HSBC Loans Electricity Network Of Armenia $5 Mln To Finance Investme

HSBC LOANS ELECTRICITY NETWORK OF ARMENIA $5 MLN TO FINANCE INVESTMENT PROGRAM

Interfax
Dec 17 2008
Russia

Electricity Network of Armenia and the Armenian subsidiary of HSBC have
signed an agreement under which the company will receive a six-year
loan totaling $5 million to finance its existing investment program,
Russian electricity importer/exporter Inter RAO UES said in a statement
on its website.

In addition, a part of the funds will be spent on refinancing
short-term loans the company took to cover investment expenses in
2006- 2007.

Electricity Network of Armenia has a monopoly on the sale of
electricity to consumers throughout Armenia. The company was privatized
in 2002. Inter RAO bought out the company in 2005 for $70 million.

The company had sales of $237 million in 2007 and investment of $35
million. The company predicts sales will grow to $275 million in 2008
and investment to $38 million.

Armenian Opposition To Set Up Youth Council

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION TO SET UP YOUTH COUNCIL

Interfax
Dec 17 2008
Russia

Youth organizations that are members of the opposition Armenian
National Congress have announced plans to establish a youth council.

"This step has been prompted by the need to restore democracy and
constitutional order in Armenia," the congress’ member-parties said
in a statement.

"The council is open to youth, public and political forces, as well
as individuals in Armenia and its diaspora," they said.

The statement was signed by the Armenian Nationwide Movement, the
National Party of Armenia, the Republic Party, the Democratic Path
party, the Liberal Party of Armenia, the Alternative sociopolitical
initiative, the Special Regiment and Now youth initiatives, and the
Young Conservatives public organization.

The Armenian National Congress, which is led by the country’s ex-
president Levon Ter-Petrosian, was set up in August 2008. It includes
18 parties and more than a dozen pro-opposition public and youth
organizations.

Pallone, Knollenberg Announce Kirk As New Co-Chairman Of Armenia Cau

PALLONE, KNOLLENBERG ANNOUNCE KIRK AS NEW CO-CHAIRMAN OF ARMENIA CAUCUS

States News Service
December 17, 2008 Wednesday

The following information was released by the office of New Jersey
Rep. Frank Pallone Jr.:

U.S. Reps. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI),
co-chairmen of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues, today
announced U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk (R-IL) as the incoming co-chairman of
the Caucus in the 111th Congress. Kirk will succeed Knollenberg as
co-chairman and will serve with Pallone in that capacity.

Kirk, who represents the 10th District of Illinois, is a member of
the House Appropriations Committee and sits on the State, Foreign
Operations Subcommittee. As a Naval Reserve intelligence officer,
Kirk has served tours of duty in Iraq, Haiti and Bosnia.

"I am proud of the work Joe Knollenberg and I have done during our
eight years as co-chairmen of the Caucus on Armenian Issues, and I
look forward to building on those successes and continuing to work
in a bipartisan fashion with Mark Kirk," Pallone said. "As an active
member on the foreign affairs subcommittee, Congressman Kirk will bring
a great deal of knowledge and leadership to his role as co-chairman
and will be an asset in working to advance the goals of the Caucus. In
the 111th Congress, the Caucus will continue to advocate for peace and
stability in Nagorno Karabakh, recognition of the Armenian Genocide
and Armenia’s economic integration in the Caucasus."

"I am delighted that Congressman Kirk has agreed to be the new Caucus
Co-Chair," Knollenberg said. "He’s a highly talented leader with a
record of success. It has been an honor to serve as Caucus Co-Chair and
I couldn’t have asked for a better ally than Frank Pallone. The Caucus
is lucky to have such strong leadership in these two individuals."

"After 20 years of working with the Armenian-American community to
advance the U.S.-Armenia issues, I am honored and excited to serve
alongside Congressman Pallone as co-chair of the Caucus on Armenian
Issues," Kirk said. "The Caucus on Armenian Issues is well-known for
its work to strengthen the U.S.-Armenia relationship and recognize
the Armenian Genocide. I look forward to working with Congressman
Pallone and all members of the Caucus to advance the U.S.-Armenia
relationship in the 111th Congress."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian Gas Supplies To Armenia Up 11% On Year In Jan-Nov

RUSSIAN GAS SUPPLIES TO ARMENIA UP 11% ON YEAR IN JAN-NOV

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire
December 17, 2008 Wednesday 4:03 PM EET

Russia’s natural gas supplies to Armenia increased 1% on the year to
2.005 billion cubic meters in January-November, the press office of
Russian-Armenian gas pipeline operator ArmRosgazprom said Wednesday.

