N. Zohrabyan: Any precondition and ultimatum may kill the initiative

Panorama, Armenia
July 23 2011

N. Zohrabyan: Any precondition and ultimatum may kill the initiative

Heads of delegations for governmental authorities-ANC dialogue Davit
Harutyunyan and Levon Zurabyan have agreed upon the next meeting
scheduled for July 26. Naira Zohrabyan, from Prosperous Armenia Party,
described the first meeting as a constructive.

The official says it’s important to manage founding of
authorities-opposition platform in Armenia, to eliminate obstacles
hampering the state advancement.

`I think both of the parties acknowledge that all the reasonable
questions can be discussed even by the most radical opponents,’ Mrs.
Zohrabyan told Panorama.am.

It’s believed that in the next meeting the sides will appear with
agenda issues, which, according to Mrs. Zohrabyan, the coalition will
put on a discussion on July 25. .

Panorama.am was interested in coalition’s disposition towards the ANC
statements demanding early presidential elections, as well as
parliamentary: `I think our colleagues from ANC acknowledge that
dialogue is constructed through compromises, and not through
preconditions or ultimatum.’

From: Baghdasarian

How Sargsyan’s response reached Medvedev

How Sargsyan’s response reached Medvedev

08:46 pm | July 22, 2011 | Politics

Politologist Ruben Mehrabyan says it doesn’t matter how Serzh
Sargsyan’s response to Dmitry Medvedev’s message on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict reached Moscow.

Azerbaijan had sent its response to Dmitry Medvedev through
Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammedyarov.

“In some cases, this may be symbolic. But I don’t see grounds for that
at this moment,” Mr. Mehrabyan told “A1+” today.

Mehrabyan says it is natural that the content of Serzh Sargsyan’s
response wasn’t released. “Based on the logic of the negotiations, no
release of the final decision shouldn’t come as a surprise.”

The politologist doesn’t rule out that the Armenian authorities
surprised the people in terms of the NK conflict. “I think we
shouldn’t expect that in the short run.”

The politologist is almost certain that the accelerated pace in the
negotiations over the NK conflict will continue, but he doesn’t think
the Co-Chairs will be able to come to terms. “That is why the
status-quo remains unchanged.”

According to Mehrabyan, Russia will still maintain its positions in
the negotiations. “Russia won’t allow a change of the status-quo that
will weaken its positions in the region.” Mehrabyan finds that the
reinforcement of Russia’s positions in our region is not in Armenia’s
interests.

“Keeping the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution in the circle of
Russia’s interests is not in Armenia’s interests. Armenia has its
interests. There are no eternal friends and enemies.”

For this moment, the politologist says there is no alternative to
Euro-integration for Armenia. “That is significant in terms of
civilization.”

Ruben Mehrabyan also doesn’t agree that the Armenian authorities are
able to defend Armenia’s interests during the negotiations. “I
wouldn’t like to touch upon their desires, but there are very big
flaws in terms of their capabilities and that is due to a number of
inter-political factors.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2011/07/22/letter-medvedev

Baze 2011 youth camp kicks off in Byurakan

Baze 2011 youth camp kicks off in Byurakan

July 22, 2011 – 22:19 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran Sargsyan opened
Baze 2011 youth camp in Byurakan.

In his opening speech Mr.Sargsyan welcomed participants of the camp,
noting that Baze is not only unification of youth but also creation of
peculiar atmosphere. He also stressed that many high-ranking officials
of the Armenian government have been members of Baze camp in due
course.

In turn, coordinator of the Armenian Youth Fund board of trustees,
Parliamentarian Karen Avagyan told PanARMENIAN.Net reporter that this
year Baze will be carried out in a new format. According to him, Baze
youth camp will take place from July 22-31, involving 660 young people
from Yerevan and provinces of Armenia in three shifts, 220 people in
each. Every shift will symbolize one of Armenian flag colors.

On August 20-24, a traditional meeting of Baze engaging young people
from Artsakh, Javakhk, Diaspora as well as students from Armenian
Universities will be held in Tsakhkadzor.

