Western Prelacy News – 10/23/2009

October 23, 2009

PRESS RELEASE
Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate
6252 Honolulu Avenue
La Crescenta, CA 91214
Tel: (818) 248-7737
Fax: (818) 248-7745
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

"YEAR OF THE YOUTH" CELEBRATION

The Prelacy Outreach Committee has organized a celebration of the
"Year of the Youth" to be held on Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009, at 7:30 p.m.,
at St. Mary’s Church in Glendale. The event is being held under the
auspices of H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, with keynote
speaker Dr. Viken Yacoubian lecturing on "The Role of Youth in Our Church
and National Life".
The event also features an artistic program in which the Prelacy
"Lousavorich" youth choir will participate under the direction of Very Rev.
Fr. Barthev Gulumian.
Admission is free and open to the public.

NATIONAL FUNERAL HELD FOR STEPAN KABADAYAN

It is with deep sorrow that we learned of the passing of Mr. Stepan
Kabadayan, which occurred on Saturday, October 17th, 2009. The Prelacy
Secretariat released the following statement on this occasion.
"H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, and the Religious
and Executive Councils mourn the loss of esteemed and devoted servant of our
church and community Mr. Stepan Kabadayan. Among other things, Mr.
Kabadayan, one of the founding members of St. Mary’s Church, served as a
delegate and Board of Trustees member for many years and his loss is being
felt by all.
We express our deepest condolences to his son Arthur, brother Serop,
and extended family members and friends. May he rest in peace."
With the participation of our clergy members, the Prelate presided
over the national funeral service which was held on the morning of Friday,
October 23rd at St. Mary’s Church.

PRELATE WELCOMES WRITER MOVSES BCHAKJIAN

On Thursday, October 22nd, 2009, H.E. Archbishop Moushegh
Mardirossian, Prelate, welcomed to the Prelacy Mr. Movses Bchakjian,
renowned writer and recipient of the Movses Khorenatsi medal by the Republic
of Armenia. Mr. Bchakjian, who was visiting from Paris as part of a tour of
North American communities, was accompanied by Mr. Garo Esguijian and Mr.
Yervant Avakian.
Later that evening, the author’s latest book was presented at the
Prelacy "Dikran and Zarouhie Der Ghazarian" Hall. The event was organized
by Hamazkayin Regional Executive. Very Rev. Fr. Muron Aznikian represented
the Prelate at the event.

www.westernprelacy.org

ANTELIAS: Aram I meets Patriarchs Ignatius Hazim IV and Zakka I Iwas

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I MEETS PATRIARCHS IGNATIUS HAZIM IV AND ZAKKA I IWAS IN
DAMASCUS

The visit to Syria also included meetings with H.B. Patriarch Ignatius IV
(Hazim) of Antioch and all the East, and HH Patriarch Mor Ignatios Zakka I
(Iwas)Patriarch of Antioch and All the East.

In both places His Holiness Aram I and his delegation were received warmly.
H.B. Patriarch Hazim and the Catholicos discussed interchurch relations in
the region and the situation of the Middle East Council of Churches (MECC).
The Patriarch hoped that the MECC under the Presidency of His Holiness Aram
I will be reorganized and restructured so that it will serve the churches in
the region in their witness for peace.

The Catholicos met with Patriarch Zakka I Iwas at the St Thomas Monastery in
Saidnaya, near Damascus. The Catholicos and the Patriarch met in the
presence of the seminarians and the clergy. After a warm welcome, Patriarch
Zakka I introduced the Catholicos to the audience as the strong ecumenical
leader who Moderated the Executive and Central Committees of the World
Council of Churches for two terms and is a dynamic force in the meetings of
the Heads of the Oriental Orthodox Churches in the Middle East and its
standing committee. The Patriarch then added that this cooperation has
strengthened the contribution of oriental orthodox churches in bilateral
dialogues on theological, dogmatic and other issues with Christian world
communions.

After thanking Patriarch Zakka I, Catholicos Aram emphasized the centuries
old strong ties between their two churches, which was rooted in common
christological dogmatic and theological principles. After responding to the
questions from the audience, the visit ended with a banquet organized in
honor of His Holiness Aram I and his delegation.

