"The Armenians Of Cyprus" Book Presented: Gibrahayer

"THE ARMENIANS OF CYPRUS" BOOK PRESENTED: GIBRAHAYER

NEWS.am
15:10 / 12/10/2009

"On December 7, 2009 the English and Greek editions of the books
&’The Armenians of Cyprus’ were presented to the general public,
by researcher-scholar Alexander-Michael Hadjilyra," Gibrahayer
e-magazine reports.

"In the presence of about 60 people, the author spoke of the turbulent
history of the Armenian-Cypriots and his love for them. He proudly
declared Hay chem, payts hayaser em!!! . The ceremony was concluded
by the praises of Archbishop Hergelian for the author and the blessing
of the book," the source reads.

Coalition To Establish Control Over Implementation Of Interim Commit

COALITION TO ESTABLISH CONTROL OVER IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERIM COMMITTEE’S REPORT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
10.12.2009 21:14 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s National Assembly Thursday hosted
discussions over Republican Party representative David Harutyunyan’s
draft decision on vesting State and Legal Affairs Committee with
the authority of monitoring the implementation of the final report
submitted by the interim committee investigating March 1, 2008
incidents.

Draft decision was met with the protest of "Heritage" faction,
particularly its leader Stepan Safaryan, who expressed doubts as to
the ruling party’s impartiality. He called on MPs to support ARFD’s
proposal on creating a separate committee dealing with monitoring
issues.

Nonetheless, the country’s supreme legislative body approved the
decision.

RA Government’s Anti-Corruption Strategy Introduced By The Prime Min

RA GOVERNMENT’S ANTI-CORRUPTION STRATEGY INTRODUCED BY THE PRIME MINISTER

Wed nesday, 9 December 2009

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan took part in a conference dated
to International Anti-Corruption Day, which was hosted by the USAID
Anti-corruption Action Mobilization Program in cooperation with the
OSCE Yerevan Office and the Office of Prosecutor General.

In his address to conference participants, the Prime Minister stated
in part: "Which way is the government going to handle this evil? Our
strategy can be divided into 3 important areas: the first one features
the body of State functionaries – our colleagues. Corruption will
be difficult, if not impossible to cope with if we fail to be more
exacting toward high-ranking public officials. The second major
direction covers structural reforms in the public sector. Society
is the third focus. Drastic reforms are needed for we can witness
that our society is not active in fighting corruption. Our society
is tolerant of corruption."

The forum was briefed on the government’s anti-corruption strategy
and action plan, the recently published "The Office of Prosecutor
General against Corruption" booklet, as well as the activities of the
Interest Promotion and Support Center. Those present were introduced
to the findings of the public opinion poll conducted last fall by
the Caucasian Center for Research Resources.

http://www.gov.am/en/news/item/4974/

Constitutional Court Of Armenia To Discuss Armenian-Turkish Protocol

CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF ARMENIA TO DISCUSS ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROTOCOLS ON JANUARY 11

ArmInfo
2009-12-10 16:03:00

ArmInfo. The Constitutional Court of Armenia will discuss the
Armenian-Turkish Protocols signed on October 10 in Zurich on January
11 2010, the Constitutional Court press-service told ArmInfo.

Article 72 of the Armenian Law On Constitutional Court stipulates that
ratification of an international agreement by the National Assembly
requires the President of Armenia to apply to the Constitutional
Court for verification of the document’s correspondence with the
Constitutional Court of Armenia.

The Constitutional Court may adopted one of the following resolutions:
On recognition of the commitments set forth in the international
agreement in compliance with the Constitution; On recognition of the
commitments set for in the international agree fully or partially
not complying with the Constitution.

Latvian President Arriving In Armenia

LATVIAN PRESIDENT ARRIVING IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
09.12.2009 10:47

At the invitation of the President of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, the
President of Latvia, Valdis Zatlers is arriving in Armenia today on
a three-day state visit. The President will be accompanied by the
Ministers of Economy, Interior Affairs and Environmental Protection,
the Chairman of the parliamentary Standing Committee on Foreign
Relations, other officials.

The President of Latvia, Valdirs Zatlers, and his spouse, Lilita
Zatlers, will participate in the celebration of the 50th anniversary
of Matenadaran.

The official welcome ceremony will take at the President’s Office on
December 10 and will be followed by a face-to-face meeting between
Presidents Serzh Sargsyan and Valdis Zatlers.

A number of intergovernmental and interstate agreements will be signed,
the Presidents of the two countries will give a joint press conference.