Baze will be completed by a big gala-concert on the Liberty Square in Yerevan.

Avagyan stressed that within the frames of Baze 2011 different events
will be arranged dated to the jubilees of such great Armenians like
Garegin Nzhdeh, Mesrop Mashtots Arno Babajanyan and others.

Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan, Education Minister Armen Ashotyan,
Vice Mayor of Yerevan Taron Margaryan as well as Chair of RA
Parliament Standing Committee for Science, Education, Culture, Youth
and Sport, Artak Davtyan, were present at the opening ceremony.

The camp was organized by the Armenian Youth Fund at support of RA
Ministry of Defense.

From: Baghdasarian

Armenia’s economic exodus

Armenia’s economic exodus

16:02 – 23.07.11

By Gayane Lazarian, IWPR

Karo Karapetyan has resisted the idea of leaving Armenia ever since it
became independent in 1991, but now he has decided that his family
cannot go on under the current economic circumstances.

A resident of the village of Yeghegnut, about 50 kilometres from the
capital Yerevan, Karapetyan survived the energy shortages and the
Nagorny Karabakh conflict of the early Nineties, but insists things
are now worse than before.

“We got through the cold, dark years and the war somehow, and we
produced 11 children for this country,” he said. “Now it just isn’t
possible. If we go abroad we’ll at least be able to earn a crust of
bread. We’ll be able to get by even if just one or two family members
are in work, whereas here the whole family works and we don’t benefit
from it.”

Karapetyan, who lives in the village of Yeghegnut, about 50km from
Yerevan, is among many Armenians considering leaving the country. He
has applied for a scheme in Russia that encourages immigration, called
Compatriots.

The Moscow-backed programme was launched five years ago to sponsor
Russian-speakers from other former Soviet republics to come and boost
the population in less well-developed parts of the country. It is a
response to Russia’s demographic downturn, the result of low birth
rates and poor life expectancy.

Over 800 people from Armenia have taken advantage of the scheme so
far, but observers say that is just a fraction of the number of
unofficial emigrants, which they say runs into the tens of thousands.
More than 120,000 people have left the country since the start of
2008, a high figure for a country with only 3.25 million inhabitants.

Armenian intellectuals have sent an open letter to the prime minister
and the speaker of parliament to raise the alarm.

“An extremely serious demographic situation is developing. Emigration
from Armenia is growing into an economic and national catastrophe,”
the letter said. “The main reason is not just destitution, but also
problems caused by the system of government and the ensuing decline in
morale.”.

Aram Manukyan, of the opposition Armenian National Congress, said in
June that 250,000 people had left since the beginning of 2008.

Officials deny the situation is as serious as the letter suggests,
although they acknowledge that over 26,000 people have shown interest
in Russia’s Compatriots program.

Gagik Yeganyan, head of Armenia’s migration service, said more than
47,000 people had left in the first four months of this year, nearly
30,000 last year, 25,000 in 2009 and 23,000 in 2008.

The signatories of the open letter said representatives of the program
were targeting Armenians, creating a real risk that villages would
empty and the labor force would disappear.

“The emissaries go round the villages handing out forms,” Karine
Danielyan, a green activist who heads the Stable Human Development
group. “This kind of operation is unacceptable in an independent
country. These processes may leave our country in a terrible
demographic position.”

Alexander Kandev, deputy head of the Russian migration service’s
mission in Yerevan, said the Compatriots scheme was not designed to
undermine Armenia, merely to offer people the chance of a better life.

“People who want to leave will do so anyway, whether they’re forbidden
to do so or not,” he added.

Gagik Yeganyan, head of Armenia’s migration service, noted that since
only 800 or so people had actually left under the scheme, the Russian
incentives might not be generous enough. He confirmed, however, that
two-thirds of Armenians who emigrate from the country go to Russia,
with ten per cent heading for the European Union and the same to the
United States.

Yeganyan said there was a risk of over-estimating the number of people
leaving for good, since those who returned were not always counted.

