Yerevan Hopes For Positive Outcome Of Armenian-Turkish Reconciliatio

YEREVAN HOPES FOR POSITIVE OUTCOME OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH RECONCILIATION PROCESS

Interfax
Sept 3 2009
Russia

Armenia hopes for a positive outcome of the reconciliation process
with Turkey, Armenian Foreign Minister Edvard Nalbandian has said.

"It is a difficult process that requires great efforts but both sides
have the willingness to settle relations and we look forward to a
positive outcome," he said at a press conference on Wednesday.

Referring to the statement of his Turkish counterpart that the common
border may be opened before the end of the year he said: "Everything
is possible, nothing should be excluded."

In Nalbandian’s opinion, the settlement of Armenian-Turkish relations
should result in the restoration of peace and stability in the region.

"Armenia will be able to take part in various regional and
international programs," he said.

He confirmed that the settlement with Turkey is unrelated to the
settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict while the question of
the genocide of Armenians in Turkey in 1915 "is not a question of
bargaining or speculation."

"We are establishing diplomatic relations without any preliminary
conditions," he said.

Armenia To Borrow $30 Mln In 2010 For Telecom Network Devt

ARMENIA TO BORROW $30 MLN IN 2010 FOR TELECOM NETWORK DEVT

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire
September 3, 2009 Thursday 6:53 PM EET
Russia

Armenia plans to take out a U.S. $30 million loan in 2010 from the
World Bank to develop the country’s main communications network,
Vache Kirakosyan, head of the information and high technologies
department at Armenia’s Ministry of Economy, said Thursday.

Armenia and the World Bank are currently in talks over the terms of
the loan.

The loan is the second stage of Armenia’s program for the development
of telecommunications technology in the country, Kirakosyan said. The
World Bank has already financed a $1 million research project in
the field of IT and telecommunications necessary to develop the main
communications network, he said.

Azerbaijani Media Keep Silence On The Brutal Murder Of A Child

AZERBAIJANI MEDIA KEEP SILENCE ON THE BRUTAL MURDER OF A CHILD

Aysor
Sept 3 2009
Armenia

Garadzhalar Telavi district villager Bayramov Alaverd Meko oglu
disappeared at Tbilisi Samgori market a week ago. Attempts to find
a child failed.

The corpse found in the hospital "Asani" located at the territory
of Tbilisi Samgori district, had no internal organs. The detection
of the lost organs shocked the parents. The heart and the kidney of
the 8-year-old Alaverd Bayramov had been removed.

According to villagers, there were no information about how the child
was transferred to hospital and who removed his organs.

According to the Ambassador of Azerbaijan in Georgia Namig Aliyev,
the diplomatic mission hasn’t got any information with the above
incident. The child’s parents hadn’t contacted us, – they said.

The police has arrested the suspects.

According to the Interior Ministry, two teenagers, both born in 1995,
are arrested. According to the Ministry on August 28 both of them
under the pretext of collecting scrap metal lured 8-year-old Alaverd
Bayramov from the Navglut Market into the abandoned garage. They
tied his hands and feet and raped. They beat him. After getting heavy
wounds the boy died.

This is the version of the Georgian Ministry of Internal
Affairs. Whether for fear of the Georgian authorities or the
indifference to the fate of compatriots outside of Azerbaijan but it
must be noted that there was neither official memo no any publications
or public reaction during the week.

U.S. Welcomes Normalization Of Turkish-Armenian Relations – Official

U.S. WELCOMES NORMALIZATION OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN RELATIONS – OFFICIAL

Interfax
Sept 1 2009
Russia

The U.S. Department of State approves of the ongoing efforts aimed
at normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia, Department of
State spokesman Ian Kelly said in a statement on Monday.

"The United States warmly welcomes the joint statement made today
by Turkey and Armenia, with Swiss participation, outlining further
steps in the normalization of their bilateral relations," Kelly said.

"It has long been and remains the position of the United States that
normalization should take place without preconditions and within a
reasonable timeframe," the U.S. official said.

"We urge Armenia and Turkey to proceed expeditiously, according to
the agreed framework as described in today’s statement," he said.

"We remain ready to work closely with both governments in support
of normalization, a historic process that will contribute to peace,
security and stability throughout the region," he added.

