Abram Bakhchagulyan: The Elections Of The Yerevan City Council Were

ABRAM BAKHCHAGULYAN: THE ELECTIONS OF THE YEREVAN CITY COUNCIL WERE FAIR AND TRANSPARENT
Shakeh Avoyan

"Radiolur"
01.06.2009 11:53

The elections for the City Council of Yerevan were fair and
transparent, Secretary of the Central Electoral Commission of Armenia
Abram Bakhchagulyan told reporters today. According to him, publicity
was ensured during the elections. The Central Electoral Commission
had launched an internal network, through which district electoral
commission were reporting about the process of elections and the
counting of votes on-the-fly.

Abram Bakhchagulyan noted that the District Electoral Commissions and
the CEC were rapidly responding to all the shortcomings and violations
registered at polling stations. In particular, infringements were
registered during the vote counting at polling station 8/3 in Malatsia
Sebastia; the commission did not allow international observers to
participate in the process of counting. The shortcoming was corrected
immediately after the alarm was received.

>From 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. the Central Electoral Commission is accepting
complaints today. According to Abram Bakhchagulyan, after the appeals
are considered, it will become clear what kind of shortcomings and
violations occurred and whether they will affect the outcome of the
voting or not.

Abram Bakhchagulyan considers that 52% of participation is a high
level of voter turnout.

COMSTAR, Telecom Italia Sparkle Agree To Provide Connectivity Betwee

COMSTAR, TELECOM ITALIA SPARKLE AGREE TO PROVIDE CONNECTIVITY BETWEEN LONG-DISTANCE COMMUNICATION NETWORKS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
29.05.2009 12:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ United TeleSystems (COMSTAR-UTS, LSE: CMST), the
leading provider of integrated telecommunication services in Russia and
the CIS, and Telecom Italia Sparkle S.p.A., one of the major telecom
operators in Europe, a member of Telecom Italia Group, announced
today a contract to provide connectivity between their long-distance
communication networks and deliver international voice transit service.

The contract includes organization, technical and economic terms
and conditions regarding the mutual transit of international voice
traffic. Under the established inter-network operation, COMSTAR-UTS
and Telecom Italia Sparkle provide a virtual transit service to
each other to enable operators to route specific volumes of their
international outcoming voice traffic for various routes. Transmission
of voice traffic for direct dial of international dialing number (IDD)
directed from one operator to another is also subject to the contract.

Each of the companies independently organizes transport channels and
supports technical means necessary to arrange a connection up to the
equipment owned by them and installed in Ankotel communications house
(Frankfurt, Germany). COMSTAR-UTS provide internal wiring and crossing
of communication lines between the terminal equipment in transit
node of network connectivity. Under the contract, the operators
will exchange traffic volume forecasts calculated as the amount of
minutes per month for each of the destination points. This will enable
appropriate fund allocation necessary to ensure efficient interaction
between networks of both operators which will result in uniform traffic
distribution and high quality long-distance communication services.

Sergey Pridantsev, President of COMSTAR-UTS, says, "In 2008 we promptly
build and launched a long-distance communication network and started
to deliver services to our subscribers. However, to further develop
international/long-distance communications it is necessary to boost
the capacity of backbones and update IP transport system. To solve
this strategic task, we’ve signed a traffic transit contract with one
of the largest telecom operators in Europe, Telecom Italia Sparkle,
which transports more than a half of the whole international transit
traffic in the Mediterranean region. Such partnership is very important
for us."

Dr. Stefano Mazzitelli, CEO of Telecom Italia Sparkle, says,
"Our partnership under this project with one of the major Russian
operators, COMSTAR-UTS, opens for us opportunities for cooperation in
various telecom sectors. We expect that the contract for providing
connectivity between our telecom networks will enable us to deliver
high quality services and monitor traffic transmission."

