Sports: Revealed: Mourinho in furious video bust-up with Man Utd outcast Mkhitaryan

Brinkwire, UK
Dec 17 2017
REVEALED: Mourinho in furious video bust-up with Man Utd outcast Mkhitaryan    

Manchester United midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan has clashed with manager Jose Mourinho.

The Sun says the pair rowed during a video analysis of the victory against Brighton last month.

Mourinho was unhappy with his defensive input and a mistake he made after coming on as sub in the 1-0 victory.

The Special One had also been unhappy about his contribution against Chelsea in the 1-0 away defeat on November 5.

Mkhitaryan, 28, was criticised by Mourinho in front of the squad during the video session.

But the £30 million Armenian was angry and defended himself and the argument continued after the session.

European court orders Armenia, Azerbaijan to compensate war refugees

Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Germany
 Tuesday 1:06 PM EST


European court orders Armenia, Azerbaijan to compensate war refugees

Paris

DPA POLITICS justice Europe Armenia Azerbaijan conflict  European
court orders Armenia, Azerbaijan to compensate war refugees Paris
Armenia and Azerbaijan must compensate seven refugees
from the former Soviet republics' war for the disputed region of
Nagorno-Karabakh, the European Court of Human Rights ruled Tuesday.


Armenia must pay 5,000 euros (almost 6,000 dollars) plus costs to
each of six Azerbaijani Kurds who have been unable to return to an
area occupied by Armenian forces since the war in the early 1990s,
the court said.

Azerbaijan, in a separate judgement, was ordered to pay 5,000 euros
and costs to the children of an Armenian man who had been unable to
return to his village in the Shahumyan region, near Nagorno-Karabakh.

The court had already ruled in 2015 that Armenia had given no valid
reason to explain why the six Azerbaijani applicants were not allowed
to return to their homes in the Lachin district in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Also in 2015, the court held that Azerbaijani authorities had been
within their rights to keep the Armenian applicant's village off
limits for security reasons, but should have compensated him.

Christian ethnic Armenian forces have controlled the former
autonomous district of Nagorno-Karabakh, inside majority-Muslim
Azerbaijan, since a 1994 ceasefire ended several years of fighting.

They also control formerly Azeri-populated areas around the enclave,
including Lachin.

The conflict, as well as simultaneous ethnic clashes inside Armenia
and Azerbaijan, caused hundreds of thousands of refugees to flee in
both directions across the countries' border.

The court said that both countries had a responsibility to find a
political solution to the conflict, which briefly flared up again
last year in fighting that killed more than 120 people.

Entertainment: ’80s music icon rocks Paradise, ’70s film star lauded at Coolidge Corner

Telegram & Gazette (Massachusetts)
December 8, 2017 Friday


’80s music icon rocks Paradise, ’70s film star lauded at Coolidge Corner


HIGHLIGHT: Pop Culture Notebook: Gary Numan's triumphant return;
Adrienne Barbeau honored for her body of work. Pictures will be sent

When Numan burst onto the music scene in the late ’70s, the UK artist
looked like the replicant love child of David Bowie and one of the
interchangeable guys in Kraftwerk. Today, Numan looks like Robert
Smith’s slimmer, better looking brother.

Meshing the new wave of his past (four tracks from “The Pleasure
Principle” and two track from “Replicas,” as well as one from 1980’s
“Telekon”) with the nightmare of the future (six tracks from “Savage,”
three tracks from “Splinter: Songs From a Broken Mind”), Numan played
a hellish and hypnotic, 90-minute show that included a 15-song main
set and two encores.

Dressed like a warrior of the wasteland with an industrial-strength
band that played like they were auditioning for Nine Inch Nails but
looked like extras from “The Road Warrior,” Numan erupted on stage
with the fierce, unflinching opener, “Ghost Nation” (from his latest)
and never let up.