Within the framework of the visit the President of Latvia will have
meeting with the Speaker of the National Assembly, Hovik Abrahamyan,
Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and the Catholicos of All Armenians,
His Holiness Garegin II.

Valdis Zatlers will visit Tsitsernakaberd to lay a wreath at the
memorial to the Armenian Genocide victims. He will visit the Armenian
Genocide Museum-Institute and will plant a tree in the Memory Alley.

President Zatlers will meet the faculty and students of the Yerevan
State University. At the Yerevan City Hall the Latvian President
will meet Mayor Gagik Beglaryan and a number of honorable citizens
of the city.

The delegation headed by the President of Latvia will leave Armenia
on December 11.

New Enemies Of Azerbaijan And Continuation Of Hysteria Around Eurone

NEW ENEMIES OF AZERBAIJAN AND CONTINUATION OF HYSTERIA AROUND EURONEWS REPORT

ArmInfo
2009-12-07 16:43:00

ArmInfo. Azerbaijan’s hysteria around Euronews report on Nagorny
Karabakh continues. In the meantime, poor Baku that has not yet come
back from the reports by Ren TV and Euronews, has got another enemy
i.e. Ukrainian Inter TV.

The film by Ruslan Yermaluk entitled "Nagorny Karabakh – a territory
where time stopped dead" aroused another wave of mass hysteria in
Baku. The film has allegedly "distorted many facts connected with the
history of the Karabakh conflict" and called Shushi an Armenian town,
which is natural. Azerbaijani Embassy in Ukraine has immediately
submitted a note of protest to the Ukrainian party. Letters of
indignant Azerbaijanis calling not to demonstrate such a documentary
were undoubtedly enclosed to the note.

As regards the report by Euronews that has already become legendary,
the mess around it in Azerbaijan is still gathering pace. Azerbaijani
Deputy Foreign Minister notorious for his tendencies and short-sighted
statements has resolved to comment on the given report broadcasted
on Nov 28. He drew a wise conclusion that "Someone at Euronews
intentionally broadcasts the same report for several days,
which testifies to a policy and not poor professional skills
of the journalists of that TV channel." Hysteria displayed by
storm of comments and statements on the topic "ordered", "biased,"
"provocative", "sharp," "audacious" and "one-sided" reports will be
continued today with the action of protest of Azerbaijani students
in front of the Euronew office.

REN TV, Euronews, Inter. To be continued:

Turkey fights calls for greater Afghan role

Turkey fights calls for greater Afghan role
By Delphine Strauss in Ankara

FT
December 6 2009 20:23

Turkey is `already doing what it can’ in its dispatch of troops to
Afghanistan, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, prime minister, said on Sunday,
signalling he would resist US pressure to send a bigger contingent to
back the American surge.

He spoke before flying to Washington on an official visit intended to
dispel suspicions of an eastwards drift in Turkey’s foreign policy,
and show its value as a partner in addressing regional challenges –
from stabilising Iraq to ending frozen conflicts in the Caucasus or
containing Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

The decision may feed doubts in Washington that Turkey’s pursuit of
closer ties with Muslim neighbours could dilute its support of western
aims. Mr Erdogan’s visit comes soon after a crisis in Turkish-Israeli
relations, and a defence of Iran’s nuclear programme as `peaceful and
humanitarian’.

`The US side needs to impress diplomatically on [Mr Erdogan] how much
his populist rhetoric in support of anti-western bugbears is damaging
Turkey’s position with its key partners and … in Washington and
Brussels,’ Hugh Pope, an author on Turkey, wrote in a paper for the
Transatlantic Academy.

Despite the criticism, Mr Obama’s administration considers Ankara a
vital partner in a difficult region. It supports Mr Erdogan’s drive to
broaden rights for Turkey’s Kurdish minority, aiming to end a conflict
that has deepened divisions within Turkey and also threatened
stability in northern Iraq. The US shares intelligence with Turkey on
Kurdish rebels operating from Iraq, and Mr Erdogan is accompanied on
the trip by a senior general.

Mr Obama, who before his election promised to recognise Ottoman-era
massacres of Armenians as genocide, is also likely to urge Mr Erdogan
to speed ratification of a deal to normalise relations with Yerevan.

The agreement, signed after last-minute mediation by Hillary Clinton,
US secretary of state, is one of Mr Obama’s few tangible successes in
foreign policy, but he will face pressure from Armenian groups if it
does not take effect before April.

The real test of what Mr Obama has called a `model partnership’,
though, will be Iran. Turkish diplomats say they share western fears
of Tehran gaining nuclear weapons, and differ only in their approach
to preventing it.

But Turkey, which imports gas from Iran and wants to expand trade
ties, is against any new sanctions and abstained in last month’s
United Nations vote condemning Iran’s nuclear activities, even though
China and Russia joined the censure.

Ian Lesser, in a paper for the German Marshall Fund, said Turkish
foreign policy was `in the European mainstream’ on most issues, but
warned its position on Iran’s nuclear programme `holds the potential
for a damaging departure’.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009. You may share using our
article tools. Please don’t cut articles from FT.com and redistribute
by email or post to the web.

BAKU: Turkish Min for EU Affairs confirms necessity of solving NK

Trend, Azerbaijan
Dec 3 2009

Turkish Minister for EU Affairs confirms the necessity of solving the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

Belgium, Brussels, December 2/ Trend News, Tarek Mahmoud/

The Turkish Minister for EU Affairs, Egemen Bagis confirmed today the
necessity of solving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and
Azerbaijan.

"Turkey was the first country to recognize the independence of Armenia
after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but when Armenia invaded
Karabakh, we had to close our borders" he said to the members of the
Committee on Foreign Affairs of the European Parliament.

"The Azerbaijanis are our brothers and it will be difficult to
normalize the people to people relations between Turkey and Armenia
without finding a breakthrough to this problem", he added.

The two protocols on establishing diplomatic relations and opening the
common border which had been signed by Armenia and Turkey in Zurich on
10 October 2009 had been submitted by Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan to the parliament for ratification.

Bagis insisted that Turkey will continue playing a peaceful role in
the South Caucasus region and noted that the rapprochement between
Turkey and Armenia will be beneficial for the whole region.

Asked about the possibility of the ratification of the two protocols,
he explained that the Turkish Prime Minister is defending the process
of the ratification, but he expects fierce debates inside the
parliament on that issue.

"Sunflower" Has A Main Prize For This Year

"SUNFLOWER" HAS A MAIN PRIZE FOR THIS YEAR

Aysor
Dec 4 2009
Armenia

The result of the annual 7th competition of "Sunflower" titled "Equal
rights" that concerns people with disabilities will be summed up on
December 5 in Golden Tulip hotel, informed Zaruhi Batoyan, the editor
of "Sunflower" (Arevatsaghik) journal to Aysor.am.

The competition is organized and realized by the "Bridge of Hope",
"Mission to East" organizations and the Ministry of Labor and Social
Affairs of Armenia. 21 published articles have been presented for
participating in the competition, 2 radio and 10 TV articles that have
been broadcast or published since November 20, 2008 up to November
20, 2009.

"The presented works have been studied by the commission, in the number
of which where the chairman of the "Bridge of Hope" organization,
experts from MEDIA sphere and the journalists who have become the
winners of the previous year.

This year the nominations are the following "The best TV article",
"The best radio reportage", and "The best published article" for
the first, second and third places as well as for the Main prize the
winner of which will get a "Note book".

"It mainly depends on what kind of articles are presented as we have
had cases when the main prize didn’t go to anyone at all as there have
not been an article deserving it", – Z. Batoyan informed and stressed
that after three years of pause the main prize will be find its winner.

Z. Batoyan also stated that there are concrete principles for choosing
the materials presented at the competition. The main principle is
to see whether the problem of disability is touched upon in the
material, whether there are examples of overcoming them, whether it
is elucidated from the point of view of the human rights and some
other professional skills.

Armenia: Opposition Wants Constitutional Court To Ditch Turkey Peace

ARMENIA: OPPOSITION WANTS CONSTITUTIONAL COURT TO DITCH TURKEY PEACE PLAN

EurasiaNet
Dec 3 2009
NY

Fourteen Armenian opposition parties have appealed to the country’s
Constitutional Court seeking a ruling that would declare Yerevan’s
rapprochement agreement with Turkey unconstitutional, the RIA Novosti
news agency reported.

A statement signed by opposition representatives, including those
from the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) and the
Heritage Party, argues that the Armenian-Turkish protocols threaten
Armenia’s constitutional order and run counter to the national
interest. The Armenian National Congress, the large opposition bloc
led by ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosian, did not join the appeal.

President Serzh Sargsyan submitted the protocols, subject to
parliamentary approval both in Armenia and Turkey, to Armenia’s
Constitutional Court on November 29 for a review of their compliance
with the Constitution.