Two Armenian wi-fi bunnies will forecast shares

Inquirer, UK
Aug. 11, 2006

Two Armenian wi-fi bunnies will forecast shares

But one is bigger than the other

By Adamson Rust: Friday 11 August 2006, 06:24

TWO RABBITS with wi-fi abilities and Armenian names are threatening
to irritate parents everywhere as well as plunging share holders into
a state of panic.

Rather than being called Demerjian, the smaller one is called
Nabaztag but just like Charlie it can wiggle its ears and sing songs
as well as read out emails.

According to the People’s Daily Nabaztag can also alert you to a
stock collapse and give you information about traffic jams. And so
can the Demerjian, nah nah.

Nabaztag is 23 centimetres high, so it’s much shorter than Demerjian.

Azerbaijan Membership To WTO Does Not Depend On NK Conflict Settleme

AZERBAIJAN MEMBERSHIP TO WTO DOES NOT DEPEND ON NK CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

Regnum, Russia
Aug. 10, 2006

The World Trade Organization has no requirements that make Azerbaijani
membership to the WTO and its further member relations with Armenia
dependable on settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, a REGNUM
correspondent is told at the Armenian Ministry for Trade and Economic
Development.

The ministry also notes that Azerbaijan has not become a WTO member yet
and its joining the organization is not a matter of one day. "In the
next few months Azerbaijan will definitely be unable to become a WTO
member. To enter this organization, Baku should bring the country’s
economic legislation into accordance with WTO requirements," the
Armenian ministry believes.

It is worth mentioning, Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Mahmoud
Mamedkuliyev announced that if the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
has not been settled before Azerbaijan is admitted to the World
Trade Organization, under WTO requirements Azerbaijan would have
a right not to establish economic ties with Armenia. Speaking on
other Azerbaijan duties to the WTO, Mahmoud Mamedkuliyev noted
that Baku should undertake them both before and after entering
the organization. According to him, Azerbaijan would intensify its
activity to enter the WTO. A number of meetings are planned to be
held in Geneva by the end of the year.

It is worth mentioning Armenia became WTO full member in February 2003.

Polish Premier Visits Nazi Camp Site In Response To German Expellees

POLISH PREMIER VISITS NAZI CAMP SITE IN RESPONSE TO GERMAN EXPELLEES’ EXHIBITION

TV Polonia, Warsaw
10 Aug 06

Presenter] And now about the Berlin exhibition that was opened to
the public today and that has been arousing enormous controversy
for a long time. The exhibition devoted to expulsions in Europe was
organized by the head of the German Expellees Association, Erika
Steinbach. Most Polish commentators feel that this is a successive
step leading towards the obliteration of the truth about World War II.

Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski broke-off his holiday today and
visited the German concentration camp site at Sztuthof [Polish:
Sztutowo – in northern Poland]. He said that he had done so in order
to recall who had been the aggressor and who had allowed this enormous
crime. Here is [reporter] Jacek Karnowski:

[Reporter] A successive exhibition, and successive controversies. The
expellees are taking care that the memory of their wrongs will remain
constantly alive. In Berlin, they are showing their fate alongside
that of other nations that have lost their homelands: Armenians,
Bosnians, Jews. There is also a lot about Poles – those who were
expelled from the East and from the Zamosc region.

[Erika Steinbach, head of the Expellees Association, with Polish
translation overlaid] I would also like this exhibition to be
visited by Poles. This would please me very much, we could talk
about everything.

[Reporter] The German expellees thus want to be perceived like other
victims of ethnic cleansing. And this is what arouses the greatest
fears. There is little room here for any indication of who was the
exclusive perpetrator of the wartime cataclysm.

[Jaroslaw Kaczynski, prime minister of the Republic of Poland]
There was an aggressor at the time, there was a state that admitted
enormous atrocities, there were authorities with wide social support
that decided on these atrocities and that planned them.

[Reporter] In reply to the exhibition, the prime minister today visited
the former camp at Sztuthof, a place where the Germans murdered 65,000
people. He paid homage to completely innocent victims, those who were
not aggressors but also those who resisted.

