652 Economic Crime Registered In Armenia

652 ECONOMIC CRIME REGISTERED IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.10.2009 15:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Within last 9 months of 2009, RA police intensified
struggle against property crimes, Head of Senior RA Police Department
for Organized Crime Prevention, Hunan Poghosyan told a news conference
in Yerevan. According to him, 652 economic crimes were registered in
Armenia in 2009, while 313 crimes were committed in 2008.

As for struggle against corruption, Hunan Poghosyan noted: "Armenian
police discovered 398 cases of corruption in 2009, registering 38%
increase compared with 2008 results. Special emphasis is given to
the struggle against bribery."

ANKARA: 46th Antalya Golden Orange fest: a personal retrospective

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Oct 25 2009

The 46th Antalya Golden Orange festival: a personal retrospective

Festival goers walk by a poster honoring Turkish actors in front of
the Antalya Culture Center, where the 46th Antalya Altın Portakal
International Film Festival galas were held.

Starved of the lavish funding of recent years, organizers of Antalya’s
prestigious Altın Portakal (Golden Orange) International Film Festival
made a virtue out of necessity, proclaiming this year’s stripped-down
event a `people’s festival.’

Locals were able to take part in free cinema workshops and
competitions, ticket prices were slashed and the number of venues
screening films increased. But could we, Antalya residents, grown
accustomed of late to sipping a pre-screening glass of wine alongside
major international stars such as Francis Ford Coppola and Kevin
Spacey, accept the more mundane prospect of downing a pre-film freebie
cup of instant coffee and hoping for a glimpse of an up-and-coming
`home-grown’ director?
Sunday, Oct. 11: The Laura Center. Previous festivals featured a
glossily produced program the size of an encyclopedia, giving a handy
synopsis of every film. Year 2009’s budget pamphlet listed only the
film name, director and venue, which led to a frenzied Google-search
for relevant reviews. `Tandoori Love,’ telling of a love affair
between an Indian chef, working on a Switzerland-set Bollywood film,
and a local alpine-blonde beauty, was described as `the funniest film
to have come out of Switzerland for years.’ I should have known better
(the Swiss are noted for efficiency, not humor), and it fell flat on
its face, right between the two stools where its director had
unwittingly placed it. Ang Lee’s `Taking Woodstock’ was a blessed
relief, an affectionate, amusing tribute to the almost accidental way
the greatest popular music festival in history came about.

Monday, Oct. 12: Antalya Culture Center (AKM). The foyer of the
festival’s premier venue was humming for the gala screening of Murat
SaraçoÄ?lu’s `Deli Deli Olma’ (Piano Girl), a comic drama set in a
snowy village outside distant Kars. The village’s last Molakan (a
little-known ethnic group expelled from Russia by the tsar after the
1877-78 Russo-Ottoman war) befriends a local girl and encourages her
latent musical talent, with the help of the Molakan’s ancient piano.
Entertaining if melodramatic, the rapt audience gave it a standing
ovation.

Tuesday, Oct. 13: AKM. Justifiably `Ä°ki Dil Bir Bavul’ (On the Way to
School), a documentary by Ã-zgür DoÄ?an and Orhan Eskiköy, would go on
to win the festival’s best first film award. Newly qualified teacher
Emre is sent from the prosperous western Turkish town of Denizli to a
dirt poor, ethnically Kurdish village set on an unimaginably bleak,
basalt-covered plateau outside Å?anlıurfa. He doesn’t speak Kurdish,
the kids no Turkish. The camera catches the absurdities (Emre gelling
his hair in the morning as if he’s heading out for a night on the
town) and realities (kids made to stand on one leg for speaking
Kurdish in class) of the situation. The powerful, dialogue-free
`Border’ by Armenian director Harutyun Khachatryan mixes documentary
and staged scenes to great effect. A water buffalo, filched by
Armenian villagers from the Azerbaijani side of the frontier, is used,
in the director’s own words, `to show the reality and wish to get rid
of borders — emotional, moral, psychological.’ The emblematic buffalo
tries, repeatedly, to escape his `captors’ but is prevented from
returning `home’ by the razor-wire border fence.

