Mayor-Elect Gagik Beglaryan’s Inauguration Ceremony Conducted

MAYOR-ELECT GAGIK BEGLARYAN’S INAUGURATION CEREMONY CONDUCTED

Panorama.am
14:02 11/06/2009

Mayor-elect Gagik Beglaryan’s inauguration ceremony took place today
in the Municipality of Yerevan.

President Serzh Sargsyan, PM Tigran Sargsyan, Catholicos of
All Armenians Karekin II, Speaker of the National Assembly Hovik
Abrahamyan, government members, NA deputies, and former mayors were
present at the inauguration ceremony.

Mayor-elect Gagik Beglaryan swore in: "Assuming the post of the Mayor
of Yerevan, I swear: to keep to the Constitution, laws, resolutions
passed by the City Council while carrying out my credentials as Yerevan
Mayor, to be fair and conscientious, to serve to the prosperity of
Yerevan, act for the welfare of Yerevan residents…"

Amb. Yovanovitch: There Are Many Ways For More Armenian-Americans To

AMB. YOVANOVITCH: THERE ARE MANY WAYS FOR MORE ARMENIAN-AMERICANS TO GET INVOLVED WITH ARMENIA
by Vincent Lima

ticle/2009-06-10-amb–yovanovitch-there-are-many-w ays-for-more-armenian-americans-to-get-involved-wi th-armenia&pg=4
Wednesday June 10, 2009

Will meet Armenian-Americans in U.S. cities in June

Yerevan – The United States envoy to Armenia, Ambassador Marie
Yovanovitch is travelling to the United States to meet with members of
the Armenian-American community. (See schedule here.) Armenian Reporter
editor Vincent Lima and Senior Correspondent Tatul Hakobyan met with
the ambassador at her residence in Yerevan on June 10 to discuss her
agenda and some of the issues she will discuss during her visit.

Armenian Reporter: Madam Ambassador, you’re going to be meeting with
members of the Armenian-American community in Greater Boston, New York,
Washington, and Southern California in the coming days. This’ll be
first such tour since Ambassador John Evans did one in 2005 – though
I know you spoke to several influential Armenian-Americans in the
United States before coming to Yerevan, and you meet Armenian-American
leaders when they come here to visit.

What do you hope to accomplish on this trip?

Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch: I think it’s always useful to try to
meet as many people as possible. What you stated in your question,
that’s really true: I have had the opportunity to meet people here
and in Washington.

There are other folks I have not had an opportunity to meet and groups
that I haven’t met with, and I think it’s important to maintain a
dialogue with the various members of the community on Armenian-American
relations, on our assistance programs here, and provide an opportunity
for people to ask questions, raise concerns, and also for me to hear
what people are doing both in the U.S. and here in Armenia.

I’d like to discuss the Armenian-American bilateral relationship,
which is an important one to us, and I think important to the
Armenian-American community.

I’d like to discuss our assistance, not just USAID, but also some of
the other forms of assistance that we provide, whether it’s military
to military, whether it’s the Millennium Challenge program, which is
an important program.

We also provide a lot of assistance through USDA for agricultural
programs. So there are a variety of programs that touch many facets of
Armenian life that are important for people in the U.S. to know about.

In addition, obviously there are a number of areas of concern,
whether it’s the assistance budget, or other policy matters that I’m
sure the Armenian-American community has questions about, and this
is an opportunity for individuals or groups to ask questions of an
administration official.

AR: The United States has invested a great deal of money in Armenia
over the last two decades. And the government is spending $48 million
on aid to Armenia this fiscal year. You may want to talk about what
that’s going to. My specific question is whether you think these
funds are well spent on Armenia.

MY: I do think the money is well spent.

With USAID specifically, the projects they work on are in the areas of
good governance, economic competitiveness – helping Armenia become
more competitive so that it can meet the challenges of the 21st
century – as well as in the social sector. We’re helping in health,
helping the neediest in Armenia. For example, soup kitchens, helping
with employment centers retraining people for jobs in sectors where
they’re actually hiring. Things like that.

Helping with good governance

AR: Now the good-governance programs include programs that may have
helped in the conduct of this last election. You said the money was
well spent. Can you talk about that?

MY: I think democracy and good governance is one of the areas that
require the longest for real change to happen. Although when one
looks at the economy as well, it’s very difficult to transition from
one system to another, as we’ve seen here in Armenia and we’ve seen
in other places as well.

The good-governance money primarily goes to helping civil-society
groups build capacity in order to help them work with the
government. As you know, in the United States we rely very heavily
on the civil-society sector to help provide position papers to
legislators, to help mobilize support for various agenda items, to
change what the agenda is in the United States. The environmental
movement started with a book and various organizations took that on.

We do a lot of different things. We also work with the CEC – the
Central Electoral Commission – to help them improve their procedures,
to help them work on the electoral lists, and so forth.

You asked whether the money is well spent. I think the projects are
worthwhile. Does that mean everything is perfect in Armenia? There’s
probably still a ways to go in that area and in other areas as
well. Just as there is in the United States. I think it’s a continuous
process, and I think that if anything, the most recent election show
that there is a need for continuing assistance.

Why recommend less aid?

AR: President Barack Obama has asked for $18 million less for fiscal
2010. I know Congress may yet restore some or all of these funds. In
the meantime, can you explain this request for a substantial reduction
in aid? Let me just add that we know that the administration has
asked for an increase in foreign aid overall [$36.5 billion], and
more than $322 million for Georgia, so the reason can’t be lack of
funds in an economic crisis.

MY: I think that it’s always hard to make those choices. I think that
President Obama has requested 25 percent more than President George
W. Bush did in his most recent request. President Bush had requested
$24 million in assistance. And over the past number of years, Congress
has always upped that amount from the administration’s request, which,
as Assistant Secretary Philip Gordon noted yesterday, it is likely
to do again.

AR: Do you see any merit in the argument, made by the Armenian
government, that some of the $1 billion promised in aid to Georgia
after the war there last August should go to Armenia to mitigate the
losses sustained by Armenia in that war?

MY: Well, I think that was a package that was meant for
Georgia. Congress reviewed the issue and allocated those moneys for
the losses that Georgia had suffered, most specifically for war damage.

Azerbaijan’s preparation for war

AR: One of the concerns that Armenian-Americans often raise and has
also been raised by Congress is Azerbaijan’s military buildup and the
explicit as well as implicit threats of the use of force. We talked
a bit about the foreign-aid package. Now on the military package,
the administration in its budget request is looking to eliminate
military assistance parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Has the State Department observed any lessening of expenditures, or
planning, or threats of the use of force? Is the Department doing
anything by way of allocation or policy expression to discourage
Azerbaijan’s offensive military buildup?

MY: I think that U.S. government policy is very clear: We think
the only solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is a political
solution. There is no military solution to that conflict. And we have
made that clear to all.

The proposed budget figures, which are not final – Congress has not
voted on this yet – reflect U.S. interests in the region. As you know,
we have important counterterrorism and anti-drug-trafficking programs
with Azerbaijan and those funds go to those particular programs.

None of the funding that we provide, either in Armenia or in
Azerbaijan, is for offensive purposes.

Opportunities for investing in Armenia

AR: Looking at the U.S.-Armenia relationship, there are many elements
to it, and one of them is investment by U.S.-based businesses,
people, entrepreneurs investing in Armenia. Will your trip give
you an opportunity to talk to some of those investors – actual and
potential? Is that one aspect of the U.S.-Armenia relationship that
you would pursue during this trip?

MY: Yes, in fact it is. I think there are a lot of opportunities here
in Armenia. I will have an opportunity to meet with businesspeople,
with investors, and I look forward to briefing them on the situation
in Armenia.

Clearly, just as in any investment environment, there are challenges
here as well. And people need to come into any new situation with
their eyes wide open. And even though Armenia like the rest of the
world is going through a financial crisis, sometimes in crisis are
the biggest opportunities for foreign investors.

AR: In our editorials, we often say to readers, Look, we have a web
of connections between Armenia and the Armenian-American community
and – say, prior to the last presidential elections in Armenia, in
February 2008, we said – Use your network, use your connections to
encourage your friends in Armenia, your friends in the administration
in Armenia as well as civil society to make this election better
than any other. Is there any element in your trip – and obviously,
it’s not the State Department’s role to lobby, so I’m not asking if
you’re trying to cross the line here – is there anything you hope, any
kind of message you hope to give to the Armenian-American community
in terms of mobilizing them, encouraging them to use their networks,
to use their connections in Armenia in one way or another?

MY: That’s a really good question. Because I think just as we’re
taught in the United States that it’s important to get involved,
sometimes it doesn’t necessarily matter what your cause is, but it’s
important to be involved and try to make the world a better place. And
I know that many Armenian-Americans feel very strongly about Armenia
and already are involved, doing various good works here.

Partnering with Uncle Sam

One of the things I’d like to suggest to those who are not yet
involved is that there are many ways to get involved, especially
now when Armenia is going through a period of financial crisis and
there’s a lot of need here.

And we have some suggestions for how you might want to become involved.

One is to participate in one of the State Department humanitarian
assistance programs, where for a relatively small sum, $12,000, an
individual or a group can make a material difference in an orphanage,
a school. These are small infrastructure projects where perhaps a dorm
is reconstructed or a new roof built or something like that. It’s a
relatively small amount of money and it can make a huge difference to,
say, 80 kids.

There are also private-public partnerships with USAID, where people
can get involved on a larger scale, helping the needy. For example
we have soup kitchens here. Others are sort of more entrepreneurial:
For example we have a program in the IT sector where an IT company is
working with a university here to set up programming to develop the
kind of IT courses and expertise that the U.S. company needs when it
hires for its local company here. So that’s another area.

And I know in the Armenian-American community there are all sorts of
people with skills, all sorts of people who have businesses of their
own, some of them that may have local branches here, and maybe there’s
a way they can participate in that kind of a program or another kind
of a program.

Student exchanges

So I think there are many different ways that individuals can partner
with the U.S. government, and there are many other ways as well, such
as sponsoring an exchange student. As an exchange student myself,
I know how transformative that can be in a teenager’s or young
university student’s life.

AR: You were an exchange student in Russia?

MY: I was, yes.

AR: In the Soviet Union?

MY: Yes, many years ago. We don’t have to point out how many. I learned
Russian there, worked in this part of the world. I would never have
been lucky enough to come to Armenia if I didn’t have that experience.

And I think the same thing is true, when I meet people coming back
from the United States here in Yerevan, and they talk about their
experiences in the United States, it opens up a whole new world for
them: a different way of thinking, a different way of doing business,
perhaps, and it not only changes that person and allows that person to
accomplish more in their lives here, but it creates a ripple effect,
in terms of the people that individual touches.

AR: I know there are exchange programs for citizens of Armenia to go to
the U.S. in late high school and for college and graduate school. Are
there exchange programs for U.S. citizens to come to Armenia?

MY: Fulbright. And, of course, we have the Peace Corps. It’s
not exactly an exchange program, but we’ve had many of the same
elements. Just as with exchange students who go to the U.S., I think
that our Peace Corps volunteers here serve as young ambassadors of
what it’s like to be an American, what we think and do. They provide
an inspiration to many people.

Talking Turkey

AR: The State Department has said – and yesterday Assistant
Secretary Gordon reiterated – that Armenian-Turkish relations need
to be normalized "without preconditions and within a reasonable
timeframe." Mr. Gordon also said yesterday normalization should not
be linked with other issues. I take this to mean the Karabakh issue
primarily. I think that’s very important thing that we hadn’t heard
explicitly stated before. He also said, "We have seen no flagging of
commitment" on the part of either Armenia or Turkey.

At the same time, since the middle of April, the prime minister of
Turkey has explicitly and unequivocally set a precondition, the same
precondition that has existed for the last 16 years, and it’s exactly
a link to Karabakh. In other words, what Assistant Secretary Gordon
seems to be saying is that the precondition set by Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan is not consistent with this commitment to getting this
done without preconditions and in the earliest possible timeframe.

So where does that leave us? Do you have any reason to believe that
Turkey will listen to what the United States government is saying,
and proceed with working toward the normalization of relations on
the terms that the State Department is urging and recommending?

