Lake Sevan Level Reaches Indicator Of 1965

LAKE SEVAN LEVEL REACHES INDICATOR OF 1965

ArmInfo
2010-01-26 11:22:00

ArmInfo. As of January 1 2010 the level of Lake Sevan reached 1,899m
23cm. Such level was registered in 1965, Vladimir Movsisyan, Commission
for Lake Sevan, said at De Facto debate club on Tuesday.

"We have reached and even exceeded the level registered 45 years ago
by 5 cm: It is mostly thanks to the tunnel Arpa-Sevan that we reached
such level, he said. After repair of the given section (814 million
drams), 209 million cu m of water poured into Sevan over 8 months
of 2009 versus 192 million cu b over 12 months of 2008. Repair of
another 3km 360 m section of Arpa-Sevan tunnel will be completed
within the coming 5 years. The level of Sevan is supposed to rise
20-21cm in average yearly. So the lake will reach 1903.5 m above sea
level in 2031. As a result, 15 km of roads will be flooded. Only part
of these roads will be reconstructed and 4.3 billion drams have been
allocated for this purpose. Last year Sevan- Gavar-Martuni highway
of 2.1km was repaired (376 million drams). 11 km of water pipes and 4
irrigation systems will be flooded, as well as 19 km of gas pipeline
(their reconstruction will take 1.8 billion drams), 18 km power lines
(reconstruction will cost 1.6 bln drams). Sevan will flood also 2789
ha of forests and cleaning will require 1.2 billion drams. Last year
600 ha of woods were cleaned which took the country 257 million drams.

Movsisyan said that the ministry has relevant equipment for cleaning
under water and the issue is currently under discussion.

Armenia warns of ‘serious counter-attacks’ if threatened

Armenia warns of ‘serious counter-attacks’ if threatened

Thursday, January 28, 2010
YEREVAN – Agence France-Presse

[image: This picture taken on Monday shows Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev (C), Armenian President Serge Sarkisian (R), and Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev (L) touring the Krasnaya Polyana ski resort in
Sochi.]

This picture taken on Monday shows Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (C),
Armenian President Serge Sarkisian (R), and Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev (L) touring the Krasnaya Polyana ski resort in Sochi.

In a clear warning to arch-rival Azerbaijan, Armenian President Serge
Sarkisian said Thursday that the ex-Soviet republic’s military is ready to
carry out "serious counter-attacks" if provoked.

"Today the Armenian army is an iron guarantee that ensures our survival and
is a cold, sobering shower for any hot-headed adventurers," Sarkisian said
in a statement to mark Armenia’s Army Day public holiday.

"The author of any provocation should expect serious counter-attacks and
major surprises from the Armenian army. Not realizing this is, at the least,
naive," he said.

Sarkisian’s comments were clearly aimed at neighboring Azerbaijan, which is
locked in a long-simmering conflict with Armenia over the disputed
Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Backed by Yerevan, ethnic Armenian forces seized control of Nagorno-Karabakh
and seven surrounding districts from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s, in a war
that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

The two former Soviet republics have cut direct economic and transport links
and failed to negotiate a settlement on the region’s status despite years of
negotiations.

Armenian and Azerbaijani forces are spread across a cease-fire line in and
around Nagorno-Karabakh, often facing each other at close range, and
shootings are common.

The dispute has complicated recent reconciliation efforts between Armenia
and Azerbaijan’s ally Turkey, which has called for progress in Karabakh
negotiations before it will ratify a deal signed last year to establish ties
with Armenia after decades of hostility.

Voice Of Armenia’s Opposition Once Again Stifled: Safaryan On PACE D

VOICE OF ARMENIA’S OPPOSITION ONCE AGAIN STIFLED: SAFARYAN ON PACE DECISION

Tert.am
17:24 ~U 26.01.10

The decision by the PACE Committee on Rules of Procedure, Immunities
and Institutional Affairs today, to approve the Armenian delegation’s
mandates, was the usual step in stifling the voice of Armenia’s
opposition, said Heritage Party parliamentary faction leader Stepan
Safaryan, in speaking with Tert.am today.

"That decision means that the Armenian ruling landing party [that is,
those who have been assigned by the authorities] once again stifled
the voice of Armenia and Armenia’s opposition," said Safaryan, adding
that that decision "is not the end," all is not lost, and that they
will respond with a statement soon.

As previously reported, the RA National Assembly Chair had approved a
decision to make a change to the make-up of the Armenian delegation:
opposition Heritage Party member Zaruhi Postanjyan had been replaced
with Rule of Law party member Ardzruni Aghajanyan.

