Final Armenian Squad For WC 2011 Qualifying Match Against Turkey Ann

FINAL ARMENIAN SQUAD FOR WC 2011 QUALIFYING MATCH AGAINST TURKEY ANNOUNCED

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.10.2009 17:45 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Final Armenian squad for WC 2011 qualifying match
against Turkey was announced. Banants midfielder Artak Dashyan will
be included in Armenian Youth Football Team.

On October 13, Eksishehir’s "Ataturk" stadium will host WC 2011 Turkey
-Armenia youth teams’ qualifying match at 9:00 p.m. Yerevan time.

Armenian youth team structure:

Goalkeepers

Gevorg Prazyan – Ararat Armen Fishyan – Mika.

Defenders

Artashes Arakelyan – Cilicia Artak Andrikyan – Pyunik Gagik Daghbashyan
– Banants Levon Hayrapetyan – Hamburg (Germany) Artak Yedigaryan
– Pyunik.

Midfielders

Aram Bareghamyan – Banants David Manoyan – Pyunik Arthur Yuspashian
– Pyunik Edgar Malakyan – Pyunik Masis Voskanian – Brugge (Belgium)
Narek Davdyan – Ulis Artak Dashyan – Banants.

Strikers Sargis Nasibyan – Banants Hrach Yagan – Standard (Belgium)
Albert Tadevosyan – Pyunik.

Manoyan: Protocols Are Stillborn

MANOYAN: PROTOCOLS ARE STILLBORN

11/manoyan-protocols-are-stillborn/
October 11, 2009

Below are comments made by the ARF Bureau political affairs director
Giro Manoyan on Oct. 10.

The protocols signed today after a delay of three and a half hours
are stillborn.

According to uncontested reports in the international media as
well as official Armenian explanation, the delay was because of the
Armenian delegation’s concerns regarding the statement to be made by
the Turkish foreign minister after the signing of the protocols.

According to uncontested Turkish news reports, the Turkish side
wanted to refer to the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict in the statement,
something Armenia says has nothing to do with the normalization of
ties with Turkey.

According to U.S. official reports, the U.S. delegation led by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton facilitated "the two sides in
coming to an agreement on the statements that they’re going to make
at the ceremony." At the end, as a result of this "facilitation,"
after the signing of the document none of the foreign ministers made
any statements.

Conclusion: Turkey continues to regard the "resolution" of the Karabagh
conflict as a precondition for establishing diplomatic relations with
Armenia and for lifting the blockade. Not making this statement right
after signing the protocols does not mean it has changed its policy; it
only means the Armenian authorities, under obvious U.S. pressure, are
agreeing to continue to accept Turkey’s precondition in this regard.

And if President Sarkisian’s address today to the Armenian people is
to be taken seriously, then these protocols are stillborn.

http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/10/

Turkey, Armenia sign historic accord

Turkey, Armenia sign historic accord

ZURICH, 10 OCTOBER, NOYAN TAPAN-AP. Turkey and Armenia signed an accord
Saturday to establish diplomatic relations after a century of enmity,
as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton helped the two sides
clear a last-minute snag.

"It was pulled back from the brink," said a senior U.S. official The
Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers signed the agreement in the
Swiss city of Zurich after a dispute over the final statements they
would make. In the end, the signing took place about three hours later
and there were no spoken statements. Accordind to AP, officials say
Clinton and mediators from Switzerland intervened to help broker a
solution.

The accord is expected to win ratification from both nations’
parliaments and could lead to a reopening of their border, which has
been closed for 16 years. But nationalists on both sides are still
seeking to derail implementation of the deal. American officials said
Clinton; the top U.S. diplomat for Europe, Philip Gordon; and Swiss
Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey were engaged in furious
high-stakes shuttle diplomacy with the Turkish and Armenian delegations
to resolve the differences. Diplomats said the Armenians were concerned
about wording in the Turkish statement that was to be made after the
signing ceremony at University of Zurich and had expressed those
concerns "at the last minute" before the scheduled signing ceremony.

Clinton had arrived at the ceremony venue after meeting separately with
the Turks and Armenians at a hotel, but abruptly departed without
leaving her car when the problem arose. She returned to the hotel where
she spoke by phone from the sedan in the parking lot, three times with
the Armenians and four times with the Turks. At one point in the
intervention, a Swiss police car, lights and siren blazing, brought a
Turkish diplomat to the hotel from the university with a new draft of
his country’s statement. After nearly two hours, Clinton and Armenian
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian met in person at the hotel and drove
back to the university where negotiations continued. It was not clear
if there would be a resolution. In the end, the Turks and Armenians
signed an accord establishing diplomatic ties in hope of reopening
their border and ending a century of acrimony over their bloody past.

