Armenia Joins Russian-Backed Customs Union

ARMENIA JOINS RUSSIAN-BACKED CUSTOMS UNION

Europe Online Magazine
Sept 3 2013

Europe
By our dpa-correspondent and Europe Online

Moscow (dpa) – Armenia has joined a Russian-dominated customs union,
joining fellow former Soviet republics Kazakhstan and Belarus as
members, reported Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan along with Russian
President Vladimir Putin after a meeting Tuesday.

Putin told the Itar-Tass news agency that he expected a “strong
impulse for mutually valuable economic development” now that the
southern Caucasus nation has joined.

Armenia is also apparently interested in helping set up a Eurasian
economic union. Putin would see such a group as a link between the
European Union and the Pacific region.

Russia maintains thousands of troops in Armenia. Armenia is also
economically dependent upon Russia, which is home to a million-strong
Armenian diaspora.

The three-member customs union was founded in 2010 as a counterweight
to the EU. Putin hopes to use economic pressure to get Ukraine to also
become a member, even though that country is seeking an association
agreement with the EU.

http://en.europeonline-magazine.eu/armenia-joins-russian-backed-customs-union_295439.html

Armenia Will Join Customs Union Of Russia, Belarus And Kazakhstan, P

ARMENIA WILL JOIN CUSTOMS UNION OF RUSSIA, BELARUS AND KAZAKHSTAN, PRESIDENT SAYS

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Sept 3 2013

3 September 2013 – 6:33pm

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan says his country will join the
Customs Union of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan and take part in
the Eurasian Union project. Russian President Vladimir Putin says he
welcomes this decision.

“Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan has announced that his country had
decided to join the Customs Union and to take part in the Eurasian
Union project,” RIA Novosti cites a joint statement as saying.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov says the two states will now
start talks concerning the integration process.

Expert Comments On Armenia’s Integration Into Customs Union

EXPERT COMMENTS ON ARMENIA’S INTEGRATION INTO CUSTOMS UNION

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Sept 3 2013

3 September 2013 – 7:03pm

Armenia is facing no problems in its integration into the Customs
Union of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan, Vice President of the Eurasian
Cooperation Foundation Andrey Smirnov says.

“I believe that will be no problems. The most important thing is to
intensify joint efforts in the framework of the inter-governmental
commission,” he says.

According to the expert, it’s necessary to draft some certain programme
and to start all the necessary activities.

Smirnov also says President Sargsyan’s statement saying that Armenia
will join the Customs Union doesn’t mean that this decision is final.

The intrigue is not over, the expert underlines.

Russia Lures Armenia To Trade Bloc After Ukraine, Belarus Spats

RUSSIA LURES ARMENIA TO TRADE BLOC AFTER UKRAINE, BELARUS SPATS

BusinessWeek / Bloomberg
Sept 3 2013

By Stepan Kravchenko September 03, 2013

Armenia will join a Russian-led customs union, bolstering President
Vladimir Putin’s designs for closer integration between former Soviet
states days after disputes rattled his country’s ties with Belarus
and Ukraine.

Armenia plans to “join the customs union, undertaking practical steps
for that purpose, and later to take part in forming the Eurasian
Economic Union,” Putin and his Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sargsyan,
said today in a joint statement distributed to reporters after a
meeting at the Russian leader’s residence near Moscow.

Putin has championed Russia’s alliance with Belarus and Kazakhstan
to strengthen economic ties among former Soviet republics, promising
reduced natural-gas prices to Ukraine if it agreed to join the trade
bloc. The three former Soviet republics, with a combined population of
about 170 million people and more than $2 trillion in combined output,
created a single economic space on Jan. 1, 2012.

STORY: Why Is Vladimir Putin Acting So Crazy?

The government of Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko arrested the
Russian head of OAO Uralkali, the world’s biggest potash producer,
last week, prompting Russia to raise scrutiny of its neighbor’s
products including pork and announcing plans to reduce oil flows.

