Children Of Armenia Fund To Mark The 5th Anniversary Of Its Inceptio

CHILDREN OF ARMENIA FUND TO MARK THE 5-TH ANNIVERSARY OF ITS INCEPTION IN ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
Aug 19, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 19, ARMENPRESS: Children of Armenia Fund (COAF)
will mark this month the 5-th anniversary of its inception in Armenia.

A press officer of the COAF told Armenpress that the Fund’s ultimate
goal is to help reduce poverty in the country through revival of
Armenian rural communities and implementation of projects embracing
children and young people.

On this occasion the COAF’s main sponsors, donors and members of its
Board will be visiting Armenia on August 22-25.

In Armenia they are expected to be received by the prime minister and
education and science minister. The latter will award the ministry’s
gold medal and letters of appreciation to a group of COAF sponsors.

Armenia Sends Repairmen Team To Georgia Help Repair Key Railway Brid

ARMENIA SENDS REPAIRMEN TEAM TO GEORGIA HELP REPAIR KEY RAILWAY BRIDGE

ARMENPRESS
Aug 19, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 19, ARMENPRESS;Armenia sent a 12-member repairmen team
to Georgia to help it repair a key Georgian railway bridge exploded
on August 16.

The bridge is located near the central Georgian town of Gori, 40
km west of Tbilisi. The Georgian government accused the Russians of
blowing it up on Saturday, a charge strongly denied by Moscow.

Susana Tonoyan, a spokeswoman for Armenian transport and communications
ministry, said repairs on the heavily damaged bridge got underway on
Monday, but she declined to say when the repair will be over. Earlier
Georgian authorities said it will be over in 2 days.

CEC Registers All Candidates For Prefect And Elders Council Election

CEC REGISTERS ALL CANDIDATES FOR PREFECT AND ELDERS COUNCIL ELECTIONS IN YEREVAN DISTRICTS

ARMENPRESS
Aug 19, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 19, ARMENPRESS: Tatevik Ohanian, a press secretary
for the Central Election Commission (CEC), said to Armenpress that
the CEC registered all candidates for prefect and elders council
elections in several Yerevan districts scheduled for September 7.

She said one of the candidates, Nelsik Grigorian, a non-partisan, who
intended to contest the post of prefect of Kanaker-Zeytoon district,
walked out of the race. Other districts are Achapnyak, Arabkir,
Erebuni, Malatia-Sebastia and Nubarashen.

The highest competition will be in Arabkir district where the
prefect’s post will be contested by several candidates representing
the governing Republican Party, the opposition Zharangutyun (Heritage)
party, a non-partisan candidate and one from the recently established
Armenian National Congress.

It will be tough also in Kanaker Zeytoon district, where the post
will be contested by candidates from the ruling party, opposition
and a non-partisan.

"Yerevan Project" To Conduct Monitoring

"YEREVAN PROJECT" TO CONDUCT MONITORING

Panorama.am
19:57 19/08/2008

"Yerevan Project institute is to conduct a monitoring of capital’s
principle map, and the results of the monitoring will be published
in the end of this year," said Gurgen Musheghian the director of the
institute in a briefing conducted in the Municipality of Yerevan.

According to him after the full draft of the city’s map has been
fulfilled, a few other constructions have started. That map of the
city had an economic direction. "After the monitoring analysis of
the situation will be conducted and if any changes are needed they
will be carried out certainly," he said.

39 Armenian Trucks In Batumi Are To Import Oil

39 ARMENIAN TRUCKS IN BATUMI ARE TO IMPORT OIL

Panorama.am
19:57 19/08/2008

39 trucks left from Armenia to import oil from Georgia reached
Batumi and currently they are being loaded, said Susanna Tonoyan,
the press secretary of the Ministry of Transport and Communication to
Panorama.am. According to her the trucks are accompanied by special
police, ambulance and technical support service cars.