[Helga Hirsch, commentator, in German, with Polish translation
overlaid] There is no coincidence that the Polish prime minister
travelled today to Sztuthof. I can say that I am sad that Poles cling
so strongly to their stereotypes. We here perceive your suffering.

[Reporter] The Berlin exhibition is a testing ground. If it is
well-received, the road to the construction of the Centre Against
Expulsions will be considerably shortened, and then the expellees
will write their fate into the German identity on a lasting basis.

[Frank Herold, Berliner Zeitung journalist, in German, with Polish
translation overlaid] The subject of the expellees is not the main
problem in Germany, but the interest is indeed large. The expulsions
play a greater role in public debate than they did 10-15 years ago.

[Reporter] Erika Steinbach cannot in fact call herself an expellee. Her
parents occupied this house in Rumia [near Gdansk] after the outbreak
of war [in 1939]. Her father was a soldier in the Wehrmacht and her
mother was an official from Berlin. Despite this, she is close to
the success of her life – the construction of the centre.

[Professor Czeslaw Madajczyk, Polish Academy of Sciences] This is
also a bit of a test of the resistance of the Polish side – how far
such things will be accepted and how far not.

[Reporter] Small groups of German and Polish young people protested
against the exhibition. But the head of the German parliament turned
up at the opening. For some Poles, this is proof that the expellees
are successfully persuading the German elites to their point of view.

[Irena Lipowicz, expert on German affairs] This threatens to bring a
deviation from the very much tried and tested line of Polish-German
reconciliation that was commenced by the letter of the Polish bishops
to the German bishops [in 1965].

[Reporter] Sixty years after the war, we can thus see the beginnings
of a successive struggle for memory. This is why the authorities in
Warsaw are returning to the idea of calculating all Polish losses
from the wartime years.

[Krzysztof Olendzki, deputy minister of culture] The point is for us
to know how large was the scale of genocide, to become aware of this,
so that this can never happen again.

[Reporter] Contrary to announcements, the Polish-German treaty of
1990 was not shown at the exhibition in Berlin – this was the treaty
in which Berlin renounced its claims to its former [eastern] lands.

Watchdog Bungles Spirits Suspension

WATCHDOG BUNGLES SPIRITS SUSPENSION
Rogan Macdonald / Bloomberg

The Moscow Times, Russia
Aug. 10, 2006

The Federal Consumer Protection Service mistakenly announced that
Pernod Ricard’s license had been suspended.

The Federal Consumer Protection Service’s Moscow branch had egg on
its face after it mistakenly announced that Pernod Ricard, the world’s
No. 2 wine and spirits company, had had its license suspended.

A statement saying that Pernod Ricard’s Russian subsidiary, P.R. Rus,
had its wholesale alcohol sales license suspended was posted on the
service’s web site Tuesday. It listed eight other alcohol market
players, saying that their licenses were also suspended by the
Federal Tax Service’s Moscow branch at the request of the consumer
protection service.

"It was a mistake," a spokesman for the watchdog said. "It happens."

Dated, incorrect information was given to the press service for
publication, he said, adding that everyone was under a lot of pressure
and that the department’s chief was on vacation.

The statement caused a stir — including front-page stories in the
country’s two largest business newspapers, Vedomosti and Kommersant —
before it disappeared from the service’s web site Wednesday.

The phones at the Moscow office of P.R. Rus were ringing off the
hook after the statement was released, said Olga Kasatkina, the
company’s spokeswoman, adding that P.R. Rus didn’t have any problems
with licenses.

"We are working as usual," she said.

P.R. Rus distributes Jameson’s whiskey, Armenian cognacs produced by
Yerevan Cognac Enterprise and Pernod Ricard brands including Havana
Club rum.

Retailers and importers have been struggling for weeks with delays in
the introduction of new customs labels for imported wine and spirits
that have left store shelves empty of many popular liquor brands.

