Gagik Khachatryan: Nobody’s Going To Kill Anyone At Customs

GAGIK KHACHATRYAN: NOBODY’S GOING TO KILL ANYONE AT CUSTOMS

news.am
Dec 29 2009
Armenia

"We are improving administration, but they cry we are killing people
at the customs. Nobody is going to kill anyone," Head of the RE State
Revenues Committee Gagik Khachatryan told reporters.

He refuted the report on unexpected inspections at the SIL Concern
owned by the disgraced oligarch Khachatur Sukiasyan. The article as
published by the Haykakan Zhamanak (Armenian Times) newspaper.

Khachatryan also commented on the fuss about inspectors’ recent
"attack" on the jewelry market: "Are you going to act as their
advocates? What is the reason?"

"They have been working as they liked for so many years. Now that
we have installed 8,000 cash registers and are trying to legalize
the trade they have raised a clamor. Law prohibits trade in terms of
foreign currency, let them not," Khachatryan said.

In conclusion he promised tax and customs revenues will be ensured
next year.

How Britain needs a leader of Gladstone’s stature now

How Britain needs a leader of Gladstone’s stature now: the tax-cutting
reformer who makes Brown and Cameron look like pygmies
By Dominic Sandbrook

The Mail on Sunday/UK
26th December 2009

He was a man who spent his evenings walking the streets in search of
fallen women, struggled with an addiction to pornography, and recorded
in his diary episodes of violent self-flagellation.
He was also one of the most accomplished, courageous and influential
leaders in our history: an anti-imperialist, a passionate supporter of
the underdog, a parliamentary reformer and a tax-cutter, who served
four terms as Prime Minister and is synonymous with the Victorian age.
On Tuesday, it will be 200 years since William Ewart Gladstone, one of
the greatest statesmen this country has ever produced, was born in
Liverpool.

Reformer: ‘Grand Old Man’ William Gladstone in 1893
And at a time when the economy remains in the doldrums, public debt
has risen to record levels and corrupt MPs have dragged our democracy
into the gutter, we should pay a birthday tribute to a great man who
never failed to put country before party.
Thanks to the appalling neglect of our national history, generations
of British teenagers leave school today without knowing the story of
this genuinely inspirational man.

And yet by any standards, Gladstone’s career overflowed with colour
and incident.
Born on December 29, 1809, the son of a merchant, Gladstone was
extraordinarily precocious even as a child.

Dominic Sandbrook
One of his earliest memories was being made to stand on a table and
say ‘Ladies and gentlemen . . .’ to a large audience – probably at a
Liverpool rally in support of Tory MP George Canning. Gladstone was
just three years old at the time.
Hardy surprising, then, that from the outset he enjoyed a glittering
career. At Oxford, he was president of the Union and gained a Double
First in Classics and Mathematics.

After his oral exam, he characteristically complained that it had been
too easy. When the examiner tried to change topics, Gladstone
exclaimed: ‘No sir, if you please, we will not leave it yet’ and
carried on talking.
But unlike today’s spoiled politicians, Gladstone never took his
advantages for granted.

