Construction Volume Grows By 25.1% In Armenia In First Quarter Of 20

CONSTRUCTION VOLUME GROWS BY 25.1% IN ARMENIA IN FIRST QUARTER OF 2006 ON SAME PERIOD OF LAST YEAR

Noyan Tapan
May 05 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 5, NOYAN TAPAN. In January-March 2006, construction
work of 27 bln 863.4 mln drams was done in Armenia, or by 25.1% more
than in the same period of last year. According to the RA National
Statistical Service, construction of production facilities amounted
to 12 bln 928.4 mln drams. Building and assembly work made 22 bln
711 mln drams, of which the building and assembly work of production
facilities – 8 bln 469 mln drams. In January-March 2006, construction
work of 1 bln 281.5 mln drams was carried out in the earthquake
zone at the expense of all sources of financing for construction,
restoration and repairs of social and production facilities, or 4.6%
of the total volume of construction in Armenia, including construction
work of 640.9 mln drams (about 1.42 mln USD) of production facilities
(5%). In January-March 2006, 97 new residential buildings of the
total area of 41,956 square meters were put into operation in Armenia
at the expense of resources of the population and organizations,
which made up 136.7% of the respective index of the same months of
2005. Particularly, 2 residential buildings of the total area of
605 sq.m. were put into operation in Yerevan with organizations’
resources, and 95 residential buildings of the total area of 41,351
sq.m – with resources of the population.

RA Government To Pay 1.5 Million Drams To Families Of The Air CrashV

RA GOVERNMENT TO PAY 1.5 MILLION DRAMS TO FAMILIES OF THE AIR CRASH VICTIMS

ArmRadio.am
04.05.2006 16:09

According to governmental decision, families of the victims of
the air crash in Sochi will be paid 1.5 million drams. Besides,
with the assistance of a number of businessmen the government has
opened a bank account, and those who so desire can provide their
financial assistance to families of the dead, said Hovik Abrahamyan,
RA Minister of Territorial Administration after the governmental
sitting presided over by Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan. According
to Mr. Abrahamyan, the identified bodies of the dead passengers will
be brought to Armenia at about 10 p.m.

Russia’s Putin Tells Prosecutors To Find Out Cause Of Armenian AirCr

RUSSIA’S PUTIN TELLS PROSECUTORS TO FIND OUT CAUSE OF ARMENIAN AIR CRASH QUICKLY

Centre TV, Moscow
4 May 06

[Presenter] [Russian President] Vladimir Putin has asked the
Prosecutor-General’s Office to do their best to establish the causes
of the crash of a plane of Armenian Airlines over the Black Sea. He
said so today at a meeting with Prosecutor-General Vladimir Ustinov.

Ustinov briefed the president on the progress of the investigation.

All related documents have been withdrawn, the fragments of the plane
and the dead bodies are being examined by experts. Twenty bodies have
been identified and will be sent to Armenia soon. Strong efforts are
made to recover the “black boxes”, which is vital for establishing
the cause of the crash.

[Putin] I hope that despite the difficulties surrounding the retrieval
of information from the black box, which I hope will be found, the
investigation will do its best to clarify the true reason behind the
disaster in a short period of time.

Freedom House: Corruption Obstacle To Armenia’s Political,Economic D

FREEDOM HOUSE: CORRUPTION OBSTACLE TO ARMENIA’S POLITICAL, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
May 3 2006

Yerevan, May 3. /ARKA/. Corruption is an obstacle to Armenia’s
political and economic development, days a report “Nations in Transit
2006. Armenia” published by the international human rights organization
“Freedom House”.

“The close links between the political and economic elite and the
lack of effective law enforcement procedures have fostered official
corruption,” says the report.

Although some steps to battle corruption are made in Armenia, they
are not effective enough.

According to “Freedom House”, corruption index is 5.75 in Armenia on
the 7-mark scale, 6.25 in Azerbaijan and 5.50 in Georgia.

TBILISI: Withdrawal Of Akhalkalaki Base Started

WITHDRAWAL OF AKHALKALAKI BASE STARTED

Prime News Agency, Georgia
May 3 2006

Tbilisi. May 03 (Prime-News) – The first file of trucks left the
Russian military base in Akhalkalaki on the Tuesday-Wednesday
overnight.