##
View the photos here:
tos/Photos410.htm
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org

The "PanArmenian Expo-2009" Opened

THE "PANARMENIAN EXPO-2009" OPENED

Aysor
Oct 23 2009
Armenia

Today in the Karen Demerchian’s sport complex, in Yerevan launched
pan-Armenian "PANARMENIAN EXPO-2009" traditional exhibition in which
participated more than 150 companies, 15 of them foreign (from Russia,
Iran, etc.)

On the exhibition there is an on-line regime due to which the
businessmen from all the points of the world can get in touch and
get information and seethe products represented on the exhibition
by video-regime.

The main directions of the exhibition are the industry, the
craftsmanship, the many services, especially food industry, etc. On
this exhibition the craftsmanship is presented as a separate branch
as besides business it includes also the national factor which on
its turn interests the representatives of the Diaspora.

The opening ceremony was held by the RA Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan and the RA Diaspora Minister Hranush Hakobyan, and then the
governmental delegation turned around the pavilions.

Before the exhibition would be opened a very interesting incident took
place. T. Sargsyan personally experimented the tractor of Armenian –
Belarusian production, but because of the narrowness of the way the
car crashed the iron pole.

Sochi And Yerevan Intend To Facilitate Visa Regime

SOCHI AND YEREVAN INTEND TO FACILITATE VISA REGIME

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.10.2009 17:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Soch is actively negotiating for intensifying
collaboration with Yerevan, Sochi Town Council Chairman Valery
Podpomogov told PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. As Valery Podpomogov
reported, recently Sochi Mayor visited Yerevan to meet his Armenian
colleague. Based on meeting results, the parties determined priority
directions for bilateral collaboration.

In this context, he added that a visit of Yerevan delegation to
Sochi is scheduled. Yerevan-Sochi collaboration agreements will be
concluded, stipulating for visa regime facilitation among other
contract terms. "Sochi has much to learn in consumer service and
construction sphere issues. We are especially interested in the
development of heavy and mineral resource industry technologies as
well as construction sphere," Valery Podpomogov noted.

Besides, within oncoming Sochi 2014 Olympics frameworks, Armenian
construction companies’ applications for Olympic objects construction
are currently reviewed.

Sochi delegation, which attended PanArmenian Expo 2009 exhibition on
October 23, is on a working visit to Yerevan.

New Security Configuration In Caucasus

NEW SECURITY CONFIGURATION IN CAUCASUS
By Vladimir Radyuhin

http://www.worldbu lletin.net/news_detail.php?id=48895
Oct 23 2009
Turkey

Russian analyst Vladimir Radyuhin analyses the new conditions in
Caucasus after Turkey-Armenia protocol deals.

Normalisation between Turkey and Armenia and an improving outlook
for a settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan will remove the last
roadblocks to regional security in the Caucasus

-It is for the first time that Azerbaijan will sell its gas to Russia,
which could undermine the West’s plan to build the Nabucco pipeline
to ship Caspian and Central Asian gas to Europe bypassing Russia.

The U.S. hopes that Turkey opening its doors to Armenia would help
wean it away from Russia. Today, Armenia is Russia’s only strategic
ally in the Caucasus. It is a member of the Russia-led defence pact
of six former Soviet states and hosts a major Russian military base
on its territory.

-Russia further consolidated its position as the dominant player in the
Caucasus, signing last month defence pacts with Georgia’s breakaway
territories of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, whose independence it
recognised after routing Georgia in a five-day war in August 2008.

The agreements allow Russia to station 1,700 troops in each region
for the next 49 years, with the option of extension for five-year
periods thereafter. Nevertheless, Moscow seems ready to cede some
of its influence to Ankara in order to achieve a bigger strategic
objective: create a regional security mechanism that would exclude
outside players, above all the U.S. and the NATO, whose poking only
creates trouble, as it happened last year when the U.S.-armed and
trained Georgian military attacked South Ossetia.

The milestone accords Turkey and Armenia sealed this month to normalise
their relations after a century of hostility have dramatically changed
the geopolitical configuration in the Caucasus.

They have opened the way to a new security arrangement in the region
on the basis of the emerging Russia-Turkey alliance.

At an October 10 ceremony in Zurich, the Foreign Ministers signed
protocols setting a timetable to establish diplomatic ties and reopen
the border, which has been closed for 15 years. The importance of
the event was underlined by the presence of U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, French Foreign
Minister Bernard Kouchner and the European Union’s Javier Solana.

The accords, subject to ratification, however, face formidable
opposition in both Turkey and Armenia. The Turks are angry at Armenia
continuing "occupation" of 14 per cent of the territory of Turkey’s
ethnic ally Azerbaijan in the predominantly Armenian enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh, which split from Azerbaijan in the wake of an
inter-ethnic conflict in the early 1990s. In 1993, Turkey sealed the
border and severed all contacts with Armenia over the conflict. For
their part, the Armenians are angry over Turkey’s denial of the
massacre of 1.5 million Armenians from 1915 to 1919.

Bad feelings on both sides may slow down the normalisation process,
but will hardly derail it as Turkey and Armenia have vital stakes in
ending their historic enmity. Turkey stands to gain influence in the
Caucasus and it will smoothen its path to membership in the European
Union. Landlocked Armenia, blockaded by Turkey, on one side, and
Azerbaijan, on the other, will gain through trade links with Turkey,
a large economy closely tied to the EU. It would also become a transit
trade route from Central Asia to Turkey and then to Europe.

Reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia is likely to facilitate the
settlement of the territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The presence of the top diplomats from the U.S., Russia and France —
the co-chairs to the OSCE Minsk Group, which mediates in talks on
Nagorno-Karabakh — at the signing ceremony was quite symbolic in
this regard.

Both Russia and the U.S. are interested in the Turkey-Armenia
settlement. Russian business, which effectively controls the economy
of Armenia, will benefit from the opening of the Turkish border with
Armenia, as Russia is also the biggest trading partner of Turkey. In
another gain for Russia, the role of its foe Georgia as the main
transit route for Armenian trade will greatly diminish once Turkey
opens up its border.

Russia has already reaped the first benefits on the energy front.

Within days of the Turkey-Armenian agreement, its gas monopoly
Gazprom signed a contract with Azerbaijan’s state energy company
SOCAR on Azerbaijani gas supply to Russia. The deal came as Baku
denounced the Turkey-Armenian pact as running "completely against the
national interests of Azerbaijan," because it was concluded without a
resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. It is for the first time
that Azerbaijan will sell its gas to Russia, which could undermine
the West’s plan to build the Nabucco pipeline to ship Caspian and
Central Asian gas to Europe bypassing Russia.

The U.S. hopes that Turkey opening its doors to Armenia would help
wean it away from Russia. Today, Armenia is Russia’s only strategic
ally in the Caucasus. It is a member of the Russia-led defence pact
of six former Soviet states and hosts a major Russian military base
on its territory.

For U.S. President Barack Obama, the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement
offers a way out of a tight spot he put himself in during the
presidential campaign when he promised support to a proposed Congress
resolution denouncing the slaughter of Armenians during World War I
as "genocide." This would have damaged U.S. relations with Turkey,
which is of strategic importance to America as the only NATO country
bordering the Caucasus.

Russia has its own game plan for the region. Last year, Moscow readily
embraced Ankara’s proposal for a Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
Platform.

The CSCP, based on Turkey’s concept of "zero problems with neighbours"
policy, is promoted by Ankara as a mechanism for political dialogue,
stability and crisis management in a region covering Russia, Turkey,
Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia.

For Turkey, the plan is an instrument to win a bigger foothold in
the Russian backyard. Russia further consolidated its position as
the dominant player in the Caucasus, signing last month defence pacts
with Georgia’s breakaway territories of South Ossetia and Abkhazia,
whose independence it recognised after routing Georgia in a five-day
war in August 2008.

The agreements allow Russia to station 1,700 troops in each region
for the next 49 years, with the option of extension for five-year
periods thereafter. Nevertheless, Moscow seems ready to cede some
of its influence to Ankara in order to achieve a bigger strategic
objective: create a regional security mechanism that would exclude
outside players, above all the U.S. and the NATO, whose poking only
creates trouble, as it happened last year when the U.S.-armed and
trained Georgian military attacked South Ossetia.

Even though Turkey is a NATO member, Moscow has appreciated Ankara’s
independent foreign policy in recent years that runs counter to U.S.

interests on a range of regional issues.

Ankara would not let the U.S. use its territory for the war in Iraq
and refused to join the West’s Russia-bashing over the war in South
Ossetia.

Turkey’s ambitions of a regional superpower clash with the U.S.’
aggressive push in the Caucasus. Turkey does not want the Black Sea
to become a NATO lake and has resisted U.S. pressure to renegotiate
the 1936 Montreux Convention, which restricts the passage of non-Black
Sea nations’ warships through the Bosphorus Straits.

During the Russian-Georgian conflict, Turkey invoked the Montreux
Convention to block two big U.S. warships from sailing into the Black
Sea on the pretext of delivering humanitarian aid to Georgia. While
officially Turkey continues to support Georgia’s territorial integrity,
it has quietly moved to develop contacts with Abkhazia, with a senior
Turkish diplomat visiting the regional capital Sukhumi last month.

When Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a state visit to Moscow
earlier this year, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev made a
straightforward proposal to set up a Russian-Turkish axis. "The
August crisis showed that we can deal with problems in the region by
ourselves, without the involvement of outside powers," Mr. Medvedev
told a joint press conference. The Turkish leader effectively agreed,
pointing to "substantially close or identical positions" the two
countries took on "an absolute majority" of international issues.

In a joint declaration adopted at the summit, Russia and Turkey
expressed support for Turkey’s CSCP initiative, noted the "identity of
view" on security and stability in the Black Sea region and reaffirmed
their commitment to the Montreux Convention.

There is no denying that Russia and Turkey are historical rivals in
the Caucasus, having fought 11 wars lasting 44 years in the past. They
are still competing for influence in the region, but shared interests
make them allies too. Russia meets 80 per cent of Turkey’s natural gas
needs through the Blue Stream pipe laid on the seabed across the Black
Sea. Turkey has backed the Russian proposal to build a Blue Stream-2
pipeline, which, together with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline,
would make Turkey a major energy transit hub for Europe and Israel.

A distinct cooling in Turkey’s relations with the U.S. over Iraq and
the Kurdish problem, and with Europe over its granting EU membership
to Cyprus and refusal to admit Turkey has further pushed Ankara
towards Moscow.

Normalisation between Turkey and Armenia and an improving outlook
for a settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan will remove the last
roadblocks to a regional security set-up on the basis of the Turkish
CSPC proposal.

Moscow is already looking to extend its cooperation with Turkey
on regional security beyond the Caucasus. On a visit to Istanbul
last year, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov pointedly emphasised that
Russia and Turkey shared similar views on "what needs to be done for
a conclusive settlement in Iraq" and on "the necessity of peaceful
political resolution of the situation regarding the Iranian nuclear
programme."

Chances of the new regional security configuration in the Caucasus
becoming a reality will greatly depend on whether the U.S. goes
along or tries to torpedo the project by encouraging its allies,
Georgia and Azerbaijan, to reject the initiative.

In joint Russian-U.S. efforts to promote normalisation between Turkey
and Armenia there are grounds for optimism. Mr. Medvedev hailed it as a
"good example of our [Russian-American] coordination in international
affairs." The very possibility of the ongoing reset in relations
between Russia and the U.S. being projected to the Caucasus will
enable Moscow to play on Turkey’s fears of being left in the cold
and help get the best deal from both.

www.worldbulletin.net

Zildjian Goes From Exile To Business Hall Of Fame

ZILDJIAN GOES FROM EXILE TO BUSINESS HALL OF FAME
By Glenna Hanley

Daily Gleaner
icle/829667
Oct 20 2009
Canada

MEDUCTIC – When someone is born into a family that’s been in the same
business for more than 400 years, you would think that would put him
or her on easy street.

1 of 2

Submitted photoBob Zildjian holds a cymbal made by his company,
SABIAN. Zildjian will be inducted into the Junior Achievement New
Brunswick Business Hall of Fame tonight. Submitted photoBob Zildjian
poses with his wife Willi, centre, and SABIAN vice-president of
marketing Stacey Montgomery-Clark. That wasn’t the case for Bob
Zildjian.

He belongs to the world-renowned Zildjian cymbals family. The Armenian
family immigrated to the United States from Turkey, where they had
been making cymbals for 400 years.

Zildjian grew up in the Boston area and at 14 started his
apprenticeship in cymbal production. In the Armenian tradition, the
oldest son inherits the business. So when Zildjian’s father died in
1977, older brother Armand got the company and tossed his younger
brother out.