Gunaysu: Turkish Perception Of The Recent US Court Ruling

GUNAYSU: TURKISH PERCEPTION OF THE RECENT US COURT RULING
By Ayse Gunaysu

/gunaysu-turkish-perception-of-the-recent-us-court -ruling/
August 27, 2009

Among thousands of news items showering down from international
agencies, none of the Turkish dailies or TV channels skipped the
news about a U.S. Federal Court of Appeals ruling against Armenian
demands for unpaid insurance claims. Many headlines revealed a
hardly concealed note of victory, reporting that the U.S. Court had
dealt a "big blow" to Armenians. Some of them were a little bit more
professional, reflecting only a satisfaction: "Court decision to anger
Armenians." Even the most seemingly "objective" ones used wording
that presented the issue as a defeat on the part of the "Armenians"
-not a violation of the rights of legitimate beneficiaries, the
clients of insurance companies that profited from a government’s
extermination of its own citizens. Even the daily Taraf, considered
to be waging the most courageous struggle against the "deep state,"
used the headline: "Bad news to Armenians from a US court" (Aug. 22,
2009, p.3), a headline that, intentionally or not, reinforces the
essentialist conception of Armenians widespread in Turkey and reflects
a cold-hearted pseudo-impartiality -"bad news"!-in the face of an
infuriating usurpation of one’s rights.

Apart from a handful of people, no one in Turkey, watching the news
or reading the headlines (often without reading the full texts), knows
that at the turn of the century several thousands of Armenians in the
provinces of the old Armenia were issued life-insurance policies,
with benefits amounting to more than $20 million in 1915-dollars
still unpaid to the legal heirs of the victims who perished under
a reign of terror. This is not surprising because this audience is
even ignorant of the fact that on the eve of World War I, there
were 2,925 Armenian settlements in the old Armenia, with 1,996
schools teaching over 173,000 male and female students, and 2,538
churches and monasteries-all proof of a vibrant Armenian presence in
the Ottoman Empire. When I tried to explain this to my 83-year-old
mother, who thought the U.S. court had done something good for Turkey,
she couldn’t believe her ears. She was quite sincere when she asked:
"Western insurance companies? At that time? In Harput, in Merzifon, in
Kayseri? Are you sure?" Because she could not even imagine that what
is now to us the remote, less-developed cities with rural environs
where pre-capitalist patterns still prevail-places more or less
isolated from today’s metropolitan centers-were once, before 1915,
rich and developed urban centers, with inhabitants much closer to the
Western world than their fellow Muslim citizens, in their economic
activities, social structure, and way of life. Although a university
graduate (something unusual for a woman in Turkey at that time),
a person of culture with a real sense of justice in everything she
does, my mother was brought up in a system of education based on
a history that was rewritten to reconstruct a national identity of
pride, and which turned facts upside down. This was the result: an
"enlightened" individual who knew nothing about how things were in
her own-beloved-country and what had happened just a decade before
her birth.

So, how can one expect my mother to know that Talat Pasha, a member
of the PUC triumvira and one of the top organizers of the Armenian
Genocide, had shocked Henry Morgenthau, the U.S. Ambassador to Istanbul
in 1915, with his audacity when he said: "I wish, that you would get
the American life insurance companies to send us a complete list of
their Armenian policy holders. They are practically all dead now and
have left no heirs to collect the money. It of course all escheats
to the state. The government is the beneficiary now. Will you do so?"

The Turkish audience, apart from that handful of people, that
received the message about the U.S. Court of Appeals ruling against
the Armenians’ right to seek justice, didn’t stop to think that this
was something about one’s most basic rights.

But the reason is simple: National ideology blocks people’s
minds. There is a special meaning attributed to the word "compensation"
in Turkey. It is believed that recognition will be followed by demands
of compensation, which will naturally lead to demands of territory. So,
the reference to "compensation" (to be paid to "Armenians") in these
reports is directly connected in their minds to Armenians’ claim
to territory.

This is all about denial. Denial is not an isolated phenomenon,
not a policy independent of all other aspects.

