Ukrainian Delegation to Arrive in Armenia on an Official Visit

National Assembly of RA, Armenia

July 8 2011

Delegation Led by the Speaker of Ukrainian Supreme Rada Vladimir
Litvin to Arrive in Armenia on an Official Visit

On July 11 at the invitation of the RA NA Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan,
the delegation led by Vladimir Litvin, Speaker of Ukrainian Supreme
Rada, will arrive in Armenia on two-day official visit.

Vladimir Litvin’s meetings are scheduled with the RA President Serzh
Sargsyan, the NA Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan, the Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of all Armenians His
Holiness Karekin II, the presidency of the RA National Academy of
Sciences.

In the Parliament the members of the delegation led by the Speaker of
Ukrainian Supreme Rada will meet with the Chairs of the RA NA Standing
Committees, the Heads of the RA NA factions and the members of the
Armenia-Ukraine NA Friendship Group.

During the sojourn in Yerevan the delegation headed by Vladimir
Litvin, Speaker of Ukrainian Supreme Rada, will visit Tsitsernakaberd
Memorial Complex.

www.parliament.am

Nagorno-Karabakh wants a seat at the table

Washington Post
July 8 2011

Nagorno-Karabakh wants a seat at the table

By Will Englund, Updated: Friday, July 8, 9:22 PM

STEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh – For more than a decade, Russia, the
United States and various European organizations have been trying to
sponsor a framework peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan
that would finally settle the dispute over this mountainous enclave.
But Nagorno-Karabakh itself doesn’t have a seat at the table, and its
president says that must change.

Without the de facto republic’s direct participation, Bako Sahakyan
said during an interview at his office here, no settlement is
possible.

Nagorno-Karabakh, where ethnic Armenians were in the majority,
declared its independence from Azerbaijan in 1991 and effectively
broke free in 1994, after a cease-fire ended a bloody war that cost
thousands of lives on both sides. Since then no country has recognized
it, and it has relied on Armenia, which also took part in the war, to
represent it at the protracted negotiations.

`Nagorno-Karabakh is ready for compromise,’ Sahakyan said, but it has
to have the opportunity `to discuss the issue with Azerbaijan
directly.’

Some shooting continues across the line separating Nagorno-Karabakh
and Azerbaijani forces, with several casualties every year, and there
is always the danger that an incident could quickly escalate.

The talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan, sponsored most recently by
the so-called Minsk Group, which consists of Russia, France and the
United States, have been focused on a compromise that would involve
the return of some land to Azerbaijan in exchange for recognition and
self-determination for Nagorno-Karabakh. International security
guarantees would also play an important role.

But Azerbaijan has so far balked at the idea of Nagorno-Karabakh
becoming permanently independent. It argues that it lost 20 percent of
its territory in the war, and that hundreds of thousands of
Azerbaijanis who were displaced want to return to their homes.

For its part, Nagorno-Karabakh says it won’t give up land if that
means it must retreat to indefensible borders.

Officials familiar with the Minsk Group deliberations say it is clear
that any settlement will have to be accepted by Nagorno-Karabakh, but
that’s a problem for the next phase – which is unlikely to come
anytime soon.

The latest round of negotiations was held in the Russian city of Kazan
on June 24, and broke up without results. Some Nagorno-Karabakh
officials say that failure shows it’s time to try a new approach:
giving them a seat at the negotiating table.

Nagorno-Karabakh didn’t pursue that role from the start because, when
the talks got underway, its former president, Robert Kocharian, had
just been elected president of Armenia – on a promise not to betray
his homeland. Nagorno-Karabakhis thought they could trust him to look
out for their interests, but, a decade later, some officials suggest
that was a mistake in strategy. They say this even though the current
president of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, is also a former
Nagorno-Karabakh chief executive.

Armenia, they argue, has its own interests, which aren’t always
congruent with Nagorno-Karabakh’s.

Part of the difference is that Nagorno-Karabakh began agitating for
independence in 1988, three years before the collapse of the Soviet
Union, and that it then declared independence in 1991 before either
Armenia or Azerbaijan did.

`They didn’t get freedom first, and then independence,’ said
Nagorno-Karabakh’s foreign minister, Georgy Petrosyan, referring to
Armenia proper. `They didn’t get freedom in their heads, a freedom
that would allow them to appreciate independence. In that sense,
Karabakh has had a more advantageous experience.’

Masis Mayilian, who was deputy foreign minister in the de facto
government here, and a onetime candidate for president, said the
problem with the Minsk process is that it’s based on what he considers
a fundamental flaw: In 1991, the international community decided to
recognize the Soviet-era borders of the newly independent states. That
is why Nagorno-Karabakh hasn’t been recognized, hasn’t been included
in the talks, and is officially still considered part of Azerbaijan,
even though it declared independence before the Soviet breakup.

`The Minsk Group could be effective,’ Mayilian said, `but as long as
they work based on a mistaken premise, they put the brakes on the
process.’

