ANKARA: Surp Giragos Armenian Church In Diyarbakir Prepares For Litu

SURP GIRAGOS ARMENIAN CHURCH IN DIYARBAKIR PREPARES FOR LITURGY

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Oct 12 2011

Once one of the largest churches in the Middle East, Surp Giragos
Church in Turkey’s southeastern province of Diyarbakýr will be reopened
on Oct. 23 for a religious ceremony.

Renovation started at the end of 2009 after the Diyarbakýr Surp
Giragos Armenian Church Foundation undertook the restoration project
of the church.

Ergun Ayýk, the head of the foundation, said the Surp Giragos Church
is in a complex that encompasses more than 3,200 square meters
and includes a chapel, a meeting room, a school, a dining hall and
rectories.

“Restoration of the church, which makes up about 85 percent of the
complex, is secured. But the restoration of the rest of the complex
depends on more funds,” Ayýk said of the project, which has cost $2.5
million and has been provided mostly by the foundation.

Ayýk also added that while the Diyarbakýr Municipality had
provided about one-third of the total renovation budget, other
state institutions had not contributed even though the foundation had
requested more funding. “The rest of the renovation of the complex can
be completed in three or four months if funding is secured,” he said.

The church was seized by the German army during World War I, and in
1918 it was converted into a textile warehouse of Sumerbank. After
the Armenian population of the area made an application in 1952 asking
for its return, the church was given back to the community. However,
because of the lack of a congregation, it had been neglected since
1980.

“It was in ruins,” Ayýk said. “Its opening will make moral, economic
and social contributions.”

Ayýk said that on the evening of Oct. 22 there will be a service at
the church to consecrate it, and on the next day, which is a Sunday,
there will be a religious service bearing significance for the few
Armenians left in the region and the country. Armenians inside and
outside the country are also expected to attend the ceremony. “First,
this is a very important church from an architectural point of view.

Second, it symbolizes the past. This is one of only seven Armenian
churches in the city,” he said and added that there had been
about 40,000-45,000 Armenians living in Diyarbakýr prior to the
mass deportation of Armenians during the 1915 events. There is one
Armenian family living in the city today. The religious ceremony will
follow another first in the region. Since the Surp Giragos Church in
Diyarbakýr belongs to the church foundation, there are no restrictions
on when a service can be held.

“It is open to everybody who wants to be here,” Ayýk said. The service
will be headed by Archbishop Aram Ateþyan, the deputy patriarch of
the Armenian Patriarchate based in Ýstanbul.

For the service on Oct. 23, they expect Armenians in and outside
the country in addition to clergy from Armenia to attend. A number
of high-ranking officials, including state ministers and the city’s
governor and mayor, have also been invited.

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-259664-surp-giragos-armenian-church-in-diyarbakir-prepares-for-liturgy.html

A. Mkhitaryan: Baku Inciting Armament Race

A. MKHITARYAN: BAKU INCITING ARMAMENT RACE

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 12 2011

“Monitoring is a must, since Azerbaijan wastes enormous resources
to buy armaments. The country spends oil dollars to buy armaments
violating the treaty on controversial arms,” said Republican MP Armen
Mkhitaryan to Panorama.am referring to the Washington’s chief nuclear
arms negotiator Rose Gottemoeller’s visit to the region.

The official has said that during the last 10 years Azerbaijan
increases its military budget and buys more armaments.

“Today Azerbaijan is the only country inciting unrest and armament
race in the region, and delivering rhetorical statements,” said A.

Mkhitaryan.

“After the first world war, when Germany was banned to buy new
armaments, not a single country kept the rules, which has left as
a consequence the second world war. The interested states must pay
attention on growing Azerbaijani armaments,” said the MP.

