War Is A General Problem And History Is Dictated By Government

WAR IS A GENERAL PROBLEM AND HISTORY IS DICTATED BY GOVERNMENT

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 18 2007

Statements are made as the presidential election is drawing nearer on
the military actions in 1992-1993, hailing one activist for success
and accusing another for failure. On December 18 the leader of the
National Democratic Union Vazgen Manukyan hosted at the Hayeli press
club was asked this question, who used to be minister of defense of
Armenia in those years.

"I know that war is not a guerilla band. War is the country, if all
the government structures were not involved in war, it would not be
possible to win the war. Without tens of thousands of volunteers
going to army, it would be impossible to win the war. Therefore,
it is wrong to ascribe all the victories to one person or another.

Because it is collegial work," Vazgen Manukyan says.

According to him, the entire country participated in war, with
factories, scientists, heroes, organizers. "Everyone was important.

Therefore, I do not want to recall the years of war all the time.

Unfortunately, I have read nothing objective about the movement and
the war, because it turns out that the one who is government tries
to dictate history," Vazgen Manukyan says.

RA NA Ratifies Agreement On Humanitarian Cooperation Council Of Stat

RA NA RATIFIES AGREEMENT ON HUMANITARIAN COOPERATION COUNCIL OF STATE-PARTICIPANTS OF CIS

Noyan Tapan
Dec 18 2007

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 18, NOYAN TAPAN. At the December 18 special sitting,
the RA National Assembly ratified agreement On Humanitarian Cooperation
Council of State-Participants of CIS. It has been signed by nine CIS
countries (the Ukraine, Georgia, and Moldova have not signed it). The
agreement came into force on June 22, 2007.

The parliament also ratified the reservations made by RA on convention
On Criteria of Democratic Elections, Suffrages and Freedoms in CIS
Participant States. According to the main reporter Gevorg Danielian,
the RA Minister of Justice, after the convention came into force
for Armenia on March 17, 2005, a number of amendments were made to
the Electoral Code, as a result of which non-correspondence emerged
among some provisions of the convention. This, in particular, regards
organization of votings outside the country and existence of a column
of voting "against" all candidates or all parties on the ballot-paper,
which is excluded by the current Armenian Electoral Code.

New Year Is Cheaper In Egypt

NEW YEAR IS CHEAPER IN EGYPT

A1+
[01:40 pm] 18 December, 2007

The many people visit travel agencies on New Year eve. They want
to spend the New Year and Christmas somewhere in Armenia or out
of Armenia.

For example, many people now visit "Levon Travel" agency. "They
prefer to spend the holidays in abroad, particularly they want to
spend the holidays somewhere in the South – Dubai, Egypt, etc", told
the employees of the agency. They also informed that travel prices had
not increased; simply cheap tickets for a tour were exhausted long ago.

"Miatet" agency organizes travels in the Republic and out of the
Republic during the holidays. It is ridiculous that it is more
profitable for the RA citizens to leave abroad than to rest in
Tsakhkadzor, Hankavan or Sevan. According to the employee of the
organization, 100 thousand drams is needed for one person to spend
the holidays somewhere in Armenia for six days. But the holidays in
Arab United Emirates costs 299 thousand drams for 12 days. Majority of
travels prefer to rest in Egypt and Antalya. "It is cheaper to organize
the holidays out of Armenia. 11 days in Egypt cost 487 thousand drams,
while in Antalya – 295 thousand drams", she said.

The director of "Armenian Bureau of Travels" Hovhannes Margaryan
informed "A1+" that few people prefer to spend the holidays in
Armenia. "Russia is our main market", he says, noting that 90 percent
of tourists spend their holidays in Tsakhkadzor.

It should be mentioned, that price of the tickets to Armenia increase
before New Year. You may leave for Moscow for 67 570 drams, but
tickets from Moscow to Yerevan cost 141 000 drams.

Why Artsakh Energy Suffers Losses

WHY ARTSAKH ENERGY SUFFERS LOSSES

KarabakhOpen
13-12-2007 13:01:47

Prime Minister Ara Harutiunyan held a consultation during which the
results of checking of Artsakh Energy were discussed, the department
of information and public relations of the NKR government reports. The
prime minister describes the activities of the company over the past
few years as unsatisfactory, for the checking revealed considerable
losses and misuse.

Artsakh Energy suffers losses, although the markup of electric power
is high enough to generate profit. The prime minister said part of
the staff were replaced, the wrongdoers will be responsible.

Checking of Artsakh Energy was carried out by the NKR Tax Service –
the fiscal documents and taxes paid by the company in 2005 and 2006
were checked. The head of the Tax Service presented facts of tax
avoidance and misuse. It was underlined that most losses occurred
between the transmission network and consumers.

The prime minister gave instructions for elimination of
misuse. Structural, as well as legislative changes are expected in
the energy sector.

‘Our Community Of 1,200 Was Small’

‘OUR COMMUNITY OF 1,200 WAS SMALL’
By Abbas Al Lawati, Staff Reporter

Gulf News
Dec 14 2007
United Arab Emirates

Dubai: Sharjah-based businessman Bedros Arslanian left Ethiopia
almost thirty years ago to settle in the UAE. "This is my home now,
in a way," said the 72- year-old.