At the same time, others here argue that not taking part in the
negotiations gives Nagorno-Karabakh the ultimate veto right over any
compromise.

Sahakyan, in arguing for inclusion, said he wants nonetheless to be
careful not to torpedo the Minsk Group process altogether. Just having
the talks going on has helped bring Nagorno-Karabakh a certain measure
of peace and stability, he said.

`We value any such meeting, even in a distorted format, and these
meetings will bring closer Nagorno-Karabakh’s participation in these
talks,’ he said.

This article was developed in cooperation with the Pulitzer Center on
Crisis Reporting.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/nagorno-karabakh-wants-a-seat-at-the-table/2011/07/08/gIQAxXGf3H_story.html

Armenia, Russia should intensify dialogue and coordinate investment

news.am, Armenia
July 8 2011

Armenia and Russia should intensify dialogue and coordinate investment
programs – PM

July 08, 2011 | 21:28

ROSTOV-ON-DON. – Armenia and Russia marked considerable progress in
trade and economic cooperation, said Armenian Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan at Armenian-Russian intergovernmental committee sitting in
Rostov-on-Don on Friday.

`Goods turnover between Armenia and Russia increased by 10 percent in
2010, reaching $1 billion. The first four months of current year
marked turnover increase of 13 percent in relation to relevant period
of 2010,” said Tigran Sargsyan.

He emphasized the volume of Armenian export to Russian market
increased by 40 percent in 2010 and by 27 percent in the first four
months of current year.

Sargsyan also expressed confidence that there are good opportunities
for deepening cooperation in various fields, such as industry and
tourism.

“In order to further deepen cooperation between our two countries we
should intensify mutual communication and coordinate investment
plans,’ he added.

Russian FM presents Armenian President Medvedev’s proposals on NK

news.am, Armenia
July 8 2011

Russian FM presents Armenian President Medvedev’s proposals on Karabakh

July 08, 2011 | 11:38

YEREVAN.- Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan received Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov on Friday.

Minister Lavrov handed in proposals of the Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev formed as a result of debates on Nagorno-Karabakh held in
Kazan, he told journalists on Friday.

`Proposals are accompanied by personal message of the Russian
President,’ said Lavrov.

Russian FM said he is leaving for Baku to convey the message to
Azerbaijani leadership.

Lavrov stressed that President Sargsyan reiterated his appraisal of
the activities of OSCE Minsk Group and personal efforts of the Russian
President. The Armenian leader also confirmed the interest of making
progress in the Karabakh peace process, adding he would study the
message and proposals to prepare a response.

ANTELIAS: Committee of the Heads of Oriental Orthodox Churches meets

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Director
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Watch our latest videos on YouTube here:

THE STANDING COMMITTEE OF THE HEADS OF
ORIENTAL ORTHODOX CHURCHES MEETS IN CAIRO

On Monday 4 July 2011, the Members of the Standing Committee met in Cairo.
The Committee was established in 1998, upon the decision of His Holiness
Pope Shenouda III Coptic Orthodox Church, His Holiness Ignatus Zakka I Iwas
Syrian Orthodox Church, and His Holiness Aram I Armenian Orthodox Church,
Catholicosate of Cilicia.

The members of the Committee, Anba Bishoy, Coptic Orthodox Church,
Metropolitan George Saliba and Archbishop Nais, Syrian Orthodox Church,
Archbishop Sebouh Sarkissian and Archbishop Nareg Alemezian, met with His
Holiness Pople Shenouda III, before beginning their meetings. The agenda of
the Standing Committee included: assessment of the Bilateral Theological
Dialogues; relations with the World Council of Churches and the Middle East
Council of Churches and participation in these bodies; strengthening
cooperation and coordination of activities between the three sister
churches.

In its final statement the Standing Committee reaffirmed the unity of the
faith that exists between them; recommitted them to face together challenges
and developments in the Middle East; and reconfirmed their attachment to
their ancient orthodox roots in the Region.

##
Photos:
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.youtube.com/user/HolySeeOfCilicia
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Photos/Photos587.htm
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org

Sargsyan described talk about international pressure as `exaggeratio

Mediamax, Armenia
July 9 2011

Armenian President described the talks about international pressure in
the settlement process as `exaggeration’

Mediamax reports that today, after conclusion of the first
All-Armenian Forum of young officers of the Armenian Armed Forces, the
President communicated with some of them.

Answering the question of one of the officers about the stage the
settlement process is in and whether there is international pressure,
Serzh Sargsian said:

`The process continues and we are keeping to a constructive stance in
it. Everyone knows that: some of them support us, and others try to
criticize. However it is not that important. Important is the fact
that talks about pressure are exaggerated. OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair
countries try to make the stances of all sides of the conflict –
Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan – closer. This process
proceeds with difficulty, but we did not even expect it to have an
easy solution. Our stance is known and it is perceived by the other
side with difficulty. We will do everything for a fair solution. The
stronger you are, the more combat-efficient our Army will be and our
negotiation stance will have a better standing’.