Georgia Interested In The Construction Of Batumi-Akhaklkalaki-Gyumri

GEORGIA INTERESTED IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF BATUMI-AKHAKLKALAKI-GYUMRI HIGHWAY

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
27.05.2009 20:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ An interesting project within BSEC frameworks is
the construction of Armenia-Batumi highway, MP Ara Nranyan, ARFD
Advisor on Economic Issues and member of Armenian delegation in BSEC,
told a PanARMENIAN.Net correspondent. "The Georgian side has again
reiterated its determination and willingness to launch the construction
of Batumi-Akhaklkalaki-Gyumri highway," he mentioned. Mr. Nranyan
finds that a country like Georgia appeared in an unfavorable situation
after Russian troops paralyzed the country’s eastern-western part. The
highway construction, according to the MP, is of practical importance
both for Armenia and Georgia. For the former, it may become an
alternative route to Black Sea coast. As to the latter, it may enable
it to unite its country’s eastern and western parts.

French Parties Urge Turkey To Recognize Genocide

FRENCH PARTIES URGE TURKEY TO RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE

-parties-urge-turkey-to-recognize-genocide/
May 26th, 2009

PARIS (Combined Sources)-Several political party leaders in France
urged Turkey to recognize the Armenian Genocide, reported the France-2
television channel.

Motivated by their inherent opposition to Turkey’s membership in
the European Union, the mainly right-leaning political parties are
attempting to use the Genocide recognition issue to create further
obstacles for Turkey.

Meanwhile, the left-leaning parties are hoping for reforms in Turkey,
especially on the treatment of minorities and the Armenian issue.

http://www.asbarez.com/2009/05/26/french

Georgian Opposition Can Name Sole Leader May 26

GEORGIAN OPPOSITION CAN NAME SOLE LEADER MAY 26

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
23.05.2009 19:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Davit Zurabishvili, a Georgian opposition politician
from Republican Party, which is also part of Alliance for Georgia,
said that there were considerations among opposition parties about
possibility of naming a single leader, who would establish himself
as a presidential contender backed by parties, behind the ongoing
protest rallies.

Presently, the opposition is lead by Levan Gachechiladze, Irakly
Asalania, Kakha Shartava and Nino Burjanadze.

There are two opposition leaders, who have publicly said about having
ambitions to run for presidency – Irakli Alasania, leader of Alliance
for Georgia and Nino Burjanadze, a former parliamentary speaker and
leader of Democratic Movement-United Georgia.

On May 26 the opposition plans to hold a rally at Boris Paichadze
National Stadium, scheduled to start at noon and then continue by
march towards the Rustaveli Avenue, civil.ge reported.

At Turkish Border, Armenians Are Wary Of A Thaw

AT TURKISH BORDER, ARMENIANS ARE WARY OF A THAW
By Clifford J. Levy

New York Times
pe/22armenia.html?ref=world
May 22 2009

LUSARAT, Armenia — Vazgen Shmavonyan keeps a flock of doves at an
Armenian Orthodox pilgrimage site here, and they readily venture across
the border into Turkey, less than a mile away. But Mr. Shmavonyan
cannot follow, as if he is the caged one. Off they go, symbols of
something that this region has not had a whole lot of.

The border between Armenia and Turkey has been closed since 1993,
a mini Iron Curtain that is in part a legacy of one of the world’s
more rancorous conflicts, nearly a century old. Recent weeks have
brought news of a possible thaw, with the two countries outlining a
plan for establishing diplomatic ties and lifting barriers.

Yet as much as Mr. Shmavonyan and others at the pilgrimage site
would like to roam, they reacted warily to the official contacts
with Turkey. Of course, open the border, they said, it will help the
economy and improve prospects for the future.

But first, most insisted, Turkey must address the past.

They said that before negotiations proceeded, the Turkish government
must acknowledge that 1.5 million ethnic Armenians were systematically
killed under Ottoman rule in Turkey during World War I.

"We want Turkey to admit that there was a genocide," said
Mr. Shmavonyan, 38. "Certainly, it’s bad that the border is blocked. If
it were open, it would be good for everyone. For the people who trade,
everything would be cheaper. However, let them admit it, and then we
can talk."

Mr. Shmavonyan makes his living charging visitors a few dollars to
pet and release his doves off the hilltop pilgrimage site, which
is an ancient monastery that is considered a birthplace of Armenian
Christianity and a redoubt against encroaching Islam.

The tension at the border here is reflected in the troops that guard
the Armenian side: they are Russian, deployed at Armenia’s request
to help protect it from its far larger neighbor. (Armenia has three
million people, while Turkey has 72 million.)

