Consuello Vidal Visits "Aztag" Daily

CONSUELLO VIDAL VISITS "AZTAG" DAILY

Noyan Tapan
March 31, 2008

BEIRUT, MARCH 31, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. On March 27, Consuello
Vidal, UN Resident Coordinator and UN Development Programme Resident
Representative in Armenia, visited "Aztag" daily and met with Shahan
Kandaharian, the editor-in-chief. She was accompanied by Sona Hamalian,
the head of the public relations department and Narineh Sahagian,
head of ARR Programme. The guests presented the purpose and the
progress of their visit to Lebanon, as well as the main fields of
their mission in Armenia. Then, they toured Aztag and got acquainted
with the work processes of "Aztag".

It was agreed that the above mentioned UN office will send all the
news and bulletins concerning their activities directly to "Aztag".

NATO urges Russia to lift unilateral CFE moratorium

PanARMENIAN.Net

NATO urges Russia to lift unilateral CFE moratorium
29.03.2008 14:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ NATO has issued a statement urging
Russia to consider United States proposals on the CFE
arms reduction treaty, and warning that Moscow’s
moratorium on the pact could undermine European
security.

Russia imposed a unilateral moratorium on the
Conventional Forces in Europe treaty in December 2007,
amid concerns over U.S. plans to deploy a missile
shield in Central Europe and NATO’s ongoing expansion.
Moscow has said it will resume its participation if
NATO countries ratify the document.

The NATO statement released on Friday said: "We urge
the Russian Federation to end its `suspension’, and to
work with us to reach agreement on the basis of the
parallel actions package so we can together preserve
the benefits of this landmark regime."

The package on measures to allay Russia’s concerns on
the treaty was proposed by Washington in fall last
year, and supported by all other NATO members.

"All Allies are committed to this far-reaching
package, which includes resolution of Russia’s
commitments related to the Republic of Moldova and
Georgia, and are ready to join with Russia in its
implementation," the statement said.

The trans-Atlantic military alliance earlier said its
member nations would not ratify the adapted CFE until
after Russia withdraws its military bases from
ex-Soviet republics Georgia and Moldova.

"Russia’s `suspension’ risks eroding the integrity of
the CFE regime and undermines the cooperative approach
to security which has been a core of the NATO-Russia
relationship and European security for nearly two
decades," NATO said.

The Russian and U.S. leaders are set to discuss the
CFE treaty along with controversial U.S. plans to
deploy missile defense elements in Poland and the
Czech Republic when they meet in Romania and Sochi
next month.

George W. Bush said on Wednesday he had accepted
Vladimir Putin’s invitation to visit his holiday
residence in Sochi on the Black Sea on April 6 after
the April 2-4 NATO summit in Romania, RIA Novosti
reports.

BAKU: DM: No one can threaten Azerbaijan with rhetoric to break off

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
March 29 2008

Defense Ministry’s spokesman: No one can threaten Azerbaijan with
rhetoric to break off negotiations on Nagorno Karabakh conflict

[ 29 Mar 2008 19:31 ]

Baku. Mahbuba Gasimbayli-APA. `No one can threaten Azerbaijan with
the statements to break off the negotiations on the settlement of
Nagorno Karabakh conflict,’ taking a stance on Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanyan’s statement that the probability of breaking
off the negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia increases,
spokesman for Defense Ministry Eldar Sabiroghlu told APA.