He may have been born with a silver spoon in his mouth, and he may
have gone to Eton, but he was driven by a fierce sense of Christian
mission – albeit one that sometimes manifested itself in alarmingly
peculiar ways.
In the late 1840s, after he had already enjoyed one spell as a
minister under the Tory Sir Robert Peel, Gladstone took up a hobby
that now sounds downright bizarre: walking the streets at night to
find ‘fallen women’ and encourage them to mend their ways.
To his friends, he insisted that his interest in London’s prostitutes
was purely charitable. But the evidence of his diaries tells a
different story.
Despite having eight children and a very happy marriage, Gladstone was
a man of irrepressible sexual drive. Tormented by his longings for
these women, and by his fascination with pornography, he punished
himself for his sins, recording in his diary that he had whipped
himself.
Today, it is hard to imagine a politician chastising himself for the
‘sin of impurity’, especially if the sin was only in the imagination.
But Gladstone took Biblical teachings very seriously – and his
self-flagellation was essentially an exercise in moral
self-discipline.
Meanwhile, Gladstone had embarked on a political journey the like of
which Britain had never seen.
Gordon Brown makes a point as he delivers his speech in the plenary of
the UN Climate Summit After beginning his ministerial career as a
Tory, he left the party in 1846 after Peel’s repeal of the Corn Laws –
which protected the price of British crops from cheaper foreign
imports – had split the party.
>From this point on, Free Trade would be one of Gladstone’s political
touchstones. By sticking so firmly to his principles, he helped to
make Victorian Britain the workshop of the world.
A dazzlingly eloquent and ruth-lessly tax-cutting Chancellor in the
1850s and 1860s, he became leader of the new free-market Liberal Party
in 1867 and was elected Prime Minister in 1868.
In four separate terms in Downing Street, from 1868 to 1894 –
alternating with his hated Tory rival Benjamin Disraeli, Gladstone put
together a stunning record of reform and modernisation. Indeed, it
would be no exaggeration to call William Gladstone the architect not
just of Victorian Britain, but of modern Britain, too.
It was in his first term as Prime Minister, for example, that the
government introduced competitive exams for entrance into the Civil
Service, replacing the old corrupt patronage system.
It was Gladstone who abolished religious tests for university
applicants, and it was Gladstone who introduced the secret ballot in
general elections.
David Cameron delivers his keynote speech to delegates on the last
day of the 2009 Conservative Conference
He also reformed the British Army, abolishing the hideously wasteful
practice of selling officers’ commissions to emptyheaded aristocrats,
and turning it into a professional fighting machine.
The crucial thing about these reforms – and the ultimate tribute to
Gladstone’s vision – is that they lasted. These were not spin-driven
PR gimmicks: for Gladstone, the idea of tailoring his policies to win
admiring headlines would have been anathema.
For Gladstone was a man of immense intellectual seriousness. In an age
when many MPs vault straight from Oxbridge to Westminster without
experiencing anything of the real world, and when others can barely
string a sentence together, it is almost embarrassing to recall that
we once had a Prime Minister who spent his spare time writing learned
commentaries on the Greek poet Homer, and who reportedly read no fewer
than 21,000 books.
Gladstone’s intellect was matched only by his phenomenal physical
energy. One of his great enthusiasms was chopping down trees – a
slightly bizarre hobby he pursued into great old age.
Queen Victoria, who preferred the flattery of Disraeli, complained
that Gladstone ‘speaks to me as if I was a public meeting’. But to
millions of her subjects, Gladstone’s earnestness and eloquence were
hugely admirable.
William Gladstone, 19th century Liberal Prime Minister
In 1880, when he made one of his many political comebacks, a
staggering 86,930 people came to hear him speak – something that
would be unimaginable today.
And why so many ordinary people loved the ‘Grand Old Man’ is not hard
to discern. In an age of patrician politicians, he was a genuine
democrat, who trusted the people and had faith in their good sense.
He was no socialist: indeed, he spoke out often ‘on behalf of
individual freedom and independence as opposed to what is termed
Collectivism’. But at a time when millions were more prosperous and
better educated than ever, Gladstone recognised the desire for change.
‘The principle of the Liberal Party is trust in the people, only
qualified by prudence,’ he said. Indeed, today’s legislators could
take a leaf from Gladstone’s book where parliamentary reform is
concerned.
Although, like most men of his generation, he drew the line at votes
for women, it was Gladstone who passed the Reform Act of 1884, giving
town and countryside the same voting rights for the first time
(previously, many rural dwellers had been denied the vote), sending
the electorate above five million and inaugurating a new age of mass
politics.
And Gladstone’s trust in the common man was not confined to mainland
Britain. In Ireland, he believed the only recipe for peace was to
grant Home Rule under the British crown – a solution that, had it
not been for the intransigence of the Lords and the Tories, might have
avoided the bloodshed of the last century.
Unlike most of his political colleagues, he was never carried away by
the false, fleeting glamour of jingoistic wars.
‘You should avoid needless and entangling engagements,’ he told an
audience in 1879. ‘You may boast about them, you may brag about them,
you may say you are procuring consideration of the country. But what
does all this come to, gentlemen?
‘If you increase your engagements without increasing strength, you
diminish strength, you abolish strength; you really reduce the Empire
and do not increase it. You render it less capable of performing its
duties.’
Wise words, and ones that Tony Blair and Gordon Brown should have
heeded when they sent our troops into foreign battlefields without the
resources to keep them safe. But then if Gladstone were somehow to
reawaken in 21st-century Britain, I suspect he would be appalled by
the record of his successors.
To the greatest Chancellor in our history, who boasted of saving money
on ‘candle-ends and cheese-parings’ and insisted that ‘economy is the
first and great article in my financial creed’, our level of public
debt – predicted to reach a staggering 77 per cent of our national
wealth in 2014 – would seem truly horrifying.
And as a staunch believer in tax cuts and balanced budgets, Gladstone
would be aghast at Gordon Brown’s profligate record. In his very first
Budget as Chancellor, he eliminated 123 duties and reduced 133 more.
During his second spell at the Treasury, he cut income tax from 9d to
4d in the pound, saying he wanted to let money ‘fructify in the
pockets of the people’.
Meanwhile, for all his concern for the poor, Gladstone would be
horrified by the modern welfare state. ‘We live at a time when there
is a disposition to think that the Government ought to do this and
that, and that the Government ought to do everything,’ he remarked in
1889.
‘If the Government takes into its hands that which the man ought to do
for himself, it will inflict upon him greater mischiefs than all the
benefits he will have received.’
The object of Liberalism, he explained, was ‘that the spirit of
self-reliance, the spirit of true and genuine manly independence,
should be preserved in the minds of the people’.

