The Union Of Domestic Producers Can Assist To Armenian Exports

THE UNION OF DOMESTIC PRODUCERS CAN ASSIST TO ARMENIAN EXPORTS

Noyan Tapan
Apr 10, 2009

Yerevan, April 10, Noyan Tapan. The purpose of the meeting called
by the prime minister Tigran Sargsian on April 8 was to discuss the
current economic situation with domestic producers and to define more
exact ways of overcoming the impacts of the world financial crisis
on Armenia’s economy.

Managers of more than 30 companies and enterprises participated in the
meeting and presented their opinions, goals and suggestions, speaking
about the current state of economy and development perspectives. As
the President of the Union of Domestic Producers Vazgen Safarian
mentioned, anti-crisis program of the Armenian government had been
discussed, and the members of the union expressed readiness to support
particularly to development of small and medium business programs,
to improvement of infrastructures and other projects.

According to the Information and PR Department of the Government of RA,
domestic producers emphasized the role of the state participation in
the business capital in current economic conditions, increasing the
amounts of credits, improving tax policy, particularly, promoting local
production in agriculture sphere, developing innovation technologies
and establishing specialized export promotion companies. The Union of
Domestic Producers is a member of the International Union of Producers
and in that context can use its potential to solve the problem of
Armenian exports, told Safarian.

Health Care And Pharmacy Expo 2009

HEALTH CARE AND PHARMACY EXPO 2009
By Marietta Makarian

AZG DAILY
11-04-2009

Health care

The 8th international specialized exhibition under heading Health
Care and Pharmacy EXPO 2009 started yesterday at the Moscow House
in Yerevan.

The exhibition organized by Logos EXPO center, under the patronage
of the Armenian Ministry of Health, will last four days.

The exhibition will embrace different roundtables and seminars. Leading
countries’ forms of services, including prevention, clinical treatment,
dentistry, pharmacy, maternity and childhood, hygiene, etc. will be
presented to the visitors.

Rehabilitation equipments will be in the focus of attention.

Turkey’s President And Prime Minister Have Different Points

TURKEY’S PRESIDENT AND PRIME MINISTER HAVE DIFFERENT POINTS

Panorama.am
17:22 09/04/2009

"It’s difficult to meet the challenges in Armenian-Turkish relations
unless the conflict of Nagorno Karabakh remains unsolved," the
Prime Minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced. "We hope
that the UN Security Council will give its assessment regarding the
conflict. Turkey makes efforts and has taken the initiative to create
Caucasus Platform of Peace and Stability. The opposition’s versions
regarding the opening of the border are exaggerated," said the Prime
Minister. The President of Turkey Abdullah Gul said in his interview
given to British Financial Times magazine that the most important
thing in Caucasus is the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. But the President has not rejected the
Armenian-Turkish relations could be normalized leaving the issue of
NKR conflict out.

Shirak Torosyan: Socio-Economic Problems Aggravate The National-Poli

SHIRAK TOROSYAN: SOCIO-ECONOMIC PROBLEMS AGGRAVATE THE NATIONAL-POLITICAL SITUATION IN JAVAKHK
Gita Elibekyan

"Radiolur"
10.04.2009 15:30

"Armenians of Javakhk live in an atmosphere of fear," President of the
Javakhk Patriotic Union, MP Shirak Torosyan told a press conference
today. In his opinion, our compatriots had never been subjected to such
nationalistic persecutions in this Armenian-populated region. The MP
said also that those nationalistic and political issues have further
depended because of hard socio-economic conditions.

"We do not hold the socio-economic issues as priority. Today we
prioritize the national-political issues. Javakhk faces a very serious
national political problem today, and the aggravating socio-economic
situation contributes to the deepening of the above-mentioned problem."

OSCE Organizes Meeting On Human Rights Of Armed Forces Personnel In

OSCE ORGANIZES MEETING ON HUMAN RIGHTS OF ARMED FORCES PERSONNEL IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
09.04.2009 13:13

The OSCE Office in Yerevan and the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) organized a roundtable meeting
today on human rights and fundamental freedoms of armed forces
personnel in Armenia.

The event, hosted by the Armenian Defense Ministry, focused on the
human rights of Armenian armed forces personnel. Representatives from
the government and parliament, the human rights defender’s office and
civil society discussed how they could co-operate better in this field,
including on the issue of the oversight over the armed forces.

Representatives from the ODIHR and the Geneva Centre for Democratic
Control of Armed Forces presented good practices from throughout
the OSCE region, using examples collected in the joint Handbook on
Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms of Armed Forces Personnel. The
handbook describes the international regulatory framework for the
proper treatment of armed forces personnel and gives guidance on
how to implement these commitments. Meeting participants discussed
the handbook in light of the Armenian context and explored how its
recommendations could be applied in the country.

