Representative Of Armenia Elected Vice-Chairman Of Ce Congress OfLoc

REPRESENTATIVE OF ARMENIA ELECTED VICE-CHAIRMAN OF CE CONGRESS OF LOCAL AND TERRITORIAL AUTHORITIES

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 30 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 30, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. On the first day of
the 13th plenary session of the Council of Europe Congress of Local
and Territorial Authorities, Emin Yeritsian, head of the Armenian
delegation, was elected Vice-Chairman of the Council of Europe
Congress, a member of the Bureau. As Noyan Tapan was informed
from the Press and Public Relations Department of the Union of
Armenian Communities, this is the highest elected post held by the
representatives of Armenia in the structures of the Council of Europe
by now.

Armenian Chess Men Team Moves Into Lead After 6 Rounds of Olympiad

ARMENIAN MEN TEAM MOVES INTO THE LEAD AFTER 6 ROUNDS OF 37TH CHESS OLYMPIAD

Turin, May 29. ArmInfo. Men team of Armenia toppled Uzbekistan 2.5:1.5,
hereby moving into the lead of the 37th Chess Olympiad in Turin. The
Netherlands’ won over Russia, the former leader 1.5:2.5.

Top leaders: Men – 1. Armenia – 18; 2. Netherlands – 17,5; 3. Russia – 17; 4.
Belarus – 17; 5. Ukraine – 16,5; 6. USA – 16,5; 7. Sweden – 16,5; 8. India –
16,5; 9. Uzbekistan – 16.0; 10. Georgia – 16.0. Women. 1. Russia – 14,5; 2.
Ukraine – 14,0; 3. Slovakia – 13,5; 4. USA – 13; 5. Romania – 13; 6. India –
13; 7. Bulgaria – 13; 8. Hungary – 12,5; 9. China – 12,5; 10. Estonia – 12,5.

Economic Monopoly Impacts Radios

ECONOMIC MONOPOLY IMPACTS RADIOS

Lragir.am
30 May 06

The results of a poll conducted by the Center for Survey of Public
Opinion suggest that people are dissatisfied with radio stations in
Armenia. According to the facts the Center presented in a discussion
on May 30, listeners expect better music, better news programs and a
better format.

The directors of radio stations participating in the discussion say
they broadcast what is popular to attract companies to place their
advertisements.

The directors of radio stations say this sphere is young in Armenia
and there is shortage of professionals. Money is essential for quality
programs, which always lacks. Armen Amiryan, the director of the
Public Radio, thinks that the radio stations do not have quality
production because they have money shortage. Armen Amiryan says
economy in Armenia is monopolized, there is no competition and
advertising, therefore radio stations are not sustainable. The
director of the Public Radio assures that one of the first steps
towards improvement of radio production would be ending monopoly to
establish the necessary economic environment for the development of
this sphere.

Armenian Ex-Speaker Vows To Struggle For Better Armenia

ARMENIAN EX-SPEAKER VOWS TO STRUGGLE FOR BETTER ARMENIA

Mediamax news agency
29 May 06

Yerevan, 29 May: The leader of the Orinats Yerkir [Law-Governed
Country] Party, Artur Bagdasaryan, officially relinquished his
authority as chairman of the National Assembly of Armenia today.

Speaking at his final news conference today, Bagdasaryan said that
the party would hold a special congress to outline its tactics and
strategy and lay out a “clear position” on its further activities.

“We will struggle to create an Armenia of our dreams,” the ex-speaker
said.

Bagdasaryan expressed readiness of the Orinats Yerkir to cooperate
with all political forces in the country “for the sake of real hopes
for the future and progress”.

“Our party has its own path forward which we will follow,” Bagdasaryan
said.

The new chairman of the National Assembly will be elected at a special
session of parliament, the date of which is yet to be set.

