OSCE MG Co-Chairs Arriving In Region June 25

OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS ARRIVING IN REGION JUNE 25

PanARMENIAN.Net
21.06.2008 13:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Ambassadors
Matthew Bryza of the United States, Bernard Fassier of France and
Yuri Merzlyakov of Russia are arriving in the region on June 25.

The mediators will start their visit in Azerbaijan and depart for
Armenia on June 27.

In completion, they will pay a visit to Moscow to hold a number
of meetings.

Afterwards, the OSCE Minsk Group members will meet in expanded
composition in Vienna, the Azeri Press Agency reports.

ANCA: Sen. Menendez Cross-Examines Ambassadorial Nominee for Armenia

ARMENIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF AMERICA
1711 N Street NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE
June 19, 2008
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Email: [email protected]

SEN. MENENDEZ CROSS-EXAMINES AMBASSADORIAL NOMINEE FOR ARMENIA

— Senators Obama, Boxer and others to Submit Written Questions

WASHINGTON, DC – Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) castigated the Bush
Administration’s policy of Armenian Genocide denial, today,
dramatically pressing U.S. Ambassadorial nominee to Armenia Marie
Yovanovitch regarding the Administration’s refusal to properly
characterize Ottoman Turkey’s systematic destruction of its
Armenian population as a genocide, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).

The Associated Press, in an article today entitled "Nominee Refuses
to Call Killings Genocide," noted Senator Menendez’s "intense
questioning" and the "prosecutorial style" of his inquiries during
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing. The
AP article, which was also carried by MSNBC and other media
outlets, quoted ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian as saying,
after the hearing, that, "we were troubled by Ambassador
Yovanovitch’s refusal to offer any meaningful rationale for the
Administration’s ongoing complicity in Turkey’s denials."

Sen. Menendez, who had placed two consecutive holds on previous
ambassadorial nominee Dick Hoagland for denying the Armenian
Genocide, meticulously questioned Yovanovitch by presenting
historical State Department documents from the time of the Genocide
and comparing those statements with her opening remarks.

"The US government – and certainly I – acknowledges and mourns the
mass killings, ethnic cleansing and forced deportations that
devastated over one and a half million Armenians at the end of the
Ottoman Empire," said Yovanovich in her opening testimony.
Following these remarks, Sen. Menendez presented the nominee with
several documents quoting U.S. Ambassadors to the Ottoman Empire
Henry Morgethau and Abram Elkus, and other U.S. diplomats who served
in the region at the time of the Armenian Genocide and documented
the destruction of the Armenian population.

Juxtaposing the eyewitness accounts of these U.S. officials with
the definition of the crime as outlined by the U.N. Convention on
the Punishment and Prevention of the Crime of Genocide, Sen.
Menendez asked whether the President’s annual April 24th remarks,
Yovanovitch’s prepared statements, and her responses regarding U.S.
diplomatic reporting matched the U.N. Convention, to which the U.S.
is a party. Amb. Yovanovitch sidestepped this question, stating
instead that it is the President and the State Department who set
the policy of defining historic events. In her testimony, she
publicly confirmed that "It has been President Bush’s policy, as
well as that of previous presidents of both parties, not to use
that term."

Sen. Menendez responded, "It is a shame that career foreign service
officers have to be brought before the Committee and find
difficulty in acknowledging historical facts, and find difficulty
in acknowledging the realities of what has been internationally
recognized." He went on to state, "And it is amazing to me that we
can talk about millions, a million and a half human beings who were
slaughtered, we can talk about those who were raped, we can talk
about those who were forcibly pushed out of their country, and we
can have presidential acknowledgements of that, but then we cannot
call it what it is. It is a ridiculous dance that the
Administration is doing on the use of the term genocide. It is an
attempt to suggest that we don’t want to strain our relationships
with Turkey… I believe acknowledging historical facts as they are
is a principal that is easily understood both at home and abroad.
So while the Administration believes that this policy benefits us
vis-a-vis our relationship with Turkey, I think they should also
recognize that it hurts our relationship elsewhere and it tarnishes
the United States’ history of being a place where truth is spoken
to power, and acknowledgment of our failures of the past make us
stronger, not weaker; recognizing the evils of the past do not trap
us, but they set us free."

The complete exchange between Sen. Menendez and Amb. Yovanovitch
can be watched on the ANCA website at:
ses.php?prid=3D1516

"We join with Armenian Americans across the nation in thanking
Senator Menendez for his courage and determination in holding the
Bush Administration accountable for its deeply flawed policy of
enabling Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide," said ANCA
Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "Today’s Senate hearing with
Ambassador Yovanovitch, much like yesterday’s testimony before a
U.S. House panel by Assistant Secretary Fried, confirms the sad
reality that our government has allowed a foreign nation to impose
a ‘gag rule’ on America’s right to speak truthfully about the
Armenian Genocide."

"We look forward to carefully reviewing Ambassador Yovanovitch’s
responses to the written questions that will be posed by Members of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in order to get a fuller
understanding of her ability to effectively represent U.S.
interests and American values as our Ambassador to Yerevan," added
Hamparian.

Sen. Ben Cardin (D-MD) who chaired the confirmation hearing
concurred with Sen. Menendez, noting that "there is no question in
my mind, that facts speak for themselves, and what happened was
genocide… In Armenia we need an ambassador… who understands
the historical facts, and has the historical facts correctly
stated." Sen. Cardin also questioned Amb. Yovanovitch on the
recent elections in Armenia and urged the Ambassadorial nominee to
Austria to help secure Austria’s support for Turkey’s membership in
the European Union.

Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) released a statement to coincide with
Amb. Yavanovitch’s confirmation hearing, noting her outrage at the
firing of former U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans for speaking
truthfully about the Genocide. "It is bad enough that Armenians
everywhere have to endure a U.S. President who refuses to
acknowledge the Armenian Genocide despite earlier promises to the
contrary. But Armenians were also recently forced to witness the
dismissal of a career U.S. diplomat, Ambassador John Evans, who
expressed his personal view that it is long past time that the
United States call one of the greatest events of deliberate mass
murder in the 20th century by its rightful name – genocide… I
could not agree with Ambassador Evans more."

Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) has submitted a set of questions for the
record in which he reaffirmed the importance of recognizing the
killing of 1.5 million Armenians from 1915 to 1923 as genocide.

The full text of Amb. Yovanovitch’s testimony is provided below.

#####

Testimony of Marie L. Yovanovitch
Ambassador-Designate to Armenia
June 19, 2008
Senate Foreign Relations Committee

Mr. Chairman, members of the Committee, thank you for the
opportunity to appear before you today. I am honored by the
confidence that President Bush and Secretary Rice have shown in me
by nominating me for the post of U.S. Ambassador to Armenia. If
confirmed, I pledge to build on my 22 years of service to our
country to protect and defend American interests in the
increasingly vital region of the South Caucasus.

Only in the United States would it be possible for someone like me
– a first generation immigrant to the United States — to appear
before you as an Ambassadorial nominee. My father fled the Soviets
and then the Nazis. My maternal grandfather escaped from Russia
after the revolution and raised his family in wartime Germany,
where my mother grew up stateless. My parents brought me to this
country in search of a safe harbor, a harbor that provided freedom
and opportunity, dignity and respect.

