PM Serge Sargsyan Met With The Ambassador Of Vietnam

PM SERGE SARGSYAN MET WITH THE AMBASSADOR OF VIETNAM

armradio.am
26.03.2008 15:15

RA President-Elect, Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan today received the
newly appointed Ambassador of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam to
Armenia Bui Dihn Zihn.

The Prime Minister congratulated the Ambassador on appointment
and wished him evey success in carrying out his diplomatic mission
in our country. Serge Sargsyan also expressed gratitude for the
congratulation of the President of Vietnam Nguyen Minh Triet on the
occasion of his victory in the Armenian presidential elections.

During the meeting the interlocutors spoke for reinforcement and
deepening of the firm political ties between the two countries and the
mutually beneficial economic cooperation. "We attach great importance
to the cooperation of southeastern countries and I hope that with your
appointment the Armenian-Vietnamese relations will further reinforce,"
Serge Sargsyan said.

The Ambassador of Vietnam presented the recent dynamics of economic
development of his country and noted that under the conditions of
political stability, Vietnam is confidently developing the economy
and it is now a safe and reliable country for tourism and foreign
investments.

Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan and Ambassador Bui Dihn Zihn
characterized the economic ties and the current volume of commodity
turnover between Armenia and Vietnam as non-sufficient and expressed
confidence that in case of active and interested work it is possible to
find reciprocal economic interests and different spheres of cooperation
to have the economic relations reach the level of political ties.

At the end of the meeting the Ambassador of Vietnam once again
congratulated Serge Sargsyan on his election as RA president and
wished him every success.

Foreign Diplomat – A Demonstrator?

FOREIGN DIPLOMAT – A DEMONSTRATOR?
Kima Yeghiazaryan

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
March 25, 2008

This Is Called "Mission"

The March 21 gathering of Levon’s supporters (in which the activists
were participating with flowers, candles and photos of the "political
prisoners") was different from the previous ones with the presence
of fresh faces.

Particularly Charge D’Affairs of Lithuania in RA Stankiavichus
Kyastutis hurried to the Northern Avenue to appear among the
demonstrators.

Of course it is a unique phenomenon. During the whole history of our
independent country we don’t remember a case when a foreign diplomat
participates in a demonstration. It is equal to interfering in our
internal political affairs. In this case the loyalty of the Charge
D’Affairs of Lithuania towards the "pan-Armenian movement" headed by
Levon Ter-Petrosyan is strange, mildly speaking.

And naturally, the strange, if not suspicious behavior manifested by
the Lithuanian diplomat gave rise to lots of questions.

First: does the law on the "diplomatic service" allow the diplomats
in Lithuania to publicly adopt a political stance and posture
in the country where he is realizing his mission? Which means, in
non-diplomatic language, to poke his nose into the internal political
affairs of that country. If not, then what did Mr. Kyastutis lose
in the Northern Avenue, among the activists of Armenian Pan National
Movement.

Second: What made the Charge D’Affairs to hurry to the
demonstrators? Maybe the political action was so interesting, but he
couldn’t see the whole scene of the provocations from the window of
his office. But the March 1 demonstrations in the territory of the
French embassy, which turned into a mass disorder, extending the
"geography" was not visible to French Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary, but Serge Smesoph, not only avoided appearing around
Myasnikyan Statute, to "honor" the aggressive demonstrators with his
presence, but also didn’t even look out of the window of the Embassy.

Third: Probably S. Kyastutis was inspired with the behavior of LTP’s
kinsmen Armenian diplomats and he had also joined the "pan-national
movement" with an announcement made before March 1, and he was
hiding this or maybe Ter-Petrosyan’s nephew, Arakel Semirjyan, who
has been deprived of his diplomatic rank, challenged him to appear
in the Northern Avenue. If so, the former employee of the European
Department of the Foreign Ministry, A. Semirjyan, did well in the
position of an adviser…

Had LTP’s nephew been more diligent, he could have persuaded the
Charge D’Affairs of Lithuania to hold the photo of former outstanding
diplomat, a "political prisoner" at present, Alik Arzumanyan.

Forth: Or maybe we must evaluate the step taken by S. Kyastutis as
"people’s diplomacy". But real diplomats, in this case revolutionary
attorneys, treat similar missions, with irony.

