Erdogan Called Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad

ERDOGAN CALLED SYRIAN PRESIDENT BASHAR AL-ASSAD

Tert.am
10:46 ~U 24.03.10

A few regional issues were discussed in a recent phone conversation
between Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad, initiated by Erdogan, before the Arab
League Summit in Libya, reports Turkish news agency Cihan.

No information on the details of the phone conversation have been
reported yet.

Yesterday, al-Assad held a joint press conference with visiting
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan in Damascus, in which the Syrian
president offered to act as mediator between Armenia and Turkey.

Armenian Citizens Consume Over 5 Billion Pieces Of Cigarettes A Year

ARMENIAN CITIZENS CONSUME OVER 5 BILLION PIECES OF CIGARETTES A YEAR

ARKA
March 23, 2010

YEREVAN, March 23, /ARKA/. Armenian citizens consume from 5 to 5.3
billion pieces of cigarettes a year, Aharon Tadevosian, an official
of Philip Morris International (PMI) in Armenia in charge of corporate
ties, told ARKA.

He said a study made in the capital Yerevan has revealed that Philip
Morris International holds a 18.3% share in the capital city. In his
words, the numbers for the regions are a little lower. Cigarettes
are imported from the company’s plants in Russia and Ukraine by Vidis
Distrbution that brought last year 920 million pieces of cigarettes
to Armenia paying about 6 billion Drams or some $16 million in excise
taxes-25% of all excise taxes collected form cigarette importers.

Aharon Tadevosian said Philip Morris International representation
in Armenia paid last year a total of $4 million in taxes. Phillip
Morris International has been in Armenia since 1995 through Philip
Morris Management Services BV that celebrates now the 15-h anniversary
of its inception here. It imports to Armenia Marlboro, Parliament,
Virginia Slims, Chesterfield, L&M, Assos, Bond Street, Red&White,
Next, Muratti cigarettes.

Serzh Sargsyan Meets Representatives Of Armenian Community Of Allepo

SERZH SARGSYAN MEETS REPRESENTATIVES OF ARMENIAN COMMUNITY OF ALLEPO

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2010 16:50 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In frames of the official visit to Syria, President
of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan met with the Armenian community of Allepo.

During the meeting with community representatives, President of
Armenia highly praised the relationship between the two nations,
saying that the two countries have common history. He recalled that
Syria became the home for Armenians, survivors of the Genocide in
the Ottoman Empire.

"Unfortunately threats voiced showed that the terrorism is the
major challenge of the 21st century, and the most dangerous type of
terrorism is state terrorism. One step separates it from the biggest
crime against humanity – the genocide,"the president of Armenia said.

"I believe in future, the Armenians of Syria will make more efforts
to strengthen the Syrian state," the president of Armenia said,
press office of the Armenian President reported.

Armenian And Turkish Past Will Be Studied By Historians’ Commission:

ARMENIAN AND TURKISH PAST WILL BE STUDIED BY HISTORIANS’ COMMISSION: CLINTON

news.am
March 23 2010
Armenia

Commenting on the fact that President Obama’s pledge to recognize
the Armenian Genocide is still unfulfilled, Secretary Clinton said:
"I don’t think someone forgot something. But it’s very crucial that
Turkey and Armenia execute joint work."

In an interview with Russian First channel, she recalled the ceremony
of Protocols’ signing last October in Zurich that she attended.

"One of the documents provides for the creation of historians’
commission to deal with all issues of the past. I believe it’s a right
approach when two states, two nations focus on all this. Currently,
it is in the process of formation. It is impossible to change the past,
and all we can do is to a have a better future," Clinton added.

ANKARA: Which Erdogan Is The Prime Minister Of This Country?

WHICH ERDOGAN IS THE PRIME MINISTER OF THIS COUNTRY?

Hurriyet
March 22 2010
Turkey

If you did not read Ahmet Altan’s columns in the daily Taraf on
Saturday, you have missed a lot.

Please find it and read it.

It was written the same day the prime minister gave his famous speech.

Remember that speech where he threatened to deport 100,000 Armenians
and how he denounced all columns opposing his speech including mine
by saying, "Who the hell do you think you are to recommend I apologize?

Look in the mirror… you’d do better to be the country’s lawyer."

And Ahmet Altan took the prime minister’s very speech, which does
not go well with a country’s prime minister and in which he despises
us not accepting any criticism, and evaluated it giving his article
the headline "And who are you?" describing Erdogan’s politics full
of ups and downs and drawing attention to the general attitude in
his speeches.

In this column for the first time I saw a literaturist writing such a
great piece of work while using his columnist identity. About the same
time while I was reading this column Erdogan was probably lecturing
artists about the best day in his life.

I was astonished.

Which Erdogan are we talking about?

There couldn’t be any better identification of one of Turkey’s basic
mistakes.

