UEFA Draw: Armenia, Turkey Under-17 In Group 7

UEFA DRAW: ARMENIA, TURKEY UNDER-17 IN GROUP 7

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.12.2009 12:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ UEFA has held a draw on European Under-17 and
Under-19 Championship on December 7, the Football Federation of
Armenia said on its website.

Armenia Under-17 will rival the Czech Republic, Turkey and Iceland in
Group 7. The qualification round will be held in Spain from September
22 to 27, 2010.

Armenia Under-19 will play in Group 11 vs. Spain, Israel and
Lithuania. The qualification round will be held in Lithuania from
October 19 to 24, 2010.

He Insists It Is False

HE INSISTS IT IS FALSE

Lragir.am
04/12/09

Yesterday, the governmental press has been again affirming that Levon
Ter-Petrosyan in1992 told the Russian `Komsomolskaya Pravda’ that the
NKR has to be allocated autonomy with Azerbaijan. A photo, most likely
the photo of that daily was also published with the article. While the
former Armenian foreign minister, the HAK member Aleksandr Arzumanyan
has repeatedly refused the existence of that interview.

Alik Arzumanyan yesterday said, `I assure you there was no such an
interview, I assure you this is false and I call on everyone to show
us the original version of the newspaper’. According to Arzumanyan,
today computer has very many possibilities so he is sure those
publications are false. `I am continuing to affirm that Shavarsh
Kocharyan, who dwells much on the only copy of that newspaper, ate
it’, noted Arzumanyan.

Armenia supports initiative of establishing IRENA HQ in Abu Dhabi

Armenia supports initiative of establishing IRENA headquarters in Abu Dhabi
05.12.2009 17:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia supports the initiative of establishing
International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) office in Abu Dhabi, UAE
Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Mr. Anvar Gargash told a
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter during a joint news conference with Armenian
FM Edward Nalbandyan.

UAE is always willing to assist Armenia within international
organizations, he said.

Mr. Nalbandyan noted for his part that directors of UAE leading
companies will be soon visiting Armenia to discuss possibilities for
realizing investments in country’s economy.

Azerbaijan’s oil exports via Russian pipeline up 110% in Nov.

Azerbaijan’s oil exports via Russian pipeline up 110% in Nov.

BAKU, December 5 (RIA Novosti) – Azerbaijan’s state-owned oil company
GNKAR said on Saturday its crude exports via the Baku-Novorossiisk
pipeline were up 110% in November, year-on-year.

The company pumped 2.341 million metric tons through the pipeline,
which links the Azerbaijani capital with the Russian Black Sea port of
Novorossiisk, in November, the company said in a statement.

Azerbaijan holds vast oil and gas reserves in the Caspian Sea, which
it exports to neighboring Georgia, Turkey, and Europe through three
pipelines – the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan via Georgia to Turkey,
Baku-Novorossiisk and the Baku-Supsa to Georgia.

The volume of crude transit via the Baku-Novorosiisk pipeline, which
is estimated at 5 million metric tons per year, was reduced in 2007
after the opening of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline.

US Envoy: NATO To Send More Forces To Afghanistan

US ENVOY: NATO TO SEND MORE FORCES TO AFGHANISTAN
By Slobodan Lekic

AP
03/12/09

BRUSSELS – U.S. special envoy Richard C. Holbrooke acknowledged
Thursday that the war in Afghanistan is unpopular, given "the legacy
of Iraq and Vietnam," but he predicted that NATO allies will soon
contribute more forces to join the 30,000 additional U.S. troops
being deployed there.

"We have been very gratified by the strong support of our European
allies for President Obama’s policy," Holbrooke, the president’s
special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, told journalists.

He spoke before a two-day meeting of NATO foreign ministers that opens
later Thursday. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will
brief the ministers on Friday.

Obama’s new plan for the war in Afghanistan calls for the dispatch
of 30,000 more troops, but includes assurances that some of them will
begin withdrawing in July 2011.

On Thursday, NATO spokesman James Appathurai said pledges from the
alliance already have exceeded 5,000 troops. More than 20 nations are
expected to make firm commitments at a force-generation conference
on Monday, and following the international conference on Afghanistan
in January, he said.

After Appathurai spoke, Italy – which has 2,800 troops in Afghanistan
– announced that it will increase its contingent by about 1,000
soldiers starting next year. That will allow its force to take full
responsibility for Western region of Herat, Afghanistan, and reduce the
commitment of U.S. and British troops there. Armenia also announced
it would send a small contingent of 40 troops to Afghanistan early
next year, its first deployment as part of the international coalition.

Still, many European countries have been reluctant to add large numbers
of soldiers to a war that often looks unwinnable, and to support an
Afghan government tainted by corruption and election fraud.

Some leaders are waiting for an international conference on Afghanistan
in London next month before promising any more troops.

"I understand that the war is unpopular," Holbrooke said. "It’s a
long way off, and there’s the legacy of Iraq and Vietnam."

