Armenia Makes Chess Mandatory In Schools

Channels TV
March 31 2013

Armenia Makes Chess Mandatory In Schools

Little Susie Hunanyan attended her favourite class in school last
week, and it wasn’t drawing, crafts or sport. The seven-year-old sat
studiously through an hour of chess lessons.

In Armenia, learning to play the grand game of strategy in school is
mandatory for children – the only country in the world that makes
chess compulsory – and the initiative has paid dividends. Armenia, a
Caucasus country with a population of just three million, is a chess
powerhouse.

Susie listened attentively as her teacher explained chess moves on a
large board in front of the class at the Yeghishe Charents Basic
School in the capital, Yerevan.

`I like chess lessons a lot. They always pass by smoothly,’ she said,
setting up pieces sequentially on her board.

Armenia has produced more than 30 grandmasters and won the team chess
Olympiads in 2006, 2008 and 2012. Armenian champion Levon Aronian is
currently the third-best player in the world, according to the World
Chess Federation rankings.

In 2011, Armenia made chess compulsory for second, third and
fourth-graders. That’s why Susie and her classmates have two hours of
chess every week in school.

`My grandpa taught me how to play chess. But now that I learn chess in
school, I am better at it than he is,’ Susie said, adding when she
grows up, she’d like to become a chess champion like her idol, Levon
Aronian.

For an hour, the students playfully engaged in one-on-one matches
against each other.

`Chess is having a good influence on their performance in other
subjects too. The kids are learning how to think, it’s making them
more confident,’ said teacher Rosanna Putanyan, watching her pupils
play from the periphery.

Education project

The chess initiative is not only meant to scout young talent but also
build a better society. Armen Ashotyan, Armenia’s education minister,
told Al Jazeera the project is aimed at fostering creative thinking.

`Chess develops various skills – leadership capacities,
decision-making, strategic planning, logical thinking and
responsibility,’ Ashotyan said. `We are building these traits in our
youngsters. The future of the world depends on such creative leaders
who have the capacity to make the right decisions, as well as the
character to take responsibility for wrong decisions.’

More than $3m has been spent on the project so far to supply chess
equipment and learning aids in all Armenian schools, Ashotyan added.
The majority of the budget was allocated to train chess players to
become good teachers. In coming years, spending on chess is expected
to rise, he said.

The initiative is also attracting attention from other countries.
Later this year, chess will be integrated into the national curriculum
of Hungary’s elementary schools. Countries such as Moldova, Ukraine
and Spain are showing interest in running similar projects.

In Britain, the United States, Switzerland, India, Russia and Cuba
schools have long offered chess as a subject, though no nationwide
legislation making it compulsory exists.

Developing mental capacities

A team of Armenian psychologists headed by Ruben Aghuzumstyan has been
researching the impact of chess on young minds since last year.

Aghuzumstyan said preliminary results show that children who play
chess score better in certain personality traits such as
individuality, creative thinking, reflexes and comparative analysis.

`During the first few years of school, children are equipped to learn
with games. So for kids who are seven, eight and nine, learning is
better through games, and chess is an optimised game which develops a
lot of areas of the brain,’ Aghuzumstyan said.

The psychologist, who is also a member of the Armenian Chess
Federation, said chess improves social skills as well as mental
strength.

Chess became more popular in the former Soviet republic in the 1960s.
Tigran Petrosian, a former world champion who won many accolades for
the Soviet Union, became a household name in the 1970s. Ever since,
chess has become a staple sport of the country.

On sunny days, parks in Yerevan are filled with chess enthusiasts
capturing pawns and checkmating kings.

Aghuzumustyan explained why chess is so popular in Armenia, a nation
with a troubled past. `We have a tough history,’ he said, referring to
the mass killings carried out by the Ottoman Empire during World War
I.

