Vakhtang Darchinyan Awarded Gold Emorial Medal Of Yerevan State Univ

VAKHTANG DARCHINYAN AWARDED GOLD EMORIAL MEDAL OF YEREVAN STATE UNIVERSITY

ArmRadio.am
28.06.2006 16:00

The Yerevan State University welcomed today IBF and IBO flyweight
boxing champion, our compatriot Vakhtang Darchinyan. After a question
and answer section the newly elected Rector awarded the guest with
the gold memorial medal of the Yerevan State University. The faculty
and students congratulated the sports successes of our compatriot and
thanked him for fluttering our tricolor flag and for entering the
ring under Armenian music. It is just due to this reason that very
often the great sportsmen gets deprived of suggestions and contracts
with large companies. Nevertheless, he never calculated the volume
of the possible material loss.

Vik Darchinyan’s best tradition is never losing. The feeling of fear
is not for him.

One of the students present at the meeting was interested whether
Vakhtang Darchinyan ever had to fight a Turk or Azeri.

"Now there are no Turks in my weight category. But I have enjoyed that
pleasure. I won the Turkish boxer with a knockout in the first round,"
Vakhtang said without concealing his desire to repeat the knockout.

Darchinyan will soon return to the US to prepare for the fight
scheduled September 2 in Las Vegas. The sportsman has to add his weight
to struggle for the title of the absolute world champion. We still
have an opportunity to be proud and congratulate on this occasion.

Presentation Of "Sun Mountain" Armenian Center To Take Place Near Mo

PRESENTATION OF "SUN MOUNTAIN" ARMENIAN CENTER TO TAKE PLACE NEAR MOSCOW

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Jun 27 2006

KRASNODAR, JUNE 27, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The
"Russian-Armenian Cooperation" public organization joint with the
"Sun Mountain" Armenian Cultural Center" organization will organize a
solemn evening party, exhibition and concert on June 26 in the city
of Solnechnogorsk at which the head of the Solnechnogorsk regional
administration, the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
of Armenia to Russia, heads of the Armenian public organizations of
Moscow and near Moscow will be present. According to the "Yerkramas"
(country) newspaper of Armenians of Russia, works of Armenian
painters and sculptors living near Moscow, including works of Roman
Pashayan, Gagik Antashian, Vitali Inkatov, will be presented at the
exhibition. The presentation of the newly created public organization
of the "Sun Mountain" Armenian Cultural Center" of Solnechnogorsk
will take place within the framework of the solemn evening party.

Events of Solnechnogorsk are public initiatives and are held within
the framework of the Year of Armenia in Russia. The "Russian-Armenian
Cooperation" public organization plans to hold till late 2006 similar
events in other cities near Moscow as well, cooperating with the
local administrations and Armenian communities.

The Armenian Genocide Is Not Subject To Dispute, Catholicos Of All A

THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IS NOT SUBJECT TO DISPUTE, CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS DECLARED IN ISTANBUL

ArmRadio.am
26.06.2006 18:05

"The Armenian Genocide is a reality of 90 years. For our people this
issue is not subject to discussion," the Catholicos of All Armenians
Garegin II said in a press conference in Istanbul.

The Catholicos emphasized that "such events should be condemned by
all peoples to save the humanity from the reoccurrence of these."

The Supreme Patriarch noted that the fact of the Armenian Genocide is
recognized by all countries, except Turkey, since, according to him,
there are numerous evidences of the massacre, Istanbul based "Marmara"
daily informs.

The visit of the Catholicos of All Armenians to Istanbul was
covered also by Turkish media. "Zaman" daily titled the article
about the Patriarch’s visit "The thrilling comments of the Armenian
Patriarch." "Radikal" used the following title – "Garegin II: The
reality of the Genocide." It deserves attention that the Turkish
media used the word "Patriarch" instead of "Catholicos."

Turkish papers note that the Catholicos expressed appreciation for air
communication between Armenia and Turkey. He remarked that Armenia is
willing to normalize its relations with Turkey. Garegin II mentioned
that despite the fact that Armeniansare spread all over the world,
they have their own state; therefore, according to him, the Republic
of Turkey should speak with Armenia as a state.

In response to the questions about the acts of protest organized
by Turkish nationalists, the Catholicos noted that it was his first
visit to Constantinople and these protests had no influence on his
impressions. He expressed the hope that no such protests will occur
during his second visit.

TOL: Living Well And Badly

LIVING WELL AND BADLY
by Haroutiun Khachatrian

Transitions Online, Czech Republic
June 26 2006

South Caucasus and international experts find tentative agreement and
lingering tensions over the region’s political-economic affairs. From
EurasiaNet.