Hillary Clinton And Marxists To Come To Power At The Same Time: Head

HILARY CLINTON AND MARXISTS TO COME TO POWER AT THE SAME TIME: HEAD OF MARXIST PARTY

Panorama.am
16:33 09/08/06

"If Hilary comes to power, we will definitely do so," Davit Hakobyan,
chairman of Marxist Party of Armenia, told a press conference today,
also saying that he had forecasted back in 2004 that Hilary Clinton
will become the president of the United States.

The Marxist is sure that Armenia direly needs a diplomatic "time
out." Hakobyan forecasted major political developments, saying they
will start with the resignation of President Kocharyan.

The leader of the Marxist Party indicated that they will go to
elections without teaming up with any political party. Asked whether
the Marxist Party will receive the vote of confidence by the people,
Hakobyan replied, "If a nation puts its educated sons in a secondary
position and gives the parliament as a seat for criminal and political
theaters, that nation has no right for existence."

Forgotten war threatens to reignite

Aljazeera.net, Qatar
Aug 5 2006

Forgotten war threatens to reignite
By Scott Taylor

Saturday 05 August 2006, 2:28 Makka Time, 23:28 GMT

Azerbaijan and Armenia both claim Nagorno-Karabakh

Hardening positions on the future status of the disputed
Nagorno-Karabakh region between Armenia and Azerbaijan threaten to
reignite an ancient conflict.

Gurhan Iliyev was just a 23-year-old sergeant in the Azerbaijan civil
defence force when war erupted with Armenia in 1992.

"We were engaged in heavy fighting with Armenian troops near my home
village of Lachin when a mortar shell hit my friend~Rs trench. When I
got to him I saw that his belly had been ripped open by the shrapnel
and he was screaming in mortal pain. He died in my arms as I tried
to stuff his intestines back inside him."

With the international media focused at that time on the break-up of
the former Yugoslavia and the genocide in Rwanda, this border dispute
in the Caucasus region garnered very little press coverage.

Nevertheless it was a brutal clash spanning two years that left 30,000
killed – mostly civilians – 100,000 wounded and nearly one million
people ethnically cleansed.

Armenia and Azerbaijan were both former republics of the Soviet Union
and formally granted – along with Georgia – their independence with
the signing of the Tashkent Agreement in May 1992.

Under the terms of the agreement all three republics were allocated
the same amount of Soviet military material from which they could
constitute their own independent armies.

Disputed territory

But the transition from Soviet control to full independence was marked
by bloody warfare over Nagorno-Karabakh – a stretch of mountains
within Azerbaijan~Rs recognised border where a sizeable Armenian
minority lived.

Taking advantage of Azerbaijan’s post-independence internal political
disorder and using the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians as a pretext,
the Armenian army entered the territory in 1992.

"We fought back, but our local defence battalion was short of heavy
weaponry ~V we had only two tanks and 650 men," explained Iliyev. "The
Armenians were well-equipped and they were assisted by the Russian 366
Motorized Rifle Regiment. As a result, we took enormous casualties."

After completely securing the region, the Armenians continued to push
into Azerbaijani territory ~V securing not only a land corridor with
Armenia proper, but also extending into central Azerbaijan to create
a buffer zone.

In the wake of the military operations, ethnic Azeri citizens were
forcibly removed from the newly occupied territories.

Crisis situation

Having successfully ousted his political rivals, the then president,
Heydar Aliyev, was able to solidify his leadership over Azerbaijan in
1993 and gave orders to create a formal army to deal with the crisis
situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.

"We sent letters of invitation to 3,800 ethnic Azeris still serving
in the Russian Soviet army and 2,600 accepted our offer. They became
the nucleus of our new military"

Ramiz Najafov, one of the founders of the Azeri army

"This was a difficult task to perform as we were already supporting
the civil defence forces (paramilitaries) who were in the process
of fighting a war," said Major-General Ramiz Najafov, one of the key
architects of the fledgling Azerbaijani army.

"We sent letters of invitation to 3,800 ethnic Azeris still serving
in the Russian Soviet army and 2,600 accepted our offer. They became
the nucleus of our new military."