Karabakh Role In Talks ‘Out Of The Question,’ Says Azerbaijan

KARABAKH ROLE IN TALKS ‘OUT OF THE QUESTION,’ SAYS AZERBAIJAN

Asbarez
Jan 26th, 2010

Russia — President Dmitry Medvedev (C) meets with his Armenian and
Azerbaijani counterparts Serzh Sarkisina and Ilham Aliyev in Sochi
on January 25, 2010

BAKU, MOSCOW (Combined Sources)-The participation of Karabakh in
the peace talks at this juncture is "out of the question," said
Azeri Foreign Ministry spokesman Elkhan Polukhov Tuesday, after
the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan reportedly agreed to a
preamble of an updated version of the so-called "Madrid Principles"
at a meeting with their Russian counterpart Monday in Sochi.

"There is no doubt that the Armenian community of Nagorno Karabakh
will join the negotiations at some point, but, currently, it is out
of the question, since it would be wrong and unacceptable to involve
a non-party to the conflict in the process," said Polukhov as reported
by the APA news agency.

Polukhov said that reports of Karabakh’s participation in the talks
were merely an effort by the Armenian media to "calm the Armenian
audience."

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov Monday announced that presidents
Serzh Sarkisian and Ilham Aliyev had agreed to a preamble of the
Madrid principles during a meeting with Russian President Demitry
Medvedev. Sources close to the process reported that the preamble of
the revised principles included a provision on Karabakh’s participation
in the talks.

Polukhov said only Armenia and Azerbaijan were sides to conflict and
thus the lead parties in the negotiations.

Meanwhile Russian OSCE Minsk Group co-chairman Yuri Merzlyakov
reported that Armenia and Azerbaijan will have two weeks to submit
their proposals on the provisions of the Madrid principles, on which
the parties have not reached a mutual understanding.

Merzlyakov said that after reviewing the proposals, he and his fellow
co-chairmen from France and the US would return to the region for
further discussions.

None of the sides commented publicly after the tri-lateral meeting
in Sochi. However, an Armenia Public Radio reporter observed that the
president and foreign minister of Azerbaijan were visibly anxious as
they emerged from the meetings.

ArmRadio also reported that when the presidents arrived at the Adler
airport to meet the Minsk Group Co-Chairs, Azeri president Aliyev
did not event greet reporters, which the radio correspondent viewed
as another sign of his irritation.

Turkish And Azerbaijani FMs To Meet In London

TURKISH AND AZERBAIJANI FMS TO MEET IN LONDON

News.am
12:18 / 01/27/2010

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov will hold a number
of bilateral meetings with his counterparts within the framework of
International Conference on Afghanistan in London, Jan. 28, 2010.

Mammadyarov will discuss topical issues on bilateral and regional
cooperation with Turkish FM Ahmet Davutoglu.

A day before, in his interview with Russian NTV channel, Turkish
FM Ahmet Davutoglu informed about his intention to discuss recent
developments on Karbakh peace process and Armenia-Turkey reconciliation
with his Azerbaijani counterpart.

Davutoglu also underlined that he plans to meet with the U.S.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to discuss the mentioned issues.

The main objective of London conference is to decide the issue of
assistance to Afghanistan on situation stabilization and creation of
established state by international community.

‘I Can’t Imagine Peaceful Resolution To Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict’:

‘I CAN’T IMAGINE PEACEFUL RESOLUTION TO NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT’: RUSSIAN DEPUTY PARLIAMENTARY SPEAKER

Tert.am
18:01 ~U 26.01.10

Deputy Speaker of Russia’s State Duma, Vladimir Zhirinovsky,
has said that Russia has an interest in stability in the region,
highlighting Washington’s role in that process. Commenting on
his recent statement about the necessity for Russia to recognize
Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence, Zhirinovsky was surprised at why
Azerbaijan was offended that he "recorded the facts."

Zhirinovsky, who’s also the Chair of the Liberal Democratic Party
of Russia (LDPR), commented on his statement in his interview with
"The Voice of America" Russian service.

"Armenian-Azerbaijani contradictions run so deep that I can’t
imagine how Nagorno-Karabakh can return to being under Azerbaijan’s
jurisdiction through peaceful means; for that reason, it’s necessary
to search for a new legislative status that’s, naturally, permittable
for all parties.

"Azerbaijani authorities are offended by me, but I’m not… to blame
in that conflict. I’m simply proving that which is necessary, as an
expert who has lived and worked in this region," said Zhirinovsky.

Armenian Economy Declines By 14.4% In 2009

ARMENIAN ECONOMY DECLINES BY 14.4% IN 2009

ARKA
Jan 25, 2010

YEREVAN, January 25, /ARKA/. Armenian economy declined by 14.4% in
2009, Armenia’s National Statistical Service reported, saying that
the country’s GDP totaled 3.165.5 trillion Drams. It said the 2009
December GDP was 18.3% up from the previous month. In 2008 Armenia’s
GDP grew by 6.8% year-on-year.