Fifth: Most probably the diplomat was touched by the speech delivered
by LTP, in Azatutyun Square, on February 29, where he brought
Lithuania as an example of a legislative, civilized country. That day
LTP appealed to the West – the United States and certain European
structures not to manifest a formal approach towards Armenia,
because: " the fate of Armenian democracy is in the hands of their
representative – observers. In 10 days the before mentioned powers,
countries and structures have chance to contribute to the formation
of a civilized and democratic state with free-market economy like
Lithuania or like the most regressive country like Middle Asia,
in Armenia.

Most probably the Charge D’Affairs of Lithuania was really touched to
hear this. That is why the diplomat hurried to meet LTP’s activists
who have exhausted the methods of their struggle, to pass on the
experience of Lithuanian democracy to the demonstrators.

Sixth: Maybe LTP’s supporters have managed to convince Kyastutis,
that "it is not a political struggle it is the struggle of the society
for the restoration of democracy and freedom." And he really believed
that he was participating in the social movement. But this statement
would sound really ridiculously.

It would have been very interesting to get an answer of at least one
of the before mentioned questions.

Armenia Vs Kazakhstan – 1:0

ARMENIA VS KAZAKHSTAN – 1:0

armradio.am
27.03.2008 12:46

The national football team of Armenia led by head coach Jan Poulsen
defeated the team of Kazakhstan 1:0 in the friendly match held in
Rotterdam (Holland). Player of "Ajax" (Amsterdam) scored the only
goal at the 62nd minute of the match.

RA Football Federation informe that the squad of the Armenian team
included: Gevorg Kasparov, Sargis Hovsepyan, Robert Arzumanyan,
Aleksandr Tadevosyan, Aghvan Lazarian, Levon Pachajyan, Romik
Khachatryan (Karen Aleksanyan, 78), Artur Voskanyan (Ararat Arakelyan,
46), Karlen Lazarian (Gevorg Ghazaryan, 46), Hamlet Mkhitaryan (Hamlet
Mkhitaryan, 72), Edgar Manucharyan (Ara Hakobyan, 67), Vahagn Minasyan.

This is the third victory of the Armenian national team after defeating
the teams of Belarus and Malta. Our footballers suffered one defeat
against Iceland.

Armenia will play its friendly match on June 1st with Greece – the
current European Champion.

Turkey’s Southeast Shocked By Kurdish Riots

TURKEY’S SOUTHEAST SHOCKED BY KURDISH RIOTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2008 16:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ More than 100 Kurdish demonstrators and 10 policemen
were injured and more than 160 Kurds detained across southeastern
Turkey on Saturday when police broke up spring festival celebrations,
security sources said.

Turkish police firing water cannons, teargas and wielding batons
clashed with demonstrators in the streets in the cities of Van
and Siirt.

More than 60 Kurdish demonstrators and two policemen were injured in
fighting in Van after security forces tried to disperse a crowd of
nearly 10,000 Kurds celebrating Newroz festival and shouting slogans
supporting the banned separatist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Tensions are high in Turkey’s mostly Kurdish southeast as military
operations against the PKK have continued after the military launched
an eight-day operation into northern Iraq to wipe out PKK camps there.

The clashes on Saturday began when police tried to break up
festivities, organized by the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party
(DTP). Police said the celebrations were unauthorized.

Turkey’s Kurds have long complained of discrimination, and DTP leaders
want public schools in Turkeys southeast to offer education in the
Kurdish language, which is unrelated to Turkish.

In Siirt, 32 demonstrators and eight police were injured in more
violence after police tried to disperse a group of 3,000 people with
teargas and water cannon.

In Hakkari, near Turkey’s border with Iraq, clashes also erupted
between about 2,000 revelers and police near the city’s government
building.

More than 100 Kurdish demonstrators were detained in the province
of Sanliurfa, near Turkey’s border with Syria, for participating in
another unauthorized Newroz celebration.

Saturday’s Newroz clashes were punctuated by the separate arrests of 16
people in eastern Anatolia for belonging to the PKK, Reuters reports.