Asked whether breaking off the negotiations may increase the
probability of war Eldar Sabiroghllu said Armenia’s statements of
blackmailing character would make the situation more complicated.
`War is not a desirable event. It means new slaughters and new
bloodshed. Aggressive Armenia should understand it. Nagorno Karabakh
conflict remains unsolved and causes trouble for the region because
of their fault. Therefore, war may be real despite any situation in
connection with the conflict,’ he said.
According to the spokesman, Azerbaijani territories remain under
occupation and being the side undergoing aggression it is our right
to free them.
`No one can prohibit it. The factors nearing the war are obvious.
Armenia’s statements of blackmailing character make the situation
more complicated. That’s why, peaceful solution to Nagorno Karabakh
conflict should be taken into consideration. Unfortunately, OSCE
Minsk Group co-chairing countries made the settlement of the conflict
more complicated, when they cast doubt on the just resolution of the
UN General Assembly on the `Situation in the occupied Azerbaijani
territories’. They showed that they took side with Armenia and
supported the aggressor. UN had adopted the resolution demanding
unconditional withdrawal of the Armenian forces from Azerbaijani
territories and envisaging the settlement of the conflict with
mediation of OSCE Minsk Group. In fact, it meets the interests of
both sides and the entire mankind. This is the most effective and
just way to prevent the war. This is the essence of the peaceful
resolution of the UN. But Minsk Group co-chairing countries left the
resolution aside and chose a more dangerous way. They added fuel to
the fire instead of solving the conflict. How could it be that the UN
sanctions and resolutions are effective when they are in favor of
them, and the resolution on Azerbaijan is ineffective? Is it just?
The co-chairing countries showed what double standards are. No one
can threaten us with statements to break off the negotiations,’ he
said.
Eldar Sabiroghlu noted that Azerbaijan would never agree to the
occupation of its territories and would restore its territorial
integrity at any cost.
`Azerbaijan’s mighty state, unanimous people and strong army make the
realization of our wish available. It is not too far,’ he said.

The Education Of Samantha Power

THE EDUCATION OF SAMANTHA POWER
By Evan R. Goldstein

The Chronicle of Higher Education
March 28, 2008 Friday

Even for a prominent intellectual cum foreign-policy adviser, Samantha
Power has been keeping a punishing schedule. When she arrived in
Europe at the beginning of the month, she had spent the previous
few weeks crisscrossing the country on a frenetic hybrid book tour
and campaign junket for Sen. Barack Obama, for whom she served as
an unpaid adviser. In the middle of an interview to promote her
new book, Chasing the Flame: Sergio Vieira de Mello and the Fight
to Save the World (Penguin Press) — an admiring biography of the
charismatic Brazilian-born U.N. diplomat who was killed in the August
2003 bombing of the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad — the professor of
public policy at Harvard University told a Scottish-newspaper reporter,
in an off-the-record moment, that Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton was a
"monster."

Power quickly apologized. But within hours, the story exploded across
the American news media, and she resigned from the Obama campaign.

Last month, before her Europe trip, I interviewed Power. She was
a nervous wreck even then. Perched on a stool in the corner of a
bustling Washington cafe, leaning close, she confided, "I can’t sleep,
and I can’t eat."

It was a surprising admission. After all, Power seemed to be living a
charmed life. One journalist had likened the attractive, auburn-haired
author (who was recently featured in a glamorous spread in Men’s Vogue)
and human-rights activist turned academic to a latter-day Joan of
Arc, out to save the world. Another scribe had suggested that Power
possessed just the right combination of dynamism and "cerebral bona
fides" to make her an appealing presidential candidate. In short,
she was the epitome of the academic celebrity.

Pretty heady stuff for a 37-year-old who never claimed to be on
the receiving end of direct orders from God or to have given any
thought to running for elected office, much less the highest office
in the land. And she seemed to have found love on the campaign trail:
The Boston Globe reported March 11 that Power is dating her fellow
Obama adviser, the prolific University of Chicago law professor Cass
Sunstein, soon to join her at Harvard University.

So why the frayed nerves? Simply put, Power is wildly popular. At
a recent book talk, she was inundated with well-wishers, autograph
seekers, and stargazers. With charisma and ease, she responded
to a plethora of questions that included, for example, Obama and
the prospect of U.N. reform. Unfailingly polite and personable —
and presumably not wanting to alienate potential Obama voters —
she went over her allotted time on her tightly packed schedule. She
would be playing catch-up for the rest of the day, and she had been
operating at that frenetic pace for weeks on end.

When we finally got to sit down and talk at a favorite tea shop of
hers, she took a deep breath and explained her frenzy. "In order to
do these really big, ambitious books, you kind of have to stay out
of the daily news cycle a little bit, out of the blogosphere," Power
said, fingering her BlackBerry. But, referring to her work for Obama,
she added, "I am in that now, and it has been hard to make sure I am
being an adequate surrogate for a guy I care about so much."