"That was all right because I grabbed the AZCO company (later SABIAN)
on the way out the door," said Zildjian.

At the age of 56, he started over with a plant in Meductic.

"It was a small branch, but it had some of the best craftsmen,"
said Zildjian.

He ignored those who said he could never compete with his brother’s
company. He set out to produce the highest-quality cymbals, to market
them to musicians around the world and to become his brother’s worst
nightmare.

Zildjian will be inducted into the Junior Achievement New Brunswick
Business Hall of Fame tonight, along with two other businessmen: Glenn
Cooke, co-founder and CEO of Cooke Aquaculture; and the late Claude F.

Savoie, former president of Acadian Construction and business leader
in the Acadian community.

In the quiet village of Meductic, just south of Woodstock, the SABIAN
plant, by far the largest structure in the village, is also quiet.

It’s a Friday and the production staff is off work.

Zildjian, however, is there and he isn’t quiet.

"We had to cut back here so, to avoid laying off employees, we opted
for a 10-hour, four-day workweek," Zildjian said in his open and
frank manner.

In the spacious and attractive head office, Zildjian is friendly,
chatty and welcoming. With his wife Willi and vice-president of
marketing, Stacey Montgomery-Clark, he talks about the honour
from Junior Achievement, his family history, his love of music and
musicians, and his pride in his cymbals.

At 86, he’s bright and spritely. During the interview he jumps up to
take a phone call. He rushes back to say it was his sales agent in
Shanghai and a customer from the Philippines who wanted to talk to
the man who makes the cymbals.

Not surprisingly Zildjian, who plays several instruments, is well
educated in decades of music and in all genres of music. He stayed
in tune with what was occurring in the music world.

"I got no use for them," Zildjian said of the Beatles, but he credits
the band with boosting company sales.

"When the Beatles and Elvis (Presley) got into this thing, our business
just broke open because everyone wanted to play drums and the garage
bands started."

The company responded to the trend by making a cheaper brand of cymbal
that young musicians could afford.

Zildjian can drop some big names, from Count Basie to Phil Collins,
people he has met. Many professionals are intimately involved in the
making of their instruments and have come to Meductic to work with
SABIAN craftsmen to get the cymbals they want.

Collins is one.

"He wanted a cymbal built specifically to his taste and we called it
the Phil Collins cymbal," said Zildjian.

He turned that into a fundraising venture, with $10 from every cymbal
sold going to fund music lessons for older, college-age musicians
and youngster in financial need.

The company gives to numerous organizations – the NB Youth Symphony,
the Canadian National Youth Symphony, the Greater Boston Youth
Symphony, an international high school marching band, a school
instruments program – and has three of its scholarships for music
study.

Montgomery-Clark said Zildjian nurtures his staff and is a great role
model for youth.

"What Bob does is he continually pushes you; he wants you to take
risks. He doesn’t want you to fear, but to continue to push the
envelope," said Montgomery-Clark.

His entrepreneurial spirit is spread throughout the company, she said.

As the business has grown, Zildjian has had to learn to delegate. His
son Andy is president and mainly runs the business and oversees
130 employees.

"You have to delegate unless you want to stay small," said Zildjian.

A colleague said Zildjian is one of only a handful of business people
who has put a New Brunswick product in the worldwide marketplace.

"This success has nothing to do with government initiatives. It’s
the culmination of years of commitment, effort and deep belief,"
said Stephen Thornton of Woodstock.

Connie Woodside, president and CEO of Junior Achievement New Brunswick,
said business leaders such as the three inductees this year demonstrate
to young people that you can live in New Brunswick and still be
competitive on the world stage.

"It is not only rock ‘n’ roll but every genre of music. It is pretty
amazing that they are crafted and created right here in New Brunswick,"
said Woodside.

Junior Achievement and its partner Revolution Strategy will hold the
gala induction ceremony tonight in Moncton.

http://dailygleaner.canadaeast.com/cityregion/art

Turkey: Relations Between Ankara And Israel Becoming Chilly

TURKEY: RELATIONS BETWEEN ANKARA AND ISRAEL BECOMING CHILLY
Yigal Schleifer

nsightb/articles/eav101909a.shtml
10/19/09

The once-vital relationship between Turkey and Israel is going through
a distinctly frosty period. The chill began after the invasion of
Gaza earlier this year, which Ankara criticized harshly. But now
ties between the two Middle East allies are diving further and some
experts are wondering if the relationship is coming to end.