The United States offered our family a second chance, just as so
many Armenian-Americans received a second chance in our country
after they were driven out of the Ottoman Empire. In no way do I
want to equate my own family history with that of Americans of
Armenian heritage here in the United States. But I do wish to
convey that I understand from personal experience that the events
of the past can haunt the present and that individuals, born a
generation or more after apocalyptic events, seek recognition of
the injustices of the past.

The U.S. government – and certainly I – acknowledges and mourns the
mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and forced deportations that
devastated over one and a half million Armenians at the end of the
Ottoman Empire. The United States recognizes these events as one
of the greatest tragedies of the 20th century, the "Medz Yeghern" or
Great Calamity, as many Armenians refer to it. That is why every
April the President honors the victims and expresses American
solidarity with the Armenian people on Remembrance Day.

The Administration understands that many Americans and many
Armenians believe that the events of the past that I have referred
to should be called "genocide." It has been President Bush’s
policy, as well as that of previous presidents of both parties, not
to use that term. The President’s focus is on encouraging Turkish
citizens to reconcile with their past and with the Armenians. He
seeks to support the painstaking progress achieved to date.

President Bush believes that the best way to honor the victims is
to remember the past, so it is never repeated, and to look to the
future to promote understanding and reconciliation between the
peoples and governments of Armenia and Turkey. A key part of that
effort is to end Armenia’s isolation in the region by encouraging
normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey and the
opening of their land border. The Armenian government has
requested that we facilitate this process. It will not be easy nor
will it likely be quick, but there are some hopeful signs.
President Bush believes that normalization can and should be
achieved. The result would be an improvement in the life of every
Armenian.

If I am confirmed, my priority would be to support the efforts of
the United States in working towards regional stability by
facilitating Armenian-Turkish relations and a peaceful settlement
to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan. Armenia is
isolated from its second largest neighbor, Turkey, and every year
scores of soldiers die along the line of contact with Azeri forces
in Nagorno-Karabakh. The status quo in both situations is
unacceptable, a deterioration unthinkable and clearly not in U.S.
or regional interests.

Some progress has been made in both areas recently. Success would
bring security to Armenia and great economic opportunities. This
is a goal worth pursuing, and, if confirmed, I would give it my
utmost attention — not only by supporting government-to-government
discussions — but by promoting people-to-people contacts and
partnerships, and other cross-border and regional initiatives.
Contact begins to build trust, and trust is the necessary first
step to reconciliation and conflict resolution.

Promoting good governance in Armenia is also a key U.S. goal. The
conduct of the recent presidential elections and their violent
aftermath in which ten individuals died were deeply disturbing.
The path towards democracy is rarely fast or smooth. Our aim is to
help the Armenian government and the Armenian people restore
democratic momentum and to renew their own stated mission of moving
forward to become a country where government institutions are fully
transparent and accountable and where rule of law is accepted by
all.

It is important that the Armenian government support an
independent, objective, and inclusive investigation into the
fateful events of March 1 and release those who have been held on
politically-motivated charges. It is important that the judiciary
becomes truly independent. It is important that freedom of
assembly, freedom of the press, and freedom of expression are fully
protected. It is important that the Armenian authorities show the
will to move forward with a reform program that is responsive to
the legitimate desires of the people and that inspires public
confidence in the country’s political and economic processes.

We are looking at how our democracy programs can be more targeted –
– better supporting civil society, watchdog organizations, the
independent media, and development of the internet. Our programs
will continue to focus on anti-corruption efforts and strengthening
the rule of law.

The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Agreement in 2006
demonstrated our belief that Armenia was fulfilling MCC’s required
criteria in the three broad areas of ruling justly, investing in
people, and economic freedom. MCC is a performance-based program
for governments that demonstrate commitment in these areas. In
Armenia, the MCC Compact is a poverty-reduction program that
focuses on building roads, improving the irrigation infrastructure
and training farmers. The program will eventually benefit 750,000
people, 75 percent of whom live in rural areas.

This is an important program, and we have urged the new Armenian
government to act quickly to improve its standing in the 9 of 17
indicators that it currently fails. The U.S. government is
committed to assisting Armenia in this process, but it is up to the
Armenian government to take the necessary steps, so that the
Compact program could continue.

The Armenian economy has seen great success and double digit growth
over the last six years. Our assistance programs — through
technical assistance to improve the regulatory and legislative
framework, through strengthening of the private sector, and through
training in many sectors of the economy — have contributed at
least in part to this success.

Over the last four years, Armenia has contributed to global
security by providing peacekeepers in both Kosovo and Iraq. In
fact, the size of Armenia’s contingent in Kosovo was doubled just
last week. By supporting Armenia’s defense sector reform and
greater cooperation with NATO, we enhance Armenia’s ability to
assist in peacekeeping operations and to work with coalition forces
to combat global terrorism and make the world a safer place.

Armenia remains committed to overflight and landing rights for U.S.
military aircraft and has worked to improve its capacity to combat
both money laundering and terrorism financing. These are efforts
we have strongly supported. Our assistance for Armenia’s work to
strengthen its borders and combat illegal trade in arms, weapons of
mass destruction, drugs, and people is important to regional
stability.

Our relationship with Armenia is broad and deep, both on a
bilateral level and between our peoples. The United States was
among the first to recognize Armenia’s independence, and the first
to establish an Embassy in Yerevan. Over the past seventeen years,
the United States has provided close to $2 billion in assistance
and materially improved the lives of millions of Armenians. While
challenges remain, we expect our partnership will continue to
strengthen, and that we will continue to cooperate in all areas.

Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee, if confirmed, I will do
everything in my power to ensure that U.S. interests are promoted
and protected, that the bilateral relationship flourishes, and that
Armenia’s isolation ends and regional stability is enhanced.

Thank you.

#####

Note to the editor: Photos available upon request.

http://www.anca.org/press_releases/press_relea
www.anca.org

Armenian Conversebank Suggests Summer Discount Campaign

ARMENIAN CONVERSEBANK SUGGESTS SUMMER DISCOUNT CAMPAIGN

ARKA
June 17, 2008

YEREVAN, June 17. /ARKA/. Armenian Converse Bank is holding a new
campaign called "Hit Summer" for those opening savings accounts in
the bank.

The campaign lasts from June 16 to August 16. Those opening savings
accounts in Conversebank in this period will receive a Visa credit
card without monthly service fee during the first six months, as well
as a deposit safe box at 50% discount.

Three months after the account is opened the owner will have a chance
to get privileged individual loans – at 1% lower interest rate than
the bank’s regular rates.

"Opening savings accounts in summer people will both keep in the bank
their savings in the holiday season and jewellery in the boxes. Time
after time Conversebank carries out encouraging measures, and this
is the second such campaign this year.

The first such campaign called "Zartonk" was carried out in spring
in which 600 people opened deposit accounts, 42.6% of them first-time
customers.

The Conversebank closed joint-stock company was registered on December
20, 1993. Armenian-Argentinean businessman Eduardo Eurnekyan acquired
ownership of the bank in February 2007.

According to the data of March 31, 2008, the bank’s assets totalled
64.8bln drams, with the total capital estimated at 11.99bln drams,
net profit in the first quarter 2008 at 682.4mln drams and for the
year of 2007 at 1.4bln drams. The bank operates 23 branches. ($1
-305.37 AMD).

Temporary Committee Set Up

TEMPORARY COMMITTEE SET UP

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on June 17, 2008
Armenia

During the extraordinary session convened by the initiative of the
MPs, yesterday, the parliament passed the draft decision on "setting
up a temporary committee to investigate the grounds of March 1-2
developments".

93 MPs voted for the draft decision authored by MPs Victor Dallakyan,
Samvel Nikoyan, Naira Zohrabyan, Hovhannes Margaryan and Artashes
Shahbazyan. No against votes and no one abstained.

No one was present from "Heritage". Which means, the only
pro-oppositional faction thus refused to express its stance towards
the initiative aimed at mitigating the post-election tension created
in the country.

For the formation of the NA temporary committee, according to the
decision each parliamentary faction represented two MPs. Thus Samvel
Nikoyan and Hermine Naghdalyan will represent the Republican Party,
Artashes Avoyan and Hovhannes Margaryan – "Orinats Yerkir" Party,
Artashes Shahbazyan and Artsvik Minasyan – ARFD, Aram Safaryan
and Naira Zohrabyan will represent Bargavach Hayastan Party in the
temporary committee.

For the representation of the six MPs not included in the factions
one MP was nominated for each seat. 87 MPs supported the candidacy
of MP Lyova Khachatryan elected by the majority electoral system from
constituency 14.

According to the decision, after the formation NA temporary committee
will elect a chairman and vice chairman from its staff. After which it
will invite Levon Ter-Petrosyan and other extra-parliamentary political
forces to participate in their works, with the right to a consultative
vote. It is up to the committee to decide this list. Only one-one
representatives from those political forces included in the list will
have the right to participate in the session of the committee.

The temporary committee, in essence, will act four months or a bit
more. On October 25, during the plenary session the committee must
report about the results of the activity, represent conclusions about
the violence, the police operation and the death circumstances. As
well as to propose options to exclude the repetition of similar
developments.

It is supposed that NA temporary committee will have 11 members. But
because of the attitude of the members of "Heritage" party most
probably only 9 people will have to implement the before mentioned
huge work.

Chairman of the Standing Committee on State-Legal issues Davit
Harutyunyan said he believes "Heritage" party will participate in
the works of the temporary committee. "Some minutes back the National
Assembly voted for the formation of the temporary committee. "It is
too early to conclude that the faction that didn’t participate in the
voting won’t participate in the activity of the committee. I believe
they will.

It is a part of a political process and I don’t think it is right to
keep them away from the process.

Moreover because Levon Ter-Petrosyan himself expressed readiness
to participate in the works of NA temporary committee, by his
representative.

In my view from the political point of view it is not right to miss
this opportunity given by the Committee.

RA NA Envisages To Adopt Statement Concerning Fulfilment Of Suggesti

RA NA ENVISAGES TO ADOPT STATEMENT CONCERNING FULFILMENT OF SUGGESTIONS OF PACE RESOLUTION 1609

Noyan Tapan

Ju ne 16, 2008

YEREVAN, JULY 16, NOYAN TAPAN. At the special session convened on
June 16 on the initiative of the MPs of the RA National Assembly
the parliament started the discussion of the draft statement of the
National Assembly on "The Fulfilment of the Suggestions of Resolution
1609 of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe". In the
draft statement it is mentioned, in particular, that "the National
Assembly hopes that the PACE position will be favourable with regard to
the fulfilment of the suggestions of the resolution and the further
normal activities with the Parliamentary Assembly will continue,
as after the adoption of the resolution: within two months, concrete
steps have been taken in Armenia for the purpose of the implementation
of all the suggestions of the resolution, consistent work is being
carried out and time is necessary for the recording of the results."

"Those processes are directed at the preservation of stability,
deepening of democracy, improvement of the national legislation and the
protection of Human Rights and Freedoms in the Republic of Armenia,"
is said in the draft statement composed of 19 points.

Among the steps implemented up to now importance has been attached,
in particular, to the initiative of the creation of the Public Council,
the reforms of the legislation regulating the spheres of the Electoral
Code, TV and Radio, as well as to the creation of a commission in the
direction of the strengthening of the independence of the RA Judicial
system and an NA Ad hoc Commission on the Study of the March 1-2 events
and their reasons. It is also mentioned in the draft statement that
for the purpose of the implementation of Point 2 of Resolution 12,
with which it is suggested that people detained for apparently false
and political motivations should be immediately released, the RA
Prosecutor General’s Office has officially declared that there are
no people detained for political motives. In general, 72 people or
62.6 percent of those detained have been set free, as of this moment.

According to the information provided to a Noyan Tapan correspondent
by Styopa Safarian, the secretary of the only opposition faction of
the National Assembly: Zharangutiun (Heritage), the position of the
faction with regard to the draft statement is very negative. He also
mentioned that the representatives of the political coalition, who
are the authors of the draft statement, could at best apply to the
leadership of the Council of Europe with a letter of such contents
and not adopt a statement.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=114554

This Is Where The Rights Of Each Individual End

THIS IS WHERE THE RIGHTS OF EACH INDIVIDUAL END

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on June 14, 2008
Armenia

`I have announced many times that I am going to protect our citizens’
right to express their protest. And as you see, people now express
their protest on television and in the printed press; and a
demonstration is one of the forms of expressing a protest.

We all must realize that our rights cannot be more preferable than the
rights of others. The rights of each of us end where the other people’s
rights begin. We must realize this,’ President SERGE SARGSYAN mentioned
yesterday during the meeting with the police officers.

Senator’s Bill To Assist Student’s Residency Fight

SENATOR’S BILL TO ASSIST STUDENT’S RESIDENCY FIGHT

Coalinga Record
June 11 2008
CA

FRESNO (AP) — Sen. Dianne Feinstein is introducing a private bill
to try to keep the valedictorian at Fresno’s Bullard High School from
being deported.

Seventeen-year-old Arthur Mkoyan’s 4.0 grade-point average qualified
him to enter one of the state’s top universities. But he and his mother
were ordered back to Armenia after their last appeal for asylum failed.

The family fled from what used to be part of the Soviet Union and
has been seeking asylum since 1992.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement gave the family an extension until
June 20 so Mkoyan could attend his graduation ceremony on Tuesday.

Feinstein introduced a private bill Tuesday that would provide Mkoyan,
his mother and father with permanent residency.

Russia’S Best-Known Investment Banker, Ruben Vardanian, On Building

RUSSIA’S BEST-KNOWN INVESTMENT BANKER, RUBEN VARDANIAN, ON BUILDING TRUST IN A FAST-MOVING WORLD

Knowledge@Wharton , PA
June 11 2008

Troika Dialog is the oldest and largest private investment bank in
Russia, with core lines of business in capital markets, investment
banking, asset management and alternative investments. Ruben Vardanian
has been chairman of the board of directors and CEO of the Troika
Dialog Group since 1992. The company was founded in 1991. Born in
Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, Vardanian graduated from Moscow
State University in 1992, and completed post-graduate training with
BANCA CRT in Turin, Italy, and Merrill Lynch’s Emerging Markets
Training Program in New York City. In 2006, he became the founding
president of Moscow School of Management Skolkovo. Wharton management
professors Valery Yakubovich and Michael Useem spoke with Vardanian
about entrepreneurship and education in Russia. An edited version of
the conversation follows.

Yakubovich: Where did Troika Dialog come from?

Ruben Vardanian: I was a student in Moscow University’s economics
department in 1990 when everybody realized something was going to
change in our country. I said to myself, "We are changing from one
system to another system. Which element are we missing?" That’s when
the government planning system was replaced by the financial system’s
markets. I said, "It’s a new industry, and nobody knows what will
happen and how the markets will develop, but the Russian financial
industry will be like a normal international industry."

I wanted to do something around this, and my vision was very simple:
Russia will become part of the global world. Foreign investors will
invest in Russia. We need to find out how to provide services to
them, because they need us to understand what’s going on in Russia,
and there are not so many people who can do that. It was not just
a question of knowing English. There was also a mental difference
[to explain to clients], especially in Russia in the 1990s.

I was young, and I saw I had a unique opportunity, because
international businesses are built around reputation and professional
skills, not around your political assets or capital assets, which
I didn’t have any access to at that time. I said to myself, "I can
build the right company with the right vendors." This is one of the
basic principles I used in the beginning.

Yakubovich: How did Troika Dialog capture that vision?

Vardanian: We put forward three principles in 1991, which
continue today in our business. They are all very simple, nothing
scientific. First, we said we are long-term oriented, which was
quite unusual in Russia, especially at that time. For example,
we are the only ones in Russia who hired Coopers & Lybrand [now
PricewaterhouseCoopers] in 1991 to perform an international audit
confirming our losses in the first year. That was the kind of long-term
commitment we made to ourselves and our industry. We did lots of things
people did not usually do in Russia in the 1990s. We ran the company
using international standards, not benchmarking ourselves against
[companies] around us in Russia.

The second principle says we are a client-service company. It’s unusual
to explain in Russia that you are a client-service company, because
client service was never a key aspect of our country; industrial
production was the key…. Our proprietary position was very small
[at that time], and I continued telling my people, "We are servicing
the client." It’s a very important point, which again, in the 1990s,
was not so obvious when everything was unstable, and nobody cared
about the client.

The third principle was this: I said to myself, "I want to respect
myself, and I want to respect my people, my country, my competitors,
my clients." So I want to build this respect, and I want people to
enjoy working together. It took us a lot of effort to convince people
to trust each other in business, because the level of trust in Russia
in the 1990s was very low, when the old system collapsed. Building
a partnership in Russia, where nobody believed in partnership, was
a challenge.

I wanted to change that perception, that you can trust a 24-year-old
Armenian guy and operate in a professional, international way. I think
it was good motivation for all of us to try to convince people this
was possible.

Useem: So having built Troika Dialog from the start, you created a
skill set, but when you took over the former Soviet insurance company,
Rosgosstrakh, presumably you needed a different set of leadership
tools. What were the similarities and differences in the leadership
styles you used for both organizations?

Vardanian: It was a very unique experience for me. This former Soviet
company had 30 million clients and 1,000 employees, and the average age
[of employees] was 53. The company had basically lost its market; it
was close to bankruptcy and it was alive only because the government
allowed it to be. It was a challenge for us, saying to ourselves and
others, "We believe it can be recovered," while other people said,
"There is no chance." So we had to change perceptions.

It was important to say, from the first day, what is the goal? What
will be our rules of internal relationships? What will be our channels
of communication? What will be our motivation and compensation
system? It was very different from Troika. I will be honest; it
was challenging for me to understand that the system of partnership
[we used in Troika], the system of collegial consent, didn’t work
[in Rosgosstrakh.] It was organized much more like an army or
a bureaucratic system. At Troika I have a meeting every Monday
morning with all my colleagues, and we know everybody personally. At
Rosgosstrakh, it was different. People worked in other regions of
Russia, and they didn’t know each other at all.

But what I did was the same. I traveled a lot, and I remember I went to
one of the biggest cities in Siberia, Krasnoyarsk. The director there
said it was the first time in the 85-year history of the company that
the general director came to that office, and it was not a small city.

I took the whole management team to travel around all of Russia’s
regions, trying to explain what we were doing and how we would do
it. I remember the business planning process: It took me two months,
with my management committee members spending all weekend with each
region, going line by line with them. They were shocked when they
saw the level of communication and commitment from our side.

The key element was committing ourselves fully to the ambition of
being number one. And it happened very quickly. When I came to work
with Rosgosstrakh, it had $200 million in premium collections a year,
for a company with 30 million clients. When I left in two-and-a-half
years’ time, it was $1.3 billion in premium collection. Of course
the market was much more favorable then; it was a good market. But
it was interesting for me to learn that even with a different system
and different people, you can continue if you have a clear goal and
a clear vision, and you are constantly delivering what you promised.

It is a long process: It’s still not over. My partner who worked
with me at the time has continued struggling to change the company,
and I think he’s doing great. But I see what is possible to achieve
even in old Soviet-system institutions, just by building trust and
constantly delivering on that trust.

Yakubovich: You said you wanted to build Troika Dialog as a clean,
trust-based business, and it seems like that effort was recognized
pretty quickly.

Vardanian: I think it was seven or eight years, so not very quickly.

Yakubovich: Maybe for Russian standards that is a long period,
but here I think it is very fast in terms of how you managed to
establish yourself. To many observers, you proved that a businessman
in Russia doesn’t need to be a criminal; at least, here in the West,
that stereotype exists. Did you face pressure to become a criminal,
and if so, what skills did you use to deal with those pressures?

Vardanian: First of all, I want to say I’m not an angel, and I live
in Russia, where everything is transforming, and I have not done
everything perfectly. But I am proud I have continued to live, all 17
years, without bodyguards, never fearing that my life or my family’s
lives are in danger. I always know I can become more transparent, more
public; for example, I always pay my taxes immediately. In the 1990s
that was difficult because you paid cash salaries to people. Otherwise
you’d be out of the market.

What standards you set is always your choice. I remember in 1993, we
didn’t have too much revenue, and one of my sales people came to my
office and said, "Ruben, we have a couple of clients who want to get
from us a guaranteed return, around 50%." Other banks were providing
300% or 600% return at that time because there was huge inflation and
everybody was promising that. But these clients were asking for only
50%. I said, "We can never guarantee a return — even at 50%."

Looking back today, that seems easy to say, but at the time it was
quite tough. We didn’t know if we would have money to pay salaries
at that time. But I knew it would be wrong, and I knew sooner or
later we would be paid back for it. This is why you need to have a
dream. You need to have a vision. You need to understand why you’re
saying "no." You need to understand what kind of things you will do
and what kind of things you will not do.

It’s very important to be honest with yourself and with your
colleagues. Again, people ask me often about the mafia or the
government. I can tell you: Seventeen years I’ve been in business in
Russia, dealing with lots of cash, and we never had any people who came
to us with crime, and we never had any tax police problems. Part of
it is, in the early days, we didn’t make too much money. Honestly,
if you compare us with some of our competitors in that period,
we were not very well known; we were not even number two. I think
we’ve always looked like strange people doing strange things at the
wrong time. A client once told me, "Ruben, you’re a smart person,
but you’re doing the wrong things. Now is the time to take assets,
not plan for the long-term."