Diaspora Farmers To Gather Together In Armenia

DIASPORA FARMERS TO GATHER TOGETHER IN ARMENIA

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 12 2011

Agro Forum of Armenian Farmers will be held in Yerevan from October 14
to 16. Farmers residing in Armenia as well as Diaspora farmers will
participate in the forum, Minister of Agriculture Sergo Yeritsyan
told reporters in Yerevan.

The forum will host 1200 farm households. 40 Diaspora farmers as
well as international organizations cooperating with the Ministry
will participate in the forum. The Diaspora farmers will visit
Tsitsernakaberd and Khor Virap, will attend Harvest Festival in Ararat
region. Yerevan’s Northern Avenue will also host Harvest Festival
this year.

According to the Minister, Agricultural Workers Day will be marked
for the first time in Armenia on October 16. World Food Day is also
marked on this day.

Javakhk-Armenian Activist Ends Hunger Strike

JAVAKHK-ARMENIAN ACTIVIST ENDS HUNGER STRIKE

news.am, Armenia
Oct 12 2011

Javakhk-Armenian activist Vahagn Chakhalyan, whom Georgian authorities
had sentenced to 10 years in confinement and who is serving his
sentence at a top-security prison in Georgia, ended his hunger strike
declared on October 5.

Program coordinator of the Union of Armenian organizations on
repatriation Robert Tonoyan said the hunger strike yielded certain
results. In particular, conditions in jail were improved, he was also
allowed to hold meetings.

“Even Georgian media wrote about Chakhalyan’s hunger strike,” Tonoyan
said adding that he is not the only person persecuted in Georgia for
political reasons.

Chakhalyan’s attorney Stepan Voskanyan said he is discriminated in
the Georgian prison, not allowed to have water and buy something, for
instance, sugar. According to him, Chakhalyan met with his relatives
only once in three years, while phone calls are constantly interrupted.

Javakhk (Georgian name: Javakheti) is an Armenian-populated part of
Georgia’s southeastern Samtskhe-Javakheti province.

The Sahatdjians: One Family’s Rise From The Ashes Of The Genocide To

THE SAHATDJIANS: ONE FAMILY’S RISE FROM THE ASHES OF THE GENOCIDE TO REALIZING THE AMERICAN DREAM

asbarez
Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

Sarkis and Iris Sahatdjian at their home

Fresno, and the San Joaquin Valley, became a refuge for survivors
of the Armenian Genocide. There, thousands of refugees driven out of
their homeland had the opportunity to pick up the pieces and, on the
way, created what became the hub of the Armenian-American community
in California and the Western United States.

It was no different for the Sahatdjian family, who escaped the
Genocide, not entirely unscathed, and after a tumultuous journey
wound up in the San Joaquin Valley. They left behind their home,
their thriving business, but more important their homeland to settle
in the area. Their will and determination to survive has translated
into one of the largest raisin packing establishments in Fresno
County-Victor Packing.

Brother and sister Victor and Margaret Sahatdjian run the vast
Victor Packing

Three generations of Sahatdjians have nurtured this business, which
began as a farm in 1928 and have grown it into a facility that provides
organic California raisins to consumers not only in the US, but Europe,
Asia, South America and the Middle East.

Through it all, their struggle as Genocide survivors has shaped a
family rooted in their Armenian heritage and proud of their place as
one of Fresno’s preeminent business owners.

Victor Packing Company is the largest organic raising packing company
in the country

Today, the Sahatdjians are a fixture in Fresno and active members of
the Armenian-American community there.

Veteran community activist and leader Mourad Topalian recently went
to Madera, on behalf of Asbarez and Horizon Armenian Television, to
meet with and talk to two generations of this venerable family. Their
stories inspire and serve as a lesson of sheer resilience for future
generations.

Topalian first met Sarkis and Iris, the patriarch and the matriarch
of the Sahatdjian family in their home in Fresno.

