The Alarm Of Placing A Bomb In The Building Of State Revenue Committ

THE ALARM OF PLACING A BOMB IN THE BUILDING OF STATE REVENUE COMMITTEE WAS FALSE

5/lang/en
2010-03-23
YEREVAN

The alarm of placing of a bomb in the building of the State Revenue
Committee was false. Nikolay Grigoryan, consultant to the director
of the Rescue Service of the Armenian Emergency Situations Ministry
told Armenpress that searching works have been implemented by relevant
departments, but nothing has been revealed.

An alarm was received at 12:45 pm by an unidentified person,
according to which a bomb is placed in the building of the State
Revenue Committee.

The false alarm directed toward the State Revenue Committee is the
second in the last several months.

http://www.armenpress.am/news/more/id/59563

Alen Stepanyan Playing For The Armenian Team

ALEN STEPANYAN PLAYING FOR THE ARMENIAN TEAM

Aysor
March 22 2010
Armenia

Alen Stepanyan, the 18 years old football player of Estonian football
team accepted the suggestion of playing in the Armenian team. He has
passed last tour period in Estonian "Flora" team and in the currant
tour has applied for the Latvian "Yanuba" team.

If the FIFA officials allow, Alen Stepanyan will put on the t-shirt
of the Armenian youth team. It is possible that he will partake
in the forthcoming meeting which will take place on May 20, inform
the sources.

Knights Send $425,000 In Medical Supplies To Armenia

KNIGHTS SEND $425,000 IN MEDICAL SUPPLIES TO ARMENIA
by Tom Vartabedian

0-03-22-knights-send–425000-in-medical-supplies-t o-armenia
Monday March 22, 2010

North Andover, Mass. – Medical equipment valued at $425,000 should
go a long way toward helping residents at the Miasnikyan Regional
Health Care Center in the Armavir District of Armenia as well as
Yerevan Central Oncology Hospital.

Sponsoring the project were members of Ararat Lodge, Knights of Vartan,
in Cambridge through the International Medical Equipment Collaborative
(IMEC), a humanitarian group designed to upgrade impoverished hospitals
and medical centers throughout the world.

This marked the seventh shipment in as many years bound for Armenia,
totaling nearly $3 million in outside contributions.

The latest freight consisted of surgical supplies, office equipment,
an entire conference room, complete optical setup, patient room suites,
a medical library and physical therapy equipment.

Another pallet of anesthesiology equipment was sent to Berd to assist
a polyclinic in that village.

Providing generous support toward the project was the United Armenian
Fund and Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee of Merrimack
Valley. Transportation alone runs about $10,000, most of which was
subsidized by the Knights. As for the equipment, nearly all is donated
by businesses and corporations throughout the country.

Coordinating the project was humanitarian Jack Medzorian, who makes
annual trips to Armenia in an effort to meet and address the needs,
particularly with schools and hospitals. He’s seeing the good that’s
being done.

"Having visited these hospitals and clinics, I’ve seen first-hand
their lack of basic equipment and supplies, especially in the villages
which seem to be neglected," said Medzorian. "We’re encouraging
the population to stay in these villages and not move to the bigger
cities."

Twenty years ago when Medzorian visited Berd just before the Azeri
war, it was a vibrant community with 12,000 residents. Since then,
the population has been halved with no economic opportunities and an
80 percent unemployment rate.

"These people are virtually deprived of proper basic medical care
because of poor facilities and supplies," he says. "Most of my
contacts aren’t with patients but with service providers and they’re
so grateful at any assistance received. What we send is safe, updated
equipment. They consider it a treasure."

According to volunteer Albert S. Movsesian, IMEC has taken a big
interest in Armenia because of the need.

"We have people who go back and forth to monitor the equipment and see
that it’s being used properly," he brought out. "The suburban areas
in Armenia need so much help. We’re providing valuable assistance to
that country. It’s all about people helping people."

On this day, Medzorian and Movsesian were joined by three other
volunteers: Varujan Masrof, Albert Tsaturyan and Mardiros Aurelian,
another prominent benefactor. The group held hands in prayer as the
last pallet was loaded onto a truck. IMEC is a faith-based organization
which occupies some 200,000 square feet inside the former Lucent
Technologies building, once Western Electric Co.

