Samvel Karapetian elected chairman of Armenia’s Wrestling Federation

Businessman Samvel Karapetian elected chairman of Armenia’s Wrestling
Federation

YE REVAN, JANUARY 9, NOYAN TAPAN. The first deputy president of the
National Olympic Committee of Armenia, USSR master of sports and
honoured coach Razmik Stepanian gave a report on the work done in the
past four years during the reporting back and election conference of
the Wrestling Federation of Armenia.

The Federation’s chairman, National Assembly deputy, businessman Samvel
Alexanian resigned due to being overloaded with work. A vote was held,
as a result of which the co-chairman of Tashir Holding Samvel
Karapetian was unanimously elected the chairman of the Wrestling
Federation.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011140

BAKU: Georgia Halts Russian Gas To Armenia

GEORGIA HALTS RUSSIAN GAS TO ARMENIA

Trend
Jan 9 2009
Azerbaijan

Georgia halted Russian gas supplies to Armenia, the Georgian Oil and
Gas Corporation told Trend Capital on Jan. 9.

Georgian Energy Minister Aleksandr Khetaguri will issue a special
statement at a gas distribution station in the Gardabani region today
at 13:00.

Georgia transits Russian gas to Armenia via its territory. Ten percent
remains in the country as payment.

Russia has refused Georgian demands for higher transit fees or shares
on numerous occasions.

BAKU: The state and the people will never grant independence to NK

"The Azerbaijani state and the people of the country will never grant
independence to Daqliq Qarabaq"

ANS
01.01.2009 11:47

President Ilham Aliyev congratulating Azerbaijani people on the
occasion of Solidarity Day of World Azerbaijanis said.
Ladies and gentlemen!
Dear fellow countrymen!

I cordially wish you a happy new year!

The year 2008 is ending. It has been very successful for our country in
terms of overall progress of Azerbaijan. In 2008, our economy continued
to develop at high pace. I can say that over the past four years
Azerbaijan has been the world`s number one in economic growth. This is
a great achievement enabling us to successfully resolve all economic,
infrastructure and social questions. It was not surprising that in
2008, the World Bank named Azerbaijan as a top reformer in the world.
It shows that the serious, deliberate economic reforms being
implemented in Azerbaijan yield fruits, and Azerbaijan has great
international prestige and is held in great respect around the world.
Azerbaijan takes all necessary steps to develop its economy. The
government provides support to development of entrepreneurship that
will even increase in the years to come. Today, thanks to this support,
private sector constitutes 85 percent of Azerbaijan`s economy. It is a
great achievement demonstrating that political and economic reforms in
Azerbaijan serve overall progress of our country and make it stronger.
In the followi
ng years, we will continue paying much attention to
economic development, and, I am sure, will cope with all outstanding
tasks.
The State program of socio-economic development of regions implemented
in our country has also been completed successfully. All the goals set
forth in the program have been achieved. When adopting the program we
were planning to open 600,000 new jobs. It is with a sense of great
pride that I can say today that over the past five years, the number of
new jobs has reached 750,000 giving a tremendous momentum to
development of the regions. Our regions have seen big improvements due
to realization of new infrastructure projects and construction of
social objects. All this contributes to achieving overall progress in
Azerbaijan, in all of its regions.
Big attention has been paid to agrarian sector. We have taken
practically all necessary measures to ensure food security, and I hope,
in a year or two, we will fully supply ourselves with food products.
The reforms being implemented in the agrarian sector, the government
support for farmers, privileges and loans provided to them ` all are
the factors, which ensure our accomplishments.
Along with this, big attention is paid to social policy in Azerbaijan.
Yes, our life is based on the market economy, and this is a pledge of
our success. But at the same time, Azerbaijan`s authorities have a
strong will to realize all social programs, and we are doing
that.
The past five years have seen a boom in construction of social objects
in Azerbaijan. Over the period, 1,600 new secondary schools have been
built in the country, and this course will be continued in the coming
years. New modern, well-equipped medical centers have been built,
practically, in all regions of the country, to provide people with
high-quality medical services. It also is the result of our social
policy.
Implementation of a targeted social assistance program is underway that
is of great importance as well. The number of those in poverty in
Azerbaijan has reduced from 49 to 16 percent over the past five years,
and I am convinced, it will be even less according to the 2008
outcomes. However, as long as there are citizens living in poverty, the
government must do everything possible to help them.
That is why the targeted social assistance program will be continued,
and I am sure that such social evil as poverty will be completely
eliminated in Azerbaijan.
In 2008, minimum wage and pension were increased 50 percent, and this
policy will be continued in the following years. We must do all
possible for our citizens to live better.
We create conditions for those engaged in business. But the citizens
who work at state-funded organizations should also be provided with
necessary maintenance, and we will continue to work in this direction.
All necessary actions have been taken in 2008 to resolve social
proble
ms and increase employment of refugees and internally displaced
persons. In 2003, I promised that not a single tent camp would remain
in Azerbaijan. We have achieved it. Today, no tent camp exists in
Azerbaijan. Our compatriots, who earlier lived in terrible conditions,
today are provided with excellent houses. New villages, roads, schools
and medical centers have been built for them. In other word, we took an
important step towards elimination of this big social evil. And we will
continue this policy in the coming years.
We are making efforts to achieve fair resolution of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Daqliq Qarabaq problem within territorial integrity
of Azerbaijan. In 2008, the UN General Assembly adopted a very
important resolution on the situation in the occupied territories of
Azerbaijan.
Despite 3 out of 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council ` Minsk
Group co-chairs ` opposed this resolution, it was adopted by an
overwhelming majority of votes. On the one hand, it shows the strength
of Azerbaijan and its enhancing prestige. On the other hand, it proves
that justice must triumph.
The global community supports Azerbaijan, and I have no doubt that
resolution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Daqliq Qarabaq will
be based solely on the principle of territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan. There is no other way. The Azerbaijan state and the people
of the country will never grant independence to Daqliq Qarabaq. Daqliq