Sarkis, who by his own account will turn 92 in January, recounted
his parents’ experiences as Genocide survivors and as newcomers to
a strange land. Their story has a familiar ring to most survivor
refugees, yet it is unique in their approach to the American dream
of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Victor Sahatdjian conducts a tour of the facilities “The reason
my parents picked Fresno is that I had one aunt who was here after
the 1895 massacres. Her husband decided to leave the country after
that massacre. After the 1915 Genocide, that my father and mother
were both in, she was our sponsor,” explains Sarkis “In 1923, when
we left Constantinople (Istanbul), we had to go to South America,
stay there one year because the Armenian quota was filled.

So, we had to stay in Buenos Aires for one year and then in 1924 we
were able to come and complete the quota of Armenians to Fresno.”

Sarkis says that his immediate family was lucky enough to survive
the wrath of the Ottoman decree of Genocide. “However I had a whole
family of cousins-my mother’s older sister died in the marches. The
only one that survived out of a family of 6 was the oldest son, and
he was about 13 or 14 years old, but the rest of the family perished.”

“It’s like a fairytale for someone who hears it,” he says, “but for
the person who loses it, it’s painful.”

Sarkis was the older of two sons born to Vagharshag (Victor) and
Makrouhi Sahatdjian. His brother, Haig, recently passed away.

“I worked as a teenager in canneries, that’s where our folks got their
start in life in the new country. They were like the migrant workers
of today. They went from one cannery to another. Asparagus season was
Rio Vista, California. [For] peach season they would go to Yuba City
and later on they went to Emeryville, which is a suburb of Oakland,
California during the pear and fruit cocktail season,” recounts Sarkis.

The grapes that become raisins “In the winter months they worked in
packing houses, either figs or raisin plants. That’s how we got a
second start in life. As a teenager, I started that trend. However,
when I became old enough there was talk that World War II might happen,
so I got a job working for the Navy. I worked on a destroyer, named
USS Shaw #373,” Sarkis says.

Four years after coming to America, Victor Sahatjian bought a farm,
which would become the stepping stone for the family’s large and
successful business today.

Far from being a farmer, Victor was the owner of a successful
tannery business headquartered in Garin (Erzerum) with branches
in Constantinople (Istanbul), Trabizon and Ethiopia and offices in
Marseille, France. Owning a farm was a new venture. “He said why don’t
I buy a farm and see what the neighbor does and I’ll do the same and
I’ll have my own independent business,” Sarkis says of his father.

Washing of the raisins is one of the steps to the final product Sarkis
and his brother, Haig, worked on the farm, and to make ends meet,
Sarkis also drove a school bus. In 1949 the Sahatdjian family bought
a 40-acre vineyard in Madera, where the two brothers worked part and
in 1963 the brothers started Victor Packing Company to process and
package their own crop of raisins and purchase and sell raisins from
other farmers in the area.

Today, Victor Packing Company is the world’s largest in the production
and market-share of golden raisins and leading producers of organic
raisins.

The Sahatdjians’ success has not deterred them from being an integral
part of the community. In fact, their experiences as survivors and
refugees have made their inherent ties to the homeland stronger.

“Because I had the misfortune of not being in the homeland to
learn Armenian, and because we were moving around, I didn’t have the
opportunity to go to Armenian school to learn the language and I feel
like I’m a man with the right arm missing,” says Sarkis with lament,
wiping off the tears in his eyes. “I was just fortunate enough that
in our home we spoke Armenian and I understand it enough and speak
it enough, but not reading it you don’t get the benefit. That’s the
time I know I’m missing something.”

Victor Packing Co. employees several local Armenians

“What a different man I would be if I could do both and I told that
to my grandson just a couple of days ago. He just became an attorney
and I told him what a different person you would have been if you
could speak Armenian too,” Sarkis says, whose wife, Iris, agrees with
his sentiments.

“They’re asking him to speak at the Pontifical Visit that’s going
to take place here. When they asked him to be the chairman of that
event is when I told him what a different person you would have been
if you could speak our language,” he adds.

For a country like the US to provide such opportunities to his family
and for the service he and his family have brought to the US, Sarkis
is disappointed that the US government has not properly recognized
the Armenian Genocide and continued to fall victim to Turkish lobbying
efforts, which calls the “croockedest thing in the world.”

Sarkis enthusiastically and emotionally discusses the re-establishment
of Armenia’s independence saying “when I see other countries helping,
my deep feeling is that they let us go to the wolves during World
War I and today you got China trying to help, you got Japan trying
to help and you got this country sending millions trying to help.”

“And, inchbess hayeren gsen, devagan ellah azadutyune. (As they say
in Armenian, may the independence be lasting). We hope it becomes
lasting…”

At the sprawling Victor Packing Company plant, Sarkis’s son Victor,
who is named after his grandfather, meets with Topalian and gives a
tour of the vast operations and observes each steps of the packing
process, which initially begins with the stemming of the raisins,
then the they are washed and then they are laser sorted and they go
through a final human sort, once that’s done the raisins are put in
the boxes and are shipped.

Now the family-and the company-owns 48 vineyards and farm about 1,500
acres. But, Victor explains that they buy most of the raisins from
other growers and process about seven or eight percent from their
own acreage.

“I grew up on this property. Farming is in my blood and it’s sort of
my first love,” says Victor, adding, “It was truly a family effort to
get to where this business is today. It took the effort of each and
every one of us to make this business a success. There’s not any one
of us that could say we could’ve done it alone, because we couldn’t
have. So, it’s truly a team effort-a family team effort.”

“I’m proud of the fact that we’ve done it the right way,” says
Margaret, Victor’s sister and the daughter of Sarkis and Iris. “We
try to be very ethical. We are ethical to our customers. We’re honest.

When we hire people we tell them we do things very correctly here.

And, we’re fair to everybody and we’re respectful to anyone who walks
in the door.”

The siblings take pride in being able to provide jobs to members of
the local Armenian-American community. “We like to hire as many hye
employees as possible,” says Victor.

“I’m proudest of our business culture that we’ve tried to build here.

And, we are also try to give back to the community-the local community
and the Armenian community, as well. We’re grateful and we feel
blessed that we can back to our schools, churches and perpetuate
our culture. Because those are the things that we feel-that I
feel-contributed to our success,” explains Margaret.

“I’ve visited Armenia twice and I’d love to go back anytime. It’s
very exciting. I hope that we can keep it thriving. There’s a lot of
work to be done there. The whole world has changed and we just have
to continue to help and hope things turn out well,” says Margaret.

“I’ve been to Armenia three times. The first time I stepped foot there,
it was really like a homecoming. When the plane landed and I got off,
I didn’t feel I was at a foreign place at all. After visiting there
a couple of times, I know there’s a lot of catching up to do.

It’s sort of unfortunate that the country is landlocked and there’s
a lot of unemployment. I look forward to the day that the country
would prosper and be better,” adds Victor.

Margaret’s involvement in the community is inspired by and rooted in
her mother’s and grandmother’s service to the community.

“Both my grandmothers were in the ARS. I remember there was this ARS
book and in it there’s my grandmother taking the train to Boston to
the convention as a delegate. My mom was also in it. When I was 20,
my grandmother said that there was a wonderful program the ARS had,
it was the Summer Studies Program in Boston. I went there and it was a
wonderful program indeed. So, when I came back, I thought that this is
a great organization, they clearly do great things and I’m gonna join.

I joined probably when I was 25. I’ve been on the board of the
local Sophia chapter and I was a member of the Regional Board,”
says Margaret.

“It was at the ARS Summer Studies that I met the Vehapar-Vehapar
Sarkisian (His Holiness Karekin II, the Catholicos of the Great House
of Cilicia and His Holiness Karekin I, Catholicos of All Armenians)-he
was then the Archbishop in New York. They took our group and he gave
us a lecture and I was so impressed,” adds Margaret.