Concern was first raised in mid-October after Turkey indefinitely
postponed annual military exercises, reportedly because of Israel’s
planned involvement. The exercises — air force maneuvers dubbed
Anatolian Eagle — were also to have included the United States, Italy
and other NATO countries. The other participating states reportedly
pulled out of the exercise after learning of Israel’s exclusion.

Israeli officials also have expressed outrage over a new dramatic
series being screened on Turkish state television that shows Israeli
soldiers mercilessly killing Palestinians, including one scene of a
soldier shooting a young girl at point blank range.

Observers suggest the postponement of the military exercises and the
ensuing tension reflect shifts in Turkey’s domestic politics and its
foreign policy outlook. "I think the timing [of the cancellation]
has more to do with Turkey’s internal and foreign politics," says
Lale Kemal, a military analyst based in Ankara.

"We should bear in mind that the balance of power [in Turkey]
is shifting toward civilian authority," Kemal continued. "Despite
the military’s plans for the exercise, which included Israel, the
government asked them [military planners] to exclude it."

Turkey’s Islamist press has strongly criticized Israel’s involvement
in previous military exercises, and Kemal believes the liberal
Islamic Justice and Development Party (AKP) government was worried
about the domestic fallout of this year’s drill. "Had it been up to
the military, the exercise would have continued as planned, but the
military can’t dictate its policies on the government the way it used
to. The equation is changing. We see this in other areas and in the
Turkish-Israeli relationship also. The military cannot dictate its
positions all the time right now," she said.

On the foreign policy front, Ankara, for the last few years, has
actively sought to establish itself as a kind of regional soft-power
broker, working to strengthen relations with neighbors that it has
previously kept at an arm’s length, most notably Syria and Iran.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu — the main architect of
this new foreign policy — and 10 other ministers recently visited
Syria for the first meeting of a newly created Strategic Cooperation
Council, and to sign an agreement doing away with visa requirements
between the two countries.

In many ways, this change reflects a fundamental shift from the period
when Turkey and Israel began developing their strategic relationship.

At the time, both countries looked at countries like Syria as a common
threat. Turkey and Syria almost went to war in the late 1990’s after
Ankara accused Damascus of supporting the separatist Kurdistan Workers’
Party (PKK).

"In Davutoglu’s ideological framework, Israel doesn’t play a central
role. Things have changed," says Ofra Bengio, an expert on Turkey at
the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel
Aviv University.

Says Suat Kiniklioglu, a member of the governing Justice and
Development Party (AKP) and spokesman of the parliament’s Foreign
Affairs Committee: "We need to be clear: the strategic relationship
between Turkey and Israel is no longer what it was in the late 1990s."

Bengio believes that the postponed air force exercises may also be
the victim of the continuing fallout from the January invasion of Gaza.

Davutoglu recently cancelled an upcoming visit to Israel after he
learned he was not going to be allowed to visit Gaza. Excluding
Israel from the Anatolian Eagle maneuvers might well have been
Turkey’s response to that, Bengio says. "I think Turkey is doing
this to punish Israel for everything that has happened since Gaza,
not because it might hurt its relations with Syria or Iran. The
situation is starting to look more like a game of ping-pong," she said.

During the Gaza fighting, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
accused Israel of "perpetrating inhuman actions that would bring it to
self-destruction" and of committing a "crime against humanity." More
recently, Erdogan charged the country with being a "persecutor."

Ankara initially said that no political meaning should be derived
from the postponement of the military exercises, but Turkish officials
later altered their tune. "Turkey cannot be seen as being in military
relations with Israel at such a sensitive time, when there are no
peace efforts, when peace has not gained momentum," Davutoglu told
reporters in a recent news conference. "We cannot ignore what is
going on in Gaza."

Some critics believe that altering the old balance in bilateral
relations could damage Turkey’s overall foreign policy interests.

"Turkey’s relations with Israel . . . are very vital and should not
be a tool for playing domestic games," political analyst Mehmet Ali
Birand recently wrote in a column in the English-language Hurriyet
Daily News. "We need to protect the balance as we used to do."