Armenia, a former Soviet republic, maintains close ties with Russia. In
fact, this is perhaps one of the last places on earth where, in an
echo of the cold war, NATO soldiers — in this case, from Turkey —
face Russian ones across a sealed border.

>From the Orthodox pilgrimage site, called Khor Virap, it is easy to
see Turkish land that was once settled by ethnic Armenians, including
the area around Mount Ararat, where the Bible suggests Noah landed
his ark after the flood.

Among those Armenians were Mr. Shmavonyan’s paternal grandparents,
who were killed by Turkish troops, he said. His father survived and
fled here.

Many workers and visitors at the site recounted similar tales. And
some expressed anxiety about new clashes if negotiations succeeded.

"Turkey immediately will come over here; who knows what will
happen?" said Hayk Avetisyan, 38, a taxi driver who had ferried some
tourists here from Yerevan, the Armenian capital. "If you know the
history between us — immediately Turkey will try to take over half
of Armenia."

Not everyone was as pessimistic. The Rev. Narek Avakyan, 29, the
chief Armenian Orthodox priest at Khor Virap, said Armenia should
not impose conditions on the talks.

"Whether or not they want to admit the genocide, today or tomorrow or
sometime soon, they will do it," he said of the Turkish government. "It
is a fact, and they know it. It has been so many years. And it was
not they who did it; it was their grandfathers and fathers."

The Turkish government has long disputed that a genocide occurred,
asserting that Armenia peddles false history.

Turkish officials say World War I was a dark time when many ethnic
Armenians tragically died in the upheaval caused by the fighting. But
they say there was no methodical campaign to kill them, and they
emphasize that many ethnic Turks died during that period as well.

Historians have generally said that Turkey’s claims are not credible.

Armenia has sought to persuade other countries to recognize the
genocide, and the United States has often been drawn into the fray.

As a candidate, President Obama said he would acknowledge it. However,
last month, apparently concerned about offending Turkey, an important
American ally, the White House released a statement on Armenian
Remembrance Day that paid tribute to those who died but did not
explicitly use the word genocide.

The intense feelings of people at Khor Virap show how difficult
it will be to heal divisions in this strategically important yet
volatile region.

Besides its troubled relationship with Turkey, Armenia has a closed
border with another Muslim neighbor, Azerbaijan, also a former Soviet
republic. Soon after the two countries became independent after the
demise of the Soviet Union in 1991, they went to war over the disputed
enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Turkey, which has strong ethnic and political ties to Azerbaijan,
shut its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with Azerbaijan.

The discord between Turkey and Armenia then grew far worse, as Armenia
and influential Armenian immigrant groups around the world pressed
the issue of the World War I killings.

Armenia’s only open borders are with Georgia, to the north, and Iran
to the south.

The hostility here toward the Turkish government does not necessarily
extend to its people. In fact, Mr. Shmavonyan, who keeps the flock
of doves at the monastery, said he worked for a decade in Istanbul
as a textile trader.

"They treated us very well," he said. "They know that Armenians are
very good and hard-working people."

Still, he and others were not hopeful that the rift would end soon. And
they conceded that their insistence that Turkey acknowledge the
genocide before the border was opened carried bittersweet overtones.

"Our land is there," said David Arakelyan, 50, who runs a picnic
area for visitors to the monastery. "We want to go over there and
walk around and see how our grandparents lived. I want to go over
there and see their graves."

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/22/world/euro

Serzh Sargsyan Cannot Find New Words

SERZH SARGSYAN CANNOT FIND NEW WORDS

A1+
05:48 pm | May 22, 2009

Official

Serzh Sargsyan issued a congratulatory message on renowned singer
Charles Aznavour’s 85th anniversary. The message runs in part,

"Dear Charles Aznavour,

I extend my warmest congratulations on your 85th anniversary.

I am glad to celebrate your jubilee with you in the land of your
ancestors. This is a good chance for the Armenian people to enjoy
your presence.

Words of praise and gratitude have been addressed to you for
decades. Your unique works have been welcomed with laud applauses. I
find it difficult to come up with anything new to say regarding the
tremendous success you have enjoyed.

Obviously, your music, art and your image are loved and appreciated
in all angles of the world.

