L’Arménie recense des centaines de mines dont 8 mines d’or

ARMENIE-ECONOMIE
L’Arménie recense des centaines de mines dont 8 mines d’or
la richesse du sous-sol arménien

Le sous-sol de l’Arménie recèle des richesses minières importantes.
Sur le territoire de la République d’Arménie sont recensés 29 mines
pour l’extraction du minerai ferreux et 706 pour les métaux
non-ferreux. Chiffres publiés par le ministère arménien des Ressources
minières. Parmi les mines de métaux ferreux, 8 sont des mines d’or, 2
d’or et de métaux autres, 1 d’or et de quartzite qui se trouve sur le
dite d’Amoulsar Dikranes. L’Arménie dispose également de 4 mines de
cuivre et 5 de cuivre-molybdène. 2 mines (à Hrazdan et Apovian) sont
pour l’extraction du fer. 99% des mines de métaux non-ferreux
permettent l’extraction de nombreuses pierres telles que le tuf (roche
volcanique), le basalte, le pemza ainsi que d’autres roches.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 5 juin 2011,
Krikor [email protected]

L’adieu de Mary Yovanovich au président arménien Serge Sarkissian

DIPLOMATIE
L’adieu de Mary Yovanovich au président arménien Serge Sarkissian
l’Ambassadrice Américaine quitte son poste à Erévan

Hier 4 juin le président arménien Serge Sarkissian recevait pour ses
adieux, l’Ambassadrice des Etats Unis en Arménie, Mary Yovanovich qui
quitte officiellement ses fonctions en Arménie. S. Sarkissian a
remercié M. Yovanovich pour sa mission diplomatique en Arménie et
salué l’entente entre le gouvernement arménien et l’Ambassadrice
Américaine. Cette dernière a de son côté souligné que les relations
entre Erévan et Washington avaient connu au cours des trois dernières
années un développement important. Le président arménien remercié Mary
Yovanovich pour son implication personnelle très importante pour le
développement des liens entre les Etats Unis et l’Arménie et lui a
souhaité du succès dans ses futures missions diplomatiques.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 5 juin 2011,
Krikor [email protected]

L’Arménie s’incline 1-3 face à la Russie à Saint Petersbourg

EURO 2012
L’Arménie s’incline 1-3 face à la Russie à Saint Petersbourg
et perd une chance de qualification à l’Euro 2012

Espoirs déçus pour les supporters de l’équipe d’Arménie qui s’est
inclinée hier soir 1-3 face à la Russie au stade « Petrovski » de
Saint Petersbourg lors d’un match comptant pour les qualifications de
l’Euro 2012 de football. L’Arménie dont beaucoup attendaient une
surprise au regard de ses dernières performances, ouvrait le score à
la 25e minute par Marcos Pizelli qui profitait d’une faute de
S.Ignachevich. Mais une minute plus tard Roman Pavlyuchenko égalisait
pour la Russie. L’Arménie faisait jeu égal. Le score de 1-1 à la
mi-temps reflétait la physionomie de la première partie du match.
Après la pause, les Arméniens étaient tout près de prendre l’avantage.
Mais c’est la Russie, une nouvelle fois par Roman Pavlyuchenko qui
allait à la 59e minute doubler la mise et prendre l’avantage. Alors
que les Arméniens avaient souvent l’avantage de la possession de la
balle, à la 73e minute le capitaine et défenseur Arménien Sarkis
Hovsépian intervenait énergiquement face à Youri Jirkov qui tombait à
terre dans la surface de réparation. L’arbitre Français sifflait le
pénalty qui était transformé par une nouvelle fois Roman Pavlyuchencko
qui réalisait le triplé. Celui qui avait remplacé Alexandre Kerjiakov
à la veille du match devenait face à l’Arménie le héros du match. A la
85e Henrikh Mkhitarian marquait un superbe but de la tête, mais
l’arbitre le refusait pour une position de hors-jeu. Ainsi la Russie
s’imposait 3-1 face à la sélection d’Arménie et prenait la tête du
Groupe B avec 13 points. L’Arménie est 4e avec 8 points. L’Arménie n’a
pas à rougir de cette défaite puisque les hommes de l’entraineur
arménien Vartan Minassian ont fait jeu égale avec la Russie. Les
jugements de l’arbire Français étaient davantage favorables aux
Russes. L’Arménie a perdu face à la Russie une sérieuse chance de
qualification à l’Euro 2012. Mais pour la sélection arménienne tout
espoir n’est pas perdu. A noter également que les supporters Arméniens
étaient nombreux à Saint Petersbourg avec des dizaines de tricolores
arméniens dans les tribunes, des affiches en arménien encourageant la
sélection arménienne…ainsi que des drapeaux du Haut Karabagh.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 5 juin 2011,
Krikor [email protected]