Gas consumption in Armenia was at 1.847 billion cubic meters in the
period, the company said.

ArmRosgazprom, created in 1997, has a monopoly on the import and
distribution of Russian natural gas in Armenia. Russia supplies
gas to Armenia via Georgia. ArmRosgazprom also specializes in the
transportation, storage, processing, distribution and sale of gas,
as well as in the reconstruction and expansion of underground storage
facilities and gas transportation systems in Armenia.

Russia’s natural gas monopoly Gazprom holds 69.94% in ArmRosgazprom,
while Armenia’s Energy Ministry holds 26.23%, and Russian gas producer
Itera holds 5.82%.

ANKARA: Opposition Condemns Armenian Apology Campaign

OPPOSITION CONDEMNS ARMENIAN APOLOGY CAMPAIGN

Anadolu News Agency
Dec 17 2008
Turkey

Ankara, 17 December: MPs from Turkey’s main opposition party, CHP,
condemned [on] Wednesday [17 December] the campaign launched to
apologize from Armenians for the incidents of 1915.

Parliamentarians of Republican’s People’s Party (CHP) who hold seats
at the foreign relations committee of the Turkish parliament, released
a communique saying that Turkey had nothing to apologize for regarding
1915 incidents.

"The claim that Turkey committed a crime in those years, requiring an
apology, has no legal or historical foundation. If there is someone
who needs to apologize, it is the Armenian side, who attacked Turkish
soldiers and killed hundreds of thousands of Turkish citizens while
siding with and supporting a foreign country on an attempt to invade
Ottoman territory," said the communique.

The parliamentarians also said the Armenians also needed to apologize
for massacring thousands of Azerbaijani citizens, invading Azerbaijani
territory and forcing one million of its citizens to exile.

They also said Armenians needed to apologize for not prosecuting and
punishing ASALA terrorists, who assassinated Turkish diplomats.

"While these facts remain, the attempt to apologize from Armenians
has been rather an act violating the homage we owe to our history
and ancestors, and one that hurts the honour of the Turkish nation,"
said the communique.

Armenia Installs Advanced Control System In City On Turkish Border

ARMENIA INSTALLS ADVANCED CONTROL SYSTEM IN CITY ON TURKISH BORDER

Armenian Public TV
Dec 16 2008

[Correspondent speaking over video of an airport building] An advanced
border control information system, which aims at strengthening
border control in our country, has been put into operation in Gyumri
[Armenia’s second largest city on the Turkish border]. The system is
aimed at combating drug, medicines and arms smuggling and trafficking,
and also fully controls migrants’ movements, ruling out the entrance to
Armenia of people with forged documents and those on wanted lists. The
US Department of State provided 476,000 dollars out of about 1m dollars
of the cost of this system at Armenia’s seven border checkpoints,
and the remaining 0.5m were provided by the Armenian government and
the Avia Infotel company, which founded the system. The US ambassador
to Armenia, Marie Yovanovitch, was present at the ceremony.

[Yovanovitch, speaking at the event in English with overlaid
Armenian translation] I would like to emphasize the fact that this
event takes place in Gyumri. I believe that everybody here believes
that Armenia and its neighbour Turkey will open borders and restore
relations. Gyumri can become the centre of all this in the issue
of trade and economic relations and simply direct contacts between
the people of Armenia and Turkey. The progress that we mark here is
another step towards further progress.

ANKARA: Spokesman Says Turkish Foreign Ministry Not To React To Apol

SPOKESMAN SAYS TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTRY NOT TO REACT TO APOLOGY CAMPAIGN

Anadolu Agency
Dec 17 2008
Turkey

Ankara, 17 December: Turkish Foreign Affairs’ Spokesman Burak Ozugergin
said [on] Wednesday [17 December] that the apology campaign for 1915
incidents and the following counter campaign launched by retired
diplomats, should be viewed within the scope of freedom of speech.

Commenting on the issue at a press briefing at the Turkish Foreign
Ministry in Ankara, Ozuergin said both campaigns were privately
initiated noting that they did not inspire nor would react to both
campaigns.

Ozugergin said Turkey’s stance on the 1915 incidents was well known
by everybody noting that all kinds of topics ought to be able to be
discussed freely in Turkey.

"However our foreign policy is not fragile to shift as a result of
daily debates. We will continue to act on principles," said Ozugergin.

Ozuergin said Turkish Foreign Affairs was an institution who
gave many victims to terror (Armenian) pointing out that the very
hall where the press briefing was held, was named after Taha Carim
(Turkey’s ambassador to Vatican City, who was assassinated by Armenian
terrorists) .

"So this issue is very delicate for us," said Ozugergin.