And ‘nothing should be done by the State’, he wrote in the Liberal
manifesto of 1885, ‘which can be done better or as well done by
voluntary effort’.
Above all, though, Gladstone was a man of supreme moral courage. He
preached the gospel of free trade and low taxes not because it was
convenient, but because he believed it was right.
And even when his principles clashed with his self-interest, he stuck
to his guns – for instance in 1886, when his belief in Irish Home
Rule split the Liberal Party and sent him into opposition.
By the time he retired as Prime Minister in 1894, he left Britain as
the world’s richest and most dynamic power, with its parliamentary
system and national finances the envy of the world – a far cry from
its position today.
As his friend John Morley recalled, it was entirely characteristic of
the Grand Old Man that in his final Cabinet, his ministers burst into
tears at the news of his resignation, while he ‘sat quite composed and
still’.
And it was even more characteristic that he spent the last four years
of his life writing scholarly articles and campaigning on behalf of
the persecuted Armenians under the Ottoman Empire – a painful
contrast with the shameless, sleazy money-grubbing of Tony and Cherie
Blair.
But then Gladstone belonged to a more serious age, in which duty,
virtue and responsibility were more than empty buzzwords. When he died
in 1898, thousands of ordinary Britons – Liberal and Tory alike –
filed past his body in Westminster Hall, in solemn recognition of what
they owed to the Grand Old Man.
He had his quirks and his failings, to be sure, and he would cut a
very peculiar figure in today’s House of Commons. But how we could do
with Gladstone’s courage and seriousness today.

The Republicans Organized A Concert Dedicated To The Students

THE REPUBLICANS ORGANIZED A CONCERT DEDICATED TO THE STUDENTS

Aysor
Dec 25 2009
Armenia

Today the youth wing of the Republican Party of Armenia has organized
a concert dedicated to the talented students of the higher educational
institutions of the Armenian Republic, informed the ARP youth wing
to Aysor.am.

On the concert will be present RA officials, the chairman of the RA
NA Hovik Abrahamyan, Members of Parliament and others.

In the concert will take part not only famous singers but also the
gifted students from different institutions. As Aysor.am was told
the students have been found due to the cooperation with the student
councils. And the director of the concert Aram Sukiasyan ha chosen
and has systemized the latter.

Only those invited are able to be present on the concert. According to
the organizers those are not only the gifted students of the higher
educational institutions but also the representatives of the youth
centers and the youths of the Republican Party.

Report By PACE Monitoring Group 90% Meets Assessments Inside Country

REPORT BY PACE MONITORING GROUP 90% MEETS ASSESSMENTS INSIDE COUNTRY

ArmInfo
2009-12-25 14:46:00

ArmInfo. The report by the PACE Monitoring Group on the resolution by
the Parliamentary Ad Hoc Committee to Inquire into March incidents
of 2008 meets the assessments inside the country 90%, Ombudsman of
Armenia Armen Haroutiunyan said in a press conference on Friday.

"I do not understand the mess around the report by the monitoring
group," he said. The report says nothing new, he said. Nevertheless,
the Ombudsman called for learning lessons from the March incidents.

The last report by the PACE Monitoring Committee, in particular, says
that the report of the Ad Hoc Committee is one-sided and reflects the
stance of the Armenian authorities. In March 2008 the opposition in
Armenia led by the first president L. Ter-Petrosyan rallied against
the presidential election result. The rallies grew into clashes with
the police and resulted in 10 killed and over 200 injured.

Trend.Az: Let’s Laugh At Topic Of Film About Nagorno-Karabakh On Int

TREND.AZ: LET’S LAUGH AT TOPIC OF FILM ABOUT NAGORNO-KARABAKH ON INTER TV CHANNEL

Kyiv Post
Dec 24 2009
Ukraine

Azerbaijan should laugh at the film about the Nagorno-Karabakh on
the Inter television channel. The topic of the film is biased and
distorted, Ukrainian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Boris Klimchuk said at a
press-conference in Baku Dec. 24. The Azerbaijani Embassy in Ukraine
delivered a diplomatic note to the UkrainianForeign Ministryafter
the screening of an anti-Azerbaijani film on the Inter television
channel Dec. 7, Azerbaijani Ambassador to Ukraine Talat Aliyev said.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Opposition Party Holds Rally In Front Of U.S Embas

AZERBAIJANI OPPOSITION PARTY HOLDS RALLY IN FRONT OF U.S EMBASSY

Trend
Dec 22 2009
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan’s opposition party held a rally in front of the U.S embassy
in Baku.

The rally is aimed to protest the U.S Congress’s decision to allocate
$8 million to the Nagorno-Karabakh separatist regime, the Modern
Musavat Party told Trend News.

Despite the policemen interference, the protesters voiced slogans
"America do not cdamage relations with Azerbaijan ", "Do not support
the invader Armenians", "Do not arm the Armenian separatists",
"U.S avoid the double standards policy", "No to the separatist
Karabakh regime".

The police arrested some protesters and they were released after they
were questioned at the police department.

The U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate approved a bill on
the general appropriations for the 2010 fiscal year, according to
which assistance to Nagorno-Karabakh will be allocated to the amount
of $8 million. Any restrictions on the implementation of programs in
Karabakh have been removed.

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. General Assembly’s resolutions
on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the occupied
territories.

Azerbaijani Defence Ministry Confesses An Azerbaijani Serviceman Is

AZERBAIJANI DEFENCE MINISTRY CONFESSES AN AZERBAIJANI SERVICEMAN IS GUILTY IN MURDER OF A WOMAN AT THE LINE OF CONTACT

ArmInfo
2009-12-22 12:28:00

ArmInfo. Defence Ministry of Azerbaijan has informed about the
circumstances of a woman death at the line of contact between the
armed forces of Nagornyy Karabakh and Azerbaijan.

As spokesman for Defence Ministry, Lieutenant-Colonel Elbar Sabiroglu
told APA, the serviceman, who fired at the woman on the contact line of
troops, has been detained [ 21 Dec 2009 19:34 ] Baku APA. Resident of
Aghdam region Sadagat Pasha Mammadova entered the defense line in the
morning on December 20 under the undetermined circumstances, spokesman
for Defense Ministry, Lieutenant-Colonel Eldar Sabiroglu told APA.

