Armenian-Made Cheese May Be Exported To Turkey

ARMENIAN-MADE CHEESE MAY BE EXPORTED TO TURKEY

Aysor
Feb 4 2010
Armenia

In case of Armenia-Turkey border’s opening, the Armenian-made cheese
may be exported to Turkey, said Director of Armenian Development
Agency Robert Harutyunian.

According to Robert Harutyunian, if the border opens, then it will
be possible to find out some niches in Turkey to sell Armenian-made
cheese.

"Armenian Cheese" company is going to implement export of Armenia-made
cheeses produced by different companies in Armenia and sell them under
"Armenian Cheese" brand, announced Harutyunian.

BAKU: MP Wants Armenian Studies Faculty In Azerbaijan

MP WANTS ARMENIAN STUDIES FACULTY IN AZERBAIJAN

news.az
Feb 4 2010
Azerbaijan

Anar Mammadkhanov MP Anar Mammadkhanov has welcomed broadcasts in
the Armenian language on Azerbaijan’s ATV-Int TV channel.

He told the Winter University for Young Leaders in Oguz that if
Azerbaijan wants to influence the Armenian public, it should do so
in terms of information.

"During the ‘Cold War’ between the USA and USSR, people in the USSR
studied English and broadcast programs in this language, while the
United States studied Russian. I think Azerbaijan should open an
Armenian studies and language faculty at one of its universities,"
Mammadkhanov said.

Turkey Seeks U.S. Help In Armenia Row

TURKEY SEEKS U.S. HELP IN ARMENIA ROW

United Press International UPI
Feb 3 2010

ANKARA, Turkey, Feb. 3 (UPI) — Turkey is seeking the support of
the United States and Switzerland over an Armenian court ruling that
threatens the peace process between Turkey and Armenia.

Feridun Sinirlioglu, a top Turkish diplomat, will travel to Bern
and Washington "in the coming days to express our concern" over a
ruling by Armenia’s constitutional court, a Turkish Foreign Ministry
spokesman was quoted as saying by Turkish English-language newspaper
Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

The ruling threatens a peace process that hit its high last October
when Turkey and Armenia after decades of conflict signed two documents
to re-establish ties and reopen the countries’ mutual border.

Armenia’s constitutional court upheld the legality of the documents but
underlined that they can’t contradict the official Armenian position
that the 1915-1923 killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians under the
Ottoman Empire constituted genocide, a label Ankara strongly rejects.

The spokesman vowed that Ankara was still eager to improve ties.

"There is no problem in Turkey’s Armenian opening," he was quoted as
saying. "But Armenia has a problem with its Turkey opening."

In Turkey, people are critical of Armenia’s occupation of
Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave in neighboring Azerbaijan.

In 1993 Ankara severed ties with Armenia when it fought a war with
Azerbaijan, a close Turkish ally. Observers expect some sort of
political horse-trading between Turkey and Armenia on the genocide
and Nagorno-Karabakh issues.

NATO’s New Strategy Considered At An International Conference In Yer

NATO’S NEW STRATEGY CONSIDERED AT AN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE IN YEREVAN
Anna Nazaryan

"Radiolur"
04.02.2010 16:38

An international conference "Youth Forum of the South Caucasus:
Concept of NATO’s new strategy: what is our role?" which opened in
Yerevan on the initiative of Armenian Atlantic Association and with
the assistance of the Norwegian Atlantic Committee, brought together
experts from Armenia, Georgia, Ukraine, Russia and Turkey.

"This conference will help young people to determine their role in
formation of a common future," Executive Director of the Armenian
Atlantic Association Tevan Poghosyan said in his opening remarks.

At the NATO Summit in Strasbourg/Kehl on April 3 and 4, 2009, Heads of
State and Government (HoSG) tasked the Secretary General to develop
a new NATO Strategic Concept. This exercise should be completed by
the time of NATO’s next Summit which is expected to take place in
Lisbon in late 2010.

Heritage To Fight Against Constitutional Court’s "Unconstitutional"

HERITAGE TO FIGHT AGAINST CONSTITUTIONAL COURT’S "UNCONSTITUTIONAL" RULING

Tert.am
21:59 ~U 03.02.10

Heritage Party is continuing its consultations on Armenia-Turkey
relations, said Heritage Party parliamentary faction leader Stepan
Safaryan at a press conference today.

Safaryan mentioned that their aim is to "fight against and neutralize
the results of the Constitutional Court ‘s ruling," which he considered
to be "inhumane, anti-national and unconstitutional."

"Unlike Dashnaktsutyun [the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Party],
we do not intend to call on Republican Party of Armenia to vote
against the Protocols. We have always said that we will fight against
the Constitutional Court ‘s ruling," said Safaryan.

He also said that Heritage is ready for cooperation both with
Dashnaktsutyun and other political parties, if, of course, they have
like-minded views.

Presidential Promises And Pretenses

PRESIDENTIAL PROMISES AND PRETENSES
by Jacob Sullum

Town Hall.com
Wednesday, February 03, 2010

The day before President Obama delivered his State of the Union Address
last week, The New York Times reported that "aides said he would accept
responsibility, though not necessarily blame" for failing to deliver
on promises he made during his campaign. If you accept responsibility
for something bad, aren’t you accepting blame by definition? Not if
you’re Barack Obama, who has a talent for accepting responsibility
while minimizing and deflecting it.

"With all the lobbying and horse trading, the process (for producing
health care legislation) left most Americans wondering, ‘What’s in
it for me?’" Obama said in his SOTU speech. "I take my share of the
blame." For breaking his oft-repeated promise to televise health care
negotiations on C-SPAN? For agreeing to provisions that would benefit
special interests at the expense of the general public? No. "For
not explaining it more clearly to the American people" — as if the
problem could have been solved with a nifty PowerPoint presentation.

Going Rogue by Sarah Palin FREE

At his meeting with House Republicans on Friday, Obama conceded that
pointing out his failure to televise health care negotiations was
"a legitimate criticism." But he also said coverage would have been
hard to arrange because the negotiations occurred in several locations.

Anyway, he said, "overwhelmingly the majority of it actually was on
C-SPAN, because it was taking place in congressional hearings" —
as if he had promised that C-SPAN would continue its longstanding
practice of covering congressional hearings.

The president is even less forthright when it comes to the fiscal
responsibility he keeps promising. On Monday, he declared, "We simply
cannot continue to spend as if deficits don’t have consequences,
as if waste doesn’t matter, as if the hard-earned tax money of the
American people can be treated like Monopoly money."

Yet somehow he manages to do so. Obama’s much-ballyhooed spending
"freeze" would affect just one-eighth of the budget, would not begin
until 2011 and would be accompanied by continued increases in outlays
on the president’s pet projects.

If you are serious about reducing spending, you don’t increase it. Yet
Obama’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2011 totals $3.8 trillion,
compared to the $3.6 he proposed the previous year. The deficit would
drop a bit, from a record $1.6 trillion to around $1.3 trillion,
only because of increased tax revenue.

Last year, Obama said the deficit, expected to be 11 percent of
gross domestic product this year, would fall to a "sustainable" 3
percent by the end of his first term. His new budget projections,
even with the benefit of optimistic assumptions, indicate that he
will never reach that goal even if he serves two terms and that the
deficit will rise above 5 percent of GDP after he leaves office.

On Friday, the president blamed the economy for his fiscal
incontinence, saying "most of the increases in this year’s budget"
were "a consequence of the automatic stabilizers that kick in because
of this enormous recession." But as Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., noted,
legislation signed by Obama increased domestic discretionary spending
by 84 percent.

In addition to the health care transparency and spending restraint
he has failed to deliver, Obama has broken promises to reduce the
influence of special-interest lobbyists, to refrain from raising taxes
on households earning less than $250,000 a year, to cut earmarks to
1994 levels, to take a more modest view of executive power and the
"state secrets" privilege, to close Guantanamo by last month, to end
medical marijuana raids, to allow five days of public review before
signing bills and to recognize the Armenian genocide. PolitiFact.com
counts 15 broken promises so far, and its standards are conservative

In his SOTU Address, Obama bemoaned "a deficit of trust — deep and
corrosive doubts about how Washington works that have been growing
for years." He blamed the public’s "disappointment" and "cynicism" on
powerful lobbyists, reckless bankers, highly paid CEOs, superficial
TV pundits and mud-slinging politicians. Conspicuously missing from
the list: a president who breaks promises while pretending he isn’t.

US Intel: Balkans Threaten European Stability

US INTEL: BALKANS THREATEN EUROPEAN STABILITY
By Melissa Eddy

eTaiwan News
Associated Press
2010-02-03 05:54 AM

The top U.S. intelligence official warned Tuesday that persistent
ethnic tensions in Bosnia pose the biggest challenge to maintaining
stability in Europe.

Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair said in written
testimony to lawmakers that animosities among the Balkan nation’s
Croat, Muslim and Serb factions are on the rise, and a hardening of
their divergent agendas could threaten the stability of the fragile
state.