Picturing The ‘Problem From Hell’

PICTURING THE ‘PROBLEM FROM HELL’
By Eli Rosenblatt

Forward
s/12970/
March 21 2008
NY

When you look at a photograph that depicts an act of violence – or, in
the case of Lane H. Montgomery’s new photography book, "Never Again,
Again, Again" (Ruder Finn), an act of genocide – you might assume
that the photographer took a substantial amount of time to frame, say,
a heap of murdered Tutsis drying out on wooden planks, or a horrific
scene in which a Serb soldier is kicking a Bosnian woman while she lay
bleeding on the ground. "What people might not realize is that many of
these photos are quick shots, taken when I had that second to jam my
arm into this windowsill or climb to that viewpoint," said Montgomery,
who edited the book and contributed some of her own photographs.

The new book, which gathers startling words and images by a cadre
of renowned photographers and essayists, constructs a narrative of
genocide beginning at the turn of past century. With chapters on the
Armenian genocide, the Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur,
a kind of yizkor-bukh emerges, giving us a rendering of humanity’s
most grim capabilities and documents that memorialize societies and
cultures destroyed by war.

"There is a connection between one genocide and another," Montgomery
said in a phone interview with the Forward. "The Holocaust is central,
and it should be; Hitler tried to conquer the world." The daughter of
a liberal Republican in North Carolina, Montgomery relocated to New
York about 30 years ago and traveled the world as a photojournalist,
bringing conflict-zone images to an American audience through her
work with the aid organization the International Rescue Committee
and as a contributor to the Getty Images photo service, among others.

But Montgomery is no objective observer. While the Nazi Holocaust
takes up the largest number of pages in the book, what sets it apart
is a comprehensive overview of lesser-known genocides, particularly
in Cambodia, Bosnia and Herzegovina. With the emergence of an
independent Kosovo and a 16,000-strong international force still in
place to keep the peace after years of war, the book is also a call
to action and a new plea to end the 21st century’s first genocide
in Darfur. "We need an international genocide [prevention] force,"
Montgomery said. "In addition to peacekeeping forces, we need people
ready to stop genocide. One million Tutsis were killed in a hundred
days. There is a lot to be done."

http://www.forward.com/article

Larisa Alaverdian: "Armenia Became Coutry Living In Conditions Of Co

LARISA ALAVERDIAN: "ARMENIA BECAME COUTRY LIVING IN CONDITIONS OF CONSTANT STATE OF EMERGENCY"

Noyan Tapan
March 21, 2008

YEREVAN, MARCH 21, NOYAN TAPAN. As a result of the amendments made to
the Law on "Holding of meetings, rallies, marches and demonstrations",
Armenia became a state living under conditions of constant state of
emergency. This statement was made by Larisa Alaverdian, a member of
the Zharangutiun (Heritage) faction, during the parliamentary briefing
held on March 21.

According to her, a situational approach, in fact, was displayed on
the legislative initiative and the reasons for the created situation
were not taken into consideration.

According to Stepan Safarian, a member of the Zharangutiun faction,
a state of emergency was not declared in Armenia even during the
Karabakh war or after the October 27 events. "We do not think that
there was such a need after the March 1 events," she declared.

Faction member Zaruhi Postanjian mentioned that under the conditions
of the state of emergency, the rights of the Zharangutiun party
for receiving unbiased information, as well as for taking part in
peaceful demostrations and rallies have been violated. The party has
applied to the Administrative Court with a corresponding case and the
seven-day term for receiving an answer from it expires today. In her
words, irrespective of the circumstance that the term for the state
of emergency has ended, the Administrative Court can consider its
definition as illegal. Zaruhi Postanjian mentioned that mass media,
which have not operated as a consequence of the state of emergency,
can also apply to the Administrative Court and receive compensation
for the suffered losses. She attached importance to the lawsuit of such
cases from the point of view of their preventive siginificance as well.

State Of Emergency Lifted In Yerevan

STATE OF EMERGENCY LIFTED IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
21.03.2008 13:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The 20-day state of emergency was lifted today
in Yerevan.

Yesterday, President Kocharian said imposition of state of emergency
prevented a grave popular shock.

"No violations were fixed during the past 20 days. I am hopeful that no
incidents will follow," the President said, adding that law enforcers
will prevent unauthorized protest actions.