Power has spent the last 14 months advising Obama on foreign policy.

She has always been quick to play down her role, but The
Washington Post says she is — make that was — one of the "most
influential" figures in the candidate’s brain trust, "part of a
group-within-the-group that he regularly turns to for advice."

The prominently displayed Obama button on her jacket, as well as the
way in which her answers to disparate questions always culminated in
praise for the Democratic senator from Illinois, made plain the extent
to which Power was consumed by Obama’s bid for the White House. "I
have always taken my work very, very seriously, but I have never taken
anything quite this seriously," she said. "When you are out there,
you just want to do right by him."

Power had certainly been out there, campaigning for Obama across the
country. And in a previous interview with The Chronicle, Power —
who is unscripted and forthcoming in conversation — expressed some
trepidation that her blunt style would land her in hot water. "That’s
the one thing that terrifies me," Power acknowledged at the time,
"that I’ll say something that will somehow hurt the candidate."

Power rose to fame in 2002 with her book A Problem From Hell (Basic
Books), a Pulitzer Prize-winning account of America’s impotent
response to genocide in the 20th century — from ignoring Turkey’s
deportation and slaughter of its Armenian minority during World War
I to the long-delayed effort to halt the Bosnian Serbs’ mass murder
of Muslims in the 1990s. Born out of Power’s experience as a novice
freelance reporter covering the violent disintegration of the former
Yugoslavia, A Problem From Hell is less a pure history than it is an
impassioned meditation on America’s role in the post-cold-war world.

The decade following the collapse of the Berlin Wall was a period of
great ideological ferment, particularly among liberal foreign-policy
intellectuals who believed that, with the defeat of Communism,
the United States could begin to make priorities of human rights
and democracy promotion. But those ideals rubbed up against the grim
reality of genocide and ethnic conflict: Over the course of a hundred
days in 1994, 800,000 Rwandans were murdered by their compatriots;
thousands of Bosnians were herded into concentration camps, where
they were starved, raped, and murdered.

On July 11, 1995, Bosnian Serb forces overran the U.N. "safe area"
of Srebrenica, where 40,000 Muslim men, women, and children had
sought refuge. Power was in the area at the time. She recalls seeing
NATO F-16s flying overhead, doing nothing to halt the assault. She
was outraged. She remembers thinking that the tails of the planes
seemed to be drooping in humiliation. Over the next few days, more
than 7,000 Muslim men and boys were systematically slaughtered.

Srebrenica was a watershed moment for Power, who believes earnestly
in the mantra "never again." The United Nations proved toothless,
while the world’s sole remaining superpower was unwilling to use
its military might to defend human life. "The very qualities that
made liberals prone to care about evil seemed to make them incapable
of coping with it," Power wrote with thinly veiled contempt in The
New Republic a few years later. "Liberals resisted black-and-white
characterizations, sought nuance and understanding, and dithered."

Though liberals have been allergic to the use of military force
since the Vietnam War, many scholars and activists have concluded
that America has a moral obligation to protect the victims of mass
slaughter — especially if nobody else will do it. "Given the affront
genocide represents to America’s most cherished values and to its
interests, the United States must also be prepared to risk the lives
of its soldiers in the service of stopping this monstrous crime,"
Power wrote in the conclusion to A Problem From Hell. That view,
which has become known as humanitarian intervention, was put into
practice by NATO in 1999 — when a two-month air campaign led to
the withdrawal of Serb forces from Kosovo. Its champions have become
known as liberal interventionists, or "liberal hawks." And Power has
emerged as one of the creed’s most eloquent proponents.

"The sky is falling here, but a man has got to eat," Vieira de Mello
told Power before their first meeting at a restaurant on the outskirts
of the Croatian capital of Zagreb in April 1994. "If World War III
starts while we’re at dinner, we won’t order a second bottle of wine,"
he added with aplomb.

Power considers Chasing the Flame "a more important book" than A
Problem From Hell. Her new work "speaks to a far greater breadth
of issues that we are going to be dealing with as a country and
as a global community," she said. Vieira de Mello, the subject
of Chasing the Flame, went to work for the United Nations in 1969,
after finishing a degree in philosophy at the Sorbonne. Over the next
three decades, he chased conflict across the globe: Sudan, Lebanon,
Cambodia, Bosnia, Congo, Kosovo, East Timor, and, fatefully, Iraq. In
those broken societies, he grappled with today’s major challenges:
civil war, refugees, religious extremism, the role of religious and
national identity, genocide, and terrorism.