“Every emigrant is a traveller, but not every traveller is an
emigrant,” he said. “We need to conduct a special study to identify
the numbers who are leaving for ever.”

Yeganyan said annual net emigration reached 220,000 in the difficult
years after independence, falling to about 60,000 in the second half
of the 90s. There was actually net immigration between 2003 and 2006,
he added.

Emigration levels are highest in rural areas close to Armenia’s
external frontiers. The village of Getik, on the eastern border with
Azerbaijan, is typical.

Village government chief Ashot Dallakyan says population numbers are
falling year by year, and about 30 of the 150 houses there now stand
empty.

“The roads are bad, and businessmen won’t invest since they think that
the frontier zone is risky,” local resident Araik Saribekyan said. “I
would like to say something positive, but…there isn’t anything
positive to say.”

Saribekyan continued, “We spend the whole year feeding up a couple of
calves so as to slaughter them and buy some shoes and some pasta.
Wouldn’t it be better just to leave?”

The authors of the open letter were hoping to prompt a parliamentary
debate on emigration, and encourage the government to design policies
to make people stay in Armenia.

Parliamentary speaker Hovik Abrahamyan responded by promising that
legislators would work with government to find solutions.

“I don’t think it will be possible to resolve this all at once, but we
can improve the situation. The reasons are rooted in society, so we
need to improve social conditions and create jobs,” Abrahamyan said.

Tert.am

From: Baghdasarian

Yerkir: Embassy Backtracks On Its Promise

YERKIR: EMBASSY BACKTRACKS ON ITS PROMISE

Tert.am
23.07.11

The paper claims that when the area near Lake Yerevan was being
allocated to the US embassy in Yerevan to build a new building,
the embassy promised to participate in the cleaning of the sludge
accumulated at the bottom of the lake.

However, it claims the US Embassy in Yerevan has “backtracked on its
promise,” while the Yerevan Municipality, perhaps does not dare to
remind the embassy about its promise.

Further, the paper says it turned to the Yerevan Municipality for
clarifications, and Shushan Sardaryan, the head of the press service,
said she would come up with an answer once she has one. But so far,
the paper adds, she has not responded.

From: Baghdasarian

L’Armenie Importe 3,5 Fois Plus De Fruits Qu’Elle Exporte

L’ARMENIE IMPORTE 3,5 FOIS PLUS DE FRUITS QU’ELLE EXPORTE
Krikor Amirzayan

armenews.com
samedi 23 juillet 2011

Malgre l’importance de son secteur agricole qui represente 10%
de la production de l’economie armenienne, l’Armenie importe des
quantites importantes de fruits et de legumes. Ces importations etant
3,5 fois superieures aux exportations. Selon le Centre national des
statistiques, en 2010 l’Armenie a exporte 9 000 tonnes de fruits pour
une valeur de 6,8 millions de dollars. Dans le meme temps l’Armenie a
importe 32 000 tonnes de fruits pour 43 millions de dollars. Pourtant
l’importation coûte cher. Car si en moyenne l’exportation depuis
l’Armenie d’un kilo de fruit est taxe a près de 280 drams (environ
0,75 dollars), l’importation est quant a elle taxee a près de 500 drams
(1,5 dollar). Parmi les fruits qui arrivent en tete, l’Armenie importe
surtout des oranges, citrons et banane. Ainsi en 2010 les principaux
fournisseurs en fruits et legumes de l’Armenie etaient l’Equateur
(8,3 millions de dollars), la Georgie (7,8 millions), la Grèce (7
millions), l’Iran (3,3 millions). Les deux autre pays qui fournissent
en fruits chacun a l’Armenie pour un million de dollars sont l’Egypte
et l’Afrique du Sud. L’importation depuis la Turquie est comprise
dans les chiffres de la Georgie. Le principal pays où sont exportes
les fruits de l’Armenie est la Russie, avec 6,3 millions de dollars
en 2010, soit plus de 90% des exportations armeniennes. Très loin
derrière la Russie, l’Ukraine est a 195 000 dollars et le Belarus a
105 000. Les fruits d’Armenie sont egalement exportes pour de faibles
quantites vers l’Irak, la Hongrie, la Suisse et la Georgie.