Le Grand Orient de France s’est réuni en Arménie

GRAND ORIENT DE FRANCE
Le Grand Orient de France s’est réuni en Arménie

Le 6 juillet, les membres du Grand Orient de France étaient en réunion
à Erévan. Guy Arsizet, le Grand Maître était présent en Arménie. Lors
d’une conférence de presse, il dit que sa loge comptait en Arménie
comptait de 15 à 20 membres. Il affirma lors de la conférence de
presse que le Grand Orient de France avait près de 50 000 membres en
France. A la différence de l’Arménie, selon Guy Arsizet, en France,
les membres du Grand Orient de France ne cachent pas leur appartenance
à cette obédience maçonnique. Il affirma que les autorités arméniennes
lui réservèrent un accueil chaleureux. « Je visite l’Arménie afin de
comprendre comment les peuples d’Europe peuvent aider ce pays qui
dispose d’une civilisation et d’une histoire ancienne » dit le Grand
Maître.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 10 juillet 2011,
Krikor [email protected]

Forbes Editor Included Armenia In The List Of 10 Countries With "Wor

FORBES EDITOR INCLUDED ARMENIA IN THE LIST OF 10 COUNTRIES WITH “WORST ECONOMY”

Mediamax
July 6, 2011
Armenia

Wednesday 6 July 2011 13:11 Photo:
Yerevan/Mediamax/. Forbes Senior Editor Daniel Fisher included Armenia
in the list of 10 countries with “worst economy in the world”.

Mediamax reports that Fisher put Armenia on the second line in the
list after Madagascar.

“With a 15% contraction in GDP in 2009 and mediocre growth forecast
for the next few years, this landlocked former Soviet republic is
struggling to keep up with the rest of the world. Per-capita GDP of
$3,000 is less than a third of neighboring Turkey, and with inflation
running at 7%, Armenia’s citizens are getting poorer”, Forbes Senior
Editor notes.

Besides Armenia and Madagascar, the list of 10 “worst economies in the
world” also includes Guinea, Ukraine, Jamaica, Venezuela, Kyrgyzstan,
Swaziland, Nicaragua and Iran.

http://blogs.forbes.com

Karabakh Airport Did Not Apply To IAC For Certification Yet

KARABAKH AIRPORT DID NOT APPLY TO IAC FOR CERTIFICATION YET

news.am
July 6, 2011
Armenia

STEPANAKERT. – Azerbaijani media misinformed the public regarding
CIS Interstate Aviation Committee (IAC) alleged decision not to issue
certificate to the airport of Karabakh capital Stepanakert, chief of
Karabakh civil aviation Dmitry Atbashyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

He stressed that Karabakh airport has not applied IAC for certificate
yet.

“We did not raise such an issue and the answer of CIS IAC is thus
unknown. We will apply for certification once we are sure that the
airport meets certain criteria,” Atbashyan added.

He believes that Stepanakert airport can work without the certificate
issued by CIS IAC for some time.

As for the statement of the director of State Civil Aviation
of Azerbaijan Arif Mammadov to destroy civil airplanes flying to
Stepanakert in accordance to Azerbaijan’s laws, Atbashyan noted that
Azerbaijan is a member of International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO) and signed the convention according to which all member states
are obliged not to create a threat for lives of airplane passengers
of civil aviation. Meanwhile they can demand that the airplane land
but have no right to attack the passengers.

Atbashyan pointed that international law is above national laws in
civilized states. If Azerbaijan thinks otherwise, it is their local
problem, and if Azerbaijani authorities do not recognize their own
signature on international convention, then that state should be
removed from ICAO, he added.

Azerbaijani media reported false information claiming that CIS IAC will
not issue certificate to Stepanakert airport. According to Azerbaijani
media, the issue was discussed during CIS IAC president’s visit to
Baku and he promised Azerbaijani authorities that the committee will
not issue certificate to Stepanakert airport without Azerbaijan’s
agreement.

Grand Orient De France Masonic Lodge Has 15-20 Members In Armenia

GRAND ORIENT DE FRANCE MASONIC LODGE HAS 15-20 MEMBERS IN ARMENIA

news.am
July 6, 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN. – French Masonic Lodge has 15-20 members in Armenia, said
the Great Master Guy Arsize to a press conference in Yerevan.

He stressed that the lodge counts 50 thousand members but the overall
number of masons reaches 500 thousand worldwide. Contrary to Armenia,
masons of France do not tend to hide their personality and are
essentially involved in socially directed activities.

According to the Great Master, Armenian masons do not want to
declassify their personality, because they have not had the time
to form a lodge in the country and his visit is aimed precisely at
supporting the Armenian brothers in this matter.

As evidence that French Masons are acting publicly, the Master stressed
that Armenian president was informed about his visit and welcomed it.

According Arsize, his visit has particularly pleased Masons of the
Diaspora who are interested in establishing a lodge in Armenia.