`Armenians have always been used to solving problems, because we
always had problems. For us it often wasn’t a question of living well
or not, but a question of living or not. And chess is about solving
problems on a board. It’s not a coincidence that we, as a country, are
so good at chess,’ Aghuzumustyan said.

Grooming grandmasters

In one of Yerevan’s southern suburbs, an extravagant building complex
hosts the Chess Academy of Armenia. On a recent rainy afternoon,
dozens of young chess players filed into small training rooms to get
advanced lessons. The chess players, some as young as four, are being
groomed for a professional career, free of cost thanks to the
government.

Top-ranked chess players in Armenia win respect and adulation. Massive
billboards with photos of the winning Olympiad team of 2012 on
Yerevan’s streets indicate their star status.

And the government provides top players with handsome salaries and
perks: Tigran Petrosian, who was part of the gold-winning 2012 team
and shares the same name as the country’s champion during the 1970s,
drives a swanky Mercedes S-550.

`We don’t have to worry about money. That’s a good thing. Although we
have corporate sponsors for some events, it’s mainly the state that
supports and helps us out,’ said Petrosian as he drank juice in a
Yerevan café.

The 29-year-old grandmaster said being a chess player in Armenia is a
big deal. `I get greeted on the streets when I walk. People chase me
home. And I get a lot of fan mail. I am happy to be a chess player in
this country.’

Yerevan Chess House, located in the heart of Armenia’s capital, bears
testimony to the country’s chess mania. Every day dozens of chess
players, young and old, spend hours here battling it out on their
boards. Magazines, newspapers, books and DVDs about chess are on sale
at the chess house’s newsstand.

`Chess 64′ is a popular TV show hosted by Gagik Hovhannisian that has
been running since 1972. Earlier this year, the government introduced
another programme, `Chess World`, hosted by 22-year-old Aghasi Inants,
to attract youngsters to the sport.

On a recent afternoon at the Chess House, Inants said the aim of the
series is to popularise chess further. `In one show, we had chess
lessons for youngsters, chess news, we also have celebrity interviews,
as well as a section on chess history,’ he said.

`One day a mother called me and said that her daughter wasn’t willing
to do her chess homework until she saw my show … The kid was sure that
it would be easier for her to solve her chess homework after she had
watched my show,’ the host recounted proudly.

But not all Armenians are mad about chess. Inants’ friend David
Khachatryan doesn’t play and isn’t fond of the game either.

`I will be very happy the day when football here becomes as important
as chess,’ Khachatryan told Al Jazeera. `It would be great to have a
football team as good as our chess team.’

Culled from Aljazeera

http://www.channelstv.com/home/2013/03/31/armenia-makes-chess-mandatory-in-schools/

Turquie. Il est temps de débarrasser les libertés fondamentales de l

TURQUIE
Turquie. Il est temps de débarrasser les libertés fondamentales de
leurs entraves

Le paquet de réformes examiné par le Parlement turc risque d’être une
occasion manquée de mettre la législation du pays en conformité avec
les normes internationales en matière de droits humains, et laissera
les citoyens à la merci de diverses violations dont des
emprisonnements abusifs pour avoir simplement exprimé une opinion,
écrit Amnesty International dans un nouveau rapport rendu public
mercredi 27 mars.

« Le droit à la liberté d’expression est battu en brèche en Turquie.
Des centaines de militants, de journalistes, d’écrivains et d’avocats
font l’objet de poursuites abusives. C’est là l’un des problèmes les
plus profondément enracinés sur le terrain des droits humains dans ce
pays », a déclaré John Dalhuisen, directeur du programme Europe et
Asie centrale d’Amnesty International.

Le rapport d’Amnesty International, intitulé Decriminalize dissent :
Time to deliver on the right to freedom of expression, analyse les
dispositions en vigueur et les pratiques découlant des 10 articles de
loi turcs les plus problématiques en matière de liberté d’expression.

L’ensemble de réformes en question, connu sous le nom de « Quatrième
paquet juridique », ne prévoit pas les changements requis afin de
rendre le droit turc conforme aux normes internationales en matière de
droits humains.

« Les inculpations et incarcérations de personnes ayant simplement
exprimé leurs opinions doivent cesser. Il est désormais temps pour le
gouvernement de faire la preuve de son engagement en faveur de la
liberté d’expression », a souligné John Dalhuisen.

« Les séries de mesures précédentes n’ont pas permis de s’attaquer au
c`ur du problème. La Turquie doit désormais modifier la définition de
certaines infractions dans le Code pénal et notamment dans le cadre de
la loi sur la lutte contre le terrorisme. »

« La plupart des poursuites engagées de manière abusive visent des
personnes ayant critiqué des représentants de l’État ou exprimé des
opinions légitimes sur des questions politiques sensibles. Les
autorités turques doivent accepter la critique et respecter le droit à
la liberté d’expression », a résumé Andrew Gardner, spécialiste de la
Turquie à Amnesty International.

Le tristement célèbre article 301 du Code pénal, relatif au «
dénigrement de la nation turque », notamment invoqué afin de
poursuivre et condamner Hrant Dink, un journaliste et défenseur des
droits humains assassiné par la suite, est toujours en vigueur. De
même, l’article 318, qui érige en infraction le fait de « susciter
l’hostilité de la population à l’égard du service militaire »,
continue à être utilisé afin de sanctionner ceux qui soutiennent le
droit à l’objection de conscience. Ils doivent tous deux être abrogés.

Nous avons constaté ces dernières années un recours de plus en plus
arbitraire aux lois antiterroristes dans le but de sévir contre des
activités légitimes (discours politiques, écrits critiques,
participation à des manifestations et association avec des groupes et
organisations politiques reconnus), ce qui va à l’encontre des droits
à la liberté d’expression, d’association et de réunion.

« Il est indispensable de réviser la définition, trop large et vague,
du terrorisme dans la législation turque. C’est la seule manière de
mettre un terme aux poursuites injustifiées pour « appartenance à une
organisation terroriste » et autres infractions de ce type », a
poursuivi Andrew Gardner.

Des discussions pacifiques portant sur les droits des Kurdes et les
politiques dans ce domaine ont donné lieu à des poursuites, en vertu
de dispositions visant à sanctionner la propagande terroriste. Les
analyses effectuées sur ces questions, mais aussi les slogans
accompagnant les manifestations pro-kurdes débouchent fréquemment sur
des poursuites pour « propagande terroriste ».

« Une société où les citoyens peuvent librement exprimer leurs
opinions, où ils peuvent débattre de questions d’actualité sans avoir
à craindre d’être poursuivis, est une société en bonne santé, ce à
quoi la Turquie doit aspirer », a ajouté John Dalhuisen.

« Une réforme juridique en profondeur, qui débarrasserait de ses
entraves la liberté d’expression, d’association et de réunion,
apaisera les tensions en Turquie. C’est une étape essentielle sur la
voie d’une Turquie pacifique et démocratique », a conclu Andrew
Gardner.

Exemples de cas

Temel Demirer a été poursuivi pour avoir affirmé que Hrant Dink avait
été tué parce qu’il était arménien, et pour avoir formulé des
allégations sur le rôle joué par l’État dans l’homicide de ce
journaliste. Temel Demirer a également évoqué les massacres
d’Arméniens commis en Turquie après 1915.

L’objecteur de conscience Halil Savda a été condamné à plusieurs
reprises pour avoir publiquement soutenu le droit à l’objection de
conscience. Il a été accusé d’avoir « suscité l’hostilité de la
population à l’égard du service militaire ».

L’avocat Selçuk Kozaðaçlý a été inculpé en février 2010, après avoir
réclamé justice pour des homicides de détenus, survenus lors d’une
opération remontant à 2000 durant laquelle l’armée a envahi 20 prisons
à travers le pays afin de mettre fin à une grève de la faim prolongée.
En janvier 2013, dans une affaire distincte, Selçuk Kozaðaçlý a été
accusé d’appartenir au Parti-Front révolutionnaire de libération du
peuple (DHKP-C), une organisation de gauche interdite. Il se trouvait
toujours en détention provisoire au mois de février 2013.