MY: I think that as Assistant Secretary Gordon said yesterday, Turkey
is committed to doing it. I think it’s the official position of the
government of Turkey to go forward with normalization and that it
would be independent of any other issue. And that’s true also of
the Armenians.

I think both sides recognize that this is an important step forward:
opening the border, normalizing relations, having free commerce
among individuals and groups would be beneficial to Armenia, would be
beneficial to Turkey, would be beneficial to the region, economically,
politically, and it would also increase the security in the region. And
for all of those reasons, I think both countries recognize that this
is an important step to take, and are moving, as Assistant Secretary
Gordon said yesterday, toward that.

Now is this a simple thing to do? It is not. And so I think you see
that reflected in some of the statements, and I think that Assistant
Secretary Gordon is right: there is no flagging of commitment, we
are moving forward.

Is Turkey playing for time?

AR: There were statements from the American side, the Turkish
side, and the Armenian side that in the near future we’ll see new
developments. When can we expect new developments, or is Turkey just
playing for time?

MY: I would just let those statements stand. I think that Turkey
is committed to an actual opening of the border and not just the
process, not just playing the process as you indicated. And I think,
as Assistant Secretary Gordon said, we are moving forward. And we’ll
have to wait and see.

AR: On the ground, we see that Turkey closed the border in 1993,
and since that time Turkey has been saying that we will not open
the border until the Karabakh issue is resolved to Azerbaijan’s
satisfaction. What is the reason that Turkey would now open the border
if the Armenian-Turkish process is not linked with Karabakh?

MY: Because it is the right thing to do.

AR: So Turks didn’t understand for 16 years that it was the right thing
to do, to open the border, or did something change in our region? What
is the reason the Turks are now changing their minds and are now
ready to open the border and have normal relations with Armenia?

MY: Well, I think that’s a question you’ll have to ask the Turkish
government, but what I would say is that it’s pretty clear it is
the right thing to do, because it will be positive on a political
level, positive on an economic and commercial level, and positive on a
security level. So I think what we’ve been seeing is the Turks and the
Armenians moving forward toward something that’s in the common good.

AR: Do you know whether Secretary Hillary Clinton brought this issue
up in her meeting with her Turkish counterpart?

MY: She addressed that in her public statement on Friday at the press
availability, so I would direct you to those comments.

AR: Actually, our Washington editor was there, at the press
availability on Friday, and we’ve covered that already. I just wondered
if you had anything to add.

Finally, can you say something about your experience so far in Armenia?

MY: It’s been terrific. I’ve been here eight months and it’s been
challenging, it’s been interesting, people have been very warm and
welcoming and I’m looking forward to coming to the United States
and sharing some of that experience with people in the U.S. and I’m
looking forward to my first summer here in Armenia because I hear
they’re terrific.

AR: They are! Thank you

http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?furl=/go/ar

Who Buys "Gold" Number Plates?

WHO BUYS "GOLD" NUMBER PLATES?

A1+
04:29 pm | June 10, 2009

Politics

The Armenian government decided to "legalize" the temptations of our
society towards the so-called "Gold" numbers.

The executive body suggested amendments to the RoA Law on Public
Auctions which defines the order of obtaining "Gold" numbers.

Deputy Chief of the RoA Police was unable to answer MPs’ questions
concerning the auction of number plates and promised to address them
before the second hearing.

According to the draft law, starting price for the participation is
6 000 drams.

"Frequently, people bid higher prices during the auction, some tens
of thousands of drams," Deputy Chief of the RoA Police Hovhannes
Hunanyan announced at the National Assembly today.

Under the draft law, if the owner of the "Gold" number dies, the
number plate is returned to the state. MP Artsvik Minasyan objected
to this stating the number plate should be given to his heir(s).

Stepan Safaryan thinks the law must control the hike of prices during
auctions and specify whether the number belongs to the owner or to
the state.

Number plates were the most discussed issues at the National Assembly
today.

Before the discussion, the NA rapidly considered a few legislative
initiatives without any objections.

What Plans Do Obama And Medvedev Have?

WHAT PLANS DO OBAMA AND MEDVEDEV HAVE?
Karine Ter-Sahakyan

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.06.2009 GMT+04:00

In the issue the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict regulation we have only
one truly serious problem – the status of NKR.

The impending visit of the US President to Moscow next month can be
considered symbolic: both Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev represent
the new generation of pragmatic politicians, not burdened with the
load of the past and having a clear view of peace. This view can at
first sight be unexpected for the majority of politicians of older
generation, such as Brzezinski, Albright, Thatcher, Carter, just like
certain ‘rebooted’ Yalta understandings.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Moreover, it is absolutely obvious that the entire
system of world order and the carcass remain the same as 60 years ago;
only the political vectors are changing. If after Churchill’s "Fulton
speech" Eastern Europe and Near East became priority regions, the
center has now shifted into the Caucasus and Central Asia. Moreover,
taking into account the significance of the Caucasus for the system
of regional and international security, we perceive that X Hour will
soon arrive for the region, whose future will depend precisely on
what Medvedev and Obama will agree on. Naturally no one is going to
surrender their position in this fight, a problem we have already
analyzed in discussing the spheres of influence. But there is
one more player worth remembering – Europe, or to be more exact,
President of France Nicolas Sarkozy, who is eager to show that
without the European Union, any initiative in the region is doomed
to failure. It was exactly what Sarkozy attempted to prove last year,
introducing the plan of Georgian-Ossetian conflict regulation. By the
way, he succeeded. And now he is flying to Moscow to participate in
the negotiations on regulating the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Let us
note that earlier there had appeared information on Sarkozy planning
to visit the countries of the South Caucasus in the middle of July.

If we believe the last statement of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs
on the "possible meeting between Sargsyan and Aliev in July", we can
declare with absolute confidence that in Moscow talks the co-chair
countries, in the person of their presidents, will exert pressure on
the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan. And who will win the fame
of a peacemaker is difficult to predict. But evidently it won’t be
Sarkozy, although the position of the EU is possible to be taken into
account and used by one of the negotiators as counterbalance. In case
resolution is adopted on the level Obama-Medvedev-Sarkozy, it would
be all the same who would voice it.

In the issue the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict regulation we have only
one truly serious problem – the status of NKR. All the other "basic
principles" and Madrid proposals are based precisely on it. And,
naturally, it is exactly the status of independent Karabakh that
cannot satisfy Baku. Largely, Karabakh is necessary to Aliyev for
settling the internal problems of his country, and more than once has
it been discussed. The situation is similar to the Palestine-Israeli
conflict – Arab leaders condemn "the unwillingness of the authorities
of Israel to compromise" in order to distract their own population
from misery and radicalism. Thus, the bellicose statements of the
Azerbaijani President are simply statements. Obama and Medvedev
need a region that would send its energy resources along the routes,
selected for them by Russia and the USA, while the opinion of oil-
and gas-producing countries won’t be asked. At the moment there is
a banal trading going on – who will pay more? Iran proposed buying
all of the natural gas, mined from the second port of the Azerbaijani
deposit Shahdeniz at acceptable prices; China proposed $3 billion to
Turkmenistan for the development and purchase of gas, to say nothing of
"Gazprom" that purchases gas everywhere, even in Algeria and Libya. But
first conflicts need to be solved in order to ensure the security of
the gas pipes: be it Nabucco or anything else. Moreover, on the basis
of the same considerations of security it is also necessary to solve
the Armenian-Turkish problem.

But until the Presidents’ meeting there is still a month, during the
Presidential elections of Iran are to take place. Much depends on who
will become the new head of the only country in the region that is
almost independent from the USA. If Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is elected,
the region will remain as restless as now. However neither can anything
be predicted in case of the victory of Musavi – the highest spiritual
power in Iran belongs to Ayatollah Khamenei and without his blessings
nothing can ever occur.

Sure, there is also the Turkish factor, which cannot be ignored. The
visit of Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to Washington
showed that in distribution of influence spheres in the Caucasus,
Ankara is not determined to remain in the role of an observer. Ankara
is persistently trying to participate in the normalization of the
situation in the Near East, but she hasn’t succeeded so far. However,
she is also trying to play her role in the OSCE Minsk Group, where
she is always met with closed doors. But as soon as the mediators of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict regulation are tired of reconciling
the conflicting sides, they may turn to Turkey for help. And what
outcome it will have for Armenia and the NKR is as clear as a day.

U.DS. Intensifies Navy In Persian Gulf

U.DS. INTENSIFIES NAVY IN PERSIAN GULF

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
05.06.2009 21:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) aircraft carrier left San
Diego and headed due Indian Ocean to join the USN 5th and 7th fleets.

"The terrorists driven out of Afghanistan and Pakistan can move
to northern and eastern regions of Africa," United States Special
Operation Commander, Admiral Eric Olson told Congress. "Now, we should
think how we can get information from N. Africa. Intelligence should
work harder."

Prosecutor Party Petitions To Sentence Alexander Arzumanian And Sure

PROSECUTOR PARTY PETITIONS TO SENTENCE ALEXANDER ARZUMANIAN AND SUREN SIRUNIAN TO 6 AND 5 YEARS’ IMPRISONMENT, RESPECTIVELY

Noyan Tapan
June 5, 2009

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, NOYAN TAPAN. At the June 5 court sitting on the case
of former RA Foreign Minister Alexander Arzumanian and Suren Sirunian
the prosecutor party petitioned to sentence the defendants to 6 and
5 years’ imprisonment, respectively.

The prosecutor party considered proved and grounded by the preliminary
investigation and trial the charge of organizing mass disorders on
2008 March 1-2 brought to A. Arzumanian and S. Sirunian (part 1,
Article 225, RA Criminal Code).

According to the prosecutor party, when pronouncing a judgement the
court should take into consideration "crime’s nature, high degree
of public danger," as well as circumstances characterizing the
personality, circumstances aggravating and mitigating the act. Among
mitigating circumstances it was mentioned that the defendants are
convicted for the first time, and the circumstance that "the crime was
committed by a group" is considered aggravating. The prosecutor also
petitioned to keep under seizure defendants’ property for sustaining
a possible lawsuit on damage inflicted by mass disorders.

The defence party petitioned to give 20 working days for preparing
the defence speeches, but the court gave only 4 days.

The next court sitting will take place on June 12.

Medvedev-Sargsyan Meeting Held In Saint Petersburg

MEDVEDEV-SARGSYAN MEETING HELD IN SAINT PETERSBURG

Panorama.am
15:14 05/06/2009

The President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan had a meeting yesterday
evening with his Russian counterpart, the President of Russian
Federation Dmitry Medvedev in Saint Petersburg, President’s Cabinet
reports. According to the source that was the 16th meeting between
the two Presidents after Serzh Sargsyan assumed his office.

The parties have discussed issues related to the cooperation between
the two strategic partners, as well as a number of questions on the
regional and international affairs.

Russian president Dmitry Medvedev assessed his meetings with Serzh
Sargsyan useful from the perspectives of Armenian-Russian developing
cooperation and their personal relations also.

Serzh Sargsyan thanked his Russian counterpart for the invitation
to attend the International Economic Forum in Saint Petersburg, and
said that the forum acquired quite a new significant notion in the
context of the global financial-economic crisis.

The Armenian President thanked his Russian counterpart for disposing
a $500 million stabilization loan to Armenia.

The resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has been also the
highlight of the Presidents’ meeting. "After our previous meeting we
have been working with our Russian colleagues on the implementation
of the agreements that have been made. The Armenian party supported
by the Minsk Group has been thoroughly working on the resolution
of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, looking for ways that would allow
the people of Nagorno-Karabakh to live safely in their homeland,"
President Sargsyan said.

Later the Presidents of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan had three-sided
supper.

Armenian Defense Ministry Says Azeri Special Service Makes Armenian

ARMENIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY SAYS AZERI SPECIAL SERVICE MAKES ARMENIAN RECRUITS GIVE TESTIMONY

Panorama.am
17:56 04/06/2009

"Using the unstable psychological conditions of 12-day army recruits,
who have not even made their oath, by special tools of pressure,
the mission of Azeri special service is to improve the demoralized
reputation of their armed forces within their own society by spreading
invented and fanciful information about the Armenian Armed Forces and
Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army," Defense Ministry press service says.

It is important to remind that on 31 May, at 14:10pm by local time army
recruits of Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army Ohan Harutyunyan and Gevorg
Tovmasyan voluntary deserted their military unit in the direction of
Azerbaijan. Using the current fact, the Azeri mass media reports that
the Armenian recruits have been telling about the rough situation in
the Armenian armed forces and about various unlawfulness.

"Current techniques of Azeri campaign are the evidence to the
fact that Azerbaijan makes attempts to be compared with the
Nagorno-Karabakh armed forces which excels them both in military and
psychological preparedness. It’s a shame that the Azeri armed forces
authorities direct their society and armed forces to self-deception
and venture. The mass publication of recruits’ testimonies violates
Geneva 13th convention and 27th article of fourth convention," the
official source says.

Angelina Jolie’s Manager Refused To Comment On Actress’ Intention To

ANGELINA JOLIE’S MANAGER REFUSED TO COMMENT ON ACTRESS’ INTENTION TO ADOPT AN ARMENIAN BABY

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
04.06.2009 14:14 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Any information on Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie
‘s intention to adopt an Armenian baby is premature, PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter was told at actress’ Manager, Geyer Kosinski’s office. "No
information on this issue might be publicized as yet."

According to US media, Angelina Jolie is going to adopt an Armenian
baby with or without her husband Brad Pitt. One of the reasons
Angelina wants to adopt from Armenia is because there is a lot less
"red" tape and the adoption process can be a lot easier. She also
believes an Armenian child will fit in perfectly with her African,
Cambodian, and Vietnamese babies.

Several insiders say that Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are not getting
along anymore and have simply grown apart. Some people think Angelina’s
possible adoption from Armenia is causing problems. Angelina’s upcoming
Armenian adoption has not gone down well with Brad; he wants to adopt
from India.

Texas Baptist Team Discovers Ongoing Needs In Armenia

TEXAS BAPTIST TEAM DISCOVERS ONGOING NEEDS IN ARMENIA
By Crystal Donahue

Dallas Baptist Standard
option=com_content&task=view&id=9637&I temid=53
June 3 2009
TX

GYUMRI, Armenia–Three Texas Baptists on a fact-finding mission
to Armenia discovered a country lacking resources and medical
attention–and a people still devastated by a catastrophe that struck
their nation two decades ago.

A 1988 earthquake killed more than 60,000 people, injured 15,000 and
left 500,000 homeless in Armenia. Karen Morrow, Cooperative Baptist
Fellowship’s strategic coordinator for unreached Middle-Eastern people
groups; Linda Fredrikson, children’s minister at Lakeshore Drive
Baptist Church in Weatherford; and Warren Hatley, a Dallas surgeon
who works in occupational medicine, participated in the exploratory
mission to determine how Christians in the United States can respond
to Armenia’s needs.

"It was a vision trip," Morrow said. "The logistical part was the
main thing. We wanted to be able to come back (to the United States)
and recruit doctors, nurses and dentists, but we needed to be able
to tell them what’s there first."

The mission team worked through Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and
in partnership with the Armenian Christian Medical Association,
a grassroots movement founded in 2006 by surgeon Jany Haddad and
Executive Director Kristina Ashrafyan.

"CBF has partnered with the Baptist church Haddad is a member
of in Syria on several projects over the past six years," Morrow
said. "Dr. Haddad invited us to come and see what God was doing
in Armenia … and partner with ACMA to bring in medical personnel
to help increase the level of training of Armenian doctors, nurses
and dentists."

Haddad is joined by more than 25 other medical volunteers who donate
their equipment, money and time to make trips twice a year to offer
free medical services to the Armenian people.

On his most recent trip, Haddad completed 117 outpatient surgeries in
five days. The procedures–including hernia repairs, thyroid surgeries
and gallbladder removals–were performed free of charge.

The Texas Baptist mission team recognized the opportunity to send
in specialized medical professionals to provide advanced training to
Armenian doctors and nurses.

