Armenian Public Services Regulatory Commission Gives ArmenTel Its Pe

ARMENIAN PUBLIC SERVICES REGULATORY COMMISSION GIVES ARMENTEL ITS PERMISSION TO USE RADIO FREQUENCIES

ARKA News Agency
Aug 17 2007
Armenia

YEREVAN, August 17. /ARKA/. On Friday, Armenian Public Services
Regulatory Commission gave ArmenTel Telecommunication Company its
permission to use radio frequencies.

The commission, grounding on the law on electronic communication and
its own rules, decoded to give 14515-14739 Megahertz, 14935-15159
Megahertz, 22015-22281 Megahertz and 23023-23289 Megahertz to the
company for a term expiring on March 3, 2013.

Hayk Farmazyan, ArmenTel director on policy regulation, told
journalists that the company asked for these frequencies because of
irregularities in some sections of Yerevan and provinces.

Farmazyna said that radio frequencies are needed for establishing
connecting lines during new basic GSM stations installation.

"We are gradually receiving permissions for new radio frequencies,
and I see nothing unusual in that", Farmazyna said.

He said that many basic GSM stations will be installed, and permission
is needed for radio frequencies exploitation.

ArmenTel CJSC enjoys monopoly on stationary telecommunication and is
one of the two cellular telecommunication operators in Armenia.

Russian Vympelcom (Bee Line trademark) holds 100% of ArmenTel’s shares.

ArmenTel had 608.5thnd stationary telecommunication and 452 mobile
communication subscribers by late 2006.

Three Armenian Spotrsmen Gain Bronze Medals In World Student Sportin

THREE ARMENIAN SPOTRSMEN GAIN BRONZE MEDALS IN WORLD STUDENT SPORTING GAMES

Noyan Tapan
Aug 16 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, NOYAN TAPAN. The world student games are going
on in Hong Kong. Among Armenian delegates European champion Armen
Nazarian (66kg, Hrazdan), Anush Hakobian (52kg, Nor Hatchn), and tae
kwon doist Arman Yeremian (85kg, Yerevan) took third place and gained
bronze medals in the competitions of judo.

Millenium Challenge Account- Armenia Selects Timing Of Villages For

MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE ACCOUNT-ARMENIA SELECTS TIMING OF VILLAGES FOR WATER-TO-MARKET TRAINING

ARMENPRESS
Aug 15 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS: Millennium Challenge Account –
Armenia (MCA-Armenia) has selected the timing during which villages
will participate in the training component of the Water-to-Market
Activity of the MCA-Armenia Program.

The Water-to-Market Activity, implemented by ACDI/VOCA, Arcadis
Euroconsult, and their local partner VISTAA Plus, focuses primarily
on providing training to help farmers transition to more profitable,
market-oriented agriculture. The training programs within this activity
will prepare 60,000 farmers over a period of five years.

MCA-Armenia has now identified the communities to be served in the
next four years of the program following the completion of a pilot
phase in September.

To ensure fairness and transparency, random selection of the
communities was determined to be the best method. Mathematica Policy
Research, a US based independent evaluator contracted by the Millennium
Challenge Corporation (MCC), provided technical support to MCA-Armenia
in developing a software program and making the actual selection.

Villages to be provided training in the second, third, fourth and
fifth year of the program were grouped by Marzes and the Water
User Associations in which they are members. 120 village clusters
were selected for year 2008, 77 for years 2009 and 2010, and 80 for
2011. 69 village clusters were included in the pilot phase.

An additional 82 village clusters have been identified as currently
having inadequate water; they will become eligible as water improves
through irrigation rehabilitation efforts. (Village clusters are
usually one, two or three villages grouped together based on geography
and agricultural conditions.) Farmers in some of these villages will
be surveyed as part of the MCA-Armenia Program evaluation.

The Millennium Challenge Compact, signed on March 27, 2006 with Entry
into Force on September 29, 2006, aims to reduce rural poverty through
a sustainable increase in the economic performance of the agricultural
sector. Armenia plans to achieve this goal through a five-year program
of strategic investments in rural roads, irrigation infrastructure
and technical and financial assistance to improve the supply of water
and to support farmers and agribusinesses.

The program will have a direct impact on approximately 750,000 people,
or an estimated 75 percent of the rural population, and is expected
to reduce the rural poverty rate and boost annual incomes.