"We are trying to boost our relations with Armenia in a way that will
cause no hard feelings for Azerbaijan," Erdogan told reporters.
Armenian President Serge Sarkisian said his country was taking
"responsible decisions" in normalizing relations with Turkey, despite
what he called the unhealable wounds of genocide.

The agreement calls for a panel to discuss "the historical dimension"
of the killing of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians during World War
I. The discussion is to include "an impartial scientific examination of
the historical records and archives to define existing problems and
formulate recommendations." That clause is viewed as a concession to
Turkey, which denies genocide, contending the toll is inflated and that
those killed were victims of civil war. "There is no alternative to the
establishment of the relations with Turkey without any precondition,"
said Sarkisian. "It is the dictate of the time."

Clinton, Kouchner and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov were among
the leaders who were on hand to watch the signing as it took place.
Better ties between Turkey, a regional heavyweight, and poor,
landlocked Armenia are a priority for President Barack Obama. They
could help reduce tensions in the troubled Caucasus region and
facilitate its growing role as a corridor for energy supplies bound for
the West. Javier Solana, the EU’s foreign policy chief, thanked Turkey,
which is a candidate for European Union membership.

"This is an important cooperation, no doubt, of Turkey to solve one
issue that pertains to a region which is in our neighborhood," Solana
told AP Television News after arriving in Zurich. Switzerland, which
mediated six weeks of talks between Turkey and Armenia to reach the
accord, hosted the signing. Necati Cetinkaya, a deputy chairman of
Turkey’s governing Justice and Development Party, defended the deal,
saying "sincere steps that are being taken will benefit Turkey." He
said Turkey is aiming to form friendly ties with all its neighbors and
could benefit from trade with Armenia. But Yilmaz Ates of the main
opposition Republican People’s Party said Turkey should avoid any
concessions. "If Armenia wants to repair relations … then it should
end occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh. That’s it," Ates said Saturday.

About 10,000 protesters rallied Friday in Armenia’s capital to oppose
the signing, and a tour of Armenian communities by Sarkisian sparked
protests in Lebanon and France, with demonstrators in Paris shouting
"Traitor!" On the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, Turks have close cultural and
linguistic ties with Azerbaijan, which is pressing Turkey for help in
recovering its land. Turkey shut its border with Armenia to protest the
Armenian invasion of Nagorno-Karabakh in 1993. Turkey wants Armenia to
withdraw some troops from the enclave area to show goodwill and speed
the opening of their joint border, but Armenia has yet to agree, said
Omer Taspinar, Turkey project director at the Brookings Institution in
Washington. "We may end up in a kind of awkward situation where there
are diplomatic relations, but the border is still closed," Taspinar
said.

Iranian Ponders Islam, Christianity

IRANIAN PONDERS ISLAM, CHRISTIANITY
by Kate Gregory

BP News
Baptist Press
Oct 9, 2009

TEHRAN, Iran (BP)–"When one limb aches, the whole body aches. You
who are not troubled by the troubles of others, should not be called
the children of Adam," says Ali*, quoting the 13th-century Iranian
poet Sa’di.

To Christians, that is a reference to 1 Corinthians 12.

To Ali, Christian traditions borrow from Iranian ones, rather than
the other way around. Ali, in fact, doesn’t believe in the superiority
of any belief. He says all religions lead to the same God.

He respects all prophets, including Jesus, as good and wise. In Islam
God is one, so Jesus cannot be God, he states emphatically.

"Jesus and Muhammad are the same," Ali says. "They were both prophets."

SCIENCE OVER FAITH

Born in Tehran and educated in London, Ali is a self-professed man of
science who defines fact and truth according to the majority opinion
of scholarly texts rather than religious ones.

Out of curiosity he read a copy of the Old Testament that someone
gave him.

"I was surprised," he says. Christians "call it religion, but I call
it history. Persian history. It contains our prophets. I was proud
that they recognized our history and put so much worth in it."

He knows who Christians say Jesus is, but he hasn’t read the
New Testament for himself. Iranians don’t have open access to the
Scriptures because publishing and distributing Bibles is illegal in
the Islamic Republic.

Ali has seen what can happen when people push against the restrictions
too much, and it haunted him. When he was younger, he witnessed a
public beating of someone who went against the regulations. "I couldn’t
sleep for months," he recalls. "But it’s seldom done anymore. But
once and awhile they still do it for the people to get a hint from
it about what they shouldn’t do.

"In our culture, shame is worse than the fire of hell."

