New Law On Pre-School Education In Armenia To Be Adopted Late 2005

NEW LAW ON PRE-SCHOOL EDUCATION IN ARMENIA TO BE ADOPTED LATE 2005

YEREVAN, MARCH 16. ARMINFO. A new Law “On pre-school education” in
Armenia, as well as its standard acts will be adopted by the end of
2005, Armenian Minister of Science and Education Sergo Yeritsyan
informed at today’s press-conference.

He noted that in 2006-2008 compulsory study in country’s infant school
will be started from the age of 5. Teacher of these institutions will
be retrained within that period, too. 100 pre-school institutions in
county’s regions will be reconstructed and repaired this year. 682
state infant schools act today in Armenia of them 250 in Yerevan,
63220 children attend them regularly.

7% of children attend day nurseries, 2-5 years old children attending
kindergartens amount 25%. 11.811 employees are engaged in these
institutions. Their wages are not regulated by the state bodies as
they financed by communities, Minister noted. In his words, the
present legislation does not regulate also the activity of alternative
infant schools and the order of their licensing does not correspond to
the present-day standards. The new Law will elaborate provisions
allowing regulation of by-the-hour schedule of kindergartens’
attendance. -r-

BAKU: `Days of Caucasus friendship’ due in USA

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 15 2005

`Days of Caucasus friendship’ due in USA

Baku, March 14, AssA-Irada
An international conference entitled `The Days of Caucasus
friendship’ will be held in New York, US on March 18-20.
More than 100 representatives from Baku, Tbilisi, Yerevan and
Istanbul have been invited to the event not to be attended by
politicians.
The participants will exchange views on regional problems, including
the current status of the Armenia-Azerbaijan and Armenia-Turkey
relations.*

Abkhaz leader urges Georgia to focus on economic issues not politics

Abkhaz leader urges Georgia to focus on economic issues, not politics

Ren TV, Moscow
15 Mar 05

[Presenter] The new leaders of the unrecognized republic of Abkhazia
are ready for talks with Georgian leader Mikheil Saakashvili. Abkhaz
President Sergey Bagapsh said today that working groups from both
sides would meet in April in Geneva.

The Abkhaz leader believes that the most important thing now is to
talk not about politics but about how to find solutions to specific
economic issues.

[Sergey Bagapsh, speaking at a news conference in Moscow] One such
issue is a through railway link from southern Russia to Armenia. That
is why we are proposing to consider this issue, resolve it so that we
are able to say that we have found common ground in resolving economic
issues. That was how once we resolved energy issues, agreeing on
InguriGES [dam]. There are some issues there, too. These are basic
matters that we can resolve and then tell the people that we are
already resolving these issues and that talks will continue further.

Fire Breaks Out At Yerevan JV “Polyplast” OSJC

FIRE BREAKS OUT AT YEREVAN JV “POLYPLAST” OSJC

YEREVAN, MARCH 10. ARMINFO. A not large fire broke out at Yerevan
JV “Polypalst” OJSC today. The press- service of the Armenian
Governmental Emergency Situations Department informs ARMINFO that
the alarm was received at13.11. Two fire brigades arrived in the
place of the fire in 2, Odesskaya Street. According to the source,
the fire broke out during welding works. Approximately at 13.30 the
fire was liquidated. As a result, an empty 10-ton cistern for mazut
burnt. No victims were recorded.

Karabakh Stamps Accepted In The World

KARABAKH STAMPS ACCEPTED IN THE WORLD

Azg/arm
10 March 05

Stamps are a unique way of recognizing the Nagorno Karabakh Republic.
It has been 12 years that stamps with the state symbols of Artsakh
are freely exported to diverse countries of the world. Though
Azerbaijan, as it could be expected, is against this postal export,
ArtsakhPost state company is enlarging its activities with success.
ArtsakhPost issued its next 3 stamps lately in 15.000 copies. “The
Golden Horse” is the most attractive one. Interestingly, Azerbaijan
issued a stamp with the same name aiming to appropriate the famous
Karabakh horse. Director of ArtsakhPost says that tourists visiting
Karabakh are the main customers of the stamps. Very often they send
packages with Artsakh stamps to their countries, sometimes such remote
ones as America or Australia. Director assures that all the packages
and envelopes always get the addressee.

By Kim Gabrielian in Stepanakert

Detroit Armenian Women’s Club’s 75th Anniversary benefit luncheon

Detroit News
Tuesday, March 8, 2005

Events & Performer

Society

Detroit Armenian Women’s Club’s 75th Anniversary benefit luncheon

Detroit Armenian Women’s Club’s 75th Anniversary benefit luncheon is 11:30
a.m. April 16 at the Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield Hills. The
event will feature antique gowns from the ’40s, ’50s and ’60s, entertainment
and a silent auction. Tickets are $45. Information: (248) 855-0605.

The What’s Coming Up calendar appears Tuesdays in the Features section. To
publicize your event, send information to Alesia Cooper, The Detroit News,
615 W. Lafayette Blvd., Detroit, MI 48226. You can also call her at (313)
222-2046, fax (313) 222-2451 or e-mail acooper@ detnews.com.

Chuck Bennett is a Metro Detroit freelance writer and editor of
, an online magazine. You can reach him at
[email protected].

www.the-real-scoop.com

Congressional caucus on Armenian issues called US president toacknow

PanArmenian News
March 7 2005

CONGRESSIONAL CAUCUS ON ARMENIAN ISSUES CALLED US PRESIDENT
ACKNOWLEDGE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN HIS REMEMBRANCE REMARKS ON APRIL
24

07.03.2005 06:45

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Assembly of America commended
Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg and
Frank Pallone today for launching a letter-writing campaign to ask
President Bush to appropriately acknowledge the Armenian Genocide in
his remembrance remarks next month, the Armenian Assembly of America
reports. ~SWe are writing to urge you to join us in reaffirming the
United States record on the Armenian Genocide in your upcoming April
24th commemorative statement. By properly recognizing the terrible
atrocities committed against the Armenian people as “genocide” in
your statement, you will honor the many Americans who helped launch
the unprecedented U.S. diplomatic, political and humanitarian
campaign to end the carnage and protect the survivors. The United
States must never allow crimes against humanity to pass without
remembrance and condemnation. By commemorating the Armenian Genocide,
we renew our commitment to prevent future atrocities, and therefore
negate the dictum that history is condemned to repeat itself~T, the
message says.

Failure of IMF and World Bank in Fmr USSR: Uncommon Poverty

Global Politician, NY

Failure of IMF and World Bank in Fmr USSR: Uncommon Poverty of the
Commonwealth

3/6/2005

By Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.

The Lucerne Conference on the 9 months old CIS-7 Initiative ended two years
ago with yet another misguided call upon charity-weary donors to grant the
poorest seven countries (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kyrgyz Republic,
Moldova, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan) of the Commonwealth of Independent
States financial assistance in the form of grants rather than credits.

The World Bank’s Managing Director, Shengman Zhang, concluded with the
deliriously incoherent statement that “donor assistance in the form of
highly concessional finance and debt relief will only succeed if linked to
effective reform”. None of the other five co-sponsors – the IMF, the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the Asian
Development Bank (ADB) and the indefatigable Dutch and Swiss governments –
questioned this non sequitur.

Since independence a decade ago – aided and abetted by the same founts of
Washington wisdom – the seven unfortunates have regressed to a malignant
combination of unbridled autocracy and perpetual illiquidity. Poverty soared
to African proportions, the region’s economies shriveled and public and
external debts mounted dizzyingly.

Ever the autistic solipsists, the IMF and World Bank maintained in a press
release that the talk shop “broadened and deepened the debate to include a
range of economic, institutional and social issues that must be tackled if
the seven countries are to achieve the targets of the Millennium Development
Goals”.

The release is strewn with typical IMF-newspeak.

The destitute, oppressed and diseased people of the region should achieve
“ownership of the reform agenda” in accordance with “clear national
priorities”. Worry not, reassures the anonymous hack: the World Bank has
embarked on Poverty Reduction Strategy processes in all seven fiefs.

The cynical cover-up of the west’s abysmal failure in the region comes
replete with unflinchingly triumphant balderdash: the policies of the
Bretton-Woods institutions are “putting the countries themselves in the
driver’s seat of reforms”. According to Mr. Zhang, corruption in the CIS-7
is “moderating” and the investment climate is “beginning to improve”.

The solution? “More regional integration” – in other words, more trading
among the indigent and the demonetized. This and better access to markets in
“the rest of the world” will assure “recovery and future prosperity”.

Mr. Zhang conveniently neglected to mention the Stalinesque rulers of most
of the CIS-7, the political repression, the personality cults, the blatant
looting of the state by pernicious networks of cronies, the rampant
nepotism, the elimination of the free media and the proliferation of every
conceivable abuse of human and civil rights, up to – and including – the
assassination of opponents and dissidents. To raise these delicate issues
would have been impolitic when the IMF’s largest shareholder – the United
States – has embraced these despots as newfound allies.

And from fantasyland to harsh reality:

According to the World Bank’s own numbers, with the exception of Uzbekistan,
the current gross domestic product of the reluctant members of the CIS-7 is
between 29 percent (Georgia) and 80 percent (Armenia) of its level ten years
ago.

Armenia’s annual GDP per capita is a miserly $670. More than half the
population is below the poverty line. These dismal results are despite seven
years of strong growth pegged at 6 percent annually and remittances from
abroad which equal a staggering one eighth of GDP. Armenia is the second
most prosperous of the lot. Its inflation is down to two digits. Its
currency is stable. Its trade is completely liberalized (a-propos Zhang’s
nostrums).

Azerbaijan, its foe and neighbor, should be so lucky. Close to nine tenth of
its population live as paupers. This despite a tripling of oil prices, its
mainstay commodity. The World Bank notes wistfully that its agriculture is
picking up. Its oil fund, insist the sponsoring institutions, incredibly, is
“governed by transparent and prudent management rules”.

Georgia flies in the face of the Washington Consensus. Petrified by a
meltdown of its economy in the early 1990s, a surging inflation and $1
billion in external debt – it adhered religiously to the IMF’s prescriptions
and proscriptions. To no avail. Annual GDP growth collapsed from 10 percent
in 1996-7 to less than 3 percent thereafter.

The Kyrgyz Republic is a special case even by the dismal standards of the
region. Again, nine tenths of its population live on less than $130 (one
half on less than $70) monthly. Poverty actually increased in the last few
years when economic growth picked up. At $310, the country’s GDP per capita
is sub-Saharan. Is this appalling performance the outcome of brazen
disregard for the IMF’s sagacious counsel?

Not so. according to the CIS-7 Web site “the Kyrgyz Republic is currently
the most reformed country of the Central Asia and sustains a very liberal
economic regime.” The Kyrgyz predicament defies years of robust growth,
single digit inflation, a surplus in the trade balance and other
oft-rehashed IMF benchmarks. That the patient is as sick as ever casts in
doubt the doctors’ competence.

Moldova – with $420 in GDP per capita and 85 percent of the population under
the line of poverty – is only in marginally better shape, mainly due to the
swift recovery of its principal export market, Russia.

The best economic performance of the lot was Uzbekistan’s. It is often
wheeled out as a success story and used as a fig leaf. Uzbekistan’s GDP is,
indeed, unchanged compared to 1989. GDP per capita is $450 – but only one
third of the population are under – the famine-level – national poverty
line.

But a closer scrutiny reveals the – customary – prestidigitation by the
proponents of the Washington orthodoxy.

With the exception of Belarus, another relative economic success story,
Uzbekistan resisted the IMF’s bitter medicine longer than any other country
in transition. Its accomplishments cannot be attributed by any mental
gymnastics to anything the west has done, or said. The CIS-7 Web site
describes this contrarian polity thus:

“Today significant distortions in foreign exchange allocation remain,
reflected in a large difference between the official and curb market
exchange rates (about 60% in mid-2002). The current economic system retains
the key features of soviet economy, with the state owning and exercising
quite active control over the production and distribution decisions of a
significant number of Uzbek enterprises.”

There lurks an important lesson.

Central Europe – with its industrial and liberal-democratic past should not
be lumped together with east Europe. The moral seems to be that transition
in the former Soviet Union, in the east and in the Balkans was a foolhardy
and ill-informed exercise, administered by haughty and inexperienced
bureaucrats and avaricious advisors.

The countries who resisted western pressures and chose to preserve Soviet
era institutions even as they gradually liberalized prices and unleashed
market forces – seem to have fared far better than the more obsequious lot.
This is the Chinese model – as opposed to the “shock therapy” prescribed by
western armchair “experts”. Tajikistan – with $170 GDP per capita and an
unearthly 96 percent of its denizens under the poverty line – may be
regretting not having heeded this lesson earlier.

Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. is the author of Malignant Self Love – Narcissism
Revisited and After the Rain – How the West Lost the East. He served as a
columnist for Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb,
a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the
editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open
Directory and Suite101.

Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of
Macedonia. Sam Vaknin’s Web site is at

http://samvak.tripod.com

ANKARA: Is Our Friendship With Germany Near An End?

Turkish Press
March 4 2005

Is Our Friendship With Germany Near An End?

BY MUSTAFA BALBAY

CUMHURIYET- The news from the EU isn’t encouraging at all. Here’s the
dilemma: The EU constantly delays its responsibilities toward Turkey,
while asking Turkey to do whatever it asks immediately and without
question.

Apparently, this dilemma will endure as long as our government fails
to take an appropriate stand against it.

Remarks made by the EU and Turkey both underline this double standard
chanted by every EU official visiting Turkey. There’s also been an
evident change in European governments’ policies against Turkey.

One example of this change is our disagreement with Germany on `the
Armenian issue.’ An elderly German priest named Johannes Lepsius
claims that he witnessed the Armenian genocide. His house is now
being used as a propaganda center. Angela Merkel, leader of the
German opposition Christian Democratic Union (CDU) has presented a
resolution to the Federal Parliament that can be summarized as
follows:

‘During the Ottoman reign, Armenians were victims of a large-scale
genocide through which 1.2-1.5 million Armenians lost their lives. As
the legal successor of the Ottoman Empire, Turkey denies that such an
event happened. Turkey must show unconditional assent on this issue.’

German Ambassador to Ankara Wolf-Ruthart Born was recently summoned
to the Turkish Foreign Ministry and told that such initiatives would
have a negative effect on bilateral relations.

When I called Mehmet Ali Irtemcelik, Turkey’s Ambassador to Berlin,
he gave me a brief and clear explanation of the matter:

`I’m afraid that the damage this resolution could cause will be wide,
deep and irreparable. We hope they will soon come to see this, and
we’re working to make this happen.’

In light of these recent events, the state of Turkey’s EU membership
process could be summed up like this: Neither grant full membership
to Turkey, nor allow it to go anywhere else.

Will We Gift Tsaghkadzor To Russians?

WILL WE GIFT TSAGHKADZOR TO RUSSIANS?

A1+
01-03-2005

â~@~We have 9 deputies out of 27 in the Krasdnodar region of
Russia; on the whole there are 39 deputies of Armenian origin in
other regionsâ~@~], Chairman of the Union of Armenians of Russia
Ara Abrahamyan stated today.

He reported that with branches in 240 Russian towns the Union
of Armenians is actively participating in the work of the State
Duma. â~@~For the first time Armenians are trying to rule instead
of letting the others rule over themâ~@~], Ara Abrahamyan resumed.

He also informed of his plans for Armenia. Mr. Abrahamyan has already
come to agreement with the Minister of Sports on «offering
at least 500 Russian sportsmen the possibility to take rest in
Tsaghkadzor all year round». «We distinctly see the future of
Tsaghdadzor», Ara Abrahamyan stated and clarified that the matter
concerns construction of building in Tsaghdadzor on the area of 150
000 square meters.

–Boundary_(ID_M4R9Ryh8Qcd7WQ52w2Slmw)–