Gasprom Delegation Attends Completion Ceremony For Kajaran-Ararat Se

GASPROM DELEGATION ATTENDS COMPLETION CEREMONY FOR KAJARAN-ARARAT SECTION OF IRAN-ARMENIA GAS MAIN

ARKA
Dec 3, 2008

YEREVAN, December 3. /ARKA/. A Gasprom delegation led by Board
Chairman Alexey Miller participated in a function on the occasion
of the welding of the last seam of the Kajaran-Ararat section of the
Iran-Armenia gas main.

The press service of the Gasprom OJSC reported that Alexey Miller
held a meeting with RA President Serge Sargsyan. The sides made a
high appraisal of the multi-aspect cooperation between Gasprom and
Armenia and expressed their confidence in its further development.

"Our long-term strategic cooperation with Armenia is based on mutual
confidence. Gasprom not only sells gas to Armenia, but is also involved
in gas transmission and marketing in the country. We have long-term
joint plans in the electric energy sector," Miller said.

He pointed out that the ArmRosgasprom Russian-Armenian JV has
been successfully operating for over ten years and constructed
the Kajaran-Ararat section of the gas main. "I am sure the new gas
main will essentially enhance the reliability of energy supply in
Armenia and properly contribute to the development of the region’s
gas infrastructure," Miller said.

The 206.5km-long Kajaran-Ararat section links the Iran-Armenia gas main
with Armenia’s gas transmission system. The section was constructed
by the ArmRosgasprom CJSC.

ArmRosgasprom holds a monopoly o f the supply and transmission of the
Russian gas in Armenia. The company was founded in 1997 by Gasprom
(69.94%), RA Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources (26.23%) and
Itera oil and gas company.

Even Minor Concession In Karabakh Issue Will Whip The Opponent To Cl

EVEN MINOR CONCESSION IN KARABAKH ISSUE WILL WHIP THE OPPONENT TO CLAIM MORE

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.12.2008 16:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Pursuing the soviet era policy, Azerbaijan will not
amend its approach to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. It offers NKR
and Armenia to reconcile themselves to this position which has become
a part of the state ideology, expert Hrachya Arzumanyan writes in
"Sobering up" article obtained by PanARMENIAN.Net.

"An entire generation in Azerbaijan was reared on hatred against all
Armenian and on a fanatic belief that Karabakh should be regained
at any price. If diplomatic efforts don’t work, the problem will be
resolved by use of force… The only guarantor of the Armenian people
is the army and the defense system of the Armenian states. Even minor
concession in the Karabakh issue will whip the opponent to claim more,"
the article says.

Bako Sahakyan Met Businessman Vitali Grigoryants

BAKO SAHAKYAN MET BUSINESSMAN VITALI GRIGORYANTS

Panorama.am
17:31 03/12/2008

On December 1, the President of Nagorno Karabakh Republic Bako
Sahakyan arrived in Moscow. The President had a scheduled meeting
with businessman and benefactor Vitali Grigoryants, reported the
information department of the NKR President’s Administration.

According to the source, the investment programs in Artsakh, their
process and the perspectives have been discussed.

The Minister of Finance of NKR Spartak Tevosyan was also present at
the meeting.

President Of Armenia: Macroeconomic Situation In Armenia Evaluated A

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA: MACROECONOMIC SITUATION IN ARMENIA EVALUATED AS SUSTAINABLE AND PREDICTABLE

ArmInfo
2008-12-02 16:25:00

ArmInfo. Despite the expanding world economic crisis, Armenia still
hopes for maintaining high rates of economic growth and low inflation,
President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan said at the 10th meeting of the
Presidential Atomic Energy Council Tuesday.

He said that high capitalization of Armenian banks may soften the
damage caused by the crisis. ‘We understand that it is impossible
to avoid the crisis, however, it is possible to minimize the loss’,
the president said. Today the macroeconomic situation in the country
is evaluated at sustainable and predictable in general.

ANTELIAS: Int’l Press Coverage on HH Aram I’s Visit to The Vatican

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

INTERNATIONAL PRESS COVERAGE
ON HIS HOLINESS ARAM I’S VISIT TO THE VATICAN

His Holiness Aram I’s recent visit to the Vatican on November 23-27 received
a broad coverage both in the international and local press. Various news
agencies consistently reported on the issues His Holiness discussed in the
Vatican during his meeting with the Pope and other senior officials.

In addition to international media, the Turkish press also covered the
Pontiff’s visit, enticed clearly by his statements concerning the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

In further media coverage of the visit, the Catholicosate of Cilicia’s
Ecumenical and Communications officers, Bishop Nareg Alemezian and V. Rev.
Fr. Krikor Chiftjian appeared on the Roman "Telepace" TV on November 28
talking about the new potential for cooperation between the two churches and
particularly the Catholicosate of Cilicia and the Vatican that the Pontiff’s
official visit gave rise to. Despite the theological, ecclesiological, and
confessional differences, the need for unreserved cooperation between the
two churches was emphasized for the purpose of overcoming the challenges
faced by the present-day society.

Bishop Nareg and Father Chiftjian were also hosted by Radio Vatican’s news
service to make an assessment of His Holiness’s official visit.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme

Oskanian in ‘The European Voice’ on a New European Sec. Structure

— PRESS RELEASE
The Civilitas Foundation
One Northern Ave. Suite 30
Yerevan, Armenia
Telephones: +37494.800754; +37410.500119
email: [email protected]
web:

Vartan Oskanian, Founder of the Civilitas Foundation, submitted this article
to the European Voice newspaper on the eve of the annual OSCE Meeting of
Ministers in Helsinki, later this week.

Europe needs a new security structure
By Vartan Oskanian

01.12.2008

A former foreign minister argues that the French and Russian presidents are
right to advocate a summit on a new security arrangement for Europe.

Yerevan — Two events of great consequence – one throughout the globe and
the other in our region – rattled the world¹s assumptions in the second half
of this year.
The first – the global financial shake-up – was so broad and so deep that
already this week, the leaders of the world¹s 20 largest economies held an
unprecedented meeting in Washington to discuss cures. Even George Bush¹s
lame duck presidency was no obstacle.
Today, what started as a local loan crisis is hampering development
worldwide and already promises to lead to a global recession.
Now, everyone is already wondering whether the Bretton Woods 1940s-era
system of international institutions is indeed, as Gordon Brown observed,
incapable of handling the financial challenges of the 21st century.
No one foresaw the potential calamity when the glut of Middle Eastern oil
cash flowed into the US, although in the 1980s and mid-1990s such extra cash
had come to South America and Asia, and there, too, it led first to bubbles
and later, of course, an eruption. When a similar bubble and eruption shook
the US this summer, the response was lots of finger-pointing, even by those
who should have known better.
The response was the same when the other significant event – the
Russia-Georgia conflict – broke out in August. Although it was the Georgians
and South Ossetians who were most immediately and directly affected, the
repercussions have indeed spread beyond our region. The long-term effects of
this first of its kind clash, the first instance of use of force at this
scale, between states, will continue to reverberate. Although accumulated
tensions between Moscow and Tbilisi set off the explosion, the underlying
trigger was the issue of NATO expansion. Talk about bringing NATO¹s borders
to Russia¹s frontier, in a region with great strategic, historic and
economic significance for Russia, had raised alarm signals.
But just as the International Monetary Fund and World Bank were not equipped
to supervise, stop, mitigate international imbalances in revenue and cash
accumulation, so it seems the existing post-Cold War security institutions
are unable to override old security frontiers, or prevent the exercise of
prerogatives to prevent other clashes.
Over the past 400 years from the Peace of Westphalia, to the Concert of
Europe, World War I and World War II, the world went through at least four,
perhaps five significant transformations. After each major war and conflict,
a new system emerged, new mechanisms and new institutions were created to
regulate state relationships.
But at the end of the Cold War, the very institutions that contributed to
the defeat of the USSR remained the main pillars of the so-called new world
order. That situation was tolerated at the time of the collapse, when Russia
was weak, in shock and distracted. Insisting that those same institutions,
particularly those dealing with security, operate the way they used to is
neither realistic nor sustainable.
Because the long, expensive, casualty-ridden Cold War ended without a shot
being fired, we have been more complacent, less thoughtful, less strategic
and farsighted about the critical post-war period. That has meant an
expansion, almost by-default, of a security alliance which was born to
contain an assertive, expansionist, aggressive empire that no longer exists.
That has meant a Russian proposal to place missiles in Kaliningrad in
response to a US proposal for a missile shield based in the heart of Europe.
That has meant Russia suspending its participation in the Conventional
Forces in Europe treaty and with it suspending any promise of balance. This
is an untenable formula of a future that is only imagined in terms of a
divided past.
Nearly one hundred years ago, after the first European flare-up of the 20th
century, the Europeans wanted to continue to shape the world in its old
form, and it was the Americans who pioneered their own, new vision of old
geopolitical relationships of power. As a result, America¹s strength and
influence stretched throughout what has been called the American Century.
>From the League of Nations to the Helsinki Final Act, American idealism and
future vision shaped the world.
Today, America is renewing itself again, and reaffirming its commitment to
remaining strong and influential. At the same time, thankfully,
President-Elect Obama has indicated he will be attentive to what Europe is
saying and to forge an indispensable Europe-America partnership. We expect
that he will indeed go forward with a review of missile deployment, the
Iranian showdown, the Iraqi and Afghanistan engagements, and even NATO
expansion.
Presidents Sarkozy and Medvedev have even shown the way. Just as Europeans
convinced President Bush to host last week¹s precedent-setting gathering,
now Europe and Russia have proposed a Summit meeting of the member states of
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, this time on this
other far-reaching matter of global significance: security issues and
structures. When ministers from the OSCE meet in Helsinki on 4 December,
they should set the process in motion.
The change that candidate Obama promised the Americans is a change that can
include a vision of a truly new order for an interdependent world.