Qarabaq has been Azerbaijan`s land from time immemorial, and we will
make every effort to `restore’ territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. We
can use both political, diplomatic and, if necessary, military means.
We have the right to do so. The international law guarantees it.
As you know, much work has been done in this area. Necessary actions
were taken in 2008 to build the army. Our military spending has reached
USD $2 billion and is going to rise in 2009. We are doing this; we must
do this because we live under conditions of war, which is not yet over.
The first phase of the war has finished and we have to be ready to
liberate our lands from invaders by any means. Military parade staged
in 2008 demonstrated our military power to everybody.
Azerbaijan successfully continued its energy policy in 2008. We managed
to solve energy security problems, and today, we are working to ensure
energy security of other states. It brings us both political and
economic benefits, opens up new opportunities for us. Oil and gas
pipelines such as Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum are
operating successfully. Azerbaijan successfully solved, one might say,
all oil and gas problems and achieved diversification of export.
Today, Azerbaijan`s oil and gas serve the country ` Azerbaijan already
supplies 85% of its domestic gas consumption. It provides us with
economic opportunities and increases our political power. The energy
sum
mit held in Baku in 2008 is a striking example of this.
The decisions made in Baku will not only strengthen Azerbaijan`s energy
policy but also help create a new situation in the region, Europe and
the world in general.
We effectively use these opportunities and I have no doubt that
Azerbaijan`s successful oil strategy will be continued in the following
years.
We are injecting huge funds in the energy sector. In the past five
years, Azerbaijan has managed to build six power stations. Restoring
and rebuilding some stations have increased our energy power. It was a
great success as well. In a word, the state of affairs in this sector
is pretty satisfactory. I am sure this successful policy will be
continued in the following years.
In 2008, we embarked on construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway,
which is of great historical significance. After long years of
discussions, we managed to start construction of this railway. Today,
Azerbaijani companies are actively involved in this project.
Construction of the railway linking Europe and Asia will strengthen
even more both economic and geopolitical position of Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijan will become an irreplaceable country for transportation. It
helps ensure our long-term national interests.
Other important events took place in transport sector. Two airports
were put into operation in 2008 in the cities of Lankaran and Zagatala.
New tankers are being purchased, motor highways are being built. All