[Passage omitted: background info]

Galust Sahakyan: Electing Tigran Torosyan would be a correct choice

Galust Sahakyan: Electing Tigran Torosyan would be a correct choice

ArmRadio.am
26.05.2006 17:00

Head of the NA Republican Party faction Galust Sahakyan, who was the
first to predict the collapse of the coalition, has some predictions
about the future composition of the Parliament.

`Naturally, I have predictions, but because of the tense political
atmosphere I do not consider it proper to publicize these today,’ he
declared at a Parliamentary briefing on May 26.

In response to the question about the possible suggestion of his
candidacy for the Chairman of the National Assembly, Mr. Sahakyan said
that by expressing such will the Deputies are trying to do him a
favor. He excluded such opportunity.

`I have my own circle of duties, which I consider very important.
During these years I have been carrying a greater burden. I think that
the correct choice is electing Tigran Torosyan,’ Galust Sahakyan
noted.

According to him, in the elections Tigran Torosyan will receive the
necessary 66 votes. Galust Sahakyn predicts that Tigran Torosyan will
receive 78 votes.

Will Gurgen Arsenyan Again Import Cigars?

WILL GURGEN ARSENYAN AGAIN IMPORT CIGARS?

Panorama.am
01:09 26/05/06

Today the National Assembly of Armenia adopted by a second reading the
draft law on making amendments in the Law On Fixed Fees on Cigarette
Products. Mnatsakan PETROSYAN, NA Unified Employment Party (MAK)
block member, has had this idea since 2005. He is also the author of
the draft.

According Mnatsakan Petrosyan, the studies show that 3800 cigars have
been imported into Armenia with customs cost of about USD 10 thousand
in 2004. In 2005 only 400 cigars were imported paying 600 thousand
Armenian drams in customs tax. However, the deputy is sure that in
2005 20,000 cigars are imported into Armenia by illegal channels. In
2006, no cigars have been imported. He says that high customs fees
determine shadow economy in import of cigars, paying 1500 Armenian
drams per one cigar whereas in the shops they cost only 1200-1500
Armenian drams. “It is not possible. We see risk for corruption
here. We should bring that out of shadow economy,” he says.

After the amendments are made in the law, cigar importers will pay
only 550 AMD as customs tax which is double cheaper.

But doesn’t this law support another MAK member Gurgen Arsenyan’s
business? The latter deals with import of cigars through ArsOil
company.

“Gurgen Arsenyan does not import cigars any more. We try to contribute
to the state budget. The state will win in the long run. This is a
real change,” Petrosyan says.

Defectors From Orinats Yerkir Form New Group

DEFECTORS FROM ORINATS YERKIR FORM NEW GROUP

Armenpress
May 25 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 25, ARMENPRESS: Ten parliament members who have defected
from the embattled Orinats Yerkir party of the outgoing parliament
chairman Arthur Baghdasarian, have formed a new parliamentary
non-partisan group, it emerged today. Only one defector, Melik
Manukian, refused to join the group which its founders named
“Businessman.”

All of the ten deputies are wealthy businessmen.

They defected from Orinats Yerkir’s parliament faction just in few
days, hastening Baghdasarian’s resignation and his party’s pullout
from the governing coalition.

One of the defectors, Grigor Margarian, was elected head of the group.

Under the existing National Assembly statutes, a non-partisan
group must have at least ten deputies in order to have an official
status. The 131-member assembly has already one such group, the
People’s Deputy, that holds 16 seats.

Yugoslavia R.I.P.

YUGOSLAVIA R.I.P.
By Gwynne Dyer

AZG Armenian Daily
25/05/2006

Within days of Montenegro’s successful referendum on independence on
Sunday, Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic will be arriving in Brussels
to open talks on joining the European Union, while other Montenegrin
diplomats arrive in New York to seek admission as the 193rd member
of the United Nations. A country that was extinguished 88 years ago
has risen from its grave — and the mini-empire that absorbed it has
finally come to an end.