"Working with the authorities on the human rights of Armenian armed
forces personnel is a priority for the OSCE Office in Yerevan. Today’s
discussion contributed significantly to this,0 said the Head of the
OSCE Office, Ambassador Sergey Kapinos.

The OSCE Office has supported Armenia’s efforts to improve human
rights in the armed forces as part of its assistance in the country’s
security sector reform.

Toralv Nordbo, ODIHR First Deputy Director, added: "OSCE participating
States have committed to treat armed forces personnel in conformity
with international human rights standards, and doing so is also a
matter of good policy for the military as an employer and public
institution."

President Of Armenia: Russia Has Always Had And Will Have A Key Role

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA: RUSSIA HAS ALWAYS HAD AND WILL HAVE A KEY ROLE IN OUR REGION

ArmInfo
2009-04-10 00:26:00

ArmInfo. Russia has always had and will have a key role in our region,
President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan said in an interview with ‘Russia’
TV channel. According to him, Armenia and Russia are tied up by
millenniums and have very special relations. ‘These relations have
been legally established everywhere, and they exist in our people. I do
not know how I can appreciate from the Russian point of view, however,
from the Armenian viewpoint Russia is a strategic partner for Armenia’,
S. Sargsyan said. He thanked the Russian state for its mediation in
settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict for almost two decades.

Obama Will Be Braver On April 24

OBAMA WILL BE BRAVER ON APRIL 24

Yerkir
08.04.2009 18:29

Yerevan (Yerkir) – US President Obama’s statement in Turkey should
be characterized as positive but not enough because as senator and
presidential candidate he had promised to use the word genocide. This
does not mean he will not use the word but he missed a good chance,
Kiro Manoyan, ARF Bureau’s Hay Dat and Political Affairs Office
director, told a news conference on April 8.

"As US president, he underscored that his views have not changed in
the Armenia genocide issue. He made the statement standing next to
the Turkish president," Manoyan said.

He said that Obama’s meeting with the Armenian and Turkish foreign
ministers had two goals: to establish diplomatic relations with
Armenia as soon as possible and open the border. "What will Turkey
do, is unknown. It wants to prevent the US from recognizing the
Armenian genocide, but it is only temporary. If Turkey gives way to
the Azerbaijani pressure and these talks bear no fruit, I think that
the Armenian side would stop the negotiations too," he added.

He said that he believes Turkey would establish diplomatic relations
with Armenia and would stop the blockade. This is in Turkey’s interest
because it wants to have a more significant role in the region but
it is impossible without having relations with Armenia.

The Other Kessabtsi

THE OTHER KESSABTSI
By Tamar Kevonian

1317_4/10/2009_1
Thursday, April 9, 2009

Origins are an important element in this part of the world. The
Middle East, particularly the Armenian community, relies heavily
on this information when meeting strangers. Toros, after living in
Kessab for over thirty years, still says he is a Sassountsi from
Halleb. He is fifty seven years old with a thick bushy moustache,
almost a hundred pounds overweight and has a penchant for languages. He
speaks a smattering of several of them like French, Italian, English
and Thai. "I hear something once and I can remember it."

He lives in Kessab because he likes the slower pace of life. "Believe
me, when it gets busy here in the summer I hate it," he says referring
to the population explosion that occurs during the summer months when
the number of people in the village exceeds ten thousand and walking or
driving down the street becomes an obstacle coarse. Kessab has become
a popular destination for people to spend their summer holidays away
from the heat and dust of the big cities.

Toros is a driver, an occupation he learned from his father. In the
winter he drives the bus for the Armenian school, collecting students
from the various ends of the region, and contracts with various groups
to drive their members to their regular scheduled club meetings. He
loves to drive, particularly long road trips to discover new places. In
the past, when he drove a delivery truck, he always request new routes
so he could see unfamiliar locations. This is how he traveled and
discovered the breadth of the Gulf States. Recently he planned to
drive all the way to Armenia but was thwarted by the closed Turkish
border. "I hope Gul’s (Turkey’s president) visit this week will help
(open the borders)," he says referring to the Turkish president’s
visit during the much debated Armenia vs. Turkey soccer game.

It all started in 1968 when, at 17 years old, he left Syria for
Lebanon to avoid the mandatory military service. "It used to be very
hard in those days," he says of the time spent in the army. He stayed
in exile for two difficult years in Beirut but finally concluded that
he would be willing to serve his time if only he could return to his
birth country. He did his five year tour of duty during which time
the war of 1973 broke out with Israel. "My parents were very worried
for me and my brother. But we survived."

