yerevan, Dmitry Medvedev said, "I am hopeful that the sides
in the Karabakh conflict are ready to fix progress in the negotiation
process. The Presidents of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan will meet in
Moscow in the near future to discuss the issue. Russia will continue
search for mutually acceptable decision on Karabakh."

Russia/ Medvedev: A Mosca Per Discutere Status Nagorno-Karabakh

RUSSIA/ MEDVEDEV: A MOSCA PER DISCUTERE STATUS NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Virgilio Notizie
10.21.2008
Italy

Con Ossezia e Abkhazia, nodo irrisolto da dissoluzione Ursss
postato 1 giorno fa da APCOM
ARTICOLI A TEMA
Altri

Mosca, 21 ott. (Apcom-Nuova Europa) – Mosca si propone come mediatore
ed è pronta ad accogliere i capi di Stato armeno e azero sul problema
del Nagorno-Karabakh. Per il leader del Cremlino Dmitri Medvedev
è in atto "un processo negoziale" di cui è "difficile definire" le
sfumature. Ma "siamo in una fase avanzata: entrambe le parti sono
pronte". Annessa all’Impero russo nel 1813, il Nagorno-Karabakh –
enclave armena in territorio azero – fu assegnata all’Azerbaigian alla
fine della prima guerra mondiale e versa tuttora in una condizione
indefinita, dopo un sanguinoso conflitto durato tre anni (1991-1994).

Ma gli "eventi di agosto" ossia il recente conflitto nel Caucaso hanno
dimostrato che "ogni questione complessa dovrebbe essere risolta
sulla base dei principi internazionali", ha detto Medvedev secondo
Ria Novosti da Erevan. E di fatto il contenzioso è uno dei tanti nodi
irrisolti lasciati dalla dissoluzione dell’Unione sovietica, insieme
con le due repubbliche separatiste georgiane dell’Ossezia del Sud e
dell’Abkhazia, riconosciute da Mosca indipendenti il 26 agosto scorso.

Per il presidente "non vi è nulla" più del dialogo "che possa portare
risultati migliori". E il collega e alleato armeno Serzh Sargsyan
concorda: "Siamo convinti che il problema del Karabakh potrebbe essere
risolto sulla base di compromessi e colloqui".

L’Armenia "è pronta a continuare i colloqui sulla base dei principi di
Madrid", ha aggiunto Sargsyan. "Questi comprendono il riconoscimento
del principio di autodeterminazione e il diritto del popolo del
Karabakh".

Per la regione un primo tentativo di dichiarare l’indipendenza avvenne
poco prima della dissoluzione dell’Urss, nel 1991, quando la minoranza
azera promosse un referendum boicottato dalla maggioranza armena (che
preferiva l’unificazione all’Armenia). La questione causò un conflitto
armato tra le due neonate nazioni dell’Armenia e dell’Azerbaijan,
sostenute la prima dalla Russia e la seconda dalla Turchia. Costato
30.000 morti e circa un milione di rifugiati, il conflitto vide la
vittoria delle forze armene, sancendo la perdita di controllo sul
territorio da parte dell’Azerbaijan. Tuttavia nessun paese, nemmeno
l’Armenia, ha riconosciuto l’indipendenza del Nagorno-Karabakh.

–Boundary_(ID_mytoy2Zn0i72hIrM oje/0A)–

The Details Of The Visit

THE DETAILS OF THE VISIT

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
22 Oct 2008
Armenia

RF President Dmitry Medvedev, who was on an official visit in Armenia,
visited the Genocide Memorial on October 21, in the morning, where
he laid a wreath, after which he visited the Museum of the Genocide
of Armenians and planted a tree in the Memorial Park.

Later Presidents Serge Sargsyan and Dmitry Medvedev participated in
the ceremony of the opening of the Square of Russia, where they came
out with speeches.

>From the Square the two Presidents moved to the residence of RA
President, where the tête-a-tête between Serge Sargsyan and Dmitry
Medvedev took place.

The Presidents of Armenia and Russia discussed the whole complex of
Armenian-Russian relations, touched upon the process of the settlement
of Karabakh issue, and the recent developments that took place in
the region.

