OSCE Demand Will Improve The Condition of Georgian Armenians

THE OSCE DEMAND WILL CONTRIBUTE TO THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF
ARMENIANS IN GEORGIA

A1+
25-01-2005

On January 24, 2005, the Council of Europe Parliament Congress adopted
a resolution about the responsibilities of Georgia and their carrying
out.

In the resolution the steps of Georgia taken for carrying out their
responsibilities are appreciated and in a number of cases new dates
are made clear. According to Agency A-info, in Georgia’s
responsibilities reconsidered by OSCE there are those which have
direct connection to the problems of Armenians in Javaxk and Georgia
on the whole. These responsibilities are: a)

Before September 2005 to sign and ratify the European Charter of the
Local Languages and those of Minorities and the European Circle
Convention on Transboundary Cooperation. b)

Before September 2005 to ratify the Circle Convention about the
Defense of National Minorities. c)

As for self-government, to make a whole of the administrative reforms
before the next elections of local authorities and to guarantee that
they will take place according to the European Charter of Local
Authorities. d)

In the context of the Georgian Administrative reforms to reconsider
the recently adopted model of Agarian self-government according to the
point ofview of the Venice Committee. e)

As for Mesxet population, to create immediately juridical,
administrative and political conditions to start the process of their
return, with the aim of fulfilling it in 2011. f)

This resolution adopted by OSCE comes from the December 2004 report of
the OSCE Monitoring group. Let us remind you that in October 2004 a
session was carried out by the above mentioned group which had
received a memorandum from the Council of Armenian Social Organization
of Samtsxe-Javaxk, mentioning, that the carrying out of the
responsibilities mentioned in the first 3 points by Georgia `will
contribute greatly to the improvement of the grave situation in
Samtsxe-Javaxk `.

Support builds for Armenian teens

Tuesday, January 25, 2005
Las Vegas Review-Journal
Support builds for Armenian teens
Church official joins cause to halt deportation
By LISA KIM BACH
REVIEW-JOURNAL

Rouben Sarkisian holds his three U.S.-born children, Michele, 13, Elizabeth,
12, and Patricia, 10, in front of the Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse on
Monday. Sarkisian’s two oldest daughters are jailed in Los Angeles, facing
deportation to Armenia.
Photo by Jeff Scheid.

At a rally protesting the deportation of his daughters, Rouben Sarkisian
displays childhood photos of Emma, now 18, and Mariam, now 17. The two girls
emigrated with their father from the former Soviet Union in 1991, before its
collapse.
Photo by Jeff Scheid.

Emma and Mariam Sarkisian might be teenagers without a country, but the
public response generated by U.S. government attempts to deport them proved
on Monday that they’re not without supporters.
Retired Archbishop Vatché Housepian of the Western Diocese of the Armenian
Church in North America flew in from Los Angeles to meet with attorneys
representing the Las Vegas sisters. He offered to use his influence and the
resources of his church to help keep the family together.
Although immigration officials say the two sisters are in the country
illegally, their father, Rouben Sarkisian, is a legal resident of the United
States. Their three younger sisters are citizens. The two oldest sisters are
now jailed in Los Angeles and face deportation to Armenia, a country that
didn’t even exist when they emigrated as small children with their father
from the Soviet Union in 1991. The girls do not speak Armenian and have no
family there.
“The lives of two young girls are at stake,” Housepian said of his reasons
for volunteering aid. “America is all they know. This is not a simple legal
matter. It’s a moral matter, an ethical matter. This would destroy their
entire family.”
Housepian had to return to Los Angeles before a group of friends and
sympathizers rallied on behalf of the girls in front of the steps to the
federal courthouse Monday afternoon. Until July, both girls were unaware of
their illegal status. Letters sent from the U.S. Department of Justice in
1997 showed acceptance of their applications of residency, which later were
nullified when Rouben Sarkisian divorced his U.S. wife. Sarkisian said he
received no notice from immigration officials of the change in status.
The girls were taken into custody by Homeland Security officers on Jan. 13
and are detained in Los Angeles. The family only recently learned that Emma,
18, a 2004 graduate of Palo Verde High School, and Mariam, 17, a senior at
Palo Verde, are jailed in a detention center next to the Los Angeles county
jail.
Housepian said he plans to try and see them this week. So does Gary
Nikogosyan, a Glendale, Calif., businessman who closed his auto-body repair
shop on Monday and drove four hours to Las Vegas to support the Sarkisians.
“It’s ridiculous and so, so sad,” said Nikogosyan, a friend of the family,
who added that the situation has drawn the attention of the sizable Armenian
community in Los Angeles. “If they are deported, they will have no one
there. How will they get by?”
Palo Verde parent and Summerlin resident Tracey Kreiling is a stranger to
the Sarkisian family, but she decided to show her support by coming to the
rally. Kreiling said she is shocked that government officials can take
minors into custody without disclosing to parents where they’re being held.
Kreiling, who’s also distressed by the conditions of the girls’
incarceration, said she’s already e-mailed 70 people about the plight of the
Sarkisian children, from U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., to Gov. Kenny Guinn.
“My concern is for the family,” Kreiling said. “They should have been fully
informed about the status of their children and they should have access to
them day and night.”
Reid will also be hearing from Sarkisian family friend Elena Protopopova,
who has started a petition asking for the lawmaker’s help in bringing the
girls home. She was able to get her first 30 signatures at the rally. Tessa
Hafen, a spokeswoman for Reid, said he is paying close attention to the
developing situation.
“He is very sympathetic with the children and wants to make sure they’re
treated fairly,” Hafen said.
Defense attorneys for the Sarkisians are seeking an order of release in
federal court. U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert Johnston is hearing the case.