Denial is a system. An integrated whole. You don’t only deny what
really happened; in order to deny what really happened, you have to
deny even the existence of the people to whom it happened. In order
to deny their existence, you have to wipe out the evidence of their
existence from both the physical and intellectual environment. Physical
refers to the 2,925 Armenian settlements with 1,996 schools and 2,538
churches and monasteries that are non-existent now. Intellectual
corresponds to my mother’s perception of the U.S. Court of Appeal’s
ruling as something good for Turkey.

I watched a film on TV tonight, Akira Kurosawa’s "Rhapsody in
August," a film about an old lady, a hibakusha (the Japanese word
for the victims of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
during World War II) and her four grandchildren. Watching the film,
I saw people commemorating their dead ones with great respect,
taking care of their monuments with endless love, raising their
children in the same spirit, observing Buddhist rituals, praying for
their losses. The details showing all these were elegantly and very
impressively depicted. Watching a blind hibakusha gently cleaning
the marble platform of the monument with great care, I thought of
Armenians of my country, who are deprived of this very basic right
to publicly honor the memory of their lost ones. This ban is woven
into the very structure of Turkish society, because the founders
of the new Turkish Republic and their successors built a nation
and successfully put into practice an "engineering of the spirit"
whereby the people are convinced, made to sincerely believe, that
such commemorations are a direct insult to themselves.

The outcome of such engineering, this whole complicated system of
denial, is very difficult to dismantle. The Turkish ruling elite
will not recognize the genocide, not in the short-term, not in the
mid-term. In the long-term, maybe. But how "long" a term this will be
is something unknown. The dynamic that would step up the process is
the recognition from below, i.e. recognition by the people-a very slow
process, but much more promising than an official recognition in the
foreseeable future. People in Turkey are one by one going through a
very special kind of enlightenment-meeting with facts, learning more
about the near history, getting into closer contact with Armenians
here and elsewhere (for example, meeting and listening to Prof. Marc
Nichanian speaking in the language of philosophy and literature,
hearing his words about how meaningless an apology is when what
happened to Armenians was "unforgivable," about the meaning of the
"usurpation of mourning" and the "impossibility of representation"
of what Armenians experienced. More and more stories are appearing
in the dailies and periodicals in Turkey of our grandmothers and
grandfathers of Armenian origin who were stripped of their Armenian
identities, at least in the public sphere. More and more books are
being published about the genocide, enabling the readers to try and
imagine what is unimaginable.

This will turn the wheels of a long process of recognition from below,
a recognition in the hearts of people that will inevitably interact
with the process of official recognition-a must for true justice-no
matter how distant it may be for the time being.

http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/08/27

WSJ: Turkey, Armenia Agree To Form Ties

TURKEY, ARMENIA AGREE TO FORM TIES

Wall Street Journal
7.html
Aug 31 2009
NY

Armenia and Turkey agreed on final talks to establish diplomatic
ties, overcoming a seemingly intractable rift marked by massacres of
Armenians under Ottoman rule.

The neighboring countries will be setting up and developing relations
for the first time, Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Burak Ozugergin
said. It is unclear if the talks will touch on the dispute over the
World War I-era killings. That issue is a major stumbling block to
Turkey’s aspirations to join the European Union and has strained ties
with the United States.

Historians estimate that, in the last days of the Ottoman Empire,
as many as 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks in what
is widely regarded as the first genocide of the 20th Century. Turkey
rejects claims that the World War I killings, a defining element
of Armenian national identity, amounted to genocide, and says many
people were killed on both sides of the conflict. It says Turks also
suffered losses in the hands of Armenian gangs.

Both sides said they will hold domestic consultations before
signing two protocols on the establishment of diplomatic relations
and development of bilateral relations. According to copies of the
protocols seen by Reuters, the border — closed by Turkey in 1993 —
will reopen within two months of enforcing the protocol on development
of relations.

The plan to normalize ties was announced in April, but Monday’s
statement marked the first real progress.

Turkey and Armenia also disagree about Armenian forces’ control
of the Arzerbaijani region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Turkey is a close
ally of Azerbaijan and back Baku’s claims to the region, which has
a high number of ethnic Armenian residents but is located within
Azerbaijan’s borders.