A manic bundle of energy onstage, Numan contorted his frame and
flailed his limbs (and, at times, even looked like he was about to
shed his skin), as his body got bombared by the barrage of unrelenting
beats.

Singing with his face usually buried behind clasped,
microphone-squeezing hands, Numan — with spiky jet-black hair, pasty
completion and evenly applied black massacre — lashed out and lamented
humanity’s ungodly demise due to our collective sheer arrogance and
vast shortsightedness.

Sandwiched in-between a prickly pair from “Savage” (“Bed of Thorns”
and “Pray for the Pain You Serve”), the alt-rock classic “Down in the
Park” was sheer perfection.

Numan was so electric that he didn’t realize the sound system carrying
his vocals blew out during “Love Hurt Bleed” that he continued to sing
with the same manic energy, despite his words momentarily falling on
deaf ears.

The one-two punch of his latest single, “My Name Is Ruin” followed by
his breakthrough U.S. single, “Cars” was one of the evening’s
undisputed highlights in an evening filled with undisputed highlights.

The massive barrage of pulse-pounding beats were wonderfully accented
by frenetic bursts of old-school strobe lights and changing colors
that transformed the stage into the nightmarish world of the not too
distant future where the sun has been snuffed out, oceans have dried
up and once safe havens have been turned into barren deserts.

Worth the price of admission on its own, the first encore featured
“M.E.” off “The Pleasure Principle” and “Are ‘Friends’ Electric?” from
“Replicas,” while the second encore served up a killer “I Die: You
Die.”

After the show, Numan told me that his “Savage” tour might have the
legs to continue into 2018 in bigger venues, which, believes me, it
certainly does.

I suggested to Numan that he should call his old friend Trent Reznor
about a Nine Inch Nails/Gary Numan double-bill not unlike Reznor did
with David Bowie in the ‘90s, which featured the two artists in the
middle of their respective main sets, trading off verses. That would
be so cool.

Adrienne Barbeau honored with ‘After Midnite’ award

Adrienne Barbeau was not only honored with the Coolidge Corner
Theatre’s second “Coolidge After Midnite” Award Saturday night in
Boston for her stellar body of B-movie work, she watched a screening
of her debut feature film “The Fog,” did a 40-minute Q&A and even
graciously posed for photographs and signed autographs for fans (both
for free) until nearly 4 a.m.

Barbeau, who played late-night radio DJ-turned-heroine Stevie Wayne in
“The Fog,” was asked about her track record for playing strong, female
characters in her films.

“I had an Armenian grandmother and an Armenian mother and a bunch of
Armenian aunts and that has something to do with it. My family
survived the genocide. My grandmother came over and I guess we’re all
strong women,” Barbeau said. “I would be hard pressed to play a real
victim. It doesn’t sit well with me.”

Barbeau recalled the first time she read the script for “The Fog.”

“It was the height of the women’s movement, the equal rights
amendment. We just got Roe vs. Wade and I was coming off a series
(“Maude”) that was really very socially significant. And this was my
first feature and I read it and it wasn’t “The China Syndrome” … It
was a ghost story,” Barbeau sighed. “I’m not a fan of the horror
genre. I don’t like to be scared. I don’t like to go see them. I love
to do them but you’re not going to find me in the audience. I’ve never
even seen ‘Psycho.’”

Despite her disdain for horror, Barbeau agreed to “The Fog,” as well
as “The Swamp Thing” and George A. Romero’s “Creepshow.”

Originally, Barbeau said she didn’t want to do “Creepshow,” but her
then husband, John Carpenter (who directed Barbeau in both “The Fog”
and “Escape from New York”) and good friend Tom Atkins (who was also
in “The Fog”) convinced her not to pass up on an opportunity to work
with Romero, the legendary director of “Night of the Living Dead.”

“Creepshow” turned out to be one of her favorite projects to date.

“I had a great time making it,” she said. “I love George more than
anything in the world. I love Pittsburgh (where it was shot),” Barbeau
said. “I stayed away from the set when E.G. Marshall was doing his
stuff. I’ve worked with snakes and tarantulas and bees and you name
it, but I’m not going to work with cockroaches.”

But, there was one project she turned down, which, she acknowledged,
would have made her autograph lines definitely longer at horror
conventions, and that was Rob Zombie’s “The Devil’s Rejects.”

“I read, maybe, like the first 20 or 30 pages and I called the agency
and said, ‘I can’t do this. This is just so vile,’” Barbeau recalled.
“About a year later, I was at a horror convention and there was Bill
Moseley signing autographs and he had a line around the block. I said,
‘Bill, what did you do?’ The one I turned down, “The Devil’s Rejects.”
I still wouldn’t have done it. I couldn’t. I just couldn’t.”

Gary Numan performing Tuesday at the Paradise Rock Club, Boston.

Adrienne Barbeau talking about her career as a horror movie icon
Saturday at the Coolidge Corner Theatre, Brookline. [T&G Staff
Photos/Craig S. Semon]

Council of Elders makes decisions on renaming streets

On November 29, Yerevan Council of Elders held a meeting, moderated by Yerevan Mayor Taron Margaryan, where members of the council of elders approved the draft decision on renaming the section of the city of Dzorapi, Yerevan, from Paronyan Street to the Uruguay Square, as India St.

By another decree, the members of the Council of Elders have approved the project to name the street adjacent to S. Parajanov Museum after S. Parajanov. The council members also discussed and approved the draft decision on naming the road linking Isakov Avenue to Leningradyan Street after Monte Melkonian.

By decision of the Yerevan Council of Elders, the street from Saralanj St. to Ler Kamsar St., of the Kentron administrative district, will be renamed after Leonid Azgaldyan.

The next session of the Council of Elders will be held on December 26.

“This isn’t the law which can be fought against by all means” – deputy defense minister urges protesting students to end hunger strike

Category
Politics

Deputy defense minister of Armenia Artak Zakaryan reassures that the law on military service and status of servicemen isn’t aimed at hindering the development of science and education in the country.

Zakaryan told reporters in the parliament that fighting against the bill with the “For the Development of Science” slogan is entirely unreasonable.

“I am aware that several students who are displeased with the law have declared hunger strike. I call on the young people to end the hunger strike, because it isn’t the right way, and this law isn’t the law which can be fought against by all means. During a meeting with these very students with the Prime Minister, we suggested them to participate in the designing of sub-legal acts which stem from the law. During these discussions we will take into account all proposals, we’ll see to what extent the mechanisms are effective, whether or not we are creating new possibilities for “dodgy” people, so they find ways to avoid serving. We didn’t present any initiative hindering the development of education and science”, Zakaryan said.

He added that deferment will continue being in force, but under conditions. Moreover, under conditions affordable and accessible for all. “Today deferment is in force only for those who gain points, while we suggest giving the right to deferment to all students who say that they aren’t avoiding military service, but are requesting to be allowed to continue education. Can there be a better proposal?”, he said.

“While accepting their demands will mean to return to the same situation, when the abusers will continue abusing, the avoiders will continue avoiding, and science will in no way benefit”, he said

Sports: Armenia and Belarus are suspected of match-fixing

News.am, Armenia
Nov 10 2017
Armenia and Belarus are suspected of match-fixing

The friendly match between the national teams of Armenia and Belarus which took place on November 9, was brought to the centre of the Federbet organization's attention.

According to the organization, Armenia and Belarus are suspected of match-fixing.

Federbet noted, they can confirm the anomalous movement of bets on this match, bookmaker-ratings.com.ua reported.

Armenian national football team beat Belarus 4-1 in the friendly match which took place at the Republican Stadium in Yerevan.

Erdogan, Aliyev Target Karabakh, Hail ‘Solidarity’ Between Their Countries

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left) with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev in Baku on Oct. 31

BAKU—Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erodgan on Tuesday praised his country’s relations with Azerbaijan saying the bond of solidarity between the two nations keeps “getting stronger.” Erdogan, along with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev also ramped up their anti-Armenian rhetoric when discussing the Karabakh conflict, which Erdogan said was “a bleeding wound” for Turkey.

Erdogan was speaking at a press conference in the Azerbaijani capital with his counterpart Ilham Aliyev, after the two attended the 6th Turkey-Azerbaijan High-Level Strategic Council meeting.

“The solidarity between Turkey and Azerbaijan in political, military, economic, cultural areas continues to get stronger,” said Erodgan.

To that end, Aliyev remarked that Azerbaijan would continue and expand its military cooperation with Turkey by purchasing more weapons from Ankara.

Turkish President Recep Tayyop Erdogan, Ilham Aliyev and Georgian Prime Minister Giorgi Kvirikashvili during the Oct. 30 launch of the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway

On Monday, when the two leaders were joined by the Georgian Prime Minister, Giorgi Kvirikashvili for the opening of the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway, Erdogan was quick to say that “unless Armenia ends the occupation of the Azerbaijani territories, this issue will not be resolved.”

“We believe that the international community, especially the Minsk Group, should work more actively to solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. We will continue to stand next with Azerbaijan in this matter, as in every matter,” added Erdogan.

The theme of “friendship, brotherhood and unity,” spilled over into Tuesday, when Aliyev, once again, turned his focus on the Karabakh conflict, reiterating his damaging positions, which continue to stall the peace process.

‘The people and state of Azerbaijan will never allow for the creation of a second Armenian state on our historical land…Turkey has always supported the just cause of Azerbaijan in all international organizations as a friend, as a brother,” said Aliyev.

Levon Mnatsakanyan presents the situation on the Line of Contact

On October 29, General-Lieutenant Levon Mnatsakanyan, Commander of the NKR MoD and Defense Army, received a group of well-known figures of science and culture of the Republic of Armenia, headed by Gegham Harutyunyan, who visited the Defense Army within the framework of the History and Culture Pages program.

At the meeting, the Commander of the Army considered such initiatives and programs demanded and necessary; he also thanked the guests for the lasting effective cooperation. At the request of the guests, Levon Mnatsakanyan also presented the situation on the Line of Contact, spoke about the current stage of the army building, RA MoD, DA report.

Nikol Pashinyan: And if Vigen Sargsyan served in the Armed Forces of the Republic of Armenia, then Serzh Sargsyan’s longtime secretary, Satik s a veteran of the Great Patriotic War

“And if Vigen Sargsyan served in the Armed Forces of the Republic of Armenia, then Serzh Sargsyan’s longtime secretary, Satik (unfortunately, I do not know her surname; her name has been touched upon in the press many times) is a veteran of the Great Patriotic War,” Nikol Pashinyan, the head of the Yelk (Way Out) faction, posted on Facebook.

The far-reaching debate on Vigen Sargsyan’s military service was brought on by the post of the former Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan’s wife, who spoke of a certain official who escaped from military service. Nikol Pashinyan stated that she referred to Vigen Sargsyan, and the Defense Ministry announced that Vigen Sargsyan had served in the army.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/26/2017

                                        Thursday, 

Armenian Official Warns Against `Excessive Expectations' From Deal
With EU


 . Hovannes Movsisian


Armenia - Armen Ashotian, a deputy chairman of the ruling Republican
Party of Armenia, holds a news conference in Yerevan, 13Jul2016.

A planned agreement on Armenia's "enhanced partnership" with the
European Union is not as significant as it is portrayed by some
pro-Western elements in the county, a deputy chairman of President
Serzh Sarkisian's Republican Party said on Thursday.

"The document that will be signed is beautiful and important, but I
think that it's wrong to give it extra lighting, gloss and other stuff
or turn into a Christmas tree," said Armen Ashotian. "Because we are
thereby heightening our expectations which will not be met later on
and we will say that the European vector [of Armenian foreign policy]
has failed."

The draft Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) is
designed to deepen Armenia's political and economic ties with the
EU. Citing "common values" shared by the two sides, the 350-page
document commits the Armenian government to implementing political
reforms and "approximating" national economic laws and regulations to
those of the EU.

The CEPA does not contain far-reaching free trade-related provisions,
unlike an Association Agreement that was negotiated by Armenian and EU
officials in the summer of 2013. The Armenian leadership scuttled that
agreement by opting to join a Russian-led trade bloc.

Ashotian, who also chairs the Armenian parliament committee on foreign
relations, seemed to imply that the CEPA will be signed as planned at
an EU summit in Brussels scheduled for November 24. He said the two
sides will make clear that the deal is not directed against third
parties.

Speaking at a Yerevan-based think-tank, Ashotian also made the point
that the CEPA is important to only Armenia but also the EU because the
latter needs to showcase a "success story" at the Brussels summit.

"The EU need to have another partner in the region alongside Georgia,"
said Ashotian. "There are many other reasons as well. For instance,
this agreement will contribute to regional stability and therefore the
risk of a new war or other instability could significantly
decrease. This is a mutually beneficial document."

Johannes Hahn, the EU commissioner for European neighborhood policy,
hailed "the groundbreaking new agreement" with Armenia when he visited
Yerevan earlier this month. He said it will not only deepen the EU's
ties with Armenia but also serve as a "blueprint" for other countries.



Karabakh Truce Violations `Unrelated' To Sarkisian-Aliyev Meeting


 . Artak Hambardzumian


SWITZERLAND -- Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (L) poses next to
Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian at the opening of talks in Geneva,
October 16, 2017

Armenia's First Deputy Defense Minister Artak Zakarian denied on
Thursday any connection between last week's Armenian-Azerbaijani
summit in Geneva and subsequent deadly ceasefire violations around
Nagorno-Karabakh.

President Serzh Sarkisian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev
met in Geneva on October 16. In a joint statement issued there, their
foreign ministers and international mediators said the two leaders
"agreed to take measures to intensify the negotiation process and to
take additional steps to reduce tensions on the Line of Contact." They
said the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the Minsk Group are
satisfied with the summit and are planning to hold follow-up talks
with the two ministers.

Just three days later, an Armenian soldier was shot dead in Karabakh
by Azerbaijani sniper fire. The Azerbaijani military reported that
Armenian forces killed one of its soldiers on Sunday. Karabakh's
Armenian-backed army said the Azerbaijani side shelled its frontline
positions with mortars and anti-tank weapons later on Sunday, Monday
and Tuesday. No major truce violations have been reported since then.

"Linking the tension to the Geneva meeting is totally inappropriate,"
Zakarian told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). "There has
periodically been tension on the border. It results from one fact:
inside Azerbaijan they don't come to terms with the reality that there
is no alternative to the realization of Nagorno-Karabakh's right to
self-determination. At the same time I presume that that is also an
opportunity to solve some issues in Azerbaijan."

Speaking right after the Geneva summit, Sarkisian again ruled out any
peaceful settlement that would lead to the restoration of Azerbaijani
control over Karabakh. That statement angered Azerbaijani
officials. They accused the Armenian president of breaching
understandings reached with Aliyev.

Sarkisian shrugged off those accusations on Wednesday. "We spoke one
on one, and if we agreed not to tell anyone [details of the
conversation,] then how did [Aliyev's] aides familiarize themselves
with the subject?" he told senior military officials in Yerevan. "I
can assure you that I have not uttered even half a word about our
conversation in any other place."

Meanwhile, the Russian Foreign Ministry said on Thursday Moscow
regrets the fact that "the state of affairs in the conflict zone
remains uneasy." "We are calling on Yerevan and Baku to demonstrate a
constructive approach to looking for solutions to unresolved issues,"
the ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, told reporters.

At the same time, Zakharova welcomed the warring sides' stated
readiness to intensify the negotiation process and bolster the
ceasefire regime.

For his part, the Minsk Group's U.S. co-chair, Andrew Schofer, told
the Armenpress news agency that the Geneva meeting was a "positive
sign of commitment by both presidents" to seek a Karabakh
settlement. Schofer also said that he and fellow mediators from Russia
and France expect to meet the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign
ministers in the next few weeks.



Denmark Withdraws Funding For Armenian Mining Project


 . Tatevik Lazarian
 . Artak Hambardzumian


Armenia - Open-pit mining at Teghut copper deposit, 20Dec2014.

A Danish state agency has decided to withdraw an export credit
guarantee for a $62 million investment in Armenia's second largest
copper mine, accusing its private owner of failing to comply with
environmental standards.

Vallex Group, an Armenian mining company, launched productions
operations at the Teghut deposit in the northern Lori province three
years ago as part of a $380 million project to mine copper and
molybdenum there.

Open-pit mining at Teghut will lead to the destruction of hundreds of
hectares of rich forest. Hence, strong opposition to the project
voiced by Armenian environment protection groups.

Vallex pledged to offset this damage by planting a new and bigger
forest in adjacent areas. It denied environmentalists' claims that ore
crushing and enrichment will pollute a local river and underground
waters. The company also promised to create 1,300 new jobs, build new
schools and upgrade other infrastructure in nearby villages.

The project is mostly financed by VTB, a leading Russian commercial
bank that has extended loans to Vallex. VTB in turn obtained one of
those loans, reportedly worth $62 million, from a Danish pension fund,
PensionDanmark.

According to Denmark's Export Credit Agency (EKF), the money lent by
PensionDanmark was due to be spent on the purchase of mining equipment
from a Danish engineering company.

In an October 15 statement, EKF said it granted in 2013
PensionDanmark's request to guarantee the export credit to VTB. It
said the decision was conditional on the Teghut operator complying
with "the World Bank's guidelines on environmental and social
sustainability."

The statement announced that EKF decided to withdraw that credit
guarantee because "the mine has unfortunately not complied with the
terms of the agreement." "This decision is the culmination of a
lengthy process in which we have been forced on multiple occasions to
reprimand the mine," EKF's chief executive, Anette Eberhard, was
quoted as saying.

The Danish agency did not specify the environmental standards that
have allegedly not been met by the Armenian company.


Armenia - A newly constructed ore-processing plant at the Teghut
copper mine, 20Dec2014.
Vallex said on Thursday that it had never signed any loan agreements
with EKF and will therefore not comment on the announced halt in
Danish funding. It stressed that it has been financing mining and
ore-processing operations at Teghut with its own resources and VTB
loans. In a statement, the company also insisted that it is operating
in strict compliance with environmental standards.

Levon Galstian of the Armenian Ecological Front, a non-governmental
organization strongly opposed to the Teghut project, dismissed the
Vallex reaction as "primitive manipulations." Galstian welcomed EKF's
decision, saying that it set a "precedent" that could help to prevent
the emergence of more metal mines in Armenia. He also said that his
group will use EKF's decision to ask the Armenian government to
inspect and eventually stop the Teghut operation.

Environment Protection Minister Artsvik Minasian told RFE/RL's
Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) that his ministry is already looking
into the matter and will assess Vallex's compliance with its
environment protection obligations. "We will present our actions
soon," he said.

Copper, molybdenum and other non-ferrous metals as well as their ore
concentrates have long been the number one source of Armenia's export
revenue. They accounted for at least 44 percent of Armenian exports in
January-August this year. The Armenian mining industry reportedly
employs about 8,000 people at present.



U.S. Official Lauds Armenia's Post-Soviet Progress


U.S. - U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Bridget Brink and
Armenian Ambassador Grigor Hovannisian mark the 26th anniversary of
Armenia's independence at an official reception in Washington,
24Oct2017.

A senior U.S. State Department official reportedly praised Armenia's
"strong partnership" with the United States, "vibrant" political
scene, and burgeoning information technology industry as she
celebrated the 26th anniversary of the country's independence in
Washington on Tuesday.

Bridget Brink, a U.S. deputy assistant secretary of state, was among
dignitaries that attended and spoke at a reception hosted by the
Armenian Embassy in Washington and the U.S. Congressional Armenian
Caucus on Capitol Hill on the occasion.

"This year, Armenia celebrates twenty six years of independence. In
this time, it is quite remarkable how much progress has been made,"
she said in remarks cited by the Armenian Assembly of America, a
lobbying group that sponsored the event.

"We all remember all too well the difficult years immediately after
independence," Brink went on. "But in a relatively short period of
time, Armenia has modernized its economy and has become a tech hub in
the region, created a vibrant political system that allows space for
civil society, and has built a strong, enduring partnership with the
United States, of which I am deeply proud."

The U.S. official also praised Armenia's participation in NATO-led
missions in Afghanistan and Kosovo, saying that it underscores "the
shared strategic interests between our two countries."

The Armenian ambassador in Washington, Grigor Hovannisian, described
U.S.-Armenian relations as "thriving" when he addressed the
reception. The U.S., he said, is a "reliable friend and partner that
helped Armenia face formidable odds" following the Soviet break-up.

Also attending the event were about two dozen pro-Armenian members of
the U.S. House of Representatives. Some of them visited Yerevan last
month to take part in official ceremonies that marked the country's
independence anniversary.

"As we celebrate the freedom that the Armenian people gained over two
decades ago, let us also keep in mind those in Artsakh who continue in
their struggle for independence," Ed Royce, the chairman of the House
Foreign Affairs Committee, said, using the Armenian name of
Nagorno-Karabakh.



Press Review



"Zhoghovurd" claims that the Armenian Defense Ministry's proposal to
practically abolish all remaining draft deferments enjoyed by
university students has caused a "big wave of discontent." The paper
too is critical of a relevant bill drafted by the ministry, saying
that it was strongly defended in the Armenian parliament on Wednesday
by individuals who themselves did not serve in the armed forces. "A
considerable number of government members and other officials did not
serve in the army either and received deferments for continuing their
studies," it says, adding that their arguments in support of the bill
are therefore disingenuous.

"Hayots Ashkhar" takes a different view, criticizing "groundless"
claims about military service hampering the development of science in
Armenia. The paper says such claims are mainly made by those who have
only "superficial knowledge about the real state of affairs in those
areas." "The issue is really serious and important but it does not
represent a clash of the interests of the army and the
educational-scientific complex," it says.

"Zhamanak" claims that "everything except investments" was discussed
during Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev's October 24-25 visit to
Yerevan. The paper recalls that when Prime Minister Karen Karapetian
visited Moscow in January he discussed with Medvedev the possible
creation of a Russian-Armenian investment fund. It says there was "no
word" on that idea in public statements made during Medvedev's trip to
Yerevan.

Diogo Pinto, the director of the European Friends of Armenia, a
Brussels-based group, tells "168 Zham" that he is optimistic about the
upcoming signing of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership
Agreement (CEPA) between Armenia and the EU. "If the EU and EU member
states are doing their best, then I think that the agreement will be
signed either during the [EU's November 24] summit or in the run-up to
it," he says. "If not, then I am sure that the agreement will be
signed right after it. If the agreement is successfully ratified [by
the EU member states] we could switch to negotiations on the
liberalization of the visa regime. A visa-free regime [for Armenian
nationals] would facilitate Armenia-EU relations."

(Tigran Avetisian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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