A recent economic conference held in the Georgian capital Tbilisi
sought to lay the groundwork for closer regional cooperation among
the three South Caucasus states of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia.

Regional economic integration was not formally on the agenda of the
1-2 June conference, titled the International Monetary Fund and the
South Caucasus in the 21st Century. Participants officially explored
best practices as each state attempts to modernize its respective
economy. However, the underlying hope was that sharing experience would
provide an impulse for officials to explore integration opportunities
down the road, provided that existing political obstacles, including
the lack of a settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between
Armenia and Azerbaijan, are eventually removed.

The regional IMF representatives from all three states – James McHugh
in Armenia, Basil Zavoico in Azerbaijan, and Robert Christiansen in
Georgia – were featured participants, and all faced a diplomatically
delicate task of outlining economic problems without appearing
to overly criticize government policies and responses. While each
Caucasus country features specific development conditions, conference
attendees generally agreed that corruption and tax evasion were among
the most serious problems prevalent in all three states.

"A large shadow economy should be brought into the formal economy
through an efficient tax [system] and improved corporate governance,"
said McHugh, referring to the situation in Armenia.

Georgian Minister of Finance Aleksi Aleksishvili said Tbilisi had
managed to improve its revenue collection capabilities, while stressing
that the government has stopped a practice common during the first
months following the 2003 Rose Revolution, in which entrepreneurs
were arrested, only to be released after making substantial payments
to the state treasury.

The conference scrutinized the unique economic situation in Azerbaijan,
where oil and gas development is causing revenues to spike. Several
participants focused on the potential threat of "Dutch disease,"
in which a rapid rise of income from the energy sector renders other
economic sectors of a given state uncompetitive in the global market.

Given that only about one percent of Azerbaijan’s population is
directly involved in the oil sector, the energy windfall stands to
be enjoyed by relatively few Azeris. Sabit Bagirov, president of the
Azerbaijan Entrepreneurship Foundation, warned that social tension
could grow worse in the country. "In several years, we may face a
situation that, with huge oil revenues, still a great number of poor
people are in the country, and the unresolved Karabakh conflict will
make their situation even worse. This may [make] millions of people
unhappy," Bagirov said.

Most participants avoided making direct comparisons about the successes
and failures of economic development in the Caucasus.

Tigran Sargsian, chairman of the Central Bank of Armenia, was
perhaps the only participant who sought to place developments in each
individual state within a regional context. "Today, the countries
of the South Caucasus live similarly badly and differently well,"
he said. Sargsian highlighted differences among the three Caucasus
countries. For example, according to Sargsian, Armenia was recognized
as a leader in terms of market reforms, while possessing a bad
record on poverty reduction. Georgia, meanwhile, was labeled as more
competitive than Armenia. Yet at the same time, Tbilisi must struggle
with a deficit of power producing capacity.

Given the underlying political differences, it did not come as a
surprise to participants when Sargsian’s analysis was characterized by
Azer Alasgarov, an Azerbaijan National Bank official, as "politicized."

"I agree with your critical notions, but I would like the Azerbaijan
National Bank to have presented its own vision of the situation,"
was Sargsian’s answer. The conference was organized by the Caucasus
Research Resource Centers, the IMF, and the National Bank of Georgia.

"Living Well and Badly"

Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer specializing in
economic and political affairs. This is a partner post from EurasiaNet.

Unfinished Melody

UNFINISHED MELODY
Eva Lusikian

Yerkir.am
June 23, 2006

A commemoration concert dedicated to the 50th anniversary of composer,
piano player and musician Stepan Lusikian was held at Alexander
Spendiarian Opera and Ballet Theater on June 13.

Nune Yessayan, Syuzan Margarian, Aramo, Emma Petrossian, Armen
Gevorgian, Artur Ispirian, Alexander Vardanian as well as children’s
choirs of Tigran Hekekian and David Zolian performed the composer’s
works.

It would be easier to write about Stepan Lusikian, the artist,
composer and intellectual. The most difficult thing is to write about
him using the past tense.

One could tell about his work, his public activities. However, it is
very difficult to find words to describe his personality, his inner
world… Melody is the expression of one’s soul. This is why Stepan
Lusikian’s works are easily recognizable from the very first sounds.

One of his unique abilities was the ability to listen. He would listen
to you in a way that you seemed to find the answers to seemingly
unsolvable questions. You would look into his eyes and would see
yourself… He was an extremely interesting person to talk to. He
had a unique worldview and a unique sense of humor.

I can remember his enthusiasm when he would feel he had a new
creative idea.

He would sit in front of the piano looking somewhere far away. He
liked to show his new works to people. Their opinion was important
and inspiring for him.

