Expo Russia-Armenia 2009 Opens In Yerevan

EXPO RUSSIA-ARMENIA 2009 OPENS IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Oct 29, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 29, NOYAN TAPAN. Expo Russia-Armenia 2009 opened in
Yerevan on October 29. This industrial exhibition presents products
of the Russian companies that intend to make investments in Armenia.

During the event, round tables will be conducted to discuss the
problems of fostering cooperation of Armenia and Russia in such
sectors as energy, transport, and management of natural resources.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan attended the opening ceremony.

Certification Testing Of Two Sukhoi Superjet-100 Acquired By Armavia

CERTIFICATION TESTING OF TWO SUKHOI SUPERJET-100 ACQUIRED BY ARMAVIA TO BE OVER IN DECEMBER

Arminfo
2009-10-29 17:53:00

ArmInfo. Certification testing of the two Superjet-100 acquired by
Armavia will be over in December 2009, Yuri Mozgovoy, Sales Director,
Sukhoi Civil Aircrafts in Russia and CIS, told ArmInfo. He said these
aircrafts are serial.

Y. Mozgovoy said the jets will be supplied to Armavia only after
completion of certification testing. He said Armavia has a right to
acquire optional three aircrafts on the same terms as the first two
ones in compliance with the contract. He said the prices of Sukhoi
Superjets are comparatively more reasonable than those of similar
aircrafts of other companies. These aircrafts have low-consumption
engines and air mechanics. The two Superjet-100 acquired by Armavia
have 95 seats.

Earlier Mikhail Baghdasarov, President of Mika LimitedHolding, the
owner of Armavia air company, said one of the Superjets-100 will be
delivered to Armenia in December 2009, the other in January 2010. He
said one model of the aircraft successfully passed air training
in mountains in the town of Gyumri in September. Armavia signed an
agreement with VTB Bank in 2007 for financing of acquisition of two
SSJ- 100 in the amount of $55-60 million.

Michael Vardanyan Appointed Vice-President Of Inter-Parliamentary Un

MICHAEL VARDANYAN APPOINTED VICE-PRESIDENT OF INTER-PARLIAMENTARY UNION

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.10.2009 19:07 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 121 Assembly of Inter-Parliamentary Union passed
from October 19 to 21 in Geneva . Armenian delegation headed by the
National Assembly Vice-Speaker and representative of the Republican
Party Samvel Nikoyan participated in the work of assembly.

During the first meeting of the leaders of Inter-Parliamentary Union
Assembly on October 19 participants discussed issues of membership,
report of the Secretary and Chairman of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
about the work done in the past 6 months.

The "Eurasia" working group, also chaired by Armenia, convened a
meeting. Head of the Armenian delegation Samvel Nikoyan suggested to
nominate candidate Michael Vardanyan from the group.

Global problems, mainly related to the worldwide fight against drug
trafficking and illicit arms trafficking have been discussed at
the assembly.

During October 20-21 meetings the governing council chose five new
members of the executive committee, one of them was a deputy of the
National Assembly of Armenia Michael Vardanyan. He was also appointed
as vice-president of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, press service of
the National Assembly of Armenia reports.

Armenian Minister Of Energy On Armenia’s Nuclear Potential

ARMENIAN MINISTER OF ENERGY ON ARMENIA’S NUCLEAR POTENTIAL

news.am
Oct 28 2009
Armenia

It is yet too early to name the country that will construct a new
nuclear power unit in Armenia, RA Minister of energy and Natural
Resources Armen Movsisyan told NEWS.am.

"We have not yet reached the stage when countries state their
willingness to put in tenders for construction," he said. The Minister
refuted media reports that Russia will reduce gas prices for Armenia
in exchange for the construction right.

The talks about the price reduction have nothing in common with the
construction project, Movsisyan said. As regards the possibility of
Armenian energy export to Turkey, the Minister said that it is quite
realistic, as Armenia and Turkey have been negotiating the issue for
a year.