ANKARA: Turkish Premier Sees No Need To Apologize To Armenians

TURKISH PREMIER SEES NO NEED TO APOLOGIZE TO ARMENIANS

Anadolu Agency
Dec 17 2008
Turkey

Ankara, 17 December: Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on
Wednesday [17 December] that he did not accept or support the campaign
recently launched by a group of Turkish intellectuals and academicians
aiming to apologize to Armenians for the incidents of 1915.

"They might have committed such a crime themselves, as they
are apologizing now. Republic of Turkey does not have such a
concern. One can apologize if there is a crime necessitating such
an apology. Neither my country nor my nation has such concerns,"
Erdogan said, replying to questions following his meeting with
Bulgarian President Georgi Purvanov in Istanbul.

Erdogan said that it was unacceptable to support such a campaign just
because it was launched by intellectuals. "I personally do not accept,
support or participate in this campaign," he said.

Erdogan also said that he could not understand the approach of the
intellectuals, adding that such kind of initiatives could only create
chaos and destroy peace. "I find it unreasonable to apologize when
there is no reason," he said.

Erdogan commented on an Iraqi reporter’s throwing his shoes at the
US President George W. Bush as well.

Noting that he did not approve such an attitude, Erdogan said,
"Expression and thought are the greatest powers of a journalist. I
wish that journalist could have pushed Bush with those qualities".

Briefing reporters on his meeting with the Bulgarian president,
Erdogan said they had quite fruitful talks during which they mainly
discussed economic and commercial matters.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian, Iranian Ministers Sign Cooperation Accords, Discuss Energy

ARMENIAN, IRANIAN MINISTERS SIGN COOPERATION ACCORDS, DISCUSS ENERGY PROJECTS

Public Television of Armenia
Dec 16 2008

Armenian Energy and Natural Resources Minister Armen Movsisyan has
wrapped up his visit to Iran. As part of the visit, Armenian and
Iranian officials signed numerous cooperation accords on energy and
other sectors. Iran will allocate 75m euros for the construction of
a high-voltage power line in Armenia. The following is text of report
by state-owned Armenian Public TV on 16 December

[Presenter] Armenia will continue to implement large-scale projects
with Iran. The Armenia-Iran gas pipeline will be tested soon. Iran will
allocate 75m euros for the construction of a third high-voltage power
line. A terminal will be constructed in Yeraskh [town in Armenia’s
Ararat Region close to the border with Iran], where Iranian fuel will
be stored. This is only one point of the 71-point memorandum signed
with our southern neighbour. Energy and Natural Resources Minister
Armen Movsisyan has returned from Iran in a good mood and promising
projects. Mher Arshakyan reports details from Tehran.

[Correspondent over video of meeting between Armenian and Iranian
delegations] Armenia and Iran are friendly countries, the Iranian
foreign minister and chairman of the Armenian-Iranian intergovernmental
commission, Manuchehr Mottaki, said yesterday [16 December]. Before
meeting journalists Mottaki and Armenian co-chair of the commission,
Energy and Natural Resources Minister Armen Movsisyan signed a 71-point
memorandum on cooperation, which covers the energy system, oil, trade,
banking system, agriculture, healthcare, education and other issues.

[Mottaki speaking at a news conference in Persian with overlaid
Armenian translation] Relations between the two countries are in
important stage and we are happy about this.

[Correspondent over video of news conference] Movsisyan assesses the
two-day work as satisfactory. He believes that the Armenian side’s
achievements are tangible. In particular, the construction of the
third high-voltage power line will start in Armenia next year, and
this will require 75m euros.

[Movsisyan speaking to microphone] Loan resources, which were provided
by the Iranian government, will be used for this line’s construction.

[Correspondent over archive footage] The testing of the Armenia-Iran
gas pipeline will be accomplished in two or three weeks and the
arrangements for the provision of electric power in exchange for gas
will be carried out by means of two high-voltage power lines. Movsisyan
added that a terminal would be constructed in Yeraskh and Iranian
fuel would be stored there.

[Movsisyan speaking to microphone] The terminal envisages a pipeline,
which will stretch from [Iran’s] Tabriz to Yeraskh. Refined oil and
oil products – petrol and diesel fuel- will be pumped to Armenia’s
Yeraskh from the Tabriz oil refinery via the pipeline.

[Correspondent speaking over video of news conference] The construction
of the terminal is also planned for the next year. Mottaki attached
importance to the railway, which is under construction in East
Azerbaijan [Province of Iran]. According to the preliminary plan, it
will enter Armenia from the section of Culfa [town in the Azerbaijani
exclave of Naxcivan].

[Mottaki speaking at news conference in Persian with overlaid Armenian
translation] If we succeed in constructing the railway, this will be
one of our best work.