Philharmonia/Segerstam

The Guardian, UK
Jan 22 2005

Philharmonia/Segerstam
Royal Festival Hall, London

Tim Ashley

The jury, it would seem, is out on the Armenian composer Aram
Khachaturian. He’s best known for a series of vast, socialist-realist
ballet scores such as Gayaneh and Spartacus. Massive, impressive
works, they were the mainstay of the Soviet repertoire and hugely
popular in the west, where they were regularly plundered by film and
TV companies for incidental music – the BBC’s Onedin Line is the most
famous example. Since the collapse of the former Eastern bloc,
however, his work has been less frequently heard. Even though he fell
foul of Stalin in 1948, a whiff of Soviet orthodoxy still clings to
him, and we can’t read signs of dissidence into his music as we can
with his contemporary Shostakovich.
The Piano Concerto – performed here by the Philharmonia under Leif
Segerstam, with Boris Berezovsky as soloist – was the piece that shot
Khachaturian to fame in 1936. Rooted, like much of his music, in the
asymmetrical rhythms and exotic modalities of Caucasian folk music,
it’s a work of exuberance and charm, flanking an exquisite central
andante with outer movements at once playful and ferocious. Two
murderous cadenzas make the piece tricky for the pianist, though
Berezovsky played it with ease and almost shocking dexterity.

Segerstam’s conducting, however, arouses mixed feelings. He often
generates excitement and emotion at the expense of finesse. His
thrilling if unsubtle approach, telling in Khachaturian’s concerto,
was perhaps less suited to the rest of the concert. Glinka’s overture
to Russlan and Ludmila was unyielding and brass heavy. His
interpretation of Dvorak’s New World Symphony was epic and intense,
aspiring to tragedy in the famous largo rather than nostalgia. In
many respects this was preferable to the sentimental view of the work
favoured by some, but it could have been better played and its power
was offset by some moments of ragged ensemble.

Glendale Public Library – Authors, Artists, Frieds Series

“Authors, Artists & Friends” Series
Glendale Public Library

Barbara Ghazarian & Simply Armenian: Naturally Healthy Ethnic Cooking
Made Easy

Wednesday, February 23, 7:00 p.m.
Central Library Auditorium
Glendale, CA
(818) 548-2042

Barbara Ghazarian is an experienced cook and a natural teacher with a
gift for storytelling. Barbara lectures from coast to coast on
Armenian-related topics to both Armenian and American audiences. She
authored a long-running weekly culinary column for a Los Angeles
newspaper and has years of experience teaching culinary writing to
adults in greater Boston. Experience the world of Armenian cooking and
sample some of Barbara’s quince preserves.

Simply Armenian draws on ancient culinary traditions to reveal the
secrets of the naturally healthy Armenian table. The book explores
over 150 recipes ranging from inexpensive fare to more elaborate
special occasion dishes. More than half the recipes are meat-free.