It’s very important to believe inside yourself that ethical behavior
will pay you back. The 1998 default was very difficult for me, not
because we lost money, but because I realized how it would impact
society, how people would leave Russia. You can’t screw everybody
and not think about the long run. It was a very difficult time for
me to manage.

Useem: When you joined Troika back in 1991, you were age 22, so you
did not have a lot of experience, either in Russian industry or in
banking. In major Russian companies these days, I understand there is
still a tendency to avoid hiring managers over age 40 because they had
come of age in the state-run economy and couldn’t adjust to the demands
of the free market. Yet last year you hired a new bank executive
director, Andrei Sharonov, who was in his 40s and had worked for most
of his life for the government. Could you talk about these generation
gaps and how you put people of different ages to work at Troika?

Vardanian: I started working at Troika when I was 22, and I was one
of the youngest people; I think the average age then was 27, 28. Now
Troika has 1,500 people working for it, but the average age continues
to be 27, 28, and I am now one of the older people, close to 40.

But I believe the Troika model is still correct. I’ve always hired
people with a high experience level. I was very lucky to get good
managers. I got people who trusted me, who liked my ideas and who then
brought in much more experience than I had. They came from Wall Street
and McKinsey and different industries, and they have been my mentors
and partners. I learned a lot by working with people with gray hair:
In fact, it’s a very good combination.

One of the elements of Troika’s success has been multiculturalism. We
always have 30 to 40 nationalities working in the local company. So
we’ve always worked with people of different ages and cultures. One of
my biggest challenges has been how to bridge the culture differences so
we can accept each other and work together. Because we always had two
models. One was the Russian company saying, "These Westerners don’t
know anything about Russia." And Westerners came to Russia saying,
"We’re trying to teach them, and they don’t want to listen." So I
would say it’s not just the generation or age issue, it’s more about
cultures and nationality and experience.

But back to your question. Our basic model is, "Bring young people." We
just started our summer class for trainees with 170 people, of which
I assume about 60% will stay and work in Troika. Most of our partners
started at a young age. We have a guy running a key business who is
28, and that is fine with us, absolutely.

Yakubovich: What’s interesting about your hiring of Andrei Sharonov is
that he’s coming from the government and, to the best of my knowledge,
he worked for the government all his life.

Vardanian: Fifteen years, yes.

Yakubovich: What does he bring from that government experience? The
perception is your bank is different and doesn’t want people with a
lot of baggage from the old system or bureaucracy. Could you clarify?

Vardanian: The first time we hired a person from government, which
was quite unusual, was Oleg Yuguin, who was the deputy minister of
finance, the best chief economist. We have been lucky to hire the
best professional people — who are honest and have high ethical
standards and are well-known in the market.

Hiring Andrei Sharonov was a big advantage for us because he was one of
the most dynamic ministers trying to reform our country. He brings a
systematic view about the government and how it is trying to convert
the country to a more open market economy. He’s also experienced
at managing many projects and different groups of clients. We choose
people not always by the position they hold, but also by their personal
chemistry, so we find people who accept Troika’s way of doing things.

I remember I had to fire one of the most professional people we had in
our office, because she was not accepting that culture. She told me
[that on] the Chicago Bulls basketball team, people hate each other,
that Michael Jordan and Dennis Rodman never spoke to each other,
and they still win games. To be honest, I would prefer not to win,
if it meant souring relationships. So people like Oleg Yuguin and a
couple others are unique. We all knew they were Troika people — very
professional with a lot of loyalty. Not so many Russian government
officials are like that.

One of my goals has always been to bring different parts of the elite
together, to interconnect the government elite and the industry elite
in Russia, because right now, it’s very badly organized. The same
with the educational elite and the cultural elite. I think we’ve been
isolated from one another for the last 15 years. A lot of obstacles
and slowing down of good opportunities for Russia comes because of
not knowing each other, or not trusting each other. We have these
perceptions: Every government official is corrupt, and every business
person is a jerk. These perceptions are very difficult to change if
you don’t know each other. I let people know: You can come and work
at Troika, and maybe five or 10 years later, you can go back and work
for the government; there will be no problem for you.

Yakubovich: You also have an ambitious vision to build a premier
Russian business school. You want Skolkovo, the Moscow School of
Management, to become one of the top 20 business schools within 10
years, and you want to establish very high standards for students and
faculty. Of course there are many Russian students at business schools
here in the U.S. now. How would you convince a Russian student to study
at Skolkovo instead of the top business schools in the U.S. or Europe?

Vardanian: The people who want to go to America for their studies
are not the people we want to attract, because we’re trying to send
a message that the world is changing. Before, the model was very
simple. All the best people in the world wanted to study in America
or Europe because they wanted to study at top schools and get the
opportunity to stay and work in those countries.

Now what’s happened during last five years, the schools that attract
our people realize they are attracting people who want to get rich
on the down side, not the people who want to take a risk and build
something. Secondly, most of those people now want to come back, and
the key measure is they are sending, not just Russian students, but
[all kinds of] business students. If you want to learn how to operate
in emerging markets, like China, India or Russia, it does not makes
sense for you to go to Stanford or Chicago, because you will never
learn it there: Less than 10% of the cases in those schools involve
emerging markets. If you go overseas to study, you will not be ready
when you come back, because the country is changing, transforming.

So if you want to build your career in the emerging markets, come
to Moscow, or spend time in China or India. You will learn how to
live in an environment where not everything is clear and clean and
ethical. You will learn how to operate on a day-to-day basis, not
only in your classes but in the projects you work on. It’s an option
for people who want to take risks … who are 20 years old, who say,
"I want to do something." This is why we are more entrepreneurial.

I am a very strong believer in this school. Business schools will
change in the next 20 years dramatically because of the changes
in demand and the changes in the infrastructure. People are not
scared anymore to go to Singapore or live in India. Before, people
wanted to go to America and Europe because it was safer, and the
job opportunities were higher, and because of the professors those
schools could hire. Now people can easily be hired to teach in Kuwait
or Dubai or other places.

And then there is the interactivity of the Internet. Before,
information was collected exclusively in a library in Harvard,
but not anymore. The question now is not about getting information,
but about how to use it, how to make judgments about risk, and how
to work with cultural differences. So it’s a unique time, because
Russia is changing and the industry is changing worldwide. Sometimes
I think we are at an advantage building from zero.

Useem: Looking ahead to the next decade or so, what are the key
leadership capabilities companies will need to operate within the
Russian context? Can one now begin to talk about an emerging Russian
model of business leadership?

Vardanian: One thing we are facing is everything in the world is
changing faster and with more intensity. The price of some materials
goes up or down much more extremely. This is why leaders of the new age
need to have a model for making sound decisions and adapting quickly
in a world where everything around you changes everyday. Who would
have believed the subprime debt crisis would hit America so hard,
allowing Chinese companies to buy that debt? Such changes create
new opportunities.