Ukraine’s Prime Minister Mykola Azarov has linked delays experienced
by Ukrainian exporters on the border with Russia last month to
disagreements between the two countries over the customs union.

Russia will assist Armenia’s bid “to the utmost,” Putin said in
the statement.

The joint economic bloc, which plans further policy integration
to become the Eurasian Economic Union by 2015, wants to coordinate
economic and currency policy and adopt unified visa and migration
rules. Putin has said that the alliance of former Soviet countries
will help reduce global imbalances and fuel integration across
“Greater Europe.”

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-09-03/russia-lures-armenia-to-trade-bloc-after-ukraine-belarus-spats

Kyere Quits Armenian Side

KYERE QUITS ARMENIAN SIDE

GhanaWeb, Ghana
Sept 3 2013

Ghanaian defender Samuel Kyere has terminated his contract with
Armenian side Shirak FC over owed wages.

The 21-year-old walked out of his contract after going unpaid for
three months.

A FIFA ruling on Thursday declared a free agent after Shirak were given
the option to either pay the outstanding wages or release the player.

The former Berekum Chelsea right-back played for the club in this
season’s UEFA Champions League qualifiers.

Kyere joined Shirak FC earlier this year where he helped them to win
the Armenian title.

http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/SportsArchive/artikel.php?ID=284551

Cleveland Evans: For Those Who Fear ‘Gregory’ May Disappear, Stay Wa

CLEVELAND EVANS: FOR THOSE WHO FEAR ‘GREGORY’ MAY DISAPPEAR, STAY WATCHFUL

Omaha World-Herald, Nebraska
Sept 3 2013

Peck, Maddux, Kinnear, Louganis, or Brady?

Whom do you think of first when you hear “Gregory”?

Gregory is the English form of the Greek Gregorios, “watchful,
vigilant, awake.” It was popular with early Christians because of
several Gospel passages in which Jesus tells His followers to remain
watchful and alert.

Several early saints were named Gregory. Gregory the Wonderworker
(213-270) was a bishop noted for his gentleness and success at
converting pagans. Legend claims he dried up a swamp and moved a
mountain by his spiritual power.

St. Gregory the Illuminator (240-332) was an Armenian prince. His
family fled political troubles to settle in Asia Minor. There, young
Gregory became a Christian. As an adult he returned to Armenia and
converted King Tiridates, the first monarch to make Christianity
the official state religion. Krikor, the Armenian form of Gregory,
was for centuries a common Armenian name.

The most famous St. Gregory is Pope Gregory I, known as “Gregory the
Great.” A wealthy man who founded seven monasteries and then became a
monk himself, Gregory was elected pope in 590. Credited with keeping
the church strong despite barbarian invasions of Italy, he wrote
several theology and history books widely read in medieval Europe.

Gregorian chants are named after him.

Gregory promoted the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity,
and so was especially revered in England. After his death in 604 he
was proclaimed a saint. Thirty-two medieval English churches were named
after him. His feast day, Sept. 3, was celebrated throughout England.

English historian George Redmonds says Gregory was the 34th-most-common
name for boys around 1380. Gregory’s medieval popularity is also
shown by how common Gregory is as a surname. In 2010, more than
88,000 Americans had the last name Gregory, ranking it 312th. Gregg,
Gregson and Greer families also had ancestors named Gregory.

Gregory was also common in medieval Scotland, accounting for all the
Scots named MacGregor. Somewhat surprisingly, Gregory was rare in
medieval Ireland; there don’t seem to be any Irish surnames based
on it.

In 1538, when nationwide baptismal records began in Eng­land, Gregory
still ranked 35th. However, Gregory the Great’s fame led many later
popes to adopt the name. One of those popes, Gregory XIII, famous
for calendar reforms, also sponsored plots to overthrow Protestant
Queen Elizabeth I during his 1572-1585 papacy.

It’s no surprise the 1580s were the first decade in centuries that
Gregory wasn’t among the top 50 names for English boys. Though many
non-biblical saint names fell in use after the Reformation, Gregory’s
decline was among the steepest. By the time English colonists settled
North America in the 17th century, Gregory was rare as a baby name.

