Ambassadors Of Armenia And United Kingdom To Visit Holgate School

AMBASSADORS OF ARMENIA AND UNITED KINGDOM TO VISIT HOLGATE SCHOOL

Panorama.am
12:52 31/03/2009

The Ambassador of Armenia to the United Kingdom Vahe Gabrielyan
and the Ambassador of the U.K. to Armenia Charles Lonsdale visited
on 27 March Holgate School, Hucknall, Nottinghamshire. The mission
of the Ambassadors’ visit was to recover the co-operation between
Holgate School and Lord Byron’s school constructed in Gyumri after
the earthquake of 1988 by the financial support of the British party,
the press and information department of the Foreign Ministry reports.

According to the source, the Ambassadors have attended the meeting
discussion with the participation of the director of the school and
the student council to discuss the perspectives of co-operation
between the schools, to organize common visits of the students,
to create internet communication among them.

Co-Rapporteurs Will Make A Statement

CO-RAPPORTEURS WILL MAKE A STATEMENT

A1+
04:19 pm | March 30, 2009

Politics

The Monitoring Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe (PACE) convenes a sitting in Spanish city Valencia on
April 30, at 10.30 (local time). Among other issues, the Committee
will examine the implementation of PACE Resolution 1643 (2009) by
Armenian authorities.

Co-rapporteurs Georges Colombier and John Prescott will present a
joint statement on Armenia.

Remind that during a January sitting the Monitoring Committee
considered that progress had been insufficient in the country, despite
the political will expressed by the Armenian authorities to address
the PACE requirements.

The Assembly regretted that, "until the last moment, only limited
progress was made by the Armenian authorities with regard to its
earlier demands, as expressed in Resolutions 1609 (2008) and 1620
(2008), concerning the release of persons deprived of their liberty
in relation to the events of 1 and 2 March 2008."

On January 27, the Assembly decided, "not to suspend the voting
rights of the members of the Armenian parliamentary delegation to
the Assembly at this stage, under Rule 9, paragraphs 3 and 4.c, of
the Rules of Procedure." It decides to remain seized of the matter
and invites its Monitoring Committee, at its next meeting, before
the April 2009 part-session, to examine the progress achieved by the
Armenian authorities with regard to the implementation of this and
the previous Resolutions.

The Armenian delegation to the PACE Monitoring Assembly includes
David Harutyunyan, Armen Rustamyan and Raffi Hovanisian.

State Secretary Of Germany: Pracrical Efforts Needed In Nagorno Kara

STATE SECRETARY OF GERMANY: PRACRICAL EFFORTS NEEDED IN NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT NEGOTIATIONS

Panorama.am
13:25 30/03/2009

The Foreign Minister of Armenia Edward Nalbandyan and the State
Minister of Germany Gernot Erler had a meeting today in Yerevan. The
Ministers have agreed upon the issue that the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict should be regulated only through peaceful negotiations,
announced the State Minister of Germany in a press conference today.

"We have also pointed out that the negotiating efforts based on two
basic principles of the international right; territorial integration
and self-determination right of nations, stop being as much effective
as they used to be. It is much needed to perform some practical
approaches during the negotiations to find solutions through those
polar rights," said the State Minister.

ANCA Starts New Campaign On Recognition Of The Armenian Genocide By

ANCA STARTS NEW CAMPAIGN ON RECOGNITION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BY THE USA

ArmInfo
2009-03-31 13:02:00

ArmInfo. On the eve of the April 1st arrival of Genocide Prevention
Month, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) today launched
a nationwide online and print campaign urging concrete action to end
the Darfur genocide and full U.S.recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

Echoing Martin Luther King’s famous remarks at the Lincoln Memorialin
August, 1963, the "Fierce Urgency of NOW" campaign urges anti-genocide
activists across the U.S. to visit tolearn
more about the worsening humanitarian situation in Darfur andhow
this atrocity fits into the cycle of genocide that started withthe
Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923.

On Monday, March 30, 2009, full page ads were placed in The Politico
and Roll Call newspapers, primarily targetingAdministration and
Congressional decision makers in Washington, DC, with a powerful
graphic bringing together child survivors of the Armenian Genocide
and Darfur Genocide into a stark visualization of the ongoing cycle
of genocide. The photos are juxtaposed with President Obama’s January,
2008 campaign pledge to the American people to recognize the Armenian
genocide if elected the US president.

www.anca.org/change

Joint Project With Russia To Mine Uranium Stirs Environmental Worrie

JOINT PROJECT WITH RUSSIA TO MINE URANIUM STIRS ENVIRONMENTAL WORRIES
Marianna Grigoryan

nsightb/articles/eav032609b.shtml
March 26, 2009

It is not just railways, energy and telecommunications that unite
Russian and Armenian business interests. This summer, a controversial
joint project to mine uranium is expected to break ground; a prospect
that some Armenian environmentalists warn could turn Armenia into
"an environmental disaster zone."

The project, launched in February 2008, means fuel for Armenia’s
nuclear power plant and for export. Details about financing are
sketchy, although Armenia and Russia were originally said to be equal
partners in the venture. Russia’s atomic energy agency, Rosatom, has
claimed that it will put in "several million dollars" for research
up until 2010. But the joint enterprise handling the project cannot
elaborate.

Exploration began last fall in the southern region of Syunik, known
for its metal ore riches. The project has so far relied primarily on
Soviet-era data. Rosatom Senior Director Sergei Kirienko projected in
2008 that the sites could contain "up to 60,000 tons" of uranium ore.

Academician and geochemist Sergei Grigorian, who oversees the
geological survey of the Syunik uranium deposits, told EurasiaNet
it is still too soon to speak about exact figures concerning the
deposits. The work, though, he affirmed, "is on the right track."

"I personally suspended exploration work [at this same location] during
the Soviet era, because I believed the exploitation of uranium mines
[in Armenia] was senseless since there were larger deposits in other
Soviet republics," said Grigorian. "But today, when uranium costs up
to $300 per kilogram, exploitation of the [Armenian] deposits will
bring benefits, if the ore is used carefully."

The director of the joint company set up to oversee the project,
the Armenian-Russian Mining Company, adds that for the next two years
the focus will be on geological surveys alone.

"We can’t tell the exact amount of available deposits, but the
extraction will cover quite a large territory in both the northern and
the southern regions of Syunik," said director Mkrtich Kirakosian. The
start of underground survey work, originally expected for this spring,
"might be somewhat delayed" some months as the project waits for
government authorization for the work, he added.

Despite the lack of specifics, environmentalists are already issuing
dire warnings. Syunik already is home to the copper mining works of
Kapan and Kajaran. Inga Zarafian, chairman of the non-governmental
organization Ecolur, said that opening a uranium mine in the area
would greatly increase the ecological hazards.

Traces of heavy metals such as mercury and arsenic have already
been found in the hair of children living near what is expected to
be the uranium project’s primary mining site, Lernadzor, some three
kilometers away from Kajaran. Surveys by the Armenian National Academy
of Science’s Ecosphere Research Center show that ground radiation in
the area exceeds the permitted level by more than three and a half
times; ground contamination by heavy metals is several times higher
than allowed.

Given the risks, public discussions on the mining project are a
must, Zafarian affirms. "Talking about this tomorrow may be too
late," Zarafian said. "The territories are already environmentally
endangered. . . . Now, they are going to exploit uranium mines
there. Imagine what’s going happen to the place!"

Lernadzor village head Stepan Poghosian says that locals are worried
about the health risks once actual mining begins. "Everybody knows
what uranium is. . . . People don’t want to live in a place that may
cause diseases in their children," Poghosian said. "The exploitation
of uranium is not rain, a mudslide or hail, things that villagers
can handle."

Both experts involved in the survey work and the Ministry of
Environmental Protection insist that the project involves no hazards,
and that mining operations will be "transparent."

The uranium deposits are mostly hidden within the ground’s crust
and will be extracted via tunneling, said survey overseer Grigorian,
who seconds the call for a public hearing on the matter. "The mining
might be dangerous if it were, say, in the basin of Lake Sevan, but
there is no such danger because Syunik is a mountainous region,"
said Grigorian. "Maybe a very small area is threatened there, at
the entrance to the tunnel, but the rest of the work will be done
underground. So, the population’s fears of radiation are groundless."

Armenian-Russian Mining Company Director Kirakosian echoes that
line. "It’s too soon to talk about environmental problems because, so
far, it’s just about the survey," he said, adding that all work follows
existing legislation and "observes all environmental requirements."

Environmentalist Hakob Sanasarian, chairman of the Greens’ Union
of Armenia, counters that uranium prospecting at the Syunik
site was stopped for a good reason during the Soviet era. "The
suspension . . . was not a decision that just happened," Sanasarian
said. Grigorian, who worked on the site in Soviet times, however,
maintains that the work stopped only because other sites had larger
deposits. "The environmental hazards threaten to cause genetic
modifications in humans, as well as cancer, and other defects. Nature
will have its revenge one day."