According to 2009 budget, the GDP was to grow by 9.2%. ($1 – 377.75
Drams).

Rescuing Israel’s Image In The Rubble Of Haiti

RESCUING ISRAEL’S IMAGE IN THE RUBBLE OF HAITI
By Ayala Tsoref

Ha’aretz
Mon., January 25, 2010

"One day last week, while driving through Port-au-Prince, two
people ran up to us," says Amos Radian, Israel’s ambassador to the
Dominican Republic, who has been coordinating Israeli aid to the
earthquake-stricken island nation of Haiti. The security officer
thought they were under attack, but the "assailants" turned out to
be British correspondents from the Sun and the Mirror. They’d seen
the Israeli flag on the car and having heard about the field hospital
Israel had set up, wanted to be taken to it, Radian says.

It’s a nice change for foreign correspondents to be chasing Israeli
representatives for positive reasons.

For years Israel has been depicted as brutal and inhuman, but the tone
changed last week, with media coverage focused on the hospital Israel
had put up – enabling complex surgery under field conditions, and even
sporting facilities for birthing and for premature babies. MSNBC for
instance, which broadcasts to some 78 million households in the United
States, sang the Israeli team’s praise, noting the chaos and collapse
of communications. The Israelis were the exception, MSNBC reported:
Their 747 landed at the airport, with the Israelis immediately
unloading equipment to set up a state-of-the-art field hospital.

Exactly as one might expect of Israelis, the cable news channel gushed,
their arrival was efficient, thorough and well-managed, and they got
down to work straightaway.

When MSNBC’s anchor wondered why the Israelis were more organized than
the Americans, the reporter on the ground in Haiti answered that the
Israelis had arrived far more prepared than the other rescue teams.

Within hours they had operating theatres up and running, she said.

CNN reported much the same and even asked an American general how
a tiny nation like Israel managed to do what no other delegation to
Haiti had.

Radian himself trekked through the debris, from one improvised
clinic to another, urging that the worst cases be sent to the Israeli
hospital, as it had the best care available in Haiti, he explains.

"It’s gotten so reporters wandering between the camps come to me,
telling me about tough cases in other camps – such as a woman needing
an urgent Cesarean section. They ask if they can send Israeli teams
in," he says.

The army estimates the cost of the Haiti operation for last week
alone at NIS 30 million, three-quarters of what Jerusalem spent on
its image in 2009. Of that, NIS 10 million went toward building and
the use of satellite communications; the same was spent on sending
over the Jumbo jets with the medical equipment. Each day the 230-man
medical team is there costs more than NIS 1.5 million, not including
communication costs.

As the army spokesman put it, cost becomes secondary on a humanitarian
mission like this.

Beyond rescuing lives, the Israeli team in Haiti is also helping to
rescue Israel’s image in both the press and diplomatic circles. "I
ran into the Japanese ambassador at one of the ruined sites and told
him about the hospital," says Radian. "An hour later he’d brought the
entire Japanese delegation over to come and learn. The Colombian army
asked to append their operating theatre, with 16 surgeons, to our
camp. Now our camp has the Israeli flag, the Red Cross flag and the
Colombian flag. Israeli, Colombian and British teams are operating
together at our camp, which has increased from 230 to 300 people."

No one at the airport could have missed the Israelis’ arrival. "Two
El Al jets with the Israeli flag on their tails landed… Two hundred
and thirty Israeli soldiers disembarked, and who guarded them en route?

Jordanian armored vehicles. It was surreal," says Radian.

One critic of the Israeli effort is Yoel Donchin, head of patient
safety at Hadassah University Hospital, Ein Karem in Jerusalem. In
an article published on Ynet, he wrote that what the Haitians need
most isn’t a field hospital, but field toilets. More than they need
doctors, he said, they need bulldozers to dig sewage lines.

"A country seeking to bring humanitarian aid, without thinking about
its image, should send what the victims need, not what it wants to
give," Donchin wrote. But would the news programs cover an Israeli
commander next to a site with 500 chemical toilets? Hospitals with
devoted doctors and nurses bearing the Star of David are sexier,
he concluded.

Yossi Levy of the Foreign Ministry dismisses the charge that it’s all
a public relations stunt. "We sent the best of our people – not to get
[good PR], but to save lives," he says. After years of bad images,
he adds, the photographs of the Israeli hospital speak for themselves.

Even the Guardian, not known for its pro-Israeli coverage, was
adulatory.

After foreign journalists started to crowd the field hospital, the army
set up procedures to handle them, says Matan Greenberg, soldier and
spokesman for the delegation. They are met by a colonel who explains
how Israel’s Home Front Command and rescue teams work. They meet with
the hospital commander, who reviews what happened that day events. They
can tour the tents, says Greenberg, and are finally brought to a tent
that offers satellite Internet communication, a precious commodity
in the disaster zone. The army PR team in Haiti even has press kits
ready to go.

Is the Arab press also covering the Israeli activity in Haiti?

"We tried to attract Arab papers. We invited them, but they didn’t
come," says Greenberg. "But there are a lot of [press] teams from
Europe [covering our work]."

Israel has previously sent rescue teams to Turkey, Armenia, India,
Kenya and Thailand – the latter after the 2004 tsunami. Coverage was
adulatory in all cases, but the applause waned quickly. The chill in
Israeli-Turkish relations these days demonstrates just how short that
appreciation can last.

"We have no illusions," says Levy. They know the positive coverage
won’t last; Israel will again be portrayed as Goliath. But the
Foreign Ministry is convinced that the positive reports will still
help Israeli economic interests.

"The fact that [U.S. Secretary of State Hillary] Clinton mentioned
us in her speech is of the utmost importance," says image consultant
Roni Rimon. "As long as Israel leverages [the positive coverage],
it will last."

His advice (long stated but never taken): Israel should buy ad space
in the foreign press and on Web sites, where it could publish images
and clips from its Haitian rescue mission. That said, "This is one of
the few times I don’t feel things should have been done differently,"
Rimon says. "As an adviser, I would advise them to keep doing exactly
what they’re doing."

Germany ready to lend ROA $20 mln to build power lines to Georgia

Interfax, Russia
Jan 22 2010

Germany ready to lend Armenia $20 mln to build power lines to Georgia

YEREVAN Jan 22

The German government has expressed readiness to offer Armenia a $20
million credit through the bank KfW for the building of the Armenia
part of the 400kw power-line running from Razdan in Armenia to
Gardabani in Georgia.

The director of CJSC High Voltage Power-networks of Armenia
(Vysokovoltniye Electroceti Armenii), Saak Abramyan, told Interfax
that preliminary agreement on the funds-extension has already been
reached.

The Armenian part of the power-line systems stretches 105km. The
Armenia construction work is planned to begin and end in synchrony
with Georgia’s. Work could take two years, and the overall project
price tag is estimated at $50 million.

The new power-line will be the fourth linking the two countries and
the first to allow parallel work by their respective power systems.

Armenia and Georgia are currently joined by two power-lines of 110kw
and on of 220kw. The future may bring Iran online with the two
countries’ power net as well, after the completion of a new Iran –
Armenia power- line.

The German company Dekon has won a tender for consulting services on
KfW’s lending program for 14.6 million euros for overhauling the
Gyumri-2 high voltage substation, Abramyan said. Fichtner, also a
German company, was likewise in the running for the rights at tender.

"The tender’s results have been submitted and they should be approved
by the Armenian government, after which a deal will be concluded with
the consultant," he said.

KfW’s Gyumri-2 credit program starts this year. The funds will be used
to completely replace obsolete equipment, which should increase the
reliability of power supplies to the town of Gyumri and Armenia
littoral regions. The substation also serves the high voltage Gyumri –
Kars (Turkey) power-line.

Ankara seeks to justify self in the eyes of international community

Ankara seeks to justify itself in the eyes of international community
22.01.2010 17:41 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ It would be naïve to think that Turkey’s Foreign
Ministry is unaware of the contents of the Armenian Constitution and
Declaration of Independence, said Ashot Avanesyan, the President of
National Congress of Armenians of Ukraine.

`The statement of Turkish Foreign Ministry is nothing but an attempt
to lay its own fault at someone else’s door. Having found itself in a
difficult situation, Ankara seeks to justify itself the eyes of
international community by dragging Armenian authorities into
unnecessary polemics,’ he said when commenting on Turkish Foreign
Ministry’s statement regarding the RA Constitutional Court’s
resolution on Protocols.

`Turkey will have to reconcile with its own history and together with
Armenia find a way out of historic standstill,’ Avanesyan concluded,
Analitika.at.ua reports.

The Protocols aimed at normalization of bilateral ties and opening of
the border between Armenia and Turkey were signed in Zurich by
Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and his Turkish
counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu on October 10, 2009, after a series of
diplomatic talks held through Swiss mediation. On January 12, 2010,
the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Armenia found the
protocols conformable to the country’s Organic Law.

Commenting on the decision of the Armenian Constitutional Court, the
Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that `the decision contains
preconditions and restrictive provisions which impair the letter and
spirit of the Protocols.’

‘The decision undermines the very reason for negotiating these
Protocols as well as their fundamental objective. This approach cannot
be accepted on our part. Turkey, in line with its accustomed
allegiance to its international commitments, maintains its adherence
to the primary provisions of these Protocols.We expect the same
allegiance from the Armenian Government,’ the Ministry said.