In the 1850 U.S. Census, only 416 males had Gregory as a first name –
and 23 percent were born in Ireland or Germany.

In 1880, when Social Security’s yearly baby name lists are started,
Gregory ranked 967th. In six individual years between 1882 and 1891,
it didn’t even make the top thousand.

As immigration increased the percentage of Catholics, Gregory slowly
rose. In 1888, New Yorkers Samuel Peck and his Irish Catholic wife,
Catherine, named their son Gregory.

Gregory moved to San Diego, where his wife, Bernice, bore a son named
Eldred Gregory in 1916. Eldred dropped his first name when he became
an actor.

Gregory Peck was the lead in “Days of Glory,” his first film, in 1944.

He was nominated for Oscars for “The Keys of the Kingdom” in 1944,
“The Yearling” in 1946, “Gentleman’s Agreement” in 1947 and “Twelve
O’Clock High” in 1949.

Though Gregory had been slowly rising since 1916, Peck’s career
skyrocketed it. Newborn Gregorys went up more than 90 percent in both
1945 and 1946, and another 46 percent in 1947. Gregory ranked 152nd
in 1944 and 33rd in 1947.

After 1947, Gregory rose at a slower pace until ranking 21st in both
1962 and 1963. More than 21,000 were born each of those years. Two
of Peck’s most popular films – 1961’s “The Guns of Navarone” and his
Oscar winner, 1962’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” – contributed to the peak.

Many baby boomer and Gen X Gregorys, partly inspired by Peck’s fame,
are now famous themselves. The late dancer Gregory Hines was born in
1946. Rock star Gregg Allman, officially a Gregory despite his extra
“g,” was born in 1947.

Actors Gregory Harrison, Greg Evigan, Greg Kinnear and Greg Vaughan
were born respectively in 1950, 1953, 1963, and 1973.

Thriller writer Greg Iles was born in 1960. Gregory Maguire (1954)
is author of the revisionist Oz novel “Wicked,” which inspired the
popular musical.

Athletic Gregorys include Olympic diver Greg Louganis (1960) and Greg
Maddux (1966), the first pitcher to win baseball’s Cy Young Award four
years in a row. One of the youngest famous Gregs, former University
of Nebraska at Omaha football player Greg “The Leg” Zuerlein (born
in 1987), made the longest rookie field goal in NFL history last fall
for the St. Louis Rams.

For those born during the second half of the baby boom (1956-1964),
the most famous Greg is fictional Greg Brady (played by Barry
Williams), oldest son on TV’s “The Brady Bunch,” originally broadcast
1969-1974. The Brady characters represent the perfect family to many.

Since its 1963 peak, the name Gregory has steadily fallen. The 1,217
born in 2012 ranked it 287th, lowest since 1934. A name with this long
and distinguished a history, though, is unlikely to ever disappear.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.omaha.com/article/20130903/LIVING/130909870/1696

Will Sargsyan Implement "Saakashvili’s Plan"?

WILL SARGSYAN IMPLEMENT “SAAKASHVILI’S PLAN”?

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Sept 3 2013

3 September 2013 – 9:13am

David Stepanyan, Yerevan. Exclusively to Vestnik Kavkaza

It seems the current authorities of Armenia as represented by the
Republican Party (RPA) have decided to rule the republic forever. This
is confirmed by the statement by the chairman of the commission on
state-legal issues of the parliament, David Arutyunyan. He assumed that
soon a packet of amendments to the Constitution would be presented for
an all-national referendum. The amendments require the establishing
of a parliamentary republic.

Considering the fact that ideas on shifting to a parliamentary form
have only existed in Armenia in the opposition environment since its
independence, the statement could be a breakthrough. However, Serge
Sargsyan is thought to be a lame duck. And his political future and
the future of his supporters seemed dim until “the pilot-balloon”
of David Arutyunyan. In the context of the amorphous political
field of the republic, such an initiative could be suggested by the
Republicans with the one and only goal – to provide the reproduction
of the current president through his shifting from the presidential
chair to the premier’s chair after the parliamentary elections of
2017. It will enable the current system based on unspoken agreements
to maintain power for some time.