Victor says the Fresno Armenian community has changed, but adds that
every time it weakens there’s a new wave of Armenians that come in
from somewhere and they revive it.

“I think it’s a vibrant Armenian community. The immigrants from the
Middle East have come and revived it. After that, we had the Armenians
from Armenia that have come” and added their mark to the community.

Margaret says the Armenian school is active and thriving. She explains
that the arrival of a new wave of young professionals in Fresno has
had a very positive impact on the growth of the community.

“The more institutions Armenians have in Fresno, I think the better
the community will hold together. Fresno State has a good Armenian
program and a lot of activity revolves around the speakers they bring.

That was a good boost, good shot in the arm, for the community’s
continuity so to speak,” explains Margaret. “The church continues
to be very active, as a cultural institution. There are a number
of organizations, the ARS, the ARF, the Hamazkayine… All the
institutions we have… The more the better.”

Margaret proudly says that she reads Armenian news “voraciously.”

Among the most recent issues that have caught her attention has been
the efforts in Congress to urge Turkey to return Armenian Churches
to the community there and the AYF Youth Corps program.

She says if Turkey’s “feet can be held to the fire, it would be
wonderful. If their tour guides can stop taking people to these
Armenian Churches and say that these were just here from the indigenous
people, without saying they’re Armenian… If there’s a day they can
say this is an Armenian Church and there was a Christian community
here, which in this century they should be able to that, it would
be wonderful. I’d love to see those churches and other institutions
returned to Armenian control.”

“I’m excited to hear that there’s a possibility that Turkey might be
able to be more cooperative and return those properties to the people
that built them and to the people they belong to. As Margaret said,
it’s a political thing they’re doing to get into the EU. I hope
there’s something that could happen that would keep that promise
alive. We’ve had promises made to our people by Turkey that have been
broken several times that it’s difficult to believe that it might
happen. But, I hope it does,” Victor concurs.

“To influence our youth is the key to keep the generations interested,”
says Margaret in acknowledging the Youth Corps program.

“We have to get our kids there [the homeland] and engaged and what
better way to have them volunteer there. And also to bring something
home, which is that they belong there. To take ownership of Armenia
and Armenianism,” Margaret concludes.

Bruno Duthoit: "Armenian Telecommunication Market Is In Line With Gl

BRUNO DUTHOIT: “ARMENIAN TELECOMMUNICATION MARKET IS IN LINE WITH GLOBAL TRENDS”

Lragir.am News

16:07:21 – 12/10/2011

Yesterday during the ArmTech Congress 2011, Bruno Duthoit, Orange
Armenia CEO, made a presentation on the topic “Global Trends in
Telecommunications”. The report presented not only the ecosystem of
this fast developing sector with its global players and alliances, but
also data on customer behaviour and usage in the world and in Armenia.

Notably, Bruno Duthoit presented the continuing trend of increased
mobile usage: the mobile data bandwidth developed with 77% growth in
the first half of 2011. On a worldwide scale, video streaming services
used 39% of mobile bandwidth, YouTube on its own representing 22% of
this bandwidth. The global average of monthly usage for each customer
downloading/uploading with a 3G modem is 2GB. It is interesting to
note that the usage of Orange customers in Armenia is almost 4 times
higher – 67,000 internet customers use traffic of 7-8GB per month
each with their Internet Now modems.

Explosion of data traffic will impact as well the business mix of
the operators – it is estimated that in only three years, 44% of an
operator’s mobile revenues will be generated from mobile data, vs 22%
in 2006.