I think leaders of today need to be more open minded and ready to learn
and have a global vision. Being able to accept cultural differences
is crucial to operating in countries like Russia. For example, many
people come here not even knowing the Russian holidays. So operating
in a country with a different culture, and accepting that, is one of
the key challenges for a leader today.

In Russia, I think, the value system is also a key problem. People live
in a difficult world, and money becomes the measure of success. But
everybody is lost, because the religion is gone, the government is not
in control so strongly anymore. So you have to build a company with
strong values, with a strong model for decision making and motivation
and compensation. This is crucial for success because in some ways
the company is replacing other institutions we had before. Working
14 or 16 hours a day, you don’t have much time to go to church or to
spend time with some political party. So having a company with its
own internal conscience becomes a crucial element for a person, not
only for their earnings but in their decision of how they will live,
and what is right and wrong.

The question for leaders is how we can create a system to attract
the best people, because the main fight of the 21st century is
not about assets. The main struggle in the 19th century was about
the land. In the 20th century, it was about industrial assets and
natural resources. In 21st century, the main fight will be for the
best people. Because people need to believe they want to work for you,
that they can realize themselves in your company. To attract them, we
need to have the right system in place and develop them for the long
term. Many companies are not ready to do this because they hire people,
but they don’t spend enough time or effort in developing them. I
think leaders need to be very, very committed to these types of things.

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From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
Subject: Russia’s Best-known Investment Banker, Ruben Vardanian,
on Building Trust in a Fast-moving World
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Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT

Knowledge@Wharton , PA
June 11 2008

Russia’s Best-known Investment Banker, Ruben Vardanian, on Building Trust in a Fast-moving World

Published: June 11, 2008 in Knowledge@Wharton

Troika Dialog is the oldest and largest private investment bank in Russia, with core lines of business in capital markets, investment banking, asset management and alternative investments. Ruben Vardanian has been chairman of the board of directors and CEO of the Troika Dialog Group since 1992. The company was founded in 1991. Born in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, Vardanian graduated from Moscow State University in 1992, and completed post-graduate training with BANCA CRT in Turin, Italy, and Merrill Lynch’s Emerging Markets Training Program in New York City. In 2006, he became the founding president of Moscow School of Management Skolkovo. Wharton management professors Valery Yakubovich and Michael Useem spoke with Vardanian about entrepreneurship and education in Russia. An edited version of the conversation follows.

Yakubovich: Where did Troika Dialog come from?

Ruben Vardanian: I was a student in Moscow University’s economics department in 1990 when everybody realized something was going to change in our country. I said to myself, "We are changing from one system to another system. Which element are we missing?" That’s when the government planning system was replaced by the financial system’s markets. I said, "It’s a new industry, and nobody knows what will happen and how the markets will develop, but the Russian financial industry will be like a normal international industry."

I wanted to do something around this, and my vision was very simple: Russia will become part of the global world. Foreign investors will invest in Russia. We need to find out how to provide services to them, because they need us to understand what’s going on in Russia, and there are not so many people who can do that. It was not just a question of knowing English. There was also a mental difference [to explain to clients], especially in Russia in the 1990s.

I was young, and I saw I had a unique opportunity, because international businesses are built around reputation and professional skills, not around your political assets or capital assets, which I didn’t have any access to at that time. I said to myself, "I can build the right company with the right vendors." This is one of the basic principles I used in the beginning.

Yakubovich: How did Troika Dialog capture that vision?

Vardanian: We put forward three principles in 1991, which continue today in our business. They are all very simple, nothing scientific. First, we said we are long-term oriented, which was quite unusual in Russia, especially at that time. For example, we are the only ones in Russia who hired Coopers & Lybrand [now PricewaterhouseCoopers] in 1991 to perform an international audit confirming our losses in the first year. That was the kind of long-term commitment we made to ourselves and our industry. We did lots of things people did not usually do in Russia in the 1990s. We ran the company using international standards, not benchmarking ourselves against [companies] around us in Russia.

The second principle says we are a client-service company. It’s unusual to explain in Russia that you are a client-service company, because client service was never a key aspect of our country; industrial production was the key…. Our proprietary position was very small [at that time], and I continued telling my people, "We are servicing the client." It’s a very important point, which again, in the 1990s, was not so obvious when everything was unstable, and nobody cared about the client.

The third principle was this: I said to myself, "I want to respect myself, and I want to respect my people, my country, my competitors, my clients." So I want to build this respect, and I want people to enjoy working together. It took us a lot of effort to convince people to trust each other in business, because the level of trust in Russia in the 1990s was very low, when the old system collapsed. Building a partnership in Russia, where nobody believed in partnership, was a challenge.

I wanted to change that perception, that you can trust a 24-year-old Armenian guy and operate in a professional, international way. I think it was good motivation for all of us to try to convince people this was possible.

Useem: So having built Troika Dialog from the start, you created a skill set, but when you took over the former Soviet insurance company, Rosgosstrakh, presumably you needed a different set of leadership tools. What were the similarities and differences in the leadership styles you used for both organizations?

Vardanian: It was a very unique experience for me. This former Soviet company had 30 million clients and 1,000 employees, and the average age [of employees] was 53. The company had basically lost its market; it was close to bankruptcy and it was alive only because the government allowed it to be. It was a challenge for us, saying to ourselves and others, "We believe it can be recovered," while other people said, "There is no chance." So we had to change perceptions.

It was important to say, from the first day, what is the goal? What will be our rules of internal relationships? What will be our channels of communication? What will be our motivation and compensation system? It was very different from Troika. I will be honest; it was challenging for me to understand that the system of partnership [we used in Troika], the system of collegial consent, didn’t work [in Rosgosstrakh.] It was organized much more like an army or a bureaucratic system. At Troika I have a meeting every Monday morning with all my colleagues, and we know everybody personally. At Rosgosstrakh, it was different. People worked in other regions of Russia, and they didn’t know each other at all.

But what I did was the same. I traveled a lot, and I remember I went to one of the biggest cities in Siberia, Krasnoyarsk. The director there said it was the first time in the 85-year history of the company that the general director came to that office, and it was not a small city.

I took the whole management team to travel around all of Russia’s regions, trying to explain what we were doing and how we would do it. I remember the business planning process: It took me two months, with my management committee members spending all weekend with each region, going line by line with them. They were shocked when they saw the level of communication and commitment from our side.

The key element was committing ourselves fully to the ambition of being number one. And it happened very quickly. When I came to work with Rosgosstrakh, it had $200 million in premium collections a year, for a company with 30 million clients. When I left in two-and-a-half years’ time, it was $1.3 billion in premium collection. Of course the market was much more favorable then; it was a good market. But it was interesting for me to learn that even with a different system and different people, you can continue if you have a clear goal and a clear vision, and you are constantly delivering what you promised.

It is a long process: It’s still not over. My partner who worked with me at the time has continued struggling to change the company, and I think he’s doing great. But I see what is possible to achieve even in old Soviet-system institutions, just by building trust and constantly delivering on that trust.

Yakubovich: You said you wanted to build Troika Dialog as a clean, trust-based business, and it seems like that effort was recognized pretty quickly.

Vardanian: I think it was seven or eight years, so not very quickly.