Regarding the scenario, we can conclude that changes in Armenia will
happen not by spring 2018 in presidential elections, but in spring
2017 in the parliamentary elections. The intention to shift to a
parliamentary republic means that the current president has no reliable
successor. Moreover, Sargsyan doesn’t hope to find such a person in
4 and a half years. RPA is too disparate to provide the “successor”
operation. The last war of dirty materials between Premier Tigran
Sarkisyan and Speaker Ovik Abramyan demonstrated only the top of the
iceberg of contradictions. At the same time, a presidential candidate
beyond the limits of the party can make quarreling republicans unite
against him.

Furthermore, the discussion of a referendum on shifting to a
parliamentary republic is an exclusive right of the power. Nothing
prevents Sargsyan from implementing Saakashvili’s scenario – the only
difference is that Armenia has no its Ivanishvili yet. The scenario
when Saakashvili promoted a parliamentary system and then lost the
elections is impossible for Armenia. This concerns all political
forces of Armenia – Kocharyan’s Prosperous Armenia, the Armenian
National Congress, Heritage of Raffi Ovanisyan who has almost won the
presidential elections. All of them tried to compete with Sargsyan’s
RPA and they would have no second chance. The Armenian society was
disappointed with these leaders who showed hesitation in a crucial
moment.

However, considering the first reaction by new-republican politicians,
they are not concerned about the prospect of seeing Sargsyan in
the premier’s chair after the referendum. The opposition’s logic
seems hopeless – “What is the difference whether presidential or
parliamentary elections are falsified?” When the old opposition
is destroyed and there is no new one, it is the best time for the
republicans to secure their power.

At the same time, there is a threat which frightens the future Premier
and his team – youth civil movements. The power cannot “agree” with
them in the way it used to. Furthermore, the situation in Armenia
may change in the near future. The civil activity demonstrated by the
young part of the society consolidates protest forces, and sooner or
later the forces will be headed by new people. So, instead of awaiting
such a scenario, the power tries to avoid it and change the political
system, but not the content. Currently Armenia is a country with a
half-presidential system of government; but as all force, customs,
tax structures are fully controlled by the President, Armenia is a
country with a presidential system of government.

Seminary Rector Rues US Intervention In Iraq, Says Syrian Rebels Hav

SEMINARY RECTOR RUES US INTERVENTION IN IRAQ, SAYS SYRIAN REBELS HAVE LITTLE INTEREST IN DEMOCRACY

Catholic Culture
Sept 3 2013

CWN – September 03, 2013

The rector of the Pontifical Armenian College in Rome has told the
Aleteia news site that the Syrian rebels have little interest in
promoting democracy.

“We see ‘democrats’ who enjoy cutting off the heads of their
opponents, eating the hearts of faithful soldiers, firing on truck
drivers who don’t know the [Muslim] morning and evening prayers,”
said Msgr. Georges Noradounguian.

Turning to the topic of possible American military intervention,
the priest added, “If Syrian forces had attacked Iran with chemical
weapons, would the reaction of the international community today be
the same?”

Comparing American military intervention to totalitarianism, he said:

Often we realize too late that the support given to wars for freedom
and democracy was misplaced and actually achieved the opposite
objectives.

>From the time the war on terror was declared, terrorism has been
spread even further. From the time we began to speak about the danger
of the extremists, they have multiplied and spread everywhere. From
the time talk of dictatorial, totalitarian systems began, we’ve gone
from petty dictators on a smaller scale with more limited negative
consequences, to a time and place of large scale dictators with
catastrophic consequences. There is a totalitarianism that is imposed
with force against one’s own citizens, and then there are totalitarian
regimes that impose themselves on countries and entire populations,
through economic and military power, by planning and financing wars ad
infinitum, and by delineating red lines: the use of chemical weapons
or weapons’ mass destruction.