He was very cautious in his relations with others. He treated
everything from the perspective of some global holistic philosophy. He
took life as it was.

He treated people the way they were, without trying to change them,
with no evil intentions.

This is probably what attracted people towards him. This is what
penetrated into everyone’s soul…

"… If you are to forgive, you must forgive the unforgivable. You must
forgive when no one else forgives, when you don’t forgive yourself.

And if you are to understand, then you must understand the
un-understandable, the absurd, the wrong. Every one can understand
what is correct.

And if you are to give hope, give it when the last ray of hope is
gone. And if you are not to sell, do it when every one else has sold.

… And most importantly, if you are not to betray someone or
something, you should not betray when it fully deserves betrayal.
Stapan Lusikian."

Stepan Lusikian was truly connected to the country.

Patriotism is a complex feeling…

His songs are full of love towards Armenia. And this love is very
profound…

He loved Armenia’s land and water, fruits. He loved Komitas,
Sayat-Nova, Narekatsi. He loved Armenian films, mountains. He loved
the heat of Yerevan.

There was always some nostalgia in his songs as if he knew that he
would soon have to leave his homeland.

I am sure that my father lives in the hearts of those who knew him. He
will live as long as his songs and melody live…

Kocharyan Is Pleased With Small And Medium Business

KOCHARYAN IS PLEASED WITH SMALL AND MEDIUM BUSINESS

A1+
[04:42 pm] 21 June, 2006

Issues about small and medium business were discussed during the
meeting of Robert Kocharyan and a number of representatives of
the field. The Ministers of Agriculture and Commerce and Economic
Development were also present at the meeting.

Robert Kocharyan mentioned that small and medium business is developing
actively. "There are few people in Armenia who do not want to have
their own business.

This means a powerful inner striving for being the master of their
own fate which can be a serious impetus for the development of small
and medium business. We appreciate that", Kocharyan said.

The participants of the meeting mentioned that there are problems
hindering the development of the field.

They particularly mentioned about the necessity to reduce the
frequency of check-ups, to support the businessmen of the marzes with
consultants, to prepare specialists with professional education and
to eliminate a number of legislative shortcomings.

The issues about leasing service and loans were also discussed. As
for the change of the currency exchange rate, Robert Kocharyan said
that it is the problem of the whole world and not only Armenia.

Robert Kocharyan said that the problems will be discussed during
special consultations.

No Terror Link To Air Crash

NO TERROR LINK TO AIR CRASH

Daily Post (Liverpool)
June 20, 2006, Tuesday
Mersey Edition

THE Armenian airliner that crashed into the Black Sea last month
killing all 113 people aboard was intact, with its engines operating
normally and enough fuel to land prior to impact, a Russian investig
ating commission said today.

The Armavia Airbus A320 was also under manual control by its pilots
up to the moment of the May 3 pre-dawn catastrophe near the Russian
port of Sochi.

The commission, which analysed the plane’s "black box" flight
recorders, did not assign blame for the crash.

Prosecutors have dismissed the possibility that terrorists had brought
the plane down, and officials have pointed to rough weather or pilot
error as the likely cause.

OSCE Media Freedom Representative To Visit Armenia

OSCE MEDIA FREEDOM REPRESENTATIVE TO VISIT ARMENIA

ArmRadio.am
19.06.2006 13:48

The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Miklos Haraszti, will
visit Armenia from 19 to 21 June to collect first-hand information
on the media in the country.

The visit, which comes at the invitation of the Armenian Foreign
Ministry, will help assist the country in further promoting free and
pluralistic media in pursuance of its OSCE commitments.

The Representative will meet President Robert Kocharyan, the Chairman
of the National Assembly Tigran Torosyan, Deputy Foreign Minister
Armen Baibourtian, and Deputy Justice Minister Gevorg Kostanyan.

Miklos Haraszti will also have discussions with the President of the
Council of Public TV and Radio Company of Armenia, and the President
of the National Commission for Television and Radio, as well as
representatives of State and independent media, international and
non-governmental organizations.

The ties that divide

Turkey and Armenia

The ties that divide

Jun 15th 2006 | KARS
> > From The Economist print edition

Locals dream of reopening the frontier between Turkey and Armenia

NAIF ALIBEYOGLU, mayor of Kars, a town bordering Armenia, has a
dream. He pictures a party of Turkish officials embracing their
Armenian counterparts in the middle of an ancient bridge over the river
that divides their countries. Reduced by war and neglect to a pair of
greyish stone stumps on opposite banks of the river, its condition is
an apt symbol for relations between the two countries. The bridge,
part of the historic site of Ani (see article), would in theory be
easy to reconstruct. Fixing the broader relationship between Turkey
and Armenia promises to be a great deal harder.