BAKU: Official: Azerbaijani army is most powerful in South Caucasus

Trend Daily News (Azerbaijan)
June 3, 2011 Friday 7:51 PM GMT +4

Official: Azerbaijani army is most powerful in South Caucasus

Azerbaijan, Barda, June 3 /Trend, S.Dzhaliloglu/

Today, the Azerbaijani army is the most powerful army in the South
Caucasus, spokesman of the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry Eldar
Sabiroglu told reporters on Friday.

“The Armed Forces of Azerbaijan stand ready to fulfill any combat
mission. So far, Azerbaijan has signed military agreements with 28
countries. As a result of permanent strengthening of our army, the
interest of the armed forces of foreign states to cooperate with the
Azerbaijani army has increased. The military potential of the
Azerbaijani army is strengthened, new equipment is purchased. Over the
past several years, capital repairs and reconstruction work have been
carried out in 43 military units of the armed forces,” said Sabiroglu.

Over the past five months, the Armenian armed forces have violated the
ceasefire 447 times. As a result of hunger in the Armenian army, the
soldiers voluntarily pass to Azerbaijani side. Because of lack of
discipline in the armed forces of Armenia, conflicts often arise
between soldiers.

In recent period, six soldiers have been martyrs as a result of
violations of the ceasefire. During this period, the OSCE has
conducted monitoring on the front lines five times.
The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. – are
currently holding the peace negotiations.
Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

BAKU: Recognition of Circassian genocide by Georgia is move against

Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
June 3, 2011 Friday

Political analyst: Recognition of Circassian genocide by Georgia is
move against Russia

BYLINE: M. Aliyev, Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan

June 03–Recognition of the Circassian genocide by the Georgian
Parliament is a step against Russia, the Director of the Center for
Political Innovation and Technology and political analyst Mubariz
Ahmedoglu told journalists on Thursday.

“The Russian Federation’s modern policy has never given a normal
assessment to many events in the country. Mass extermination of the
Circassians is one of those examples,” he said.

The Georgian parliament adopted a resolution recognizing the genocide
of Circassians by the Russian Empire on May 20.

Ahmedoglu said Moscow is weary of addressing this issue, despite its
lively discussion in the North Caucasus and Georgia.

“If the Russian politicians took the initiative into their hands and
intensified the issue regarding the genocide of Circassians, the
discontent which appeared at the beginning of the discussions could be
directed toward a more constructive direction. Instead of intensifying
discussions, certain forces in Moscow have stirred up the destructive
activity among the North Caucasian peoples for their narrow
interests,” Ahmedoglu said.

He said the Armenians and some Dagestani separatists have been engaged
in provoking Azerbaijan and the Northern Caucasus for a long time in
Moscow.

“Now, Moscow is in a dire situation because of the Circassian issue,”
Ahmedoglu said.

Will Israel Recognize The Genocide?

WILL ISRAEL RECOGNIZE THE GENOCIDE?

asbarez
Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

Inside the Israeli Knesset

The Abu Dhabi-based The National published an article Wednesday by
Vita Bekker, who ponders whether Israel will recognize the Armenian
Genocide.

Bekker points out that the decision by Knesset member Reuven Rivlin,
a member of the ruling Likud party to advance this effort ~Sis a
break with the years-long Israeli policy to take no stance.~T

~SIsrael, like the US, has never acknowledged that the massacre
of up to 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks was genocide,
saying that the historical dispute should be settled between Turkey
and Armenia. Its long-held view, however, is widely attributed to its
desire to maintain good relations with Turkey, which has vehemently
denied that genocide had taken place,~T says Bekker in the article.

~SThe Israeli stance has been supported for years by pro-Israel
Jewish organizations in the US, which have pressured the US Congress
and successive presidents to defeat congressional resolutions marking
the killing of the Armenians. Turkey is a key ally that has supported
the US in confrontations from Afghanistan to Iran,~T adds Bekker.

Read Bekker~Rs piece in The National here.

BAKU: U.S. Ambassador: Time Has Come To Endorse Basic Principles Of

U.S. AMBASSADOR: TIME HAS COME TO ENDORSE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION

Trend News Agency
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
May 31, 2011 Tuesday
Baku, Azerbaijan

May 31–LANKARAN, Azerbaijan — U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan Matthew
Bryza believes the time has come to agree on the basic principles of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution.