Msgr. Noradounguian called upon the West to “make a serious examination
of conscience; reread the wars of the last 20 years and learn the
lesson from them. Were these wars consistent in their goals and
results? Is Iraq free and democratic? … Are there less victims now,
after the war in Iraq and after the fall of the regime, than at the
time of the dictator?”

“Naturally I’m not in favor of dictators,” he continued. “But my
question as a Christian is this: Is the one million casualties and
the destabilization of a country really the only way and the only
price to be paid for getting rid of a dictator?”

“Christians find themselves facing not good choices but rather harsh
realities,” he continued. “What happened to the Christians in Turkey?

And the Christians in Iraq, where are they? And the Christians in
Egypt, where are they? What are they living through? Christians in
Syria see the absurd, false wars that lead to the destabilization
and destruction of their countries and force them to migrate to
unknown destinations to start their lives from a scratch, from zero,
and abandon the countries that hold their history and their culture
and their Christian identity and their work.”

http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=18910

Armenian Ambassador Leaves Kazakhstan

ARMENIAN AMBASSADOR LEAVES KAZAKHSTAN

Tengrinews
Sept 3 2013

Tuesday, 03.09.2013, 16:04

Kazakhstan Secretary of State Marat Tazhin has met with Ambassador
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Armenia Vassiliy Kazaryan who is
finishing his diplomatic mission in Kazakhstan, Tengrinews.kz reports
citing Kazakhstan President’s press-service.

The 5-year diplomatic mission of the ambassador helped develop the
inter-parliamentary relations and step up the work of the bilateral
inter-government trade and economic cooperation commission.

The Secretary of State thanked the Armenian ambassador for his
significant contribution into enhancement of the trust-based relations
between the two countries, emphasizing Armenia’s support of Astana
in its bid to host the EXPO-2017 exhibition.

During the meeting the parties discussed the status and prospects
of development of Kazakhstan-Armenian relations in the framework of
international cooperation, as well as trade, cultural and humanitarian
cooperation.

For more information see:

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://en.tengrinews.kz/politics_sub/Armenian-ambassador-leaves-Kazakhstan-22334/
http://en.tengrinews.kz/politics_sub/Armenian-ambassador-leaves-Kazakhstan-22334/

Ottawa: Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) Independence Day Statement By The

NAGORNO KARABAKH (ARTSAKH) INDEPENDENCE DAY STATEMENT BY THE HONOURABLE JIM KARYGIANNIS

Canadian Government News
Aug 31 2013

Ottawa

Office of the MP Jim karygiannis, Canadian Government has issued the
following news release:

Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) Independence Day Statement by the Honourable
Jim Karygiannis, Member of Parliament for Scarborough-Agincourt

I would like to take this opportunity to extend my best wishes to
members of the Canadian Armenian community and the people of Nagorno
Karabakh (Artsakh) on the occasion of Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh)
Independence Day.

On December 10, 1991, days before the official dissolution of
the Soviet Union, a referendum on independence was held in Nagorno
Karabakh. The overwhelming majority of Artsakh’s population voted in
favour of independence.

The people of Artsakh consider September 2nd the day The Republic
of Nagorno Karabakh was proclaimed. The occasion is marked as a
state holiday.

Today, The Nagorno Karabakh Republic is a de facto independent,
democratic and fully functioning state, with a thriving market economy
and a dynamic civil society, which is working toward entrenching its
freedom and the formal recognition of its independence.

In July 2012, I led a team of Canadian Election Observers for the
Presidential Election in The Republic of Nagorno Karabakh. It was
a picture perfect election from start to finish and witnessing
the election process in a new democracy was a positive learning
experience. I also met with government officials, residents of Nagorno
Karabakh and members of the Canadian Diaspora who were visiting and
learned more about the challenges facing this Artsakh.

From: Baghdasarian

http://karygiannismp.com/spip/article.php3?id_article=2195