Turkey was among the first countries to recognise Armenia when it
emerged from the Soviet Union’s wreckage in 1991. But bitter arguments
over the fate of the Ottoman Armenians-did the mass killings of 1915
constitute genocide?-together with lingering border disputes have
stood in the way of formal ties. The estrangement deepened in 1993
when Turkey sealed its land frontier with Armenia (while still allowing
direct air travel). The Turks acted after Armenian forces had occupied
a chunk of Azerbaijan in a war over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Years of secret talks between Turkish and Armenian diplomats-the
latest of which were held in Vienna in March- have failed to ease
tensions. And this is despite vigorous backing for renewed ties from
both America and the European Union, which Turkey is seeking to join.

Mr Alibeyoglu, who is from Turkey’s ruling AK party, says the
people of Kars are paying the price. With average annual incomes of
only $823, Kars is among the country’s poorest and most neglected
provinces. Yet before the cold war Kars was among the young republic’s
most progressive places. It is vividly evoked in "Snow", a novel by
Turkey’s most famous writer, Orhan Pamuk. Locals would attend the
theatre and ballet and dine on caviar and champagne. Such tastes were
inherited from former Russian occupiers, whose traces can still be
detected in the grandeur of its Tsarist-era architecture.

Mr Alibeyoglu, whose penchant for wine and naughty sculptures would
have gone unnoticed in those days, now sees a chance to reverse
his city’s decline, but only if Turkey unconditionally reopens its
borders. By doing this, Turkey would regain some moral high ground,
as well as securing access to strategic markets in Central Asia
and beyond. Kars could even become a regional hub in the Caucasus,
especially if a rail link to Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, were
restored. Trade volumes between the two countries, now averaging
a measly $100m a year, almost all of it conducted via Georgia,
should soar.

There is more. As many as 200,000 members of the Armenian diaspora
return to their homeland every year. Many would like to cross
the border into Turkey in order to visit Armenian archaeological
sites. The tourist trade could be worth millions of dollars. "They
would also meet Turks and realise they aren’t quite as evil as they
imagined," adds Kaan Soyak, co-chairman of the Turkish-Armenian
Business Development Council.

But how to break the diplomatic deadlock? Mr Alibeyoglu’s answer is to
take matters into his own hands. In 2000 he drove to the Armenian town
of Gyumri, where he appeared on television with his fellow mayor and
appealed for peace. This autumn, Mr Alibeyoglu will host a festival
that features, for a second time, performers from Armenia, Georgia
and Azerbaijan. The Armenians will have to make a tortuous journey via
the Turkish cities of Trabzon and Istanbul. But the mayor hopes that,
one day soon, their journey will be much quicker.

Italian-Armenian Symposium On Stone Quarrying And Processing Technol

ITALIAN-ARMENIAN SYMPOSIUM ON STONE QUARRYING AND PROCESSING TECHNOLOGIES HELD IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Jun 15 2006

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, NOYAN TAPAN. The political cooperation between
Armenia and Italy is currently at the highest level, while economic
relations still have a potential for development. In this sense,
the symposium "Stone Quarrying and Processing Technologies" is quite
promising. The Italian Ambassador to Armenia Marco Clemente expressed
this opinion in his speech of welcome at the symposium on June 15.

27 Armenian companies operating in such spheres as stone quarrying
and processing, transport, insrument making, as well as 11 Italian
companies engaged in stone quarrying and processing equipment
and instrument production, and implementation of educational and
design program took part in the symposium. The event was organized
by the Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen of Armenia (UMBA)
and Olstone company (Italy) representing the interests of a number
of companies. The company’s technical manager Stephano Simone said
that the best Italian stone quarrying and processing companies have
been invited to participate in the symposium.

During the event, an agreement on cooperation was signed between
the UMBA and Olstone. UMBA Chairman Arsen Ghazarian notes that the
document creates preconditions for establishment of Armenian-Italian
joint ventures on operation of stone mines ans stone processing, for
introduction of new technologies and installation of conveyers in such
enterprises, as well as for training of Armenian enterprises’ employees
in Italy. According to him, the implementation of these measures will
increase Armenian exports. The Armenian travertine, tufa and felsite
are mainly used on the domestic market where an annual growth in
construction volumes made 20-30% in recent years. In the opinion of A.

Ghazarian, it is not ruled out that exports of Armenian construction
stone will exceed local consumption in the near future. He said that
construction stone is transported by railway to Georgian ports, then –
to Russia, Ukraine, the US, Germany, and France, in smaller amounts –
to other countries, particularly to Australia and South Africa.