En avril 2012, Fazýl Say, pianiste de renommée internationale, a été
poursuivi pour des tweets dans lesquels il se moquait de figures
religieuses et de la conception musulmane du paradis. Au mois de
février 2013, deux audiences avaient déjà eu lieu dans cette affaire ;
une troisième doit se tenir le 15 avril.

Ahmet Þýk et Nedim Þener, journalistes d’investigation, sont accusés
d’avoir soutenu les activités d’Ergenekon, un réseau criminel présumé
qui fomenterait un complot visant à renverser le gouvernement ; ils
sont poursuivis pour avoir « sciemment et de leur propre chef soutenu
une organisation terroriste ». Les faits reprochés à Ahmet Þýk sont en
grande partie en relation avec son livre, intitulé L’armée de l’imam,
selon lequel existe, au sein d’institutions de l’État et de la société
civile, un réseau composé de disciples de Fetullah Gülen, un
intellectuel turc spécialiste de l’Islam, actuellement en exil, qui
soutient le Parti de la justice et du développement (AKP) au pouvoir.
Les éléments retenus contre Nedim Þener se résument à des écrits et à
des enregistrements de conversations téléphoniques avec des accusés de
l’affaire Ergenekon sur des questions sans lien avec une quelconque
infraction.

En janvier 2009, Vedat Kurþun, rédacteur en chef et propriétaire
d’Azadiya Welat, le seul journal en langue kurde du pays, a été
déclaré coupable de plusieurs chefs de « crime commis au nom d’une
organisation terroriste » et de « propagande en faveur d’une
organisation terroriste », puis condamné à un total de 166 ans et six
mois de réclusion. À l’issue d’un procès en appel, il a été acquitté
des chefs de « crime commis au nom d’une organisation terroriste » et
condamné à une peine de 10 ans et six mois de prison pour « propagande
en faveur d’une organisation terroriste ».

Sultani Acýbuca, 62 ans, membre d’un groupe de mères dont le fils est
mort ou a été emprisonné dans le cadre du conflit entre l’armée turque
et le Parti des travailleurs du Kurdistan (PKK), a été déclarée
coupable d’appartenance à une organisation terroriste parce qu’elle
avait appelé à la paix et à la fin du conflit.

dimanche 31 mars 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

« Chirag » Gumri caracole en tête du championnat d’Arménie de footba

FOOTBALL
« Chirag » Gumri caracole en tête du championnat d’Arménie de football

Hier les derniers matches de la 35e journée du championnat d’Arménie
de football a vu le leader « Chirag » Gumri s’imposer 4-3 sur «
Impulse » Dilidjan. Une victoire importante pour le leader « Chirag »
Gumri car dans le même temps « Mika » Achdarak, deuxième du classement
perdait sur son terrain sur le score de 1-2 face à « Kantsassar »
Ghapan. Ce dernier étant troisième du classement. Pour les deux autres
rencontres, « Piunig » Erévan prenait l’avantage sur « Ararat » Erévan
(3-1) tandis que « Oulis » Erévan et « Panants » Erévan faisaient un
score nul (0-0).

Classement général au terme de la 35e journée :

1, « Chirag » Gumri 73 points,
2. « Mika » Achdarak 69 points
3. « Kantsassar » Ghapan 55 points
4. « Piyunik » Erévan 55 points
5. « Impulse » Dilidjan 51 points
6. « Oulis » Erévan 36 points
7. « Panants » Erévan 26 points
8. « Ararat » Erévan 25 points

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 31 mars 2013,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Il y a 26 ans « Clazar » un satellite d’observation astronomique fab

ASTRONOMIE
Il y a 26 ans « Clazar » un satellite d’observation astronomique
fabriqué en Arménie était lancé dans l’espace

Il y a 26 ans, le 30 mars 1987 un satellite artificiel allemand
d’observation du nom de « Clazar » était en orbite autour de la terre.
Ce satellite « Clazar » fut le dernier observatoire astronomique
embarqué à bord d’un satellite, dont la lunette astronomique fut
intégralement fabriquée en Arménie. « Clazar » était conçu et fabriqué
dans un atelier de construction scientifique « Granit » en Arménie par
les professeurs Hrant Tovmassian et Youri Khotchayantz. Deux
scientifiques Arméniens qui avaient travaillé sur le projet de la
station orbitale soviétique « Mir ». L’observatoire spatial « Clazar »
était doté d’une lunette astronomique performante pour photographier
des corps lumineux célestes. Les astronomes Arméniens de
l’observatoire arménien de Byurakan, R.Hovhannissian, R. Yepremian et
H. Tovmassian ont participé aux études. Grce aux photographies de «
Clazar » en des étoiles situées dans les « Nuages de Magellan » furent
étudiées et classées. En 1990 un autre satellite d’observation «
Clazar-2 » fut embarqué sur la station « Mir » mais en raison de
problèmes techniques il ne fut pas efficace. « Clazar » était le
troisième satellite d’observation astronomique fabriqué en Arménie.
Avant « Clazar » le professeur Kourzadian de l’Académie des Sciences
d’Arménie avait conçu « Orion » et « Orion-2 » deux autres lunettes
astronomiques embarquées dans l’espace à bord de station spatiales
soviétiques.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 31 mars 2013,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Christian exodus could fuel Middle East decline

Postmedia Breaking News
March 29, 2013 Friday

Lawrence Solomon: Christian exodus could fuel Middle East decline

FP COMMENT

Christians in their millions are leaving Muslim lands, a heartbreak
for the region’s 12 million remaining Copts, Catholics, Chaldeans and
other Christian communities, many of which predate Muslim communities.
But their exodus also represents a great tragedy for the region’s
Muslims: The Middle East’s Christians, with their free-wheeling,
free-market orientation, have for centuries created prosperity in an
otherwise stagnant Middle East; once the Christians are gone, an
economic desolation is likely to revisit their historic homelands.

Much of the Middle East today is known for its economic backwardness –
only sub-Saharan Africa fares worse than the Arab world, according to
the United Nations Arab Development Report. But it wasn’t always so.
When Europe was a backwater in the centuries following Christ’s birth,
the Christian Middle East was a splendour, its many peoples made the
region among the world’s richest and most vibrant. In the first few
centuries following the Arab invasion of the Christian countries in
the 7th century AD, when Crusaders from then-backward countries such
as England and France tried to take back the Holy Lands, they were
amazed at the opulence they found.

The Crusaders ultimately failed in their Holy Wars and much of the
Middle East would fall into disrepair under rule of the Ottoman Empire
and the restraints of its Sharia Law. Christian Europe advanced,
meanwhile, overtaking the Islamic lands in economic prowess by
promoting individual liberty and capitalism, not least through the
creation of joint stock companies, insurance and other financial
innovations that furthered capital formation and international trade.

Muslim merchants could not compete well. For one thing, the Ottomans
were insular. Seeing themselves as superior and having little to learn
from the West, they sent to the West few embassies that could further
trade. For another, under Islamic law a Muslim couldn’t settle
disputes in the courts of infidels. This limitation handicapped
Muslim-Christian business relations, particularly since under Islamic
law the word of Muslims often trumped that of infidels, even when the
infidels had documents to back up their claims. For a third, the
laudable Islamic desire for equity required that upon death at least
two-thirds of a Muslim estate be split among what are often numerous
family members – children, wives, parents, siblings. This
fragmentation of estates acted to thwart the continuance of family
empires and other large business enterprises, typically leading Muslim
enterprises to operate on a small scale.

