President Of Armenia Meets EU Special Envoy For The South Caucasus

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA MEETS EU SPECIAL ENVOY FOR THE SOUTH CAUCASUS

armradio.am
19.02.2009 11:23

President Serzh Sargsyan received the EU Special Representative for
the South Caucasus Peter Semneby, President’s Press Office reported.

The meeting featured the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
of Poland to Armenia Thomas Knote, the Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of France to Armenia Serge Smessow, and the Head of
the European Commission delegation to Armenia Raul de Luzenberger.

Attaching importance to the further deepening of cooperation with the
European Union, President Sargsyan expressed confidence that the Action
Plan for 2009-2011 adopted at the sitting of the National Security
Council provides an opportunity to move forward in that direction.

During the meeting the interlocutors referred to the cooperation within
the framework of the Eastern Partnership Initiative of the European
Union, the process of negotiations on the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict, the Armenian-Turkish dialogue, as well as the process of
reforms in our country.

Emphasizing the importance of the regional component of the Eastern
Partnership Initiative, President Sargsyan expressed hope that the
European Union will be consistent in ensuring the commitment of all
the countries involved in the initiative to that priority.

Peter Semneby confirmed the intention of the EU High Commissioner for
Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier Sola na to visit Armenia,
in accordance with the agreement reached during President Serzh
Sargsyan’s visit to Brussels.

Executive Director Of IMF: Badly Developed Armenian Banking System S

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF IMF: BADLY DEVELOPED ARMENIAN BANKING SYSTEM SAVED ARMENIA FROM WORLD FINANCIAL CRISIS

ArmInfo
2009-02-17 14:24:00

ArmInfo. Badly developed Armenian banking system saved Armenia from
world financial crisis, executive director of IMF Age Bakker said
when giving lecture at Yerevan State University.

He also added that the fact that Armenian banks do not give extra
modern types of service, as, for instance, in the USA or Europe,
saved them , and thanks to it financial stability in Armenia has been
preserved. At present we have to speak about the world economic crisis
affecting the real sector of Armenian economy, he said and added that
development of the economy of the country much depends on activeness of
the construction sector, which had suffered most of all as a result
of the world economic crisis. For this reason he recommended the
government to promote diversification of the economy of the country.

"Providing economical stability is the most important task of the
government of Armenia. In the conditions of the crisis time has
come think about improvement of the business-climate and accelerate
structural reforms", – he said.

Bjni Mineral Water Factory Sold For AMD 4.441 Billion

BJNI MINERAL WATER FACTORY SOLD FOR AMD 4.441 BILLION

ARKA
Feb 16, 2009

YEREVAN, February 16. /ARKA/. Bjni mineral water factory was sold
for AMD 4.441 billion at the compulsory auction held Monday, said
Ruben Grdzelyan, spokesman of Armenian Justice Ministry’s agency of
compulsory execution of judicial acts.

He said that the agency is not entitled to name the purchaser.

The unknown purchaser has already paid AMD 222 million as necessary
fee.

"The winners of the auction ought to pay the remaining amount within
three days, Grdzelyan said.

The previous auction on Bjni was held in late January, but no bids
were received then.

Under the relevant law, in such cases, the auction can be resumed
on the third workday after completion of the previous session, and
initial bid is lowered 10%.

The auction was resumed on February 5 with initial bid of AMD 4.441
billion (more than $14.5 million).

The plant belonged to SIL Concern owned by Sukiasyan family.

MP Khacharur Sukiasyan, the company shareholder, has been announced
wanted for tax evasion, the factory was halted and its property seized
in fall 2008 after State Revenue Committee notified the plant about
recovery of AMD 4 billion 67 million 201 thousand 600 to the state
budget in accordance with Administrative Court’s decision.

Nagorno-Karabakh has right to self-determination – ROA president

Interfax, Russia
Feb 12 2009

Nagorno-Karabakh has right to self-determination – Armenian president

YEREVAN Feb 12

There is no reason for Nagorno-Karabakh to be part of Azerbaijan,
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said.

"Nagorno-Karabakh cannot be part of Azerbaijan. There are no legal or
historical reasons for it, nor do the people of Nagorno-Karabakh want
it," Sargsyan said at the fourth convention of the Prospering Armenia
Party in Yerevan on Thursday.