Back in the seventies, he says, there were under a hundred Armenians
in the UAE, mostly concentrated in Abu Dhabi. "Some Armenians from
Iran and Palestine have been in Abu Dhabi for more than fifty years."

Despite an Armenian presence in Ethiopia "for many centuries",
Arslanian has been met with surprise from fellow diaspora Armenians
upon telling them where he was from.

Community

"Our community in Ethiopia was small, of about 1,200, but we had
been there for a long time," he said. Armenians integrated well in
Ethiopia and were rewarded with high ranking government positions,
but most have left now. "We have quality, not quantity."

Like many diaspora Armenians, Arslanian calls more than one place home,
and Ethiopia is one of them. Fluent in Amharic, Arslanian was born and
brought up in Ethiopia and often visits family there. "I have many
memories there. Sometimes I feel like I belong there. I miss it,"
he says. The Republic of Armenia, which he visits every two months,
is also home.

"After so many years, we’ve got our own country and our own national
symbols, of which we are very proud." Although he doesn’t feel the
need to get Armenian citizenship, Arslanian says he might take it
one day "for symbolic reasons."

Candidate For The Position Of The President Aram Harutiunian Condemn

CANDIDATE FOR THE POSITION OF THE PRESIDENT ARAM HARUTIUNIAN CONDEMNED THE "PRE-TIME START OF ELECTORAL CAMPAIGNS"

Mediamax
December 11, 2007

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Candidate for the position of the President,
Leader of "National Unification" party Aram Harutiunian described
the pre-election race in Armenia as a "no-rules fighting".

Mediamax reports that, speaking in the Yerevan "Friday" press club
today, he expressed concern in connection with the "pre-time start
of electoral campaigns, in which there are unacceptable, sometimes
amoral techniques present". Among the latter, Harutiunian noted the
distribution on the order of the first President of the disk with
the record of the October 27 of 1999 terrorist act in the Armenian
parliament hall, as well as the reciprocal offends among the potential
candidates form the position of the President.

Leader of "National Unification" stated that he will be participating
in the elections with the mottos "In the name of eternal Armenia" and
"Time for national consent". "I am getting nominated for the position
of the President to soften the confrontation between the authorities
and the opposition", Harutiunian stated. He noted that he intends to
send proxies to all the polling stations and control the legitimate
nature of the elections.

49-year-old politician stressed that the Karabakh problem should not
be an object of political speculations, and all the forces in the
country should demonstrate consensus in this issue. According to him,
this approach is dictated by the interests of the statehood.

Aram Harutiunian is getting nominated for the position of the
President for the second time. During the presidential elections of
2003, he occupied the next to the last place, gaining less than 1%
of electors’ votes.

Cascade Insurance Increases Share Capital, Launches 24 Hour Call Cen

CASCADE INSURANCE INCREASES SHARE CAPITAL, LAUNCHES 24 HOUR CALL CENTER

ARMENPRESS
Dec 10 2007

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS: Successfully wrapping up its third
year of operation Cascade Insurance ICJSC increased its paid up share
capital to 618,640,000 AMD (over USD 2 Million), maintaining a leading
position in the local Insurance market.

"In three years since its foundation Cascade Insurance has
established itself as a major participant in the vibrant and expanding
Armenian insurance market. This additional capital injection further
demonstrates the shareholders’ commitment to the continued growth and
success of the company," stated Jonathan Stark, CEO of Cascade Capital
Holdings. Cascade Capital Holdings owns 65% of Cascade Insurance.

The operation of the company is regulated by the Central Bank
of Armenia. "Recently there were many changes in the insurance
industry. We find development trends positive and the role of
Central Bank indispensable to the insurance market. Their guidance
and leadership direct the companies in the right path of growth,
attested by emergence of larger capitalized insurance companies. This
investment brings Cascade Insurance to the forefront of the insurance
market in terms of paid up share capital," acknowledged Garnik Tonoyan,
General Manager of Cascade Insurance.

To better serve its customers Cascade Insurance launched Armenia’s
first 24-hour, 7-day per week Customer Service Call Center on December
1, 2007.

Cascade Insurance Customers can contact the call center representatives
by dialing 0 800 55 555 at no charge to the caller. Now more than
7,000 Cascade Insurance customers can call the Call Center any time
of the day to get answers to all their questions regarding medical
insurance. They can also inquire about a pending claim or file a new
claim and the Call Center representatives will advise on the proper
course of action.

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is a 35%
shareholder of Cascade Insurance. Cascade Capital Holdings (CCH)
is 100% owned by the Cafesjian Family Foundation. Cascade Capital
Holdings’ other companies include Cascade Bank, Cascade Credit and
Cascade Investments.

No deal on Kosovo ahead of a UN deadline on 10 December

No deal on Kosovo ahead of a UN deadline on 10 December

armradio.am
08.12.2007 11:35

Mediators in talks between Kosovo and Serbia have concluded that no
agreement can be reached on Kosovo’s final status ahead of a UN
deadline on 10 December, the BBC reports. The troika of the EU, US and
Russia spent 120 days trying to broker a deal.