“The Deauville statement of Presidents Barack Obama Enhanced Coverage
LinkingBarack Obama -Search using: Biographies Plus News News,
Most Recent 60 Days of the U.S., Dimitry Medvedev Enhanced Coverage
LinkingDimitry Medvedev -Search using: Biographies Plus News News,
Most Recent 60 Days of Russia and Nicolas Sarkozy Enhanced Coverage
LinkingNicolas Sarkozy -Search using: Biographies Plus News News,
Most Recent 60 Days of France is correct statement with a view to
establish a stability in the region. The time has come to agree on
the basic principles of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution,”
Bryza told journalists in Lankaran today.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Enhanced Coverage LinkingDmitry
Medvedev, -Search using: Biographies Plus News News, Most Recent
60 Days U.S President Barack Obama Enhanced Coverage LinkingBarack
Obama -Search using: Biographies Plus News News, Most Recent 60 Days
and French President Nicolas Sarkozy Enhanced Coverage LinkingNicolas
Sarkozy -Search using: Biographies Plus News News, Most Recent 60 Days
called on the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders to demonstrate the
political will and to finalize the basic principles [the settlement
of the Nagorno-Karabakh] during the upcoming Armenian-Azerbaijani
summit in June.

“The further delay will put the desire of the parties to reach an
agreement under question,” a joint statement of the presidents of
the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing countries said.

The Azerbaijani government thinks that Armenia must draw conclusions
from the last statement of the Russian, U.S and French Presidents
over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

“Of course, we welcome the statement made by the presidents in
Deauville, France during the G8 meeting,” the head of the foreign
relations department at the Presidential Administration Novruz Mammadov
told Trend last week. “The presidents’ concern over the unresolved
conflict is clear and pleases. They stress the necessity of rapid
settlement of the conflict through negotiations. We also attach great
importance to this.”

Bryza said the basic principles could be the basis of an agreement
even if the final peace agreement lacks.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group — Russia, France, and the U.S. —
are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

BAKU: Baku Attaches Great Importance To Meeting Of Azerbaijani And A

BRIEF: BAKU ATTACHES GREAT IMPORTANCE TO MEETING OF AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS

Trend News Agency
May 31, 2011 Tuesday
Baku, Azerbaijan

May 31–BAKU, Azerbaijan — The presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia
will meet in the third decade of June upon Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev’s initiative, Head of the Foreign Relations Department at
the Azerbaijani Presidential Administration Novruz Mammadov told
journalists today.

“We attach great importance to this meeting. Moreover, the
international community and OSCE Minsk Group member countries also
attach great importance to the meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian
presidents,” he said.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group — Russia, France, and the U.S. —
are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

Economist: The Uses And Abuses Of The G-Word

THE USES AND ABUSES OF THE G-WORD

The Economist

June 2 2011

Genocide is the ultimate crime. All the more reason to use the word
carefully

NO LESS than the act itself, “the politics of genocide can be
heartbreaking.” That is what Sophal Ear, who fled Cambodia as a
ten-year-old and now works as a politics professor in the United
States, remembers feeling as a young man.

His father was among the 1.7m victims of mass killing by the Khmer
Rouge; by pretending to be a Vietnamese citizen, his mother spirited
him and four other children to freedom. Yet before last year, when four
suspects were indicted for genocide, most murders by his homeland’s
communist tyrants were not seen as genocidal in the legal sense,
because killers and victims belonged to the same ethnic and religious
group. Among the many crimes of Pol Pot’s regime, only the killings
of minorities like ethnic Vietnamese, or Muslims, fall neatly into
the category of genocide.

Many people, faced with any of the scenes created by systematic
slaughter during the 20th century would simply say: “I may not be a
lawyer, but I know genocide when I see it.” The reality of genocide
may be easy to grasp at a gut level, yet its definition is complex.

Prosecutors, judges, historians and politicians have made huge efforts
in recent years to describe the boundaries of genocide: when mere
mass murder stops and the ultimate human crime starts. Yet the term is
far more than a tool of historical or moral analysis. Its use brings
momentous political and legal consequences-and is therefore bound to
be highly contested.

Such thinking pervaded bureaucratic debates in Washington, DC, in
1994 as news of massacres in Rwanda emerged. As Samantha Power,
an author who works for President Barack Obama, has disclosed,
a paper by a Pentagon official urged caution in using the G-word:
“Be careful …Genocide finding could commit [the government] to
actually do something.”