Тhe RA Parliament has adopted in the third reading the bill "On
construction of a new power unit in Armenia." The document provides
for the construction of a new power unit/units with a total capacity
of 1.2MW and operating life of 60 years.

The construction project is estimated at U.S. $4.5-5bn and is of high
importance for Armenia, as the neighboring states have energy deficit.

Armenia is the only country in the region that is capable of generating
energy not only for domestic needs, but also export.

During his recent visit to Yerevan President of the Rostom Corporation
Sergey Kiriyenko stated that Rosatom is ready to render its services
to Armenia, using the most reliable technologies.

There’s a new taste for quince

8-2009oct28,0,5254414.story

There’s a new taste for quince

Interest in the once-popular quince is growing again.
(David Karp / For The Times)

By David Karp
October 28, 2009

Neglected for decades, the quince seems an improbable candidate for revival
today, when consumers demand sweet, ready-to-eat fresh fruit. Why is it,
then, that in recent years three books of quince recipes and lore have
appeared, the fruit increasingly is featured at high-end restaurants,
and half a dozen of these have even been named after it?

"The quince is the poster child of ‘Slowness,’ " suggests Ben Watson, an
author and food activist who organized a tasting of quince varieties for Slow
Food’s Ark of Taste committee. "It’s lovely and fragrant but pretty much
inedible unless transformed by peeling, coring and cooking. I think it is
poised for a comeback."

It certainly is a paradoxical fruit, both homely and voluptuous, like a la
rge, knobbly, fuzzy pear. Raw it is typically so hard, sour and astringent
that in Turkey, the world’s largest producer, "to eat the quince" is slang
meaning "to get into serious trouble." But it has an intense, alluring aroma —
reminiscent of pineapple, guava, Bartlett pear and vanilla — and when
cooked, its flesh softens and turns a gorgeous translucent pink.

The quince is a pome fruit related to apples and pears, native to the
Transcaucasus area. It is most commonly grown in western Asia,
southeastern Europe and parts of Latin America for use in preserves,
compotes, condiments and stews.

Spanish padres planted a few quince trees at California missions, but
cultivation took off only with the arrival of American nurserymen and
farmers in the mid-19th century. The great plant breeder Luther Burbank
observed in 1914 that "the soil and climate of California are peculiarly
hospitable to this fruit" because of its long, warm, dry growing season. At
the time there were about 900 acres of quince grown here, and that was just
a small fraction of the nation’s plantings.

Quince was popular because its high pectin content made it ideal for making
jams and jellies, but its cultivation faded away with the use of powdered
pectin, the decline in home preserving and the increased prevalence of fire
blight, a bacterial disease that can quickly wipe out an orchard.

Today California is the only U.S. state that grows commercial quantities of
quince, and there are only about 300 acres, mostly in the San Joaquin
Valley. The harvest runs from mid-August to early November, and the fruit,
which stores well, is sold through January; small shipments from Chile come
in from March to May.

Careful harvesting

The quince’s aroma develops fully only when it is picked yellow-ripe, but
commercial growers usually harvest when the fruit is greenish-yellow so it
will ship and store better. Workers wearing cotton gloves pick the fruit
gently and put it into small plastic totes, because even though quinces seem
hard, they bruise easily. Packing is simple: Workers sort out the culls and
discard them, rub off the fuzz from the good fruit with a soft cloth (to keep
mold from developing in storage) and wrap them in protective tissues.

The carotenoid molecules that give quince its yellow color break down into
compounds, notably lactones and rose-scented ionones, that impart the
fruit’s pungent floral aroma. Phenolic chemicals in raw quince flesh coagulate
proteins in your mouth, causing the fruit to taste astringent; but when it is
cooked for a long time, heat and acidity convert these compounds to
anthocyanins, so the pulp loses its astringency and turns a pleasing pink.

Many quince growers are of Armenian ancestry. Herbert Kaprielian of Reedley,
Calif., the longtime "King of Quince," who turns 80 today, remembers that
when he started growing the fruit in the 1950s "every Armenian-owned farm
had at least one quince tree." At first he shipped mainly to Greeks,
Italians and Jews on the East Coast, then starting in the 1970s, Latino
customers became increasingly important. Marketers now estimate that about
three-quarters of the crop goes to ethnic groups familiar with quince from
their homelands.

The leading variety in California is Pineapple, a smooth, roundish fruit
that’s early-maturing and relatively tender. In fact, Luther Burbank, who
introduced it in 1899, claimed that it "when thoroughly ripe rivals the
apple as a fruit to be eaten raw." I always considered this nonsense, but
last year when I picked some Pineapples in early November, they were indeed
soft and juicy enough to be fairly palatable.

Ripening in mid-season, Smyrna, brought from western Anatolia in 1897, is
large and pear-shaped, with heavy brown fuzz. It’s the favorite of quince
aficionados for its intense aroma but grown on limited acreage because of its
susceptibility to fire blight. Latest and largest of all is Golden, also
known as Cooke’s Jumbo, a blocky-shaped fruit, possibly a chance genetic
mutation of Smyrna, selected by Kaprielian’s father in the 1960s.

Since the days of Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder, anecdotal and scientific
reports have described dessert varieties of quince that are delicious to eat
fresh, but whenever I encountered such fruits they tasted more like furn
iture than food. Eventually I came to view such accounts as apocryphal.

A backyard favorite

Then in 1997, I met a retired computer engineer named Edgar Valdivia at a
California Rare Fruit Growers conference. He said he had a sweet-fleshed
quince tree in his yard in Simi Valley, derived from cuttings imported by a
friend from the Majes Valley of southern Peru, where it’s too warm for most
apples and pears to grow well but where quinces flourish. The next day he
brought in a round yellow fruit that indeed had typical quince aroma,
ribbing and light fuzz — but was softer, juicier and non-astringent, and
quite pleasant to eat.

Since then the variety has become increasingly popular among Southern
California backyard growers. At least one farmers market vendor, Alex
Weiser, has ordered trees, but it remains to be seen how the variety will
fare commercially.

A friend sent budwood of this tree to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
fruit collection in Corvallis, Ore., where, much to my surprise, the quince
curator, Joseph Postman, called the variety Karp’s Sweet quince, naming it
after me. As grown in the Northwest, however, it might better be named Karp’s
Sour; the variety needs California’s heat and long growing season to ripen
properly.

In Corvallis, Postman maintains an orchard of more than 100 quince clones,
many of which he and other USDA scientists collected in recent expeditions
to the fruit’s homeland in Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan.

When I visited, some of the varieties were fruiting for the first time, and
a few seemed remarkably tender and non-astringent, especially given the
area’s cool climate; others were early-ripening, showing promise that they
might be suitable for growing commercially in the Northwest, where autumn
rains, which can crack and rot quince, often arrive before standard
varieties ripen. With the USDA collection and several nurseries and farms
growing exotic varieties, the area is already a crucible of quince
enthusiasm.

Fruits, like stocks and clothes, are ruled by the inscrutable laws of
fashion. Quince may never regain its status as a major player, but in
today’s food world, it’s so out it’s in.

[email protected]

http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-quince2

Vahan Hovhannisyan: Dependence On Turkish Policy Is A Disgrace For O

VAHAN HOVHANNISYAN: DEPENDENCE ON TURKISH POLICY IS A DISGRACE FOR OUR STATE

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.10.2009 19:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Armenian leadership is under the false impression
that Turkish senior officials’ statements are intended for domestic
consumption," ARFD MP Vahan Hovhannisyan told today a parliament
session.

At that he noted that Turkish FM Ahmet Davutoglu’s recent statements
on the necessity of fixing progress in Karabakh peace talks again
testifies to the existence of preconditions in Armenian-Turkish
Protocols, something the opposition had warned about.

The Protocols signed in Zurich between Armenian and Turkish FMs and
the order of their ratification by two countries’ parliaments (RA
Parliament will ratify documents after Turkish Parliament’s decision)
clearly demonstrates that Armenia is not conducting an independent
policy in the process. "RA leadership’s policy depends on Turkish
side’s steps. That’s a disgrace for our country," Mr. Hovhannisyan
stressed.

