President Sargsyan To Travel To Brussels

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN TO TRAVEL TO BRUSSELS

Panorama.am
16:32 11/05/2010

Politics

The newly appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of
the Kingdom of Belgium to Armenia Stephan de Locker presented his
credentials to President Serzh Sargsyan, President’s press office
reported.

President Sargsyan congratulated Mr. De Locker on assuming office
and voiced hope that he would make a considerable contribution to
the development of Armenia-Belgium relations.

President Sargsyan noted that Armenia is interested in reinforcing
the Armenian-Belgian cooperation in both bilateral and multilateral
formats. The parties signified the cooperation under the Eastern
Partnership Program. The interlocutors exchanged views on regional
issues.

Ambassador De Locker said the Belgian Government welcomes the Armenian
President’s efforts targeted at the normalization of relations between
Armenia and Turkey and expresses its support in this complex and
hard process.

At the request of the Ambassador, President Sargsyan presented
Armenia’s approaches over the current stage of the negotiations on
the Karabakh conflict settlement.

Referring to President Sargsyan’s upcoming visit to Brussels, the
parties expressed confidence that it would serve as an additional
impetus for further development of the Armenian-Belgian relations.

New Medical Plant To Be Built In Yerevan

NEW MEDICAL PLANT TO BE BUILT IN YEREVAN

ARKA
May 11, 2010
YEREVAN

Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan was present today at the foundation
stone laying ceremony for construction of a new plant in Yerevan to
produce disposable medical equipment.

Zhirayr Apoyan, head of SMT company, which is part of Russian Athena
Pallada company, said the first batch will be produced in the first
quarter of 2011. He said the plant will be producing syringes, blood
containers that do not need storage.

Zhirayr Apoyan said part of the products will be sold at local market
and other part will be sold abroad.

The plant will create about 800 new jobs with an average wage of
150,000 Drams or $380. Armenian economy minister Nerses Yeritsian
said the plant’s products will meet highest international requirements.

Volume Of State Duties In Audit Sphere Was About 5 Million Drams In

VOLUME OF STATE DUTIES IN AUDIT SPHERE WAS ABOUT 5 MILLION DRAMS IN JANUARY-APRIL

ARKA
May 11, 2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, May 11. /ARKA/. Volume of state duties charged from
audit organizations and private auditors was 4925 thousand drams
in January-April 2010 in Armenia, from which 4745 thousand drams
was charged from audit organizations and 175 thousand drams – from
private auditors.

Specialists providing auditing services paid penalty in the amount
of 705 thousand drams in the reporting period.

Armenian Ministry of Finance awarded 10 licenses for implementation
of auditing service during January-April 2010. Activity of one license
was terminated, another two were restored.

As of May 1, 2010, 34 licensed audit organizations and 9 private
auditors operate in Armenia.

AMIC special Info-Flash – 05/2010

AMIC’s Newsletter, Montreal,Canada
AMIC’s Info-Flash
2340 Chemin Lucerne # 30
Ville Mont-Royal, Quebec
H3R 2J8, Canada
Tel: 514-739-8950
Web:
Email: [email protected]

A special issue of AMIC Newsletter, May 2010

******************************

Info-Flash is reproducing below the full text of an interview made with Lord
Ara Darzi. The interview dates from January 2010 and the “reporter” is Dr.
Sonia Wartan, member of the “Great Britain Armenian Medical Association.” We
remind our readers that Lord Darzi was the main speaker during AMIC’s Xth
Medical World Congress held in New York in July 2009 (July 1-4, 2009.)
Info-Flash in its issue of September 2009, made a short presentation of the
communication given then by Lord Darzi on “Robotic Surgery.”

We are certain that all our readers will read with great interest the
following interview.

Interview with Professor the Lord Ara Darzi
Dr. Sonia Wartan reporting

Professor Lord Darzi was born on 7th May 1960 to Armenian Parents. He was
appointed as a consultant Surgeon at the age of 31. Darzi joined Imperial
College London in 1994, obtained his Professorship in 1996 and became the
Chair of Surgery and Head of Department in 1998. Darzi holds the Paul Hamlyn
Chair of Surgery at Imperial College London and the Institute of Cancer
Research. He is also an honorary consultant surgeon at St Mary’s Hospital,
and the Royal Marsden Hospital. He has held many senior administrative
appointments within the Faculty of Medicine at Imperial College, Research
Council, Editorial Board of Scientific Journals, and medical royal colleges.

Darzi’s main clinical and academic interest is in minimal invasive surgery
and allied technologies in which he and his team are internationally
recognized. He leads a team of researchers covering a wide spectrum of
engineering and basic sciences research topics including Medical Image
Computing, Biomedical Engineering, Clinical Safety, and Robotics. He has
published more than 450 peer-reviewed papers and published 7 books.
His work has received international recognition including many awards. He
has also delivered many prestigious and named lectures around the globe.
On 29 June 2007, Darzi was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State
(Lords) at the Department of Health by the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown. He
was created a life peer on 12 July 2007, as Lord Darzi of Denham. Lord
Darzi was asked to carry out a “wide-ranging review of the NHS”. His
review, High Quality Care for All along with High Quality Workforce were
published on 30 June 2008, which sets out how the findings relating to the
NHS workforce will be taken forward, and a consultation on a draft NHS
constitution.

Sonia Wartan

Thank you for taking the time in your busy schedule to talk to us.
I would like to start with the following:
I believe our readers will be very interested to know any new and exciting
surgical technologies in robotics that you are leading at present.

Ara Darzi

There are plenty, some of them were presented in the AMIC’s meeting in New
York. Robotics as we know it now is the tip of the iceberg, best described
as the first car ever on the road with breakthroughs coming at an ever
increasing pace. So its applications at present are very limited, but it
has opened a completely new platform of computer assisted surgery, this is
primarily because you are bringing the computer chip into the operating
theatre. Robots being used not just into the cavities like chest or
abdominal cavities but robots used intraluminaly through the mouth, nose,
transrectaly and the potential to do much more not just minimally invasive
but certainly what we call natural orifice trans-endoscopic surgery. We
have been involved in developing ‘snake like’ robots, funded by the Wellcome
Trust. There are also a number of other concepts in robotics that we are
very excited about and will materialise into the clinical use in the next
2-3 years, they are very much at an experimental stage.

SW
With your experience during your time as health minister, what are your
views on the health system that our children (and us during our retirement)
will be using? Would it be more or less like the present National Health
Service or would it be different? And how?

AD
In the United Kingdom the National Health Service has been with us for the
last 61 years. I do not envisage that ever changing and in actual fact I
think it is much more relevant post Obama than it has been before. Many
people here do not necessarily appreciate what we have in the UK as the NHS
has been with them their whole lives. Look at the debates in the United
States where 40-50 million people are un-insured with no access to care, I
think we have a very sound health system but at the same time we understand
that our system itself has challenges in improving the quality of care it
provides and we are tackling them. So I still believe that we have the best
system right here where we are. However, we need to start working on it
because there are still areas where we can significantly improve the quality
provided.

As far as society and the problems we all face getting older, I think the
challenges are different than the ones that faced the system when I was back
in training or in my early years working in the NHS. One interesting
statistic shows that most of us are living up to five hours a day extra.
Life expectancy when the NHS was created in 1948 has increased by 10 years.
That is because we embraced innovation, technology, new devices and new
treatments. I think we will see more of that, but there are challenges that
arise through the technology and science that has added years to our lives.
We have to start thinking whether we are also adding life to the years,
because older people might not have the quality of life that they are
entitled to and this is a real challenge. That is one example, the other is
long-term conditions. I do not think the future is a service entirely
focused on hospital provision; the future has to also be in community and
primary care, to build that service we need to see more resources and invest
this more in primary care and community services.

SW
Polyclinics featured as the way forward for an efficient primary care
delivery in your report on the NHS. This will give easy access to the
service that is available 8am to 8 pm and during the weekends. How
successful the implementations have been so far and are any lessons to be
learned from the experience?

AD
In London I have opened seven polyclinics and I am sure more are open now.
I think if we look at all the challenges facing us; aging population, long
term conditions, well being, prevention, all of those cannot just be
delivered in the large hospital setting. This has to also be in the primary
and community health care sector. There is plenty of evidence for this
argument. Starting with what we have at the moment, we have one of the best
primary care systems in the world. This primary care system has two
functionalities; firstly a treatment service, which is more or less what 80%
of the population needs, and it has a gate-keeping role, which is the
referral role. There is a tension between those two because to be a
gatekeeper you have to have a small number of general practitioners who know
their population well if you want to expand the treatment role. I strongly
believe that we should expand the treatment role in primary care because
there is no difference between somebody who qualifies from Imperial college
medical school London becoming a general practitioner or a surgeon because
they are equivalent. I think we need to give more diagnostic capabilities to
primary care, to enhance their ability in this area.
Lots of patients come to hospitals to see a specialist unnecessarily, a lot
of that could be done in primary care settings, but to do that you need a
larger population base because you can’t invest in diagnostics if you are
treating a list of 2000-3000 people. You need to come-up with a way, keep
the right size of population, small enough to keep the familiarity, but
expanded for the diagnostics. That is the concept of polyclinics.
Polyclinics are not single buildings, a lot of polyclinics we described are
a federated model where 5 practices come together and invest in a core
facility in diagnostics. Diagnostics is one arm, well-being, prevention,
social services, community services and schooling come under a holistic
approach and that is what a good community is all about. If you translate
policy into implementation you are always challenged, you will always get
different lobbies and people with different agendas. There are fantastic
federated models, G.Ps doing surgery and interventions. On the other hand
what I will not tolerate are these small single-handed practices in small
premises. One has to acknowledge that these people have done a lot of good
in their time for patients and for our communities but things have moved on,
even in my practice I am one of a team of 4 consultants and 2 nurses
specialist and a stoma specialist.

SW
As a professional, academic and international intellectual figure with
Armenian parents, I am sure our readers will be interested to hear about any
contributions to the Armenian health care system.

AD
I have been there twice and have operated on sick patients and I get a lot
of Armenian patients here. We have a PhD student from Armenia with us. That
was our idea to build a capacity of academics to go back to Armenia.
We are also contributing to training and we have done some live links with
university officers, skills training, sent virtual reality simulators for
training purposes, which I understand, is been actively used. I think more
could be done there in this respect.

SW
In your reviews “high quality care for all” and “High quality workforce” you
emphasis on quality in the NHS. In the present economic environment, how
would you envisage the delivery of high quality care with fewer resources?

AD
Well, I think you are right; we have made a fairly bold statement. Quality
will be the organising principle of the NHS, but at the same time quality
becomes more relevant in economic downturn. It is unlike other sectors; in
health quality may be cheaper. If you do something right from the first
time, it is much cheaper than treating some of the issues that will arise
later. Quality reinforces and also provides a greater momentum in an
economic downturn but it can mean different things to different people.
Quality is not just the consultation between the patient and me, quality is
all about the patient’s journey, and quality is also what the customer
thinks not just what the doctor thinks. As doctors we have to think about
the patient’s pathway of care as a whole.

SW
I enjoyed listing to your episode of dessert island discs on 22 June 08. I
very much enjoyed the very 1st and the last piece of your music choice.
They were Yekeghetsin Haikakan, sacred choral music by Vahan Tekeyan and the
logical song by “Supertramp.”

Would you share with our readers the reason for your choice?

AD
The first choice was because it reminded me of my childhood as a choirboy in
the Armenian Church; I had to listen to that every Sunday. The thing about
desert island discs is that you don’t just choose your favourite seven
songs; you need to pick-up songs which remind you of different decades of
your life. To be fair that is one of my favourite songs as well. Not many
Non-Armenians know about it and I think that Kirsty Young, the presenter of
the programme, was also quite touched by it.
The other song was the logical song, I pick it up in the context of what I
was doing at the time where a lot of things might not be logical to people
at the time but become very logical later. You need to invest in the
future.

SW
I note that you are the 1st surgeon ever granted an honorary fellow of the
Royal academy of engineering.
How important was this accolade to you?

AD
I am not sure whether many have been appointed since then but yes I was the
first one. It was an honour for me; I was always, up to the year before I
entered the medical school, very much geared up to becoming an engineer
because I came from a family of engineers. Engineering was more relevant to
me; I enjoyed visual and tactile tasks rather than being a prescriber.
However, I decided to do medicine and most of my research is in engineering,
computing and computer science. The honorary fellowship was a great
privilege to receive; it had a great value for me as it was from the
Academy.

SW
With your duties, do you have any hobbies or spare time?
What hobbies help you relax?

AD
I like boating; I enjoy the water when I can. I still go to Ireland for a
bit of boating. I like cooking but I find Armenian cooking much more
difficult than others. Cooking is fun and makes you switch off. I enjoy my
holidays with my family. I also do some exercise to keep fit.

SW
Do you have any favourite books?

AD
Yes plenty, probably the most relevant is “Yes Minister.” This is
interesting because it is not just a book. I was given this book at my
leaving party for my ministerial position; it was signed by all the civil
servants who I had worked with over the years at the Department of Health.

Dr. Sonia Wartan
MB ChB, FCARCSI
Consultant in Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine
Royal Gwent Hospital, Newport, Gwent, UK

www.amic.ca

Czech Prime Minister To Visit Armenia Soon

CZECH PRIME MINISTER TO VISIT ARMENIA SOON

ARKA
May 10, 2010
YEREVAN

Armenian prime minister Tigran Sarkisian said Sunday his Czech
counterpart, Jan Fischer, will visit Armenia in the near future. Asked
by journalists to comment on his last week trip to the Czech republic
and his talks with Jan Fischer Tigran Sarkisian said the meeting
opened a new page in Armenian-Czech relations.

‘During our talks we have managed to specify the agenda of our
bilateral relations in economic and political cooperation,’ Sarkisian
said, adding that a specified agenda would make Jan Fischer’s visit
more effective and would allow to achieve agreements that would in
turn create favorable conditions for economic and political partnership
of both countries.

He specified that the countries will sign agreements concerning
protection of investments and avoiding double taxation.

There are 11 companies in Armenia with Czech capital and 10 plants
in the Czech republic with Armenian capital. Armenian exports to the
Czech republic this year have amounted to $103,600 while import from
it totaled $1.1 million.

Minister Nalbandian To Meet The Minsk Group Co-Chairs InBrussels

MINISTER NALBANDIAN TO MEET THE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS INBRUSSELS

Armradio.am
10.05.2010 12:10

The Foreign Minister of Armenia, Edward Nalbandian, will leave for
Strasbourg on May 11 to participate in the meeting of Foreign Ministers
of the Council of Europe member states.

Minister Nalbandian will leave Strasbourg for Brussels, where he
will participate in the sitting of the North Atlantic Council in 28+1
format. The process of implementation of the Armenia-NATO Individual
Partnership Action Plan will be discussed at the sitting.

The Armenian Foreign Minister will meet the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs
in Brussels.

On May 9 Solemn Events Organized In Stepanakert And Shoushi Dedicate

ON MAY 9 SOLEMN EVENTS ORGANIZED IN STEPANAKERT AND SHOUSHI DEDICATED TO THE VICTORY HOLIDAY, THE DAY OF THE ARTSAKH REPUBLIC DEFENSE ARMY AND THE LIBERATION OF SHOUSHI

NOYAN TAPAN
MAY 10,2010
STEPANAKERT

On 9 May President of the Artsakh Republic Bako Sahakyan partook at
the solemn events organized in Stepanakert and Shoushi dedicated to
the Victory Holiday, the Day of the Artsakh Republic Defense Army
and the liberation of Shoushi.

The Head of the State together with second President of the Republic
of Armenia Robert Kocharyan and second President of the NKR Arkady
Ghoukasyan visited Stepanakert memorial complex, laid garland and
flowers to the monument immortalizing the memory of martyrs perished
in the Great Patriotic War and Artsakh liberation struggle.

Thereupon the President visited Shoushi where he laid garlands and
flowers to the pedestal of the tank-monument and the monument of
Vazgen Sargsyan. Bako Sahakyan was present at the solemn ceremony
of handing over keys of the newly built dwelling house in Shoushi to
families of the NKR Defense army servicemen.

According to the report by central information department of the office
of the Artsakh Republic President, on the same day in connection with
the 9 May Triple Holiday the President partook at the solemn event
organized at the Stepanakert stadium where he delivered a speech.

The leadership of the Artsakh Republic, official delegation of the
Republic of Armenia at the head of the National Assembly speaker Hovik
Abrahamyan, representatives of the Diaspora, as well as guests from
the abroad partook at the solemn events.

Vivacell-Mts Hosted Schoolchildren

VIVACELL-MTS HOSTED SCHOOLCHILDREN

Lragir.am
10/05/2010

VivaCell-MTS readily opens its doors for the schoolchildren. The path
Armenia’s leading mobile operator has passed and its achievements
were revealed to the schoolchildren of the secondary school number
83 after Hambardzum Galstyan.

Any step aimed at making the future of the coming generations more
rational and at promotion of the country’s development is most
welcomed. VivaCell-MTS is ready to cooperate with those who share
this position. The visits of schoolchildren to the VivaCell-MTS
headquarters have become a good tradition.

"A clever person is the one who thinks of tomorrow today. Most of those
who study in secondary schools make the choice of future profession
either by following others’ advice, opt for one occasionally, or
do that based on personal preferences. The choice will be easier to
make, if you are given a chance to communicate with companies working
in various spheres while in school. As a rule the most realistic
impression is formed when exploring and discovering the field in
person," said VivaCell-MTS General Manager Ralph Yirikian.

"VivaCell-MTS supports this model of cooperation with the sphere
of education, because we are confident, it can best serve to the
formation and efficient operation of the job market in what refers
to the preparation of specialists on demand," concluded Mr. Yirikian.

The discussion that evolved during the meeting as well as the
tour in VivaCell-MTS headquarters helped schoolchildren get better
understanding of both the Company’s activities and the specifics of
telecommunication and information technologies.

Astarjian: The Peddlers Of Ankara

ASTARJIAN: THE PEDDLERS OF ANKARA
Dr. Henry Astarjian

0/astarjian-the-peddlers-of-ankara/
Mon, May 10 2010

In his very recent press conference-which he held after a round of
meetings with the Washington establishment, the Armenian president and
foreign minister, and other participants in the Nuclear Proliferation
Conference-he behaved like Hoja Nessretin who, pretending to be a
businessman, bought a goat for a certain price at one end of the
bazaar and sold it for the same price at the other end.

When asked the rationale behind it, he said, "El beni alis veriste
gorsun" (Let people see me doing business).

This is precisely what Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and
his boss Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the two peddlers of fake merchandise,
did in the bazaars of Washington. They bought and sold political
ribbons by the mile-ribbons extending from Armenia to Azerbaijan,
to Iran to Pakistan to Iraq, to Palestine and Israel, and to the
Silk Trail, leading them in the company of the West to their origins:
resource-rich Central Asia. And America in its naivete is buying what
they are selling.

Erdogan and Davutoglu, desperate to find a solution to the "Armenian
Problem," have now decided to bring the fight to us, "the Ottoman
Diasporans" (a Turkish characterization). They are hoping to find
some Armenians or Armenian organizations that are receptive to their
way of thinking and to their plans for Armenia. They may be lucky
and find some who makes gestures and compromises on some issues,
but never on the issue of the genocide.

They are launching this new strategy knowing full well that their
maneuvers in shaping up the debate is dead on arrival. They know the
position of the "Bad Armenians." They know our role in blocking the
outcome of the deceitful Turkish-Armenian protocols. They know our
work in exposing past and present Turkish atrocities. They know that
we will pursue genocide recognition until they confess to the crime
committed by their fathers, and grandfathers. And they know that we
will not give up an inch of our confiscated land of Western Armenia,
which was proscribed by President Woodrow Wilson.

The peddlers’ recent political offensive against the Bad Armenians has
boomeranged. It has crystallized Armenian thinking, and united us. The
divide and conquer tactic has not worked, and is doomed to fail.

The diaspora’s cry echoed in Armenia and they responded favorably. Now
Davutoglu and Erdogan, acting like Davut Pasha and Recep Pasha of
the Ottoman era, had better realize that there are no Good, Bad,
or So-So Armenians. There are only Bad Armenians.

Davutoglu must find another way to peddle his ribbons. Perhaps he
should color them red, blue, and orange.

Whether the United States accepts the genocide as genocide does not
change reality-that what the Ottoman Turks committed was genocide,
and what the Erdogan-Davutoglu government claims as the "continuation
of the Ottoman Empire" is guilty of covering up the first-degree
murder of an entire nation, a crime indeed. Turkey cannot claim
selective inheritance of its Ottoman past; they must accept the bad
with the good.

A few hours ago, I watched a TV interview with Erdogan conducted by
Christiane Amanpour on CNN. The man sat there telling lie after lie,
distorting facts about every topic, including their obvious decision
to U-turn their state ship towards home, the Islamic berth.

Erdogan said, and I am paraphrasing, that previous Turkish governments
had ignored their neighbors, but we are now paying attention to our
neighborhood. We are on good terms with our neighbors to the south,
the east, the west, and the north.

Oh what a lie! How has he had good relationship with Armenia? By
blocking passage of goods to the landlocked people of Armenia? By
forcing a protocol down Armenia’s throat? By supporting the aggressions
of Azerbaijan in Karabagh and with pogroms in Sumgait?

He said that Turkey has lived in peace and harmony with all its
neighbors. To prove his good intentions towards Armenians, he said he
has tolerated the presence of tens of thousand of illegal Armenians
working and living in Turkey. He said he showed his benevolence
toward Turkish Armenians ("Of course these are our citizens, with
whom we have no problems") by ordering the renovation of the Akhtamar
Church in Van. (That may be partly true. Ramzy Kartal, a Kurdish
parliamentarian, who represented Van in the Turkish Parliament, told
me that Akhtamar was in his district, and that he had done everything
to preserve it). Erdogan did not mention that the renovations were
to attract tourists and to appear tolerant of Christian symbols.

Anticipating the next question, he displayed a masked face when
Amanpour asked him about the Armenian Genocide. He said his country
never committed atrocities in its history. Oh what a lie! They are
doing it right now to our friends and partners in destiny-the Kurds,
in Anatolia. They have killed and maimed, and raped, and displaced
some three million men, women, and children from their villages-three
million who have found refuge in strange places like Western Turkish
cities and Istanbul, not the deserts of Der Zor. They have done it
not only to us, but to the Muslim Arabs, the Christian Assyrians,
and other minorities as well. If they hadn’t committed atrocities
"in history," then why did Sherif Hussein of Hejaz revolt against them?

Didn’t Baghdad revolt? Didn’t Damascus revolt? Didn’t Cairo revolt?

He knows he is lying. He knows he is blowing dust in the eyes of his
audience. And yet he continues to peddle his fake merchandise in the
souks (markets) of the world.

While emphatically denying the genocide, he contradicted himself
when he said: "We are of the opinion that this matter belongs to the
historians. We have opened our archives and everyone is invited to
look and see for himself. Whatever these investigative committees say
we will accept." He did not mention how incriminating documents have
already vanished from the archives.

So, it is with this mental frame and political credibility that the
duo Turkish peddlers are trying to convert us, the Bad Armenians,
into Good Armenians-in an attempt to continue the denial of the
genocide and blocking America’s acceptance of the genocide as genocide.

Davutoglu, in case it hasn’t sunk in yet, I want you to know that the
10 million of us in the Armenian Diaspora, and Armenia, and Karabagh
are "bad."

As the Turkish saying goes, "Anliana sivrisineg saz, anlamiana davul
zurna az."

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/05/1

A Kid’s Book Sale -Exhibition In Yerevan

A KID’S BOOK SALE -EXHIBITION IN YEREVAN

Aysor
May 10 2010
Armenia

Today in the children’s library after Khnko Aper took place the 4th
sale-exhibition of the children’s books. On the exhibition were
presented a series of publications which suggest books which are
colorful and full off images.

The presented pavilions are full of different kinds of books, with
contemporary approaches and the most important thing is that all those
things are presented with a design which will attract the children
and will be pleasant for them.

As Levon Ananyan, the chairman of the Union of the Armenian Writers
mentioned the good book brings up a generation and encouraged the
children to read a lot.

"After the lessons and the games, whenever you find free time read
books, because the book is a knowledge, we passing the future of our
country to you", mentioned L. Ananyan.

There were also children’s writers who also attached importance to
the role of the book in the life of people and advised the children
to read books.

On the event were present schoolchildren, teachers as well as
children’s writers.