They spoke about the urgent international topics as well.

After the tête-a-tête negotiations with more participants was
held. The discussions were based on Armenian-Russian economic
relations, which grows consistently.

The Co-Chairman of the Inter-Governmental Committee on Armenian-Russian
Economic Relations, RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and RF Minister
of Transportation Igor Levitin introduced the issued discussed and
the recorded results of the 10th jubilee session of the committee.

Presidential Press Office

–Boundary_(ID_NIluh91uDztu+Q5A+OSwfA)–

President Of Russia Visits Memorial To The Victims Of Armenian Genoi

PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA VISITS MEMORIAL TO THE VICTIMS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM-INSTITUTE

ARMENPRESS
Oct 21, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 21, ARMENPRESS: President of the Russian Federation
Dmitri Medvedev visited today memorial to the victims of the Armenian
genocide and put a wreath, paying tribute to the memory of the victims.

Afterwards the Russian president was in the Armenian Genocide
Museum-Institute the director of which Hayk Demoyan presented the
history of the Armenian genocide, cultural and ethnic losses of the
Armenian people. After traveling through the museum D. Medvedev put
down his impressions in the book of memory.

"Armenian Genocide Museum and memorial are witnesses of terrible
tragedy of the 20th century and at the same time is a reminder that
life is the main value which must be preserved by civilized people,"
he wrote.

H. Demoyan handed to Medvedev the "Gold Medal" of the Genocide
Museum-Institute.

President of Russia also planted a tree in the memory ally of
Tsitsernakaberd.

D. Medvedev was accompanied by the Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian, first Yerevan deputy mayor Kamo Areyan, Russian ambassador
to Armenia Nikolay Pavlov, Armenian ambassador to Russia Armen Smbatian
and members of his delegation.

RA Minister Of Economy Received Newly Appointed Czech Ambassador

RA MINISTER OF ECONOMY RECEIVED NEWLY APPOINTED CZECH AMBASSADOR

RIA Oreanda
Economic News
October 8, 2008 Wednesday
Russia

Yerevan. OREANDA-NEWS On 08 October was announced, that Nerses
Yeritsyan, the RA Minister of Economy received Ivan Jestrab, the
newly appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the
Czech Republic to Armenia (residence in Tbilisi).

Congratulating the Ambassador with the beginning of his mission,
Minister Yeritsyan said, that Armenia gives great importance to the
development of bilateral relations with Czech Republic, as well as
the broadening of cooperation within the framework of the European
Neighbourhood Policy.

Mr. Jestrab emphasized the interest of his country to the Southern
Caucasus countries, especially to Armenia. Touching upon the Czech
Foreign Minister’s and Senate Chairman’s official visits to Armenia,
and the results of Armenian Czech Business Forum (September 12, 2008),
Mr. Ambassador mentioned, that all those events could serve as a good
platform for the future mutually beneficial collaboration.

During the meeting, talking about the level of the economic relations
between the two countries, Nerses Yeritsyan mentioned that the current
economic relations don’t develop dynamically, and the opportunities are
not fully used. Mr. Minister underlined several fields for cooperation,
such as jewellery, chemical and mining industries. Touching upon the
investment possibilities, Nerses Yeritsyan focused his attention on
the services, High-Tech and IT.

Stressing the importance of development of cooperation with the EU
countries, Mr. Minister underlined, that Armenia is making active
efforts to sign Free Trade Agreement in deep with EU countries,
because it will give an additional boost to direct the economic
reforms processes in a right course and will help us to achieve our
final goals.

The Ambassador of Czech Republic thanked the Minister of Economy for
warm welcome and said, that he is really impressed by the progressive
development of Armenia and its readiness for cooperation.

He also underlined, that he’ll support the stimulation of development
of bilateral cooperation between Czech Republic and Armenia.

Armenian Opposition Takes Time Out

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION TAKES TIME OUT

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.10.2008 12:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian opposition announced suspension of protest
actions for 2 or 3 months.