Yakubovich: Maybe for Russian standards that is a long period, but here I think it is very fast in terms of how you managed to establish yourself. To many observers, you proved that a businessman in Russia doesn’t need to be a criminal; at least, here in the West, that stereotype exists. Did you face pressure to become a criminal, and if so, what skills did you use to deal with those pressures?

Vardanian: First of all, I want to say I’m not an angel, and I live in Russia, where everything is transforming, and I have not done everything perfectly. But I am proud I have continued to live, all 17 years, without bodyguards, never fearing that my life or my family’s lives are in danger. I always know I can become more transparent, more public; for example, I always pay my taxes immediately. In the 1990s that was difficult because you paid cash salaries to people. Otherwise you’d be out of the market.

What standards you set is always your choice. I remember in 1993, we didn’t have too much revenue, and one of my sales people came to my office and said, "Ruben, we have a couple of clients who want to get from us a guaranteed return, around 50%." Other banks were providing 300% or 600% return at that time because there was huge inflation and everybody was promising that. But these clients were asking for only 50%. I said, "We can never guarantee a return — even at 50%."

Looking back today, that seems easy to say, but at the time it was quite tough. We didn’t know if we would have money to pay salaries at that time. But I knew it would be wrong, and I knew sooner or later we would be paid back for it. This is why you need to have a dream. You need to have a vision. You need to understand why you’re saying "no." You need to understand what kind of things you will do and what kind of things you will not do.

It’s very important to be honest with yourself and with your colleagues. Again, people ask me often about the mafia or the government. I can tell you: Seventeen years I’ve been in business in Russia, dealing with lots of cash, and we never had any people who came to us with crime, and we never had any tax police problems. Part of it is, in the early days, we didn’t make too much money. Honestly, if you compare us with some of our competitors in that period, we were not very well known; we were not even number two. I think we’ve always looked like strange people doing strange things at the wrong time. A client once told me, "Ruben, you’re a smart person, but you’re doing the wrong things. Now is the time to take assets, not plan for the long-term."

It’s very important to believe inside yourself that ethical behavior will pay you back. The 1998 default was very difficult for me, not because we lost money, but because I realized how it would impact society, how people would leave Russia. You can’t screw everybody and not think about the long run. It was a very difficult time for me to manage.

Useem: When you joined Troika back in 1991, you were age 22, so you did not have a lot of experience, either in Russian industry or in banking. In major Russian companies these days, I understand there is still a tendency to avoid hiring managers over age 40 because they had come of age in the state-run economy and couldn’t adjust to the demands of the free market. Yet last year you hired a new bank executive director, Andrei Sharonov, who was in his 40s and had worked for most of his life for the government. Could you talk about these generation gaps and how you put people of different ages to work at Troika?

Vardanian: I started working at Troika when I was 22, and I was one of the youngest people; I think the average age then was 27, 28. Now Troika has 1,500 people working for it, but the average age continues to be 27, 28, and I am now one of the older people, close to 40.

But I believe the Troika model is still correct. I’ve always hired people with a high experience level. I was very lucky to get good managers. I got people who trusted me, who liked my ideas and who then brought in much more experience than I had. They came from Wall Street and McKinsey and different industries, and they have been my mentors and partners. I learned a lot by working with people with gray hair: In fact, it’s a very good combination.

One of the elements of Troika’s success has been multiculturalism. We always have 30 to 40 nationalities working in the local company. So we’ve always worked with people of different ages and cultures. One of my biggest challenges has been how to bridge the culture differences so we can accept each other and work together. Because we always had two models. One was the Russian company saying, "These Westerners don’t know anything about Russia." And Westerners came to Russia saying, "We’re trying to teach them, and they don’t want to listen." So I would say it’s not just the generation or age issue, it’s more about cultures and nationality and experience.

But back to your question. Our basic model is, "Bring young people." We just started our summer class for trainees with 170 people, of which I assume about 60% will stay and work in Troika. Most of our partners started at a young age. We have a guy running a key business who is 28, and that is fine with us, absolutely.

Yakubovich: What’s interesting about your hiring of Andrei Sharonov is that he’s coming from the government and, to the best of my knowledge, he worked for the government all his life.

Vardanian: Fifteen years, yes.

Yakubovich: What does he bring from that government experience? The perception is your bank is different and doesn’t want people with a lot of baggage from the old system or bureaucracy. Could you clarify?

Vardanian: The first time we hired a person from government, which was quite unusual, was Oleg Yuguin, who was the deputy minister of finance, the best chief economist. We have been lucky to hire the best professional people — who are honest and have high ethical standards and are well-known in the market.

Hiring Andrei Sharonov was a big advantage for us because he was one of the most dynamic ministers trying to reform our country. He brings a systematic view about the government and how it is trying to convert the country to a more open market economy. He’s also experienced at managing many projects and different groups of clients. We choose people not always by the position they hold, but also by their personal chemistry, so we find people who accept Troika’s way of doing things.

I remember I had to fire one of the most professional people we had in our office, because she was not accepting that culture. She told me [that on] the Chicago Bulls basketball team, people hate each other, that Michael Jordan and Dennis Rodman never spoke to each other, and they still win games. To be honest, I would prefer not to win, if it meant souring relationships. So people like Oleg Yuguin and a couple others are unique. We all knew they were Troika people — very professional with a lot of loyalty. Not so many Russian government officials are like that.

One of my goals has always been to bring different parts of the elite together, to interconnect the government elite and the industry elite in Russia, because right now, it’s very badly organized. The same with the educational elite and the cultural elite. I think we’ve been isolated from one another for the last 15 years. A lot of obstacles and slowing down of good opportunities for Russia comes because of not knowing each other, or not trusting each other. We have these perceptions: Every government official is corrupt, and every business person is a jerk. These perceptions are very difficult to change if you don’t know each other. I let people know: You can come and work at Troika, and maybe five or 10 years later, you can go back and work for the government; there will be no problem for you.

Yakubovich: You also have an ambitious vision to build a premier Russian business school. You want Skolkovo, the Moscow School of Management, to become one of the top 20 business schools within 10 years, and you want to establish very high standards for students and faculty. Of course there are many Russian students at business schools here in the U.S. now. How would you convince a Russian student to study at Skolkovo instead of the top business schools in the U.S. or Europe?

Vardanian: The people who want to go to America for their studies are not the people we want to attract, because we’re trying to send a message that the world is changing. Before, the model was very simple. All the best people in the world wanted to study in America or Europe because they wanted to study at top schools and get the opportunity to stay and work in those countries.

Now what’s happened during last five years, the schools that attract our people realize they are attracting people who want to get rich on the down side, not the people who want to take a risk and build something. Secondly, most of those people now want to come back, and the key measure is they are sending, not just Russian students, but [all kinds of] business students. If you want to learn how to operate in emerging markets, like China, India or Russia, it does not makes sense for you to go to Stanford or Chicago, because you will never learn it there: Less than 10% of the cases in those schools involve emerging markets. If you go overseas to study, you will not be ready when you come back, because the country is changing, transforming.

So if you want to build your career in the emerging markets, come to Moscow, or spend time in China or India. You will learn how to live in an environment where not everything is clear and clean and ethical. You will learn how to operate on a day-to-day basis, not only in your classes but in the projects you work on. It’s an option for people who want to take risks … who are 20 years old, who say, "I want to do something." This is why we are more entrepreneurial.

