Armenian-Iranian Cooperation Proceeds From The Whole Region’s Intere

ARMENIAN-IRANIAN COOPERATION PROCEEDS FROM THE WHOLE REGION’S INTERESTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.12.2006 17:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ During the last visit to Iran Armenian Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian met with his Iranian counterpart Manoucher
Mottaki , the RA MFA press office reports. During the meeting
the interlocutors mentioned that after Armenian President Robert
Kocharian’s July visit to Iran all the agreements, particularly the
programs on Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, the second high voltage power
transmission line and alternative highway construction works are
being fulfilled consistently. Also were touched issues of widening
the cooperation in energy sphere. Alongside a number of regional
and bilateral issues were discussed. The two sides expressed
their satisfaction with active development of relations, bilateral
contacts in various levels. Stressing the importance of bilateral
intergovernmental commission work, Vartan Oskanian and Manoucher
Mottaki touched upon the existing trade-economic relations. It was
underlined that the many-sided cooperation between Armenia and
Iran proceeds from the interests not only of the two countries,
but also of whole region. In this context the sides particularly
underlined the work of North-South corridor. The interlocutors also
discussed the issue of deepening the cooperation in international
organizations. Vartan Oskanian informed his Iranian counterpart on
the last developments of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian FM: Upcoming 1.5 Will Be Active From The Point Of View Of T

ARMENIAN FM: UPCOMING 1.5 WILL BE ACTIVE FROM THE POINT OF VIEW OF THE COOPERATION WITH EUROPEAN STRUCTURES

Yerevan, December 19. ArmInfo. The upcoming one and a half year will
be active for Armenia from the point of view of the cooperation with
European structures, said Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan
at the Discussion Club "Urbat," Tuesday.

The minister mentioned that Germany will take chairmanship of the EU
in January. That country has already announced its priorities for the
period of its chairmanship, including the Caucasus, New Neighborhood
policy and the Action Plans. Vardan Oskanyan said. He thinks there
are two directions of the work: multilateral cooperation with the EU
and bilateral cooperation with EU member- states. "Thus, we shall have
to determine in January-February which programs to implement and with
what countries," the minister said. He mentioned that the first year
of the Individual Partnership Action Plan with NATO will be summed
up in the first half of 2007. In addition, we have much to do related
our commitments to the CE. Thus, all the legislative changes must be
made in accordance with the reformed Constitution of Armenia, he said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Aghtamar Church To Re-Open On April 24

AGHTAMAR CHURCH TO RE-OPEN ON APRIL 24

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Dec 19 2006

ISTANBUL, DECEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The restored
church of Aghtamar will open on April 24, 2007. Culture Minister Atilla
Goc said about it in his speech at the Turkish Parliament. According
to Marmara, the Turkish Minister mentioned that re-opening of the
church will be just on the day which the Armenians accept as the day
of memory of the Armenian Genocide.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Water Supply Of Yerevan Arabkir Community To Be Partly Stopped On De

WATER SUPPLY OF YEREVAN ARABKIR COMMUNITY TO BE PARTLY STOPPED ON DECEMBER 20

Noyan Tapan
Dec 18 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN. The water supply will be stopped
from 10:00 to 18:00 on December 20 in the streets of Mamikoniants,
Malkhasiants, Griboyedov, Arghutian, Kovkasian, Sevkaretsi Sako,
Manushian, H.Emin, Tavrizian, A.Khachatrian, Papazian, Vagharshian,
Baghramian, Proshian and the district of Aygedzor, provided by
the reconstruction works. Noyan Tapan was informed about it by the
"Yerevan Jur" CJSC.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian Pianist Denis Matsuyev Performs With Yerevan Youth Orchestra

RUSSIAN PIANIST DENIS MATSUYEV PERFORMS WITH YEREVAN YOUTH ORCHESTRA ON DECEMBER 19

Noyan Tapan
Dec 19 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN. The concert of the Youth Orchestra
of Yerevan, which will be headed by conductor Sergey Smbatian,
will take place on December 19 at the Aram Khachaturian concert
hall. Russian pianist Denis Matsuyev will take part in the concert
which was initiated by the RA Ministry of Culture and Youth Issues,
Vladimir Spivakov’s international charity fund and Yerevan Komitas
State Conservatory. At the press conference taken place on the same
day, D.Matsuyev mentioned that though he visited Armenia for the third
time, but he considers it, as well as other countries of the former
Soviet Union as his home. "My previous two concerts in Armenia were
held with brilliant success, and, I am sure that today’s concert
will also enjoy severe Armenian spectator’s praise," the Russian
pianist mentioned. D.Matsuyev became a soloist of the Moscow State
Philharmony. He performed with the best orchestras of Russia and
abroad. D.Matsuyev organized in 2004 in Irkutsk the "Baikal Stars"
festival, and in 2005 in Moscow the "Crescendo" festival of young
talents.

The pianist is the Deputy Chairman of the "New Names" international
charity fund, diploma holder of the London and Rio de Janeiro Music
Academies. In 2006, D.Matsuyev became a member of the Culture Council
attached to the RF President as well as was given the title of the
honourary artist of Russia.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ASIF-3 Program To Start In Late 2006

ASIF-3 PROGRAM TO START IN LATE 2006

Noyan Tapan
Dec 19 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN. Information about the completion
of the Armenian Social Investment Fund’s (ASIF) second program and
the fund’s third program was discussed at the December 18 sitting
of the ASIF Board of Trustees conducted by the board chairman, the
RA prime minister Andranik Margarian. NT was informed about it from
the RA Government Information and PR Department.

According to the ASIF executive director Ashot Kirakosian, the ASIF-2
Program started in November 2000. In addition to a credit equivalent
to 20 mln USD, resources of the Armenian government, communities and
the grant and co-financing resources of the UK DFID were allocated. The
fund’s executive office received over 1,200 program-related proposals
from Armenian urban and rural communities. These proposals were
examined in accordance with the ASIF procedures.

The executive director said that 333 programs of the total contract
cost of 22.24 mln USD were implemented. Most of them were related to
comprehensive schools (60%), drinking water pipes (19%), specialized
schools (6%), community centers (5%) and medical establishments
(4%). 35 thousand two-seat desks were distributed to 620 schools
with the fund’s financing. During implementation of infrastructure
restoration programs, the fund cooperated actively with a number of
local and international sponsor organizations (Aznavour for Armenia,
IFAD, UNHCR, Hayastan and Tufenkian Foundations) and private
philanthropists, implementing 56 programs of 2.1 mln USD. During
the years under review, the finacial assistance to communities was
great as well, with about 1.43 mln USD being transferred for community
investments by local and international donor organizations and private
philanthropists. Besides, given the lack of knowledge, experience and
stable traditions for governing the newly established self-government
bodies in Armenia, the ASIF-2 Program also included the training
component with the aim of strengthening local self-government bodies
and community organizations. It was noted that the fund’s activities
were appreciated by communities, which prompted the government to
express its interest in the ASIF’s continuing its work and starting
the ASIF-3 Program. For this purpose a credit agreement of 25 mln
USD was signed between the Armenian government and the International
Development Association in September 12, 2006. A. Kirakosian said
that the ASIF-3 Program aims to improve the living standard of
the poor and vulerable groups through restoration of community
infrastructures, improvement of the quality and accessibility of
services, and development of additional capacities at community
and municipal level. The fund’s third program has three components
(community investments, formation of local self-government bodies’
capacities and management of ASIF-3 Program). It will start in the
second half of December 2006 and finish in June 2011. During this
period it is envisaged to implement numerous programs on restoration
of infrastructures of small and medium communities, mostly in poor
rural settlements, remote, isolated, mountainous communities and
communities of the earthquake zone.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Soldier Killed On Azeri Border

ARMENIAN SOLDIER KILLED ON AZERI BORDER
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Dec 19 2006

An Armenian army soldier was shot dead late on Monday in what the
Defense Ministry in Yerevan called an Azerbaijani cease-fire violation
registered in a tense section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

A ministry spokesman said Junior Sergeant Ruben Tamrazian, 39, was
killed by an Azerbaijani sniper near the northern Armenian town of
Ijevan. "An investigation is underway," Colonel Seyran Shahsuvarian
said in a brief statement on Tuesday.

The area close to eastern Georgia has seen regular skirmishes this
year between Armenian and Azerbaijani troops deployed on either side
of the heavily militarized frontier. Each side has reported casualties
and accused the other of breaching the truce.

Another Armenian soldier was fatally shot in the chest in the same
area and under similar circumstances in late September.

There was no immediate reaction to the latest reported incident from
Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijani military said instead that its forces
positioned northeast of Nagorno-Karabakh came under Armenian fire
but suffered no casualties on Monday.

BAKU: Karl De Gucht: Agreement On Settlement Of Nagorno Karabakh Con

KARL DE GUCHT: AGREEMENT ON SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT CAN BE REACHED NEXT YEAR

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Dec 19 2006

"The positions of the parties have come closer to the main principles
in the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict," OSCE chairman Karl
de Gucht told Armenpress, APA reports.

He said that the main principles of solution discussed by the parties
improve the process of talks. Carl de Gucht did not rule out reaching
an agreement on Nagorno Karabakh conflict next year.

"The positions of Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents on the main
principles of the process of settlement came closer in the last
meeting in Minsk. I hope the presidents will speed up the process of
the settlement.

"Carl de Gucht expressed his gratitude to the OSCE Minsk Group
co-chairs for their active participation in the preparation of the
document concerning the fundamentals of the settlement process.