"Our position on the Karabakh conflict is clear: the people of
Nagorno-Karabakh has the right to self-determination and has exercised
this right. We also believe that the there is no alternative to the
peaceful resolution," he said.

Azerbaijan and the international community must recognize the Karabakh
people’s right to self-determination, he said.

"We are fighting for this right to be recognized and the only way is
through talks. The Nagorno-Karabakh republic is our native land, it
has no value, you cannot trade in it," the Armenian president said.

There are positive prospects for the Armenian-Turkish relations, he
said. "There is a good opportunity to normalize our relations with
Turkey, and we must use that opportunity," Sargsyan said.

kk dp

Russia, Armenia To Create Joint Air Defense Network: Official

RUSSIA, ARMENIA TO CREATE JOINT AIR DEFENSE NETWORK: OFFICIAL

Xinhua

Feb 13 2009
China

MOSCOW, Feb. 13 (Xinhua) — Russia and Armenia will build a united
air defense system similar to a recently announced Russian-Belarusian
air defense network, the head of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO) said on Friday.

"The so-called Russian-Belarusian integrated air defense network
is just a part of the cooperation within the CSTO," CSTO Secretary
General Nikolai Bordyuzha told a news conference in Moscow.

"We are expecting Russia and Armenia to set up a similar joint (air
defense) network," he was quoted by the RIA Novosti news agency
as saying.

The alliance will set up three regional air defense networks in
Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia, Bordyuzha said.

"After that we will advance to a higher level of cooperation,
coordinating the activity of all regional networks and introducing
common rules of engagement and information exchange," he said.

The CSTO, a post-Soviet security bloc, comprises Russia, Belarus,
Armenia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.

Russia said last year it was planning to expand military-technical
cooperation with other CSTO members and build a CSTO integrated air
defense network.

Moscow and Minsk inked an agreement on Feb. 3 to establish a common
air defense system.

www.chinaview.cn

Bordyuzha: Russia, Armenia To Set Up Joint Air Defense Network

BORDYUZHA: RUSSIA, ARMENIA TO SET UP JOINT AIR DEFENSE NETWORK

armradio.am
13.02.2009 18:02

Russia and Armenia will set up an integrated air defense network
similar to recently announced Russian-Belarusian air defenses,
Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO) Nikolay Bordyuzha told a press conference in Moscow.

"The so-called Russian-Belarusian integrated air defense network is
just a part of the cooperation within the CSTO," Bordyuzha said.

"We are expecting Russia and Armenia to set up a similar joint air
defense network," RIA Novosti quoted him as saying.

According to Bordyuzha, the CSTO, which comprises Russia, Belarus,
the Caucasus republic of Armenia and four Central Asian states of
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, will set up three
regional air defense networks – in Eastern Europe (Belarus), in the
Caucasus and in Central Asia.

"After that we will advance to a higher level of cooperation,
coordinating the activity of all regional networks and introducing
common rules of engagement and information exchange," the official
said.

Abdullah Gul: "Turkey Attaches A Great Importance To The Moscow Meet

ABDULLAH GUL: "TURKEY ATTACHES A GREAT IMPORTANCE TO THE MOSCOW MEETING OF PRESIDENTS OF RUSSIA, ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN"

Today.Az
s/politics/50643.html
Feb 12 2009
Azerbaijan

"Russia plays a key role in the peaceful resolution of the Karabakh
conflict", said Turkish president Abdullah Gul, starting his state
visit to Russia.

Turkey attaches a "great importance to the Moscow trilateral meeting
with participation of the Presidents of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan
upon completion of which there has been adopted a declaration of
the need for the peaceful resolution of the Karabakh conflict",
noted the president.

The head of the Turkish state noted that "Russia plays a key role
in this issue as it is also the co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group on
Nagorno Karabakh".

"Any positive turn in the resolution of conflicts in the Caucasus
immediately has a positive impact on all the countries of the region,
while the negative turn has a negative impact on all regional players",
considers Abdullah Gul.

According to the Turkish President, his country has long been
searching for ways of normalizing relations with Armenia and uses
all opportunities for a dialogue, "including the one provided by the
selection match of the world championship between the football teams
of our countries".

"I have left to Yerevan and watched this game at the tribune together
with my Armenian counterpart. After the match we have a very good
and useful meeting with President Sargsyan. I am very glad that the
dialogue established in Yerevan is still underway", noted he.

"I believe that my visit to Yerevan was not only the start of the
process of normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia
but will also promote normalization of relations between Armenia and
Azerbaijan. At the same time I would like to express a deep gratitude
to Russia for the constant efforts for assistance to the search of
ways to settle these complex knots", said Abdullah Gul.

http://www.today.az/new

Student Of Yerevan Conservatory Mary Khojoyan Receives Scholarship O

STUDENT OF YEREVAN CONSERVATORY MARY KHOJOYAN RECEIVES SCHOLARSHIP OF ARMENIAN ARGENTINIAN BENEFACTORS

Noyan Tapan

Feb 11, 2009

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 11, NOYAN TAPAN. Mary Khojoyan – a second-year
student of the string department of Yerevan State Conservatory,
award-winner of international and republican contests, violinist, has
received "The Best Student" scholarship established for second-year
and senior students of the conservatory by the Armenian Argentinian
benefactors Hrayr and Marta Albarians. The scholarship of 500 dollars
was handed to the best student at an event organized at the rector’s
office on February 11.

"The Best Student" scholarship is given to an excellent student who has
been noted for his (her) active concert and social activities during
the academic year. The best student is selected by the benefactors.

To recap, this program is implemented by the Hayastan All-Armenian
Fund.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1012062

Armenia 2008

ARMENIA 2008

A1+
[03:38 pm] 10 February, 2009

Harassment of journalists and self-censorship among the news media
intensified before and after a flawed February 2008 presidential
election. The country’s authoritarian president, Robert Kocharian,
imposed a state of emergency after the balloting to suppress
demonstrations and block independent news reporting, a move that
allowed him to deliver the presidency to a hand-picked successor,
Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan.

In early year, authorities sought to ensure that news coverage
supported Sargsyan’s candidacy. In the weeks ahead of the February
19 vote, most of the country’s state and private media followed the
lead of H1 state television by praising Sargsyan and criticizing
Levon Ter-Petrosian, the leading opposition candidate who served as
the first post-Soviet president from 1991 to 1998. Armenian State
Radio stopped rebroadcasts of Armenian-language news programs from the
U.S. government-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL). Only
residents of the capital, Yerevan, and several regional cities had
regular access to alternative sources of information, such as the
Web site of the A1+ news agency.

Sargsyan won the election with 52 percent of the vote. But observers
from the Vienna-based Organization for Security and Co-operation
in Europe–a pan-European human rights monitoring group–found
the process marred by voting irregularities and ballot-counting
abuses. Two journalists–Hovsep Hovsepian of A1+ and Lusine Barsegian
of the Yerevan daily Haikakan Zhamanak–were assaulted and robbed
by unidentified people when they attempted to document abuses at a
polling station in Yerevan.

Tens of thousands of Ter-Petrosian’s supporters peacefully protested
in central Yerevan after reports of electoral fraud emerged. After
a week of demonstrations–and statements from several influential
government officials in support of the opposition candidate–Kocharian
declared a 20-day state of emergency on March 1, banning all public
rallies and independent news reporting. The order placed Ter-Petrosian
under virtual house arrest as police cordoned off his home and barred
visitors. Hundreds of police officers moved in to violently disperse
demonstrators in central Yerevan. Gagik Shamshian, a photojournalist
for the daily Aravot and the weekly Chorrord Ishkhanutyun, and Artak
Egiazarian, a reporter with the Yerevan daily Aik, were roughed up
by police and detained for several hours, according to local press
reports.

The state of emergency required news media to cite only official
sources when reporting on national politics, an edict that opened
the way for authorities to crack down aggressively on independent
media. Authorities banned three private radio stations–Radio Yerevan,
Radio Hay, and Ardzagank Radio–from broadcasting news from RFE/RL. The
private television station ArmNews, which carried CNN and Euronews
programming, interrupted reports on Armenia with commercials. Security
officers were stationed at printing presses to censor newspapers,
while authorities ordered Internet service providers to block access
to the Web sites of A1+, RFE/RL, the independent newspapers Aravot
and Haikakan Zhamanak, and YouTube (where demonstrators had posted
homemade videos of police violence).