We met an easygoing Erdogan who in the name of his country apologized
to the past, realized the truth and asked for help of those who are
not sharing the same view. I have listened to many of his speeches
but there was none so effective like this one.

So which Erdogan is the real one?

Which Erdogan leads this country?

Which Erdogan is our prime minister? Is it the Erdogan who did not
accept any criticism on Friday and who beat us up by complaining to
the public, or is it the one who talked in front of actors?

Is it the Erdogan who turned blue while he was outraged and even
spoiled his body language or the one who was confident and spoke in
a sincere way while chatting with actors?

I paid attention and noticed that many of my colleagues wrote about
this issue that Ahmet Altan picked up.

The prime minister I want and deem likely is the Erdogan who talked
to the actors. Not the one who talks about deporting illegal Armenians
or the one who can’t stand criticism or yells at people.

The Erdogan who should be our president is the one who shows affection
for children, knows how to take brave steps and embraces minorities.

And not an Erdogan who is unpredictable when he gets upset or is
willing to sacrifice minorities when he sees it fit.

Blast Threat At RA Public Revenues Committee

BLAST THREAT AT RA PUBLIC REVENUES COMMITTEE

news.am
March 23 2010
Armenia

Today, the officers of RA Public Revenues Committee were evacuated from
the building. Yerevan Police Department received information about
the bomb in RA Public Revenues Committee. Presently bomb technicians
are conducting search operations in the site.

Officers of RA Emergency Situations Ministry, Police and National
Security Council arrived to the scene.

No information is available how long search operations will last.

As NEWS.am reported previously, February 25, the police department
received information about the bomb in RA Public Revenues Committee.

Later the information was forged.

Arman Kirakosyan: Erdogan Forgets About Millions Of Turks Making The

ARMAN KIRAKOSYAN: ERDOGAN FORGETS ABOUT MILLIONS OF TURKS MAKING THEIR LIVING ABROAD

armradio.am
22.03.2010 13:27

Asked to comment on Turkish Prime Minister’s statement that he
had declared about the forced deportation of Armenians to call the
attention of the international community to the illegal Armenian
migrants in Turkey, Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosyan
said:

"Speaking about Armenians, who have left for Turkey, Mr. Erdogan
forgets about the millions of Turkish migrants who make their living
in different countries of the world.

It’s a pity that on the eve of the 95th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide perpetrated by Ottoman Turkey the authorities of the
contemporary Republic of Turkey continue being guided by the value
system of the Ottoman Empire, not Europe, when speaking about the
forced deportation of Armenians."

Shift To Summer Time On March 28

SHIFT TO SUMMER TIME ON MARCH 28

armradio.am
22.03.2010 13:53

In line with the Law on Calculation of Time on the Territory of the
Republic of Armenia, on March 28, at 2.00 a.m. local time the hands
of the clock should be moved an hour forward, marking the start of
"summer time."

As a result of different studies scholars have come to the conclusion
that every fifth person feels uncomfortable for a week or two
because of time changes. Some specialists say it adversely affects
human health.

The hands of the clock were first moved in England in 1908. 192
countries of the world, including the United States and a number of
EU countries change the time twice a year.

WSJ: Turkey’s Political Revolution

TURKEY’S POLITICAL REVOLUTION
By Morton Abramowitz And Henri J. Barkey

Wall Street Journal
2748704207504575129313434669400.html?mod=WSJ_Opini on_LEFTTopBucket
March 21 2010

An unprecedented political drama has been unfolding in Turkey,
leading toward the elimination of military tutelage over the country’s
political life. Prosecutors recently arrested some of Turkey’s most
senior military leaders, both active and retired.

How this civil-military struggle evolves is critically important
for Turkey’s future, but also has global significance. If the ruling
Justice and Development Party (AKP) is successful in tapering Turkey’s
escalating political polarization, avoiding petty religious issues,
and enhancing its own democracy, the impact in the Islamic world,
however intangible, could be enormous. Turkey’s friends can help by
both making it clear where they stand, and by holding AKP’s feet to
the fire.

Shortly after the 2002 AKP electoral victory, elements of the Turkish
military, including senior commanders, began worrying that the AKP
would transform Turkey from the secular democracy inherited from
Ataturk to a more religious and authoritarian state. Some, as we now
know, began plotting against the new government. Their fears turned out
to be correct, not because the AKP has turned Turkey into an Islamic
state–it has not and is not likely to–but because it has gone very
far in eliminating the military’s role in Turkish political life.

That is an extraordinary achievement, although it is not AKP’s alone.

Rather, it is the result of a profound and long-coming societal
change–namely, the emergence of a conservative and pious middle class.

Shaken by the arrests, a tough response from the Turkish military
cannot be ruled out. Senior judges and prosecutors remain squarely
in the military’s camp even if their subordinates do not, and the
military may rely on the Turkish judiciary to somehow check the AKP,
as it has tried to do before. Even if that succeeds, it would be a
Pyrrhic victory and, in the end, be unlikely to change the course of
Turkish politics’ steady civilianization. The Turkish military will,
of course, not lose its importance. It is a formidable force in an
unstable area and Turks cherish its patriotism and its contributions
to the country’s security. It will retain much of its independence
and remain a thorn in the side of the AKP. But its days as a kingmaker
of governments are coming to an end.

The military’s past attempts at interfering in political issues,
ranging from the selection of the president to judicial processes, have
served to undermine its own legitimacy, while helping the AKP win a
second electoral victory in 2007. Still, the paralysis and distraction
engendered by the court cases against the military have also taken
a toll on the AKP. The party remains the most popular and powerful,
but it is more vulnerable than ever, with its poll numbers dropping.

The AKP has done much to modernize and democratize Turkey–something
only a pious and conservative party could have achieved. However,
its increasingly combative style and its modus operandi of picking
domestic fights rather than carrying out meaningful economic and
political reforms have helped reduce its popularity. Its all-powerful
prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has turned into an increasingly
authoritarian leader, contemptuous of criticism. Mr. Erdogan’s
proclaimed activist foreign policy in the Middle East, especially
his softness on the Iranian nuclear program and harshness on Israel,
has won him domestic and occasional foreign plaudits, but it has
also contributed to his sense of invincibility. Neither will his
international efforts, however popular at home, compensate for
rising unemployment and stalled reform efforts. A party cannot live
by foreign policy alone, especially when it also sets the stage for
serious overreaching and the alienation of friends and allies. Mr.

Erdogan’s remarkable outburst threatening to expel all "100,00
Armenians living illegally in Turkey" in retaliation for the adoption
of resolutions in some countries recognizing the 1915 Armenian
Genocide, is likely to call into question Turkey’s sincerity in
reconciling with its neighbor Armenia, and has even earned him
criticism at home.

Turks will make up their own minds about how to deal with the AKP.

Turkey’s tragedy has been the absence of a serious opposition to
challenge the AKP. The resulting vacuum has usually been filled by
the military. The inability of the opposition to focus effectively on
economic or judicial reforms may be a major boon to the ruling party,
but it has seriously undermined Turkish democracy.

Despite Turkey’s impressive strides under AKP rule and the praise it
has received from the West, the U.S. and other Western countries still
have to put their money where their mouths are. While a genuinely
free-market party, the AKP is not a liberal party in the traditional
sense–Mr. Erdogan rules his party with an iron fist. Nor does the AKP
appear to have much time for the needs of those who oppose it. It has
ignored the legitimate fears of pro-secular groups, especially women,
and it is intent on subduing the media rather than reforming it. It
has also yet to effectively tackle the major cleavages in Turkish
life: It made a start on the Kurdish issue but has lost its appetite;
has long ignored the need to overhaul its authoritarian constitution
and unfair election practices; and has failed to make clear to the
public whether it is a truly secular party, as it proclaims.

Turkey will only move forward if the AKP reshapes itself and acts
on its promises to make Turkey a better-functioning democracy. That
will not be easy, since politics in Turkey have been a zero-sum game
this past decade. The West has praised the AKP until now, but it does
Turks no favors by shying away from declaring that major changes are
essential for Turkey to be a part of the EU and the wider democratic
world. If the AKP doesn’t hear and heed that message, it may engender
precisely what Turkey’s Western friends would loathe to see: The
re-emergence of an authoritarian society, or even the military’s
political comeback.

Mr. Abramowitz, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, was American
Ambassador to Turkey from 1989 to 1991. Mr. Barkey is a visiting fellow
at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a professor of
international relations at Lehigh University.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405

Ian Gillan To Sing With Hay Superstar Contestants

IAN GILLAN TO SING WITH HAY SUPERSTAR CONTESTANTS

Tert.am
22.03.10

Deep Purple lead singer and a rock legend in his own right, Ian
Gillan will be an honored guest on local TV program "Hay Superstar,"
known as the Armenian version of the hit British TV show Pop Idol.

As told to Tert.am by producer Andre Simonyan, they have invited the
rock legend to participate in the show during his visit to Yerevan.

"He gladly accepted," said Simonyan. According to him, three of Hay
Superstar’s participants, Raysa Avanesyan, Suren Arustamyan and Iveta
Mukuchyan, will song songs by Deep Purple on March 28, which will be
broadcast on Shant TV.

Simonyan also added that the participants will sing two songs with
Gillan.

"We selected those participants who feel wonderful when they sing rock
[music]," said Simonyan.

On March 26 and 27, Gillan is set to with the State Philharmonic
Orchestra of Armenia in Yerevan’s Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall.