Infrastructure For Implementing CALI To Be Created In Armenia By End

INFRASTRUCTURE FOR IMPLEMENTING CALI TO BE CREATED IN ARMENIA BY END OF 2007

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 27 2007

YEREVAN, July 27. /ARKA/. The infrastructure for implementing
Compulsory Automobile Liability Insurance (CALI) will be created
in Armenia by the end of 2007, said Chairman of the Central Bank of
Armenia (CBA) Tigran Sargsyan.

He said, in particular, it is planned to create database for all car
accidents, and all the insurance companies will join it.

Besides, Sargsyan pointed out, that it is planned to create an
infrastructure for implementing CALI, in particular, registering
insurance companies.

"The register will represent a united database, the participation
of all insurance companies in it will be compulsory. After this,
the CBA will start elaborating terms and schedules for implementing
this type of insurance," Sargsyan said.

According to his estimations, the CBA will be ready to implement CALI
from January 1, 2009.

At the same time, Sargsyan pointed out that in connection with
the market liberalization, after the adoption of the new Law "On
insurance", the competition on the market will allow the consumer
to use the services of the company which will offer more qualitative
and available services.

In particular, market tariffs, publications of companies’ tariff plans
and use of punishment system in case of deviation from accepted norms
– all these will contribute to the formation of the above-mentioned
system.

Own capital of Armenian insurance companies made AMD 4.9bln against
minus AMD 20.6bln in 2006

As of June 30, 2007, the total volume of the insurance companies’
authorized capital made AMD 4.7bln against AMD 5.3bln in 2006. The
amount of insurance bonuses in the first half-year of 2007 made AMD
2.5bln against AMD 3.3bln for the same period in 2006.

The number of licensed insurance companies reduced by 7: on June 30,
2006 there 18 companies and on June 30, 2007 – 11.

Starting from January 1, 2006, the Central Bank of Armenia, within
which the system of united financial control functions, has been
implementing control over the insurance market. ($1 – AMD 337.64).

Criminal Case Towards Alexander Arzumanian Is Ordered, Former Foreig

CRIMINAL CASE TOWARDS ALEXANDER ARZUMANIAN IS ORDERED, FORMER FOREIGN MINISTER’S LAWYER STATES

Noyan Tapan
May 17 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 17, NOYAN TAPAN. "The case instituted towards initiator of
Movement of Civil Disobedience, former RA Foreign Minister Alexander
Arzumanian is ordered, prosecution towards him indeed does not
proceed from the requirements of the current legislation," lawyer
Hovik Arsenian stated at the May 17 press conference.

An accusation was brought to A. Arzumanian by the signs of Article 190,
RA Criminal Code – misappropriation of revenues received by illegal
way. However, in lawyer’s words, as the money has been received from
Russia, this issue relates to financial and economic stability of
Russia. "It is unintelligible why suddenly in Armenia they treated
this issue with such pain and a criminal case was instituted here,"
H. Arsenian said.

Besides, in lawyer’s words, for a person’s being called for criminal
liability by the above mentioned article, he was to know in advance
that the received money was got by obviously criminal way, and knowing
all this, he was to take steps in the direction of legalizing this
money. However, as A. Arzumanian’s lawyer asserted, there is no proof
of the kind in the criminal case.

H. Arsenian said that he has applied to the Appeal Court appealing
against the decision of first instance court to choose arrest as
a preventive punishment to A. Arzumanian. He also said that the
investigation group’s actions towards the opposition figure will
depend on the post-electoral processes.

A. Arzumanian’s wife, Melissa Brown, was also present at the press
conference. In her words, all this has a political implication. She
also said that her husband is in a normal condition and in high
spirits.

American Earth Day Marked In Armenia As Well

AMERICAN EARTH DAY MARKED IN ARMENIA AS WELL

Noyan Tapan
Apr 26 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenia Tree Project Charitable
Foundation marked the Earth Day on April 25, by organizing a tree
planting and solemn event in the village of Karin, the marz of
Aragatsotn.

In the organizers’ words, the main goal of the event was the
striving to emphasize the necessity of relating with care towards
the whole planet and Armenia, its small, but cherished part for
all Armenians. "The nature of Armenia is a great richness which is
subjected today to the risk of loss," Executive Director of the fund
Jeff Masarjian (Boston, U.S.) mentioned in his speech, emphasizing that
correct ecological policy helps business and country development. He
mentioned that the ATP mission is to assist stable future of Armenia.

Representative of the U.S. Embassy to Armenia Thomas Mittnacht,
Deputy Resident Representative UNDP Armenia Alexander Avanessov,
Archbishop Torgom Tonikian, Armforest Director Martun Matevosian made
speeches at the event.

The guests visited the ATP hotbed which allocates rare and endemic
young plants for planting of greenery in regions as well as separate
villages suffered from fellings.

Hrant Dink Vigil at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, NYC – 1/23 (6pm-8pm)

In protest of the Assassination of Hrant Dink

Candle Light Vigil will be held at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza
(East 47th Street and First Avenue, New York City)
Tuesday, January 23rd – from 6pm to 8pm

Buses to Leave From
St. Vartanantz Church, Ridgefield, NJ at 4pm
St. Thomas Church, Tenafly, NJ at 4pm
Hovnanian School, New Milford, NJ at 4pm
Armenian Hye Doun – Palisades Park, NJ at 4pm

For further bus information please Call Pauline at 201-803-4640

Organized by Armenian National Committee of New York & New Jersey
With the participation of Greater NY/NJ Armenian Organizations

JAA Discusses Ethical Issues with International Peers

PRESS RELEASE
Junior Achievement of Armenia
Hanrapetutyan 62, apt.#89
c. Yerevan, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Anahit Manukyan
Tel: /+37410/ 54 22 39
Fax: /+37410/ 54 22 39
E-mail:[email protected]
Web:

JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT OF ARMENIA STUDENTS DISCUSS ETICAL ISSUES WITH THEIR
INTERNATIONAL PEERS
Two of Junior Achievement of Armenia’s outstanding students participated
in a two day workshop on business ethics in Almaty, Kazakhstan from
October 27 to 28. They were joined by students of Georgia, Azerbaijan,
Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. The
students, Naira Mkhitaryan of Etchmiatzin school #4, and Ani Simonyan of
school #1 of Nor Kharberd were selected among their peers based on an
essay they wrote addressing ethical issues in the business world.
They were accompanied by Anahit Manoukyan, program coordinator of Junior
Achievement of Armenia.
The program included workshops, lectures, meetings with notable
businessmen and an activity called `Global Business Village’ which asked
the students to present their national business practices. `The
conference was very interesting and allowed us to present our cultural
similarities and differences as we were asked to prepare skits on our
national business culture’ noted Naira Mkhitaryan. For Ani, it was
meeting people and listening to speakers representing the business world
that was the most educational part of the workshop, ` We got to hear
successful businessmen and educators such as Yelena Ussova and Arman
Ospanov. I learned much in those two days that will help me in my
future career.’
During the 12 week of the Global Business Ethics program, the
participating students learn about the common and individual values,
character development and business ethics. The program connects
students of the participating countries through the Internet and
provides them with the opportunity to discuss ethics related issues
involving international experiences. The exercises also provide an
opportunity for the students to widen their range of interest. The
students are challenged to make decisions on presented cases which call
for ethical judgments.
This is the second year that Junior Achievement of Armenia is partaking
in this educational program organized by the Junior Achievement program
of the CIS countries. Currently, 200 schools are embraced in the
program. `Given the realities of today’s business world, we think it
is imperative to teach students not only how to start and manage their
business but also to be aware and abide by accepted ethical standards.
In this respect, we are very pleased that our students have a chance to
be exposed to the experiences of other countries’ commented Armine K.
Hovannisian, Executive Director of Junior Achievement of Armenia.
Established in 1992, Junior Achievement of Armenia is dedicated to
promoting free-market economics, democratic governance, social
responsibility and ethical business practices in the Republic of Armenia
through economic and civic education. JAA’s work is financed by the
United States Agency for International Development. With courses in all
1,359 high schools in the country, JAA-trained educators now teach
170,000 students each year. Nearly 20% of Armenia’s total population
has taken a JAA course. For more information, please go to

www.jaarmenia.org
www.jaarmenia.org.

A family waits – White Lake residents trapped in Lebanon

A FAMILY WAITS – WHITE LAKE RESIDENTS TRAPPED IN LEBANON
Milford Times, MI
Aug 3, 2006
By Aileen Wingblad
STAFF WRITER
When Jack Chopjian’s wife, Karine, and their two young sons left for
an overseas trip to visit family in May, he said good-bye with the
intent of joining them there at the end of August.
Chopjian was to fly in for a huge celebration with friends and
relatives in honor of their little boy’s baptism, followed by a
few weeks of vacationing with Karine and the kids – Christopher, 4
and Armen, 2. Chopjian, a White Lake resident and owner of Milford
Jewelers in downtown Milford, was to enjoy with the family days of
sunning at the beach, splashing in the sea, enjoying the beauty of
the surrounding mountain range, reveling in the seemingly endless
nightlife and the other wonders the country holds.
ADVERTISEMENT
The beloved country of his and Karine’s childhood, Lebanon.
More specifically, the rural village of Anjar, in a lush and exotic
region of Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley – the adopted homeland of thousands
of Armenians, like Chopjian’s parents and grandparents.
Yet fate was to intervene in a most grim and destructive way.
Instead of relishing an extended holiday, Karine, Christopher and
Armen are trapped in Anjar, just north of the Syrian border. Hunkered
down in the home of Karine’s parents since Israel’s aerial bombardment
began in Lebanon last month, they are challenged by the daily rumble of
bombs – some hitting just a mile away. Telephone, water and electrical
services are severely limited. Gas stations are shut down, and grocery
stores are picked clean.
At this point, Chopjian said, his wife’s best bet is to get to
neighboring Syria and make arrangements for a return flight. However,
though the Syrian border is just a few miles away, major streets
leading there are closed or demolished. And travel along the back
roads is questionable – and risky.
So for now, he said, there is no manageable way back to the United
States for his wife and kids.
“It was supposed to be a nice vacation, but it turned into war,”
said Tamar Aguilar, Chopjian’s sister and business partner.
Frustration rules the day “I am frustrated, very frustrated. There’s
nothing I can do. I can’t just fly there and get them,” Chopjian
said. “I’m freaking out, of course. But what can I do?”
He watches daily news updates on TV, and gets other information from
friends who have satellite feeds from Arabic news services. And he
puts on a brave and friendly face each day, hoping for the best while
biding his time until his loved ones return.
“But he is nervous, very nervous – and so am I,” Aguilar said. “It’s
hard to stay concentrated at work. It is on your mind all the time.
Friends keep calling and asking what’s going on, if there is any
change. But right now, we just don’t know. It is really hard.”
Chopjian tries to contact his wife every day, having more luck with
land lines than cellular service. “The cell phones just aren’t clear.
And the regular phones are clearer, but still it’s hard to get
through. And lots of times, after about two minutes, the phone just
drops right off,” he said.
Those brief but invaluable phone calls include conversations with his
sons, too. Armen, still a toddler, is frightened and confused, Chopjian
said. Christopher has been told the sounds of the bombs are fireworks.
“That way, it doesn’t scare him,” he said. “When he hears the bombs,
he just says, ‘oh, there are the fireworks again.”
Unwanted legacy Though Karine and the others are surrounded by danger,
Chopjian said he has faith in his wife’s ability to hold up until she
can return home. Her parents’ house is a safe haven, for now, and the
community of Anjar is close-knit and supporting, he said. Besides,
he added, Karine – like himself and countless family and friends – has
already proven an ability to endure the horrors of armed conflict. Just
as he did, Karine grew up in the Armenian-populated region of Lebanon
during that country’s civil war of the 1970s.
“She’s strong. She’s made it through this type of thing before,”
he said.
But picturing his young sons in that environment is weighing heavily
on Chopjian’s heart. He shudders to think his little boys could
harbor some of the same kinds of memories of war that have haunted
him since his own childhood. Living through air strikes and gun fire
– and watching as your neighborhood crumbles around you – has left
a profound impression on Chopjian. And the recollections are still
fresh, some 25 years after he emigrated to the United States.
Aguilar shares her brother’s dread that the children will be adversely
affected by this summer’s trip to Lebanon. “I’d hate it if they have
flashbacks – and all the kids that are over there,” she said. “I know
what they are going through.” Aguilar said she’s troubled to this day
by the sound of thunder, which always brings to mind memories of air
strikes that were a part of her pre-teen years.
“People say it’s just thunder. But to me, I’m reminded of all the
bombings,” she said. “I hate it.”
The waiting game Chopjian said despite the unrest that plagues much
of the Middle East, the latest conflict in Lebanon came as quite a
shock to him. After all, he said, Lebanon and its people over the past
several years have been undergoing a renaissance of sorts with rebuilt
infrastructure and plenty of corporations eager to invest there.
He last visited in 2001. The country was occupied by Syrian security
forces at the time, which left him a bit uneasy, yet the area was
breathtakingly beautiful. It was easy to see, he said, why Lebanon
had earned a reputation as a vacation hot-spot recently throughout
much of the world.
After Syrian forces left last year, Chopjian said he believed Lebanon
was well on its way to the democracy desired by the people. “The
country was coming back, they were happy. There was a lot of
construction, lots of money and tourism and business,” Chopjian said.
Now, there is heartbreak.
“Any country that is in war, it is horrible,” he said. “As for the
politics, I don’t know what to say about who is right and who is
wrong. There are no winners in this.”
Aguilar said all she can do now is “pray for peace” and urges others
to do so, too. “It is just such a mess over there. Such a mess,”
she said. “I never imagined anything like this would be happening.”
Chopjian won’t venture a guess as to when Karine and the boys will
be back. “Honestly, I don’t know. Obviously, I want them here as soon
as possible. Perhaps there will be a cease-fire and they can get out,
but it’s crazy. That whole region is suffering.
“But no matter what you say, she’s there and I am here,” he said.
“The situation is changing every minute. And there is nothing I can
do about it.”
Aileen Wingblad is a reporter for the Milford Times. She can
be reached by phone at (248) 685-1507 ext. 22 or by e-mail at
[email protected].