In his mid-20’s he bought a car and worked in the Gulf for a
short while. He saved his money and returned to Kessab to buy a
house. "Kessab then became my base. I never went back to Halleb."

In 1985 he married a Christian Arab woman from Jordan whom he’d met
during his business transactions. "But it didn’t take," he says with
a wry smile. He attributes it to his wife’s intense jealousy which
drove a wedge between them that he never could dispel. "I don’t think
I changed," he says reflecting on his former marriage "I even cut
down on the length of my travels." By the time the two parted ways
in 1995 they had two children, Vartoug and Apo,. Vartoug went with
her mother to Jordan while Apo stayed in Kessab with Toros.

He and Apo visited Vartoug often but suddenly three years ago she
cut off all contact with her father. He called his ex-wife, a rare
occurrence, for an explanation. "She told me not to be upset. That’s
her (Vartoug) living her own life. How can I not be upset? I’m not an
animal." He continues to call her but she won’t acknowledge him. "I
heard she (Vartoug) got married," he says of the little news that
does reach his ears, "but I couldn’t find out for sure."

Toros’ friends tell him he should get married again, that he shouldn’t
be alone but he worries that a woman would get jealous of the attention
and the resources he allocates to his son. He wishes that society
was less rigid in Kessab so he could consider the option of dating
or living with someone. "Here you need a title like %u218Uncle’
or %u218Brother-in-law’." He used to dream of a large family with
lots of children underfoot. He used to observe the families of his
Arab friends with their eight or nine kids and enjoyed being in their
midst. He likes the energy and commotion of kids running in and out
of the house but that was not his fate.

"My son almost didn’t happen," he says and sometimes wonders it would
have been better for Apo if that were the case. "It’s hard on him (Apo)
growing up without a mother especially on holidays like Mother’s Day."

Now Toros is in love with a local Armenian woman. It’s an open secret
in the small village. After three years of growing affections he
has asked her to marry him but she’s refused. "She wants to but is
concerned about her family’s reaction," he complains. His girlfriend
is in her early fifties but never married. She still seeks her
mother’s council who believes that her daughter has no business with
"a divorced man." She is the only daughter amongst three sons who
have married and have families of their own. "I think they (the
brothers) are very selfish for not encouraging her to be with me,"
he says. "They should be happy that someone loves her, who she loves
back, and wants to marry her."

Toros has some hard decisions to make in the near future: to stay
with a woman he loves but who will not openly commit to him or move
on and find someone who will even though he may not love her. "This
subject has been coming up a lot lately," he explains that because of
his work he meets many new people when they visit Kessab and need his
services. Several times this past summer he was approached by various
people who wanted to play matchmaker and introduce him to eligible
women from Halleb. He’s considered taking them up on their offer.

In the meantime he’ll continue to plan his road trip to Armenia
with Apo.

www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=4

Abdullah Gul Is Confident NKR Conflict Will Be Resolved By Late 2009

ABDULLAH GUL IS CONFIDENT NKR CONFLICT WILL BE RESOLVED BY LATE 2009

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.04.2009 16:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish President Abdullah Gul says the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will be resolved by late 2009, Turkish
SONSAYFA internet portal reported.

"The most serious problem in the Caucasus is the Nagorno-Karabakh
problem. I believe the problem will be resolved by the end of 2009,"
he said.

Was Serge Sargsyan’s Initiative Not Required?

WAS SERGE SARGSYAN’S INITIATIVE NOT REQUIRED?

LRAGIR.AM
15:57:20 – 08/04/2009

"Turkey needs relations with Armenia. Turkey is interested in the
border opening itself," on April 8, at the Hayacq club stated the Kiro
Manoyan, who heads the Hay Dat and Political Affairs Office of the
ARF Dashnaktsutyun. He noted that Turkey wants to be a factor in the
region. "It wants to be a factor in order to enhance its influence,
and it is unable to do that without its relations with Armenia",
said the Dashnaktsutyun member.

"Even if Armenia gives nothing, that is why we say that it has not
to give anything, anyway, in the end, Turkey will sign the agreement
to establish diplomatic links with Armenia and to open the border,"
said Kiro Manoyan.

The reporters asked, in this case, we may state that even if the
Armenian president did not make that invitation, Turkey, sooner
or later, would take up the initiative in the Armenian and Turkish
relations by itself.

"After the August war it became evident that Turkey presented a new
initiative in the region. And if our president had not presented
his initiative before, Turkey would have done it after the war",
said Kiro Manoyan.