Commenting on journalists’ questions on the words of Stephane Richard
regarding the possibility of Orange entering the fibre optic market in
Armenia, Bruno Duthoit clarified that the quote was about international
connectivity and the topic is still in the first phase of discussion
and needs to be evaluated.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/economy23740.html

Another Suicide In NKR Defense Army: 19-Year-Old Servicemen Shoots H

ANOTHER SUICIDE IN NKR DEFENSE ARMY: 19-YEAR-OLD SERVICEMEN SHOOTS HIMSELF

PanARMENIAN.Net
October 12, 2011 – 20:47 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – On October 12, 12: 40 p.m. local time, serviceman
Yurik Nersisyan, born 1992, shot himself with a gun, while on military
duty in the northern part of the line of contact, NKR defence army
press service reported. Investigation is under way.

Republic Of Ireland Given A Helping Hand To Euro 2012 Play-Offs With

REPUBLIC OF IRELAND GIVEN A HELPING HAND TO EURO 2012 PLAY-OFFS WITH THIERRY HENRY FORGOTTEN IF NOT FORGIVEN
By Steve Wilson

Daily Telegraph/UK
2:22PM BST 12 Oct 2011

The Republic of Ireland cried foul when Thierry Henry and a dubious
handball decision robbed them of a place at the 2010 World Cup. An
equally suspect refereeing decision gives them a helping hand to
the Euro 2012 play offs and it’s put down to karma and the luck of
the Irish.

No word yet from Tigran Sargsyan, then. Armen Gevorgyan, too, has
been oddly quiet. The Armenian Prime Minister and his deputy have so
far kept their counsel.

But it can only be a matter of time before one or both of them publicly
raises with Uefa the need for technology in football to guard against
errors from officials. Or lobbies European football’s governing body
and the Irish FA for a replay of last night’s euro 2012 qualifier at
the Aviva Stadium.

If they don’t get around to it then they’re missing a trick. Irish
football values fair play and so would undoubtedly acquiesce.

We know this as fact because back in November 2009 Sargsyan’s
counterpart in the Republic, Brian Cowen, led the chorus of politicians
unequivocally condemning Thierry Henry’s gamesmanship and sleight
of hand.

The Frenchman, for those with short memories, blatantly controlled
the ball, not once but twice, in setting up an extra time winner in
a play-off in Paris that booked the French a place at last year’s
World Cup at Ireland’s expense.

Related Articles Rep of Ireland 2 Armenia 1 11 Oct 2011 Spain
3 Scotland 1 11 Oct 2011 Italy 3 Northern Ireland 0 11 Oct 2011
Bulgaria 0 Wales 1 11 Oct 2011 Nasri rescues edgy France 12 Oct
2011 Ireland look for play-off spot 11 Oct 2011 Fans of karma would
have enjoyed the public implosion of Raymond Domenech’s team at that
tournament. Though believers in the theory of what goes around comes
around had their own satisfaction yesterday evening. As long as they
were Irish, and not Armenian, of course.

With the game goalless, Simon Cox controlled a flighted through
ball with his arm before attempting to lob Armenia goalkeeper Roman
Berezovsky. He failed, largely because Berezovsky was right in front
of him, having run well out of his area. The goalkeeper blocked with
a combination of chest and arm pit but was wrongly judged to have
handled and was promptly sent off, the look of bemusement on his face
the definition for the tragicomic.

Armenia needed victory to pip Ireland to a play-off spot but the
game, with Ireland already on top before the sending off, became
one-sided after and the Irish ran out narrow 2-1 winners. They go in
to tomorrow’s draw, seeded, while Armenia are left to rue the luck
of the Irish.

“It just came over my shoulder and I tried to control it,” Cox said,
doing nothing to dispel the notion of the illegal use of an arm. Cox
admitted the Armenia goalkeeper was blameless before observing:
“Some you get, some you don’t.”

What a difference two years make.

“If that result remains, it reinforces the view that if you cheat,
you will win,” railed Ireland’s incensed justice minister, Dermot
Ahern, of the Paris fixture. “We should put the powers that be in
the cosy world of Fifa on the spot and demand a replay.”