Israeli officials have already voiced skepticism about Ankara’s
ability to serve as an "honest broker," if talks between Jerusalem
and Damascus were to be renewed.

"They are forcing the limits of their ability to maintain relations
with both sides," says Bulent Aliriza, an expert on Turkey at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based
think tank. "Turkey has every right to open up to the Middle East
and to criticize Israel, but the impression is being developed that
Turkey is developing its relationships in the Middle East at the
expense of Israel."

Editor’s Note: Yigal Schleifer is a freelance reporter based in
Istanbul.

http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/i

Expert Says Poll Results Show People Are Against Opening Of Border

EXPERT SAYS POLL RESULTS SHOW PEOPLE ARE AGAINST OPENING OF BORDER

Panorama.am
17:00 19/10/2009

Armenian sociological association conducted surveys among 1000
Armenians living in capital city from 21 to 25 September, Gevorg
Poghosyan, the president of the association told at news conference.

According to the survey results 52.4% of poll participants were
against the signing of protocols and 40% the opening of the border.

Mr. Poghosyan reports that people mainly are concerned about the
protocols as they say Armenia has not closed any border, we have
appeared in complete blockade because of Turkey.

"Both, Armenian and Turkish people do not hail the protocols, even
more they are against it. Internal protests are developing in both
countries," the sociologist said.

Expert says he is sure people needed to be more informed about the
processes. They needed much information, but the authorities of both
Armenia and Turkey delayed them.

Construction Of Hydro Power Plant On River Of Arax To Start In Late

CONSTRUCTION OF HYDRO POWER PLANT ON RIVER OF ARAX TO START IN LATE 2009

ARKA
Oct 19, 2009

YEREVAN, October 19, /ARKA/. Armenian Energy and Natural Resources
Minister Armen Movsisyan said last Friday construction of a hydro
power plant near the town of Meghri, on the River of Arax, separating
Armenia from Iran, will start in late 2009 and early 2010.

He said development of the feasibility study for the project is in
the final phase. Armenia and Iran agreed in 2007 to build a power
plant on the Arax River which is supposed to become one of the most
powerful hydro power plants in the South Caucasus. On the Armenian
side the plant will be near the town of Meghri and on the Iranian
side near the town of Karachilar. Each will have the capacity to
produce 800 million KWh of power annually.

According to the minister, construction of the plant will be funded
by the Iranian side, while the Armenian side will repay by supplying
electrical power to Iran. He said construction of the plant, originally
planned fro mid 2009, was postponed because of the political situation
in Iran following its presidential election.

"Presently the work is resumed and before the end of the year the
Iranian-Armenian intergovernmental commission will convene to sign
final contracts,’ the minister said. The projected capacity of the
hydropower plant is 130-140 megawatt which will allow to produce
annually about 850 million kWh electricity.

In 2007 Armenia and Iran agreed to build two hydropower plants on
the border river of Arax each with 140 megawatt capacity. The cost
of the Armenian plant is estimated at $240 million.

Armenian And Lithuanian Universities’ Representatives Focus On Educa

ARMENIAN AND LITHUANIAN UNIVERSITIES’ REPRESENTATIVES FOCUS ON EDUCATIONAL ISSUES

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.10.2009 20:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 14-18, Armenian and Lithuanian
Universities’ representatives will hold discussions on educational
issues in both countries.

On October 16, YSU hosted the meeting of Armenian and Lithuanian
Universities’ representatives, held within "Higher education
modernization" conference frameworks.

Conference opening was attended by Lithuanian Ambassador to Armenia
Giedrius Apuokas, RA Deputy Minister of Education and Science Ara
Avetisyan and Head of National Tempus Office Lana Karlova.

"I believe, educational conferences are of high importance. Experience
exchange between students will promote cultural enrichment on both
sides," Lithuanian Ambassador to Armenia Giedrius Apuokas stated.

The conference is held on the initiative of Tempus National Office,
with the assistance of "Educational Exchange Assistance Foundation".

Tempus National Office is implementing educational programs in Armenia,
South African states, Eastern Europe, South Caucasus, Middle Asia and
Baltic States. "Higher education modernization" program launched in
2009 will be implemented till 2013.