Leader of the Armenian National Congress, Armenia’s first President
Levon Ter-Petrosyan said during yesterday’s rally that "it doesn’t
mean that the opposition renounces its plans."

"A pause will offer a possibility to realize our goals," he said.

Freedom of Historical Debate is Under Attack By The Memory Police

THE FREEDOM OF HISTORICAL DEBATE IS UNDER ATTACK BY THE MEMORY POLICE
Timothy Garton Ash, [email protected]

The Guardian
Thursday October 16 2008

Well-intentioned laws that prescribe how we remember terrible events
are foolish, unworkable and counter-productive

Among the ways in which freedom is being chipped away in Europe,
one of the less obvious is the legislation of memory. More and more
countries have laws saying you must remember and describe this or
that historical event in a certain way, sometimes on pain of criminal
prosecution if you give the wrong answer. What the wrong answer is
depends on where you are. In Switzerland, you get prosecuted for
saying that the terrible thing that happened to the Armenians in
the last years of the Ottoman empire was not a genocide. In Turkey,
you get prosecuted for saying it was. What is state-ordained truth
in the Alps is state-ordained falsehood in Anatolia.

This week a group of historians and writers, of whom I am one,
has pushed back against this dangerous nonsense. In what is being
called the "Appel de Blois", published in Le Monde last weekend,
we maintain that in a free country "it is not the business of any
political authority to define historical truth and to restrict the
liberty of the historian by penal sanctions". And we argue against the
accumulation of so-called "memory laws". First signatories include
historians such as Eric Hobsbawm, Jacques Le Goff and Heinrich Aug u
st Winkler. It’s no accident that this appeal originated in France,
which has the most intense and tortuous recent experience with
memory laws and prosecutions. It began uncontroversially in 1990,
when denial of the Nazi Holocaust of the European Jews, along with
other crimes against humanity defined by the 1945 Nuremberg tribunal,
was made punishable by law in France – as it is in several other
European countries. In 1995, the historian Bernard Lewis was convicted
by a French court for arguing that, on the available evidence, what
happened to the Armenians might not correctly be described as genocide
according to the definition in international law.

A further law, passed in 2001, says the French Republic recognises
slavery as a crime against humanity, and this must be given
its "consequential place" in teaching and research. A group
representing some overseas French citizens subsequently brought
a case against the author of a study of the African slave trade,
Olivier Pétré-Grenouilleau, on the charge of "denial of a crime
against humanity". Meanwhile, yet another law was passed, from a very
different point of view, prescribing that school curricula should
recognise the "positive role" played by the French presence overseas,
"especially in North Africa".

Fortunately, at this point a wave of indignation gave birth to a
movement called Liberty for History (lph-asso.fr), led by the French
historian Pierre Nora, which i s also behind=3D2 0the Appel de Blois. The
case against Pétré-Grenouilleau was dropped, and the "positive role"
clause nullified. But it remains incredible that such a proposal ever
made it to the statute book in one of the world’s great democracies
and homelands of historical scholarship.

This kind of nonsense is all the more dangerous when it comes wearing
the mask of virtue. A perfect example is the recent attempt to enforce
limits to the interpretation of history across the whole EU in the name
of "combating racism and xenophobia". A proposed "framework decision"
of the justice and home affairs council of the EU, initiated by the
German justice minister Brigitte Zypries, suggests that in all EU
member states "publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising
crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes" should be
"punishable by criminal penalties of a maximum of at least between
one and three years imprisonment".

Who will decide what historical events count as genocide, crimes
against humanity or war crimes, and what constitutes "grossly
trivialising" them?

International humanitarian law indicates some criteria, but exactly
what events qualify is a matter of often heated dispute. The only
cast-iron way to ensure EU-wide uniformity of treatment would be for
the EU to agree a list – call it the Zypries List – of qualifying
horrors. You can imagine the horse-trading behind closed doors in
Brussels . (Polish official to French=3D2 0counterpart: "OK, we’ll give
you the Armenian genocide if you give us the Ukrainian famine.") Pure
Gogol.

