The Fall Of Berlin Wall — Model For Armenia-Turkey Border Opening

THE FALL OF BERLIN WALL — MODEL FOR ARMENIA-TURKEY BORDER OPENING

news.am
Nov 30 2009
Armenia

The peaceful fall of Berlin Wall can be a model for Armenian-Turkish
border opening, Karine Ghazinyan, RA Deputy Foreign Minister stated in
the course of discussions following "Berlin Wall fall 20th Anniversary"
fair organized by Yerevan State University jointly with German Embassy
in Armenia.

Karine Ghazinyan, Hans Johan-Schmidt (German Ambassador to Armenia),
Serzh Smessow (French Ambassador to Armenia), UK and Russian embassies’
representatives participated in the discussion, that presented the role
of the mentioned states in Berlin Wall fall process. All participants
shared an opinion that the Wall fall played a crucial role in further
development of European countries’ cooperation.

Johan-Schmidt noted that peaceful meetings in Federal Republic of
Germany laid a path to unification of Germany. Ghazinyan added that
the peaceful fall of Berlin Wall can be a model for Armenian-Turkish
border opening.

BAKU: Progress Achieved In Munich Meeting Of Azerbaijani, Armenian P

PROGRESS ACHIEVED IN MUNICH MEETING OF AZERBAIJANI, ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS: AZERBAIJANI FOREIGN MINISTRY

Today
57715.html
Nov 24 2009
Azerbaijan

During the Munich meeting, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan conducted deeper and detailed
discussions around the unsolved issues, Spokesman of Azerbaijan’s
Foreign Ministry Elkhan Polukhov said.

The meeting lasted for more than 4 hours which also shows importance
of the meeting, he said.

The diplomat noted that a progress was reached in terms of
approximation in positions of the parties on some issues.

"Moreover, the presidents of both countries instructed the foreign
ministers to continue the talks. The next meeting of the foreign
ministers of the two countries will be held in Athens in early
December," Polukhov added.

http://www.today.az/news/politics/

EBRD To Grant $5.5 Mln Credit To STAR

EBRD TO GRANT $5.5 MLN CREDIT TO STAR

ArmInfo
2009-11-24 14:59:00

ArmInfo. European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
will grant credit to the biggest retail network of Armenia, STAR, to
the sum of $5.5 mln. As STAR told ArmInfo, signing of a corresponding
credit agreement will be held in Yerevan on November 25.

According to the agreement terms, STAR will receive this credit in
December 2009, $3.5 of which will be granted in form of credit for 7
years with two-year delay of payment, $1.434 mln – in form of a joint
stock capital, with possibility of redemption in 1 year, and $566,000
– in form of conversion of corporate bonds to shares. According to
STAR Executive Director Vahan Kerobyan, the funds will be directed
to fulfillment of obligations to suppliers of goods, opening of new
supermarkets and reconstruction of the existing ones, as well as
strengthening of the network’s circulating capital.

To note, EBRD is one of the shareholders of STAR, and its share in
the Company’s capital currently makes up 28,3%. STAR network numbers
13 supermarkets (12 – in Yerevan, and 1 – in Hrazdan).

BAKU: Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia meet in Munich

APA, Azerbaijan
Nov 22 2009

Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia meet in Munich

[ 22 Nov 2009 17:41 ]

Baku ` APA. Presidents Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and Serzh Sarkisyan
of Armenia have today met at the headquarters of the French consulate
general in Munich.

The meeting focused on the current state and prospects of the talks to
solve the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, APA
reports quoting AzerTAC news agency.

The meeting was held in the presence of foreign ministers Elmar
Mammadyarov of Azerbaijan and Edward Nalbandian of Armenia, OSCE Minsk
Group Co-Chairs Robert Bradtke of the United States of America,
Bernard Fassier of France and Yury Merzlyakov of Russia, as well as
Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej
Kasprzyk.

Ara Nranyan: In 2010 The Situation To Worsen For Armenian Citizens

ARA NRANYAN: IN 2010 THE SITUATION TO WORSEN FOR ARMENIAN CITIZENS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
20.11.2009 19:45 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Armenia’s state budget for 2010 is not encouraging.

In 2010 the situation will worsen for Armenian citizens, since private
transfers from abroad reduced, price growth is observed, while the
RA government does not envisage any increase in wages," Ara Nranyan
deputy of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun faction said on November 20, during
a briefing at the National Assembly of Armenia.

According Ara Nranyan, if the Central Bank of Armenia is not able
to keep the dollar rate lower 420 AMD margin, then the foreign debt
will rise to 50 per cent of GDP and our country will be unable to
service it.

According to Ara Nranyan, Armenian government used very inefficiently
the credits and "Armenia may find itself among bankrupt countries."

However, MP also said that ARF has not yet determined, to vote for
or against this budget.

Best Resellers In VivaCell-MTS’ Dealers Network Are Awarded Certific

BEST RESELLERS IN VIVACELL-MTS’ DEALERS NETWORK ARE AWARDED CERTIFICATES OF RECOGNITION AND MARTPHONES FOR THEIR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN SALES OF AIRTIME VIA TOP-UP

ArmInfo
2009-11-19 13:47:00

ArmInfo. Best resellers in VivaCell-MTS’ dealers network are awarded
certificates of recognition and smartphones for their outstanding
achievements in sales of airtime via Top-Up, press-service of
VivaCell-MTS reports.

Top-up is an innovative, fast, simple and convenient method for
recharging prepaid account. Through this system, VivaCell-MTS prepaid
subscribers, who have run out of airtime, are able to recharge their
account directly from an authorized point of sale with the amount
they wish, starting from 50 AMD to 90,000 AMD.

The deployment of Top-Up service enabled VivaCell-MTS to provide its
resellers with the ability to recharge the account of the subscriber
with airtime mobile handsets, eliminating the need for physical top-up
cards. The reseller/dealer receives the airtime from the operator
and is able to transfer this airtime to the subscriber through a
mobile-to- mobile transaction. The Top-Up prepaid recharge system
was launched this year on the 21st of May, and by the end of Q3,
the system has reached significant share (over 20%) of total market
sales for the prepaid recharge. VivaCell-MTS has over 3,000 points
of sales for recharge airtime via Top-Up across Armenia. During a
special event organized at VivaCell-MTS’ Headquarters the best 3
top resellers from each marz and from the Company’s biggest Top-Up
dealer Press Stand network were awarded certificates of recognition
for their outstanding achievements and tireless efforts in Top-Up
Sales and received valuable phones from VivaCell-MTS.

Besides, the number one Top-Up salesman of Armenia, Lusik Sarikyan, was
also awarded a valuable smart phone and a certificate of recognition
for exceptional work done and outstanding achievements.

Armenia’s number one Top-Up salesman has reached AMD 12,785,000 of
sales volume, which is the top figure in Armenia for Q3 2009.

Unveiling The Hanging Gardens Of Armenia

UNVEILING THE HANGING GARDENS OF ARMENIA
MICHAEL KIMMELMAN

New York Times
Nov 18 2009

YEREVAN, Armenia — Some 20,000 Armenians turned up for the opening
of the Cafesjian Center for the Arts last week. They jammed the new
sculpture park and the terraced gardens and galleries, including the
first exhibition ever in Armenia of the Armenian-born American great,
Arshile Gorky.

Did I mention the artificial waterfalls?

Built into a gigantic hill in the commercial heart of this capital
city, with a staircase that climbs the outside linking the gardens,
the place was originally conceived in Soviet times to be topped by
a monument to the Soviet revolution. That it has been turned into
a contemporary-art center by a rich American is a twist of history
whose symbolism is lost on no one here.

There’s no endowment, no professional board, so it may very well
soon fall flat on its face, as so much has in this country where
widespread corruption, lethargy and years of isolation have led to
an unemployment rate around 40 percent, a crumbling infrastructure
and almost no middle class.

But for the time being, at least, it is doing what precious few
museums, and even fewer vanity enterprises like it can dream of doing
— namely, offering a whole nation a kind of uplift.

>From morning to evening, as if out on prom night, young Armenians
at the opening rode the center’s escalator, in many ways the main
attraction, which rises via several grand, plaza-size landings inside
to, of all things, a little jazz lounge, where a view of the city
unfolds beyond tall windows behind the stage.

Armenia’s president, Serge Sargsyan, surrounded by swarms of security
guards (politicians can’t be too careful here) took time out from
the debate over opening the border with Turkey. He joined Gerard L.

Cafesjian, the 84-year-old Brooklyn-born Armenian-American patron
of the center, and the center’s director, Michael De Marsche, among
others, to hear the inaugural set.

These days Armenian newspaper headlines dwell on the Turkish border
opening, which the United States quietly presses for to gain an oil
pipeline that can sidestep Russia and Iran. In return Turkey wants
to table once and for all any talk about having committed genocide
in the killing of more than a million Armenians nearly a century ago.

Admitting to genocide has legal ramifications in terms of restitution.