The Ottomans were enlightened, however, in adopting a largely
hands-off policy toward their many non-Muslim minorities. Whenever a
Muslim wasn’t a party to a transaction, a Copt or Maronite Christian,
or any minority for that matter, could freely enter into all manner of
business arrangements and operate under the laws of any court the
parties chose. With this wide array of structures on offer, and the
freedom to choose, business deals were struck between non-Muslims in
whatever way was least costly, least bureaucratic, and most secure.
Sometimes deals would be structured along Western lines, sometimes
along lines local to a Middle East community, sometimes even along
Sharia lines – whatever best suited the parties. The effect was soon
seen in the trading houses of the Middle East.

In Beirut by the mid-1800s, entrepreneurial Christian families
controlled virtually all of the trade with Europe. In the Turkish
trading city of Trabzon by the late 1800s, more than 80% of both
exporters and importers were local Christians, generally Greek or
Armenian. By the early 1900s, although Muslims constituted about 80%
of the Ottoman Empire and Christians less than 20%, Muslims played
almost no role in trade with Europe and only a small role in trade
within the Ottoman Empire – two-thirds of the local traders then were
either Greeks or Armenians, just 15% were Muslim.

Over the last century, the once-formidable Christian presence in the
Middle East has ratcheted down down down, to now rest at 4% of the
region’s population. Armenians fled Turkey in the convulsions of the
First World War. The 1950s saw the departure of Egypt’s Greeks – the
country’s most affluent and influential minority – under the military
dictatorship of Abdul Gamal Nasser. The Lebanese Christians then had
their turn to suffer persecution, then the Christians of Iraq. Now the
Arab Spring is leading to more convulsions, and to an inevitable
further departure of Christians from their native lands. Even
Bethlehem, Christ’s very birthplace, has lost most of its Christians,
and some predict it will lose the rest.

The Arab Spring with its resurgence of Islamic fundamentalism is
striking out one of the hopes for prosperity that the UN Arab report
cited – the liberation of women and their enlistment into the
workforce. The resurgence of fossil fuel production in the Western
world is striking out the likelihood that high energy prices in future
will sustain the Middle East’s economies. The loss of the Middle
East’s Christians – the region’s indispensable

Ministry spokesman: Azerbaijan has become more active at border

Ministry spokesman: Azerbaijan has become more active at border

Saturday,
March
30

`Armenia’s Defense Ministry tracks movements of the enemy along the
border zone, ready to take the respective steps for neutralization of
possible provocations and actions,’ Defense Ministry spokesman Artsrun
Hovhannisian told Aysor.am today.

Let us remind you that earlier this week the Azerbaijani side spread
information that the situation at the border is tense and that the
Azerbaijani side suffered casualties in skirmishes at the line of
contact of Armenian and Azerbaijani armed forces. The ministry
spokesman Artsrun Hovhannisian said at that time that the information
does not correspond to reality. Yet the same information has been
spread today.

`The Defense Ministry already denied the rumors spread by Azerbaijani
side to the effect there were skirmishes at the border on March 25-26,
with both sides suffering casualties. Nevertheless, I should note that
later the Azerbaijani side has become much more active and at the
moment Azerbaijani special units and military equipment are being
accumulated at some sections of the border,’ A. Hovhannisian said,
reiterating that the Armenian side is ready to take the respective
steps and neutralize any provocation.

TODAY, 17:05

Aysor.am

Will BHK hand out electoral bribe?

Will BHK hand out electoral bribe?

03:55 PM | TODAY | POLITICS

Prosperous Party of Armenia (BHK) activists with voters’ lists in
their hands are checking, who of RA residents are in Armenia at this
moment , who will be going to the polls and other questions.

They also promise electoral bribe of 10 or 15 thousand AMD to elect in
favor of BHK candidate in the municipal elections.

The correspondent of “A1 +” saw such an image in Ajapnyak community.

When our reporter tried to understand exactly when and how much they
were going to pay for a family of two people, the young people said
that they were then checking how many people they had voting for BHK
and they did not know clearly the amount: “Either 10 or 15 thousand
AMD”.

It was found out that for each street of the district common
responsible 18 – 30 years young people were appointed to implement the
project “each home” with 60 thousand AMD per months.

In this background of this image BHK faction’s secretary Naira
Zohrabyan’s statement in an interview with zham.am is more impressive.

“It is high time that the forces that are led with the fixation to the
keep the power by all means should finally understand that constantly
making elections instead of people they are leading the country to
blind alley (cul-de-sac).

There have already been numerous alarms about registrations of the
people in non-existent addresses and in various retailer-owned stores
of NA MPs as well as hundreds other “new-how”-s.

All this violations with specific details and names of the responsible
people will be submitted to Yerevan residents. Together with the alien
political forces we are not going to let the authorities to rig the
people’s vote for the recurrent time and with imitations to feed
various kinds of euro-officials”,-she said.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2013/03/30/bhk

Karabakh wants air communication with Armenia – Le Monde

Karabakh wants air communication with Armenia – Le Monde

March 30, 2013 | 00:10

PARIS. – The first flight between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia’s
capital city Yerevan may be conducted this spring, the French Le Monde
daily reports. Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) PM Arayik Harutyunyan,
who is in Paris at present, informed this to the daily.

`We finished construction of the [NKR capital city Stepanakert]
airport five or six months ago. There will be flights definitely,
[but] the date is not set. This matter must be looked upon from a
human, not a political, point of view. People have a right to freedom
of movement by land and by air,’ he said.

To note, the Azerbaijani authorities have protested against the
violation of their airspace, if the aforesaid flight is launched.

`If Azerbaijan uses force [against it], there will be a new war. And
they cannot use the planes [of theirs] to prevent the flights, since
we have our own anti-aircraft defense measures,’ Harutyunyan said in
this respect.

The NKR PM also stressed that the OSCE Minsk Group diplomats often use
helicopters to fly to Stepanakert.

`What is the difference between a helicopter and an airplane?’ Arayik
Harutyunyan asked with a smile.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armavia owes Russian companies 54.2 million rubles

Armavia owes Russian companies 54.2 million rubles

Saturday,
March 30

Armenia’s national carrier, Armavia airline owes various Russian
companies and organizations overdue debts of a total of 54.2 million
rubles, according to an official statement of Ross Aviation.

Armavia owes Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport 44.3 million rubles. The
airline’s debts to the airports in the cities of Sochi and Krasnodar
make one million rubles, Lenta.ru said.

In addition, Armavia owes Ross Aviation $288 thousand (more than 8.9
million rubles) for air navigation services in January 2013.
A year ago Armavia’s owner Mikhail Baghdasarov made an announcement
about the possible bankruptcy of the airline. The company’s financial
difficulties are said to be related to high service tariffs of
Zvartnots Airport.

In September 2012, the press reported about Baghdasarov’ intention to
sell Armavia.

TODAY, 13:53

Aysor.am

Raffi Hovannisian in high spirits

Raffi Hovannisian in high spirits (video)

12:33 – 30.03.13

Heritage party leader Raffi Hovannisian, hunger-striking for already
21st day, greeted everyone today in the Liberty Square and was in high
spirits on the last day of his hunger strike.

Early in the morning, his wife, daughter, elder son visited him. Later
his son Armen and his dog visited Hovannisian. The dog was happily
bouncing and seemed to be very happy to see Hovannisian.

People continue visiting him, giving him presents and welcoming his
decision to stop hunger strike.

Speaking at the rally yesterday Hovannisian said he is going to stop
his hunger strike on March 31.

Sardarapat movement initiative group member Zhirayr Sefilyan too
visited Raffi Hovannisian today.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/03/30/raffi-hovhannisyan-day21/