these require huge funds. Today, the Azerbaijani state possesses such
resources. It is our successful economic policy and economic reforms
that created such conditions for us.
Dear friends, today is the World Azerbaijanis Solidarity Day as well.
This Day is marked by Azerbaijanis across the world. The Azerbaijan
state continues its efforts to make the world Azerbaijanis better
organized and strengthen their solidarity. I am glad that in the
countries where Azerbaijanis live they carry out their activities
within respective organizations. Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations are
getting stronger and effectively work to ensure our country`s
interests. At the same time, the Azerbaijan government makes every
effort to solve the problems of Azerbaijanis living abroad. We will
always support them, and Azerbaijanis living in other states may always
rely on their homeland.
2008 was the year of Presidential election. The people of Azerbaijan
expressed their will in a free and democratic manner. Availing myself
of this opportunity, I once again want to express my gratitude to the
people of Azerbaijan for the high confidence shown in me. This high
confidence and kind attitude makes me even more enthusiastic.
Five years ago, I promised the Azerbaijani people that I would do
everything possible for the overall development of the country. I will
be working for the sake of welfare of the people of Azerbaijan, for
developing Azerbaijan and strengthening our
state system. I want to say
again that the high confidence shown in me pleases and inspires me. I
want to assure the people of Azerbaijan that I will continue to do my
best to worthily serve my people.

Dear friends!
Ladies and Gentlemen!
Brothers and Sisters!

Once again, I cordially congratulate you on the World Azerbaijanis
Solidarity Day and wish you a Happy New Year. I also wish you good
health, happiness and new successes.

Der Spiegel: Apologizing to the Armenians: ‘Eroding Biggest Taboos’

Der Spiegel, Germany
Dec 30 2008

APOLOGIZING TO THE ARMENIANS
‘Eroding One of Turkey’s Biggest Taboos’

More than 25,000 Turks have added their names to an online statement
apologizing for Ottoman war crimes committed during World War
I. SPIEGEL spoke with campaign initiator Baskin Oran.

SPIEGEL: Since the beginning of your online campaign, more than 25,000
Turks have signed a statement apologizing for war crimes committed by
the Ottoman Empire during World War I. More than a million Armenians
lost their lives in the catastrophic events, which began in 1915. Is
this the beginning of a critical examination of the past?

AP
Mt. Ararat from Armenia.
Baskin Oran: The Turks who are now apologizing are not responsible for
the sins of 1915. There is no collective crime, but there is a
collective conscience. With our campaign, we are eroding one of
Turkey’s biggest taboos. But still, the campaign is coming decades
late.

SPIEGEL: Turkish nationalists say that you are damaging the country’s
image. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan agrees.

Oran: I disagree. I think that our image abroad will actually
improve. Beyond that, though, it is the grandchildren of the Armenians
who should finally hear an apology — in a country like Turkey, where
there is no "culture of apology."

SPIEGEL: What effect will the campaign have on Turkish-Armenian
relations?

Oran: The majority of Armenians welcome our initiative. But there are
hardliners who criticize our petition for not specifically using the
word "genocide." They are afraid that our apology could foil Armenian
demands for reparations. Such people merely see us as lackeys of the
Turkish state.

SPIEGEL: What kind of reactions have you received from Turkish
citizens.

Oran: Unfortunately, they have mostly been negative. Every day, I
personally receive around 200 pieces of hate mail. Many accuse me of
having insulted the Turkish people. But one has to bear in mind that
every child here learns that Armenians killed Muslims. Our education
is to blame for the country’s collective amnesia. In eastern Turkey,
though, it is true that, in the past, many people did suffer from
Armenian revenge attacks.

Interview conducted by Daniel Steinvorth

Photo: BASKIN ORAN
AP Baskin Oran, 63, is a political science professor at the University
of Ankara. In mid- December, he launched an online campaign together
with almost 1,000 Turkish intellectuals to gather signatures for an
apology to the Armenians for war crimes committed by the Ottomans
during World War I.