The Compact includes a USD 67 million project to rehabilitate up
to 943 kilometers of rural roads, more than a third of Armenia’s
proposed "Lifeline Road Network." When completed, the road network
will ensure that every rural community has road access to markets,
services, and the main road network.

Under the Compact, the Government of Armenia will be required to commit
additional resources for maintenance of the road network. The Compact
also includes a USD 146 million project to increase the productivity
of approximately 250,000 farm households (34% of which are headed
by women) through improved water supply, higher yields, higher-value
crops, and a more competitive agricultural sector.

Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a U.S. government corporation
designed to work with some of the poorest countries in the world, is
based on the principle that aid is most effective when it reinforces
good governance, economic freedom, and investments in people that
promote economic growth and elimination of extreme poverty.

Millennium Challenge Account-Armenia (MCA-Armenia), a State Non
Commercial Organization established by the Government of Armenia,
is responsible for overseeing the transparent implementation of the
Compact signed between the Millennium Challenge Corporation and the
Government of Armenia.

System Of Professional-Technological And Industrial Non-Residence Ed

SYSTEM OF PROFESSIONAL-TECHNOLOGICAL AND INDUSTRIAL NON-RESIDENCE EDUCATION TO BE INTRODUCED IN ARMENIA

arminfo
2007-08-13 13:34:00

A system of professional and technological and industrial non-residence
education will be introduced in Armenia starting from the new
2007-2008-education year. The system will provide for remote and
individual forms of teaching, Head of the Armenian Ministry of
Education and Science Department for Secondary Special Education
Samvel Pipoyan said at a press conference, Monday.

He said the system will be introduced in Tavush and Kotayk regions. The
system provides for e-teaching and examining. Due to the system,
school leavers in remote regions from unsecured families will get
an opportunity to receive special education. S. Pipoyan also added
the highly demanded specialties in Armenia are tractor and combine
operators, milkmaids and dairy technologists.

Common Air-Raid Military Exercises Kick Off In Russian Town Of Astra

COMMON AIR-RAID MILITARY EXERCISES KICK OFF IN RUSSIAN TOWN OF ASTRAKHAN

Panorama.am
14:53 13/08/2007

The second round of military exercises Combat Cooperation 2007
will kick off in a shooting-range in Russian town of Astrakhan
today. Armenia will take part in these military exercises of Newly
Independent States (NIS) common air-raid system as an observer.

The exercises will run until August 24.

Colonel Seiran Shahsuvaryan, the press secretary of the Armenian
Ministry of Defense, told Panorama.am that the Armenian delegation
will leave for Astrakhan later on also saying "the date has not been
fixed yet." The delegation will be spearheaded by Armenian Minister
of Defense Michael Harutunyan.

The Military Air and Air-raid Forces of Russia, Belarus and Ghzghzstan
will take part in these military exercises. The first round took place
in a shooting range in Russian Chita with the third and fourth rounds
slated in Ghazakhstan and Uzbekstan late August or early September.

Reports on firing on Azeri ecologists nothing but recurrent canard

PanARMENIAN.Net

Reports on firing on Azeri ecologists is nothing but
recurrent canard of Baku media
10.08.2007 16:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Karabakh fully refutes the reports on firing in the
Aghdam direction, head of the department of propaganda and information
at the NKR Defense Army, colonel lieutenant Senor Asratyan told a
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. `There was no fire. The Azeri side is
circulating misinformation again,’ he said.

Trend news agency reported that the Armenian side fired upon members
of the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources during an ecological
monitoring in the village of Charagly.

France to punish genocide deniers with prison term

France to punish genocide deniers with prison term

Compiled by Justin Hemlepp ,TheSequitur.com Executive Editor
11 Aug 07

According to The Brussels Journal:

`On Thursday 12 October, the lower house of the French Parliament
adopted a bill which would provide a jail sentence and a heavy fine to
anyone denying the genocide committed by Ottoman Turks against the
Armenians in 1915. The bill was passed in the National Assembly by 106
votes to 19. The punishment to be issued for the denial of the Armenian
genocide ` set at a maximum of one year prison term and 45,000 euros
(£30,000) fine ` is equal to the punishment already dealt under French
law for the denial of the holocaust.’