Barbara states: “Armenian food is easy to make, inexpensive, abundant
and good for you. Now, with the focus on olive oil based diets, eating
Armenian fits right into a low-carb regime.”  

Les turqueries de Philippe de Villiers

Le Point , France
vendredi 21 janvier 2005

Le point de… Alain Duhamel

Les turqueries de Philippe de Villiers

Philippe de Villiers a un objectif : s’imposer, lors du référendum
sur le traité constitutionnel européen, comme le champion du non,
comme le symbole le plus talentueux du refus, à la manière de
Philippe Séguin face au traité de Maastricht. Pour y parvenir, il a
choisi le levier le plus massif : la Turquie. Sous sa plume,
Constitution européenne et adhésion de la Turquie ne sont en effet
qu’un seul et même problème, le traité ayant notamment pour fonction,
selon lui, de préparer l’intégration de la Turquie. La thèse est
parfaitement réfutable, les discussions avec la Turquie ayant
commencé des décennies avant qu’il soit même question de Constitution
européenne et les négociations officielles désormais programmées
devant se poursuivre des années, avec ou sans Constitution. Peu
importe au souverainiste le plus actif et le plus virulent de France
: il est plus aisé de sonner le tocsin à propos de la Turquie que
d’épouvanter avec une Constitution forcément opaque. Il faut donc
brandir Istanbul pour fracasser le traité.

Il s’y emploie avec un nouveau livre qui s’intitule « Les turqueries
du grand Mamamouchi » (1) et interpelle Jacques Chirac avec une
insolence jubilatoire. Il s’agit naturellement d’un pamphlet, ou
plutôt d’une satire. Philippe de Villiers ne manque ni de verve ni
d’aplomb, il pique et blesse en riant, il se pourfend avec allégresse
et ne craint pas de recourir aux bottes les plus assassines. Il fait
de Jacques Chirac le principal introducteur de la Turquie en Europe,
passant audacieusement sous silence l’activité de l’Espagne, l’accord
de la Grande-Bretagne, l’acceptation de l’Italie et l’appui de
l’Allemagne. Il présente naturellement l’hypothèse de l’adhésion
turque sous des couleurs apocalyptiques. Une histoire effroyable, une
géographie rédhibitoire, une démographie affolante, les moeurs les
plus brutales, une religion et des principes aux antipodes des nôtres
: si le livre de Philippe de Villiers commence sur le registre de la
comédie (la description hilarante d’une audience de l’auteur dans le
bureau présidentiel du palais de l’Elysée), le ton tourne promptement
au réquisitoire. La documentation de Philippe de Villiers est
sérieuse (encore que sélective), la démonstration galope, entraînant
derrière elle un essaim d’idées reçues et de clichés historiques, la
conclusion est sans appel : la Turquie est la mort de l’Europe, la
Constitution fournissant en somme les soins palliatifs.

Tout cela ne va pas sans contradictions flagrantes ni omissions
volontaires : Philippe de Villiers dépeint la Turquie comme un péril
effroyable pour suggérer ensuite benoîtement qu’elle devienne un «
véritable arc de sympathie entre l’Europe et le monde arabo-islamique
». Il souligne longuement les persécutions contre les Kurdes, le
barbare génocide arménien (et accuse faussement au passage l’Europe
de l’avoir oublié), la quasi-disparition des minorités chrétiennes
turques en oubliant de préciser qu’aujourd’hui toutes ces minorités
souhaitent ardemment une entrée dans l’Union qui serait leur
meilleure protection. Villiers a du talent et une vocation de
duelliste. Ses démonstrations ressemblent furieusement aux harangues
cocardières des veilles de conflit.

1. « Les turqueries du grand Mamamouchi. Adresse à Jacques Chirac »,
de Philippe de Villiers (Albin Michel, 204 pages, 14,50 e).

© le point 20/01/05 – N°1688 – Page 33 – 479 mots

Armenian Genocide Monument Council Launches Website

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Genocide Monument
Council of Glendale (AGMCG)
P.O. Box 4426
Glendale, CA 91222
Fax: (818) 240-2360
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MonuMENT COuncil OF GLENDALE TO ANNOUNCE COMPETITION
FOR DESIGN

COUNCIL LAUNCHES WEBSITE AND READIES FOR MONUMENT DESIGN COMPETITION

GLENDALE, CA (December 28 , 2004) – The Armenian Genocide Monument
Council of Glendale (AGMCG) announced on December 22 the launching of
their website (
<; ) and the beginning of their
Monument design competition. The AGMCG will oversee the design and
construction of a commemorative monument in the City of Glendale
dedicated to the victims of the Armenian Genocide, the first genocide of
the 20th Century. The monument will serve as a befitting venue to begin
the educational process of honoring the memory of those who perished and
acknowledging the memories of the heroic deeds and acts of the Americans
whose actions helped save thousands of helpless Armenian men, women and
children from the rage of the Genocide.