Mary Coughlan, then deputy prime minister, also joined calls in the
Irish parliament for world football’s governing body to “vigorously
pursue the use of video referees”

In the BBC studios last night Gary Lineker and Alex McLeish shared a
joke or two about the whole thing. “The Irish probably deserved that,
didn’t they Alex?” asked Lineker, the answer implicit in the tone.

“Yeah,” chuckled McLeish, who will no doubt laugh off Shay Given being
given his marching orders for a similarly blameless act this weekend.

Henry’s offence was of course more blatant, more premeditated and more
decisive in terms of the result. The Irish were the beneficiaries of
a poor refereeing decision, rather than their own mischief. They did
not cheat. Though Armenia were cheated.

The comparison is not a direct one. But it remains a lesson
in football’s ability to make easy fools of bandwagon jumping
malcontents. It is a lesson most fans, blinded by their partisan
affiliations, will forever be resistant to learning.

Treating the duel imposers of refereeing injustices for and against
may be the mark of a well rounded man. Football fans’ permanent state
of arrested development, however, will forever mitigate against this
fanciful and bastardised notion of Kipling.

Tigran Sargsyan: More Taxes Must Be Collected In 2012

TIGRAN SARGSYAN: MORE TAXES MUST BE COLLECTED IN 2012

ARMENPRESS
15:05, 12 October, 2011

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan received today members of the Armenian
Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen. Governmental press service
reported that addressing the present Tigran Sargsyan informed that
the government will present a big package to the National Assembly
the goal of which is to extend the tax base of the country, which on
its turn will promote gathering of 101 billion AMD more tax in 2011
than during the running year.

“For solving this issue we have targeted the spheres where we must
reveal the existing income. Part of them must enter the state budget
for the implementation of issue we are facing. On one hand we must
reduce the budget deficit, on the other we must not reduce the
expenses. The only way to do it is gathering more taxes,” the prime
minister said.

Tigran Sargsyan said the number one issue Armenia is facing is poverty
promoted by the world financial-economic crisis. The prime minister
said one of the important tools of overcoming it is increase of the
amount of social allowances and pensions. “In 2012 we are planning
to implement a number of events for promoting the development of
business. A part of the state budget will be directed toward it. The
Ministry of Economy has worked out a strategy of industrial policy
according to which1.5 billion AMD must annually be invested for the
assistance of local enterprises which on its turn will promote the
export of the products, establishment of international ties. That
is to say on one hand we are trying to gather income, on the other,
spend them effectively for the solution of social issues, reduction
of poverty, development of business environment”, the prime minister
said, adding that he expects the assistance of the Union.

Afterward the issues the members of the Union were concerned about
were raised, proposals were forwarded.

Trapattoni Confesses Armenia Played Better Football, Minasyan Is Pro

TRAPATTONI CONFESSES ARMENIA PLAYED BETTER FOOTBALL, MINASYAN IS PROUD OF HIS TEAM

armradio.am
12.10.2011 12:28

“I think Armenia is one of the best teams in the group and for us
it~Rs a very great result,” Irish coach Giovanni Trapattoni said at
a post-match press conference last night. “In the first half Armenia
played very well and it was very difficult to control them,~T he said.

Trapattoni was not prepared to accept that Ireland had once more
reaped the benefits of a lucky break or three, confessing, however,
that ~SArmenia played better football than us.~T

“I repeat, Armenia played well but I don~Rt remember a very difficult
situation for Shay Given. I don~Rt remember him making too many saves.

Yes, we were lucky in Russia, I have admitted that, but even though
Armenia played better football than us, I don~Rt remember us being
in trouble.

“But I repeat, even with 10 men Armenia played well. I knew they
would. They played well against Macedonia, Russia and Slovakia. I
saw these games.”

“Congratulations to the Irish team. I wish you luck in the play-off.

You are a very good team,~T Armenian coach Vardan Minasyan told a
short briefing.

“But I am very proud of my team and we have done a very good job. We
can be very proud.”