As Prime-News was told by the representatives of the regional
administration of Samtskhe-Javakheti, the file will arrive in the
Tsalka railway station to be re-leaded. The first lot of military
equipment is to leave Georgia by May 15th.

The decision to traffic the equipment in nights was not accidental
and it aims at prevention of possible provocations. However the local
residents staged a protest rally in Akhalkalaki on Wednesday.

The local residents of Armenian origin are largely employed in the
military base and they say that planned withdrawal of base leaves
them without earnings.

Cooperation Agreement Signed Between National Center For Armenian Sm

COOPERATION AGREEMENT SIGNED BETWEEN NATIONAL CENTER FOR ARMENIAN SME DEVELOPMENT AND INECOBANK

Noyan Tapan
May 02 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 2, NOYAN TAPAN. The foundation “National Center for
Development of Armenian Small and Medium Enterprises (SME)” and
Inecobank on April 27 signed a agreement on cooperation. According
to the foundation’s press service, the purpose of the agreement is
to solve the problem of insufficent pledge in providing credits in
Armenian marzes, particularly in remote and border areas, through the
Center’s Credit Guarantees Program. The remote and border areas make up
80-90% of the Armenian regions where this program is being implemented.

BAKU: Next Trial To Take Place On Claim Raised By Jailers AgainstRam

NEXT TRIAL TO TAKE PLACE ON CLAIM RAISED BY JAILERS AGAINST RAMIL SAFAROV

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 2 2006

Tomorrow trial on the claim raised by jailers against Azerbaijani Army
officer Ramil Safarov accused of murder of Armenian officer Gurgen
Margaryan will take place in Pesht Court, Hungary. Azerbaijani embassy
in Hungary told APA that the Ms. Tot Dender will preside over the
trial and the court sitting will be attended by Azerbaijani embassy
representatives and students. Hungarian lawyer Klara Fiser will defend
rights of Safarov.

Jailers demanded Ramil Safarov to give the phone card on June 19,
2004. Safarov don’t know Hungarian language and he therefore didn’t
understand the jailers and this misunderstanding caused incident
among them. 8 police tied Safarov’s arms and exercised force.

safarov’s lawyers appealed to the court but the court didn’t meet
the appeal through lack of evidences. Then the jailers appealed to
the court claiming Safarov put up resistance to jailers.

Safarov’s lawyer Adil Ismayilov told APA that Defense Ministry assumed
all expenditures for defense of Safarov.

ANKARA: Gul Citicizes France Over Bills Proposing Jail Time,Fines Fo

GUL CRITICIZES FRANCE OVER BILLS PROPOSING JAIL TIME, FINES FOR “GENOCIDE” DENIAL

Turkish Press
Milliyet
May 1 2006

Press Review

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul has sharply criticized France for five
bills in the legislative pipeline proposing jail sentences of up to
one year and fines for denying the so-called Armenian genocide. Last
week, Gul met with his French counterpart Philippe Douste-Blazy
during the NATO foreign ministers’ meeting in Sofia. Gul said that
if Turkish politicians paying an official visit to France are asked
by reporters about the so-called Armenian genocide, they would say
that the allegations don’t reflect the facts. “Then will you put
these politicians in jail?” asked Gul.

Armenian Doctor’s Journeys Home Benefited His People

ARMENIAN DOCTOR’S JOURNEYS HOME BENEFITED HIS PEOPLE
By Diane Haines

NorthJersey.com, NJ
Herald News
May 1 2006

A Paterson-based physician has given life to his ancestral homeland
of Armenia.

Over the past 10 years, Dr. Haroutune Mekhjian has performed open-heart
surgery on 70 to 80 patients in Armenia. He also has trained Armenian
physicians to do the delicate operations.

His first humanitarian trip was in 1996, only months after the only
heart surgeon in Armenia died unexpectedly at the age of 60.

Mekhjian helped fill the void by providing the much needed surgery
during yearly visits.

“The need for cardiac surgery was so much there,” he says. “There are
young women who have had rheumatic fever and their valves are badly
damaged. The operation costs $2,000 and it was nearly impossible to
get that kind of money to be treated. We didn’t charge anything.”

And those missions are only part of his contribution to Armenia. He
also has shipped medical supplies donated by various vendors and by
St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center in Paterson.

The irony is that Mekhjian nearly left school to go into the bed
manufacturing business with his father in Syria. Instead, he listened
to his mother.

“I didn’t want to go to school after I finished elementary school
training,” he recalls. “My father was a successful businessman and
he wanted me to go into the business. He manufactured beds. But my
mother insisted I should go and get my education.”

He attended a high school run by American missionaries, where he
learned English. After graduation, he went to the American University
of Beirut — a renowned university worldwide, but especially in the
Middle East.

In 1916 his ancestors escaped the Turks, who then controlled the area
now known as Armenia. Mekhjian was born on Easter Sunday in 1939 in
Aleppo, Syria, where he attended high school. He traveled to Beirut
to complete medical school and study general surgery. After marrying
his wife, Shake, a registered nurse, the couple emigrated to New York
City in June 1969. Mekhjian began his residency in cardiac surgery
at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, then went on to St. Luke’s
Hospital, where he remained in private practice for the next 12 years.

By 1982, he says, “St. Joseph’s had the largest cardio-cauterization
department in the whole metropolitan area, with 2,000 cases as
compared to 500 or 600 at New York hospitals.” At the time, the chief
of cardiology at St. Joseph’s was referring cases to St. Luke’s.

It was Mekhjian who launched the open-heart surgery practice at St.
Joseph’s that year. He had to wait another 13 years, however, before
taking his first exploratory trip to Armenia, which was virtually
closed to travel while part of the former Soviet Union.

“In 1991, the Soviet Union broke up and Armenia was one of 20 republics
which got its independence,” Mekhjian says, “and it was a lot easier
for us to travel. There was news about poverty and the miserable
conditions the people were in. In 1995, I went on a fact-finding
mission with my wife.”

After two weeks of collecting information, he returned to New Jersey
and organized a trip for the following year to begin cardiac surgery.

Seated behind his large, wooden desk at the hospital, the 66-year-old
Mekhjian, who lives in Alpine, wears a white lab coat and gestures
frequently with his hands. His neatly ordered desk has piles of
paperwork and a pencil holder with an American flag. Two computers and
a plastic model heart sit on nearby cabinets. The pale green walls
are hung with a large map of the United States and pictures of the
doctor taken at the Vatican with the world leader of the Armenian
Apostolic Church and Pope John Paul II.

On Mekhjian’s first working trip to Armenia, he was accompanied by
his wife, a cardiac anesthesiologist and the chief of perfusion (the
operator of the heart and lung machine). There were 15 operations
scheduled over 12 days at Mikaelian Heart Institute in Yerevan,
the capital. All the patients survived and returned home.

The following year, Mekhjian brought a whole team from Armenia
to America.

“They spent one month at St. Joseph’s and one month at Westchester
Medical Center (in Westchester County, New York),” he says. “After the
training, I felt confident they could handle the situation themselves.”

Over the years, Mekhjian and his team have operated on between 70
and 80 patients, all of whom recovered. Although he has returned to
Armenia each year, it is strictly to consult and deliver supplies.

“They thought we were magicians,” he says. “I believe we made a
major contribution.”

Speaker Makes Speech in St. Petersburg at Duma 100th Sitting Jubilee

RA NA SPEAKER MAKES SPEECH IN SAINT PETERSBURG AT JUBILEE SITTING
DEDICATED TO 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF RF STATE DUMA

SAINT PETERSBURG, APRIL 28, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. RA National
Assembly Speaker Artur Baghdasarian who is in Saint Petersburg to
participate in the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the State
Duma of the Russian Federation made a speech at the April 27 jubilee
sitting. On behalf of the National Assembly, Artur Baghdasarian
congratulated upon the 100th anniversary of the State Duma, attaching
importance to the Armenian-Russian interparliamentary cooperation. As
Noyan Tapan was informed by the NA Public Relations Department, within
the framework of the 100th anniversary, Artur Baghdasarian met in
Saint Petersburg with OSCE Parliamentary Assembly President Alcee
Hastings, discussing issues of the OSCE PA-RA NA cooperation. At the
meeting with RF State Duma Chairman Boris Grizlov, NA Speaker
congratulated him on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the
State Duma, issues relating to the Armenian-Russian interparliamentary
relations were also discussed. NA Speaker Artur Baghdasarian also gave
inteview to Russian media.