Plain facts, muddy language

Even when the facts are clear, the vocabulary may not be. The killing
of up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys near Srebrenica in Bosnia, in 1995,
has been widely described as a genocidal act; that is why its alleged
mastermind, the Bosnian-Serb general, Ratko Mladic, was extradited
to The Hague this week. Yet even in the Bosnian context, the word
genocide has been challenged; prominent figures, who do not doubt the
vileness of the war, raise questions about the proper legal category.

They include William Schabas, a Canadian law professor who heads
the International Association of Genocide Scholars. He has stirred
a furore by arguing that since many authorities reject the use of
“genocide” to describe the whole military campaign by the Bosnian Serbs
(or those of other war parties), it may not make sense to single out
one episode in the war as genocidal; either there was a general bid
to exterminate or there was not.

This thinking does not, he insists, diminish the horror of Srebrenica
or of genocide-like acts in general. But he thinks the world should
focus more on “crimes against humanity”-defined as killing and other
inhumane acts when committed as “part of a widespread or systematic
attack …against any civilian population.” Such felonious deeds should
not be seen as a “discounted form of genocide” but as an extreme form
of wickedness; they were, after all, the precise charges against the
Nazis convicted at Nuremberg.

The starting point for any definition of genocide is clear and fairly
familiar. The United Nations in 1948 adopted the Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, which describes
“the deliberate and systematic destruction, in whole or in part, of
an ethnical, racial, religious or national group.” That formula is
incorporated in the statutes of the Hague-based International Criminal
Court, which since 2002 has stood ready to try terrible atrocities
if national courts fail. In scores of countries the convention is
also part of domestic law.

The prime mover of the convention, Raphael Lemkin, had been pressing
since the 1930s for the adoption by world institutions of a broad ban
on the mass slaughter of groups; he said later that he had been mainly
motivated by the mass slaughter of Ottoman Armenians in 1915. The text
was readily adopted in a climate of horror over the Nazi Holocaust
of Jews as well as of Roma and other despised groups.

The convention’s provisions are remarkable for what they do and do
not cover. They exclude-at the insistence of the Soviet Union, for
obvious reasons-the mass killing of “class” or political enemies. But
they include as genocidal any measures to limit births within a group,
and the transfer of children of one group to another. China’s one-child
policy would not count-because it applies to ethnic Chinese-unless
it were brutally enforced on, say, Tibetans. Armenian nationalists
enraged Mikhail Gorbachev, the then Soviet leader, by protesting over
the adoption of orphans by Russians after the 1988 earthquake there.

But they had law on their side.

The special courts considering Rwanda and the Balkans have expanded the
jurisprudence of both genocide and crimes against humanity. The Rwanda
one has stressed that the genocide charge requires proof of a plan;
and that the victims were killed solely for membership of a group.

Mr Schabas sees two trends in the definition of genocide. First, judges
and legal scholars have been cautious: the ICC judges, he points out,
took a lot of persuading to issue an arrest warrant for genocide
against Sudan’s president, Omar al-Bashir. Even the fact that they
finally issued it does not mean they are persuaded that the G-word
can stick. Meanwhile, social scientists and historians have widened
the use of the word, to include, say, the destruction of cultures
and languages, or the decimation of tribes. Indigenous peoples, for
example, have died in big numbers because they were vulnerable to
the diseases borne by colonisers. The effect is genocidal, whether
or not there was a plan.

Judges and lawyers have to be precise because their opinions have
precise effects: for historians, a perpetual testing and redefining
of categories comes naturally. But that does not make the historian’s
work easy or free of heartbreaking consequences: witness the endless
row over the mass killings of Armenians.

Only an open debate can resolve those questions. It does not help
that asserting an Armenian genocide is a criminal offence in Turkey,
whereas denying it is against the law in Switzerland. (France’s
lower house adopted a similar measure but was overruled in May
by the Senate.) Arrest warrants may be the right way to deal with
genocidaires, but they have no place in the study of history.

http://www.economist.com/node/18772664?story_id=18772664

Armenian Catholicos Defrocks Fr. Abel Manoukian

ARMENIAN CATHOLICOS DEFROCKS FR. ABEL MANOUKIAN

news.am
June 2 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN. – Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II defrocked Fr. Abel
Manoukian.

>From now on the priest will bear his secular name Hrach Manoukian,
press service of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin informed Armenian
News-NEWS.am.

Earlier in May Catholicos of All Armenians suspended priesthood of
Abel Manoukian.

The decision came after his refusal to recognize the approved canonic
diocese in Switzerland, priest of the Geneva’s St. Hagop church, as
well as neglect of the order by Karekin II to come to Holy Etchmiadzin.