The AGMCG is a newly established organization and is dedicated to
enhancing cross cultural understanding amongst the different cultural
and ethnic groups in the City of Glendale by promoting respect for past
historical events and the recognition thereof through continuous
education, specifically that of the Armenian Genocide. In August of
2001, the City Council of Glendale adopted a motion to accept the gift
of a monument to honor the 1.5 million victims of the Armenian genocide
and the memory of Americans whose actions helped save thousands of
Armenian men, women and children from perishing in the genocide between
1915 and 1918.

On April 8, 2003, the Glendale City Council approved the final
location/site for the Genocide monument. The AGMCG has been working
very closely with City staff to oversee the monument selection process
and has established a Selection Committee comprised of community
leaders, architecture and design experts and public officials. The
announcement of the winner of the competition will take place in April
of 2005. April 24, 2005 marks the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide. All parties interested in submitting a design may do so by
following the guidelines and rules for submission made available on the
AGMCG website.

For more information, visit

Armenian Genocide Monument Council of Glendale

http://www.armeniangenocidemonument.com/
http://www.armeniangenocidemonument.com/&gt
http://www.armeniangenocidemonument.com/
www.armeniangenocidemonument.com

Armenia for expansion of scientific, educational cooperation

IRNA, Iran
January 18, 2005 Tuesday 2:37 PM EST

Armenia for expansion of scientific, educational cooperation

TEHRAN

Armenian Minister of Higher Education Sergo Yeritsian here on Tuesday
called for expansion of scientific and educational cooperation with
Gilan University.

In a meeting with the Chancellor of Gilan University Davood Ahmadi
Dastjerdi, he said Gilan province enjoys ample potentials for
expansion of mutual cooperation.

Given the educated people in the province, he said such a mutually
based cooperation should have been created earlier.

The Islamic Republic of Iran and Armenia have always enjoyed friendly
ties and should make use of each other capabilities more than before,
he said.

Referring to his meeting with Iranian minister of science, research
and technology as well as minister of education, he said it was
agreed that the two countries further broaden scientific, educational
and academic cooperation.

Chancellor of Gilan University, for his part, said, “We are glad to
welcome visitors from a country dubbed as land of science, , arts and
music.”

Underlining the need for expansion of academic cooperation between
the two countries, he said at present foreign students from
Tajikistan, Yemen, Syria and China are studying in Gilan University.

. There are various faculties throughout the province, he pointed
out.

The Armenian minister of higher education along with a nine member
delegation arrived in Gilan province on Tuesday.

ANKARA: Armenia: Friend or Foe?

Zaman, Turkey
Jan 14 2005

Armenia: Friend or Foe?

Published: Friday 14, 2005
zaman.com

Yerevan is a stone-gray city. Only the girls with hairs colored in a
standard way have smiles on their faces, here, in this city, and only
music forms networks and links between souls, here, in this country.
Throughout the visit, I was caught between the feelings that our
common ties were so strong or that our grudges would separate us
forever. Just as my attitude was constantly changing, I found the
attitude of the Armenians I spoke to oscillate between wondering why
Turkey wouldn’t show mercy and open its borders, or why Turkey won’t
accept and take responsibility for the genocide.

The last stop of the visit initiated by the East Conference on the US
meddling in the region was Yerevan and the theme was “let’s get
acquainted with our neighbors so that if anything happens to them, we
will know who they are.” Armenia was not under the same threat as
other countries we visited; on the contrary, Armenia believes it will
join NATO to integrate with the US and to consolidate its security.
The irony is that what America means for an Iraqi today is the same
as what Turkey meant for an Armenian. Not that we were beaten or even
insulted, and the meeting at the Tashnak Sutyun Party was incredibly
refined despite the many excessive demands and messages it included.
They managed to present even the most radical demands in a highly
aesthetic way, saying, “Our radicalism derives from our sincerity in
asking for the establishment of a permanent peace.” Members of
Tashnak Party, which demands the return of Armenia’s historical
territory and maintain the allegations of genocide as if it happened
yesterday, were convinced that Turks made pilgrimages to Talat
Pasha’s grave. They were surprised when we said that Turks don’t even
know where his grave is, and put this misunderstanding down to the
lack of knowledge about the other between Armenia and Turkey. They
went on to say that if Turkey recognized the genocide, it would be a
sign that political problems no longer needed to be solved through
the use of force.

My blood feud or my neighbor

Turkey is both Eros and Thanatos for Armenia, a country that
continues to defend its claims at the same level and in the same
severity without knowing that they make the meeting of its demands
impossible. Even on the first day, we came across with an event at
Turkology Department at Yerevan State University which we could not
understand whether it was staged or not. While Vice Rector Melikyan
was welcoming us saying: “It is nice that you came and we should
appreciate this contact as all we want is a stable dialogue so there
will be no problems for Turkey to open its borders,” one of the
students stood up and called us to “stand up for the memory of those
who died during the genocide.” Quick-thinking Aydin Cubukcu stood up
in the memory of “all Turks and Armenians who died in those years.”
Thus, our Armenian brothers, who have built almost their whole
national identity on the tragic events of 1915, stood up for Turks in
the name of deaths they themselves caused, and perhaps this was a
‘first’.

It could be said that the East Conference claimed many ‘firsts’ in
this sense as our program included a visit to the Chief Patriarch of
the Armenian Diaspora Karekin II, which is apparently the first
meeting of the Patriarch with such a delegation. The Patriarch is a
polite man with a beaming face who was extremely open and warm. While
he called the genocide an unquestionable reality, he did not dwell on
it, instead talking of a policy that favors the development of
relations between Armenia and Turkey. We understood it as a sign of
his pleasure at the visit that the Patriarch showed us the locked
case holding the golden letters of the Armenian alphabet, which hold
religious significance and a special place in the Armenian identity.
2005 will be celebrated as the 1600th year of the Armenian alphabet
and an exhibition regarding this is planned to be held at the Louvre
in Paris. This is further evidence of the strength of the Armenian
diaspora, with seven million living abroad, twice the number of those
in Armenia. The diaspora is very important for Armenia as the
country’s economy stands on the financial flow of $600 million from
abroad. The only industry in the country is a cognac factory.

Opaque future, sulky faces

Surveys about Armenia’s future have found 50 percent see the future
as ‘unclear’. Armenian Research Center surveys have found that around
the same amount have no hopes for economic improvement in the short
term and are concerned about security issues. The desire to join NATO
rises in line with tension with Azerbaijan. A very small number of
people, meanwhile, think that going further to west will detach the
country from Russia and this will give “rather negative results”.
Russia plays the role of a hysterical father who loves but also beats
his children. The Armenian National and International Research Center
finds that except for a small minority who prefer Russia due to
geographical proximity, the majority of the people find the US more
rational and acceptable than Russia, but each negative development
stimulates people in panic to get closer to Russia. Turkey’s
attitudes and approaches are also included in these developments.

In my opinion, this environment is responsible for the sulky
expression on people’s faces and a fear of Turks, but there are
lovely things, too, in Yerevan and people who defy your expectations.
For example, the guidance of two Armenians of Istanbul origin, Ara
and Sevan, who work at Jamanak newspaper (which means “zaman”), and
their both being avid “Zaman” readers. Also my confusion after the
incident in the Turkology Department in the gift shop of the hotel I
was staying in, as I was quizzed on the state of Afyon, where the
shop assistant’s mother was from. I could not tell her much about the
present state of Afyon and this made me embarrassed a bit. As I said,
being a Turk in Yerevan is like traveling with a suitcase full of
embarrassment. When you say, “We came from Turkey”, the answer you
will get might be, “No problem”. On the other side, several meetings
that started in an unfriendly way ended in friendship when they
deepened a little. You frequently feel in meetings: “If only that
history had not existed, how nice it would have been.”