IDOLIZING PROPHETS

So far, the regulations haven’t shamed Ali into taking Islam any
more seriously than he has to by law. Ali doesn’t p to witness a
special ceremony rather than to pray. Most people who go to mosques
are pleading to God for His favor, he observes. Ali tells the story
of a woman who tied herself to the gates of a mosque until she felt
God heard her prayers.

Since God is to be revered as unreachable, it is prophets who Iranians
connect with on a personal level. The 14th-century poet Hafez is so
honored, Ali says, that Iranians pair the reading of the Qur’an with
the writings of Hafez.

"They pray to him for truth. They open his book and point to the
truth they are looking for," Ali says. "They go to him for what they
are supposed to do — if they are supposed to marry, if they will
recover from illness. They trust in him to know what’s going on in
their lives and what’s going to happen before it does.

"You ask him to tell you the truth, like a friend. He’s equal to you,
beside you. Open his book and you will turn to the truth. He’s more
than a poet. He is a prophet. He is equal to mystics."

In Islam, mysticism is identified with being a Sufi, one who relies
on contemplation to discern God’s will. Shiite Muslims follow imams,
who they believe are the rightful successors to Muhammad. In Iran,
festivals are held to hasten the coming of the 12th imam, who is
supposed to bring justice to the world.

There are two theories about when this will happen, Ali explains. "He
won’t come until everything is good in the world or until everything
gets so bad in the world that it needs to be redeemed. Some want to
help it be as good or as worse as it can be to hasten his coming."

COSMIC BATTLE

Ali believes Christianity borrowed its philosophy of good and evil from
the prophet Zoroaster. Zoroastrianism is an ancient Iranian belief
that good and evil are overarching influences that battle each other
in the world.

Signs of Zoroastrianism remain in contemporary Iran. Motorists hang
guardian symbols on their rearview mirrors depicting an eye to guard
against evil. "It’s meant to catch and release any bad energy coming
your way from people you enco d will happen to you," Ali comments.

"I don’t ignore what people believe," he says. "It is there. It seems
to be very silly but human belief is interesting. Some people are
devout, but some go through the outward motions because they have
to. They don’t have faith in anything."

Ali places himself in the latter category of keeping up appearances,
divorcing public behavior from the relevancy of real life behind closed
doors. "Like most people I don’t like boundaries, but unfortunately
we are all victims of boundaries," Ali says.

DUTY OVER DEVOTION

When he was in his 20s, the native Iranian fell in love with a young
Armenian woman. His parents objected to the match, willing to give
permission for their son to marry only someone from the same ethnic
and religious background.

Armenians in Iran come from a Christian heritage, including an era
of persecution from the Turks. In some Iranian towns with an Armenian
population, the landscape is dotted with small church steeples topped
with crosses. The Armenians can practice their faith, Ali explains,
as long as they do not attempt to convert a Muslim.

Obedient to his parents’ wishes, Ali married an Iranian woman instead
but never forgot his first love.

He says he will not put limits on whom his children can marry.

"I don’t care what religion they are. I only hope they have a good
heart," he says, patting his chest.

Having chosen duty over matters of the heart as a young man, Ali
says his heart will warm to matters of faith later in life. In Islam,
closeness to God can really be obtained only in paradise upon death.

"Faith is always there," Ali says. "I’m not a fanatical, serious
Muslim. Maybe when I’m older and closer to death, I’ll take it
seriously."

–30– *Name changed. Kate Gregory covered this story for the
International Mission Board.

Turkey Important Ally Of U.S.: Kyiv Post

TURKEY IMPORTANT ALLY OF U.S.: KYIV POST

News.am
15:26 / 10/09/2009

Being an influential state in the Middle East, Caucasus and Central
Asia, Turkey is an important ally of U.S., Ukraine’s leading
English-language newspaper Kyiv Post reports. NEWS.am posts some
extracts of the article, titled "Turkey-Armenia deal could alleviate
U.S. headache."

"For decades, however, relations have been roiled by
Armenian-Americans, who have doggedly pursued U.S. recognition of
the World War I-era killings of Armenians as Genocide. That may
soon change.

A historic deal to resume diplomatic ties and open the border between
Turkey and Armenia, expected to be signed Saturday, could alleviate
that longtime headache for U.S. diplomats.

Recognizing that objections from Armenians living thousands of miles
away have a political impact, Armenian and U.S. officials have been
seeking support for the deal by the Armenia diaspora, which has often
taken a harder, more nationalist line on relations with Turkey than
the Armenian government. Now some major Armenian-American groups
have indeed praised the deal amid a rancorous debate within the
community. The backing of some influential groups is a welcome
development for the Obama administration, which has pushed for
Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.