"Part of our strategy is not to do the work ourselves, but to help
facilitate others to do the work," Morrow said.

The Armenian Christian Medical Association and the CBF hope to
enlist medical professionals representing different specialties to
hold seminars and lectures to help equip Armenians with additional
training and knowledge in crisis and trauma management.

"We want people to know that we love Jesus Christ and he calls us to
serve in this manner," Morrow said. ACMA and Haddad "lay the gospel
out for patients … and God is blessing their work. It’s a very
well-coordinated system that seeks to serve the people."

Even though American volunteers can share freely the gospel, they
can expect some obstacles, Hatley said.

"It’s hard to get into Armenia because there are no direct flights,"
he said.

Additionally, not all Armenians speak English.

"It was frustrating not being able to communicate directly with the
people … but surgery transcends the language barrier … and there
were translators to help."

Despite those minor complications, Hatley said "it was a great
opportunity to bless others with the skills you have and use every
day."

The blessings were more than the mission team had expected. In fact,
Fredrikson had never even desired to do mission work abroad, but God
had different plans for the licensed professional counselor.

"Several months ago, I heard the Lord say: "Get a passport. The
world is mine and I am going to show you things. … There is danger,
but there is safety in my hands."

In obedience, Fredrikson traveled with Morrow as a part of a prayer
team for a women’s conference. But shortly after the women’s arrival
to Turkey, Fredrikson felt led to do more.

In the first 48 hours, without any sleep, she wrote four children’s
programs, spoke at a Turkish women’s conference on trauma crisis
training, visited an orphanage, answered questions, led a Bible study
for 50 people and was interviewed on television.

Even though she felt unprepared, God provided and guided, especially
when she and Morrow went to a hospital located at the epicenter of
the earthquake in Armenia, Fredrikson said.

"When we got there, they put a doctor’s coat on me and ushered us into
the surgery room where Dr. Haddad was performing surgeries," she said.

"Most of the patients were women. I noticed many of them were terrified
… and had tears in their eyes."

Fredrikson gestured to them to ask if they needed prayer. Even though
they didn’t understand English, they agreed and closed their eyes.

"I could see peace come over them as the Holy Spirit was moving,"
she said.

The Armenians were thankful for their American visitors. The women were
made honorary members of the Armenian Christian Medical Association,
which is sanctioned by the Armenian government.

God continued to work in unimaginable ways, Fredrikson said. In a
small village church one Sunday, she and Morrow were asked to pray
for the people after the service.

At another community, Fredrikson faced social and ethical
questions. One woman said: "I am pregnant. I already have eight
children and my husband doesn’t want any more. My husband wants to
kill it, is that all right?"

Another asked: "When I pray, God gives me visions. Is that
OK?" Fredrikson said God provided answers for her to share with
the people.

The next day, Fredrikson spoke for a program at the University in
Yerevon. Afterwards, one of the professors invited Fredrikson and
Morrow to her small, earthquake-damaged house for tea. After seeing
the woman’s living conditions, 15 people to one house with open
rooms under unfavorable weather conditions, Fredrikson thought,
"How do these people survive?" It made her realize how blessed she is.

"I experienced God in more of a real way than I ever have before
… and it was the most wonderful experience I’ve ever hard," she said.

Her prayer on the trip was to have spiritual eyes and ears, which
she feels God gave her.

"I believe I was seeing through the eyes of Jesus," Fredrikson said. "I
feel such a connection to the Armenian people. …(God) said to me:
‘Well of course you do. I am in you, and I am in them. You are bonded
together through the Spirit.’"

Volunteers became aware of the sense of impending danger Armenians
feel because they live on a fault line and know another earthquake
could occur any time.

"It’s a time bomb waiting to happen," Morrow said. "It’s not a matter
of if it will happen; it’s a matter of when."

Fredrikson, Morrow and Hatley expressed thanks for the evangelism
opportunities they had, and they look forward to watching God move
in Armenia though medical evangelism in the future.

"We were able to see God at work," Morrow said. "It came from listening
to God’s still small voice, being willing to say ‘yes’ even when we
didn’t know what his plan was and then walking in faith."

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