,15 18,598746,00.html

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0

Armenian President Visits Yerablur Military Pantheon

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT VISITS YERABLUR MILITARY PANTHEON

Noyan Tapan

Dec 19, 2008

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 29, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian government members
headed by the president Serzh Sargsyan on December 27 went to Yerablur
military pantheon and paid a tribute of respect to the Armenians who
laid down their lives for freedom of their Fatherland.

According to the RA minister of defence Seyran Ohanian, it has become
a tradition to visit the graves of their friends on the eve of each
New Year.

"We go to the graves of our comrades-in-arms every year. By doing so,
we as if wish them a Happy New Year," S. Ohanian said.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011064

Family Plans Fundraiser To Aid Search For Woman

FAMILY PLANS FUNDRAISER TO AID SEARCH FOR WOMAN

Windsor Star
December 27, 2008 Saturday
Ontario

The Windsor family of a 30-year-old woman who disappeared while
travelling in China is hosting a fundraiser Sunday in an effort to
boost the search for Ani Ashekian.

Ashekian, who grew up in Windsor and has been working in Toronto as
a paralegal, was last heard from on Nov. 10, after arriving in Hong
Kong. She had left for Beijing on Oct. 24 and was supposed to return
to Canada from Delhi, India, on Dec. 15.

Ashekian’s family members said there has been no activity on her
credit card since Nov. 10 and they are worried because she always
keeps in touch with them while travelling.

Ashekian’s older sister, Rosie Kampstra, said the family is raising
money to hire a private investigator to find Ashekian and bring her
home. A fundraiser will be held Sunday between 1 and 7 p.m. at the
Armenian Community Centre at 702 Pierre Ave. There will be food,
beverages, raffles and a silent auction. The family is asking for
a $20 donation at the door. If Ashekian is found without a private
investigator’s assistance, the money will go to missing children
services, Kampstra said.

Kampstra said Ashekian’s boyfriend, Wendell Walsh, is now in Hong Kong
looking for her. Hong Kong authorities are investigating Ashekian’s
disappearance and Foreign Affairs Canada is aware of the case. A
Facebook page, called Missing: Ani Ashekian, has been set up in hopes
of gathering any information about her disappearance.

Armenia Fund Donates Facilities To Public Television And Hospitals I

ARMENIA FUND DONATES FACILITIES TO PUBLIC TELEVISION AND HOSPITALS IN NAGORNO KARABAKH

armradio.am
26.12.2008 13:23

The Artsakh Public TV Company located in Stepanakert will start the
New Year equipped with facilities donated by the Hayastan Fund USA
West Coast affiliate.

The Director of the Artsakh TV Company pointed out that the existing
technical equipment, also donated years ago by the Hayastan Fund,
is now obsolete and frequently causes problems in broadcasting timing
and quality.

The US $100 000 worth equipment will enhance technical capacity of
the company; digital cameras, video and graphic server, audio mixers
and meter crane will improve service quality, which in its turn will
enable attract more audience.

The Public TV project is not the only initiative launched by
the Hayastan Fund within the infrastructure technology upgrade
project. Three ambulances funded by the Fund USA West Coast and French
affiliates have been donated to Askeran, Shushi and Martuni hospitals.

"Our goal is to support comprehensive development of communities, and
hence almost no sphere is left out of the attention of the Hayastan
Fund," says the Hayastan Fund Acting Executive Director Ara Vardanyan.

The Violated Right Of "A1+" Must Be Restored

THE VIOLATED RIGHT OF "A1+" MUST BE RESTORED

A1+
[06:26 pm] 25 December, 2008

Judge of the European Court of Human Rights Alvina Gyulumyan
touched upon the verdict reached by the EC for the lawsuit filed
by "A1+" during a press conference today. Gyulumyan noted that the
fulfillment of the verdict is mandatory and the Ministerial Committee
is following-up on the completion.

"The court reached a verdict. The Ministerial Committee of the Council
of Europe will determine how the verdict must be implemented and what
the requirements are for the country, not the court."

Gyulumyan also noted that the court takes into account the
socio-economic situation of the country when fixing the amount of
the fine.