From: Baghdasarian

Arto Tuncboyaciyan Est Desormais Citoyen Armenien

ARTO TUNCBOYACIYAN EST DESORMAIS CITOYEN ARMENIEN
Krikor Amirzayan

armenews.com
samedi 23 juillet 2011

Le 18 juillet, le President du Parlement armenien Hovig Abrahamian
a signe l’acte officiel accordant la nationalite armenienne a Arto
Tuncboyaciyan, le chanteur et musicien du groupe ” Armenian Navy Band
“. A cette occasion H. Abrahamian a felicite l’artiste pour cette
obtention de la citoyennete d’Armenie ainsi que sa contribution a
faire connaître la culture armenienne a l’etranger. Arto Tuncboyaciyan
a de son côte dit que l'” Armenian Navy Band ” donnerait en Armenie
une serie de concerts de bienfaisance.

From: Baghdasarian

Les Belles Voitures De Sainte Etchmiadzine Delient Les Langues

LES BELLES VOITURES DE SAINTE ETCHMIADZINE DELIENT LES LANGUES
Krikor Amirzayan

armenews.com
samedi 23 juillet 2011

Après les propos -juges scandaleux- du Catholicos Karekine II en
Georgie avec le patriarche de l’Eglise georgienne, Etchmiadzine est
une nouvelle fois au c~ur d’un mini-scandale. Lors d’une conference
de presse accordee a l’agence ” Arminfo “, le responsable du service
des protocoles d’Etchmiadzine, le père Vahram Melikian a informe
qu’au cours de l’annee ecoulee, Sainte Etchmiadzine a achete auprès
de Toyota-Yerevan pas moins de 7 voitures pour un total de 309
000 dollars. V. Melikian donna quelques elements des recettes de
Sainte Etchmiadzine. La vente des bougies represente 17 a 17% de ces
recettes, le reste vient des donations, de la vente de livres et les
dons d’organisations. Ces derniers etant principalement destines a
realiser des projets. Concernant les vehicules de marque Toyota, V.

Melikian dit que le bienfaiteur Samvel Garabedian a offert des
plusieurs de ces vehicules tandis qu’une autre Toyota de type HiAce
fut quant a elle offerte par un bienfaiteur venu de Hollande. Ainsi
les sommes pour l’achat de ces vehicules ne furent pas directement
prelevees dans le budget de Sainte Etchmiadzine. ” Il est amusant
de penser que pour une institution telle que Sainte Etchmiadzine qui
dispose de 6 000 collaborateurs ne peut disposer de quelques voitures
qui ne sont en rien differentes de celles que l’on voit aujourd’hui
circuler dans les rues d’Erevan. Je n’autorise desormais plus les
critiques ! ” dit Vahram Melikian. Ce dernier a confie qu’il etait
recemment en Georgie et qu’il a vu le president georgien offrir des
voitures de luxe aux religieux. Enfin, il a minimise sur la qualite
des voitures de Sainte Etchmiadzine qui ont deja plusieurs annees
d’anciennete.

From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: OSCE Secretary General: Basic Principles Of NK Settlement Must

OSCE SECRETARY GENERAL: BASIC PRINCIPLES OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH SETTLEMENT MUST BE AGREED AS TOP PRIORITY

Trend News Agency
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
July 21, 2011 Thursday

by: E. Ostapenko, Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan

July 21–The South Caucasus is important for the security and stability
of the entire OSCE area, and the OSCE is as active in the region as
ever, OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier said in an interview
with Trend.

“The political direction of the Organization is set at the strategic
level by our Chairmanship, which rotates annually, but I think you can
see that the OSCE has remained continuously and consistently engaged,”
he said.

In Armenia and Azerbaijan, we work to support domestic reforms through
our field operations, he added.