With Montenegro’s independence, the last vestige of former Yugoslavia
is gone: Serbia has lost its seacoast and reverted to its land-locked
borders of 1918. Yugoslavia was a project that was bloody at the start,
bloody again in the middle, and exceedingly bloody in its last years
in the 1990s. The lesson we should draw from this is: no more shotgun
marriages in the name of tidiness.

As the Ottoman (Turkish) empire retreated down the western side of the
Balkans during the 19th century, half a dozen Christian ethnic groups
who spoke closely related South Slavic dialects were candidates for
nationhood, but not all of them got it. The Slovenes and Croatians
became part of the Austro-Hungarian empire, which eventually absorbed
the Bosnians as well. Serbia and Montenegro became independent states
in 1878, but after the Balkan wars of 1911-12 the Macedonians were
just handed over to Serbia (which almost doubled in size).

As early as the mid-19th century, many Serbs believed that all the
western Balkans should eventually be ruled from Belgrade. In his famous
Nacertanije (Programme) of 1844, Ilija Garasanin, Minister of Internal
Affairs in a Serbia that was still technically under Ottoman rule,
outlined the stages by which Serbian control might gradually extend
to include the whole of the region, and generations of Serbs were
taught to dream of that Greater Serbia.

Their opportunity came with the First World War, which destroyed the
Austro-Hungarian empire and left the Slovenes, Croatians and Bosnians
free to seek their own destinies.

Where they all ended up, however, was in the new, Serb-dominated
state of Yugoslavia. The victorious great powers let the Serbs
have their way in part because they owed Serbia a favour (since it
had fought on the winning side), but mainly because it was a tidier
arrangement than cluttering up the western Balkans with half a dozen
small countries. They even bundled long-independent Montenegro into
the new Yugoslavia (although some Montenegrins immediately revolted
against rule from Belgrade).

The Kingdom of Yugoslavia was dominated by Serbia from the start: all
of its prime ministers were Serbs, as were 161 of its 165 generals. So
it fell apart at once when Nazi Germany invaded in 1941, and a Croatian
fascist regime set out to take revenge on Serbians and assert its own
independence: over half a million people died in Croatian concentration
camps. Then Communist guerillas took power after the Second World
War and reestablished Serbian domination, killing all those (mostly
Croatians and Bosnians) who had collaborated with the Germans.

Communist Yugoslavia lasted almost half a century, but when it started
to break apart in 1992 the Serbs would not let go, and it took four
wars and a quarter-million deaths before Serbia finally accepted the
loss of its South Slav empire. Even after that the European Union tried
to hold Serbia and Montenegro together, bullying the Montenegrins into
accepting a lopsided two-country federation (Serbia has twelve times
as many people as Montenegro) in 2003. But the Montenegrins insisted
on the right to a referendum on breaking up that union after three
years, and last Sunday they exercised that right.

Kosovo will almost certainly also get official independence from
Serbia by the end of this year, and there will then be seven countries
where fifteen years ago there was only one. It is very untidy, and you
could certainly accuse some of these countries of being driven by the
“narcissism of small differences.”

But THEY cared about these small differences, and bad things happened
when they were ignored.

Serbia wanted to rule the western Balkans, but it never conquered
the other ethnic groups. They were pushed into Serbia’s arms by great
powers that wanted to keep things simple, and the result was almost
a century of resentment and intermittent murder. Now it’s over, and
they have to learn to live alongside one another again. It will be
much easier if they have some larger context in which to submerge
their differences, and there is one at hand: the European Union.

Slovenia is already an EU member, and Croatia and Macedonia are
candidates. Montenegro is applying now, and Serbia would open talks
tomorrow if it could get around the EU’s insistence that it hand over
the worst Serbian war criminals first. Bosnia will take much longer,
as it remains deeply divided between its Serbian, Croatian and Muslim
“Bosniak” communities, and Kosovo isn’t even officially a country yet.