Vartan Oskanian, Armenia¹s Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1998 until
April 2008, is the founder of the Yerevan-based Civilitas Foundation.

www.civilitasfoundation.org

They Will Back The Primate Anyway

THEY WILL BACK THE PRIMATE ANYWAY

A1+
[01:09 pm] 01 December, 2008

An initiative group has launched collection of signatures in support
of Michael Ajapahyan, primate of the Diocese of Shirak marz.

The group vows to do everything to prevent the unpopular developments
and impertinent interference with the spiritual life of the diocese
and expose the plot to replace the primate.

"Michael Ajapahyan has been improving the spiritual life of communities
for nine years, immediately after assuming the post. There is no
community in our region which has not got his blessing. Liturgies
have been recited even in rundown churches and chapels. The social
and educational centre, the youth council of the Diocese of Shirak of
the Armenian Apostolic Church, St. Hakob Mtsbnetsi and other unions
of Christian youth have been set up thanks to Ajapahyan. He has also
organised pilgrimages to churches and sanctuaries. His sermons and
precepts form an indivisible part of our spiritual life."

The message voices indignation with the plot of the administrative and
criminal force against this healthy spiritual strand in an effort to
engage the archbishop in political matters and to manipulate his civil
stance. The members of the initiative state this is a precedent when
the political government constrains the activities of the spiritual
leader, causing a surge of protest in the region.

"We, the children of the Armenian Church, voice our indignation
over this intolerable phenomenon and express our determination and
resoluteness to back the primate enjoying public love and respect to
the end," holds the message.

NA Chairman: Chess – Art And Sport

NA CHAIRMAN: CHESS – ART AND SPORT

Panorama.am
18:04 29/11/2008

Armenian chess players who became Olympic Champions have been hosted
in the National Assembly of Armenia, reported the public relations
department of the NA. The Chairman of the NA Hovik Abrahamyan greeted
the guests and said that due to their performance in Dresden Armenian
chess players have proved that Armenia is a big chess country and
that they have their own place in the world chess.

To say that every Armenian loves playing chess and they do play, is
not quite right. Although experts still dispute whether chess is an
art or a sport, it is right to say that chess is both – an art and
a sport, says the Chairman.