Formation Of The Power Which Enjoys Confidence Of Major Part Of Soci

FORMATION OF THE POWER WHICH ENJOYS CONFIDENCE OF MAJOR PART OF SOCIETY IS ONE OF THE PRIORITIES OF THE POLITICAL COALITION FORMED IN ARMENIA

arminfo
2008-03-21 13:07:00

ArmInfo. Formation of the power which enjoys confidence of major part
of society is one of the priorities of the political coalition formed
in Armenia today.

According to the text of the Agreement, signed to day by the RPA,
ARFD, Prosperous Armenia party and Orinats Yerkir, members of the
coalition will deepen democratic reforms, improve mechanisms of
human rights protection, will effectively contradict external and
internal challenges against Armenia. As for the main principles of
the coalition functioning, members of the coalition are going to be
guided by the principles of mutual respect, tolerance, resolving
of disagreements via talks, cooperating with each other and the
President of the republic. Creation of counterbalances between the
power wings, drawing out of measures for raising confidence of the
society to the election processes, strengthening of freedom of speech,
gradual stimulation of the small amd medium-sized business, opening of
new job places and others are among the political priorities of the
coalition. The document will step in from the moment of its signing
and will function over the whole period of authorities of the National
Assembly of forth convocation. The Agreement may be broken in case
of irresistible principle disagreement.

Boarding School To Open

BOARDING SCHOOL TO OPEN

KarabakhOpen
20-03-2008 12:37:06

The NKR government has affirmed the bill on the rights of children.

On the initiative of the NKR minister of social security Narine
Azatyan, the government passed an order to set up Boarding School
for Care and Protection of Children N1 and to reorganize the boarding
school of Kashatagh into Boarding School for Care and Protection of
Children N2.

The government also affirmed the procedure of admittance of children
to those establishments. The government will assume guardianship of
parentless children.

Interview: Only A Document That Be Signed By Azerbaijan, Nagorno Kar

INTERVIEW: ONLY A DOCUMENT THAT BE SIGNED BY AZERBAIJAN, NAGORNO KARABAKH AND ARMENIA CAN RESOLVE NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT

ArmInfo
18.03.08

Only a document that be signed by Azerbaijan, Nagorno Karabakh and
Armenia can resolve Nagorno Karabakh conflict Minister of Foreign
Affairs of Armenia responds to ArmInfo questions on the UN resolution
on Karabakh, as well as the domestic situation

Q: The resolution presented at the UN General Assembly by Azerbaijan
was passed. How do you assess what happened and how will it change
things?

A: The actual passage of the resolution, I assess negatively. It
was unnecessary, ill-timed, mean-spirited, both as a process and a
product. But I’m satisfied with the number of countries that did not
support it. I assess their decisions positively. This is a non-binding,
or consultative pronouncement by the General Assembly, I don’t think
it will have an affect on the process, unless Azerbaijan is engaged
not just in deception but self-deception.

If they expect to use this for anything other than their domestic
purposes, if they have convinced themselves that the international
community truly supports the one-sided desires they had enumerated in
the text of this resolution, then this will cause serious problems
in the negotations. One thing must be clear for Azerbaijan – that
no amount of resolutions will make Nagorno Karabakh deviate from its
path of self-determination.

Q: Then, how do you know if they are serious about the negotiations?

A: Fortunately, we will have an opportunity soon to find out. There
is a possibility that Armenia’s President-Elect will meet with the
Azerbaijani President in Bucharest, in the framework of the NATO-EAPC
Summit. We’ve stated our readiness to participate, I know the co-chairs
will make such a proposal, and I know the Azeris have also hinted that
they are ready to continue the dialogue at the highest levels. During
that first meeting this issue can be clarified. President-Elect
Sargsyan can ask President Aliyev point blank – if you truly believe
in the content of this resolution and if that will be your guideline,
then there’s nothing to talk about and let’s not waste our time. But if
you’re still committed to the negotiating document on the table today,
then let’s get serious and go the short distance that’s left. Indeed,
the UN resolution text and the content of the negotiating document
are incompatible; most of the international community recognized this
which is why they did not support it.

Q: But still 39 countries voted in favor.

