EU Interested In Socio-Economic Development Of Armenia

EU INTERESTED IN SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net –
April 6, 2010 – 19:53 AMT 14:53 GMT

RA prime minister Tigran Sargsyan received a European Union delegation
headed by EU Commissioner for Enlargement and Neighborhood Policy
Stefan Fule, being on a regional visit in Armenia, press office of
the government of Armenia reported.

Welcoming the guests, the prime minister noted that Armenia is
satisfied with the progress of ongoing joint programs with the EU,
adding that much work has to be done in this direction.

In turn, Stefan Fule noted, that the EU is interested in socio-economic
development of Armenia. He said, the formation of new contractual
relations between the EU and Armenia will help to review and evaluate
the programs carried out to date and discuss possible ways of deepening
relations furthermore.

The officials discussed the National Indicative Program for 2011-2013
in frames of "Eastern Partnership". The Prime stressed, that formation
of democratic structures and effective management system are priorities
for the country. They will reduce corruption, promoting small and
medium businesses and more transparent works style of businesses.

Tigran Sargsyan stressed importance of signing in-depth and
comprehensive free trade agreement, involving reforms within the next
three years. The third priority is the need to implement activities
towards socio-economic reforms and sustainable development.

The European Times Armenia Magazine Presented In Yerevan

THE EUROPEAN TIMES ARMENIA MAGAZINE PRESENTED IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net –
April 6, 2010 – 16:58 AMT 11:58 GMT

Presentation of The European Times magazine’s special edition dedicated
to Armenia took place in Yerevan on April 6.

Armenian Deputy Minister of Economy Ara Petrossyan said that this
magazine is among those tools, which may serve as an incentive for
implementation of the current governmental strategy.

According to him, this is the best platform for presentation of
business and investment environment, invitation of potential investors
to Armenia and strengthening of ties. "All those fields, which were
declared by the government as prior, were tackled in the magazine,
and it is important that this publication, having a wide geography,
will serve as a big incentive for facilitating the processes being
implemented in our economic policy," added the Deputy Minister.

Armenia’s business and investment opportunities, international
financial institutions, finances and insurance, energy and natural
resources, trade and industry, construction and infrastructures,
transport and communications, agriculture, health and tourism are
presented in the magazine.

Armenia: Bodies of Azerbaijan residents handed over under ICRC

Armenia: Bodies of Azerbaijan residents handed over under ICRC auspices

2010-04-03 16:30:00

ArmInfo. The bodies of two residents of Azerbaijan have been
repatriated today from Armenia to Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of
Azerbaijan under the auspices of the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC).

The press service of ICRC reports that the operation took place on the
road between the Armenian town of Eraskhavan and the Azerbaijani town
of Sadarak.

Acting as a neutral intermediary, the ICRC facilitated the
repatriation at the request of all parties and in full cooperation
with them. Since 1992, the organisation has repeatedly helped
authorities arrange the repatriation of human remains. The ICRC will
support any similar operation in the future if the need arises.

To remind, a subversive group of five armed people infiltrated into
the territory of the village of Koty, Tavoush region, Armenia, from
Azerbaijan Mar 3. Upon detecting them the Armenian troops opened
warning fire, which was followed by a skirmish. As a result, the group
was neutralized. One of the men was wounded and captured. He later
died when being taken to the hospital. The rest managed to escape. The
same day 09:00 PM the Armenian troops detected one more group
consisting of three people in black camouflage with tommy-guns.

As a result of a skirmish the group sustained losses: two people were
killed with their bodies left in the neutral zone. So, three Azeri
subversives were killed as a result of the Mar 3 events.

Turkish PM Says Turkey Has ‘Nothing In Past To Be Ashamed Of’

TURKISH PM SAYS TURKEY HAS ‘NOTHING IN PAST TO BE ASHAMED OF’

ArmInfo
2010-04-01 18:28:00

ArmInfo. The Turkish premier said the adoption of such bills
(resolution on Armenian Genocide) did not comply with diplomatic
courtesy or justice.

Turkish premier on Wednesday scorned the adoption of two separate bills
by the Swedish parliament and a U.S. House panel that affirmed Armenian
Genocide in 1915 in the Ottoman Empire, expressing firm belief that
Turkey had nothing in its past to be ashamed of, Turkish media report.

"Neither Sweden nor the United States had anything to do with the
incidents that occurred nearly a century ago. And once you make history
a mere tool for politics, you might never be able to find the truth
again," Recep Tayyip Erdogan told a televised address to the nation.

Erdogan said there were no competent scientific studies that shed
a light on what really happened in 1915, and he accused politicians
to take advantage of the allegations in favor of their domestic or
foreign interests.

"Turkey has always defended that history should be left up to
historians and it should be allowed to make the decision," Erdogan
said.

Social Issues In Government’s Focus, RA Finance Minister Says

SOCIAL ISSUES IN GOVERNMENT’S FOCUS, RA FINANCE MINISTER SAYS

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.03.2010 13:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian government implements various social
programs in accordance with the national budget potential, RA Minister
of Finance said.

"We try our utmost to maximally alleviate the pressure on the
vulnerable strata of the population but no country can fully obviate
the needs of the poor," Tigran Davtyan told reporters on Wednesday.

On March 25, 2010, the government approved 11% and 15% rise in pensions
and allowances respectively to compensate the rise in gas prices.

"Social issues are always in the government’s focus," Minister Davtyan
said. "A special working group was formed to develop a package of
measures to be taken to assist the needy families."

According to him, monthly gas expenses will increase by AMD 2500 from
April 1.

Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Mkhitar Mnatsakanyan said for
his part that "social hardships are temporary and the government will
exert every effort to make social allowances consistent."

Turkey: The New Ottomans

TURKEY: THE NEW OTTOMANS
Jonathan Head

Management Today
ance/news/992253/turkey-new-ottomans/
March 31 2010

How the Islamist government is making Turkey a force to be reckoned
with on the international stage.

We were an hour late leaving Istanbul, cutting it tight to catch a
meeting with Hillary Clinton. None of this seemed to bother Ahmet
Davutoglu as he bounded up the stairs of the chartered aircraft that
was taking him, and us, to London.

The man who has almost single-handedly redefined Turkey’s foreign
policy was ebullient. He had just pulled off a successful summit
on Afghanistan, and was dashing to the plane from a last-minute
tete-a-tete with his Chinese counterpart.

These are heady days to be a foreign minister in Turkey. Not since the
heyday of Ottoman power in the 17th century has this country walked
so tall on the world stage. By adroitly re-engaging with its eastern
neighbours while simultaneously trying to stay on good terms with
the west, Turkey is cannily carving out a higher profile for itself
in the global marketplace.

The twin pillars of economic liberalisation and deregulation, plus
Turkey’s controversial official candidacy for membership of the
EU, have been behind much of the progress to date. The government,
in which an overtly Islamic party holds a majority of the seats in
parliament for the first time in Turkey’s history, has driven both
these processes forward with enthusiasm.

It has been an uphill struggle. The period following the fall of
the Soviet Union in 1989 was particularly grim, as the country
staggered from one coalition government to another, and economic
growth weathercocked between minus 6% and plus 9%. But more recently,
the economy has stabilised, and Turkey is now a big exporter of white
goods and commercial vehicles, as well as of more traditional produce
such as textiles and soft fruit.

At one point, this resurgence was called ‘Neo-Ottomanism’, harking
back to the days when the word of the Ottoman sultans was law from the
gates of Vienna to the shores of the Persian Gulf. But that did not go
down well with countries such as Serbia, once under the Ottoman yoke.

So, these days, Davutoglu likes to give his policy the rather less
catchy title ‘Zero problems with our neighbours’.

The pace of Davutoglu’s diplomacy has been breathtaking. In three
years he has turned a frosty relationship with Syria into a blossoming
friendship. Iraq, once shunned as a hotbed of Kurdish separatism, has
been embraced. Two years ago, Turkish troops went over the border in
pursuit of Kurdish rebels. Today, 70% of investment and 80% of the
products sold in the Kurdish region are Turkish. Fences are being
mended with Armenia, although their disputed history remains a thorn.

Even Iran, a historic rival whose Islamic revolution was anathema to
Turkey’s old, secular elite, is suddenly a friend. Indeed, when prime
minister Tayyip Erdogan used the F word last October before a landmark
state visit to Tehran, eyebrows shot up among Turkey’s western allies.

Could someone who called Iran’s firebrand president Ahmadinejad a
friend be trusted? Was the West in danger of losing Turkey, now that
it was governed by a bunch of pious, provincial Muslims?

But, regardless of his religion and outlook, Erdogan is an economic
pragmatist. Among the 200 people in his Iranian delegation were
representatives of 80 Turkish businesses, and, mostly, what they
talked about was business: the possibilities of a joint airline,
a joint banking venture, a Turkish-Iranian industrial park near the
border… When I asked one of the prime minister’s foreign policy
advisers how the high-profile visit had helped Turkey, he replied:
‘We got a great deal on Iranian gas.’

The party that has governed Turkey for the past seven years is often
described as Islamist, but what really drives it is business. And its
modern track record is a tale of commercial triumph over adversity
unrivalled in the region. No wonder its new friends in the Middle
East look to Turkey for economic leadership.

To explain this, we need to go back half a century. The year 1961
was a bad one for Turkey – the military had just taken over in the
first of what would be four coups, and the economy was a shambles.

That was also the year when the first Ford Transit was built, in
Germany, then in Britain. In 2001, the five millionth Transit rolled
off the assembly line in Southampton. It was the panel van of choice
for decorators and delivery-men, a utilitarian British icon. By
2011, though, the only Transits manufactured in Southampton will be
custom-built chassis cabs, a maximum of 35,000 a year. The rest will
be made in Turkey, in Izmit, next to the Marmara Sea, in a world-class
factory with a capacity of 300,000 vehicles a year.

This hive of modern manufacturing efficiency had the hardest imaginable
beginning. On the morning of 17 August 1999, the scene that confronted
Nuri Otay and other Ford managers was calamitous. At 3am, an earthquake
measuring 7.4 on the Richter scale struck the area, killing more
than 17,000 people. The fault-line ran right through the middle of
the Ford plant, which was under construction at the time, swallowing
a security guard and damaging some of the structure.

‘It was tough,’ recalls Otay, who has just been made general manager
for Ford in Turkey. ‘The buildings were not badly damaged, but we
had to reconsider everything.’

It was a critical moment. Ford had for the first time taken an equal
stake in its Turkish venture, Ford Otosan, which until then had been
merely a local assembly operation run by the giant Koc Group. Turkey’s
entry into the EU Customs Union in 1996 changed the rules, exposing
its manufacturers to European competition, but also opening potential
new markets for it in the EU. Ford clearly believed expansion was the
way to go, jointly investing $650m in the new plant, the biggest ever
in Turkey’s automotive sector.

Otay and his team adapted their engineering skills to make a seismic
assessment of the area. They concluded that an earthquake on that
scale would happen only once every 150 years or so. With a few safety
adaptations, they resumed construction, opening the factory just two
months late in 2001. Today, it is one of Ford’s most efficient plants,
even exporting Transit Connect vans to the US. And manufacturing
quality is high too. This year it won the prestigious North American
Truck of the Year award, beating all those V8-powered behemoths. ‘Of
course, if you compare us to many European countries, we have cost
advantages, but this is not the main one,’ says Otay. ‘People are
dedicated in Turkey. What matters is: how much is the cost per
vehicle? You need a more efficient structure on the labour side for
success in the auto industry.’

With basic pay starting at $500 a month, the cost advantages are
significant, especially as the 1,800 different body configurations
on a Ford Transit assembly line make it more labour-intensive than
the equivalent for cars. Southampton’s loss is Turkey’s gain.

By contrast with giants like Ford Otosan, few people have ever bought
anything from Malkan Machines, despite a slogan claiming that ‘Malkan
irons the world’. Yet this company is far more representative of
the new Turkey: driven by a rising class of small-scale Anatolian
entrepreneurs, many of them pious Muslims like Erdogan, firms such
as Malkan are reaching out to new markets beyond Europe and the US.

It began humbly enough in a small Istanbul workshop in 1971. There,
metalworker Mustafa Alkan decided to try his hand at making the
industrial ironing machines used in hotels, dry-cleaners and Turkey’s
burgeoning textile industry. He takes pride in never having borrowed
from a bank.

Today, Malkan sells its machines in 76 countries, and is run by
Mustafa’s daughter, Mutlu. She wears a headscarf, and sits on the board
of the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP, in Turkish),
which puts her clearly on one side of the secular/Islamic rift. The
biggest business interests, such as Koc, generally sit on the other,
secular side.

‘I don’t think of the AKP as an Islamist party,’ she says, ‘but as
a party that respects all ways of life, including an Islamic way of
life. Turkey is unique. My closest friend is a very good Muslim, but
doesn’t wear a headscarf; she fasts during Ramadan, but every Friday
goes out drinking. We don’t have any problem with each other. She
has her lifestyle, I have mine.’

Mutlu is certainly hard-working. She agreed to meet me just a week
after giving birth to her second child, and was already planning to
make a number of business trips with her son. Her father took her to
trade fairs in Europe; she says her daughter has visited 60 countries
with her. She is a staunch supporter of Turkey’s bid to join the EU,
yet she applauds the government’s new focus on the Middle East.

‘Turkey is a big country, and I think those years we kept away from
our neighbours were lost years. But our democracy and republican
system have created space for people to improve themselves, and
now our government is making neighbouring countries aware that our
products have strong quality and competitive prices.’

It is Turkey’s youthful population that makes the country appealing
as a new recruit to an ageing European Union; and yet the poverty and
conservative religious habits of much of the population put many off.

They would feel more comfortable with a Turk like Cem Yegul, one
of the three founders of Babylon, the club preferred by Istanbul’s
music cognoscenti.

Istanbul has a terrific music scene. There is an abundance of
home-grown talent in jazz, rock, rap, grunge and experimental music,
blending contemporary genres with tradi- tional Turkish instruments.

Babylon was the pioneering venue for these musical explorations.

Today, there are dozens of clubs in the winding streets of upmarket
Beyoglu, opening and closing with bewildering frequency. So are Yegul
and his friends worried about the puritan instincts of Erdogan and
his party?

‘Not at all,’ says the club-owner. ‘I find it more of a
social-democratic government than governments in the past. Coming
from a very Islamic background, these guys were not familiar with the
world. Once they got power, they cultured themselves; they grasped
what was going on, that people were hungry for these new experiences.

In future, the party will evolve – it will not hinder the nightlife.’

Not everyone shares Yegul’s confidence. Plenty of people fear that the
freedoms they enjoy in modern Turkey – unprecedented in the Muslim
world – will be eroded as Erdogan tightens his grip. The military,
historically the guarantor of Turkish secularism, is in retreat.

Institutional checks on power are weak. Already the government
has shown a disturbing intolerance of media criticism. One of the
big secular businesses, the Dogan Group, has been crippled by a
suspiciously large fine imposed by the tax department. Modern Turkish
women, in particular, worry that they will face pressure to dress
and behave more conservatively.

Tellingly, it’s becoming a lot harder to get a drink in some Turkish
towns. Not such a big deal in a country where 97% of the population
is nominally Muslim. But a bigger deal when you consider that the
first factory to be constructed by Kemal Ataturk, the country’s great
20th-century moderniser, in Ankara, his new capital, was a brewery.

This was a gesture of defiance to the religious establishment,
which he thought was holding Turkey back. Ataturk’s legacy remains
inviolable – officially at any rate. All still a long way from sharia
law, however. No-one really thinks Erdogan has that kind of agenda,
or could get away with it if he did.

The most powerful bastion of the old secular business elite has for
the past 39 years been the Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen’s
Association, TUSIAD – of which the Koc and Dogan families are prominent
members. Its new chair – only the second woman to occupy the seat – is
an athletic, blond mother-of-five whose family owns Turkey’s largest
clothing retailer. Umit Boyner’s lifestyle and business background
would seem to put her firmly in the secular camp. Yet in her opening
speech as chair, she backed the government on a range of issues that
usually divide secular and religious Turks. She called for reform of
the judiciary and of the military-drafted constitution, for the armed
forces to stop threatening to launch coups, and for reconciliation
with the Kurdish minority. It was a speech that might have come from
the lips of one of Erdogan’s ministers.

Boyner was simply facing facts: that for all its flaws, this government
has pushed harder to modernise Turkey’s economy and institutions than
any other; that it is an enthusiastic proponent of EU membership,
a cause long championed by the business elite; and that with the
opposition in disarray, the AKP could be in power for many years,
continuing to dominate the pace and direction of Turkey’s development.

Those businesspeople who don’t climb aboard and share the journey
risk being abandoned by the roadside instead. And neither party really
wants that to happen.

http://www.managementtoday.co.uk/channel/Fin

Samvel Babayan: War In Karabakh Can Resume At Any Moment

SAMVEL BABAYAN: WAR IN KARABAKH CAN RESUME AT ANY MOMENT

Noyan Tapan
March 30, 2010

YEREVAN, MARCH 30, NOYAN TAPAN. All developments lead to a war in
the Nagorno Karabakh negotiations as Azerbaijan is not ready for
compromises and wants to receive everything giving nothing. Former NKR
Defence Minister Samvel Babayan expressed such an opinion at a March
30 press conference. In his words, at the current negotiations stage
the Armenian side should not constantly speak about compromises as it
"makes the enemy impudent." S. Babayan said that operations can resume
at any moment in Karabakh, and the Armenians "are doomed to win again."

According to his observation, history shows that South Caucasian
region’s countries sign a document with the opposite side only in
cases when they are forced to sign it. According to S. Babayan,
the same concerns Azerbaijan which will sign a final document with
the Armenian side only in case of being defeated in the war for the
second time. The speaker considers that it is Armenian diplomacy’s
omission that in 1994 the Armenians did not force such a document on
the defeated Azerbaijan.

Assessing OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs’ work S. Babayan said that
they do not fulfill their role well. According to him, instead of
unsuccessful attempts of bringing the sides to a consent Minsk Group
should assume the role of a judge.

Speaking about the home political sphere at journalists’ request S.

Babayan declared that all political figures of Armenia "over the past
16 years just wore out the brilliant victory gained in Karabakh." In
his words, there are political figures who should have retired on a
pension long ago but for some reason do not retire. However, S.

Babayan did not mention concrete names.

Turkey’s Envoy Returns To Sweden

TURKEY’S ENVOY RETURNS TO SWEDEN

ArmInfo
2010-03-30 20:35:00

ArmInfo. "Turkey’s senior diplomat returned to Sweden after
consultations in Ankara on the decision of the Swedish parliament to
adopt a resolution on the incidents of 1915", Turkish mass media say.

Zergun Koruturk, Turkey’s ambassadress to Sweden, told reporters
that she was going back to Sweden after she had held consultations
in Ankara. "Calling back an ambassador to his/her country
for consultations is a serious reaction, and even a protest,
in diplomacy," she said. "The Swedish constitution authorizes the
government to deal with foreign policy, and therefore this decision
is only recommendatory," she said. Koruturk said Turkey showed that
reaction and the Swedish government did no way approve the decision of
the parliament. Koruturk said the Swedish government had clearly stated
that it would not implement that decision. Koruturk said then, Turkey
showed a political will that it was time that the senior diplomat
went back to Sweden. "My return to Sweden is a political decision,
just as my return to Turkey," she said.

To recall, on March 11 Swedish Parliament approved the Armenian
Genocide resolution and caused the disruptive reaction of official
Ankara. Turkey immediately recalled its ambassadress from Stockholm.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned this decision and
said that it had been taken for political reasons. He also cancelled
his visit to Stockholm scheduled for March 17. At the same time,
this decision of Swedish Riksdag was criticized by the Swedish foreign
minister and prime minister. The latter called his Turkish counterpart
and pointed out that the Swedish government does not share the opinion
of the Swedish parliament.

US Dollar Fortifies Position

US DOLLAR FORTIFIES POSITION

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.03.2010 19:37 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On March 30, purchase and sale deals volume at
NASDAQ OMX totalled USD 650 000 at the average rate of AMD 401,55 /
USD1, CBA press service reported.

At the close of business, exchange rate comprised AMD 403,5 / USD1.

Average market exchange rate of Armenian Dram to US Dollar on Armenia’s
foreign exchange market reached AMD 398,29 to USD 1 as of March 30,
2010, decreasing by 1.70 points compared to March 29, 2010.

Disinformation About Armenian Victims In Moscow

DISINFORMATION ABOUT ARMENIAN VICTIMS IN MOSCOW

Aysor
March 29 2010
Armenia

The Foreign Ministry of Armenia informs: "Dear colleagues, the public
procurator’s office of Russia by mistake has issued the list of the
victims of the bomb explosion taken place in 2004 on February 6 in
subway. As a result we have provided you wrong information. We are
asking for your condescension."

According to the former information of the AR MFA there were names
of two Armenians one of them was Hasmik Melkumyan born in 1973 the
other one was Levon Khachatryan born in 1982.

There is no other information by now.