The harsh media restrictions and widespread public fear made
independent reporting nearly impossible. "I tried just speaking to
people informally, but they refused to speak with me, saying they’re
afraid of being persecuted by the authorities," said Karine Simonian,
an RFE/RL journalist in the northern city of Vanadzor.

The news vacuum allowed pro-government information and propaganda
to dominate the airwaves as the Supreme Court rejected two cases
challenging Sargsyan’s electoral victory. A March 13 decree, signed by
Kocharian, allowed journalists to return to work only if they did not
report "obviously false or destabilizing information" about domestic
politics. When the state of emergency expired on March 21, access
to most Internet sites was restored and newspapers were allowed to
resume publishing. But police continued to harass opposition activists
and journalists reporting on opposition rallies; local authorities
in Gyumri shuttered Gala TV in retaliation for its critical news
reporting. The crackdown allowed Sargsyan to be sworn into office
on April 9, despite widespread public discontent over the conduct of
the elections.

Regulation of broadcast media remained highly politicized thanks to
government loyalists serving on the National Council on Television
and Radio (NCTR). Journalists with A1+, a one-time broadcaster that
transformed itself into an Internet-based news agency, know that
better than most. The NCTR revoked the broadcast license of A1+
in 2002 because of the station’s critical reporting and has since
rejected a dozen applications filed by the news agency. In June 2008,
the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights ruled that the
NCTR’s repeated denials without explanation had violated the European
Convention on Human Rights. The court instructed the government to
pay the station 20,000 euros (US$31,000) in damages.

The government responded by delaying payment of the fine and
by drafting an amendment to the Law on Radio and Television that
effectively froze television licensing until 2010, according to local
press reports. In September, the amendment was approved by parliament
and signed by the president, preventing A1+ from participating in
any new television license tenders.

The prosecutor general’s office selectively enforced the law,
punishing critical journalists while failing to prosecute attacks
against the press. Haikakan Zhamanak’s Barsegian was hospitalized
with a concussion in August after being attacked by two unidentified
assailants. Barsegian had just written several articles critical of
government supporters. In November, three assailants beat prominent
investigative journalist Edik Baghdasarian, editor of the news magazine
Hetq, as he was walking on a Yerevan street. His most recent reports
concerned corruption in the mining industry. No arrests were reported
in the attacks. Arman Babadzhanian, editor of Zhamanak Yerevan,
remained imprisoned during 2008 after being convicted in 2006 of
forging documents to avoid military service. His four-year sentence
was widely seen as excessive and given in retaliation for a 2006
article criticizing the prosecutor general.

Goran Lennmarker: "Peaceful Resolution Of The Karabakh Conflict Has

GORAN LENNMARKER: "PEACEFUL RESOLUTION OF THE KARABAKH CONFLICT HAS NO ALTERNATIVE"

Today.Az
ws/politics/50583.html
Feb 9 2009
Azerbaijan

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan and special representative
of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly on Nagorno Karabakh issues Goran
Lennmarker discussed the resolution of the Karabakh conflict at a
meeting on Monday, according to the department of press and information
of the Armenian Foreign Ministry.

According to the press release, by Lennmarker’s request, Minister
Nalbandyan introduced the recent developments in the negotiation
process on the resolution of the Karabakh conflict, results of the
meeting of the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Zurich.

"It was noted in this aspect that the Moscow declaration of November
2 of 2008, as well as the statements of the Foreign ministries of the
Minsk Group co-chairing states and the OSCE Foreign Ministers Council
in Helsinki regarding the resolution of the Karabakh problem create
favorable basis for the progress in talks", says the press release.

In turn, Lennmarker noted that the negotiation process in the framework
of the OSCE Minsk Group, may lead to the resolution of the conflict
and voiced confidence that the peaceful resolution of the Karabakh
conflict has no alternative.

During the meeting Nalbandyan and Lennmarker exchanged views on
proposals of the EU Eastern Partnership.

http://www.today.az/ne