Described by one colleague as a cross between James Bond and Robert
F. Kennedy, Vieira de Mello began his career as a quasi-Marxist
anti-imperialist — he stormed the barricades in Paris in 1968
and had the scars to prove it — but his shrill moral absolutism
gradually gave way to an idealistic pragmatism. By the time he
reluctantly agreed to lead the beleaguered U.N. mission in Baghdad,
Power approvingly writes, he had become a "diplomat and politician,
comfortable weighing lesser evils."

To what extent does Vieira de Mello’s intellectual journey reflect
Power’s own evolving perspective on American foreign policy? Her
writings in recent years suggest a far more chastened outlook on what
American power can accomplish in the world. Unlike some of her fellow
liberal hawks — who embraced the invasion of Iraq as a noble struggle
for the liberation of others — Power opposed the war because she
was discomfited by the unilateral manner in which it was waged and
the disingenuous way she felt the Bush administration invoked human
rights as a rationalization for toppling Saddam Hussein’s regime. More
notable, Power’s preferred response to the genocide in Darfur is
not a call for U.S. intervention, but rather a nuanced plan to use
diplomatic measures to put pressure on the government in Khartoum to
halt the killing. When Power discussed policy during our interview,
she quickly corrected herself when she uttered the word "solution,"
substituting the more humble "remedy" — as if she were still trying
out her new, more modest persona.

When I mentioned that anecdote to Richard Falk, a Princeton professor
of international law and practice, he interpreted it as evidence
that Power is no longer "naïvely expectant that the U.S. will use
its power for benign purposes." Like Vieira de Mello, "she is more
reconciled to the need for a Faustian bargain between trying to do
good things but also accommodating some dark forces," he says.

"All this black-and-white, on-off-switch stuff I have no patience
for now," Power conceded to me. "I just didn’t know the world well
enough then." While some foreign-policy wonks might regard that as a
welcome sign of maturation, others see it as a betrayal of the very
principles Power once so passionately championed. "The implication
of A Problem From Hell is that, in the end, the only way to really
stop genocide is through armed intervention," says Thomas Cushman, a
professor of sociology at Wellesley College and founding editor of The
Journal of Human Rights. He excoriates Power for her insistence that
American troops be withdrawn from Iraq. "It’s hard to square Power’s
self-affirmed liberal commitment to stopping genocide with her proposed
abandonment of fundamental liberal duties in Iraq," Cushman adds.

Power disagreed with that kind of argument, noting with some agitation
that people commonly caricature A Problem From Hell as a plea for
endless wars of altruism. "My argument was about the tools in the
toolbox: diplomatic, economic, and all the way to military tools
that need to be employed when you care about something," she said,
gesticulating energetically.

"The world has changed," she added. "To think about what the United
States can do in 2008 is so different than what it could have achieved
in 1994."

That said, Power does worry that Americans will "overlearn" the lessons
of Iraq. "The response to Iraq can’t be, ‘This is what happens when
we try to help people,’" she said. "Among the specific reasons Iraq
went wrong, one of them is not that we cared for people."

In fact, she declared forcefully, the opposite is true: "Had we cared
for people more, we would have been more likely to succeed."

Given her celebrity and stature, it’s hard to imagine that the Clinton
comment will silence Power’s voice or erode her influence for long.

–Boundary_(ID_EyP/iNlNQdZ+9AhoDgxxcQ)–

Dr. George Kooshian To Present Autobiography Of His Father, Who Surv

DR. GEORGE KOOSHIAN TO PRESENT AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF HIS FATHER, WHO SURVIVED GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan
March 28, 2008

An illustrated lecture in English on "The Web of Hope: The Memoirs
of George B. Kooshian" will be presented by Dr. George B. Kooshian,
a specialist in the history of Armenian Immigration to California
in the Ararat-Eskijian Museum on March 30. Dr. Kooshian presents
his father’s autobiography, his birth and education in Turkey; his
passage into exile and genocide; and his rebirth in America.