"Every time we send a shipment, our prayers are sure to follow," said
Medzorian. "The people at IMEC are truly an unsung breed. They’re
ordinary people in everyday life doing extraordinary deeds. The
Knights of Vartan are extremely fortunate to partner with them and
efficiently carry out all aspects of our mission effectively."

The last shipment leaving IMEC in North Andover arrived in Berdzor
(formerly Lachin) Hospital and clinics in the Kashatagh region of
Karabagh, valued at $365,000.

The container arrived in Poti, Georgia, by ocean freight, then
transported overland to Yerevan, offloaded and delivered to Berdzor.

Coordinator for this shipment was Mary Matosian, project director,
Tufenkian Charitable Foundation.

Total population served in this region was 8,000. Most of the clinics
here are accessible only by dirt roads, especially south of Berdzor
to Kelbajar and south of the Arax River.

Other health centers which have benefitted greatly with such acts of
kindness include: Kovsakan Hospital, population 4,000; Ishkanadzor
Clinic, population 2,000, and Moshatagh Clinic, population 1,000.

Roads are often unpaved, dangerous and almost impossible to navigate
in winter. Emergency cases rarely reach hospitals in a timely manner
and babies are often delivered by the side of the road.

The clinic in Moshatagh is located inside a dilapidated school building
where three rooms are allocated to medical needs. Three nurses are
working here to assist the surrounding villages. The only furniture
was two beds and no medical equipment until help arrived from the
Knights of Vartan and IMEC.

Berdzor is better equipped with eight doctors, five nurse
practitioners, a midwife and 10 nurses. The regional hospital there
serves the entire area and has the region’s only pharmacy over 1,314
square miles. An ultrasound machine is brought from another region
once a month. Often, though, patients cannot honor their appointments
due to a lack of transportation.

In Kovsakan, the situation is just as bleak. Although it is called
a hospital, this facility should not be allowed to function as a
health center, according to reports. It can only offer consultations,
distribute limited medicine, perform vaccination, deliver babies and
transport serious cases to a regional hospital. The government plans
to build a large clinic to replace the present facility.

"Our team includes dedicated members whose work is a labor of love,"
added Medzorian. "We are rewarded many times over with the pleasure and
satisfaction we receive knowing that critical supplies are equipment
are going to help needy patients in Armenia and Karabagh."

Those interested in donating used medical equipment or a financial
contribution to help defray costs may send a check payable to the
Knights of Vartan, Armenia Medical Aid Fund, c/o Jack Medzorian,
8 Berkshire Drive, Winchester, MA 01890 or e-mail [email protected].

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/201

Armenian President’s Youth Awards Ceremony For Best Classical Music

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S YOUTH AWARDS CEREMONY FOR BEST CLASSICAL MUSIC INSTRUMENTAL PERFORMANCE 2009 DUE MARCH 21

Panorama.am
13:49 19/03/2010

Culture

Komitas Chamber Music Hall will host the final of Armenian
President’s Youth Awards Ceremony for Best Classical Music Instrumental
Performance 2009 March 21. The finalists to perform are David Melkonyan
(saxophone), Eduard Nersisyan (saxophone), Sona Barsegyan (piano),
Narek Sargsyan (violin), Petros Simidyan (piano). The entrance is free,
Armenia All Armenian Fund press office reported.

Armenian President’s Youth Awards have been awarded since 2005,
sponsored by Poghosyan Foundation. The annual contest categories
include classical music, literature, painting and cinema. The winners
are awarded a certificate, a medal and $2500.

Aronian Currently 7th At Amber Blindfold And Rapid Tournament

ARONIAN CURRENTLY 7TH AT AMBER BLINDFOLD AND RAPID TOURNAMENT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.03.2010 11:08 GMT+04:00

Armenian grandmaster Levon Aronian tied matches with Russia’s Vladimir
Kramnik and Israel’s Boris Gelfand in the 7th and 8th rounds of Amber
Blindfold and Rapid Tournament.

After 8 rounds, Aronian comes 9th with 7 points. Ukraine’s Vassily
Ivanchuk keeps the lead with 11 points.

In the 9th round, Aronian will rival Ukraine’s Ruslan Ponomarev.