According to Gagik Aghadjanyan, the director of "Apaven" company no
problems have been revealed on the roads.

Collective Security Treaty Organization Secretary General Arrive In

COLLECTIVE SECURITY TREATY ORGANIZATION SECRETARY GENERAL ARRIVES IN ARMENIA

Panorama.am
19:58 19/08/2008

Today the secretary general of Collective Security Treaty Organization
Nikolai Borduzha arrives in Yerevan, reported the press service of
the CSTO. A group of CSTO members is to arrive in Yerevan also to
take part in "Rubej 2008" military exercises and the preoperational
activities of SCTO member countries’ ministers’ session.

Mr. Borduzha mentioned that the rumors spread by the mass media that
the implementation of the exercises is postponed are not true.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

"Mariachi Imperial De America" Will Have Concerts In Armenia

"MARIACHI IMPERIAL DE AMERICA" WILL HAVE CONCERTS IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
18.08.2008 16:24

The USA Embassy with love will present the group "Mariachi Imperial de
America" to the Armenian audience till August 23. Mariachi music is a
lyric style which was born in Mexico in the 19th century. In the 20th
century Mariachi music entered the USA with the emigrants from Mexico.

Mariachi was based in the United States. The new representation of the
American Mariachi style brought a new life for this traditional art.

Mariachi de Imperial de America group is having appearances in
different stages and TV-shows for already 25 years. The group has
already two lasers CD-s. The members of the group are Jose Longoria
(violin), Jorge Longoria (violin), Adrian Longoria (Vihuela or Mexican
guitar), Judi Gonzales (violin), Young Isidro Tristan (guitar),
Carlos Castro (trombone) and Jonathan Kebey (trombone). The head
of the group is Gordon Branitski. On the eve at 20:00 o’clock the
group had an appearance in the garden of Conservatoire in Yerevan. To
remind the group will have concerts in the regions too. The concerts
are free of charges and everybody can attend it.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Baku To The Future

‘BAKU TO THE FUTURE’
By Andrew Breitbart

The Washington Times
August 18, 2008 Monday

The recurring argument broadcast by the American celebrity left is
that their trips abroad establish that the United States should speak
softly and carry a small stick.

This Bellini-fueled analysis, hyped as weighty by the mainstream media,
is usually formed at junkets in San Sebastian or Cannes, on vacation
in Portofino or Davos, or on late-night walks in London parks with
Kevin Spacey and his dog, Hugo Chavez – both of whom couldn’t care
less about Tbilisi, Georgia.

The world is bigger, more complex and more dangerous than the groovy
comfort zones frequented by certain spineless Europeans and their
American sycophants. More important, most of the rest of the world
is economically developing, and its opinion of the U.S. is constantly
evolving.

With our reputation and might in play, more pedestrian Americans
like myself have much to gain from trying to win over less-romantic
regions of the globe and not just making nice in Nice.

One such place is Azerbaijan.

Early last Monday, I landed in the capital city of Baku knowing little
more than the country’s Wikipedia entry. The oil-rich, moderate Muslim,
former Soviet republic borders regional thugs Iran and Russia, along
with America’s now weakened ally, Georgia. Only a few hundred miles
to the north, Russia and Georgia began warring only days before
my arrival.

I soon joined forces with one Dutch and seven American journalists
on a "fact-finding" trip sponsored by the Azerbaijan Diplomatic
Academy. Upon our arrival, this Western media contingency was thrust
onto national prime-time television. For seven days from event to
event, we were flanked by Azeri camera crews desperate to get us to
comment on their big problem.

The first night, I led the nightly news. The Chyron on the screen
read, "Andrey Breyban," as I was asked about Nagorno-Karabakh,
Azerbaijan’s territorial dispute with Armenia. "I know nothing,"
I answered regretfully.

(Should I know something about Nagorno-Karabakh? I recall similar ugly
pangs in the ’90s as Bosnia-Herzegovina began to become an American
problem. I was actually relieved they got my name wrong.)