ANKARA: European Deputy Questions Trust In Turkish Judiciary

EUROPEAN DEPUTY QUESTIONS TRUST IN TURKISH JUDICIARY

The New Anatolian
March 27 2008
Turkey

Christian Democrat MEP Ria Oomen-Ruijten said Thursday there is no
judiciary in Turkey that every one can rely on.

"Turkey needs to work on this matter," Oomen-Ruijten, who is also
Turkey rapporteur of the European Parliament (EP), said during a
meeting at the External Relations Committee of the EP in which MEPs
discussed a draft report on Turkey.

Oomen-Ruijten said Turkish parliament decided to free headscarf in
universities with two-third majority but this decision cannot be
implemented. "I do not know any other country like this. I am for
the independence of the judiciary but there is no judiciary in Turkey
that every one can rely on," she said.

Oomen-Ruijten also said she is totally against the closure of the
Justice and Development (AK) Party and the Democratic Society Party
(DTP).

"This problem can be overcome by making rapid reforms concerning the
judiciary," she stressed.

On the other hand, Joost Lagendijk, the co-chair of Turkey- EU Joint
Parliament Committee, said judiciary considers ‘wrong" the preference
of majority of the nation and this is unacceptable. Lagendijk said
the EU should strongly ask for a judicial reform in Turkey.

The draft report recommends Turkey to provide a large participation
of NGOs in efforts to prepare a new constitution, and asks Turkey to
amend the Article 301 of TCK as soon as possible.

Condemning the acts of the terrorist organization PKK, the draft asks
the PKK to lay down arms without any precondition.

The draft calls on Iraqi government and the regional administration in
Iraq not to "allow PKK to use its territories as a base for terrorist
attacks against Turkey."

On Cyprus problem, the draft report says that a comprehensive solution
should be found under the auspices of the UN.

The report does not touch on Armenian allegations regarding the
incidents of 1915, and calls on the European Commission and Turkey
to launch negotiations on a visa simplification agreement.

The EP is expected to vote the report in a plenary session in May.

Euro-Armenian Games 2008 Tournament Held In Vienna

EURO-ARMENIAN GAMES 2008 TOURNAMENT HELD IN VIENNA

Noyan Tapan
March 27, 2008

VIENNA, MARCH 27, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Euro-Armenian
Games 2008 Tournament was held in Vienna on March 21-24 with the
efforts of the "Ararat" Armenian Sports Association and under the
patronage of the Ambassador of Armenia to Australia Ashot Hovakimian
and Vienna Mayor Michael Haupl. 25 delegations with more than 650
Armenian sportsmen from different cities of Europe and Lebanon took
part in this tournament.

Competitions were held in the following kinds of sports: mini football,
basketball, volleyball, table tennis, badminton, chess.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the Press and Information Department
of the RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs, at the official opening solemn
ceremony of the tournament Ambassador Hovakimian made a greeting speech
addressed to the sportsmen. He expressed satisfaction on the occasion
of holding such all-Armenian events and wished the Armenian sportsmen
success. The Ambassador also mentioned that the all-European Armenian
games are not only a sports event but also promote unity of Armenian
young people living in different countries of Europe and preservation
of Armenian nation.

During the award giving ceremony held after the end of the games,
the Stuttgart mini football team was awarded a special prize "For a
fair game" by Ambassador Hovakimian.

At the closing ceremony, Ambassador Hovakimian in his speech
congratulated all the sportsmen for successful holding of the
tournament and expressed a hope that they all will take part in the
next pan-Armenian games to be held in Yerevan.

The next Euro-Armenian games will be held in Switzerland and in 2010
in Amsterdam.

The In-Depth Reason

THE IN-DEPTH REASON

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
March 26, 2008

"The fact that L. Ter-Petrosyan received quite a large number of votes,
despite being the founder of all kinds of inadmissible phenomena
existing in the country, evidences that our society is in a crippled
state: the instability characteristic of transitional countries,
revolutions and coups, internal clashes. We are in a medium position
which allows for destabilizing the situation.