Let us recall that "A1+" TV was shut down in 2002 and on June 16 this
year the European Court of Human Rights approved the lawsuit filed by
"Meltex" company and reached a verdict according to which the shutdown
of "A1+" independent television was against the 10th article of the
European Convention of Human Rights, which refers to the right to
freedom of speech.

"We believe that the state bodies have not made reasonable decisions
and this is the violation that gave citizens the chance to know why
this company was given an advantage and for the television station
to know the reason for no frequency so that we will not face this
problem during the next contest," said Alvina Gyulumyan.

Based on the verdict reached by the European Court of Human Rights, the
Armenian government had to pay 10,000 euros as compensation for court
expenses and 20,000 euros as compensation for damages caused to "A1+".

Do the payments make up for the government’s obligations to "A1+"
TV? In response to that, Alvina Gyulumyan said:

"The Ministerial Committee not only follows-up on the financial
compensation, but also plans measures to restore the right."

One of the journalists noted that not only does "A1+" not have the
right after the verdict of the European Court, but the government
has adopted a law according to which there will be no tenders until
2010. What must "A1+" do? Should it file a lawsuit? In response to
that, Alvina Gyulumyan said that "A1+" may file a lawsuit if it feels
that its right is violated by law.

FM: No single document can be adopted without consent of NK

Armenian FM: No single document can be adopted without consent of
Nagorno-Karabakh

2008-12-20 16:31:00

ArmInfo. Today, Minister of Foreign Minister of Armenia Edward
Nalbandyan, who is paying a working visit to Nagorno-Karabakh Republic,
met with professors and students of Artsakh State University.

ArmInfo’s own correspondent in Stepanakert reports that Nalbandyan
presented the current stage of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process. He
pointed out that during the last meeting of OSCE FMs in Helsinki the
conflicting parties confirmed their commitment to resolve the problem
peacefully in the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group on the basis of the
Madrid principles. Nalbandyan said that the key priority for the
Armenian diplomacy is the recognition of the right of the
Nagorno-Karabakh people to self-determination. "No single document can
be adopted without the consent of Nagorno-Karabakh," he said.

Beginning To Crack The Code Of ‘Junk DNA’

BEGINNING TO CRACK THE CODE OF ‘JUNK DNA’
By Faye Flam

Philadelphia Inquirer
/20081218_Beginning_to_crack_the_code_of__junk_DNA _.html
Dec 18 2008
PA

To scientists, it was a mystery. Most of the genetic material we
carry in our cells seemed to have no purpose.

It seemed so useless, some called it "junk DNA."

Weirder still, geneticists noticed that some of the junk has a life
of its own, copying itself, viruslike, and jumping around the DNA.

This phenomenon had never been documented in humans until geneticist
Haig Kazazian started studying boys with the blood-clotting disorder
hemophilia.

Over years of painstaking research, Kazazian, now at the University
of Pennsylvania, found that these straying bits of DNA can land in
important genes like so much molecular debris – leading to a few cases
of hemophilia, muscular dystrophy, and several other genetic disorders.

For his lifetime of achievements, he was given one of the highest
honors in his field last month: the Allen Award from the American
Society of Human Genetics.

Kazazian, 71, has no plans to slow down. He is investigating whether
this type of self-replicating junk DNA holds more power over human
illness than has previously been imagined. It might influence our risk
for cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, and other common conditions.

"The one thing that drew me to Haig is his intellectual curiosity
and his fearlessness," said geneticist John Moran, who studied under
Kazazian at Johns Hopkins University before becoming a professor at
the University of Michigan. "He took the field in a new direction –
he really was one of the pioneers."

Johns Hopkins genetics professor Aravinda Chakravarti said that while
geneticists looked at mice or fruit flies in search of clues to human
disease, Kazazian also worked the other way, starting by unraveling
mysterious medical cases to better understand how human DNA works.

Oddly, humans appear to carry much more DNA than we need. If you
stretched out the DNA in just one cell, it would extend six feet –
spelling out a four-letter code three billion letters long.

In a vast sea Only 1 or 2 percent of all that is made up of genes –
sequences that spell out recipes for a host of biological molecules
known as proteins.

These genes are embedded in all of this other DNA like islands in a
vast sea.

