Armenia Not To Enter GUAM In Near Future, Armenian FM says

ARMENIA NOT TO ENTER GUAM IN NEAR FUTURE, ARMENIAN FM SAYS

Interfax, Russia
June 19 2006

Kyiv, June 19 (Interfax-Ukraine) – Armenia is not planning to enter
the GUAM group of countries in the near future, Vartan Oskanian,
Armenian foreign minister has said.

"GUAM membership is not on the agenda at present," he said at a joint
press conference with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Borys Tarasiuk in
Kyiv on Monday.

During Ukrainian-Armenian talks in Kyiv on Monday, the two countries
discussed the intensification of political contacts, Tarasiuk said.

He said the countries discussed preparation for a visit by the
Ukrainian premier to Armenia, and also a visit of Armenian President
Robert Kocharian to Ukraine.

Presidential Chief Economic Advisor’s Statement At WB-IMF Constituen

PRESIDENTIAL CHIEF ECONOMIC ADVISOR’S STATEMENT AT WB-IMF CONSTITUENCY MEETING IN YEREVAN

Arka News Agency, Armenia
June 19 2006

Statement by Vahram Nercissiantz
Chief Economic Advisor to the President of Armenia
at
IMF/WB Dutch Constituency Meeting
(Yerevan, June 18, 2006)

Ladies and Gentlemen,

On behalf of the President’s office, I wish to welcome our
distinguished guests and colleagues to Armenia for the IMF-World
Bank Dutch Constituency Meeting. We hope you will have a memorable
stay in our small Republic, and will share with us your experiences
in economic management and development.

Experience has shown that economic development requires growth and
growth requires stability. Experience has also shown that whilst
stability is necessary for growth, it is not sufficient. Ultimately,
private and public investments generate growth, and poverty reduction
is best achieved through growth by investing in people, and promoting
a free and competitive business environment so that investments are
made and jobs created. Fiscal policy, therefore, must have a long-term
growth strategy without impairing macroeconomic stability.

This requires increasing efficiency in public expenditure, and
efficient revenue enhancement, particularly in tax administration,
and efficient use of external aid. This, in a nutshell, is President
Kocharian’s strategy for country economic management.

The results are clear. The economy has been stable as the annual
inflation rates since 1998, when President Kocharian was elected,
have been around low single digits, and the national currency, Dram,
has been the most stable currency in the Region for several years.

The economy has been growing steadily from 1994 to 2000 around 5.5%
annually; and then since 2001 the economy has been growing around 12%
annually; and last year the economy grew at 14%. We expect another
double digit growth rate also for this year. And most important of all:
poverty has declined from 56% in 1998 to around 25% and it continues
to decline rapidly.

Looking into the fiscal space, we see increasing efficiency in public
expenditures through privatization of public utilities, and parastatal
enterprises, and dramatic reduction and targeting of subsidies. Today,
over 80% of the economy is private, and growing, both in terms of GDP
and employment. The remaining public sector, mainly physical and social
infrastructure, is top priority and is developing rapidly through
IDA assisted projects, where Armenia’s performance, in both progress
of reforms and implementation of project portfolio, is ranked number
one amongst all IDA countries. We are told that this IDA score is a
composite of many factors, including institutional development, fiscal
management and social development. Clearly, government’s expenditure
program is the poverty reduction strategy, endorsed by all donors,
underpinned by a medium term expenditure framework, and, of course,
annual budgets debated and approved by the Parliament. Looking forward,
the Administration is strengthening public expenditure management,
strengthening social safety net, and increasing public investment to
support private sector growth. And these objectives will be integrated
further when we update the PRSP later this year.

With respect to efficient revenue enhancement measures, particularly
taxes, the picture is not as strong. Annual tax collections have been
only around 14.5% of GDP (or around 17.5% of GDP if social security
payments are included) mainly due to tax evasion. Mobilization
of private sector savings by the commercial banks have also been
rather low as loan assets of the entire banking sector comprise only
around 8% of GDP. There are several reasons for this, including lack
of confidence by depositors, and then lack of borrowing interest by
creditworthy enterprises, that finance working capital, and sometimes
capital investments, through internal cash that they accumulate by
evading taxes. Moreover, equity markets have not yet developed mainly
because of closed family driven and opaque corporate governance.

Greed and vanity have sometimes induced deviations from economic
policy causing waste and misallocation of scarce resources. Simply
said, abuse of both power and freedom during this rapid economic
transition has at times obstructed implementation of otherwise sound
economic policies. If unchecked, such deviations will distort the
markets, undermine economic performance and create serious economic
and social problems. Clearly, country economic management must be
driven by policy and not transactions.

President Kocharyan’s Administration, therefore, has undertook
decisive measures to improve governance to enhance efficient resource
mobilization in both public and private sectors. For efficient
mobilization and allocation of public resources, the strategy now
calls overhaul of the government machinery through a comprehensive
civil service reform program so as to substantially reduce waste and
corruption, and to reform administration of taxes and customs. In fact,
the 2004-2006 Tax and Customs Reform Plan has already yielded some
modest improvements in revenue mobilization, but we recognize more must
be done. For mobilization of private resources, the strategy calls for
an extensive and coordinated set of measures to simplify administrative
procedures and remove obstacles to trade and investment, and encourage
development of the enterprise sector through open and transparent
corporate governance and thus enhance confidence that is necessary for
the financial sector to mobilize savings into investment. In short, the
strategy here is to substantially reduce the cost of doing business,
so as to enhance Armenia’s competitiveness in the global economy.

Clearly, reforms in Armenia require a great deal of personal
sacrifice and behavioral modification by all of us during transition,
and benefits of the reforms are not immediately available to all
segments of the population at this stage. We are determined, however,
to continue to implement the reforms through democratic processes of
open debate and due process of law. We believe reforms implemented
through democratic institutions are more stable and sustainable, and
enhance public confidence. By improving the business and investment
climate through reform of public and corporate governance, and with
additional foreign and domestic private investment, we expect to
maintain our high economic growth rates for this decade and with
progressive distribution of the yields of that growth, the benefits
of the reforms will be appreciably felt by the entire population
through gradual improvements in quality of life.

Thank you for your attention.

Drafts On RA Flag And Emblem Adopted In Third Reading And Completely

DRAFTS ON RA FLAG AND EMBLEM ADOPTED IN THIRD READING AND COMPLETELY

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Jun 16 2006

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The RA National
Assembly adopted in the third reading and completely the drafts on the
RA flag and emblem at the June 15 special session. The characteristics
and orders of usage of the flag and emblem are defined by them. It is
particularly defined that the red colour of the state flag symbolizes
the Armenian plateau, the Armenian people’s constant struggle for
existence, Christian belief, independence and freedom of Armenia. The
blue colour symbolizes the Armenian people’s will to live under
peaceful sky. The orange colour symbolizes the Armenian people’s
creative talent and diligence.

Amendments Possible In Law On Local Self-Government Of Georgia

AMENDMENTS POSSIBLE IN LAW ON LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT OF GEORGIA

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Jun 16 2006

AKHALKALAK, JUNE 16, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Amendments are
possible in the law on local self-government bodies of Georgia. In
the opinion of Alexander Shalamberidze, the Deputy Chairman of
the Parliament Committee on Regional Policy, Self-Government, High
Mountainous Regions of the country, it is most necessary for keeping
equal local budgets of distant settlements.

As the "A-Info" agency informs, greeting the parliamentarian’s
intention to make possible amendments in the law, Mels Torosian,
a member of the Samtskhe-Javakhk Armenian Public Organizations’
Council, mentioned on this occasion that the parliamentarians do not
speak about liquidating another disproportion by the self-government
legislation. It is particularly spoken about Armenians’ and Georgians’
being presented in Sakrebulos of regions equal to their number. By
the acting legislation, the Georgian inhabitation making only 5% in
the region of Akhalkalak has a right to have up to 30% presence. The
same injustice threatens the regions of Akhaltskha, Tsalka, Aspindza,
Ninotsminda.

Hungary To Dedicate Memorial To Ethnic Germans Expelled After World

HUNGARY TO DEDICATE MEMORIAL TO ETHNIC GERMANS EXPELLED AFTER WORLD WAR II

AP Worldstream
Jun 18, 2006

Hungary on Sunday will dedicate a memorial to the thousands of ethnic
Germans who were expelled from the country after World War II.

The mass expulsion from Hungary of those considered to be Germans
began on Jan. 19, 1946, in the small town of Budaors on the western
outskirts of Budapest, the capital.

President Laszlo Solyom, Parliament Speaker Katalin Szili, and Ursula
Seiler-Albring, Germany’s ambassador to Hungary, are expected to
speak at the ceremony in Budaors’s Old Cemetery.

In just six weeks, some 7,000 people _ around 90 percent of the
population of the town known in German as Wundersch _ were forced
out of Hungary and deported to Germany.