So President Obama has lately stopped using the G word, leaving
Armenians to choose between desperately needed economic improvement
and justice in the defining calamity of their history.

Paralyzed for decades by that event, turned in on itself, landlocked
and surrounded by mostly hostile neighbors, Armenia has had until
now almost no place to see modern and contemporary art from outside
the country. When a perfectly anodyne fat Botero sculpture of a cat
was installed in the new center’s sculpture park a few years ago, it
caused a scandal. Then, resistance melted. As the center’s opening
proved, thousands of young Armenians are hungry for what’s beyond
their borders and are open to change.

I arrived, having been invited to lecture at the opening, dimly
aware of the center’s history, which began during the 1930s, when a
prominent local architect, Alexander Tamanyan, conceived the Cascade,
as it’s called, a towering, white travertine ziggurat of artificial
waterfalls and gardens tumbling down a promontory that links the
historic residential and business centers of the city.

Banquet-hall-size meeting rooms were devised for Soviet apparatchiks.

The plan was largely forgotten until the late 1970s, after which
construction began. Then came the earthquake in 1988 and the breakup of
the Soviet Union in 1991. Like much of the city during the post-Soviet
years of transition, the Cascade was left in the lurch.

Enter Mr. Cafesjian, from Minnesota. Armenian officials agreed he
could erect a building on top of the Cascade in which to show his
collection if he would complete the Cascade. Work started in 2002,
but costs spiraled swiftly out of control. What had been imagined as a
$20 million undertaking soon topped $40 million, with no end in sight.

Mr. Cafesjian regrouped. Two years ago he hired Mr. De Marsche, then
president of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center. The building on
top was put on hold, the focus instead turned toward completing the
Cascade and the sculpture park at the foot of it. Tamanyan’s original
meeting rooms became art galleries, a gift shop and the jazz lounge.

Peculiar doesn’t begin to describe the results. The galleries are
irregular and spaced far apart, some of them reachable only outdoors
across the gardens, which in winter will be frigid and covered
with snow.

It’s a world away from other museums here. I stopped several times
into the National Gallery, an aging palace of marble, worn carpets,
bare light bulbs and creaky floorboards in the middle of the city. You
wouldn’t necessarily know it was a gallery from outside. The facade is
covered by billboards for a bank. An unmarked entrance is shuttered
by Venetian blinds. Even on Saturday and Sunday afternoons I was the
only visitor in the entire place. Elderly female guards in starched
white shirts, startled, glumly rose to watch me pass.

Through the gallery’s windows, bossa nova music wafted incongruously
from an empty Soviet-era amusement park nearby. A panorama of
half-finished apartment blocks, Hummers and luxury shops for the
oligarchs, and bulky statues of Armenian heroes on horseback spread
out below.

According to Raffi Hovannisian, Armenia’s former foreign minister, the
country now depends for some one-third of its economy on money sent by
Armenians abroad. The global collapse has been devastating. Several
years of double-digit economic growth during the early 2000s have
largely evaporated.

Even Dennis Doyle, who sits on the board of Mr. Cafesjian’s family
foundation, wondered aloud about the center’s future. Mr. Cafesjian
promises to pay for it. But that means it all depends on him in the
end. The Armenian government is no safety net.

Karen De Marsche, Mr. De Marsche’s wife, said she was sitting in
a restaurant here with a friend one recent afternoon when a man
rushed in, agitated, and begged for something from the manager, who
disappeared into the kitchen. The friend, who knew the man, got up
from the table to find out what was wrong. She returned, distressed.

"What happened?" Ms. De Marsche asked.

The friend explained that the man was canvassing restaurants. His uncle
had just died in the hospital, and the man told hospital officials
the rest of his family couldn’t make it to town for a couple of days.

They told him, "Get ice."

Domino Effect Of Turkey-Armenia Warmth To Coat Gate Of Orient, Says

DOMINO EFFECT OF TURKEY-ARMENIA WARMTH TO COAT GATE OF ORIENT, SAYS ANALYST
Fulya Ozerkan

Hurriyet Daily News
Nov 17 2009
Turkey

The warm winds of change in Turkish-Armenian ties will somehow create
a domino effect with positive implications, from the lifting of the
blockade on Nakhichevan to the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
problem, according a senior foreign policy analyst from an Ankara-based
think tank

The warming relations between Turkey and Armenia could change the
fate of Nakhchivan, an isolated territory on Turkey’s eastern border,
according to an Ankara-based think tank.

Nakhchivan is an autonomous region of the Republic of Azerbaijan
geographically separated from the motherland and surrounded by Armenia.

"As a gesture of goodwill, Armenia could lift the blockade on
Nakhchivan and allow the restoration of its north-south and east-west
connections," said senior foreign policy analyst Burcu Gultekin
Punsmann in a written policy proposal developed for the Economic
Policy Research Foundation of Turkey, or TEPAV.

"This would be a considerable confidence-building measure for the
settlement of the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh," she said.

Nakhchivan, the former "Gate of the Orient," is at the crossroads
of the east-west and north-south railway connections. In the 17th
century, traveler Evliya Celebi described the city bordered by Iran,
Armenia and Turkey as one of the wonders of the world. Since 1993
a ceasefire line has surrounded Nakhchivan and the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict cut its communications off from the rest of Azerbaijan.

"The rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia will somehow create a
domino effect with positive implications, from the lifting of the
blockade on Nakhchivan, to the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
problem," Punsmann told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

"But if the process is stalled, then the whole chain will be negatively
affected."

Nakhchivan is blockaded by Armenia on its west, north and east sides.

All land links with Azerbaijan are also blocked. Flights between
Nakhchivan and Baku are the only remaining direct link.

"Even at the worst times in the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan
over Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s, Nakhchivan was able to protect
its territorial integrity. That can be linked with its proximity to
Turkey and the guarantees provided by Turkey. Armenian troops stopped
on the border of Nakhchivan during the war," said Punsmann.

Asked if the Armenian gesture of lifting the blockade on the autonomous
region depends on the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border, she
said it would be inaccurate to put forth preconditions to take any
step but "such a development could be seen in the context of the
Turkish-Armenian rapprochement."

Dilucu border gate may become trade hub

In the policy proposal, Punsmann highlighted that if Yerevan lifted
its blockade on the landlocked region, the reopening of east-west
communications would boost the activities of the Turkish-Azerbaijani
border gate of Dilucu.

Turkey’s Igdır province is located 85 kilometers from the border post
with Nakhchivan and 35 kilometers from the border with Armenia. The
Dilucu border gate, commonly known as Hasret Kapısı, opened in 1992
and a bridge built over the River Araxes links Turkey to Nakhchivan.

"Unlocking Nakhchivan will transform the Turkish-Azerbaijani border
gate of Dilucu into a trade center," said Punsmann. "Dilucu can be
a meeting place for people from Azerbaijan, Armenia, Iran and Turkey."

Plans are also under way to extend the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railroad
to Nakhchivan. Azerbaijan is negotiating with Turkey to construct
a branch line from the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway. The branch will
run to Igdır and further to Nakhchivan. Other new railroad projects
entirely bypass the enclave.

Armenia’s Corruption Rate Went Down

ARMENIA’S CORRUPTION RATE WENT DOWN

news.am
Nov 17 2009
Armenia

Armenia ranks the 125th among 180 states in the annual global
corruption report. According to the Global Corruption Report 2009
of Transparency International, Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI)
ranks countries in terms of the degree to which businesspeople and
country analysts perceive corruption to exist among public officials
and politicians.

The countries were assessed on a scale from 1-to 10, the calculations
were conducted by three international organizations of the examined
states. According to Transparency International, Armenian office
Chairwoman Amalia Kostanyan, last year Armenia took the 114th place
in the rating. She considers that this fact is induced not by system
changes, but events that impact people’s mentality and therefore
public opinion.

Transparency International Executive Director Varuzhan Hoktanyan said:
"As compared to the last year, Armenia’s index reduced by 0.2 point,
making 2.7 points. The same tendency was registered in Azerbaijan
and Georgia, however the most dramatic reduction was fixed in Iran."

The lowest indexes-1.1 testifying the high corruption rate are
registered in Somali, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Sudan and Iraq, while
the highest index 9.4- in New Zealand, Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland
and Singapore.

Armenian Emergency Situations Ministry Explains How A Mine Occurred

ARMENIAN EMERGENCY SITUATIONS MINISTRY EXPLAINS HOW A MINE OCCURRED NOT FAR FROM ARMENIAN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT

ArmInfo
2009-11-17 13:32:00

ArmInfo. Armenian Emergency Situations Ministry has explained how
a live mine could occur not far from the Armenian NPP. Earlier on
November 13 in the evening a live mine was found in 300 meters from
the wall of the plant during agricultural cultivation of the area.

Sappers removed the mine and rendered it harmless.

The Ministry explained that a military polygon was located in the given
territory before and such finds are not rare in that area. Mines have
already been found there before.