Carl de Gucht finishes his mission as OSCE chairman on January1.

Spanish Foreign minister Miguel Angel Moratinos will succeed him.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Turkish Market Performance In 2006 Seen Worst

TURKISH MARKET PERFORMANCE IN 2006 SEEN WORST

The New Anatolian, Turkey
Dec 19 2006

It was the year when the nation boldly served notice to the world it
was now a player in the global economy, an up-and-coming powerhouse
that stood head and shoulders above other emerging stock markets.

This year, however, it has suffered a stunning reversal of fortune
that has left international investors shaken and doubtful this fallen
star will regain its footing in the short term.

What went wrong?

The Turkish stock market, the world’s first-place finisher in 2005,
is on pace to be its worst performer in 2006, hurt by a surging
current-account deficit, stubborn inflation and a series of upsets
in the country’s delicate effort to become part of the European Union.

In 2005, Istanbul’s benchmark equities index, the IMKB-100, leaped 59%,
buoyed by exuberance about Turkey’s move toward joining the E.U.

But since Jan. 1, the index is up a paltry 1%, squeezing into the
black on Friday after languishing in the red for most of 2006, a year
that saw red-hot gains in emerging markets from India to Russia.

The lira, the nation’s currency, has suffered too, losing 20% of its
value against the euro while retreating 7% against the dollar.

"Turkey’s a longer-term story and you have to treat it as such," said
Vladimir Milev, a financial analyst at the MetzlerPayden European
Emerging Markets Fund "If you’re expecting a nice quiet ride trying
to play it, it’s probably not where you should be — it’s a lot more
volatile than other emerging markets."

Emerging-market casualty That was certainly the case during the global
emerging-markets rout in May and June of this year, when Turkish
assets were hit especially hard. That’s partly because the Turkish
stock market is one of the biggest and most liquid among emerging
markets – so it’s easier to buy and sell.

Turkey’s three main sectors outside of agriculture are banking,
energy and tourism, industries that are all especially vulnerable
to the kinds of interest-rate and currency swings — not to mention
global inflation fears — that swept the markets last spring.

Equity funds with $700 bln in assets were net sellers of $743 mln
in Turkish equities in June, according to Emerging Portfolio Fund
Research, a fund tracking group based in Cambridge, Mass. That’s the
worst month of net selling by these funds in a single month since
the group began tracking this data in 1995.

Indeed, fund managers have been reducing their Turkey exposure all
year, partly because of the natural tendency to allocate elsewhere
when a market has outperformed.

Worldwide, emerging-market equity funds tracked by Emerging Portfolio
Fund Research pared their Turkey weighting to 2.3% from 3.3% at the
beginning of the year. Emerging Europe equity funds have cut their
weighting to 9.4% in the same period from 10.8% at the start of 2006
and cut it to as low as 7.4% in the May-June period.

"We’ve had six straight weeks of new inflows into emerging-market
funds, but emerging-Europe funds have had 12 straight weeks of
outflows," said Brad Durham, a managing director with Emerging
Portfolio Fund Research. "Some of that is reallocation to Asia,
which benefits from lower energy prices. But some is due to worry
about deficits and political uncertainty."

A ballooning deficit In recent days, Turkish statistics officials said
the nation’s foreign-trade deficit rose to $4.4 bln in October, up
33% from a year ago and higher than the $3.7 bln that most economists
expected. For the year so far, the trade gap stands at $44.6 bln.

Based on that data, the October current account deficit is expected to
rise to $2.7 bln from $895 mln in October of 2005, and to be above 9%
of gross national product by the end of 2006, according to economists
at Deutsche Bank in a note.

"We don’t expect a major improvement in 2007 unless a prolonged/sharp
lira depreciation and/or a sharp economic slowdown takes place,"
said economist Serkan Gonencler. "Such a high deficit will continue
to pose serious risks to the current economic equilibrium."

The deficit isn’t the only bugbear. Inflation in consumer prices stood
at 10.6% in September, according to data from the Turkish central bank,
way above its target of 4%.

Policy-makers have responded with a series of interest-rate hikes
this year that have pushed rates sharply higher. Turkey has two key
short-term rates, a borrowing rate that banks can borrow at and a
higher lending rate that allows them to earn a spread.

The overnight borrowing rate is now 17.5%, or 4 percentage points
higher than its December 2005 level. The overnight lending rate
now stands at 22.5%, up from 17.5%. At the height of the summertime
sell-off, the central bank convened an emergency meeting on a Sunday
night and in one fell swoop ordered an increase of 225 basis points.

