Drivers Are Selfish

DRIVERS ARE SELFISH

A1+
[05:41 pm] 07 September, 2006

The survey conducted by the NGO "Armenian Medical Association" has
revealed that passengers are rather passive while protecting their
rights in public transportation. The point is that they keep silent
when drivers smoke and poison their health.

By the way, when any passenger ventures to make a remark to the driver
the latter only answers, "This is my car, and I can do whatever I
want." This testifies to the high level of egoism.

"Most passengers avoid having conflicts with drivers and that’s why
they remain indifferent," says Vahe Ter-Minasyan who is responsible
for the program implementation.

Parunak Zerveyan, president of the association, says that this
phenomenon is determined by the public unawareness and they have
tried to correct this mistake by anti-smoking campaign. The campaign
was held through 4 radio stations and 12000 fleeting. By the way,
there were radio stations that refused to join their campaign and
broadcast anti-smoking advertisements.

The polling revealed that out of 10 drivers 8 are smokers and 33,
8 percent of passengers are aware that the law forbids smoking in
vehicles but they are passive in protecting their rights.

"Three-month program aimed at raising public awareness and monitoring
on the "RA anti-smoking legislation exertion lasted from May 15 to
August 15. Two hundred drivers and a thousand passengers participated
in the polling.

On the whole, five million AMD was spent on the program. Mr. Zerveyan
maintains that the program is aimed at the implementation of the
current law which requires legislative acts and means of punishment.

"Some of our citizens even suggested execution," added Mr. Zerveyan
jokingly.

By the way, we asked a few questions to our citizens after the
meeting. It turned out that few passengers were aware of the
above-mentioned campaign though they were glad that there is such a
program. As for the drivers, they confessed that sometimes they smoke
while driving but they always keep the windows of the car open and
try "not to let the smoke in so as not to poison the passengers." We
don’t imagine how they manage to do it.

Senate Panel Approves Nominee For Ambassador To Armenia

SENATE PANEL APPROVES NOMINEE FOR AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA
George Gedda

AP Worldstream
Sep 07, 2006

A Senate panel on Thursday approved the nomination of career diplomat
Richard Hoagland to be ambassador to Armenia, despite objections by
some senators to the Bush administration’s refusal to classify the
deaths of 1.5 million Armenians in 1915 as "genocide."

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee vote was 13-5. The nomination
will now be considered by the full Senate.

At his June 28 confirmation hearing, Hoagland declined to use the
word genocide to describe the 1915 killings, which occurred during
the waning days of the Ottoman Empire.

The tour of duty of the current ambassador, John Evans, reportedly
was curtailed because he referred to the killings as a genocide in
defiance of administration policy.

Turkey strongly objects to any such characterization. U.S. policymakers
are wary of antagonizing Turkey, an important NATO ally.

Armenians say that as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors were
killed in an organized genocidal campaign by Ottoman Turks, and have
pushed for recognition of the killings as genocide around the world.

Committee Chairman Richard Lugar said Hoagland’s nomination should
be sent to the Senate for final approval.

The Senate, he said, "should not withhold confirmation based on
disagreements with administration policy." It would be "troubling"
if such a precedent were to be set.

He pointed out that Armenia is an important country with borders on
Iran, Turkey and Azerbaijan. Rejection of Hoagland would mean that
months would pass before an alternate ambassador could be found.

Sen. Norm Coleman, a Republican, said he could not "be in a position
to support a nominee who is not in a position to recognize a historical
reality."

Sen. Barbara Boxer, a Democrat, said she could not support the
nomination.

"I will today call it the Armenian genocide," she said. "There is no
doubt about what happened. I believe is calling things by their names."

ANKARA: Ankara Steps Up Efforts For Changes In EP Report

ANKARA STEPS UP EFFORTS FOR CHANGES IN EP REPORT

The New Anatolian, Turkey
Sept 6 2006

The Turkish Foreign Ministry criticized yesterday the European
Parliament’s highly critical report on Turkey, calling on MEPs to show
common sense and make making necessary changes before the report goes
to a vote in the full EP late this month.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Namik Tan in a statement said that
the report puts too much emphasis on "elements that have nothing
to do with Turkish-European Union affairs that won’t contribute to
relations and are far from being reasonable or objective."

Tan said that some elements in the report are "far from reality and
penned with political motives, [and] don’t mesh with the European
Parliament’s respectability."

"Attempts to impose conditions that are far from being objective —
such as the so-called Armenian genocide which requires a serious
academic study — were met with deep sadness," he added.

Turkey’s permanent Ambassador to the EU Volkan Bozkir warned that
the report approved by the EP Foreign Relations Committee has many
parts that could damage Turkey’s relations with the Union, urging
necessary changes to be made immediately.

Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan also ruled out taking the report prepared
by MEP Camiel Eurlings seriously, stressing that Turkey will never
accept the Armenian genocide claims.

"Turkey’s stance and decisiveness on the so-called Armenian genocide
issue is clear and nobody should expect us to change that," Erdogan
said. "European parliamentarians have already debated this issue and
rejected the genocide claims."

Turkey-EU Joint Parliamentary Commission Co-Chairman Joost Lagendijk
warned the EP about dangers of approving the report in the assembly
saying, "If you increase your demands of Turkey every year, you will
give an impression that the EP is against Turkey’s membership in
the EU."

Shahen Hovasapian Resigned Post Of Chairman Of Weightlifting Federat

SHAHEN HOVASAPIAN RESIGNED POST OF CHAIRMAN OF WEIGHTLIFTING FEDERATION OF ARMENIA 6 MONTHS AGO

Noyan Tapan
Sept 06 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 6, NOYAN TAPAN. According to Noyan Tapan data,
Shahen Hovasapian, the Chief of the Investigation Department of the RA
State Tax Service attached to Government, who died in the consequence
of an explosion blown up because of an explosive placed in his office
car on September 6, was born in a weightlifter’s family, he and his
brothers also went in for weightlifting. Sh.Hovasapian headed the
Weightlifting Federation of Armenia from 2004 to March, 2006. During
that period of time Sh.Hovasapian greatly assisted sportsmen in the
issue of competition missions, organization of teaching and training
gatherings, providing weightlifters with modern sports goods and
equipment.

Sh.Hovasapian resigned the post of the Federation Chairman in March,
2006, because of being overworked.

Greek Cyprus Threatens To Veto Turkey’s EU Bid

GREEK CYPRUS THREATENS TO VETO TURKEY’S EU BID

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.09.2006 14:05 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Greek Cyprus is ready to block the opening and
closing of the EU’s negotiating chapters with Turkey if Ankara doesn’t
open its ports and harbors to Greek Cypriot ships and planes, stated
Greek Cypriot Foreign Minister George Lillikas.

Stressing that the position of the Greek Cypriot administration on the
issue remains firm, Lillikas said, "The policy we’re following is one
that doesn’t allow Turkey’s smooth accession." Asked about the Finnish
warning to Turkey regarding fulfilling its commitments towards Greek
Cyprus and the Union and the implementation of the Ankara protocol
that extends the Customs Union to the 10 new EU members, including
Greek Cyprus, Lillikas said, "If Turkey continues to maintain the same
stance then there will be relative reactions and a relative stance
on behalf of the Greek Cypriot government," reports the New Anatolian.

We remind that Turkey has refused to open its ports and harbors for
use by the Greek Cypriots unless the Union ends the isolation of the
Turkish Cypriots.

However, the 25-nation bloc is demanding that Turkey open its ports
to EU member Greek Cyprus by the end of this year. If not, Ankara’s
entry talks, which began last fall, may be suspended.

ANKARA: European Parliament Report Critical Of Turkey

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT REPORT CRITICAL OF TURKEY

NTV MSNBC, Turkey
Aug 5 2006

The report was also damning in its condemnation of the terrorist
group the PKK, which has stepped up its activities targeting Turkey.

Guncelleme: 21:36 TSÝ 05 Eylul 2006 SalýSTRASBOURG – The European
Parliament’s Committee on Foreign Affairs has adopted a report
prepared by Christian Democrat MEP Camiel Eurlings that criticises
Turkey’s slow pace of implementing reforms as part of its European
Union accession process.

In a vote held Monday evening, 52 committee members voted in favour
of accepting the report, while six voted against and eight abstained.

A general session of the European parliament will vote on the report
sometime between September 25 and 28.

The report said that Turkey has slowed down its program of putting
in place reforms required by the EU as part of its membership process.

It also called on Turkey to recognise the so called genocide committed
by the Ottoman Empire against its Armenian citizens. The report
also claimed that Turkey committed genocide against Pontus Greeks
and Syrians.

The slow pace of enacting reforms strengthening human rights, freedoms
of expressions, and religious rights for minorities was also cited
in the report.

–Boundary_(ID_YGJpizyXdYfWaA6LpVdSww)–

Who Is Behind The Bombings In Turkey, And What Do They Want?

WHO IS BEHIND THE BOMBINGS IN TURKEY, AND WHAT DO THEY WANT?
Justin Huggler, The Independent – United Kingdom; Aug 30, 2006

AZG Armenian Daily
06/09/2006

How serious is the latest outrage?

It appears Turkey is facing a new bombing campaign – and this time
the targets are tourists. Coordinated blasts in Istanbul and two major
tourist centres on Sunday and Monday have left at least three people
dead and 47 injured, including 10 Britons.

Istanbul was the target of al-Qa’ida-style bombings in 2003, but this
does not appear to be the work of Islamic militants. Instead, it seems
an older enemy has come back to haunt Turkey: Kurdish separatists.

A group calling itself the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAF) has claimed
responsibility and said on its website: "We had warned before, Turkey
is not a safe country. Tourists should not come to Turkey."

The latest bombings seem to bear out earlier reports that Turkey has
been trying to cover up a bombing campaign against tourist resorts for
some time. There has been a series of blasts in Istanbul and popular
resorts all year. When four people were killed in an explosion at
Manav-gat in June, the authorities said it was caused by a faulty gas
cylinder – but the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons claimed responsibility,
and Turkish newspapers claimed there was footage of a bomb being
hidden.

Who are the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons?

It’s not entirely clear. Some observers believe it’s little more
than a front for the PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party), the Kurdish
separatist group that fought a 15-year civil war with the Turkish
authorities in the Eighties and Nineties. But others say there is
strong evidence it is a splinter group led by commanders who have
split from the PKK because of dissatisfaction with its tactics,
along the lines of the Real IRA and the IRA.

The Falcons first appeared in 2004 – the same year the PKK renounced
a unilateral ceasefire. The direct targeting of tourists would be
a change in recent tactics for the PKK. Even in its heyday, much
of the PKK’s efforts were directed against the Turkish military –
although there were attacks on civilians, including tourists.

At least 30,000 people are believed to have died in the war between the
PKK and Turkey. But today the PKK is a shadow of its former self. The
guerrilla army which fought for control of cities in south-eastern
Turkey during the Nineties is largely gone, defeated by a combination
of brutal tactics by the Turkish army, and a dramatic coup when Turkey
captured its leader, Abdullah Ocalan, in 1999, and paraded him before
television cameras in chains.

After Ocalan called for a peaceful solution from the dock, during
his trial by Turkey, the PKK declared a unilateral ceasefire. But it
ended the ceasefire in 2004. Since then, the PKK has resumed violence,
mostly against the Turkish military. In the meantime, the Falcons
have emerged with a series of attacks on civilians.

What is the status of the Kurds in Turkey today?

The Kurds remain one of the world’s largest stateless peoples, and
they make up somewhere between a quarter and a third of Turkey’s
population. At one point it was illegal to call yourself a Kurd or
to speak a word of Kurdish in Turkey – which meant for thousands of
rural Kurdish women, who only knew their own language, it was illegal
to speak. During its brutal suppression of the PKK insurgency, the
Turkish military burned more than 3,000 Kurdish villages to the ground,
leaving hundreds of thousands of people homeless and penniless.

The worst excesses are now a thing of the past – largely thanks to
Turkey’s ambition to join the European Union. The EU has made it
clear Turkey will have to give the Kurds minority rights as part of
the price of joining.

But critics say the changes Turkey has made in its treatment of the
Kurds to satisfy the EU have been little more than ‘cosmetic’. And
it is clear from the resurgence of violence that there is still
resentment at their treatment among Turkey’s Kurds.

What does this mean for Turkey’s hopes of EU membership?

The opponents of Turkish membership inside the EU – and many still
remain – may seize on the latest violence as evidence that Turkey
has not resolved the Kurdish issue. The EU does not want to import
a major ethnic insurgency inside its own borders.

But those behind the bombings, whoever they actually are, may
find there is far less tolerance for such tactics in the post-9/11
world. Certainly Turkey can expect complete backing from the US against
the militants – but then it always could. It was the EU that Turkey
found harder to convince.

The EU’s reaction will have major implications for how Turkey responds
to a new wave of Kurdish violence. It succeeded in crushing the PKK
in the Nineties with a campaign of extraordinary brutality in which,
as well as burning thousands of Kurdish villages, it responded to
the rebels with guerrilla tactics of its own, sending commandos into
the mountain to hunt down the rebels – and snatching Ocalan from the
streets of Nairobi in a Mossad-style operation.

It is open to question whether the EU will be able to stomach such
extreme tactics in a candidate state. The Kurdish issue was cited
when the EU rejected Turkish membership overtures again and again
for many years.

Is the situation in Iraq to blame for the renewed violence?

Turkey certainly says so. The PKK used the Kurdish mountains of
northern Iraq as a base for many year s, when they were turned into
"safe havens" where Saddam’s army was not allowed to go after the
1991 Gulf War. They were supposed to be forced out after the fall of
Saddam, but with Iraq mired in anarchy and violence, Turkey claims
the PKK are back in their old mountain bases there.

In the old days before the US-led invasion, the Turkish army used
to cross the border regularly to hunt down the PKK in northern
Iraq. Turkey says the situation is worse than ever now.

The Iraqi government does not want the Turkish army flitting across
its border whenever it suits it – not least because the Turks have
always been suspected of territorial designs on northern Iraq.

But Iraq’s security forces, unable to contain their own insurgency,
are in little position to do much about the PKK.

On top of that, the sight of Iraq’s Kurds enjoying considerable
autonomy just across the border is sure to fuel the aspirations of
Turkey’s Kurds for the same.

Lebanese Armenians Protest Turkish Soldiers

PanARMENIAN.Net

Lebanese Armenians Protest Turkish Soldiers
02.09.2006 13:10 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A group of Lebanese Armenians opposed Turkey’s
presence in Lebanon in a protest Thursday. Nearly 100 Armenians,
mainly university students, gathered before the U.N. office in Beirut
carrying banners claiming that Turkey collaborated with Israel. The
protestors then presented a U.N. official with an open letter
addressed to Secretary-General Kofi Annan, reported Zaman.

AGRC Provides School Children of Ararat With All Necessary Stuff

AGRC PROVIDES SCHOOL CHILDREN OF ARARAT WITH ALL NECESSARY STUFF

Yerevan, August 31. ArmInfo. The ‘Ararat Gold Recovery Company’
organizes a celebration for the school children of the Ararat town of
Armenia. It has become a tradition that each year head of AGRC
B.K. Sharma provides 320 pupils of Ararat schools with all necessary
stuff – textbooks, copybooks, pens, pencils, schoolbags, etc.

Azeri Parliament Member Defies EU Warning

AZERI PARLIAMENT MEMBER DEFIES EU WARNING

Armenpress
Aug 31 2006

BAKU, AUGUST 31, ARMENPRESS: A senior member of Azerbaijani ruling
party has openly defied a warning by Brussels that has voiced alarm
at the mounting risk of open warfare in the EU’s southeast neighbors
– Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan – amid European plans to sign new
cooperation pacts and build new pipelines in the region.

Aidyn Mirzazade, a member of the ruling board of the governing Yeni
Azerbaijan party said his country must increase its military spending
as much as it needs to drive ‘Armenian occupants’ from Azeri lands.

His remarks came as retaliation to Benita Ferrero-Waldner, EU external
relations commissioner’s speech in Slovenian city of Bled during the
‘Caspian Outlook’ international conference where she called on Georgia
and Azerbaijan to give up plans of settling their conflicts by use
of force. "Negative trends are coming together, the combination of
which is, frankly, alarming," Benita Ferrero-Waldner said in Slovenia
on Monday (28 August), citing a recent upswing in aggressive rhetoric
and arms spending.

"Defense spending is going through the roof," she stated, adding "there
is a serious danger of the rhetoric lowering the threshold for war"
in reference to the so-called "frozen conflicts" of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia in Georgia and Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan. Georgia’s
military budget proportionally increased faster than any other
country’s in the world last year, while Azerbaijan has boasted that
its military budget in 2007 will be the size of the total budget
of Armenia.

"We shall never cede an inch of land to Armenians and the major
argument is to have an effective army equipped with modern weapons,"
the Azeri, Aidyn Mirzazade, was quoted by Azeri news agency Trend
as saying.