Meanwhile, local residents say they are left in a quandary about
whether to go or to stay. "I don’t know what is going to happen,"
said Lernadzor’s Petrosian. "We have lived here our whole lives . . ."

http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/i

Knights Of Vartan Queens And Long Island Scholarship Deadline Approa

KNIGHTS OF VARTAN QUEENS AND LONG ISLAND SCHOLARSHIP DEADLINE APPROACHING

Armenian Reporter
Wednesday March 25, 2009

Bayside, N.Y. – The Etchmiadzin Lodge of the Knights of Vartan,
will offer a $1,000 scholarship as well as other smaller grants to
Armenian students who are currently enrolled at an accredited college
or university in pursuit of an undergraduate or graduate degree. The
applicants must have completed at least one semester of college work.

The competition is open to residents of Queens, Nassau, and Suffolk
counties of New York state. Also eligible are residents of these
counties who are attending schools outside of the area.

Applicants are additionally eligible for a second $ 1,000 scholarship
award if they are sons or daughters of a member of the Knights of
Vartan in good standing.

The deadline for completed applications and supporting transcripts
is May 16

EMERSON Presents Production In Armenia

EMERSON PRESENTS PRODUCTION IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2009 14:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ EMERSON Company has held a presentation of its
production in Armenia today.

EMERSON Company is the developer and producer of server and network
racks, uninterrupted power supply systems (UPS) and Cooling products
and solutions for Data Center Environments, whose products and
solutions are installed in major organizations like NASA, Orange,
Beeline, Ericsson, Nokia, Siemens, Huawei, Cisco Systems, Sun
Microsystems and others.

"EMERSON produces high quality goods, which allows to save electricity
and natural resources," said Klaus Kahl, EMERSON sales Director.

For his part, Hayk Hovhannisyan, co-founder of ROOT Company, official
representatives of EMERSON in Armenia, said that EMERSON will establish
an office in the republic and will organize seminars and trainings
to properly represent its production.

ArmenTel, VivaCell, FTA Armenia, major banks are among EMERSON’s
clients in Armenia.

"The company plans to invest $1-2 million in system support of these
enterprises in 2009," Hovhannisyan said.

Level Of Collection Of Taxes And Other Mandatory Payments To State B

LEVEL OF COLLECTION OF TAXES AND OTHER MANDATORY PAYMENTS TO STATE BUDGET REDUCES DOWN TO 60.1% IN ARMENIA IN JANUARY 2009

ARKA
March 23, 2009

YEREVAN, March 23. /ARKA/. The level of collection of taxes and other
mandatory payments to the state budget reduced down to 60.1% in Armenia
in January 2009 against January 2008, says the analysis of summarized
indicators in the monitoring of major taxpayers for January 2009
posted on the official website of Armenian State Revenues Committee.

According to the information, the reduction is recorded due to direct
dependence of this level on the sales, exports and imports that have
also fallen over the period under review.

Three organizations – K-Telecom (VivaCell-MTS brand), ArmRosgasprom
closed joint stock company and ArmenTel – transferred to the budget
a total of 3.4bln Drams, which is a reduction of 84.2% as compared
with the same period of last year.

Armenian State Revenues Committee developed and analyzed the summarized
indicators of monitoring of tax payments by major taxpayers in January
2009, guided by the tax administering strategy of the Republic of
Armenia for 2008-2011 to ensure transparent, uniform tax conditions
for major business to improve tax and customs administering.

Monitoring was carried out among 325 major taxpayers in Armenia at
the end of January 2009.($1=372.02Drams).

Second S-400 air defense regiment put into service in Russia

Second S-400 air defense regiment put into service in Russia

16:18 | 17/ 03/ 2009

MOSCOW, March 17 (RIA Novosti) – The second regiment equipped with
advanced S-400 Triumf air defense missile systems has been put into
combat service in Russia, the defense minister said on Tuesday.

In 2007, Russia successfully conducted live firing tests of the S-400
air defense complex at the Kapustin Yar firing range in south Russia’s
Astrakhan Region, and deployed the first missile regiment equipped with
the new system to protect the airspace surrounding Moscow and
industrial zones in the center of Russia’s European territory.

The S-400 Triumf (SA-21 Growler) air defense system is expected to form
the new cornerstone of Russia’s theater air and missile defenses up to
2020 or even 2025.

The S-400 is designed to intercept and destroy airborne targets at a
distance of up to 400 kilometers (250 miles), twice the range of the
U.S. MIM-104 Patriot, and 2.5 times that of the S-300PMU-2.