Thursday, Oct. 15: Laura Center. `Uzak Ä°htimal’ (Wrong Rosary). This
gentle, understated film was shot in the atmospheric backstreets of
Ä°stanbul’s Galata district by Mahmut Fazıl CoÅ?kun. An earnest muezzin,
Musa, becomes infatuated with his pretty neighbor, Clara, a Christian.
Bumping into her outside their apartment, Musa accidentally picks up
her rosary beads instead of his own prayer beads. He only realizes his
mistake whilst fingering the beads in his mosque and one of the
congregation tactfully points out the crucifix attached to them. The
scene drew gales of laughter from the audience, but at the end there
was nearly a fight between an angry young man and some equally irate
viewers who had been chiding him throughout the film for using his
mobile phone.

Friday, Oct. 16: AKM. What started out as another sell-out finished
with the plush auditorium half empty. `Aya Seyahat’ (Journey to the
Moon) by KutluÄ? Ataman did for a remote 1950s Turkish village what
`Spinal Tap’ did for heavy metal — that is, lovingly poked fun at it
through the device of a mock documentary. A clever piece of
filmmaking, it splices stunning black and white stills recounting the
villagers’ attempts to do their bit in the Cold War `space race’ and
fly to the moon in the minaret of the local mosque, with interviews
with an ensemble of Turkish academics musing on their country cousins’
antics. Did the viewers who walked out do so because they felt their
intelligence or their nation was being insulted, or simply through
incomprehension? Whatever the reason, it was insulting to both the
director and the remaining audience — who gave this intelligent and
witty film the generous applause it deserved.

Saving the best for last, it was back to Migros for `Min Dit’ (The
Children of Diyarbakır), director Miraz Bezar’s debut feature, backed
by successful Turkish-German director Fatih Akın. Orphaned by the
murder of their parents by Nuri, a JÄ°TEM (a clandestine intelligence
organization formed within the gendarmerie) assassin, 10-year-old
Gülistan and her sibling Fırat (beautifully played by real-life street
kids) end up on the mean streets of the impoverished southeastern city
of Diyarbakır. Just back from one of several visits over the years to
that city, I know how accurately the film depicts the street urchins’
plight. A brave debut, and courageous of the festival organizers to
screen a Kurdish language film where the villain of the piece is a
member of the Turkish security forces.

Golden Orange No. 46 may have been more austere than we have become
accustomed to, and the unusually overcast skies gave the festival a
somber atmosphere. But the films I saw (with one exception) ranged
between the good and the superb (and remember, `On the Way to School’
apart, I didn’t even catch the award-winning entries), with many
screenings sold out. A great festival in keeping with 2009’s pinched
economy. Here’s hoping for an even better 47th.

25 October 2009, Sunday

TERRY RICHARDSON ANTALYA

BAKU: Azerbaijani, Turkish Presidents Mull Ways Of Resolving Nagorno

AZERBAIJANI, TURKISH PRESIDENTS MULL WAYS OF RESOLVING NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

Trend
Oct 21 2009
Azerbaijan

Turkish President Abdullah Gul phoned Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev on October 21, the state AzerTaj news agency reported.

During the conversation, the presidents exchanged views
over Azerbaijan-Turkey bilateral relations, settlement of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh and Turkey-Armenia
relations.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul said unless the Armenia-Azerbaijan
conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh is settled the Turkey-Armenia relations
can not be normalized.

President Ilham Aliyev thanked the Turkish leader for his position.

Russia Rejects To Ship Systems S-300 To Iran

RUSSIA REJECTS TO SHIP SYSTEMS S-300 TO IRAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.10.2009 21:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ According to some sources, the contract concluded in
2007, never entered into force, other sources report, that Iran has
already made an advance payment under the contract, but the expected
shipment of the air defense systems has not begun.

Meanwhile, according to the Russia’s Federal Service
for Military-Technical Cooperation, Russia would continue
military-technical cooperation with Iran without violating its
international obligations, BBC Russian Service reports.

Wexler Leaves Congress, Washington Wondering Why

WEXLER LEAVES CONGRESS, WASHINGTON WONDERING WHY
Ron Kampeas

Baltimore Jewish Times
imes/news/jt/national_news/wexler_leaves_congress_ washington_wondering_why/15116
Oct 20 2009

The "fire-breathing liberal" has sucked the air out of the room.