Turkey was one of the first countries to recognize Armenia’s
independence in 1991, but the two countries never established
diplomatic relations and their joint border has been closed since
1993. Ties began to improve after a so-called soccer diplomacy campaign
last year, when Turkish President Abdullah Gul attended a World Cup
qualifier in Armenia. Armenia’s President Serge Sarkisian has said
he wants progress on reopening their shared border before he will
attend a World Cup qualifying match in Turkey on Oct. 14.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB12517680350387462

Government Reconsiders Terms Of Credit To Agarak Copper And Molybden

GOVERNMENT RECONSIDERS TERMS OF CREDIT TO AGARAK COPPER AND MOLYBDENUM COMBINE

ARKA
Aug 27, 2009

YEREVAN, August 27, /ARKA/. The Armenian government has revised today
the terms of a loan that it allocated earlier this year to a cooper
and molybdenum plant in the southernmost town of Agarak.

Finance minister Tigran Davtian recalled that the government in late
June approved a total of $44 million in loans to three struggling
mining companies in the country’s south- the Zangezur Mining ($15
million for a five year term), Armenia Molybdenum Production ($15
million for a five year term), and the Agarak Copper and Molybdenum
Combine ($14 million for a 4 year term), after receiving a $500
million Russian credit.

The minister said the $14 million loan will be allocated to Agarak
plant for a 4 year term but at LIBOR+8% interest rate and the
permission to start repaying from December 15, 2009.

"This will allow the plant to implement its investment program and
fulfill its commitments to create new jobs and resume the plant’s
operation,’ the minister said.

Non-ferrous metals were Armenia’s number one export item in recent
years.

The dramatic decline of global demand for them and a dramatic fall
in prices in the last quarter of 2008 forced the Agarak plant to halt
its operations temporarily in February 2009.

Energy minister Armen Movsisyan said the loan, originally expected
to be spent on purchase of new equipment, could be spent NOW on
resolution of transport and logistical issues.

The Agarak cooper and molybdenum plant along with Sotk gold mines and
Ararat gold mining company are the main assets of GeoProMining company,
established in 2001. It deals with production of metals in Russia,
Armenia and Georgia.

ArmenTel CJSC’s General Director Satisfied With 2009 Results

ARMENTEL CJSC’S GENERAL DIRECTOR SATISFIED WITH 2009 RESULTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.08.2009 20:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ ArmenTel CJCS’s (Trade mark: Beeline) General
Director Igor Klimko is satisfied with company’s results registered
during the first half of 2009.

According to him, the company’s net operation income has increased
by 7% in comparison with the first quarter, comprising about AMD 18
billion. Besides, marketing measures have reduced crisis impact to
a minimum. "In the second quarter, MOU index has registered over 36%
growth, and APRU has increased by AMD 5 thousand in comparison with
the first quarter," General Director noted

User dynamic results are also satisfactory despite crisis and harsh
competition. "The growth we registered in the second quarter comprises
1% or 486 thousand mobile subscribers," Klymko said. Unlike other
companies, "ArmenTel" makes calculation of active user base every
three months, he added.

Regular Meeting Of Armenian Writers Association Of California To Be

REGULAR MEETING OF ARMENIAN WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF CALIFORNIA TO BE HELD ON SEPTEMBER 2

NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY
August 26, 2009
Yerevan

YEREVAN, AUGUST 26, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The forthcoming
literary meeting of the Armenian Writers Association of California
(AWAC) will take place on September 2 at Glendale Public Library.

Writer Fira Zela Akian will read her works. Poetess Ofelia Hovian will
present a literary report. Author’s handmade works, a video material
will be presented. An exchange of opinions will take place. The AWAC
report mentioned this.

ARF-Dashnaktsutyun To Continue Instilling Patriotism Among Youth

ARF-DASHNAKTSUTYUN TO CONTINUE INSTILLING PATRIOTISM AMONG YOUTH

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
24.08.2009 20:28 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Since the inception of its Youth Wing, ARFD has
systematically organized camps for its young members," ARFD Youth Wing
representative Arthur Khazaryan told a news conference in Yerevan. This
year, the camp will be organized on August 26-30 in Dilijan.

Such events aim to disseminate the party’s ideas and values, as well
as instill patriotism among youth, Youth Wing activist noted.