Bulent Aliriza, director of the Turkey project at CSIS, a Washington
think tank, said the United States has been pivotal in the Swiss-led
mediation between the two countries. ‘The U.S. administration and
the Turkish government both wish to defuse the tensions associated
with annual efforts to get the U.S. to recognize the events of 1915
as genocide and view normalization as the best way of doing so,’
he said," the article reads.

The daily quotes the Executive director of the Armenian Assembly
of America Bryan Ardouny: "For the first time Turkey has publicly
committed to normalize relations without preconditions, which the
United States has actively supported."

Opening Border With Turkey Will Decrease Monopoly In Armenian Market

OPENING BORDER WITH TURKEY WILL DECREASE MONOPOLY IN ARMENIAN MARKET

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.10.2009 14:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Opening of RA-Turkish border will result in
competitiveness increase, while monopoly in Armenian market will slump
significantly, Head of RF Antimonopoly Service Igor Artemyev believes.

According to RF Antimonopoly expert, there should not be any concern
over trade expansion of Turkish goods, as the market situation can be
controlled by policy implemented. "It’s up to you whether to slightly
or fully open the market," he said. In this context Artemyev explained
that RA Government has to stimulate local production in order to meet
competition with Turkish manufacturers, as well as implement correct
tax and customs policy.

Orhan Pamuk Cleared Of Claims For His Remarks On Killings Of Armenia

ORHAN PAMUK CLEARED OF CLAIMS FOR HIS REMARKS ON KILLINGS OF ARMENIANS

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.10.2009 20:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey’s Supreme Court of Appeals on Wednesday
cleared ways for compensation claims against author Orhan Pamuk for
saying "30,000 Kurds and 1 million Armenians were killed on this
soil." Pamuk’s remarks were published by a Swiss magazine in 2005.

In May 2009, the Supreme Court overturned the local court ruling upon
an appeal by plaintiffs and ordered a new trial.

The Istanbul court reheard the suit and rejected the case once
again. However, the Supreme Court reversed the judgment after the
plaintiffs went for another appeal. Supreme Court judges also refused
Pamuk’s request for revision of decision.

Pamuk had said in his request that the court should consider the
consequences if every Turkish citizen had right to sue him. The
Istanbul court will have to hear the suit once again, Anatolian News
agency reported.

Member Of Armenian Delegation To PACE Puts European Parliamentarians

MEMBER OF ARMENIAN DELEGATION TO PACE PUTS EUROPEAN PARLIAMENTARIANS NEXT TO THE REAL STATE OF THINGS

ArmInfo
2009-10-06 16:59:00

ArmInfo. "Since the moment of admission to PACE the Azerbaijani
Delegation to PACE has been carrying out anti-Armenian propaganda based
on lies and slanders. This time we have responded to them, however,
unlike them, our materials are based on truth and historic facts",-
Naira Zohrabyan, a member of the Armenian Delegation to PACE, MP from
the Prosperous Armenia faction, said to ArmInfo correspondent.

According to Zohrabyan, she initiated the dissemination of documents,
books and DVDs in PACE, these materials describe the whole factual
truth about what happened in Nagorno-Karabakh, Khojaly and about many
other events. She pointed out that the information was also e-mailed
to all the deputies of PACE member countries. Moreover, books were
handed to the deputies, including the English and Russian versions
of "Armenophobia" containing the Azerbaijani statesmen’s hateful
statements against Armenians. "My goal was to demonstrate that the
actions of the Azeri Delegation may have the effect of a boomerang. If
they have this right, we also should have it",- Zohrabyan stressed.

She said that as a consequence of this step of the Armenian
Delegation, Azerbaijani and some Turkish deputies went off into
hysterics. "However, after this action most European deputies, who
are well-known for their anti-Armenian position came to me and said
that these materials put them next to the real state of things",-
she concluded.

ARFD In Argentine Speculates

ARFD IN ARGENTINE SPECULATES

News.am
13:39 / 10/06/2009

ARF Dashnaktsutyun members met with RA Ambassador to Argentina Vladimir
Karmirshalyan to discuss the released Protocols on Armenia-Turkey
relations’ normalization, Diario Armenia daily reads.

At September 26 meeting, the party members informed H. E. Karmirshalyan
of the ARFD official stance on the matter, that is the questionable
and conflicting provisions should be rephrased.

Dr. Khatchik Derghoukassian maintained that ARFD is for Armenia-Turkey
border opening, but without preconditions and in compliance with the
international law.

The Ambassador emphasized his position implying that negotiations
with Turkey purport no preconditions and Armenian Genocide issue is
not sidelined.