“With respect to the situation in Georgia, we are working on the
implementation of water projects on both sides of the Administrative
Boundary Line and exploring ways in which we can increase our
engagement on the ground,” he said.

He said that the OSCE also remain deeply committed to helping to
resolve protracted conflicts in the region through the agreed formats
— the OSCE Minsk Group, which is co-chaired by France, Russia and US,
and the Geneva Discussions, co-chaired by the OSCE, the EU and the UN.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group — Russia, France, and the U.S. —
are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

The Geneva talks were convened after an armed conflict in Georgia in
August 2008, in accordance with the Ceasefire Agreement of August 12.

Military actions were launched in the unrecognized republic of South
Ossetia in August 2008. Georgian troops entered Tskhinvali, the
capital of South Ossetia and later Russian troops occupied the city
and drove the Georgian military back to Georgia. Russia recognized the
independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia on Aug. 26 and established
diplomatic relations with them on Sept. 9, 2008.

He said that his appointment is not a question of a change in policy
so much as a continuous process of adaptation.

“Our work and approaches will continue to evolve in response to
changing security needs,” he said. “All of what we do is based on
mandates agreed by consensus of the 56 participating States. This
means that the countries of the South Caucasus — Armenia, Azerbaijan
and Georgia — are not only “consumers” of our efforts, but also
contributors to the work of the Organization as a whole to promote
security, prosperity and democracy throughout the OSCE space.”

He said that he fully supports efforts to address the protracted
conflicts through the agreed formats, and he is optimistic that
progress can be achieved.

“I met recently with the Minsk Group Co-Chairs and I share their view
that the Basic Principles must be agreed as a top priority so that the
sides can move to the drafting of a comprehensive peace settlement,”
he said.

Through the Geneva Discussions and the Dvani/Ergneti Incident
Prevention and Response Mechanism established within the framework
of the Geneva Discussions, the OSCE continues to seek progress
on resolving security and humanitarian questions. The ongoing
implementation of water projects is encouraging — and we are also
working to address gas supply challenges, he said.

“I had the pleasure of visiting Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
regularly as Director of the OSCE Conflict Prevention Centre,”
he added.

“I look forward to visiting the region in my new capacity as soon
as my schedule allows,” he said. “I intend to use my future visits
to discuss with the leadership of the countries of the region ways
to preserve and possibly further enhance the effective of the OSCE’s
contribution to security and stability in the South Caucasus.”

From: Baghdasarian

ANKARA: Baku Accuses Sarksyan Of Being Warmonger

BAKU ACCUSES SARKSYAN OF BEING WARMONGER

Today’s Zaman
July 22 2011
Turkey

The Armenian government is trying to incite a war with Azerbaijan to
avoid internal political and economic problems, a senior Azerbaijani
diplomat in Baku has said. Araz Azimov, the deputy foreign minister
of Azerbaijan, told a group of Turkish reporters on Friday that the
government in Yerevan is looking to start an armed conflict with
Azerbaijan in order to consolidate its power at home and distract
attention away from increasingly unbearable economic hardship.

“[Armenian President Serzh] Sarksyan is under tremendous pressure from
the opposition in his country. The economy is performing terribly. The
diaspora is not happy with him. If he succeeds in provoking a conflict
with us, he will secure aid from abroad and crush the opposition inside
as people will gather around his cause,” he explained. The incidents
along the cease-fire line should be interpreted with this in mind,
Azimov underlined.

Just last week, a 13-year-old girl was killed by a toy with a
built-in explosive that had allegedly been floated down the river by
an Armenian. The girl’s mother was seriously injured as well. Similar
incidents have happened in the past, Azimov said, all aimed to cause
unrest amongst the people in Azerbaijan hoping that there would be
widespread clashes along the disputed borders.