Is it possible that Armenians could move on? In fact, there is some
development in this direction. Garen Bekaryan, whom we talked at the
European Union (EU) Integration Center, says: “In fact, Armenians
might have to bury this genocide issue into history, but Turkey’s
massing of troops at the border during the Karabag incident revived
past fears.” She is not wrong on this point. Russia sent Armenia
50,000 soldiers after Turgut Ozal’s remark “What happens if a bomb
falls on Armenia?” These soldiers are still in Armenia, ostensibly to
protect it, but are damaging the country’s attempts at
democratization in the meantime.

The situation resembles the riddle of the chicken and the egg. It
seems that both sides must embrace their responsibilities and it’s
unlikely that a solution will be found overnight.

NIHAL BENGISU KARACA

US AMb. commends Armenian DM for his frankness

ArmenPress
Jan 11 2005

US AMBASSADOR COMMENDS ARMENIAN DM FOR HIS FRANKNESS

YEREVAN, JANUARY 11, ARMENPRESS: A spokesman for Armenian defense
ministry said the US ambassador John Evans commended today Armenian
defense minister Serzh Sarkisian for his repeated statements calling
for a peaceful resolution of the Armenian-Azeri conflict over Nagorno
Karabagh.
The spokesman, Seyran Shahsuvarian, said the ambassador and the
minister met today to wish one another Happy New year and expressed
hope that the warm relations between the US and Armenia will continue
through 2005.
The spokesman also said the two men spoke about the upcoming
inspectoral visits within the frameworks of the Vienna agreement. He
added the ambassador complimented the minister for his
straightforwardness regarding the ongoing world developments and his
broad outlook, which he said are contributing greatly to boosting
bilateral relations.
Among other things the two men also discussed regular monitoring
of the line of contact between Azeri and Armenian troops, exchange of
PoWs and extending cooperation between various non-governmental
organizations and the army.

Armenian president wants more “efficient” work from customs

Armenian president wants more “efficient” work from customs

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
8 Jan 05

[Presenter] The process of delivering earnings to the state budget in
2005 will be tough and the custom administration will have to work
much harder and more efficiently, President Robert Kocharyan told a
meeting with the leadership of the State Customs Committee today.

[Correspondent over video of meeting] During his first meeting with
the leadership of the State Customs Committee this year, President
Robert Kocharyan noted that 2005 would demand more efficient and hard
work from the customs administration. Improvements in the activities
of the custom and tax administrations will be the focus of attention
this year.

[Robert Kocharyan, captioned] I am interested in the following issues,
first, how are you going to implement these tasks?

Second, what reforms will you introduce to make your work more
civilized and productive within the legal framework?

You must remember that your activities should aim at encouraging
businessmen rather than hindering them. I am confident that if all the
legal procedures are observed and standards of the civilized world are
adopted, this will have a very positive impact on businesses.

[Correspondent] The head of state highlighted the importance of the
fight against smuggling and the need for cooperation with the tax
authorities in this area. He stressed that a lack of such cooperation
makes tax evasion and violations possible.

In this context the president spoke of the importance of implementing
as soon as possible, before the end of the first three months, a
methodology for making checks more effective and for improving
internal checks of the custom checkpoints. The president also said
that the presidential oversight board was tasked with undertaking
certain steps in this direction, the results of which would show the
level of effectiveness of monitoring the customs system.

[Robert Kocharyan] The principle of inspections and monitoring should
be the following: the public should be told about the rules of the
game and asked to adhere to these rules. The quantitative index of
your inspections does not mean much by itself. It is necessary to take
one or two cases and follow them up to the end. By looking into every
aspect of the given case it would be possible to find out what is
going on and what mechanisms are being used for that.

[Passage omitted: correspondent recaps the president’s words]

I believe all of you realize there is still much to be done to ensure
that the system works efficiently. A lot depends on you. The fact that
Armenia is 42nd on a list of free market economies which is published
annually, means that a lot is yet to be done. I think we achieved a
lot last year and in the last couple of years. But it is not
enough. All of you must understand that there is still a lot to be
done. We will do it no matter what. But if there are persons who
cannot keep up with the pace of work, then we will continue without
them. There is no other way.

The tax committee and your administration can either kill the economy
or give it a normal boost. This year is going to be an important one
in terms of improving the customs and tax systems.

[Correspondent] At the end of the meeting President Kocharyan ordered
relevant officials to provide him with a precise timetable of measures
for resolving the problems raised at the meeting.

Lilit Setrakyan, Vartan Petrosyan, “Aylur”.