"Without judgment on merits, almost all of the town’s population
was branded on the basis of the principle of collective guilt," the
town said in a pamphlet commemorating the expulsions. "All those
who considered themselves ethnic Germans or whose mother language
was German according to the 1941 census were among the guilty, among
those expelled."

In all, some 200,000 ethnic Germans were driven from Hungary until
1948.

Similar measures were also undertaken in the former Czechoslovakia,
where some 3 million ethnic Germans and 600,000 ethnic Hungarians
were expelled after the war under the decrees of former Czechoslovak
President Edvard Benes because many had supported Adolf Hitler and
the Nazi occupation of Eastern Europe.

Today, ethnic Germans are one of 13 national or ethnic minorities
recognized in Hungary, also including Armenians, Bulgarians, Greeks,
Roma (Gypsies) and Serbs.

An exhibition on the expulsion of the German population from Hungary
opened June 1, at the House of Terror in Budapest.

Court Of Appeal Inaugurates Renovated Court Room,Library And Confere

COURT OF APPEAL INAUGURATES RENOVATED COURT ROOM, LIBRARY AND CONFERENCE HALL

Armenpress
Jun 13 2006

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian Court of Appeals has
inaugurated today a renovated court room, a library and a conference
hall. The renovation was started one year ago and was funded by
government funds and a World Bank credit for reformation of the
justice system.

The library has 6,000 books in four languages.

Justice minister David Harutunian said the fact that the bulk of thee
books are in English will force judges to improve their knowledge
of English.

People Are Made To Leave The Country

PEOPLE ARE MADE TO LEAVE THE COUNTRY

Lragir.am
13 June 06

On June 13 several members of parliaments representing different
political forces touched upon the depreciation of the dollar and
revaluation of the dram. Mher Shahgeldyan, Orinats Yerkir, says as a
result of the policy of revaluation of the dram the income of a major
part of the population they receive from their relatives working abroad
decreased. Victor Dallakyan, the secretary of the Ardarutiun Alliance,
expresses concern on the same matter. He cites the calculations of
economists: through exchange rate manipulations the population of
Armenia was robbed of over 300 million dollars.

Artashes Geghamyan, the leader of the National Unity Party, says
people lost more, about 460 million dollars. Member of Parliament
Tatul Manaseryan said the revaluation of the dram leads to a decline in
local production, which makes a great number of people leave Armenia
and work abroad.

Nairobi: Leaders: State is hiding something

The Standard (Nairobi) Kenya
June 10, 2006

Leaders: State is hiding something

By Ben Agina

Kanu chairman Uhuru Kenyatta yesterday read conspiracy on the part of
the Government in deporting the four Armenians.

Uhuru said the Armenians had not broken any immigration rules to
warrant deportation, but had committed a crime that called for
prosecution.

Artur Sagarsyan and Artur Margaryan await deportation pensively at
the Kenya Airport Police Unit

“The Armenians had committed a criminal offence and they should have
been charged and prosecuted. The Government is in this,” said Uhuru.

Speaking on telephone from the US, Mwingi North MP Kalonzo Musyoka
said the Armenians should not have been here in the first place.

Kalonzo said it was clear from the beginning that the Armenians were
people with ulterior motives.

Uhuru said it was shocking that foreigners could threaten Kenyans.

He said it was not enough to deport the Armenians, adding that they
should have faced the full force of the law.

“Why should you deport people who have entered our security area and
failed to pay duty?” he asked.

Uhuru wondered whether the Armenians were above the law for them not
to face charges. He said the Government should be held accountable
for their failure to prefer charges against the Armenians.

Kalonzo said now that they had committed a crime, they should be
charged.

The Liberal Democratic party chairman, Mr David Musila, said the
incident witnessed at JKIA on Thursday breached the security of the
country.

“As LDP we had raised concerns that these were mercenaries with
ulterior motives,” said Musila. Musila, who is also the Deputy
Speaker, said the President owes Kenyans an explanation after some
senior ministers earlier defended the Armenians.

“Kenyans must get an explanation on who was protecting the
Armenians,” demanded Musila. Musila accused some people in Government
of protecting the Armenians.

He also wondered whether Kenya’s security is at the mercy of
foreigners.

Musila congratulated the Commissioner of Police Major-General Hussein
Ali for the action he took against the Armenians. Kabete MP Paul
Muite said the behaviour of the Armenians at the JKIA was insulting.

“If you were in a foreign country and you enter a security area and
behave like that you could be dead by now,” said Muite.

He wondered why the Armenians were spared when they threatened to
shoot Immigration officials at the airport.

Muite, who chairs the Parliamentary Committee on Legal and
Administration of Justice, said the Armenians have been part of their
discussions since the raid on The Standard Group premises on March 2.