A: They did not vote in favor of the content of the resolution,
they voted in favor of the sponsor – Azerbaijan. Those who voted
‘yes’ were either members of GUAM or of the Organization of Islamic
Conference. I think if UN General Assembly resolutions were actually
binding, then many of those who abstained would have in fact voted
against the resolution.

However, I don’t want to deal in conjectures. This is the time
to understand that there is no other option but negotiations. Show
me one example in history when a conflict has been resolved by the
passage or acceptance of a document by an international organization
or by third countries. There hasn’t happened and it’s not going to
happen now, certainly not in the case of Nagorno Karabakh. In 1948,
the UN General Assembly resolution to partition Palestine didn’t solve
anything. More recently, the Security Council resolution on Kosovo
also didn’t manage to bring the sides together in a meaningful way. I
remember in Lisbon when the OSCE Chairman-in-Office made a statement
about Nagorno Karabakh, Azerbaijan’s joy knew no limits. It took
years for Azerbaijan to understand that that document had no value.

There is only one document that can resolve this conflict: that
is the one that will be signed by Azerbaijan, Nagorno Karabakh
and Armenia. Let me say again that the document on the table now,
given to the parties at the highest levels in Madrid and deposited
at the OSCE Secretariat, should be the guiding principle for a real
sustainable resolution of the conflict.

Q: On the day the resolution was being voted on, you were in
Europe. This was your first trip since the elections and the
post-election disaster. What reactions did you receive? What was
Europe’s message?

A: This was a forum where the policy makers of the US, Europe
and beyond were all present. Not only did I meet a lot of people,
ironically, I was a keynote speaker in a session on Europe’s path to
the Caucasus, where the primary focus was of course on democracy. This
had been scheduled months before the election, and although I would
have said the same things whether the post-election events had taken
place or not, the situation was more sensitive and the stakes were
higher. Indeed, Armenia has taken a beating because of the riots
and the deaths. No one was interested in asking or knowing who did
what. They looked at this as an Armenian mess, an Armenian tragedy, an
Armenian problem and judged us all together. It’s not the government
that’s damaged, it’s not the opposition that’s discredited, it’s
Armenia that is dishonored.

My task there was to accept their criticism, listen to their
disappointment, share their frustration and try to explain that this
was not a permanent setback, but a temporary aberration from the
path to which we’re commited. I hope I’m not wrong. My judgment –
and their assessment – will be tested by what happens in the coming
weeks and months. What was clear was that despite all this, there’s
a lot of good will towards Armenia, a lot of hope pinned on Armenia,
and a sincere desire to see us come through this in a meaninful way,
not just superficially moving forward with business as usual.

Q: How do we do that? What’s the way out?

A: This conference was in Brussels, and most of the people I met with
were from Europe, and the EU leadership. They repeated the points they
had made last week – that they expected the state of emergency lifted,
they expected dialogue, they wanted the issue of detentions addressed,
and they expected a return to unrestricted media. It was clear that
there is a great deal of overlap between their requirements and the
desires of the government and the statements of the opposition.

What the EU wants is what the Armenian people want. In my view, all
of those basic expectations can be met, they are and must be doable
considering that the people’s faith and trust, the integrity of our
society and the future of our city and country are at stake.

We too want the state of emergency lifted, and as the President has
said there have been no infractions, and the State of Emergency will
be lifted as scheduled.

The matter of detentions is very critical and very important. Of course
we do not want to become a country of political prisoners. Those
who have political association and have acted criminally must be
punished. But artificial criminal charges should not be used to
isolate political figures.

The opposition cannot continue to act to risk everything. They
did that on the afternoon and evening of March 1. If what they
want are political, economic and social changes, they can use the
strength of their support base to insist on those changes. We have
a president-elect who has said he understands the depth of the
frustration and dissatisfaction and is committed to bringing change.

The political changes, the healing and the building are going to take
a very very long time. They will be made more difficult by the rumors,
the distrust, the fear, the readiness to believe the worst. Perhaps
we can set aside the opposition’s sense of entitlement and the
government’s self-assuredness, and actually conduct an independent,
transparent investigation over what happened on March 1, even as we
engage in real dialogue about what’s to come.