The Chairman wished Armenian chess players all the best and successes
in their future performances.

Monks arrested in J’lem church brawl

Monks arrested in J’lem church brawl

Nov 9, 2008 13:27 | Updated Nov 9, 2008 19:00

Jerusalem Post

Monks arrested in J’lem church brawl Police rushed into
one of Christianity’s holiest churches Sunday and arrested two
clergyman after an argument between monks erupted into a brawl next to
the site of Jesus’ tomb. The clash broke out between Armenian and
Greek Orthodox monks in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, revered as
the site of Jesus’ crucifixion, burial and resurrection. It began as
Armenian clergymen marched in an annual procession commemorating the
4th-century discovery of the cross believed to have been used to
crucify Jesus. It ended with the arrival of dozens of riot policemen
who separated the sides, seizing a bearded Armenian monk in a
red-and-pink robe and a black-clad Greek Orthodox monk with a bloody
gash on his forehead. Both men were taken away in handcuffs. Six
Christian sects divide control of the ancient church. They regularly
fight over turf and influence, and Israeli police are occasionally
forced to intervene.

The feud revolves around a demand by the Greek Orthodox to post a
monk inside the Edicule – the ancient structure built on what is
believed to be the tomb of Jesus – during the Armenian procession. The
Armenians refused, and when they tried to march the Greek Orthodox
monks blocked their way. We were keeping resistance so that the
procession could not pass through … and establish a right that they
don’t have," said a young Greek Orthodox monk with a cut next to his
left eye. The monk, who gave his name as Serafim, said he sustained
the wound when an Armenian punched him from behind and broke his
glasses.

Father Pakrat of the Armenian Patriarchate said the Greek demand was
"against the status quo arrangement and against the internal
arrangement of the Holy Sepulcher." He said the Greeks attacked
first. Archbishop Aristarchos, the chief secretary of the Greek
Orthodox patriarchate, said his monks had not initiated the
violence. "I’m sorry that these events happened in front of the Holy
Sepulcher, which is the most holy religious monument of Christianity,"
he said.

After the brawl, the church was crowded with police holding assault
rifles and equipped with riot gear, standing beside Golgotha, where
Jesus is believed to have been crucified, and the long smooth stone
marking the place where tradition holds his body was laid out. Police
spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police were forced to intervene after
fighting was reported. They arrested two monks, one from each side, he
said.

The feud is only one of a bewildering array of rivalries among
churchmen in the Holy Sepulcher. The government has long wanted to
build a fire exit in the church, which regularly fills with thousands
of pilgrims and has only one main door, but the plan is on hold
because the sects cannot agree where the exit will be built. In
another example, a ladder placed on a ledge over the entrance sometime
in the 19th century has remained there ever since because of a dispute
over who has the authority to take it down.

More recently, a spat between Ethiopian and Coptic Christians is
delaying badly needed renovations to a rooftop monastery that
engineers say could collapse.

Lukashenko thinks ties with Armenia can be intensified

Interfax, Russia
Nov 27 2008

LUKASHENKO THINKS TIES WITH ARMENIA CAN BE INTENSIFIED

There are conditions to develop Belarusian-Armenian cooperation,
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said.I would not say that
there problems in our relationships. The two countries are very close
to each other, which is for example proved by the fact that the two
countries are members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO), Lukashenko told a meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian in Minsk on Thursday.

Speaking about trade and economic cooperation, Lukashenko said that of
course the volume is small. He, however, noted that Belarusian-
Armenian trade has grown eight times since 2001. There were no
logistics patterns then, but the trade is developing today, the
president said.

Speaking about bilateral cooperation on the international arena, the
Belarusian president said that we have almost no differences. If there
are certain controversies, we resolve them swiftly, Lukashenko said.

Our relations are developing dynamically and are at a high level,
Nalbandian said. We have a complete understanding to work more
actively, so that our relations develop, deepen and extend in various
areas, the minister said, noting that there should be more exchanges
in visits at various levels and regional cooperation should be
intensified.