He said the committee hopes to summon the Commissioner to brief them
more with the unfolding events.

Muite also congratulated the police commissioner and expressed
optimism that the due process of law would be followed. LDP
secretary-general Joseph Kamotho yesterday asked Internal Security
minister John Michuki to tell Kenyans why the Armenians were being
deported instead of being charged in court.

Kamotho said the Internal Security Minister had assured Kenyans that
the Armenians were being investigated.

“Now that they have committed a crime, why are they being let off?
What Kind of cover-up is this by Government?” posed Kamotho.

“If the Government has nothing it fears the Armenians would expose,
they should not have been deported,” they said.

Nairobi: Writer at home with Armenians

Daily Nation, Kenya
June 10, 2006

Writer at home with Armenians

Story by ADHYAMBO ODERA
Publication Date: 6/10/2006

Being a celebrity in Kenya is simple – hang around a clique of people
that consider themselves celebs.

It didn’t take the Artur brothers long to figure that out.

When Mr Artur Margaryan invited some writers for a party, I at first
shunned it. I didn’t want to mix up with the man after what had been
reported about him – mercenary claims and all.

The second time our paths crossed was at the Chaguo la Teeniez Awards
(Chat). The man arrived in style. By his side, was a woman wearing a
lot of gold. He once said he spent Sh150,000 a day to entertain his
girlfriend.

I wondered why he was at the ceremony. Chat awards are for musicians,
actors, DJs and radio presenters.

I was answered when he took the stage to present a prize to a shocked
musician Amani, then gave comedian and Chat MC Mongolo Sh10,000.

The following week, he threw a party at his Runda residence. I went
to satisfy my curiosity. But getting there at 7pm wasn’t easy.
Luckily, he had hired guards from a security firm to escort guests to
the house he shared with his brother Artur Sargsyan.

At the gate, another man, possibly Armenian, had a walkie talkie. He
would ask guests their names and confirm it with Mr Margaryan before
letting them in. But guests had to be escorted, owing to the 12 guard
dogs, which looked ready to maul a stranger.

As my escort ushered me into the house, I noticed that the five or so
luxurious cars in the compound had their number plates covered, and
my escort was uncomfortable with me lagging behind checking out the
compound.

At the garden, a few local celebs had already gathered. I went
straight into the house. It was not well furnished – expensive
leather seats thrown together rather hurriedly, I thought.

One thing struck me. Someone in that house loved art, and expensive
pieces too.

Mr Margaryan was at the office, but his brother greeted me
cheerfully. When I finally met him at the office, where an associate
was winding up a meeting, he greeted me with a polite smile.

I noticed that he wanted to mingle with the crowd, but people seemed
uncomfortable with his hug. Some turned up for the party and left
immediately.

I stayed on to find out more. He told me he was in love with Kenyan
music. He wanted to contribute to its growth by investing in it, he
said.

He also said he had a record label back home and wanted to create
stars. Not for the money, though, he said. He knew where to market
them and make money. In the meantime he wanted people to know that he
was a great man, with interest in show business.

The musicians in question were in attendance, and he chatted with
them. He also posed for photographs with almost everyone. But
remembering what happened to Mwingi North MP Kalonzo Musyoka, I opted
out.

The brothers had claimed they knew the MP and had taken a picture
with him.

What came out clearly is that Mr Margaryan has style, a sense of
humour and is always prepared with the right words.

NATO PA Delegation Arriving in Yerevan

PanARMENIAN.Net

NATO PA Delegation Arriving in Yerevan
09.06.2006 18:53 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ June 12-14 NATO PA delegation will be visiting
Armenia. The delegation members are scheduled to meet with the members
of the Armenian parliamentary delegation to the NATO PA, head of the
department of the OSCE affairs at the RA Foreign Ministry Varuzhan
Nersisyan and other officials.

June 12 the NATO PA delegation will meet with RA Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian, chief of the national security service Gorik Hakobyan
and member of the committee on struggle against corruption Manuk
Topuzyan as well as representatives of NGOs.

June 13 discussions with Armenian Parliament Speaker Tigran Torosian
are scheduled. The delegation members will also meet with Chief of the
General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, Colonel General Mikael
Harutyunyan, head of the department for emergency situations Edik
Barseghyan and Energy Minister Armen Movsisyan.

June 14 round table discussions organized jointly by the NATO PA and
the parliamentary commissions on foreign affairs and defense, national
security and home affairs will be held in the Armenian parliament,
reported the RA NA press service.