Karabakh And Transnistrian Foreign Ministers Meeting

KARABAKH AND TRANSNISTRIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS MEETING

news.am
Oct 26 2009
Armenia

NKR Foreign Minister Georgy Petrosyan received the Transnistrian
Moldavian Republic delegation, headed by Minister of Foreign Affairs
Vladimir Yastrebchak. The officials discussed a number of mutual
interest issues, outlining the frame of future relations and contacts
between the republics having a similar fate, NKR Foreign Ministry
press service informed NEWS.am.

The Transnistrian Moldavian delegation headed by Vladimir Yastrebchak
is on a three-day visit to Stepanakert. October 25, the guests
attended the excavations in Tigranakert and visited Gandzasar medieval
monastery.

RA FM And OSCE MG Co-Chairs Discussed Karabakh Settlement Process

RA FM AND OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS DISCUSSED KARABAKH SETTLEMENT PROCESS

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.10.2009 21:13 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan and
OSCE MG Co-Chairs Bernard Fassier (France), Robert Bradtke (U.S.) and
Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia) met in Luxemburg to discuss current process
of Karabakh peace talks, RA MFA Press Secretary Tigran Balayan told
PanARMENIAN.Net.

Touching on possible meeting between Armenian and Azeri Foreign
Ministers, MFA Spokesman said that no such meeting is scheduled.

Eastern Partnership Parliamentary Assembly To Consist Of 120 Deputie

EASTERN PARTNERSHIP PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY TO CONSIST OF 120 DEPUTIES

NOYAN TAPAN
October 26, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 26, NOYAN TAPAN. Between October 19 to 22, Chairwoman
of the RA National Assembly Standing Committee on European Integration
Naira Zohrabian participated in the starting conference on creation
of Eastern Partnership parliamentary format held in the capital city
of Sweden Stockholm.

The conference was convened on the initiative of presiding Sweden
and was held with participation of EU member states. Proposals of the
sides were presented at the conference, as well as the participants
told how they imagine the parliamentary format of partnership,
Euronest which can be a serious stimulus for solution of problems
regarding the main platforms established by Eastern Partnership,
as well as for solution of problems of political association and
economic integration of EU partner-states.

N. Zohrabian in her speech presented Armenian side’s proposals
mentioning that Armenia attaches importance to creation of a
parliamentary format of partnership which will give a possibility by
using flexible parliamentary instruments and parliamentary diplomacy
to contribute to partner countries’ European integration. Speaking
about cooperation between partner states, which is one of the main
components of Eastern Partnership, N. Zohrabian touched upon the policy
of reservations carried on by Azerbaijan, which essentially hinders
solution of priorities declared by the partnership. Touching upon
Armenian side’s considerations on Euronest she said that it will be
inadmissible for the Armenian side if Azerbaijan tries to turn the
Eastern Partnership parliamentary format into a format of solving
conflicts. She said that Azerbaijan’s continuing such a policy will
nonplus this very important initiative from the very first meeting.

In response to the speech of Azerbaijan’s Mili Majlis representative,
where falsehood and misinformation on Nagorno Karabakh was voiced, N.

Zohrabian sent a written application to the Chairman of the conference,
representative of Sweden Goran Lennmarker proposing drawing attention
of EU and EU partner-states to Azerbaijan’s destructive conduct
and calling the European Union for expressing exact attitude to
Azerbaijan’s non-constructive steps and statements.

During the conference it was decided in as short time constraints
as possible to sum up both the technical and content issues of the
Eastern Partnership parliamentary format.

According to a preliminary agreement, the Eastern Partnership
Parliamentary Assembly will consist of 120 deputies: 60 deputies
from EU member states and 10 deputies from each of partner states,
Armenia, Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, and Belarus.

According to the RA NA Public Relations Department, during the visit
to Stockholm N. Zohrabian met with representatives of the Armenian
community, as well as with deputies of the Swedish parliament and
clarified the details of the Armenian-Turkish signed protocols and
last Armenian-Turkish developments.

Armenian women’s team wins

Aysor, Armenia
Oct 24 2009

Armenian women’s team wins

Participating in the 17th Team Chess Championship in Novi Sad, Serbia,
Armenian women’s team won 3:1 over Slovenia’s team.

Elina Danielyan won over Anna Muzichuk, and Lilit Galoyan defeated
Anna Srebrnich. Lilit Lazarian ` Jana Krivets set ended in a draw as
well as Siranush Andriasyan ` Vesna Rozich set.

Thus, after the second round women championship’s tournament table is
led by Poland, Germany, Romania, Ukraine, Georgia and Armenia. Women’s
teams of Azerbaijan and France follow them with 3 points each.

In addition, in round three the Armenian women’s team will play
against Poland’s team.

Armenia ` Slovenia 3:1

Elina Danielyan – Anna Muzichuk ` 1:0

1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bg5 Be7 5. e5 Nfd7 6. Bxe7 Qxe7 7. Nb5
Nb6 8. c3 a6 9. Na3 c5 10. f4 Nc6 11. Nf3 cxd4 12. cxd4 Qb4 + 13. Qd2
Bd7 14. Bd3 Rc8 15. Nc2 Qxd2 + 16. Kxd2 Nc4 + 17. Kc1 a5 18. Nd2 Nb4
19. Nxb4 axb4 20. Nxc4 dxc4 21. Be4 Bc6 22. Bxc6 + Rxc6 23. a3 bxa3
24. Rxa3 Ke7 25. Rd1 Rd8 26. Ra5 Rd5 27. Rxd5 exd5 28. g3 Rb6 29. Kc2
Rb3 30. Ra1 Ke6 31. Ra5 h5 32. f5 + Kxf5 33. Rxd5 Ke4 34. Rd7 Rf3 35.
e6 fxe6 36. Rxb7 g5 37. Rd7 Rf2 + 38. Kc3 Rxh2 39. Rd6 Kf5 40. Rb6 Rh3
41. Rb5 + Kf6 42. Kxc4 Rxg3 43. d5 exd5 + 44. Rxd5 h4 45. b4 h3 46.
Rd6 + Ke5 47. Rh6 Rg4 + 0:1.

Lilit Lazarian – Jana Krivets 0.5:0.5

1. Nf3 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. Qa4 + Nd7 4. e4 a6 5. Bxc4 e6 6. d4 c5 7. O-O
cxd4 8. Nxd4 Qb6 9. Be3 Bc5 10. Bb3 Ne7 11. Nd2 O-O 12. Rac1 Qa7 13.
Qc4 b5 14. Qc3 Bb6 15. Qb4 Bc5 16. Qc3 Bb6 17. a4 bxa4 18. Bxa4 Nf6
19. Nc2 Bxe3 20. Nxe3 Bd7 21. Bxd7 Qxd7 22. Nec4 Qb5 23. Ra1 Rfd8 24.
Ra5 Qb7 25. Qe3 Nc6 26. Rg5 h6 27. Rg3 Kh8 28. e5 Nd5 29. Qe4 Qb4 30.
Qg4 Rg8 31. Qh5 Raf8 32. Rb3 Qe7 33. Nf3 Rb8 34. Ra3 Rb5 35. Nfd2 a5
36. Rf3 Rf8 37. Rg3 Nd4 38. Qg4 Nf5 39. Ra3 a4 40. Qe2 Rxb2 41. Rxa4
Nc3 42. Qd3 Nxa4 43. Nxb2 Nxb2 44. Qb3 Qc7 45. Qxb2 1 / 2: 1 / 2.

Lilit Galoyan – Anna Srebrnich 1:0

1. c4 Nf6 2. Nc3 c5 3. e4 d6 4. g3 Nc6 5. Bg2 g6 6. d3 Bg7 7. Nge2 O-O
8. O-O Nh5 9. Be3 Nd4 10. Rb1 Bd7 11. b4 Nxe2 + 12. Nxe2 b5 13. h3 e5
14. g4 Nf6 15. f4 exf4 16. Bxf4 Ne8 17. Qd2 Rc8 18. Bg5 f6 19. Bh4 Bc6
20. Nc3 Rc7 21. Nd5 Rcf7 22. a4 Bxd5 23. exd5 Qd7 24. a5 f5 25. bxc5
bxc4 26. Bf3 Be5 27. a6 Qc8 28. Qa5 Ng7 29. gxf5 Qxf5 30. Be4 Qxf1 +
31. Rxf1 Rxf1 + 32. Kg2 Ne8 33. Qd8 Ng7 34. Qc7 R1f7 35. Qc6 Nf5 36.
Bxf5 Rxf5 37. Qb7 R8f7 38. Qc8 + Kg7 39. Qe6 Rf3 40. Qg4 Rxd3 41. Be1
Ra3 42. Qe2 Rxa6 43. h4 h5 44. Bd2 Ra3 45. Be3 Rb3 46. Qe1 Rb2 + 47.
Kh1 Rc2 0:1.

Siranush Andriasyan – Vesna Rozich 0.5:0.5

1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bg5 dxe4 5. Nxe4 Be7 6. Bxf6 gxf6 7.
Nf3 b6 8. Bc4 Bb7 9. Qe2 c6 10. O-O Qc7 11. Ng3 Nd7 12. Nh4 O-O-O 13.
Ba6 Nf8 14. Bxb7 + Kxb7 15. Nf3 h5 16. Rfe1 Ng6 17. Qe3 f5 18. Ne2
Rhg8 19. Kh1 Nh4 20. Nxh4 Bxh4 21. c3 Rg4 22. f3 Rg6 23. Rg1 Bg5 24.
f4 Bh6 25. a4 Qd6 26. Qf3 h4 27. a5 b5 28. Rgf1 Qd5 29. b4 Rdg8 30.
Qxd5 exd5 31. g3 Re6 32. Rf2 Rge8 33. Ra2 Re3 34. Kg2 hxg3 35. hxg3
Rd3 36. Rf3 Rd1 37. Rf1 Rd3 38. Rh1 Re6 39. Rh5 Rf6 40. Rc2 Kc7 41.
Kf2 Bg7 42. Ng1 Re6 43. Ne2 Rf6 44. Ng1 Re6 45. Ne2 Rf6 46. Rh1 Re6
47. Rh7 Rg6 48. Rc1 Kd6 49. Rh5 Rf6 50. Rg5 Bh6 51. Rg8 Re6 52. Ra8
Rd2 53. Re1 Re7 54. Rd8 + Kc7 55. Rh8 Re6 56. Rh7 Rf6 57. Ke3 Rb2 58.
Kd3 Bf8 59. Nc1 Bd6 60. Re3 Kd7 61. Re2 Rxe2 62. Nxe2 Ke8 63. Rh8 +
Bf8 64. Rh5 Ke7 65. Ng1 Rg6 66. Ne2 Ke6 67. Rh8 Ke7 68. Ke3 Rh6 69.
Rxh6 Bxh6 70. Ng1 Ke6 71. Nf3 f6 72. Ne1 Bf8 73. Kf3 Be7 74. Kg2 Bf8
75. Kh3 Bd6 76. Ng2 Kf7 77. Ne3 Kg6 78. a6 Bc7 79. Kh4 Bd6 80. Nc2 Bc7
81. Na1 Kh6 82. Nb3 Bd6 83. Nd2 Kg6 84. Nf3 Bc7 85. Kh3 Kf7 86. Nh4
Ke6 87. Kg2 Bd6 88. Kf3 Bf8 89. Ng2 Ke7 90. Nh4 Ke6 91. Ng2 Ke7 92. g4
fxg4 + 93. Kxg4 Ke6 94. Nh4 Bd6 95. Nf5 Bf8 96. Ne3 Bd6 97. Nc2 Bc7
98. Na1 f5 + 99. Kg5 Bd8 + 100. Kg6 Bc7 101. Kg5 Bd8 + 102. Kg6 Bc7
103. Kg5 1 / 2: 1 / 2.