[Correspondent] The Iranian foreign minister spoke about the global
financial crisis and said that already many countries had incurred
losses. Mottaki believes that Iran-Armenia economic cooperation
has the capacity to withstand the crisis, but this will require
serious efforts from both sides. Movsisyan said that the financial
scheme of constructing a hydroelectric power plant on the River Aras
will be prepared in a month or six weeks. According to preliminary
estimations, its construction will require 240m dollars. A tender
will be announced for its construction and a contractor to carry out
the construction. Mher Arshakyan, Tehran, "Haylur".

Armenia Seeks To End Silence Over Domestic Abuse

ARMENIA SEEKS TO END SILENCE OVER DOMESTIC ABUSE
by Mariam Harutunian

Agence France Presse — English
December 17, 2008 Wednesday 5:04 AM GMT

It was the fear in her children’s eyes that finally convinced Anayit
to leave her husband after years of abuse.

Married at 19, Anayit had worried from the beginning about her
husband’s possessiveness and jealousy. He followed her to university
classes and forbade her to visit friends or even her parents on
her own.

The first time he struck her, all she had done was go alone to a shop
to buy bread.

"When he learned what I had done, he punched me in the face and
screamed that I was a prostitute," said Anayit, now 27.

Years of abuse followed until she left him last year, taking her
three young children to the only shelter for battered women in the
Armenian capital Yerevan.

"I was suffering for the sake of our children, they need a father. But
when he hit me in front of them and I saw fear in their eyes, I
realised that for my children’s sake I had to leave him," she said.

Anayit is rare in Armenia not only for seeking help and leaving an
abusive relationship, but also for speaking out about what human
rights groups say is widespread domestic violence.

Armenians are proud of the strong family bonds that have endured for
centuries in this remote and isolated ex-Soviet republic, proud of
its history as the first state to adopt Christianity as state religion.

But some say those traditions are being warped, allowing abusers to
act with impunity and police to turn a blind eye to domestic violence
by claiming it is purely a "family matter".

Rights group Amnesty International said that Armenia’s tradition of
strong family bonds "hides an institutionalised culture of silence
on violence within the family and injustice for its victims."

As many as one in four Armenian women have at some time experienced
violence at the hands of husbands or other family members, Amnesty
International said in a report released last month.

But the speaking out about abuse has remained a taboo, with family
secrets remaining behind the closed doors of family homes.

"When my husband was beating me, my mother-in-law used to say that
it meant he wasn’t indifferent and that he loved me, and that her
husband used to beat her as well," said Karina, 32, another woman at
the shelter.

— ‘An initiative to end the silence’ —

—————————————-

In a survey Armenia’s Women’s Rights Centre conducted last year, 88
percent of respondents said domestic violence was a private matter
best handled within the home.

That culture of indifference and secrecy extends to law enforcement,
rights groups said, with police often ignoring abuse and in some
cases pressuring women to drop complaints.

"Police endorse the view that domestic violence is an internal ‘family
matter’ that should not be publicly pursued," the Amnesty report said.

It said that during police training sessions run by the Organisation
for Security and Cooperation in Europe, senior officers with more than
20 years experience said they had never dealt with a single case of
domestic violence.

But activists are now hoping that a draft law to finally criminalise
domestic violence will be adopted by parliament next spring.

Unlike in many other countries, domestic violence is not dealt with
separately under Armenian law and falls under general provisions for
assault and other violent crimes.

"We hope that lawmakers will take our initiative seriously and that
the silence on this problem will finally end," said Susanna Vardanian,
the director of the Women’s Rights Centre, which along with other
non-governmental groups helped draft the bill.

Supporters of the bill say a separate law is needed in order to push
police to deal with domestic violence and to protect women who decide
to come forward about abuse.

The law would make it mandatory for police to investigate allegations
of domestic violence and legally prevent husbands from claiming that
a woman’s behaviour was a "mitigating factor" in abuse.

"The police and the courts are not taking this problem seriously,"
said Rafik Petrosian, a pro-government lawmaker who supports the bill.

"A strong family is simply the most important thing for
Armenians. That’s why the police try to reconcile spouses and to
prevent divorce."

Activists are also pushing for government support for a nationwide
network of crisis centres and shelters offering advice and protection
to battered women.

And while legal reforms are a vital step, many say changing public
attitudes is just as important.

"This is a perversion of national traditions," said another lawmaker
supporting the bill, Naira Zograbian.

"According to Armenian tradition a husband is the head of the family."

"But tradition doesn’t say that the husband should be a tyrant and
that the wife can’t develop as an individual, can’t work, can’t decide
what to wear or choose her own friends."