Independent war correspondent Michael J. Totten and National Review’s
Rob Long joined me one night in a discussion on an hourlong news
program. The topic? Nagorno-Karabakh. Out of necessity, we changed
the subject to journalism, specifically to the American concept of
a free press – something Azerbaijan claims to be working on. We sold
them "transparency" – and it was transparent that we didn’t know much
about our strategic ally’s key issue.

Azerbaijan is an under-praised ally of the United States, having
granted the U.S. military access to Iraq via its vital airspace, and
it has 150 troops assisting coalition forces guarding the Haditha
Dam. The first Azeri soldier was killed in Iraq in June. No other
majority Muslim country (somewhere near 95 percent, according to my
hosts) risks the wrath of extremist Islamic elements quite like this.

If the democratization of the Islamic world is key to American
geopolitical thinking, then Azerbaijan must be rewarded for its
practical and symbolic help – especially when Iran flexes and Russia
thrusts their muscles so brazenly these days.

Getting to know about Azerbaijan may be a good start along this path.

While there are no Starbucks or Crate and Barrels in Baku, the city’s
2-million-plus residents experience a life radically more American
than Saudi. Soviet aesthetics and mannerisms still dominate, yet
materialism rears its Bulgari-ed head.

"Tropic Thunder" and "Hellboy II" play in the local multiplex down
the promenade from Cafe Mozart, where foreigners and natives take
in ample beer, cappuccino and Wi-Fi to the wee hours. Unfinished
high-rises punctuate Baku’s dusty skyline, while Mercedes and Range
Rovers compete with Russian Ladas on her hilly roads.

The smell of oil is in the air.

Mosques are a prominent part of the Baku experience, yet religious
tolerance manifests in a handful of Christian and Jewish houses of
worship. Jeans and T-shirts grossly outnumber hijabs, and except for a
bearded Wahhabist in Baku’s Old City who gave me the evil eye, every
Muslim I had interaction with was friendly and seemingly motivated
by this life.

One local told me the young people go to the mosques but don’t read
the Koran. The imam at the magnificent Bibi Heybat mosque overlooking
the filthy Caspian Sea told me he supports interfaith marriage. The
statue of the "Liberated Woman" in the center of town depicts a woman
tossing her veil.

For the most part, I’m sold.

We were asked every day at every turn about Nagorno-Karabakh. The
issue was inescapable for the week. "I am compelled by your story,"
I repeatedly told the microphones stuck in my face. "I need to do
more research. I need to hear the other side."

After a trip to a refugee camp in the middle of Baku – think the
timeless West Bank media shows – I naturally started to think of it
in terms of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Every time I was given
more information, I felt less informed.

At the end of the trip, our group was told matter-of-factly by Azeri
officials that Russia was using Armenian bases to bomb Georgia. If
true, this puts their Nagorno-Karabakh dispute into starkly American
terms and reveals how Russia works to establish control over the
region at the expense of the West.

The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline begins in the Caspian Sea and goes
through the Caucasus Mountains westward to the Black Sea. It is the
only such oil-and-natural-gas route in the region that circumvents
Russia and Iran and provides long-term energy security to Europe. If
Azerbaijan provokes Russia, it could be the next Georgia – and the
consequences would be far more reaching.

Azerbaijan’s fear is both real and now. The least we could do is
pay attention.

Preparations Underway for Blessing of the Holy Muron

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
August 19, 2008

Preparations Underway for Blessing of the Holy Muron

>From the time of the first Catholicos of All Armenians – St. Gregory the
Illuminator, the right to bless the Holy Muron (Chrism) has been reserved
for the consecrated head of the Church, the Catholicos of All Armenians.