Armenia proposes a non-aggression pact with Azerbaijan

The Voice of Russia
March 21 2010

Armenia proposes a non-aggression pact with Azerbaijan

Boris Pavlishchev Mar 21, 2010 12:45 Moscow Time

Armenian President Serge Sargsyan has appealed to Azerbaijan to sign a
non-aggression pact which he hopes would prepare the ground for
continued talks about the future of Nagorno Karabakh – an Armenian
enclave which declared its independence from Azerbaijan in the wake of
the 1992 Soviet breakup.

In an interview with Euronews Sargsyan said that non-use of force is
an underlying principle of international law, which holds the key to a
lasting settlement of the long-running territorial dispute.

In an earlier conciliatory move towards Baku, the Armenian leader said
he was ready to accept the modified Madrid Principles of solving the
conflict. Azeri President Ilkham Aliyev responded by saying the
negotiations were already in their final stage but insisted on the
return of all Karabakh territories and the withdrawal of the Armenian
forces stationed there.

All this meaning that Armenia is ready for a compromise, to give back
the areas around Nagorno Karabakh it seized during the brief war of
the early 1990s, and also to give the region a temporary status as
stipulated by the Madrid agreements the Armenian and Azeri president
were handed during the 2007 OSCE summit.

Simultaneously, President Sargsyan reiterated his country’s
longstanding premise about the people of Nagorno-Karabakh having every
right to self-determination, adding that Karabakh was artificially
appended to Azerbaijan during the Soviet times and Armenia could not
just give it up.

"In Moscow Carnegie Center expert Alexei Malashenko does not believe
the conflict will be settled any time soon. An economically successful
Azerbaijan sees itself as a South Caucasus superpower, which can use
its enormous material, human and military potential to achieve its
goals – hence its consistent refusal to give any ground on the Nagorno
Karabakh issue".

At the same time, Malashenko does not think a new war is imminent
because neither Russia nor Europe will let it happen. Neither will
Turkey, which 17 years ago broke off diplomatic relations with Armenia
precisely over Nagorno Karabakh. Which means that the international
community should show maximum understanding for the two sides’
positions on the issue, no matter how different they may be, and work
hard to get the settlement process going.

Russia, both independently and as part of the OSCE, plays an active
mediatory role here having already hosted several trilateral summits
to deal with the matter. In 2008 Russian, Armenian and Azeri
presidents signed a declaration underscoring their shared desire to
resolve the conflict on the basis of international law. The latest
such meeting was in January in Sochi where the sides agreed to offer
their own proposals in addition to those made in Madrid.

.html

http://english.ruvr.ru/2010/03/21/5487529

Al-Jazeera: Turkey downplays expulsion threat

Aljazeera.net, Qatar
March 20 2010

Turkey downplays expulsion threat

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s prime minister, has said he had no
immediate plans to expel illegal Armenian workers after his threat to
do so sparked a barrage of criticism at home and abroad.

Erdogan, however, urged Western countries to stop branding the
massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as "genocide,"
slamming such moves as attempts to "tarnish" Turkey’s honour and
"meddle" in its ties with Armenia.

The Turkish media and rights groups accused Erdogan of treating
illegal Armenians as a pawn in Ankara’s protests after his threat
earlier this week to deport thousands of impoverished Armenians
working illegally in Turkey.

But Erdogan said his remarks on Saturday were aimed "at drawing the world’s
attention to our tolerant approach towards those people" and did not
mean that "we will take such a step immediately".

Troubled relations

On Tuesday, Erdogan threatened to expel illegal Armenian workers if
foreign parliaments continued to pass such resolutions, prompting
harsh domestic criticism that his remarks damaged already troubled
peace efforts with Armenia.

Erdogan put the number of illegal Armenians in Turkey at 100,000.
Researchers, however, say that the Turkish authorities tend to inflate
the figures to put pressure on Armenia, estimating the number between
10,000 to 20,000.

Referring to about 100,000 Armenians working illegally in Turkey,
Erdogan said on Tuesday: "Only 70,000 of them are Turkish citizens,
but we are tolerating the remaining 100,000.

"If necessary, I may have to tell these 100,000 to go back to their
country because they are not my citizens. I don’t have to keep them in
my country."

Forced to leave their impoverished country to earn a living, thousands
of Armenians, mostly women, have settled in Turkey, mainly in
Istanbul.

Many came after an earthquake in their homeland in 1988 and work
illegally, mainly in manual jobs or as nannies and cleaning ladies,
sending remittances home.

‘Negative impact’

Erdogan blamed the genocide resolutions on the influential Armenian
diaspora in the US and Western Europe.