But he also predicted that NATO members would announce more troops
for Afghanistan at a series of meetings in the coming weeks. "Some
countries may decide to speak tomorrow at the NATO ministerial, others
will work it through the force-generation conference on Dec. 7, and
others have announced already they are going to work toward the Jan.

28 date for the London conference," Holbrooke said.

France, Germany and other West European nations spearheaded opposition
to the U.S.-led attack on Iraq in 2003, damaging relations between
Washington and some of its closest allies.

But unlike al-Qaida, the enemies in Iraq and Vietnam did not pose a
direct danger to the security of allied nations, Holbrooke said.

"Our core objectives in Afghanistan have not changed, but resources
to achieve them have been increased," he said. Success will depend
on close cooperation between all 43 troop-contributing nations
and countries such as Japan, which provide development aid to the
government in Kabul, he said.

Brig. Gen. Eric Tremblay, the spokesman for the 83,000-strong NATO
force in Afghanistan, said that although more combat troops are needed,
military instructors needed to train the expanding Afghan army and
police also are a priority.

Other priorities include retaining trained troops in the government’s
army, he said. Low salaries and poor morale have contributed to a
1.5-2 percent desertion rate from the force, one of the highest in
recent history.

So far, most of the pledges of additional troops have been small
numbers from small nations. The largest contributors – Britain,
France and Germany – are holding off on new troop pledges, waiting
for the Afghanistan conference in London on Jan. 28.

Italy’s defense minister said Thursday his country will send about
1,000 new troops. But the Turkish Foreign Ministry said that, while
it is considering increasing its training of Afghan security forces,
it will not participate in combat operations.

The U.S. now has 71,000 troops in Afghanistan, while other NATO
members and allies collectively have 38,000 troops there. With the
reinforcements, the international forces will grow to more than
140,000.

The Afghan army has about 94,000 troops, and plans to expand to
134,000. The Afghan police number about 93,000 members.

The U.S. and Afghan forces face an estimated 25,000 Taliban insurgents.

Cooperation With NATO To Help Armenia Diversify Its Security Resourc

COOPERATION WITH NATO TO HELP ARMENIA DIVERSIFY ITS SECURITY RESOURCES

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.12.2009 18:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Cooperation with NATO will enable Armenia to
diversify its security resources, "Heritage" faction MP Stepan
Safaryan finds. "Armenia’s should extend its cooperation frameworks
beyond Russia," he told today a news conference.

At that, he stressed the importance of Armenia’s being on good terms
with countries that can help Azerbaijan. "This was what Azerbaijan did
when signing strategic cooperation agreement with Moscow in 2008. Its
argument was that Russia will not support Armenia in case military
operations are resumed," Armenian MP noted.

Azerbaijan Recalls Its Resolution On "Occupied Territories" From The

AZERBAIJAN RECALLS ITS RESOLUTION ON "OCCUPIED TERRITORIES" FROM THE UN

armradio.am
02.12.2009 18:55

Official Baku has called back its draft "On situation in Azerbaijan’s
occupied territories" which was submitted and adopted at UN General
Assembly in March 2008. Then most of UN members abstained from voting,
and three countries of the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia, USA, and France
voted against the document, and Now Azerbaijan has refused to discuss
the document on December 3, Turan Agency reports.

The discussion has been postponed for an uncertain period. The reason
for such behavior is unknown. It is noteworthy that the discussing
of the draft Resolution "On protracted conflicts at GUAM territories"
was also postponed.

TLHRC: Turkey — A Human Rights Update

TLHRC: Turkey — A Human Rights Update

Congressional Documents and Publications
November 30, 2009

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DOCUMENTS

Please join the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission at a hearing
on human rights conditions in Turkey. The hearing will be held on
Thursday, December 3, from 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., in room 2200
Rayburn HOB. The hearing is open to the public and media.

The Justice and Development Party (AKP, by its better-known Turkish
acronym) has had a mixed human rights record during its seven years
in office. Particularly in its early days, the government initiated a
number of important reforms and it now professes to favor expanding
freedoms for Turkish Kurds. Overall, however, the human rights
situation has deteriorated in recent years, especially regarding
freedom of the press and freedom of expression. As The Washington
Post editorialized on November 23, "Frustrated by hostility toward
his government by media conglomerates that formed part of Turkey’s
traditional secular establishment, the prime minister and his allies
have resorted to increasingly heavy-handed measures…. Turkish
journalists say that a pall of fear has fallen across their business.

Editors practice self-censorship. Many journalists are believed to
be among the more than 100,000 people whose phones have been tapped
by the government in recent years."

At the same time, other journalists have been victimized by
independent, nationalist prosecutors. According to Reporters
Without Borders, in the past four years, 200 Turkish intellectuals,
journalists, publishers, and dissidents have been charged and tried
on political charges. One particularly troubling case is that of Nedim
Sener, a journalist investigating the killing of a fellow journalist,
the Turkish-Armenian Hrant Dink. Sener received a 32-year jail
sentence for publishing an article and a book about Dink. Meanwhile,
the overall situation is complicated by the ongoing investigation
of alleged coup-plotting – the so-called "Ergenekon" case – and the
associated divisions in Turkey between secular and religious camps.