Peace still can rise from ashes in Mideast

Henderson Gleaner, KY
Aug 11 2007

Peace still can rise from ashes in Mideast

By Rev. Joseph Ziliak
Saturday, August 11, 2007

Not being an expert on Iraq or the Middle East, I can only rely on
what I read or hear. And then, after that, how do I interpret
correctly what is happening?

Statistics and numbers are hard to come by and to verify. But it is
maintained that some 2 million Iraqis have fled their homeland to
seek some accommodation abroad. Most seem to have fled to Syria and
Jordan, while others are in Egypt, Lebanon and Turkey.

Some would maintain that this story is a repetition of that which
happened about 90 years ago as World War I was closing. It is
estimated that up to 2 million Armenian, Assyrian, Chaldean and
Syriac Christians were murdered or died of starvation, disease or
exposure to the elements.

Admittedly, some of these stories came from sources who are Christian
and suffering under the current chaos of Iraq.

For an Iraqi to live and work in Jordan, he must have a visa, and
renew that visa, at a cost, every month.

An 18-year-old Iraqi works without a visa at a grocery store in
Amman, Jordan. He earns some $63 a month, which he uses to pay the
rent for a two-room basement apartment. He would prefer to be in
school, studying computer science, but now cares for his mother and
two younger sisters. Their father was murdered.

His father owned an electrical appliance shop in Baghdad. He failed
to return home from work one day in December 2005. Kidnappers later
called, asking for $50,000 in ransom for his release. Calling on
relatives and neighbors for help, his wife was able to gather only
$6,000.

She was told to drop off the money at a cemetery. A few days later
the kidnappers called, demanding more money. They had already shot
her husband three times in the head. They wanted more protection
money to keep her and her children from harm. Thus, the family headed
for Jordan.

Their sparsely furnished but clean apartment in Amman is decorated
with a photo of a smiling family – three children and an attractive
husband and wife in front of a beautiful suburban Baghdad home.

A newly ordained Chaldean priest returned to Mosul from graduate
studies in Rome in 2003.

"This is where I belong," he said.

He came back to Mosul to rejuvenate his people. He noted that the
elderly people entrust their younger ones to God’s protection as they
flee their homeland. The older ones stay where they are rooted and
have built their homes.

"I may be wrong," said the priest, "but I am certain of one thing,
one single fact that is always true: The Holy Spirit will enlighten
people so that they may work for the good of humanity in this world
so full of evil."

After celebrating the eucharistic liturgy at the Chaldean church on
June 3, 2007, the 34-year-old priest left with three subdeacons who
acted as bodyguards because the priest frequently had received death
threats.

The car in which they rode was overtaken. It was sprayed with
bullets, killing all the occupants.

Our country has done little to allow refugees fleeing such a
situation to enter our country. Only 68 were admitted into the United
States between October 2006 and March 2007. Only 466 Iraqis have been
allowed to enter since March 2003.

The future is not good for many of those who’ve fled Iraq. It is not
good for those who’ve remained.

The situation is complicated, difficult and virtually impossible for
us to really know what to do. Of course, the only good solution is
that the various groups negotiate for peace. It is never too late for
that to happen.

May God be with those who can make such a solution a reality.

Father Joseph L. Ziliak is pastor of St. John the Baptist Catholic
Church in Newburgh.

CENN: Joint biological river monitoring

CENN INFO
Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)
T +995 32 75 19 03/04
F +995 32 75 19 05
mailto:[email protected]
Web:

Joint biological river monitoring

In the framework of the project – Strengthening Transboundary Cooperation
and Community Involvement for Sustainable Water Resources Management – is
planed to be conducted joint biological river monitoring. The project is
being implemented within the framework of the South Caucasus Water Program
run by PA Consulting Group and funded by USAID.

Biological river monitoring will be held simultaneously in both countries –
Azerbaijan and Armenia – on July 19-22, 2007. Bilateral Georgian and
Armenian group will conduct the joint biological river monitoring of the
river Debed (in Armenia). At the same date (19-22 July, 2007) will be held
the joint biological river monitoring of the river Alazani in Azerbaijan.

For additional information, please contact:

Nino Shavgulidze

Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)
T +995 32 75 19 03 / 04
F +995 32 75 19 05
mailto:[email protected]

http://www.cenn.org/