"We are extending our hand, but if our counterparts clench their hand
into a fist, there will be nothing we can do," he said.

"Those people make shows with those resolutions … And they harm the
Armenian people as well … And things become deadlocked.

"Those actions [on genocide resolutions] unfortunately have a negative
impact on our sincere attitudes."

Following Swiss-brokered talks to end decades of enmity, Turkey and
Armenia signed an accord in October to establish diplomatic ties and
open their border.

The process, however, has hit snags, with both countries accusing each
other of lacking true commitment to the deal.

US measure

The climate was further inflamed this month when the US House Foreign
Affairs Committee approved a non-binding resolution branding the
massacres of Armenians a genocide, with the Swedish parliament
following suit last week.

Turkey recalled its ambassadors from both countries, warning that
bilateral ties and reconciliation efforts with Armenia would suffer.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in a systematic
extermination campaign during World War I as the Ottoman Empire fell
apart.

Turkey counters that between 300,000 and 500,000 Armenians, and at
least as many Turks, were killed in civil strife when Armenians rose
up against their Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian
forces.

Parliaments in several other countries have also recognised the mass
killings as genocide in the past.

10/03/2010320183145794106.html

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/20

Sergey Lavrov And Hillary Clinton Discuss Karabakh Problem

SERGEY LAVROV AND HILLARY CLINTON DISCUSS KARABAKH PROBLEM

ArmInfo
2010-03-19 14:38:00

ArmInfo. Foreign Minister of Russia Sergey Lavrov and US Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton met on March 18 in Moscow.

As Russian Foreign Ministry’s site reports, the parties held a thematic
opinion exchange on the situation in Karabakh settlement.

Moreover, key moments of the practical efforts being currently made on
development of the whole complex of the Russian-American relations
were discussed. In view of this, special attention was paid to
intensification of the work of the Russian- American presidential
commission, as well as focusing of its activity on significant
practical projects of the Russian-American cooperation.

S. Lavrov and H. Clinton marked considerable progress reached at
bilateral negotiations on the new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
in Geneva, as well as discussed the issues related to the final
completion of the draft Treaty to prepare it for signing. The parties
emphasized the interest in continuation of bilateral interaction on the
track of non-distribution, including in the context of the upcoming
summit on nuclear safety in Washington. A detailed analysis of the
situation being developed around the Iranian nuclear programme was
made. The parties also discussed other elements of the international
agenda. In particular, they confirmed the interest in development of
the Russian-American cooperation within the frames of stabilization
efforts in Afghanistan, as well as in the interests of counteraction
to the Afghan drug threat.

Arman Sarkisyan To Fight Against Genaro Trazancos March

ARMAN SARKISYAN TO FIGHT AGAINST GENARO TRAZANCOS MARCH 25

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.03.2010 19:28 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Champion of Russia, CIS and Slavonic states, WBL
world champion, Armenian boxer Arman Sarkisyan will fight against
Mexico’s Genaro Trazancos on March 25 in US.

"I’ve waited long enough for a chance to fight. I did not see serious
attitude on behalf of my representatives and had to leave for US to
continue my career," Sarkisyan said.

US Hopes For Quick Progress In Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict Settlement:

US HOPES FOR QUICK PROGRESS IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT: PHILIP GORDON

Tert.am
10:39 ~U 18.03.10

The US Government hopes for quick progress in the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict settlement, US Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon told
APA’s Washington correspondent, reports Azerbaijani news agency APA.

Gordon said the United States is ready to help in any way that it can.

"The United States is certainly very much focused on the issue and
engaged in it, I would be reluctant to put a timetable on when I
think this problem would be resolved, but I do think there has been
progress recently," he added.

Gordon believes any contact and dialogue among the parties is a good
thing, so "the more, the better."

According to him, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is important in and of
itself, independent of any other issue; however, it remains one of
the main issues in the region as well as energy and Turkey-Armenia
normalization.

"But, these three important matters should both support each other
and be separated. Because if these issues are mixed with each other,
it will be even more complicated," said the US Assistant Secretary
of State.

According to Gordon, Nagorno-Karabakh is also important "not because
we see it as a link to the Turkey-Armenia relationship, but because
it could also be a contribution to peace and stability in the region,
that both Azerbaijan and Armenia would benefit from. It is something
we care about and would like to see succeed."