I wish you robust health and inexhaustible energy, energy that you
have placed in the service of what is good, beautiful and for the
benefit of your two homelands, France and Armenia.

David Shahnazarian: Kidnapping Witnesses And Pressing Them Is State

DAVID SHAHNAZARIAN: KIDNAPPING WITNESSES AND PRESSING THEM IS STATE TERRORISM

Noyan Tapan
May 21, 2009

YEREVAN, MAY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. Yerevan Council of Elders elections
campaign is accompanied by acts of violence to witnesses during
political trials.

Armenian National Congress (ANC) Central Office representative David
Shahnazarian stated at the May 21 press conference. In his words, the
Police persecute and kidnap witnesses, exert psychological pressure
upon them to extort evidence beneficial for the authorities. "Such
conduct of the authorities is unprecedented, it is just a state
terrorism," D. Shahnazarian said adding that ANC strictly condemns
the above mentioned phenomenon.

According to the oppositionist’s formulation, this election campaign
is also unique as TV companies under authorities’ control do not
cover it normally.

In D. Shahnazarian’s conviction, it is done deliberately for Yerevan
citizens to be unaware of the election campaign process and their
attention to be distracted from the campaign. He explained that the
wish of the authorities is low voter turnout, which will permit them
to commit mass riggings. According to D. Shahnazarian, RPA’s rating
is too low, over 2%, while ANC has a possibility of receiving 80%
votes. He said that the opposition will do its best to prevent riggings
and to be able to fix the votes it will receive.

In response to the question of whether in case of being included in
Council of Elders ANC will cooperate with pro-governmental forces
D. Shahnazarian repeated the thought voiced by ANC members at previous
press conferences, according to which cooperation with the authorities
is impossible as long as there is even if one political prisoner
in Armenia.

Relations Between Armenia And Iran Are Still Local: ACNIS Expert

RELATIONS BETWEEN ARMENIA AND IRAN ARE STILL LOCAL: ACNIS EXPERT

ArmInfo
2009-05-21 13:54:00

ArmInfo. Relations between Armenia and Iran are still of local nature,
and almost nothing has changed in this aspect over the last 20 years,
expert of the Armenian National Center for National and International
Studies Manvel Sarkisyan said during today’s Roundtable in ACNIS
dedicated to the Armenian-Iranian relations. ‘Armenia is perceived
in Iran at the level of one of its northern provinces. At the same
time, our republic is not perceived in this country as a geopolitical
partner. This situation can be changed only in case if Armenia becomes
a transit country from Iran in the communication and energy spheres,
however, nothing of the kind is envisaged’, he said. M. Sarkisyan
thinks that in the conditions of absence of the Iranian transit
over the Armenian territory, as well as absence of relations between
Armenia and Iran in defense, all the relations between Yerevan and
Tehran are of local nature and are reduced to the economic relations
which are also of small volume.

To note, the goods turnover between Armenia and Iran in 2008 made up
$227 million.

Moscow Theater After Parajanov Had Its First Tour In Armenia

MOSCOW THEATER AFTER PARAJANOV HAD ITS FIRST TOUR IN ARMENIA

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
20.05.2009 18:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Parajanov Cultural Center was founded in Moscow 15
years ago.

During this time theater troupe of cultural center was performing in
Moscow and some European states. In honor of its 15 year anniversary
and 85th anniversary of the great Armenian director the theater
troupe will have its first performance in Armenia with a premiere of
"I’ll revenge with love" performance.

According to performance author and head of cultural center Vladimir
Gabe, the play is based on dreams and visions of the great master. The
premier will take place on May 22 at Sundunkian Theater.

Besides the spectacles different culture events including exhibitions,
retrospectives of master’s works and meetings with Parajanov’s
colleagues are being held in Parajanov cultural center.

Sergei Parajanov (1924-1990) was one of the best known directors
of Soviet films. Born in Tbilisi, Georgia, to an Armenian family,
his work reflected the ethnic diversity of the Caucasus where he
was raised. His first major work was Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors
(1964), which earned him an international reputation for its rich
use of costume and color, and its whimsical portrayal of rural
life. Possibly his greatest work, The Color of Pomegranates (1969),
described the life of the Armenian poet Sayat Nova.