BAKU: Shirak Torosyan: "Turkish Military Contingent Can Be Displaced

SHIRAK TOROSYAN: “TURKISH MILITARY CONTINGENT CAN BE DISPLACED TO AKHALKALAK”
Today, Azerbaijan
June 14 2006
“The withdrawal of the Russian military base from Akhalkalak has a
psychological motive for the Armenians of the region,” Shirak Torosyan,
head of “Javakhk” Public Association.
As APA reports, besides the loss of 4000 work places Armenians feel
unprotected. “The Russian military were the guarantors of security
and stability. The matter is who will replace them. If NATO troops
come Armenians fear it will be a Turkish contingent,” Torosyan said.
When commenting on the supposed repatriation of Akhiska Turks to
Akhalkalak, Georgia, Torosian remarked this step is targeted at
infringement of the right of Armenian inhabitants. Akhiska Turks used
to live in the villages of the Aspindz and Akhaltsikh regions. These
villages were long ago settled by Georgians and it would be pointless
to exile them. There are large uninhabited territories in Georgia
and the repatriates should settle down there.
The “Javakhk” leader said the Baku-Tbilisi-Akhalkalaki-Kars railway
is the result of the Georgian-Turkish relations.
“The project promises work places and consequently the way out of the
deadlock. However we are against the construction of this railway,
since it conflicts with the interests of Armenia,” he underscored.
URL:

Personnel Rearrangements Made In ‘Kilikia” Football Club

PERSONNEL REARRANGEMENTS MADE IN ‘KILIKIA” FOOTBALL CLUB
Yerevan, April 13. ArmInfo. After “Kilikia” had drawn twice with
“Banants-2” in the 1/4 of Armenia’s cup-final, the management of the
capital club dismissed the whole training staff and voided contracts
with several football players. Such radical measures were taken despite
the fact “Kilikia” reached the tournament semi-final, having won the
competitor in a number of post-match 11-meters.
One of the most experienced Armenian trainers Samvel Darbinyan was
training “Kilikia” since the end 2004. under his leadership, the
“Kilikia” reached the final national cup last season, where lost to
“Mika” with a score 0:2. However, the next draw of the tournament
did not give Darbinyan causes for joy. The management considered that
“Kilikia” is not ready for the season as the preparatory process was
insufficiently performed. As a result, the training staff headed by
Darbinyan, remained jobless.
Now “Kilikia” will be trained by Sergey Aghababyan who is also the
Club president. Besides, four football-players – brothers Souren
Atoyan and Mamikon Atoyan, Artak Oganessyan and Ararat Harutiunyan
have to search for new workplaces for them.

Public Hearings On “What Armenian Citizens Gained And Lost In 2005”

PUBLIC HEARINGS ON “WHAT ARMENIAN CITIZENS GAINED AND LOST IN 2005” TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN ON MARCH 16TH
ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 15, 2006
YEREVAN, March 15. /ARKA/. Public hearings on “What Armenian citizens
gained and lost in 2005” will be held in Yerevan on March 16th. The
National Civil Initiative reported that a special report of the
Armenian Ombudsman Larisa Alaverdyan on “The Situation with Human
Rights in Armenia in 2005” will be presented during the discussions.
The political secretary of “Legacy” party Vardan Khachatryan also
plans to have a talk concerning the evaluations “for” and “against”
the referendum on constitutional amendments held on November 27th,
2005.

“Turkish” Bird Flu Doesn’t Threaten Us

“TURKISH” BIRD FLU DOESN’T THREATEN US
Panorama
13:24 10/10/05
The chief epidemiologist of Armenia Ara Asoyan said, “We don’t have to
worry about the spread bird flu in Turkey, as Armenia doesn’t import
Turkish bird meet”.
Let us notice, that according to the recent news there was a mass bird
flu epidemic in one of the bird farms of Balikiser region in Turkey. As
a result there was a death of about 2000 turkeys. /Panorama.am/
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress