Ameriabank Launches Program For Medium-Sized Businesses

AMERIABANK LAUNCHES PROGRAM FOR MEDIUM-SIZED BUSINESSES

PanARMENIAN.Net
13.10.2009 13:14 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Ameriabank has announced a new loan program for
medium-sized businesses, Corporate Banking Director Levon Arevshatyan
said.

"We have already reached agreement with two international organizations
on $20-40 million," he told reporters on Tuesday.

"Enterprises with up to AMD 15 million annual income and no more than
250 employees are eligible to participate," he said, adding that 60-70%
of the bank’s clients are medium-sized companies.

The bank offers credits with 8 years maturity period, 3 years grace
period and 11% interest rate.

Do The USA And Russia Have Further Cooperation Opportunities?

DO THE USA AND RUSSIA HAVE FURTHER COOPERATION OPPORTUNITIES?

Aysor.am
Tuesday, October 13

James Collins, U.S. ambassador to Russia from 1997-2001, and now
an analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in
Washington, in the interview given to the Russian department of the
"Voice of America" spoke about the visit of US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton to Russia calling it a witness of changing relations
between RF and USA, but the prospective of the relations keeps
staying fragile.

Today the USA Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on a working visit
has arrived to Moscow, the capital of Russia.

"I don’t think there’s any question that Iran will be on the
agenda. I think we have made substantial progress in looking for
common approaches to Iran", – assured the former ambassador.

"Where we seem to part company often, or where the debate gets
difficult, is in what do you do if the Iranian side refuses to
cooperate and this gets into sanctions debates and so forth. I believe
the Russians see sanctions differently from us. They have very great
doubts that they will be effective. As we saw in New York, President
Medvedev said he doubted their effectiveness, but that maybe they would
be inevitable. I’m not quite sure what to make of that statement. I
believe we should not overestimate how far it carries the Russians
in our direction".

To the question of the journalist "What does the US Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton to Russia? Are there opportunities for further
cooperation? And continuing tension?" the ambassador answered:
"We have a lot of unfinished business, I would say, in the sense of
developing a more stable set of future relations, both between us and
more broadly in the region, regarding, in essence, the post-Soviet
space. The aftermath of the Georgian war is still with us. There
are disagreements that are very sharp about Russia’s action in
recognizing these two territories that we recognize as a part of
Georgia. So we have that issue, there are the other unr in the region
like Nagorno-Karabakh and Transnistria, and there is broadly-speaking,
an unresolved set of issues which are very complex and very large over
the future of what kinds of arrangements will exist going forward to
set-up the future European security system".

Azeri Leader Says Talks With Armenia Collapse

AZERI LEADER SAYS TALKS WITH ARMENIA COLLAPSE

Reuters
09 Oct 2009 16:33:57 GMT

MOSCOW, Oct 9 (Reuters) – Hopes for a settlement of a two-decade
conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia ended in fiasco on Friday
when the Azeri leader accused his Armenian counterpart of being
unconstructive after two days of talks.

"As far as the key topics are concerned, both sides could not move
towards an agreement, and the main reason for this was because the
position of the Armenian side was unconstructive," Interfax quoted
Preident Ilham Aliyev as telling Azeri state television.

Earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters in the
Moldovan capital, where the meeting took place, that the presidents
of the two Caucasus nations had moved closer to a resolution over
the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

Representatives from the Azeri and Armenian governments could not be
immediately reached for comment.

Aliyev and Armenian president Serzh Sarksyan held constructive talks
on Thursday about the region, the U.S. embassy in Chisinau had said
after hosting the meeting.

A breakthrough in the conflict, in which Christian Armenians control
the area that is within Muslim Azerbaijan’s recognised borders, would
smooth the way for the restoration of ties between Armenia and Turkey
after a century of hostility.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev met Aliyev and Sarksyan during a
summit on Friday of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS),
a group of most former Soviet republics.

Lavrov had said after the meeting that advances were being made
"step by step".

Armenia and Turkey, an ally of Azerbaijan, are due to meet in Zurich
on Saturday to sign an accord that would pave the way for normal
relations that have been bitter since the mass killings of Armenians
by Ottoman forces during World War One.

U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton is due to attend the Zurich
signing ceremony.

Turkish officials say to move forward on this, Armenia and Azerbaijan
must make progress on the disputed region.

Ethnic Armenians in the region fought for several years against Azeris
at the end of the 1980s on the eve of the Soviet Union’s collapse. Some
30,000 people were killed. Turkey shut its borders to Armenia in 1993
in solidarity with Azerbaijan.

(Reporting by Amie Ferris-Rotman and Dmitry Zhdannikov; editing by
David Stamp)

Robert Fisk: Genocide Forgotten: Armenians Horrified By Treaty With

ROBERT FISK: GENOCIDE FORGOTTEN: ARMENIANS HORRIFIED BY TREATY WITH TURKEY

Independent
Thursday, 8 October 2009
UK

A new trade deal is set to gloss over the murder of 1.5 million people

Armenians hold a candle light protest in Lebanon

In the autumn of 1915, an Austrian engineer called Litzmayer, who
was helping build the Constantinople-Baghdad railway, saw what he
thought was a large Turkish army heading for Mesopotamia. But as
the crowd came closer, he realised it was a huge caravan of women,
moving forward under the supervision of soldiers.

The 40,000 or so women were all Armenians, separated from their men –
most of whom had already had their throats cut by Turkish gendarmerie –
and deported on a genocidal death march during which up to 1.5 million
Armenians died.

Subjected to constant rape and beatings, some had already swallowed
poison on their way from their homes in Erzerum, Serena, Sivas, Bitlis
and other cities in Turkish western Armenia. "Some of them," Bishop
Grigoris Balakian, one of Litzmayer’s contemporaries, recorded, "had
been driven to such a state that they were mere skeletons enveloped
in rags, with skin that had turned leathery, burned from the sun,
cold, and wind. Many pregnant women, having become numb, had left
their newborns on the side of the road as a protest against mankind
and God." Every year, new evidence emerges about this m ass ethnic
cleansing, the first holocaust of the last century; and every year,
Turkey denies that it ever committed genocide. Yet on Saturday –
to the horror of millions of descendants of Armenian survivors – the
President of Armenia, Serg Sarkissian, plans to agree to a protocol
with Turkey to re-open diplomatic relations, which should allow for
new trade concessions and oil interests. And he proposes to do this
without honouring his most important promise to Armenians abroad – to
demand that Turkey admit it carried out the Armenian genocide in 1915.

In Beirut yesterday, outside Mr Sarkissian’s hotel, thousands of
Armenians protested against this trade-for-denial treaty. "We will not
forget," their banners read. "Armenian history is not for sale." They
called the President a traitor. "Why should our million and a half
martyrs be put up for sale?"

one of them asked. "And what about our Armenian lands in Turkey, the
homes our grandparents left behind? Sarkissian is selling them too."

The sad truth is that the 5.7 million Armenian diaspora, scattered
across Russia, the US, France, Lebanon and many other countries,
are the descendants of the western Armenians who bore the brunt of
Turkish Ottoman brutality in 1915.

Tiny, landlocked, modern-day Armenia – its population a mere 3.2
million, living in what was once called eastern Armenia – is poor,
flaunts a dubious version of democracy and i s deeply corrupt. It
relies on remittances from its wealthier cousins overseas; hence
Mr Sarkissian’s hopeless mission to New York, Los Angeles, Paris,
Beirut and Rostov-on-Don to persuade them to support the treaty, to
be signed by the Armenian and Turkish Foreign Ministers in Switzerland.

The Turks have also been trumpeting a possible settlement to the
territory of Nagorno-Karabagh, part of historic Armenia seized from
Azerbaijan by Armenian militias almost two decades ago – not without
a little ethnic cleansing by Armenians, it should be added. But it is
the refusal of the Yerevan government to make Turkey’s acknowledgement
of the genocide a condition of talks that has infuriated the diaspora.

"The Armenian government is trying to sweeten the taste for us by
suggesting that Turkish and Armenian historians sit down to decide
what happened in 1915," one of the Armenians protesting in Beirut said.

"But would the Israelis maintain diplomatic relations if the German
government suddenly called the Jewish Holocaust into question and
suggested it all be mulled over by historians?"

Betrayal has always been in the air. Barack Obama was the third
successive US President to promise Armenian electors that he would
acknowledge the genocide if he won office – and then to betray them,
once elected, by refusing even to use the word. Despite thunderous
denunciations in the aftermath of the Armenian genocide by Lloyd George

and Churchill – the first British politician to call it a holocaust –
the Foreign Office also now meekly claims that the "details" of the
1915 massacres are still in question. Yet still the evidence comes in,
even from this newspaper’s readers. In a letter to me, an Australian,
Robert Davidson, said his grandfather, John "Jock" Davidson, a First
World War veteran of the Australian Light Horse, had witnessed the
Armenian genocide: "He wrote of the hundreds of Armenian carcasses
outside the walls of Homs.

They were men, women and children and were all naked and had been
left to rot or be devoured by dogs.

"The Australian Light Horsemen were appalled at the brutality done to
these people. In another instance his company came upon an Armenian
woman and two children in skeletal condition. She signed to them that
the Turks had cut the throats of her husband and two elder children."

In his new book on Bishop Balakian, Armenian Golgotha, the historian
Peter Balakian (the bishop’s great-nephew) records how British soldiers
who had surrendered to the Turks at Kut al-Amara in present-day Iraq
and were sent on their own death march north – of 13,000 British and
Indian soldiers, only 1,600 would survive – had spoken of frightful
scenes of Armenian carnage near Deir ez-Zour, not far from Homs in
Syria. "In those vast deserts," the Bishop said, "they had come upon
piles of human bones, crushed skulls , and skeletons stretched out
everywhere, and heaps of skeletons of murdered children."

When the foreign ministers sit down to sign their protocol in
Switzerland on Saturday, they must hope that blood does not run out
of their pens.

Lilit Mkrtchyan Ties Against Ju Wenjun In 9th Tour Of FIDE Champions

LILIT MKRTCHYAN TIES AGAINST JU WENJUN IN 9TH TOUR OF FIDE CHAMPIONSHIP

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.10.2009 21:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Lilit Lazarian tied against Ju Wenjun in 9th tour
of FIDE Women Grand Prix championship due in Nanjing, China.

After the 9th tour, Lilit Lazarian, with 5 points to her score,
shares 5th to 6th places of tournament table with Mongolia’s Munguntuul
Batkhuyag.

In the 10th tour, Lilit Lazarian will play with white pieces against
Turkey’s Betul Yildiz.

Results after 9th tour:

Munguntuul Batkhuyag (Mongolia) – Zhao Xue (China) – 0,5:0,5 Nana
Dzagnidze (Georgia) – Martha Fierro (Ecuador) – 1:0 Ju Wenjun (China) –
Lilit Lazarian (Armenia) – 0,5:0,5 Betul Yildiz (Turkey) – Shen Yang
(China) – 0:1 Zhu Chen (Qatar) – Xu Yuhua (China)- 0:1 Baira Kovanova
(Russia) – Marie Sebag (France) – 1:0.

Standings after 9th tour:

Nana Dzagnidze, Xu Yuhua – 6,5; Marie Sebag – 6; Zhao Xue – 5,5;
Lilit Lazarian, Munguntuul Batkhuyag – 5; Shen Yang, Baira Kovanova,
Ju Wenjun – 3,5; Zhu Chen,- 4; Martha Fierro – 2; Betul Yildiz – 0.

Armenia Implementing Global Programs In Three Main Directions

ARMENIA IMPLEMENTING GLOBAL PROGRAMS IN THREE MAIN DIRECTIONS

Panorama.am
18:13 07/10/2009

Today Armenia is implementing global programs in three main directions:
Armenia-EU, Armenia-NATO, Armenia-CSTO cooperation. The three programs
assume over 400 actions to be implemented in 2009-11.

These refer to the spheres of protection, security, etc., the Secretary
of Armenian National Security Council Artur Bagdasaryan said as
concluding the three-day training program on management and control
of the security sphere, held for the Armenian NA and Government staff.

According to the Secretary, Armenia-EU cooperation program includes
197 actions, 600 events, Armenia-NATO involves 122 actions, 84 among
which have already been implemented. Artur Bagdasaryan also signified
Armenia-CSTO cooperation.

Shadow Economy And Restricted Ways To International Markets Cause Mo

SHADOW ECONOMY AND RESTRICTED WAYS TO INTERNATIONAL MARKETS CAUSE MONOPOLY PHENOMENA IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Oct 7, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 7, NOYAN TAPAN. The jubilee 30th two-day sitting of
the CIS Interstate Council for Antimonopoly Policy (ICAP) started in
Yerevan on October 7. Among the participants are heads and members of
not only the ICAP, but also antimonopoly bodies of Hungary, Austria,
Romania, and local representatives of the European Commission, OSCE,
AEPLAC, GTZ, World Bank, and USAID.

According to a report of the RA State Commission for the Protection
of Economic Competition, prior to ICAP’s sitting, the 13th meeting
of the staff for joint research on violations of the antimonopoly
legislation of CIS member states was held.

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan made a speech of welcome, in
which he said: "We are concerned about the current monopoly-related
phenomena in Armenia, which are caused by the shadow economy and the
restricted ways to international markets because export and import
operations through the territories of Georgia and Iran are expensive,
the small and medium business cannot afford it, so big players
remain in the field. Armenia’s georgraphical location also hinders
domestic competition". According to him, the anticrisis measures of
the government aim to diversify the economy, assist small and medium
enterprises, particularly by making loans accessible to them, and to
implement reforms in tax and customs administration.

Chairman of the RA State Commission for the Protection of Economic
Competition Ashot Shahnazarian said that the time dictates new
demands. He underlined the necessity for new approaches, which are
modern not only in the relations of competing departments, but also
for the public.

Chairman of ICAP Igor Artemev attached great importance to the
implementation of antimonopoly programs in CIS countries, saying:
"It is necessary to promote an exchange of experience and help each
other in the development of the antimonopoly policy".

A Look At Key Suspects In Rwanda’s Genocide

A LOOK AT KEY SUSPECTS IN RWANDA’S GENOCIDE

Bureau News
Gaea Times (blog)
October 6th, 2009

A look at key suspects in Rwanda’s genocide

A look at some of the top suspects and convicts in Rwanda’s 1994
genocide:

— Idelphonse Nizeyimana: Former deputy intelligence chief accused
of orchestrating the killings of thousands of people. Police say he
was arrested Monday in Uganda on charges of genocide, complicity in
genocide, and direct and public incitement to commit genocide.

— Felicien Kabuga: Rwanda’s most wanted genocide suspect. A wealthy
businessman, Kabuga has been on the run since he is accused of helping
finance the genocide.

— Gregoire Ndahimana: Former mayor in Rwanda. He is in custody and
pleaded not guilty to planning the massacres on Tutsis who had sought
refuge at the Nyange Parish.

— Callixte Kalimanzira: A former interior minister in Rwanda. He has
been sentenced to 30 years in prison for tricking thousands of people
to hide on a hill, only to watch them get slaughtered by militias.

— Col. Theoneste Bagosora: Former director of Rwanda’s Ministry of
Defense. He is appealing a life sentence after being convicted of using
his position to direct Hutu soldiers to kill Tutsis and moderate Hutus.

— Augustin Ngirabatware: A former Rwandan minister accused of
diverting funds from international donors to murderous militias. He is
in custody, charged with genocide and crimes against humanity, and has
pleaded not guilty. Ngirabatware is the son-in-law of Felicien Kabuga.

Galust’s Master And Guarantee

GALUST’S MASTER AND GUARANTEE

hos15439.html
12:44:55 – 07/10/2009

The fact that for Galust Sahakyan our compatriots in the Diaspora
who are holding protest actions against Serge Sargsyan are lees is
absolutely natural and regular. What else could our compatriots be
for Galust Sahakyan? They could not be considered national heroes,
source of wisdom or courageous people with super modern thinking. Our
compatriots from the Diaspora do not provide Galust Sahakyan with
the abundance of his route lines, they do not protect the businesses
of Galust Sahakyan, his relatives and friends from the law and from
any civil value. Of course, all those who dare to say a wrong word
in address of the guarantee of his well-being and security Serge
Sargsyan. So no one needs to get surprised or angry with Galust
Sahakyan that he considers the Armenians of the Diaspora complaining
from Serge Sargsyan lees.

Moreover, Serge Sargsyan is even able to reprove Galust Sahakyan
because of his not being so active in his defense among the
Diaspora. The point is that Galust Sahakyan had to be in France
before Serge Sargsyan to disperse all the protesting Diasporian
Armenians gathered near the Komitas statue with a piece of wood in
his hand. "What happened to Galust Sahakyan that instead of him
the police officers have to defend Serge Sargsyan- the guarantee
of Galust Sahakyan’s welfare and security in Paris? Are the French
police officers to be trusted? And what if they do not fulfill their
task as it would do the Armenian policemen or Galust Sahakyan himself?"

This is really a serious mistake and perhaps a real opportunity for
Galust Sahakyan to bring up the issue on Artur Baghdasaryan’s fault,
on whom once Galust Sahakyan picked much, in the Security Council and
to discuss the reason why Galust Sahakyan was sitting calmly in Yerevan
knowing that those protesting against Serge Sargsyan are lees. Though,
no one knows whether he was sitting calmly. Maybe Sahakyan was very
much worried maybe he even saw a nightmare in the previous night,
say, how crows were howling at the sun near the Eiffel tower. How
can he guess that the dream predicted those people gathered near
the Komitas statue and Serge Sargsyan, who is surely Galust’s sun,
appeared under the wave of their shouts.

But Serge Sargsyan will surely forgive Galust Sahakyan. And his
question will not be brought up in the Security Council because Artur
Baghdasaryan will also forgive him. So as the Diasporian Armenian
whom Galust Sahakyan called lees only because they protested against
the president will forgive him. He is ours, our Galust Sahakyan and
what he says, he says for our sake, for us to feel good. What can he
do if nothing good comes out from what he says?

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society-lra

Assessments Of American-Armenians After The New York Meeting Of Arme

ASSESSMENTS OF AMERICAN-ARMENIANS AFTER THE NEW YORK MEETING OF ARMENIAN PRESIDENT

ARMENPRESS
Oct 5, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 5, ARMENPRESS: Armenian President Serzh Sargsian’s
All-Armenian tour is "unprecedented and is a new quality in the
Yerevan-Diaspora intercourse", said the participants of the New York
meeting of the Armenian President Serzh Sargsian within the frameworks
of his All-Armenian tour.

The opinions differed as to the protocols. The representatives of
Office for Armenian Cause and the Union of Armenian Relief were against
the protocols, opinions of other figures of Armenian communities
were positive.

Responsible for the East Cost office of the Union of Armenian
Relief Angel Manoukian is most of all bothered by the issue of the
Genocide. "Fair claim for the Genocide is the most important share
for the Armenian Mother," she said.

Member of the World Council of Churches bureau Vigen Aykazian
noted that he has no suspects that the issue of the opening of the
borders must be settled and is agree with the "viewpoint of the
unconditioned state". "On the whole I can say that it is good. But
there are points that need explanations especially when the issue of
historians is arisen."

"There were very hot discussions and they will probably be
continued. But this is a part of the process. It is important that
the Armenian President definitely pointed out that there will be no
regress in the Genocide issue and no concessions are intended in the
Karabakh issue," said the executive director of Armenian Assembly of
America Bryan Ardouni.

Head of the Council of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic
Church Oskar Tatosian said that the majority of the Diaspora is still
silent; most people are for the development of Armenia and support
the initiative of the Armenian President.

Primate of the Eastern American Diocese of the Cilicia, Archbishop
Oshakan Choloian stressed the issue of participation of the Armenians
which is especially important for the clergymen.

Head of the Toronto branch of Armenian all-Armenian during the
meetings the aim of establishment of the sub-commission of historians
is discovered. "It is praiseworthy that it will discuss not the issue
of the Genocide but its consequences or the fate of the Armenian
monuments in Turkey," he said.

After the exchange of thoughts the New York meeting ended with the
concluding speech of the Armenian President.

The All-Armenian tour of President Sargsian continues. Next stop is
in Los Angeles.