About a third of the other 98 percent of our DNA is made of "introns"
– stretches of code that are spliced out when it’s time to transcribe
the genes into proteins. The rest is the stuff formerly called junk.

If there are messages written there, they are not altogether
accessible. If the coherent 2 percent read like Harry Potter,
the so-called junk DNA could be the more opaque stretches of James
Joyce’s Ulysses.

Kazazian didn’t set out initially to investigate any of this. When
launching his genetics career in the 1960s, he wanted to work on
combating inherited diseases, such as hemophilia, muscular dystrophy
and thalassemia, a form of anemia.

In high school and college, he imagined that he would become a
doctor. That was the profession his father said he would have followed
had his family not been imprisoned in a Turkish concentration camp
in 1915 – along with thousands of other Armenians living in Turkey.

New vistas Kazazian’s father was 14 at the time. Both of his parents,
all of his siblings, and his grandmother died in Turkey. In the early
1920s, he came to the United States and became a rug merchant. Medicine
would have to wait until the next generation.

But Kazazian switched from medicine to genetics in the 1960s, inspired
by the new vistas of knowledge the field was opening up.

In 1969, he joined the faculty at Johns Hopkins, where he began
studying genetic diseases. He and other geneticists at the time were
finding that dozens of different errors in the same gene could lead
to the same disease.

He expected something similar when he started studying hemophilia,
which is caused by various defects in a gene called factor VIII,
carried on the X chromosome.

People with hemophilia often suffer bleeding into their joints,
Kazazian said. And even a simple dental visit can leave them with
profuse bleeding. Doctors eventually learned to treat the disease by
giving patients factor VIII from donated blood.

But in the 1980s, HIV invaded the blood supply, and soon AIDS began
to tear through the hemophiliac population.

Kazazian had come across three genetically unusual cases – boys with
hemophilia whose factor VIII gene was disabled by an invading piece
of stray DNA.

The invading DNA belonged to a specific category of the junk DNA
called a transposable element. These had been observed in plants,
where they had the power to act like a virus, copying themselves and
jumping to new parts of the genetic code.

Most human transposable elements belong to a family called line1
elements. In total, Kazazian said, we carry about 500,000 of them,
making up a whopping 17 percent of human DNA, a major portion of the
so-called junk. Most of these are inert, having lost their ability
to cut and paste themselves to new locations.

But a few are still capable of jumping around and causing trouble.

How had these line1 elements gotten into the boys’ factor VIII genes?

To figure it out, Kazazian was able to identify some unique stretches
of code in the line1 sequence affecting one of the boys.

Using what is called a genetic probe, he was able to find the same
sequence in a line1 element in the boy’s mother, but it was in a
different place, on Chromosome 22. (Human chromosomes are all assigned
a number except the sex chromosomes, which are labeled X and Y.)

In her case, it caused no problem. Kazazian said he suspected that the
line1 element jumped from her Chromosome 22 to the X chromosome either
in the mother’s egg cell or during an early stage in the development
of the embryo that became the boy.

The boy was 10 years old when Kazazian made the discovery. His case
was tragic, Kazazian said. During his teens he showed promise as an
actor, snagging a major role in the movie Lost in Yonkers. But as a
teenager, he acquired HIV from his treatment and died at 21.

Kazazian traced another hemophilia case to a jumping line1 element
and went on to find line1 elements lurking behind a case of muscular
dystrophy.

In 1994, he came to the University of Pennsylvania to head the genetics
department. He stepped down as director in 2006 but still retains an
active research agenda, supervising a coterie of scientists working
on line1 elements in animals and humans.

He is intrigued now by the possibility that active line1 elements may
copy themselves and invade DNA during human development, introducing
genetic variation within the same person’s DNA.

He said there were some tantalizing hints that in brain cells, this
process could spawn variations in personality and temperament. In
other parts of the body, it could leave some cells more vulnerable
than others to cancer.

Kazazian said he was sure that his life had been channeled in part
by his father’s ordeal in Turkey. "I always knew he had wanted to
become a doctor," he said. "I think he would have preferred that I
go into medical practice . . . but eventually he realized I had to
do my own thing."

http://www.philly.com/inquirer/front_page