But there is also an opportunity to reform all the spheres of human
activity. The greater and healthier part of our society desires
changes. I find it quite possible that L. Ter-Petrosyan’s received
so many votes due to some subtle technologies elaborated in the West
as well as large amounts of money. However, the in-depth reason, when
the protesting people follow the leader pursuing no goals and ideas,
results from the absence of an influential opposition," SHAVARSH
KOCHARYAN finds.

Manager Of Armwatercanal Envisages To Raise Water Tariff

MANAGER OF ARMWATERCANAL ENVISAGES TO RAISE WATER TARIFF

Noyan Tapan
March 26, 2008

YEREVAN, MARCH 26, NOYAN TAPAN. Since 2004, the French manager of
ArmWaterCanal company has invested 18 mln USD in the system – at
the expense of WB credit resources and its own funds (250 mln drams
or about 806 thousand USD a year). The company’s director general
Patrick Loren told reporters on March 26 that the volume of water
supply has increased as a result of these investments: the average
duration of water supply made 12 hours in 2007 – against 9.5 hours
in 2006. 19 thousand water meters were installed in 2007, and it is
envisaged to install 30 thousand ones in 2008.

P. Loren said that a program on sewage cleaning around Lake Sevan
will be launched jointly with the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development (EBRD) within a month.

According to him, the agreement on ArmWaterCanal’s management expires
this year but they intend to work for another two years.

It was announced that the manager is going to submit a bid for raising
the water tariff (currently making 140 drams) to the RA Public Services
Regulatory Commission.

Rehab Pioneer, Energetic Dad

REHAB PIONEER, ENERGETIC DAD
Dana Borcea

Hamilton Spectator
March 25 2008
Canada

Dr. John Basmajian did a good chunk of his groundbreaking work in
rehabilitative science from the comfort of his living room couch.

Working at home gave the father of three a chance to combine his twin
passions for medicine and his family.

His daughter Nancy recalled her father’s "immense powers of
concentration" and marvelled at his ability to focus on writing his
books and lectures within feet of his children banging on the piano.

"He could work through anything," she said.

The hard-working father and former head of the Chedoke Rehabilitation
Centre died last Tuesday after a brief illness.

He was 86.

Basmajian was born in present-day Istanbul to Armenian parents and
raised in Brantford.

He graduated from medical school at the University of Toronto in
1945. In the decades that followed, his work as a doctor, researcher
and professor saw him and his family put down roots in Toronto,
Kingston, Ont., and Atlanta.

In 1977, he moved to Hamilton and assumed the role of director of
the Chedoke Rehabilitation Centre as well as professor of medicine
and anatomy at McMaster University.

Basmajian was best known for his pioneering work in electromyography,
the study of electrical discharge from muscles, and later
biofeedback. He was honoured for his research in 1995 when he was
named to the Order of Canada.

Basmajian spoke about the significance of his work in an interview
with The Spectator after the announcement.

"I started working on muscle in the days of polio and afterwards,
when it was licked, people asked me why I continued. I was able to
discover some things that became important later on," he said.

His work on how muscle could be trained to recover translated into
significant progress in the world of rehabilitative science. He also
developed new technologies and invented devices, including electrodes
used to measure electrical discharge from muscle fibres.

Outside of the labs and clinics, Basmajian kept himself busy with
writing and was considered a bestseller in the world of medical
textbooks. His books on anatomy and electromyography sold well over
one million copies.

But at least as important was the legacy he left as a teacher and
mentor.

His son Haig, a Cobourg-based surgeon, figured his father trained
more than 1,000 Canadian doctors, many of whom remembered him vividly
years after leaving his class.

"He managed to inject enthusiasm into his lectures on anatomy, which
is not always the most exciting subject," his son said.

Former pupils often remember Basmajian — who was ambidextrous —
at his blackboard drawing diagrams with one hand while labelling them
with the other.

Haig remembered his father taking calls at home from students with
questions and remembering their names years later.

"I didn’t have a lot of professors like that when I was in medical
school," he said.

Basmajian’s wife of 60 years, Dora, said she appreciated her husband’s
generosity with others.

"He made time for everyone but I didn’t mind sharing him," she said.

"He had so much energy, I couldn’t have handled it all alone."