Blair further named Russia’s continued efforts to exercise influence
over its former Soviet neighbors, particularly Georgia, as another
cause for concern, saying it could pose a threat to relations with
Washington. He noted that "sporadic low-level violence" continues in
the region, which could spark a return to fighting. Russia and Georgia
fought a brief war in August 2008 over two breakaway Georgia regions.

Fighting also could flare between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the
disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Blair said. The enclave in
Azerbaijan has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces since
a six-year conflict that killed about 30,000 people and displaced 1
million before a truce was reached in 1994.

Bosnia remains divided into ethnic ministates _ a Serb republic and
a Muslim-Croat federation _ that were established in 1995 under the
Dayton agreement that ended a bitter 3 1/2-year civil war. It is
under the leadership of a multiethnic government whose leaders clash
regularly over what the country should look like.

Blair said Bosnian Serbs has been reversing some of the changes
included in the accord as part of efforts to seek more autonomy
for their ministate. This, Blair said "is contributing to growing
interethnic tensions." At the same time the Bosnian Muslims and Croats
want to abolish the country’s division so it can progress toward EU
membership, Blair said.

"While neither widespread violence nor a formal breakup of the state
appears imminent, ethnic agendas still dominate the political process,
and reforms have stalled because of wrangling among the three main
ethnic groups," Blair said.

Kosovo, whose Serb minority and ethnic Albanian majority remain at a
tense standoff over the still-divided northern sector, also requires
continuing US and European attention to maintain stability, Blair said.

PACE Co-Rapporteurs Urge Immediate Reform In Armenia

PACE CO-RAPPORTEURS URGE IMMEDIATE REFORM IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.02.2010 21:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian authorities need to implement the
reforms recommended by the ad hoc Committee of the National Assembly
of Armenia on the events of 1 and 2 March 2008, without further delay,
concluded the co-rapporteurs of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe (PACE), John Prescott (United Kingdom, SOC) and
Georges Colombier (France, EPP/CD), following an exchange of views
in the PACE Monitoring Committee last week.

"The reforms recommended by the ad hoc Committee, in combination with
those contained in the relevant PACE resolutions, if implemented in
good faith, could comprehensively address the circumstances that led
to the events of 1 and 2 March 2008," the co-rapporteurs said.

They stressed that these recommendations therefore needed to be
implemented without further delay, especially those related to the
reform of the police – including the establishment of an independent
oversight and complaints body – and the long overdue reform of the
electoral code.

The co-rapporteurs announced that they would send a letter to the
Armenian Parliament asking it to provide the Monitoring Committee,
before its meeting on 17 March 2010 in Paris, with a clear timetable
for these reforms.

"On the basis of the discussions in the Monitoring Committee we
will then visit Yerevan this spring to discuss the establishment
of a clear roadmap for the implementation of these reforms," the
co-rapporteurs said.

In addition to the roadmap, the co-rapporteurs also intend to raise
the issue of the sentencing of Nikol Pashinian as well as other cases
where they have sought clarification from the authorities.

"A number of issues following the events of 1 and 2 March still need
to be clarified and addressed", the co-rapporteurs said, stressing
the continuing importance and need for the monitoring of political
developments by the Assembly and other relevant bodies of the Council
of Europe, PACE communication unit said.

Azerbaijan Breaks Ceasefire

AZERBAIJAN BREAKS CEASEFIRE

News.am
11:33 / 02/01/2010

A number of ceasefire violations were registered on the contact line
of NKR-Azerbaijani armed forces within last week.

According to NKR defense army operational report, Azerbaijani side
fired at Karabakhi position in all directions from different types of
small arms, including sniper rifles. Particularly, NKR army forward
lines in Hadrut, Martuni, Martakert and Askeran defensive areas
were fired.

NKR defense army countered to hush the enemy fire.

Armenia-Georgia Air Communication Suspended Due To Lack Of Demand

ARMENIA-GEORGIA AIR COMMUNICATION SUSPENDED DUE TO LACK OF DEMAND

News.am
14:07 / 02/01/2010

Commercial interests account for the suspension of air communication
between Armenia and Georgia, Georgian Deputy Foreign Minister Nino
Kalandadze said at a Feb. 1 briefing.

Specifically, a low demand for flights to Georgia account for the
decision. "As far as I know, air communication between Armenia and
Georgia was suspended because of lack of demand, and it is a private
decision," Kalandadze said.

Armenia-Georgia air communication was suspended February 1, 2010.

According to the Georgian United Transport Administration, the
suspension is only seasonal.