Within a year the Azeris had managed to train and field six full
infantry brigades and their deployment to the front reversed the
Armenian advances.

The establishment of a balance between the combat forces turned the
campaign into a stalemate and eventually a ceasefire agreement was
signed in 1994.

After the ceasefire, the Armenian forces continued to fortify their
positions in the occupied Azerbaijani territories and the Azeris
constructed trenches around the disputed region and the root causes
for the conflict remained unresolved.

What had been a little-regarded war would soon become an almost
completely forgotten, but still simmering, flashpoint.

Displaced peoples

In the company of two other Canadian journalists and escorted by
officials from the foreign ministry, we had been brought to the city
to observe first-hand the ongoing plight of the nearly 800,000 Azeris
who were forcibly displaced during the 1992-1994 war.

"Every IDP is entitled to a monthly ration which includes flour,
rice, sugar and oil"

Senan Huseynov, the Azerbaijani director for refugees

At the Saatly train station in southern Azerbaijan sits a 4-km long
stretch of old railway boxcars, which still serve as temporary homes
for some 2,000 Azeri internally displaced persons (IDPs).

There is minimal privacy afforded by the fact that, on average,
two families share a single boxcar. Despite 14 years of continuous
residence, there are still few creature comforts beyond the basic
necessities available.

"Every IDP is entitled to a monthly ration which includes flour, rice,
sugar and oil," explained Senan Huseynov, the Azerbaijani director for
refugees. "On top of that they receive an allowance of 30,000 Manats
($6.50) per month to purchase meat and other foodstuffs."

In addition to the Saatly boxcar compound we visited a camp of crudely
constructed mud brick houses, in which approximately 10,000 residents
lived. The standard layout for those small shelters is three tiny rooms
totalling 240 square feet of space and housing up to seven people.

The luckiest of the IDPs are now being relocated into custom-built
compounds complete with community centres and medical centres.

Virtual limbo

But with no real means of employment or proposed developments, the
displaced Azeris remain in limbo – political pawns in a political
process that has been bogged down for the past 12 years.

When the 1994 ceasefire was first brokered, the Organisation of
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) established the Minsk Group
to oversee and monitor the agreements.

To date the United Nations has passed a total of four resolutions
calling upon the Armenians to withdraw their military forces from the
occupied territories as a first step to resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh
situation.

The second phase of the resolutions is the immediate resettlement
of the IDPs into their former homes. But with no threat of any
international military force being deployed to enforce these
resolutions, the Armenians have refused to pull back their forces.

Fact-finding missions and OSCE reports continually cite the fact
that the Armenians continue to destroy existing Azeri infrastructures
while building their own facilities inside the occupied territories
in flagrant violation of the ceasefire agreement.

Roadblocks

One of the key roadblocks to achieving a diplomatic settlement to
the crisis is the fact that Azerbaijan and Armenia refuse to budge
on their positions concerning a referendum on the future state of
Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Armenians want any decision on self-determination to be limited
to the residents of the region. If the Azeris are returned to the area
prior to such a vote, the Armenians would still represent approximately
a three to one majority in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Azerbaijani position is that any such referendum must be decided
by all 8.5 million residents of the country, who would certainly
reject any separation of the territory.

Elmar Mammadyarov, the foreign minister, recently conceded that
Azerbaijan would grant Karabakh the "highest level of autonomy in
exchange for an immediate withdrawal". However, the Minsk Group has
grown frustrated with the lack of any real progress.

"They are not out purchasing attack helicopters right now, but if they
start to do that we’ll know they~Rre serious about settling this by
forceful means"

A Baku-based diplomat

In a statement released last month, US co-chairman Matthew Bryza
chided both the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents for their failure
to make any key concessions.

In response to the OSCE report, Aliyev resorted to sabre-rattling
with the statement that he remains "committed to peace, but he cannot
accept the current situation [of Armenian occupation]".

Upping the ante

To up the political ante, Azerbaijan has recently embarked on a
massive military build up.