The battle for Europe But the issue that has likely unsettled investors
the most in 2006 is the trouble that Turkey’s had in the first of its
accession negotiations with the E.U. Talks that were launched with
great fanfare in 2005 have stumbled this year, mostly because of a
dispute over Cyprus, an island divided between a Turkish-controlled
north and Greek-controlled south since 1974.

The European Commission has now suspended eight of the 35 "chapters,"
or specific areas of negotiation with Turkey on membership, because
of Ankara’s failure to recognize Cyprus as an independent nation and
also to open its ports to Cypriot ships.

Brussels had given Turkey a Dec. 6 deadline to meet the conditions
on Cyprus, but talks hosted by Finland, which held the rotating E.U.

presidency until Germany took over this week, broke down without
agreement. E.U. Enlargement Minister Olli Rehn said he now expects
accession talks will be slowed.

Recognition of Cyprus remains a key condition for Turkey. The Turks
are refusing to meet the demand until the E.U. honors a promise to
ease an embargo on northern Cyprus. In fact, Turkish Cypriots voted
to accept a United Nations-based plan to reunify the island back in
2004, while Greek Cypriots rejected it. Cyprus became an E.U. member
shortly after and is threatening to boycott Turkey’s bid.

The commission’s actions are "bad news," said Ahmet Akarli, a Goldman
Sachs analyst. They Cyprus issue is unlikely to be resolved before
Turkish and Cypriot elections in 2007 and early 2008, Akarli said.

Not everyone is so gloomy. Baturalp Candemir, chief economist
at Istanbul-based EFG Istanbul Securities, said he believes the
commission’s decision could even be a positive for Turkey as it
removes a major overhang on the market.

"We suggest that investors take advantage of any weakness as a buying
opportunity," Candemir wrote in a note to clients.

Enlargement fatigue Cyprus isn’t the only stumbling block. A number of
western European governments have demonstrated so-called enlargement
fatigue since the E.U. said Romania and Bulgaria will become members,
effective next month. France and Austria have both made clear their
opposition to Turkey’s entering the E.U. fold. Lawmakers in Paris even
took the provocative step of passing legislation making it illegal
to deny Turkey’s role in the Armenian genocide of 1915.

Turkey strongly denies responsibility and called the October law a
serious blow to diplomatic relations between the two countries.

Countries that support Turkey’s accession bid have long argued that
the predominantly Muslim nation of 70 mln could form an important
bridge between the Islamic Middle East and Western Europe. They
have also argued that Turkey would form an important new market for
European business.

Still, most experts believe Turkey will eventually become an E.U.

member. The country is not expected to be ready with reforms until
2014.

"This [the talks] is a process that’s going to take a decade, so it
makes no sense to get bent out of shape over short-term decisions,"
said MetzlerPayden’s Milev. "Turkey has a number of social, political
and economic issues to resolve, but at the end of the day, it’s
a big country by European standards, and it’s an interesting and
large stock market with opportunities, as long as you don’t take a
short-term view."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

TBILISI: Castel Sakartvelo To Bottle More Beer

CASTEL SAKARTVELO TO BOTTLE MORE BEER
By Christina Tashkevich

The Messenger, Georgia
Dec 19 2006

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has
approved a USD 15 million loan to B.I.H. Eastern Ltd, the holding
company of Groupe Castel’s beer, wine and mineral water operations
in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Russia. The bank says the loan
would be used to strengthen the two breweries Castel Sakartvelo in
Georgia and Kotayk Brewery in Armenia.

Castel Sakartvelo currently holds a 14 percent share in the beer
market in Georgia. It is one of two breweries in the region that
produces premium brand beers.

"EBRD’s loan will help the company strengthen the company’s operations
by upgrading and enlarging its logistics as well as increase its
marketing activities," the bank’s press release stated on Monday.

CEO of B.I.H. Eastern Ltd Jean Paul Lanfranchi told The Messenger
earlier in December that the company plans to invest more in canning
and bottling beer at Castel Sakartvelo.

"We have been refurbishing the equipment, so we would be able to
increase our capacity of bottling," he said.

Armenian Kotyak Brewery who has been facing increased competition in
the last few years with the help of a loan will invest in improving
its products.

EBRD Director for the Caucasus Mike Davey said the investment is a
good example of the support the bank can offer agribusiness companies
in the region with its capacity for longer-term lending.

In early December, the EBRD together with the European Investment
Bank (EIB) announced plans to finance EU-supported projects in the
Southern Caucasus.

The EIB has been authorised by the EU Council to extend loans that
could exceed EUR 3.7 billion through 2013 (or about EUR 500 million
per year) for co-financing investment projects in the region of
Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

EIB President Philippe Maystadt said in December the region covered by
the agreement is critical because it includes the countries that are
close neighbours of the EU, all of which need modern infrastructure
that will boost economic development.

He added the most efficient way to undertake these large infrastructure
projects is in partnership with the EBRD, which already has a good
knowledge of the region.