Kosovo is still a province of Serbia, but ethnic Albanian leaders there
have threatened to declare independence unilaterally after the deadline
lapses. NATO – fearing a violent Serb reaction – has said it will keep
16,000 troops in Kosovo to deter any clashes.

Kosovo’s independence ambitions have the broad backing of the US and
several EU nations. Foreign Ministers from Britain, Germany, France and
Italy have written to their counterparts in fellow EU member states
saying that the time for negotiation is over, and that the EU must
honour its responsibilities to Kosovo.

Bulgaria’s Ambassador Leaving Armenia With Good Impressions

BULGARIA’S AMBASSADOR LEAVING ARMENIA WITH GOOD IMPRESSIONS

armradio.am
07.12.2007 14:15

RA Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan today had a farewell meeting with
the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of
Bulgaria to Armenia Stefan Dimitroff. The Prime Minister thanked
Ambassador Dimitroff for the considerable contribution to the
reinforcement of Armenian-Bulgarian relations during more than
four years of his tenure in office. The cooperation between the
two countries developed in almost all directions, there were many
high-level reciprocal visits.

Ambassador Dimitroff noted that during Bulgarian Prime Minister’s
visit to Armenia the Heads of Government of the two countries reached
agreements to deepen cooperation in all spheres, and now Sergey
Stanishev invites Serge Sargsyan to Bulgaria to continue the effective
dialogue ad further reinforce the Armenian-Bulgarian relations.

At the end of the meeting Stefan Dimitroff said that he is leaving
Armenia with good impressions and wishes to pay a private visit to
Artsakh next year.

Serge Sargsyan wished success to Mr. Dimitroff in his future activity
and private live, noting he is always welcome in Armenia.

Trial Of Publisher Revives Row Over Turkish ‘Insult’ Law

TRIAL OF PUBLISHER REVIVES ROW OVER TURKISH ‘INSULT’ LAW
Helena Smith in Athens

The Guardian
Wednesday December 5, 2007

· British author fears attack over Armenian book
· Ankara accepts need for change, says Labour MEP

Nearly two years after the internationally acclaimed author Orhan
Pamuk narrowly escaped imprisonment for statements that were thought
to "insult Turkishness", the publisher of a British writer goes on
trial today accused of the same charge.

Ragip Zarakolu is facing up to three years in prison for publishing
a book – promoting reconciliation between Turks and Armenians –
by George Jerjian, a writer living in London.

Jerjian’s book, The Truth Will Set Us Free, which was translated into
Turkish in 2005, chronicles the life of his Armenian grandmother
who survived the early 20th century massacres of Armenians thanks
to an Ottoman soldier. The historical account has prompted as much
controversy among the Armenian diaspora, not least in the US, as it
has in Turkey.

"Mr Jerjian … is a highly credible author with very moderate views,"
said the Labour MEP Richard Howitt, who will attend the hearing at
Istanbul’s Asliye Ceze courthouse. "If even he falls foul of Turkish
law it shows how far they still have to go on freedom of expression."

The MEP, who is in Turkey in his role as vice-president of the human
rights sub-committee of the European parliament, said Jerjian was
too scared to visit Turkey "for fear he might be shot".

Zarakolu is being tried under Turkey’s 301 article of law, the same
legislation that was used against Pamuk, a Nobel prize winner, as
well as 60 other local writers and journalists. Today’s hearing comes
in the wake of repeated promises by senior officials in Turkey’s
reform-minded neo-Islamist administration to rescind the notorious
piece of legislation.

In February this year, six months before he went on to become head of
state, Turkey’s foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, declared the need for
article 301 to be revised, saying: "There are certain problems with
[it]. We see there are changes which must be made to this law."

Yesterday the Turkish justice minister, Mehmet Ali Sahin, reiterated
the sentiment, telling Howitt that "freely expressed views that
neither promote terrorism nor violence should be protected".

But while Turkish diplomats admit the contentious law has probably
done more damage to Ankara’s efforts to join the EU than any other
single piece of legislation, observers say there has been little
headway made over reforming the spirit and letter of the law.

In a climate of unabated nationalism, state prosecutors and police
officials continue to level charges against artists, musicians and
writers perceived to publicly denigrate Turkishness.

Vehemently denied by Turkish authorities, the Armenian genocide, which
began in 1915, has sparked feverish debate, with several writers,
including the Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink, being
sued for publicly questioning the official version of events. Dink,
editor-in-chief of the bilingual paper Agos, was shot dead outside
his Istanbul office this year by a self-avowed nationalist.

"The government has understood that it needs to change the article
but it is now for parliament to pass it and for the courts to respect
that change," Howitt told the Guardian from Ankara.

The neo-Islamists’ unveiling of a new constitution later this month
will be a significant turning point in the campaign to overturn the
law, analysts say. "A test for the sincerity of their commitment will
be that the new constitution lays down a framework where these cases
never happen again," Howitt said.

–Boundary_(ID_ENNAN+FOjn/5DLMcbkad+w)–