An Azerbaijani diplomat warned, however, that the repercussions of
a new war would have dire consequences for Armenia. “We are prepared
for any eventualities and have beefed up our army,” he said, adding
that the army is more than capable of preventing any aggression from
Armenia. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said that during Armed
Forces Day celebrations last month, “Azerbaijan fulfilled the task
that I set, which was that Azerbaijan’s military expenditure must
exceed the entire state budget of Armenia,” noting that defense
spending in the oil-rich country had reached $3.3 billion this year.

When asked what the game plan was for Azerbaijan if the crisis turned
into war, the veteran diplomat said, “Then everything will change.”

Stating that he himself had experienced war when the Soviets invaded
Afghanistan, Azimov said Azerbaijani forces would likely conduct
a mop-up operation in the Azerbaijani territories currently under
illegal Armenian occupation.

“International law allows us to send an army to fight anti-terror
operations on our own lands. You can say that the Armenian forces
are behaving like a terrorist group, killing innocent people on
Azerbaijani soil,” he explained. He vowed that Azerbaijani forces
would sweep any elements of terror away from its own territory.

Armenia is buying time Azimov has been closely involved throughout
the 18 years of negotiations with Armenia under the so called Minsk
process created by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE).

“We had ups and downs during that period. But it has become
increasingly clear that Yerevan is not interested in finding a solution
to the Nagorno-Karabakh issue at all. Sarksyan has backtracked from
earlier compromises we had brokered with Armenia especially during
the 2004-2007 period. Last year, he rejected the Madrid II principles
proposed by the Minsk group in Athens in 2009. He refused to discuss
the details of the Lacin corridor linking Azerbaijan to the autonomous
Nakhchivan Republic via Armenian territory. Now in a reversal from
his predecessor’s position, Sarksyan is saying internally displaced
Azerbaijanis can not return to their homes before the final status
of Karabakh is finalized,” Azimov explained.

As for the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, the Azerbaijani diplomat
expressed that there might be different formulas for the internal
self-determination or self-governance within the territorial integrity
of Azerbaijan. “But we need to withdraw forces from this region, allow
displaced people to return to their homes and invest in the economy.

Once we create the right conditions on the ground, we will agree
to whatever decision the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh make in the
referendum” he said.

The frustrated diplomat warned that Azerbaijan’s patience is wearing
thin towards the protracted negotiations that have no end in sight.

“There is nothing concrete on the table,” he lamented. Stressing that
both countries need to move beyond discussing the basic principles
of an action pan on the ground, the Azerbaijani diplomat noted there
should be a “deadline” for the negotiations.

“We have discussed principles for so long but it has not produced
any result. Now we need to talk about the substance,” he said, adding
that the parties should come to an agreement on that within a year.

Lambasting Russia and Iran Deputy Foreign Minister Azimov did not hide
his strong disapproval of Russian and Iranian assistance to Armenia,
two countries that have provided a lifeline to Armenia’s beleaguered
economy. “Russia has control of 70 percent of the Armenian economy. The
border has been protected by Russian soldiers. They provide assistance
to Armenian forces as well,” he said.

As for the Iran, Azimov said the Azerbaijani government does not
approve the cozy relations Iran has established with its arch-enemy,
Armenia. “We have told them this on many occasions. Iran has
over 40 agreements with Armenia and providing gas, oil and other
critical supplies to the country. They do that despite the betrayal of
Armenia over the Iranian initiative back in 1992,” he said. Azimov was
referring to the May 1992 meeting in Tehran during which both Armenian
and Azerbaijani leaders signed a memorandum of understanding for the
cessation of hostilities as proposed by the Iranian leadership at the
time. Right after that, Armenia attacked more Azerbaijani territory,
breaking the agreement.

“If Iran closes its border with Armenia just like Turkey does, Yerevan
may be pushed back to a position to end the occupation of Azerbaijani
territory,” he said. Azimov hinted that the relations with the US
and Israel, the pipeline politics and problems in the Caspian energy
resources may have a role to play in Iran’s involvement with Armenia.

“Iran wants to show that it is a regional power to be reckoned with.

But we are not comfortable with their policy vis-a-vis Armenia,”
he noted.

From: Baghdasarian