Will the EU actually take them all in? For the sake of peace in
Europe, it should, but it will be up to 27 governments when Romania
and Bulgaria join next year.

Adding the western Balkans would increase the number of EU member
states with full voting rights by another 20 percent while increasing
the total population by only 5 percent. It’s a lot to ask, and we
won’t know the answer for years.

Some Progress Fixed In Kosovo Status Talks

SOME PROGRESS FIXED IN KOSOVO STATUS TALKS

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.05.2006 13:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The delegations of Serbia and Kosovo Albanians
managed to fix some progress at the talks held in Vienna. As
U.N. mediator, Austrian diplomat Albert Rohan said, the parties
agreed on protection of cultural and religious sites in Kosovo. That
first of all refers to the Serbian Orthodox Churches in the regions
inhabited mostly by ethnic Albanians. However the main item of the
Vienna negotiations remains unsettled. The Albanians of Kosovo demand
complete independence while the Serbian government is ready to grant
Kosovo the status of autonomy only, reported Deutsche Welle.

Russian TV Shows “Unique” Robot Raising Black Sea Crash FlightRecord

RUSSIAN TV SHOWS “UNIQUE” ROBOT RAISING BLACK SEA CRASH FLIGHT RECORDERS

Channel One TV, Moscow
23 May 06

[Presenter] The search for the second black box of the [Armenian] A-320
aircraft which crashed over the Black Sea near Sochi at the start of
May is continuing. The work had to be suspended several times today
because of bad weather. The first flight recorder was raised on the
previous day. It looks like it is going to be deciphered by specialists
in France, the country where the aircraft was constructed. It remains
to be seen whether complete information about causes of the crash is
going to be obtained. The flight recorder was badly damaged. Today we
received footage of a unique operation to raise the black box. Aleksey
Sonin reports.

[Correspondent] This is how Russian specialists worked on the ship
deck to improve the (?RT-1000) deep-water equipment during breaks in
the submersion operations. At the beginning, a direction finder was
fixed onto the body of the apparatus in order to be as accurate as
possible when determining the section of the bottom of the sea where
the flight recorder was emitting radio signals. Then they had the idea
of fitting the robot with a special vacuum cleaner in order to suck
up silt. In the opinion of French specialists present on board the
search ship, each of the new technological solutions can be patented.

[Aleksandr Davydenko, captioned as head of the operation to raise the
flight recorders] They were really impressed by this. Our specialists,
just like [18-th century legendary Russian inventor Ivan] Kulibin, kept
coming up with innovative solutions according to the situation. This
was highly appreciated. They [the French experts] even confirmed that
they had not such robots yet.

[Correspondent] The screen of the monitor clearly shows large fragments
of the plane. Smaller fragments are hidden beneath the silt. It was
established during previous search operations that the robot passed
above the black box several times but failed to spot it.

The silt gets several metres deep at certain sections of the seabed.

The operators switch on the underwater vacuum cleaner. And now the
flight recorder becomes visible on the screen. However, locating the
flight recorder is only half of the problem. The most difficult part
is to bring it to the surface from a depth of 500 metres. It took
the specialists a long time to design a way for the manipulator to
grab the item.

[Davydenko] It turned out that it had a handle by which it could be
transported. We made the decision to get it out of the hole and place
it onto some even surface. We put a hook through the handle but there
was not anywhere even for us to put it on. It kept sinking into the
silt. A very risky decision was made to use the hook to raise it to
the surface. This was perhaps the most serious phase of the operation.

[Correspondent] When there were just 10 metres left to the surface,
a diver went underwater, as an insurance against risks. He tied the
flight recorder to the body of the robot, so that it did not become
detached during the lifting onto the ship. The first stage of the
operation is over. It was for the first time that our specialists
carried out an operation like this. The engineers are now preparing
the robot for another submersion operation. The second black box
remains to be retrieved.

[c/r 171350-171550, video shows the operation in progress]