"By next year we will have doubled our defence budget up to a total
of $1.2 billion," said Major-General Najafov. "We will be spending
the equivalent of the entire Armenian federal budget just on defence."

While such a build-up will certainly change the regional strategic
balance, international observers say that this posturing is a long
way from fruition.

"Most of the money being spent is to increase their own salaries,
not to add to their tactical capability," said one Baku-based diplomat.

"They are not out purchasing attack helicopters right now, but if they
start to do that we~Rll know they’re serious about settling this by
forceful means."

es/9FCDE7FD-47A8-4A72-93FE-10A85BBD6575.htm

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exer

Poverty exercise inspires other role-playing ideas

Bloomington Pantagraph, USA
Aug 4, 2006

Poverty exercise inspires other role-playing ideas

Pantagraph Editorial

Like so-called reality TV programs that "simulate" being stranded on
an island or being thrown into a house full of strangers with "Big
Brother" watching, the poverty simulation exercises conducted by the
University of Illinois Extension and the McLean County Diversity
Project barely give people a taste of what real poverty is like.

It is one thing to run out of "money" in what amounts to a game. It
is another thing to go to bed hungry or wonder how to replace the
shoes your child has outgrown.

But if the simulations can change perspectives and increase
understanding, they are worth the effort.

And that appears to be the case with participants in the simulation
that took place recently at The Salvation Army Corps and Community
Center in Bloomington.

Even participants who have worked with people in poverty had their
eyes opened to circumstances they hadn’t considered, such as failing
to get a receipt to prove rent was paid or spending time dealing with
paperwork and bureaucracy.

In fact, the simulation seems to have done such a good job of
increasing awareness for participants, we would like to suggest other
simulations or role-playing activities

— Gov. Rod Blagojevich should play the role of a nursing home
administrator or pharmacy owner trying to pay employees, rent,
utility bills and other expenses while waiting months for the state
to reimburse him for Medicaid cases.

— Lawmakers should play the roles of teachers trying to teach
students the basics of reading, writing and arithmetic while also
finding time to teach state-mandated material on genocide in Armenia
and the Ukraine, "the vestiges of slavery in the country" and healthy
eating.

Bonus points will be awarded if they figure out how to teach these
topics while also taking time off for such holidays as Casimir
Pulaski Day.

— Supreme and appellate court justices should play the role of just
about anyone trying to make sense of and live within the boundaries
of their sometimes conflicting rulings.

Would such role-playing change their habits? Probably not.

But, like the poverty simulation exercises, it might give them a
greater understanding of what others go through and maybe — just
maybe — it could inspire them to make the things better for those
affected by their actions or, at least, not do anything that makes
the situation worse.

Barbarian Annihilation of Civilians Being Carried Out in Lebanon

Barbarian Annihilation of Civilians Being Carried Out in Lebanon

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.08.2006 21:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Demolition of Lebanon and annihilation of its
population is a recurrent step of aggression against Syria and
Iran. The initial stage of this plan was the occupation of Afghanistan
and Iraq, Armenian political scientist Levon Melik-Shahnazaryan told a
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. In his words, Israel and the U.S. do not even
try to conceal their purpose. "Though the military power of Israel
is sufficient in case with Lebanon, the immediate participation of
the U.S. will become necessary at the final stage. Nevertheless Iran
will be too tough for them," he said.

At the same time he remarked that a barbarian annihilation of civilians
that cannot be justified is being carried out in Lebanon. "Not
only Israel but the whole international community is to blame for
it. A country with centuries-old civilization and a unique system
of co-existence of various confessions and ethnic groups is being
demolished. The developments in Lebanon cannot be assessed from a
political standpoint without taking into account the humanitarian
constituent of the problem," the Armenian political scientist said.

Frenzied punk-funk party: System of a Down.

