Foreign Ministry Of Armenia: Moscow Declaration Signed By Armenian,

FOREIGN MINISTRY OF ARMENIA: MOSCOW DECLARATION SIGNED BY ARMENIAN, AZERI AND RUSSIAN PRESIDENTS DOES NOT IMPLY DOMINANCE OF ANY OF INTERNATIONAL PRINCIPLE

ArmInfo
2008-11-03 18:00:00

ArmInfo. Moscow Declaration signed by Armenian, Azeri and Russian
presidents does not imply dominance of any of international principle.

"Yesterday the President of Azerbaijan signed a document that does
not give priority to the principle of territorial integrity over the
other principles of the international law," the head of the Mass Media
Department of the Press Service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Armenia Tigran Balayan said when asked to comment on the statement
of his Azeri colleague Khazar Ibragim, who said that the principle
of territorial integrity was prior to all the other principles of
the international law.

"The Aim Of My Visit To Yerevan Was To Create A New Atmosphere"

"THE AIM OF MY VISIT TO YEREVAN WAS TO CREATE A NEW ATMOSPHERE"

AZG Armenian Daily
01/11/2008

Armenia-Turkey

Turkish President Abdullah Gul said at a reception held in the
presidential residence dedicated to the 85th anniversary of foundation
of Turkish Republic.

"Creation of the new atmosphere will contribute to resolution of
available issues between the sides", he added.

To the question about concrete steps towards regulation of relations
with Armenia including opening of borders in the nearest future,
Turkish President mentioned that it is needed to be constructive.He
called everybody to support creation of the new atmosphere.

According to Abdullah Gul, everything has changed in the Caucasus
and rearrangement of powers is taking place.

"I am hopeful that there will be good developments", underlined
Turkish President.

EBRD To Pay $7 MLN To Acquire 25% + One Share Stake In Araratbank

EBRD TO PAY $7 MLN TO ACQUIRE 25% + ONE SHARE STAKE IN ARARATBANK

ARKA
oct 29, 2008

YEREVAN, October 29. /ARKA/. The European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) is paying $7mln to acquire 25% plus one share stake
in Araratbank, a privately-owned Armenian bank, to support its plans
for further expansion. EBRD Country Director for the South Caucasus
Mike Davey and Araratbank’s principal shareholder Barsegh Beglaryan
today signed a relevant agreement in Yerevan, reported Araratbank’s
CEO Ashot Osipyan.

EBRD will make the final payment in a month, Osipyan said, adding
Araratbank’s capital will reach $24mln against current $13mln. The
bank plans to increase its capital to $50mln in three years.

The banker approved of EBRD’s investments in post-soviet banks which
improve internal policies and procedures, corporate governance and
existing management structure. "I think the agreement is a chief
achievement for the bank and a high appraisal of our activities in
the past years," Osipyan said, adding Araratbank has done considerable
to improve Armenia’s banking system and economy.

Barsegh Beglaryan, president of Flash Ltd, is Araratbank’s 70%
shareholder. EBRD holds 25%+1 of the bank’s shares, with the rest
of the stock being in free circulation. The bank currently has 86
shareholders.

Araratbank (formerly Haykap Bank) was established on September 2,
1991. On October 31, 1996, the bank got N4 License.

Araratbank’s assets totaled 27.9bln drams as of September 30. The
bank’s total capital reached 5.5bln drams, with Q1-Q3 profit amounting
to 552.6mln drams.

According to ARKA, the bank ranks 14th in terms of assets and total
deposits and 15th in terms of total capital. The bank ranks 10th in
terms of profit.

On October 7, 1992, Armenia with EUR 10mln worth share became EBRD
member.

EBRD holds shares in Byblos Bank Armenia, Armeconombank and
ProCreditBank.

EBRD is one of the major partners of Armenia with â~B¬202 worth
investments in 52 projects.

–Boundary_(ID_8WlxKACugwnPejF0FFaJ9w)- –

RZD Can Join Iran-Armenia Link Construction But Won’t Finance It

RZD CAN JOIN IRAN-ARMENIA LINK CONSTRUCTION BUT WON’T FINANCE IT

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.10.2008 17:17 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russian Railways (RZD) can join construction of
the Iran-Armenia link but won’t finance it, President of the Russian
monopoly Vladimir Yakunin said.

"Armenia supposes that a new link connecting it with Iran is
essential. However, concession funds and RZD investments will not be
spent on construction. I don’t think the Armenian side will be the only
investor. To all appearance, it will be a financial consortium. We
are ready to consider the possibility of our participation but other
financial sources will be used for it," he said, RIA Novosti reports.

State – Church – Society: Issues Of Spiritual Security

STATE – CHURCH – SOCIETY: ISSUES OF SPIRITUAL SECURITY
Gagik Terteryan

cs&nid=1413
27 October 2008

As it is known the first and foremost task of national security
is preservation of national system of values, and, first of all,
its spiritual component. At the same time, real spiritual values are
universal, and, accordingly, much significant than the national ones,
that’s why their preservation is the matter of national security. While
considering the issue from this standpoint, it is worth taking
into consideration that spiritual security of Armenia is not only
conditioned by mere "Armenian" motives. The considerable part of
our spiritual values has a character common to all mankind and,
in that way, makes a part of the world civilization system. In its
turn, it means that spiritual values of Armeniancy are subjects of
global civilization. This circumstance is extremely important in the
plane of world outlook, but, at the same time, is not a guarantor of
security of our system of values.

The spiritual sphere today is politicized as ever. Making unsteady
and disorganizing a nation-competitor’s system of values has become
one of the main objectives of up-to-date information warfare waged in
the context of civilization conflicts. The tendencies of present day
developments have come to prove that overall and especially Christian
systems of values are subject to serious threats. Thus, one should in
particular come to the conclusion that the issue of overall spiritual
system protection of Armeniancy has it share of rights and obligations.

How serious the threats directed against humanity are has come to
be proved by the fact that some analysts already consider up-to-date
political developments from post-historical, so called eschatological
(apocalyptical) standpoint. Such a standpoint is of methodological
significance as in that way an attempt is made to unify material
and spiritual in the political sphere, or theoretically get rid of
such an assertion that politics and morality are incompatible. On
this occasion let’s mention that today as well, according to some
classics of the strategy, "a big strategy" is to enclose "morality,"
otherwise it will not be effective.

Ensuring of our spiritual security requires involvement of all the
potential of Church, State and Society. At that, it is known that
semantic correlation of these subjects (except for separate examples)
is still up to the mark.

In the past there were known cases when State and Church signed
agreements – a concordat which was called to regulate relations between
spiritual and secular authorities and ensure harmony. However, on
the present stage the agreement reached between them is not enough:
today it is difficult to imagine any kind of harmony without society
with its moods and frames of mind. At that, spiritual and secular
perceptions in today’s Armenian society (especially in the absence
of overall national ideology) are manifold and often contradicting,
which makes the agreement formation atmosphere even more complicated.

In addition to the above mentioned let’s mention that in the society
are introduced ideological regulations which don’t coincide with
formation of harmony between spiritual and secular components. In
particular one of these concepts is "civil society". Welcoming
manifestations of civil activity, self-organization and zeal
ascribed to such a society, we are also anxious that such a form
and content of a society organization supposes certain atomization
of a society, aggravation of contradictions among its various
segments. We suppose that some regulations of "civil" society also
include elements of totalitarian ideology as they try to assert in
peoples’ minds inevitable antagonism in society-authorities relations,
thus reminding Bolshevist class approaches. Certain issues are also
raised in connection with absolutization of the term "human rights,"
which also often make a ground for radical, formalized interpretations.

However, it is obvious that confrontation to these foreign challenges
and making use of opportunities flowing out of these challenges is
realizable only in case of sufficient internal spiritual resources
the deficiency of which is obvious today. One should only say that
the world combination "spiritual power" is almost not used in our
information plane. It is partially conditioned by passive position of
Armenian Church to the society’s actual problems. At the same time
Armenian Statehood plays the most important role in the spiritual
sphere and in this connection it is worth mentioning the theological
concept "katekhon" interpreted as containment of permissiveness which
is considered to be the holly responsibility of the State. Today it
is necessary to restore this role of secular authority: the state must
undertake the whole complex of secular functions of ensuring spiritual
security. It is to be mentioned that Armenian Church, Armenian State
and Armeniancy as a whole are endowed with such qualities which are
necessary to form and preserve the society’s spiritual core.

In particular, Armenian Church is one of those exclusive churches
for which it is alien both secularization (mortification) inherent
to western churches (especially the protestant ones) and orthodox,
extremely conservative approaches of eastern churches. In other words,
our centuries-old spiritual-church culture is more than concordant
with the challenges of up-to-date globalization. Displaying a striking
example of original Armenian civilization our Church must play the
main role in the future multi-civilization world order, and its
mission is not only limited by Armenia and Armeniancy. In that way
Armenian Church is for centuries engaged in the issues of organizing
Armeniancy, according to the present day terminology, is competitive
and, accordingly, is obliged to undertake the role of our society’s
spiritual leader.

Mission of spiritual and secular authorities is to serve the
society. In its turn the society’s spiritual and intellectual substance
is devaluated if it doesn’t follow its national-spiritual essence and
doesn’t serve its nation. Armenian Church and Armenian State are to
work out and carry out projects which will make spiritual atmosphere
in the society and ensure ideological harmony.

Other issues of author ON THE COMPLEX OF INFERIORITY AND "TECHNOLOGICAL
SYSTEM" [04.10.2007] Information implication of the war [09.10.2006]
Russia: Problems in The West and the prospective in The East
[06.05.2006]

http://www.noravank.am/en/?page=analiti

Emeritus Prof celebrates Saroyan centennial on world scale

Targeted News Service
October 22, 2008 Wednesday 7:32 AM EST

EMERITUS PROF CELEBRATES SAROYAN CENTENNIAL ON WORLD SCALE

FRESNO, Calif.

California State University Fresno issued the following press release:

One of the William Saroyan centennial’s busiest celebrants is
Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, the Haig & Isabel Berberian Professor of
Armenian Studies, Emeritus, at California State University, Fresno,
who has traveled extensively marking the renowned author’s life and
works.

Saroyan was born 100 years ago in Fresno and died there in 1981. In a
career that included writing short stories, books, plays, even song
lyrics, Saroyan won an Academy Award and a Pulitzer Prize (which he
refused). He was also an artist and filmmaker.

Often his stories and characters grew out of his early years in
Fresno’s Armenian community, but they also were shaped by visits and
living in Europe, San Francisco, Hollywood and New York.

In sharing his expertise on the author, Kouymjian, whose home is in
Paris, has experienced something of Saroyan’s peripatetic life. And
his travels won’t end until spring. His "Year of Saroyan" began in
April, when he participated in and helped Fresno State professor
Barlow Der Mugrdechian organize an international symposium, "William
Saroyan at 100," at Fresno State.

In July, Kouymjian traveled to Yerevan, Armenia, for the Golden
Apricot Armenian International Film Festival to screen Saroyan’s film,
"The Good Job," subtitled in Armenian, and the Oscar-winning "The
Human Comedy." He also presented a workshop on Saroyan and cinema.

In September, Kouymjian discussed Saroyan’s literary work during
Armenian Culture Days at the Vigd?s Finnboggad?ttir Institute of
Foreign Languages at the University of Iceland in Reykjav?k. He
returned to Paris to present a paper, "Saroyan as Painter," at a
conference of the Association Internationale des Etudes Arméniennes at
the Sorbonne.

Oct. 8-10, Kouymjian lectured and also chaired two roundtable
discussions at an international Saroyan conference he helped organize
in Yerevan, Armenia. Four of the five participants in the Saroyan
symposium at Fresno State joined him in Yerevan.

Attendance by Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, the newly appointed
American ambassador, Mary Jovanovich, and Hasmik Pogosyan, Armenia’s
minister of Culture, indicate Saroyan’s stature in his ancestral land.

In Yerevan, Kouymjian also instructed young theater directors on how
to direct and stage Saroyan’s later plays. Fresno State director Ed
EmmanuEl staged one such a work, "Slaughter of the Innocents," at the
same time Kouymjian was lecturing in Armenia.

Another Kouymjian project is "Saroyan in Paris," a tribute to be held
on Dec. 1 at the Musée de la Vie romantique. The museum is in the 9th
Arrondisement (called Opéra district) near the apartment where Saroyan
spent part of nearly each year from 1960 until just before his death.

Scheduled are a dramatic reading by Reine Bart?ve of Saroyan’s, "The
Armenian Mouse," a piano concert of his music by Vahan Mardirossian,
who played in the Philip Lorenz Keyboard Concerts series at Fresno
State in 2005, and a screening of the Saroyan film, "The Good Job."
Kouymjian will present an illustrated talk about Saroyan’s time in
Paris.

Also on Kouymjian’s Saroyan schedule is a photographic exhibit in
Istanbul, Turkey, late this year, a March tribute in Amsterdam and
writing an introduction to the publication of Saroyan’s early novel,
"Follow," by the Press at California State University, Fresno and The
Fresno Bee

Kouymjian retired last year from director of the Armenian Studies
Program at Fresno State, which he established in 1977. The campus also
is home to the Center for Armenian Studies, which offers an
opportunity for students and faculty to interact.

For more information, call 559.278.2669.

OSCE Minsk Group remains main Karabakh settlement format – diplomat

Interfax News Agency, Russia
Oct 23 2008

OSCE Minsk Group remains main Karabakh settlement format – diplomat

BAKU Oct 23

The OSCE Minsk Group remains the main format of Karabakh settlement
negotiations, Russian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Vasily Istratov told a
Thursday press conference in Baku.

"The Minsk Group has become very experienced in the settlement of this
conflict and has put forward many settlement proposals," he said.

The Minsk Group has been the main negotiating format for the past 15
years, "but that does not mean that other formats should be rejected.

It is most important that every format has the right direction," the
diplomat said.

"The role of Turkey is mounting, and other regional countries accept
that," he said. The wish of Turkey [to mediate] does not contradict
the general settlement policy, he added.

"There may be plenty of various formats; they supplement one another,
overlap or have parallel development, but, luckily, all of them have
the right direction," Istratov said.

"New settlement options have emerged," he said. "No one gained from
the latest developments in the Caucasus. Thus, it is necessary to spur
on the search for a Karabakh solution without waiting for the problem
to resolve itself. A solution is only possible through consent," the
diplomat remarked.

te dp

Two Candidates Run For Mayor’s Elections In Aparan And Talin And One

TWO CANDIDATES RUN FOR MAYOR’S ELECTIONS IN APARAN AND TALIN AND ONE IN ASHTARAK TO BE HELD ON OCTOBER 26

Noyan Tapan
Oct 20, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 20, NOYAN TAPAN. On October 26, local self-government
elections are scheduled in the communities of the Aragatsotn region,
including community head elections in the towns of Ashtarak, Aparan,
and Talin.

As Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed by Tatev Ohanian, the
Spokesperson of the RA Central Electoral Commission, two out of three
non-partisan candidates registered for Ashtarak Mayor’s elections,
Ashot Azizian and Grigor Baloyan, have withdrawn their candidatures
in the established term.

So, the only candidate for Mayor’s elections is current Mayor Gagik
Tamazian.

ANM member Alexan Avetisian has withdrawn his candidature for Aparan
Mayor’s elections. Current Mayor, RPA member Gor Abrahamian and
non-partisan Razmik Petrosian run for the elections.

Two out of four candidates for Talin Mayor’s elections, non-partisans
Armen Sargsian and Edward Grigorian, have withdrawn their
candidatures. Current Mayor, non-partisan Mnatsakan Mnatsakanian and
RPA member Gurgen Grigorian continue the election campaign.

On The Bosporus, A Scholar Tells Of Sultans, Washerwomen And Snakes

ON THE BOSPORUS, A SCHOLAR TELLS OF SULTANS, WASHERWOMEN AND SNAKES
By Sabrina Tavernise

New York Times
October 24, 2008
United States

ISTANBUL — Murat Belge is one of Turkey’s most important
intellectuals. He is also — when the mood strikes him — one of this
city’s most erudite tour guides.

Johan Spanner for The New York Times Murat Belge. – Photo

Enlarge This Image

Johan Spanner for The New York Times Boat passengers on the Bosporus
learn about yalis, 19th-century wooden waterfront houses that are
replete with stories.

So when he boards a boat on Sunday mornings for a trip up the
Bosporus to talk about his beloved city, several hundred people line
up to listen.

His interest is history, and his talks are bursting with 19th-century
gossip. The paranoid sultan who lived directly on the sea to be able
to control it. The maid who went into prostitution to support her
mistress, whose Albanian husband had stolen the couple’s money. A
Crusades-era tree that was cut down in 1934 for a gardening school.

History can be slippery in Turkey, which became a modern state in
1923, assembled from the ethnic patchwork of what remained of the
Ottoman Empire. The official version is kept under lock and key,
and writers can be punished for trying to open it.

Mr. Belge (pronounced BEL-geh), a prominent leftist who teaches
comparative literature at Bilgi University in Istanbul, knows this
well. He was imprisoned for two years during a military coup in the
1970s, and has been prosecuted (but not jailed) in recent years,
on grounds including columns he wrote in support of a conference on
Armenians in the early 20th century, the time of the genocide of the
Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire.

But that does not seem to have dented his irreverence, which flowed as
freely as the anise-flavored liqueur during lunch at a fish restaurant
during a tour this summer.

"We have a very unhealthy relation with our history," he said. "It’s
basically a collection of lies."

In Turkey’s painful birth, at the end of World War I, its founder,
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, disassembled the structure of the Ottoman
state, which had been in place for 600 years. Instead of forging a
national identity based on the Ottomans, he emphasized "Turkishness,"
reaching back to the Hittites in 2600 B.C.

"To set up a state is easy, but to create a nation is extremely
difficult," Mr. Belge said. "We are still suffering the consequences."

But confrontation is not his objective. On the contrary, his strong
affection for this beautiful city — piled on top of itself throughout
the centuries — and his loving attention to detail gives audiences
a fresh look at their own environment.

The journey begins in Europe (part of the city is in Europe and part
in Asia), not far from Dolmabahce, an Ottoman palace built in the 19th
century when the empire was already in deep decline. The balconies,
Mr. Belge said, were brought to Turkey by European designers.

"Tanzimat emerges from that peninsula," Mr. Belge said, motioning
to a green finger of land, where minarets of the 17th-century Blue
Mosque spike the skyline.

Tanzimat, a 19th-century period of reform, was a brief stab at
modernization when the Ottomans established a Parliament and, briefly,
a Constitution, as well as giving more rights to ethnic and religious
minorities.

It was a time of brisk international trade, with far more ships coming
to port than in the early years of the Turkish republic, he said,
adding, "Ottomans were much more globalized in that respect."

The Ottomans wanted no competition to their power, so in contrast
to European society, there was no class of landed gentry, Mr. Belge
said. People could quickly gain wealth and status.

So it was for one illiterate military officer, who became chief
commander of the army. He signed his name using the Arabic script
numbers 7 and 8, and a few squiggles in between, because that was what
writing looked like to him. His wife, a washerwoman, never became
accustomed to her important new status, and embarrassed hosts by
refusing to sit down in their presence, something that was unacceptable
for servants at the time.

The wooden waterfront mansions, or yalis (pronounced YAW-luhs),
are among Mr. Belge’s favorite features of the Bosporus. He lived in
one for a summer in 1974 and has been trying ever since to unearth
their stories.

This, in fact, is how he became interested in giving tours. As a
professor and writer, he likes sharing what he knows, so he began to
lead walking tours. By the 19th century, even tradesmen were living
in the waterfront yalis. Mr. Belge pointed out one that is referred
to as the "shoe-leather maker’s yali."

The snake yali got its name when a sultan spoke admiringly about it
to a servant. The man happened to know the owner, and fearful that
the yali would be taken by the sultan, replied that it looked nice
from the outside, but was infested with snakes.

Mr. Belge pointed to a court office that had burned. "In Turkey,
there is a habit that justice buildings burn so that the archives
disappear," he said mischievously. Then he indicated an empty space
where a yali had been destroyed by an out-of-control ferry. "Living
on the Bosporus is good, but there are consequences," he said.

Ashgabat Opened III International Publishing Exhibition

ASHGABAT OPENED III INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING EXHIBITION

RIA Oreanda
Economic News
October 8, 2008 Wednesday
Russia

Ashgabat . ">OREANDA-NEWS . October 8, 2008. The III International
Publishing Exhibition and the International Book Fair have been
opened at the Exhibition Centre in Ashgabat. The organizers of the
three-day forum held in accordance with the Resolution of President
Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov are the Turkmen State Publishing Service
and the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Turkmenistan.

The guests from 22 countries worldwide including Ukraine, Germany,
Turkey, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, China, the United Nations,
Austria, South Korea, India, Armenia arrived in Ashgabat to take part
in the book forum. They will present the latest technical achievements
in printing industry and demonstrate typography innovations for books
and printed publications. The separate expositions will focus on an
important component of printing business paper production.

The Russian Federation sent most numerous delegation of over a
hundred of participants. Nowadays print workers of Turkmenistan and
Russia are bound with long-term partnership rapidly developed on the
mutually advantageous basis. The Russian delegation represents the
large printing companies Rospechat, the Interregional Association
of Print Workers, the Association of Book Publishers of Russia, the
Guild of Periodical Publishers. These companies together with the
Fund of Social and Economic and Intellectual Programmes of Russia will
attend the events held at the schools and libraries in Ashgabat in the
framework of the printing forum. The programme includes discussions,
meeting with the authors, roundtables and literary soirees.

This book exhibition is held in the period of reforming the national
education system, and therefore the guests of the forum are Russias
largest publishers of academic and scientific literature in engineering
sciences including the Nauka Publishing House.

The specialists of the Nauka Publishing House together with the
colleagues from the publication services of Moscow Institute of
High-Power Engineering, Moscow State Technical Institute and others
will make the presentation of scientific literature at the Turkmen
Polytechnic Institute.

The Turkmen publishers including the Ashgabat Printing House, the Book
Chamber, the editorial self-sustained association, the velayat printing
services and printing houses will widely present their products. Over
20 entrepreneurs engaged in publishing business will participate in
the exhibition. The specialists as well as the people and guests of
Turkmenistan can visit the Exhibition during three days.