I am a very strong believer in this school. Business schools will change in the next 20 years dramatically because of the changes in demand and the changes in the infrastructure. People are not scared anymore to go to Singapore or live in India. Before, people wanted to go to America and Europe because it was safer, and the job opportunities were higher, and because of the professors those schools could hire. Now people can easily be hired to teach in Kuwait or Dubai or other places.

And then there is the interactivity of the Internet. Before, information was collected exclusively in a library in Harvard, but not anymore. The question now is not about getting information, but about how to use it, how to make judgments about risk, and how to work with cultural differences. So it’s a unique time, because Russia is changing and the industry is changing worldwide. Sometimes I think we are at an advantage building from zero.

Useem: Looking ahead to the next decade or so, what are the key leadership capabilities companies will need to operate within the Russian context? Can one now begin to talk about an emerging Russian model of business leadership?

Vardanian: One thing we are facing is everything in the world is changing faster and with more intensity. The price of some materials goes up or down much more extremely. This is why leaders of the new age need to have a model for making sound decisions and adapting quickly in a world where everything around you changes everyday. Who would have believed the subprime debt crisis would hit America so hard, allowing Chinese companies to buy that debt? Such changes create new opportunities.

I think leaders of today need to be more open minded and ready to learn and have a global vision. Being able to accept cultural differences is crucial to operating in countries like Russia. For example, many people come here not even knowing the Russian holidays. So operating in a country with a different culture, and accepting that, is one of the key challenges for a leader today.

In Russia, I think, the value system is also a key problem. People live in a difficult world, and money becomes the measure of success. But everybody is lost, because the religion is gone, the government is not in control so strongly anymore. So you have to build a company with strong values, with a strong model for decision making and motivation and compensation. This is crucial for success because in some ways the company is replacing other institutions we had before. Working 14 or 16 hours a day, you don’t have much time to go to church or to spend time with some political party. So having a company with its own internal conscience becomes a crucial element for a person, not only for their earnings but in their decision of how they will live, and what is right and wrong.

The question for leaders is how we can create a system to attract the best people, because the main fight of the 21st century is not about assets. The main struggle in the 19th century was about the land. In the 20th century, it was about industrial assets and natural resources. In 21st century, the main fight will be for the best people. Because people need to believe they want to work for you, that they can realize themselves in your company. To attract them, we need to have the right system in place and develop them for the long term. Many companies are not ready to do this because they hire people, but they don’t spend enough time or effort in developing them. I think leaders need to be very, very committed to these types of things.

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–Boundary_(ID_YXfSstz9p9j9RCqhp3becw)–

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Feinstein Steps In To Help Fresno Valedictorian

FEINSTEIN STEPS IN TO HELP FRESNO VALEDICTORIAN
By Clint Olivier & Laura Fabian

KMPH Fox 26, CA
June 11 2008

At his graduation ceremony, Bullard High’s Arthur Mkoyen stands for
the ‘Star Spangled Banner’ while the laws of his adopted home country,
are calling for him to be deported, and soon.

The valedictorian with a 4.0 grade point average is just days away
from being sent back to his native Armenia.

"I was just thinking about what is going to happen next," he said.

Immigration officials gave Arthur and his family an extension until
June 20th so they could attend the ceremony even though they were
supposed to leave sooner.

But there was heartbreak.

Arthur’s dad couldn’t make it, he’s being held at a detention center
in Arizona.

"I was sad that he wasn’t there. They wouldn’t even let him out to
come to my graduation," he said.

Now California senator Dianne Feinstein is getting involved.

In a statement released Tuesday, Feinstein said:

"This is a family that has deep roots in the community and has
worked hard.

The children have excelled in school. So I am introducing a private
bill so they can stay in this country."

The private bill would provide Arthur, and his mother and father with
permanent residency.

Nathan Alchian says he would miss his friend of seven years, if the
worst case scenario played out.

"I really wish he could stay in this country so he can achieve what
he’s done through his high school education," he said.

With so much to deal with on one of the biggest days of his young life,
Arthur Mkoyen says he stayed positive, and enjoyed his moment.

"I just kept happy, happy thoughts in my mind, and just got through
it," he said.

If everything works out, Arthur has plans to attend U.C. Davis in
the Fall.
–Boundary_(ID_5J6/8FvrBGxCDzYWYb9/wg)
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Content-Description:

From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
Subject: Feinstein Steps In To Help Fresno Valedictorian
MIME-version: 1.0
Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT

KMPH Fox 26, CA
June 11 2008

Feinstein Steps In To Help Fresno Valedictorian

Posted: June 11, 2008 09:15 AM
By Clint Olivier & Laura Fabian

At his graduation ceremony, Bullard High’s Arthur Mkoyen stands for the ‘Star Spangled Banner’ while the laws of his adopted home country, are calling for him to be deported, and soon.

The valedictorian with a 4.0 grade point average is just days away from being sent back to his native Armenia.

"I was just thinking about what is going to happen next," he said.

Immigration officials gave Arthur and his family an extension until June 20th so they could attend the ceremony even though they were supposed to leave sooner.

But there was heartbreak.

Arthur’s dad couldn’t make it, he’s being held at a detention center in Arizona.

"I was sad that he wasn’t there. They wouldn’t even let him out to come to my graduation," he said.

Now California senator Dianne Feinstein is getting involved.

In a statement released Tuesday, Feinstein said:

"This is a family that has deep roots in the community and has worked hard.

The children have excelled in school. So I am introducing a private bill so they can stay in this country."

The private bill would provide Arthur, and his mother and father with permanent residency.

Nathan Alchian says he would miss his friend of seven years, if the worst case scenario played out.

"I really wish he could stay in this country so he can achieve what he’s done through his high school education," he said.

With so much to deal with on one of the biggest days of his young life, Arthur Mkoyen says he stayed positive, and enjoyed his moment.

"I just kept happy, happy thoughts in my mind, and just got through it," he said.

If everything works out, Arthur has plans to attend U.C. Davis in the Fall.

–Boundary_(ID_5J6/8FvrBGxCDzYWYb9/wg)–

Armenian New Company Of Actors In New York

ARMENIAN NEW COMPANY OF ACTORS IN NEW YORK
Robert Karapetian

A1+
[01:22 pm] 10 June, 2008

Yervand Otyan’s comical work "Love and Laughter" was the first play
to be performed by the new company of actors after Hrachya Ghaplanian
in New York. . It was initiated by young producer and actor Vahram
Khojoyan, who received higher theatrical education in Yerevan and
has been living in New York since 1999.

"After graduation I worked at the Yerevan Dramatic Theatre after
Hrachya Ghaplanian for 6 years. In fact, I entered on my career at
that theatre and decided to call the playing company after the Great
Master", explains Khojoyan.

The company consists of 20 members some of whom have not even received
theatrical education. Among lots of other plays Khojoyan’s company
of actors is planning to perform Perch Zeytuntsyan’s "Great Silence"
in English and in Armenian.

The Armenian Apostolic Church in New York is to finance the company
of actors.

By the way, Khojoyan is also planning to found "Armenian Art Center"
in New York.