FRENZIED PUNK-FUNK PARTY: SYSTEM OF A DOWN. 17,000 FANS SLOG THROUGH
STEADY MIST TO HEAR IMPRESSIVE ARMENIAN-AMERICAN HARD ROCK BAND

The Gazette (Montreal)
August 3, 2006 Thursday
Final Edition

By T’CHA DUNLEVY, The Gazette

"Welcome to the soldier side, where there’s no one here but me," sang
Serj Tankian, of Armenian-American hard rock act System of a Down,
over a solemn guitar line.

Make that no one there but him, his band and 17,000 fans – all
more than happy to tough it out through rain and muck to hear
this impressive band deliver yet another air-tight, no-frills,
riff-and-groove-laden performance at Jean Drapeau Park.

It was an action-packed evening, with six bands performing from
6 p.m. onward: Bad Acid Trip, Unearthed, Norma Jean, Hatebreed,
Avenged Sevenfold and the headliners.

System of a Down was here just last year, playing the Bell Centre in
support of its two-CD set Hypnotize/Mesmerize. A full two-thirds of
last night’s show comprised songs from that package, beginning with
four off the top.

>From Soldier Side, they kicked into high gear with the aptly-titled
Attack. A barrage of punk guitars and speed-metal drums provided stark
contrast to the melodic introduction. As if on cue, rain began to
fall. Not the torrential storm that had come down in the afternoon,
but a steady mist, nonetheless.

Tankian strolled about the stage with an aura of calm, while his
bandmates – guitarist Daron Malakian, bassist Shavo Odadjian and
drummer John Dolmayan – raged away behind him. The song, like much
of the band’s repertoire, flipped between chaotic frenzy and more
spacious acoustics.

The prog-like shifts in tempo and tone carried into the anti-war
diatribe B.Y.O.B., with its Zappa-esque punk-jazz freakouts and ironic
chorus – "Everybody’s going to the party have a real good time."

Revenga carried a Balkan-inspired festive spirit, providing a
thrash-friendly hybrid of hopping funk and quasi-operatic balladry.

The rain relented about six songs in, as Tankian prodded the crowd:
"Clap your hands, people. We’re gonna do it like this."

He launched the rabid chant of Psycho, off the band’s 2001 album
Toxicity: "Psycho, groupie, cocaine, crazy!" Again, the mania was
played against a melodic interlude.

It began to feel a bit like formula. Without the canned intensity of
an indoor venue, and perhaps because of the weather, the drama wasn’t
building as effectively as it could have.

Respite came with Lonely Day, an introspective lament, with Tankian
singing of "the most loneliest day of my life."

But System of a Down can’t stand still for long. Things picked up again
with the rollicking Kill Rock ‘n’ Roll and the electro-disco-inflected
Old School Hollywood, following which Tankian finally addressed
the crowd.

"Where we come from, we live in a civilization that is not so
civilized," he began. "It feels more like we live in an organization
– that sells you war, that sells you religion, McDonalds, murder …

the organization is not on your side."

With that, the rain picked up again, this time with feeling,
as Tankian rattled off the tongue-twisting punk-funk of Violent
Pornography. Deadline, and the elements, sent this writer toward the
metro. In the background, Tankian was bandying the phallic boasts
of Cigaro.

[email protected]

Working group of Armenian Ombudsman’s office meets with prisoners

WORKING GROUP OF ARMENIAN OMBUDSMAN’S OFFICE MEETS WITH PRISONERS

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Aug 2 2006

YEREVAN, August 2. /ARKA/. Working group of the Armenian Ombudsman’s
Office met with several life-term prisoners in "Nubarashen" prison
last Thursday.

The press service and public relations department of the Armenian
Ombudsman reported that the prisoners expressed their discontent both
with their sentences and inadequate treatment in the prison.

Accoridng to the prisoners’ complaints, the prison administration
were given clear instructions to correct the situation related to
periodic medical examination and care, and also organization of walks
and supply of necessary consumer accessories.

Warden of "Nubarashen" prison Aram Sargsyan promised to do his utmost
to overcome the abovementioned problems, which will be later evaluated
by this working group during its next visit.

The prison administration immediately provided the workign group
members an opportunity for individual meetings with the prisoners,
who went on a hunger-strike. R.O. -0–