The blessing of the Holy Muron, which traditionally occurs once every seven
years, will take place in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin on the Feast of
the Holy Cross of Varag, September 28, 2008.   His Holiness Karekin II,
Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, will preside and
personally offer the service.  He will be assisted by twelve archbishops of
the Armenian Church from dioceses throughout the world.

Upon the Pontifical Order of His Holiness, several major committees were
created in the Spring of 2008, to undertake the preparations for the
blessing service, planning of events and for receiving the numerous guests
and pilgrims that will be visiting Armenia.  Many high-ranking clergymen and
representatives from sister churches and Christian organizations have made
plans to be in attendance.

One of the committees has already completed their work of gathering the
ingredients for the Holy Muron.  The main element which makes up the
foundation of the Holy Muron is pure, virgin olive oil, to which are
combined balsam and more than 40 kinds of fragrant incense, flowers, sweet
aromatic plants, roots and floral extracts, as well as different oil and
leaf extracts.

The ingredients have been transported to the Mother See from numerous
sources and countries around the world.  The large supply of olive oil was
graciously donated to Holy Etchmiadzin by His Excellency Ioannis Korinthios,
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Hellenic
Republic (Greece) to the Republic of Armenia, as a gift from the Greek
people to the Armenians.   Balsam and rose oil were brought to Holy
Etchmiadzin by Mr. Bedros Aslanian, from Sharjah in the United Arab
Emirates.  Numerous oils and extracts have arrived from the Far East – the
majority from India, and were personally delivered by Very Rev. Father
Oshagan Gulgulian, Dean of the Armenian College and Philanthropic Academy in
Calcutta and Pastor of the Armenians of India. 

Clove oil, castor oil, lemon oil, lemon essence, bay oil and musk powder are
just a few of the rare ingredients transported from India during Father
Oshagan’s most recent visit.  Father Oshagan stated that the ingredients
came from several locations, including Mumbai (Bombay), areas north of Delhi
and some from Kolkata (Calcutta).  Due to international airline
restrictions, the ingredients had to be specially wrapped and boxed for
transport, as they could not be hand carried on the plane.

Father Oshagan remarked that during his journey, Indian and U.A.E. officials
were exceedingly helpful and respectful when they discovered the final
purpose of the ingredients he was transporting and the rarity of the
occasion.  The final leg of his journey was aboard Armavia Airlines, and
upon learning of the purpose of his trip, the crew was excited and happy to
be a part of his mission.  `I was very proud to be flying on an Armenian
plane, carrying the ingredients for the Holy Muron, and when Mt. Ararat and
finally, Holy Etchmiadzin came into view, it was a very emotional moment for
me’, said Father Oshagan.

On the evening of August 18, the cauldron which holds the Holy Muron was
filled with olive oil and placed on the bema in front of the main altar of
the Mother Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin.  For the next 40 days, it shall be
present for the prayers and special psalms which are read during morning and
evening services, as well as during the Divine Liturgies celebrated for the
next seven weeks.

Once all of the other ingredients are gathered, they will be crushed, ground
and mixed with white wine, rose water, and other floral essences by the
members of the Brotherhood of Holy Etchmiadzin, with their offerings of
prayer and incense.  The mixing is scheduled to take place on September 14,
15 and 16, following which the mixture cooks for three days on September 17,
18 and 19, all on the grounds of the Mother See.

Numerous dioceses outside of Armenia have made plans to bring groups of
pilgrims to witness and participate in this special event.  Several public
events are planned during the days before and after the festive service.

The schedule of events follows.  More information will be provided as
details become available.

Friday, 26 September
Concert and Program by the children of the `Armenian Church Youth Centers’
Yerevan Opera House
 
Saturday, 27 September
Consecration of new St John the Baptist and St Vartan Baptisteries
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin

Ecumenical Prayer Service
St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral in Yerevan
 
Sunday, 28 September
Celebration of the Divine Liturgy
Mother Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin

Blessing of the Holy Muron
Open Air Altar, Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin 

Monday, 29 September
Performance of `Anush’ opera
Yerevan Opera House

##

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armenianchurch.org

Global Energy Facing Military Risks

GLOBAL ENERGY FACING MILITARY RISKS
Igor Tomberg

1 7.08.2008

The active US and EU diplomacy in the Caspian region, which is mainly
aimed to lessen Russia’s influence by constructing a maximal number
of pipelines bypassing its territory, has long ignored the security
dimension of the corresponding projects. Recently the risks surfaced
when Georgia’s invasion of South Ossetia threatened to disrupt oil
and gas supplies via the Transcaucasia. The military conflict affected
the energy landscape in the entire Caspian region and – indirectly –
the global oil price dynamics. On August 12, all oil and gas pipelines
traversing Georgia shut down operations due to security concerns. The
view upheld by Russian media is that the situation reflects the
tremendous risks entailed by the efforts of Washington and Brussels
to construct alternative fuel transit routes circumventing Russia.

Georgia has gained greater importance in the oil and gas transit,
especially to Europe, over the past 5-10 years. Besides, it is regarded
as a potential avenue in the framework of several projects of oil and
gas transit from Central Asia to the global markets, including those
of the Black Sea countries. However, Georgia’s aggression rendered oil
and gas transit via the Transcaucasia highly problematic. Currently,
analysts estimate the potential disruptions at approximately 1.6 bn
barrels of oil equivalent daily.

Already in the morning of August 11, the price of September futures
for WTI oil at the New York Electronic Mercantile Exchange rose to
$116.9 per barrel, $1.7 beyond the August 8 closing mark. Driven by
concerns stemming from the hostilities in South Ossetia, the prices
of September Brent futures in London and WTI futures in New York New
reached $112.18 and $114.8 respectively.

Oil importers say the supply process has been seriously affected. In
particular, gas supplies from Russia to Armenia via Georgia have been
30% below target. Exporters are complaining that it became impossible
to fulfill contracts and starting to eye alternative markets and
routes. Kazakh companies are looking towards the domestic market
and Azerbaijan is reorienting its export to the Baku-Novorossiysk
pipeline. Momentarily, Georgia became a risky transiter and left
other countries contemplating alternatives.

Somehow, the war in South Ossetia has overshadowed another event of
great significance in the context. Two days prior to the outbreak
of the conflict, fire halted the oil flow on the Turkish section of
the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. Responsibility was claimed by the
Kurdish rebels. The fire took a whole week to extinguish and the oil
transit still has not been restored. BP declared a force majeure,
thus freeing itself of contractual obligations to deliver crude. On
August 12, BP closed the pipeline across Georgia used to transit oil
from Azerbaijan to Turkey. At the same time, BP stopped supplying
oil via the Baku-Supsa pipeline which comprises a segment located in
Georgia and links Azerbaijan to the Georgian coast of the Black Sea.

Even though Russian warplanes never attacked pipelines and the
conflict could only tell on marine routes, the reaction of oil
exporters was immediate and far-reaching. The State Oil Company of
Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR) suspended export via Georgian seaports
and declared that its personnel from the Kulevi terminal would
be evacuated. Subsequently the same course of action was taken by
Kazakhstan.

Somewhat later than Baku, Astana said it would not export crude via
the Batumi seaport. Now Kazakhstan is looking into the possibility
of increasing export to China and Russia, and Azerbaijan intends to
channel greater volumes via the Baku-Novorossiysk pipeline. SOCAR has
already submitted a request to Russia’s Transneft to provide greater
capacities at the pipeline.

SOCAR Vice President M. Barkov said the company asked to additionally
pipe 83,000 tons of oil a month (a total of 166,000 tons).

The impression is that the extraordinary circumstances at the transit
routes were not an unexpected development for the oil companies. In
any case, the experience of the past several days will make the
countries of the region assess with greater care the risks inherent
in new transit infrastructure projects and will instill a stronger
sense of loyalty to the already existing routes passing across Russia.

The Azerbaijani export dip is not projected to exceed 0.5-1% of
the global demand and consequently the disruptions are not going to
influence global oil prices to a considerable extent. Nevertheless, as
it is stated in a report circulated by the Troika Dialog investment
company, the conflict is likely to make companies involved in
international oil and gas pipeline projects focus on the risks of
transit across Georgia.

The fact that now Azerbaijan is open to new oil export options and
transit routes worries Poland, which seeks to alleviate its dependency
on fuel supplies from Russia. Warsaw planned to import oil via the
Odessa-Brody-Gdansk-Plock pipeline. Most of the workload for it was
to be provided by Azerbaijan, but the country is already forced to
shift routes as a result of the war.

The conflict can also have an adverse impact on the gas sector. Gas
from Azerbaijan is supplied to Turkey across Georgia via the
Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum pipeline which has the potential to transit 30
bn cu km of natural gas annually but currently operates below the
planned capacity. Now that the pipeline is not functioning, Baku
is likely to appreciate Gazprom’s offer to buy all of Azerbaijan’s
export gas at the global price.

Considering the cost of gas transit to Europe via Turkey in the
framework of the pipeline projects which have not been completed
but have conti nuously swelling budgets, competing with Gazprom is
clearly going to be an uphill task. In any case, the risks of gas
transit bypassing Russia are growing, and the situation around the
transit via Georgia is the prime manifestation of the tendency.

At the same time, exotic undertakings like the White Stream project
invented by the team of Ukrainian Prime Minister Yu. Tymoshenko
finally seem dead.

The idea was to construct a pipeline across the seabed and via
Azerbaijan to link Turkmenistan and the Supsa seaport in Georgia, plus
a pipeline across the Black seabed and via the Crimea to the EU. The
Kyiv dreamers even planned White Stream-2 and White Stream-3, but now
the only risk-free route is the one across Russia, and locations like
Supsa or even the Crimea need not even be discussed.

It must be understood that it is not the Russian army who
is responsible for the shutdown of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
pipeline. Experts warned about the risks stemming from potential
Kurdish attacks against the transit infrastructure already on the
eve of the Turkish offensive against Kurds in Northern Iraq (October,
2007).

The US plan to partition Iraq and to establish an independent Kurdistan
can easily turn the vast Kurdish-populated region into a zone of
a serious conflict. The offensive against the Kurdish organizations
based in Northern Iraq drew a minimal amount of attention in Western
media at the time it was launched, though t he expression "trans-border
operation" disguised an invasion of a neighbor country. Knowing how
much experience the Kurdistan Workers’ Party had in guerilla warfare,
it did not take a prophet to predict that the conflict would be
protracted and would contribute to the risks associated not only with
hypothetic projects like the Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline and Nabucco,
but also with the existing pipelines such as Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and
the ones linking Iraq and Iran to Turkey. The recent sabotage at the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan may be the first in a series of bad news.

Central Asian countries will have to base their decisions concerning
the oil and gas transit routes on their understanding of the
general political context. Currently the high risk zones are by
no means limited to the Transcaucasia. For example, obstacles
of military-political character impede the implementation of the
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline project. Since its
830-km segment is supposed to lie in the unpacified Afghanistan where
the NATO forces seem unable to curb rampant violence, a huge question
mark hangs over the entire plan. The tense relations between India and
Pakistan are an additional source of political risks to the project.

Thus, the main conclusion to be drawn from the recent events in
the Caucasus is that the military risks to oil and gas pipelines
are escalating.

Regardless of where the gas comes from – Russia or not E2 in the
post-Soviet space the risks affect any supply routes. As the efforts
of producers to diversify export avenues are confronted by political
and military limitations, it makes sense to return to the time-tested
and stable oil and gas transit routes.

http://en.fondsk.ru/article.php?id=1548