Since some countries with a strong free-speech tradition, including
Britain, objected to Zypries’ original draft, the proposed agreement
now also says: "Member states may choose to punish only conduct
which is either carried out in a manner likely to disturb public
order or which is threatening, abusive or insulting." So in practice,
individual countries will continue to do things their own way.

Despite its manifold flaws, this framework decision was approved by the
European Parliament in November 2007, but it has not been brought back
to the justice and home affairs council for final approval. I emailed
the relevant representative of the current French presidency of the
EU to ask why, and just received this cryptic but encouraging reply:
"The FD ‘Racism and xenophobia’ is not ready for adoption, as it is
suspended to some outstanding parliamentary reservations." Merci,
madame liberté: that will do till the end of this year. Then let the
Czech presidency of the EU, which covers the first half of next year,
strike it down for good – with a dose of the Good Soldier Svejk’s
common sense about history.

Let me be clear. I believe it is very important that nations, states,
peoples and other groups (not to mention individuals) should face
up, solemnly and publicly, to the bad things d one by them or in
their name. The W est German leader Willy Brandt falling silently to
his knees in Warsaw before a monument to the victims and heroes of
the Warsaw Ghetto is, for me, one of the noblest images of postwar
European history. For people to face up to these things, they have to
know about them in the first place. So these subjects must be taught in
schools as well as publicly commemorated. But before they are taught,
they must be researched. The evidence must be uncovered, checked and
sifted, and various possible interpretations tested against it.

It’s this process of historical research and debate that requires
complete freedom – subject only to tightly drawn laws of libel and
slander, designed to protect living persons but not governments, states
or national pride (as in the notorious article 301 of the Turkish
penal code). The historian’s equivalent of a natural scientist’s
experiment is to test the evidence against all possible hypotheses,
however extreme, and then submit what seems to him or her the most
convincing interpretation for criticism by professional colleagues
and for public debate. This is how we get as near as one ever can to
truth about the past.

How, for example, do you refute the absurd conspiracy theory, which
apparently still has some currency in parts of the Arab world, that
"the Jews" were behind the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks
on New York? By forbidding anyone from saying that, on pain of
imprisonment? No. You refute it by=3D2 0refuting it. By mustering all
the available evidence, in free and open debate. This is not just
the best way to get at the facts; ultimately, it’s the best way to
combat racism and xenophobia too. So join us, please, to see off the
nanny state and its memory police.

International Conference On Venture Capital Launches In Yerevan

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON VENTURE CAPITAL LAUNCHES IN YEREVAN

ARKA
Oct 17, 2008

YEREVAN, October 17. /ARKA/. The Entrepreneurship in Science and
Technologies international conference on venture capital started
in Yerevan.

At the opening ceremony today Director of the Enterprise Incubator
Foundation (EIF) Bagrat Yengibaryan stated the conference is aimed at
introducing science intensive projects on cooperation between science
and private sector to investors and interested parties.

"This will give us an opportunity to attract investments as well as
to establish long-term cooperation and develop business-projects with
various investors," said Yengibaryan.

A presentation and a sum up of a grant program promoting the private
sector-science cooperation will take place as a part of the conference
and the authors of the three best research projects will be awarded
$10,000 each.

Zhenya Azizyan, Head of IT Development department, RA Ministry of
Economy, noted the conference is in harmony with the Government’s
programs, strategies and IT development conceptions.

"Development of projects and commercialization of their results
will let us develop scientific thought, as well as entrepreneurial
abilities, which is a priority component that attracts venture capital
and is gradually becoming a reality for Armenia," said Azizyan.

She expressed a hope that in the near future a use will be found
for the conference results not only in=2 0Armenia but in the USA and
other countries as well.

The applications for the competition are mainly in the fields of IT,
some engineering solutions and projects in biotechnologies and energy.

The RA Government plans to attract some $700mln of venture capital
for the IT sector in ten years.

The organizers of the conference are EIF, the U.S. Civil Research
Development Fund (CRDF) and the RA Ministry of Economy under the
Science and Technology Entrepreneurship Program (STEP).

U.S. and European investors participate in the conference.