To discuss these issues, we will welcome as our witnesses:***

I. Panel:

Representatives: Amnesty International; Reporters without Borders.

II. Panel:

Riza Turmen, columnist, former ambassador, and former judge, European
Court of Human Rights

Ihsan Dagi, Professor, Middle East Technical University, Ankara,
and columnist

Sedat Ergin, columnist, Hurriyet Daily

Hasan Bulent Kahraman, columnist, Professor of Political Science,
Sabanci University

Dr. Selma Acuner, Association for Supporting and Training Women
Candidates, coordinator for international relations

***Witness list subject to change.

If you have any questions, please contact Hans Hogrefe (Rep. McGovern)
or Elizabeth Hoffman (Rep. Wolf) at 202-225-3680.

James P. McGovern,M.C. Frank R. Wolf, M.C.

Co-Chairman, TLHRC Co-Chairman, TLHRC

UNDP & Partner Orgs Marked Int’l Day for Abolition of Slavery

PRESS RELEASE
United Nations Development Programme / Armenia
14 Petros Adamyan St., Yerevan 0010
Contact: Mr. Hovhannes Sarajyan, Communications Associate
Tel: +37410 566 073
E-mail: [email protected]<mailto:hovhannes.sa [email protected]>
Web site:

UNDP in Armenia and Partner Organizations Marked the International Day
for
Abolition of Slavery

Yerevan, 02 December 2009 – Today the International Day for Abolition
of Slavery was marked in Yerevan with participation of representatives
of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Armenia, RoA
Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Labor and Social Affairs, RoA Police,
Armenian Red Cross Association, Armenian UN Association and the
International Youth Bridges Association.

The International Day for Abolition of Slavery is one of the key days
being observed in Armenia within the campaign of "16 Days of Activism
Against Gender Violence" that was launched on 25 November.
On 2 December 1949, the UN General Assembly adopted the UN Convention
for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation
of the Prostitution of Others. Since then this International Day has
been used as a platform to mark the human efforts and determination to
fight against slavery. The UN estimates that annually more than
700,000 women, girls, men and boys are being trafficked across borders
away from their homes and families and into slavery.
Addressing the participants of the event, Mr. Dirk Boberg, UNDP
Resident Representative a.i., said, "Slavery is a booming
international trade, less obvious than before, but all around us. The
commemoration for abolition of slavery serves as a reminder that
contemporary forms of slavery – such as human trafficking, forced
prostitution, forced labor and the use of children in the
international drug trade – are still flourishing today, largely as a
result of vulnerability exacerbated by poverty, discrimination and
social exclusion."
The UN has a central position in regard to the fight against human
trafficking. It produced 3 key international Conventions on
trafficking in human beings: the Convention Against Transnational
Organized Crime, also called Palermo Convention (2000), and two
Palermo Protocols: the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish
Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children, and the
Protocol Against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and
Air. Armenia ratified the UN Convention Against Transnational
Organized Crime in 2003.

UNDP Anti-Trafficking Programme in Armenia, together with the
government institutions and the civil society, addresses human
trafficking issues in the country through capacity building,
prevention programs, public-awareness campaigns, as well as provision
of direct assistance to the victims. As part of the awareness raising
component, UNDP supports and facilitates local grass-root initiatives
to inform the vulnerable groups and the society, in general, about the
causes and ways to tackle the trafficking-related problems.
During the event a short documentary on National Referral Mechanism
(NRM), adopted by the Government of Armenia in 2008, was presented,
which elucidates the main objectives of the framework document and the
role of institutions which, as per NRM, should provide assistance to
the victims of trafficking, protect and promote the human rights of
trafficked persons.

During the event a short documentary on National Referral Mechanism (NRM),
adopted by the Government of Armenia in 2008, was presented, which
elucidates the main objectives of the framework document and the role
of institutions which, as per NRM, should provide assistance to the
victims of trafficking, protect and promote the human rights of
trafficked persons.

###
UNDP is the UN’s global development network, advocating for change and
connecting countries to knowledge, experience and resources to help
people build a better life. We are on the ground in 166 countries,
working with them on their own solutions to global and national
development challenges. As they develop local capacity, they draw on
the people of UNDP and our wide range of partners. UNDP in Armenia was
established in 1993 and supports the Government of Armenia to reach
its own development priorities and the Millennium Development Goals by
2015.

http://www.undp.am

Nalbandyan, Davudoglu Discus Process Of Ratification

NALBANDYAN, DAVUDOGLU DISCUS PROCESS OF RATIFICATION

Aysor
Dec 2 2009
Armenia

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan has met with his Turkish
counterpart Ahmed Davudoglu in Athens. The parties discussed the
process of ratification for Armenian-Turkish protocols signed between
the two countries on October 10, said spokesman of the Armenian
Foreign Ministry.

Foreign Minister Nalbandyan is on visit to Greece for participation
in the 17th OSCE Ministerial Council in Athens.