The system is also believed to be able to destroy stealth aircraft,
cruise missiles, and ballistic missiles, with an effective range of up
to 3,500 kilometers (2,200 miles) and a speed of up to 4.8 kilometers
(3 miles) per second.

A regular S-400 battalion comprises at least eight launchers with 32
missiles and a mobile command post, according to various sources. The
new state arms procurement program until 2015 stipulates the purchase
of enough S-400 air defense systems to arm 18 battalions during this
period.

ANKARA: Turkey rejects confrontation with Iranians

Hurriyet, Turkey
March 21 2009

Turkey rejects confrontation with Iranians

WASHINGTON – Turkey favors "economic interdependence" with Iran over
energy-related sanctions on the neighboring country, a top adviser to
the Turkish prime minister said after meetings with aides to President
Barack Obama, according to report by Bloomberg.

"We will not favor energy limitations," Ambassador Ahmet
DavutoÄ?lu, who advises Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
ErdoÄ?an on foreign policy, told reporters in Washington on
Friday after meeting with Obama’s national security adviser, James
Jones. DavutoÄ?lu, seen as the architect of the government’s
foreign policy, talked yesterday with top State Department officials
as part of preparations for Obama’s trip to Turkey in
April.DavutoÄ?lu said the Nabucco natural-gas pipeline that
Turkey is developing would need gas from several countries, including
Iran.

U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza said last week
in Ankara that the U.S. does not want Iran to contribute gas to the
pipeline.

The United States is trying to maintain economic pressure on Iran to
steer the country away from a nuclear weapons program. Iran, which has
the world’s second-largest gas reserves after Russia, has postponed
field development plans as international sanctions hamper funding for
its energy industry.

Historic era in bilateral ties

Obama’s visit to Turkey so early in his administration, will
underscore that relations with the United States are on strong
footing, after difficulties tied to the Iraq War during the Bush
administration, DavutoÄ?lu said.

"We are in a historic era where our policies are almost identical on
all issues," he said.

DavutoÄ?lu said he was confident that relations would remain on
"solid ground," when pressed on whether he thought Obama was likely to
declare the World War I-era mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman
Turkey as genocide in an annual statement next month.

The issue should not "hijack the strategic vision of Turkish-American
relations," DavutoÄ?lu said. DavutoÄ?lu also said Turkey
was presently working on a set of measures to improve relations with
Armenia, from which "everyone in the Caucasus would benefit," reported
Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review’s Ã`mit Enginsoy from
Washington.

At a separate meeting with Turkish journalists, DavutoÄ?lu said
he hoped not to see a development in Washington that could derail this
process.

"On all matters, we have the impression that our positions are almost
identical. Our counterparts appreciate our active policies in the
Middle East, Afghanistan and the Caucasus," DavutoÄ?lu said.

He recalled that former president Bill Clinton visited Turkey during
his seventh year as president and Bush’s visit came in his fourth
year. "But Obama will be paying his first, very first, bilateral visit
to Turkey. This shows the importance the U.S. attaches to Turkey," he
said.

He also praised an ongoing mechanism of cooperation among Turkey, the
U.S., the Iraqi government and Iraqi Kurds to counter the terrorist
Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which attacks Turkish targets from
bases in northern Iraq. DavutoÄ?lu said the Obama administration
is now involved in a historic rapprochement process with Syria, which
Turkey supports. He said Turkey and the Bush administration disagreed
on how to approach Syria, with Turkey calling for engagement with
Damascus and the former Washington administration seeking its
isolation.

10,000 cops for Obama’s security

Thousands of Turkish police will act as U.S. President Barack Obama’s
security while in Turkey, private channel NTV reported Friday. Any
leave has been suspended for Ankara and Istanbul police due to the
visit.

Obama’s program is about to be finalized but there are still some
uncertainties that have not been disclosed due to security reasons,
the report said. Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama are expected to
arrive in Ankara on April 5, probably in the late afternoon.

Obama will make his first visit to Anıtkabir on the morning of
April 6 and then will proceed to the Presidential Palace for the
official welcoming ceremony. President Abdullah Gül and Obama
will first hold one on one talks and then preside over the
delegations’ meeting. Obama will also meet with Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and will deliver a speech to the Turkish
Parliament. Obama will go to Istanbul with ErdoÄ?an on the same
plane. In Istanbul, Obama is expected to visit a university where he
will meet with Turkish university students.

On April 7, Obama will participate in the Alliance of
Civilizations’summit, where U.N. General Secretary Ban Ki Moon and
Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero will also be present.