A soft-spoken retirement announcement by the usually outspoken
U.S. Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) has left Democrats, Republicans,
Jews and non-Jews expressing reactions that ranged from baffled
to… baffled.

"We were stunned," said one source close to the congressional
leadership. Figures in the pro-Israel community expressed similar
sentiments.

What makes the move even more perplexing is that Wexler, who dubbed
himself the "fire-breathing liberal" in his manifesto published last
year, is ending a very public political career that has had a virtually
unimpeded upward swing to become a think-tank diplomat–the kind of
figure who does his best work behind the scenes without taking credit.

Wexler, 48, will lead the Center for Middle East Peace and Economic
Cooperation, a group co-founded by S. Daniel Abraham, the Slim-Fast
diet food magnate whom Wexler named in his book as a "close friend"
and the funder of Wexler’s Middle East travel in the past.

The group has existed since 1993 and was prominent during the heyday
of the Oslo peace process launched that year, but it has been moribund
since the death in 2002 of its co-founder, former Utah congressman
Wayne Owens.

"Taking over as president of the Center for Middle East Peace offers
me an unparalleled opportunity to work on behalf of Middle East peace
for an important and influential non-profit institute," Wexler said
in a statement. "After much discussion with my family, I have decided
that I cannot pass up on this opportunity."

The problem with his explanation is that the congressman, who was
unavailable for an interview, already is in a position to exert
considerable influence on Middle East policy.

As chairman of the Europe subcommittee of the U.S. House of
Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, Wexler lobbied European
nations to join in isolating Iran isolation and helped sustain
Israel’s role as a NATO satellite country. He was effective, too,
in bringing Turkey into the process as a Mideast broker.

Wexler was the first major Jewish political figure to join the
Obama campaign, in 2007, just after the then-senator had declared
his candidacy. Obama’s political mastermind, David Axelrod–now a
senior White House adviser–advised his candidate to woo Wexler
as the iconoclast likeliest to break Hillary Rodham Clinton’s
then-stranglehold on Jewish support.

With a stand-up comic’s hands-in-the-pocket, cards-on-the-table
demeanor, Wexler ventured during the campaign into redoubts of Jewish
support for Clinton such as Ohio. Thrown into a grind of twice-daily
appearances, Wexler would loosen up the audience with jokes about
how refreshing it was to address voters about a half-century younger
than the average age in his Florida constituency before launching
into a vigorous defense of Obama’s emphasis on diplomacy to rebuild
America’s reputation abroad.

"When that new day of trans-Atlantic relations emerges, Israel too
will be a great beneficiary," he told a crowd in Cleveland.

Some voters who were skeptical about Obama before Wexler’s presentation
said afterward that he won them over.

Much was made in the weeks before last year’s election of the supposed
reluctance of Florida’s elderly Jews to back a black candidate whose
middle name was Hussein. Obama won Florida handily, and the problems
likely were overstated, but Wexler earned credit for tirelessly
working the state’s retirement homes, where he is beloved.

Wexler has commanded respect from Jewish liberals and centrists by
combining support for robust U.S. diplomacy in pursuit of a two-state
solution with a strong defense of Israel’s response to Hamas rocket
attacks, steering clear of criticizing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s policies and arguing that Obama needs to do a better job
of selling his policies directly to the Israeli public.

So why would Wexler give up such precious political capital?

In the absence of a more detailed explanation, journalists and
policymakers who thought they knew Wexler could only speculate: He was
positioning himself for an Obama administration peace-brokering role.

After 14 years he had tired of the congressional grind. The most
common reason proffered was that he needs the money (the lawmaker
has three children who attend a pricey Jewish day school).

Wexler, reached by The Associated Press, said nothing exciting was up.

"I am not under any investigation. My marriage is intact. My health
is good and, thank God, the health of my family is good," he said. "I
am leaving to become the president of the Center for Middle East Peace.

It may not be as sexy as some other things, but this is what I’m
doing."

The only episode approaching a scandal in recent years reinforces
the notion that Wexler is eager for a change: An opponent discovered
in 2008 that the Delray Beach residence Wexler listed as his was in
fact his in-laws’.

This, it turns out, was not illegal, but in the course of the reporting
it became clear that Wexler prefers his Washington-area community in
suburban Potomac, Md., where he and his family attend Beth Sholom,
an Orthodox synagogue.

Wexler is perhaps one of the most unabashed Jews in Congress; he
does not hide his affiliations. His wife, Laurie, has worked for the
American Jewish Committee. Stumping in the tiniest of far-flung towns
during Obama’s campaign, he had an unerring scent for whatever local
deli was selling Jewish–or at least Jewish-style–fare.

In his book, he gleefully joined his liberalism and his advocacy for
Israel into pugnaciousness.

Wexler describes in his book a contentious Abraham-funded visit to
Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations three weeks after the Sept. 11,
2001 attacks and his growing impatience with Arab leaders who tried to
persuade him that the U.S.-Israel alliance was to blame for terrorism.

http://www.jewishtimes.com/index.php/jewisht

Armenian Experts Attend NATO Conference In Istanbul

ARMENIAN EXPERTS ATTEND NATO CONFERENCE IN ISTANBUL

Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am
Oct 20 2009
Armenia

An Armenian delegation headed by Richard Giragosian, Head of the
Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS),
Tigran Lazarian, European Stability Institute (ESI) Analyst, and
other experts will participate in the conference "Security Challenges
and Regional Cooperation in South Caucasus" in Istanbul.

The conference is due on October 22-24 under the auspices of NATO
"Science for Peace and Security" program. Maria Amaryan and Stepan
Grigoryan from the Analytical Centre on Globalization and Regional
Cooperation (ACGRC) will present a report on "Changes of geopolitical
patterns in the Caucasus and potential for international involvement",
Richard Giragosian – "The problem of transnational crimes and regional
security in the South Caucasus." Tigran Lazarian will speak of NGO
role in settling conflicts and getting closer Caucasian states — the
Armenia-Turkey normalization is an example. Politicians and political
analysts of Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia will also deliver speeches.

Azerbaijani Constructive War In Artsakh: Balayan

AZERBAIJANI CONSTRUCTIVE WAR IN ARTSAKH: BALAYAN

Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am
Oct 19 2009

Saying "constructiveness" Azerbaijan means large-scale war against
Artsakhi people (Karabakh), RA Foreign Ministry Press Secretary Tigran
Balayan told ArmInfo news agency.

Earlier, Azerbaijani MFA representative Elhan Polukhov stated about
permanent adherence to country’s constructive positions, charging
Armenia with the denial of the achieved arrangements.

In response to this remark, Tigran Balayan said: "Probably, Mr.

Polukhov means &’constructiveness’ proceeding from which a large-scale
war against people of Artsakh launched. Guided by &’constructiveness’,
they denied Paris Principles in 2001, &’constructiveness’ that enabled
to deny Madrid document throughout a year issued in 2007. I consider
Polukhov’s constructiveness is understandable by himself only."

BAKU: Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister To Come To Baku

ARMENIAN DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER TO COME TO BAKU

APA
Oct 19 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku. Viktoria Dementieva – APA. Armenia will participate in the
21st meeting of the Foreign Ministers Council of the Organization
of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation in Baku. APA reports quoting
Novosti-Armenia agency that Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosian
will lead the Armenian delegation.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov will chair the meeting.

The meeting will be held on October 22.

Ankara et Erevan entre foot et diplomatie

Le Figaro, France
Jeudi 15 Octobre 2009

L’ANALYSE;
Ankara et Erevan entre foot et diplomatie

par Barluet, Alain

La Turquie et l’Arm©nie, qui s’affrontaient hier lors d’un match de
football hautement symbolique, doivent maintenant jouer les
prolongations sur le terrain diplomatique. Certes, on ne saurait
minimiser la port©e de l’accord conclu au forceps, samedi dernier
Zurich, entre les repr©sentants d’Ankara et d’Erevan. Les deux
protocoles sur lesquels ils se sont accord©s visent l’©tablissement
de relations diplomatiques, la r©ouverture de la fronti¨re commune
et pr©voient une s©rie de mesures pour resserrer les liens bilat©raux.
Il s’agit d’une ©tape sans pr©c©dent dans la d©marche de
r©conciliation entre les deux voisins qui s’opposent depuis pr¨s d’un
si¨cle sur la question du g©nocide arm©nien, un terme que r©cuse
toujours la Turquie. Un accord historique, donc, mais qui, ce stade,
ne r¨gle rien. Malgr© l’opposition des nationalistes qui donnent de la
voix dans les deux pays, les protocoles seront vraisemblablement
approuv©s par les parlements respectifs.

Plus difficile sera de r©duire les arri¨re-pens©es des deux pays
signataires. Celles des Turcs, d’abord, qui ont toujours cherch©
entraver la reconnaissance d’un g©nocide qui a fait plus d’un million
et demi de morts, selon Erevan, l o¹ Ankara conc¨de seulement le
massacre 300 000 500 000 personnes dans le contexte de la Premi¨re
Guerre mondiale. Une « sous-commission » d’historiens doit d©sormais
ªtre constitu©e : la sensibilit©, plus ou moins proche des positions
arm©niennes, des personnalit©s nomm©es par Ankara sera un indicateur
de sa volont© politique de lever, ou non, cette hypoth¨que majeure qui
constitue, Erevan, un imp©ratif cat©gorique.

C´t© arm©nien, on n’est pas non sans avoir des id©es derri¨re la tªte.
Avec l’accord de Zurich, Erevan esp¨re ainsi avoir mis la Turquie «
dans la seringue » pour l’amener rouvrir la fronti¨re commune,
ferm©e depuis 1993, une des priorit©s de Serge Sarkissian, surtout
depuis la crise g©orgienne de l’an dernier. Le pr©sident arm©nien peut
compter sur les parrains de l’accord de Zurich pour peser de tout leur
poids dans ce sens : d’une fa§on ou d’une autre, Europ©ens, Am©ricains
et Russes ont chacun int©rªt au d©senclavement de l’Arm©nie pour
assurer l’acheminement des hydrocarbures d’Asie centrale.
Un autre obstacle demeure sur la route de la r©conciliation
turco-arm©nienne : le Haut-Karabakh, enclave majoritairement peupl©e
d’Arm©niens en Azerba¯djan, prot©g© r©gional de la Turquie. La
question ne figure pas explicitement dans les protocoles de Zurich.
Mais, au lendemain de la signature de Zurich, le premier ministre turc
Recep Tayyip Erdogan a clairement conditionn© une « attitude positive
» d’Ankara concernant l’ouverture de la fronti¨re avec l’Arm©nie par
un retrait des Arm©niens du territoire de l’Azerba¯djan. Pour le
gouvernement Erdogan en pleine renaissance n©o-ottomane, il ne saurait
ªtre question de laisser tomber Bakou et les compatriotes de souche
turque.

Les exigences turques ne facilitent pas la t¢che du « groupe de Minsk
», dont les chevilles ouvri¨res sont la France, les ?tats-Unis et la
Russie, qui s’efforce depuis 1997 de r©soudre le casse-tªte du
Haut-Karabakh. Pour surmonter les blocages, le groupe pr©conise une
approche pragmatique visant, dans un premier temps, au retrait des
populations arm©niennes des zones entourant l’enclave, repoussant
plus tard la question de son statut d©finitif. Selon un expert du
dossier, les d©clarations turques risquent d’avoir des interactions
n©gatives sur les travaux du « groupe de Minsk » en renfor§ant, du
c´t© turc comme du c´t© arm©nien, la position des extr©mistes sur le
Haut-Karabakh.

Levier pour l’ouverture ou pr©texte radicalisation, tout d©pendra de
l’interpr©tation qui sera faite, Ankara comme Erevan, de l’accord
pass© Zurich. La troisi¨me mi-temps s’annonce longue et difficile.
[email protected]

Protesters in Tel-Aviv demand recognition of Armenian Genocide

Protesters in Tel-Aviv demand recognition of Armenian Genocide
17.10.2009 15:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 16, Im Titsu (If You Like) movement held
demonstration near Turkish Embassy in Tel-Aviv.

Activists held photo exhibition on Armenian Genocide, calling on
Turkish Government to recognize Armenian Holocaust in Ottoman Empire.

Im Tirtsu movement was founded by Israeli university students after
Second Lebanese War. Its organizers’ objective is to strengthen and
revive Zionist values in Israeli society, Newsru.co.il reports.