Sabiroglu said our servicemen fired in that direction and the woman
died on the spot.

The spokesman said the serviceman, who had fired at the woman, was
detained, the fact was being investigated. "Additional information
will be given about the results," he said.

APA’s Karabakh bureau reports that resident of Aghdam region Mammadova
Sadagat Pasha left her house two days ago and did not come back.

Mammadova was born in Khindiristan village and married to the resident
of Alibayli village. Mammadova has been recently divorces and returned
to the house of her daughter in Khindiristan.

The village residents say Mammadova suffered mental affection. They
say the woman disappeared two days ago.

In Response To Imposition Of Fines, Azerbaijan Keeps On Appealing Ag

IN RESPONSE TO IMPOSITION OF FINES, AZERBAIJAN KEEPS ON APPEALING AGAINST ARMENIA TO THE EUROPEAN COURT

ArmInfo
2009-12-22 13:28:00

ArmInfo. The European Court of Human Rights passed six decisions on
Azerbaijan this year. One of the decisions as come into effective,
the other five will be effective next year. The total sum of the fines
imposed on Azerbaijan is ? 50,000 – 60,000. Azerbaijan’s authorized
representative in the European Court of Human Rights Chingiz Asgarov
told journalists, APA reports.

"Six decisions concern freedom of peaceful assembly envisaged in
article 11 of the Convention, right to a fair trial envisaged in
article 6 and article 3 prohibiting torture, and inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment," he said. Chingiz Asgarov said the Chamber of
the European Court considered the appeals of Azerbaijani IDPs against
Armenia. "The Chamber decided that the issue should be considered
in the Grand Chamber. It will be considered in the Chamber panel of
17 judges. The hearing will be held. The process will probably last
till the end of next year," he said.

The authoritarian dynasty of the Aliyevs and enforcement of Haydar
Aliyev’s cult of personality on the own people have already resulted
in the situation when 20% of the Azerbaijan population are ready to
leave their country. At least, such are the results of the public
opinion poll conducted by Gallup. This indicator in Armenia is 10%,
Gallup poll says. The situation in Georgia is worse than in Armenia
(15%).

Earlier Gevorg Kostanyan, assistant to the president of Armenia,
representing Armenia at the European Court of Human Rights, said
Azerbaijani citizens have made nearly 700 appeals against Armenia
versus over 1000 appeals by the Armenian citizens and refuges against
Azerbaijan. In the period from 1988 up to 1991 nearly 400,000 Armenians
were forcefully deported from Baku, Sumgait, Mingechaur, Kirovabad and
other populated areas of the Azerbaijani SSR. Hundreds of Azerbaijani
Armenians were killed during pogroms in Sumgait and Baku.

Turkish PM Erdogan Blames Press For Mounting Social Tension

TURKISH PM ERDOGAN BLAMES PRESS FOR MOUNTING SOCIAL TENSION

Tert.am
13:03, 21.12.09

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s aggressiveness toward
the media reflects his mishandling of the Kurdish initiative as a
whole, say media representatives. After initially including the press
in the process, Erdogan now blames it for mounting social tension,
reports Turkish news source Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has recently been intensifying
his criticism of the media since the press, which initially supported
the government’s Kurdish initiative, has largely withdrawn its support.

"Erdogan’s relations with the media have always been problematic,"
daily Taraf columnist and academic Mithat Sancar told the Hurriyet
Daily News & Economic Review. "Of course, he can come up with
criticism against the media, but adopting such an aggressive manner
is not compatible with a democratic culture. His style is not right
or beneficial."

Recently, however, the attitude seems to have changed, as Erdogan has
turned his guns on the media, blaming its coverage for the mounting
social tension in society as social turmoil triggered by nationwide
street clashes has jeopardized the initiative.

"[Erdogan’s] recent approach to the media is just a reflection of
his general stance on the media," said Sancar. "The government can’t
manage the process in general. What the media does is necessary for
press freedom."