33 Libraries Were Closed Down in the Past 16 Years

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33 LIBRARIES WERE CLOSED DOWN IN THE PAST 16 YEARS

05:07 pm 24 March, 2006

`Our society yearns to read good books and normal library
conditions. It needs libraries which can satisfy today’s needs. There
is still much to do in the sphere of libraries’, director of the
National Library and head of the Armenian Libraries’ Association David
Sargsyan said during the press conference.

The Association is going to organize a library week in order to invite
the attention of the society to libraries and books. On April 3-10 in
all the regions of Armenia, in Nagorno Karabakh, as well as in the
Armenian libraries of Javakhq, Ispahan and Hamshen events will take
place in the libraries. These events will include book reading,
exhibitions, and competitions of compositions with the themes `My
Library’ and `What is Reading?’

This is the fifth time the Association has ever organized a library
week. According to David Sargsyan, the idea was born during the
discussion of the library associations of USA and South Caucasian
countries.

Head of the library after Avetiq Isahakyan Hasmik Karapetyan states
that the libraries have serious problems. Every year many libraries
are closed, and those which exist are not in good conditions. During
the last 16 years 33 libraries have been closed down in Armenia. At
present, there are about 1000 libraries in the Republic.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Artashes Minasyan – Champion of Armenia

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ARTASHES MINASYAN – CHAMPION OF ARMENIA

08:00 pm 24 March, 2006

Artashes Minasyan became the chess champion of Armenia. He gained the
right to participate in the chess world Olympiad in the Armenian chess
team. He also won 1.5 million AMD.

The second place was taken by Arman Pashikyan who won 900 thousand
AMD. He also reached the title of Grand Master. The third place was
taken by Tigran Qotanjyan.

As for the women’s championship, Siranoush Andreasyan became
champion. She too will participate in the world Olympiad. Her victory
`cost’ 300 thousand AMD.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Paul Krekorian moves ahead in funding

Glendale News Press, CA
March 24 2006

Krekorian moves ahead in funding

Burbank School Board President Paul Krekorian announced his campaign
for California State Assembly has successfully raised $408,900.

The number puts Krekorian ahead of his challenger, Glendale City
Council Member Frank Quintero, in fundraising for the 43rd Assembly
District race, which includes Burbank, Glendale, North Hollywood and
Los Feliz. The seat will be left open after Assemblyman Dario Frommer
terms out of the position.

Krekorian has $321,631 available from the Committee to Elect Paul
Krekorian, and an additional $82,500 from the group Education Leaders
Support Burbank School Board President Paul Krekorian, which is
sponsored by EdVoice Inc., a nonprofit group that advocates for
public education in the California Legislature.

Quintero, who on Saturday was endorsed by Frommer, has reported a
total of $321,982 on hand.

Krekorian claims to have received donations from 676 contributors, at
an average donation of $456.

Krekorian also received the endorsement of the Burbank Police
Officer’s Assn. last week. The endorsement was made in light of
Krekorian’s dedication to public safety and understanding of the
challenges police officers face, explained Mike Parrinello, president
of the association.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

March 24 is the international day for fight against tuberculosis

March 24 is the international day for fight against tuberculosis

ArmRadio
24.03.2006 14:48

March 24 is the international day for fight against tuberculosis (TB).
Despite the efforts directed at control and prevention of the disease,
the desirable results have not been achieved. The rate of tuberculosis
continues to remain high all over the world. 9 million TB cases are
registered annually, 2 million of which die. The mortality rate from
TB has also increased. According to the coordinator of the national
program to fight TB Vahan Petrosyan, the implementation of the DOTS
strategy by the World Health Organization has raised the effectiveness
of the fight against the disease.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Curbing Armenia’s Death Cult

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
March 24 2006

Curbing Armenia’s Death Cult

Parliament steps in to stop people taking up more space than they can
possible use after death.

By Marianna Grigorian and Gayane Mkrtchian in Yerevan (CRS No. 332,
24-Mar-06)

A giant marble statue of a sad-looking man towers above most of the
other gravestones in the town cemetery of Echmiadzin. But it is by no
means the only one – a bust stands on a three-metre pedestal nearby,
for example.

Such showy monuments come in at 60,000 to 80,000 US dollars – a
fabulous sum, especially in a country as poor as Armenia. But they
are part of a growing phenomenon where people spend more on the dead
than on the living.

“Many rich people are competing with each other these days,’ monument
sculptor Sargis Khojoian told IWPR. `They come right up to you and
say, ‘We’re prepared to pay an extra 500 dollars just to make the
headstone for our deceased higher and more luxurious than the rest’.’

It is partly about competition, but often just social pressure to do
the right thing and follow tradition in this ancient Christian
society.

One woman who works as an artist recalls how there was no money to
pay for her mother’s cancer treatment during her final months. But
once she was dead, the family borrowed more than 10,000 dollars for
the funeral and gravestone.

“That money could have helped her live longer and suffer less,’ said
the woman, who asked not to be named. `However, that was not the top
priority for my relatives.’

Now the funeral is over with all the proprieties observed, but the
family will remain burdened with the debt for years to come.

Parliament has become so concerned at the trend that it passed a new
law at the end of February aimed at reducing people’s spending to
more moderate dimensions. It is directed not just at the huge
monumental sculptures, but also at the use of large expanses of land
for one grave.

According to Armenian tradition, the more lavish the funeral
ceremony, the larger the grave and the more splendid the headstone,
the more the deceased person is perceived to have been respected by
relatives.

Vladimir Badalian, the member of parliament who drafted the
legislation, wants to put an end to the “frantic aspiration to buy
large and splendid graves”.

“I have seen a grave that occupies 260 square metres. Is that
normal?” he asked.

According to Razmik Harutiunian, an engineer with a funeral company
called Ritual Services for Citizens, “The official data show that
cemeteries in Yerevan occupy five per cent of the city’s territory.
However, in reality, the figure is at least twice that.’

Harutiunian predicts that if things continue as they are, the
sprawling cemeteries could eventually swallow up half of Yerevan.

That will not happen if Badalian’s law is enforced properly. It
stipulates that each person is allowed 2.5 square metres, while a
family grave for four cannot exceed 12.2 sq m.

The strictly-limited graves will, however, be allocated free of
charge.

Under the old system, buying a grave site is not very expensive, with
the official rates set at 12,000 drams or about 26 dollars.

But because previous legislation does not say exactly how big a grave
needs to be, there has been considerable scope for informal price
setting. A plot measuring five or six square metres in Yerevan
capital can range between 1,000 and 6,000 dollars. Location is
everything – a space near the entrance to the cemetary is reckoned to
be more prestigious.

Outside the main towns, prices are cheaper, with a plot costing 30 to
50 dollars, or nothing at all in remote villages. As a result, some
people choose their burial sites according to what they can afford.

Aida Aghasian, a resident of Echmiadzin, recalled how `an
acquaintance of mine was asked for such a sum that he went to his
[home] village and buried his father in his mother’s grave. Many
people do that”.

Another provision of the law bans the unregulated sale of funeral
items. In Nar-Dos, one of Yerevan’s central streets, coffins in all
sizes and trimmings are on display in the street. Many people skirt
the street if they can possibly avoid it.

“The law forbids selling funeral items all over the place, as it
upsets people. Such things should be sold either out of town or in
special shops with tinted or curtained windows,” said Badalian.

One part of the law that could prove controversial is a requirement
to build a crematorium, which goes against Armenian tradition. The
government has already earmarked funds for its construction.

The idea is that a crematorium could halt the creeping expansion of
cemetaries. “Ten hectares of land and a memorial wall will fully
satisfy the demand for several years. We will not need any more
territory,” said Badalian, who is keen on the scheme.

But the idea that remains should be burned rather than buried has met
with some public hostility, especially from the Armenian Apostolic
Church.

“The church is against cremation,” said Father Hakob Khachtrian,
senior priest at the Church of St Sargis. “Our Lord told us, `Dust
thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return’. When we cremate a dead
body, we interfere in our Lord’s providence.”

Father Hakob believes the way to solve the problem is simply to stop
people building oversized monuments and mausoleums.

Badalian thinks people will eventually come round to the idea, for
the sake of the living rather than the dead, “The orchards in
Yerevan’s Shahumian district were famous for their fruit trees, but
they were turned into a cemetery seven or eight years ago. In 100
years time we will have to walk through this cemetery. But what I
want is more orchards and recreation areas in my city.’

Marianna Grigorian and Gayane Mkrtchian are reporters for the
Armenianow online weekly.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Azeri, Armenian officials to hold talks in U.S.

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 24 2006

Azeri, Armenian officials to hold talks in U.S.

Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov, and Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanian are due to visit Washington shortly, Radio
Liberty reported.

During the visit, Azimov is expected to discuss military and
political issues with American officials.

Oskanian is to meet with the US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
and attend the ceremony of allocating a $236 million aid package to
Armenia by the United States within the Millennium Challenge program.

The US co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group brokering settlement to the
Armenia-Azerbaijan Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict, Steven Mann,
has confirmed the report. He stressed, however, that the visits had
been scheduled a long time ago and are not related to the Garabagh
peace talks.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Turkish President to Visit Azerbaijan Early April

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
March 24 2006

Turkish President to Visit Azerbaijan Early April

24/03/2006 21:44

Turkish President Ahmed Necet Sezer is expected to make an official
visit to Baku on April 4, Turkish diplomatic sources told TURAN.

Sezer will arrive in Baku together with the Ministers of Energy and
Natural Resources and Transport, as well as other officials and
Turkish businessmen.

Turkish-Armenian relationships and the Karabakh conflict settlement
will be discussed during bilateral talks. The two countries are
expected to specify their positions to the situation in Iran.

The financial and technical details of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and
Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipelines and construction of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway will be also discussed.

Sezer planned to visit Baku in January, but the visit was postponed
at the last moment, due to “non-flying weather.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Parliament Members Suggest to Expel Iranian Ambassador

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
March 24 2006

Azerbaijan Parliament Members Suggest to Expel Iranian Ambassador

24/03/2006 21:42

At today’s Milli Mejlis session pro-governmental Deputy Gudrat
Hasanguliyev has proposed to declare Afshar Suleimani, Iranian
Ambassador to Azerbaijan, persona non grata.

He expressed “surprise” with the fact that the Ambassador has not
been expelled from Baku until now and complained about Foreign
Ministry’s inactivity. Deputy Zahid Oruj supported him and said the
Ambassador’s statements are “inadmissible” for foreign diplomat.

Speaker Oktai Asadov asked Deputies not be as emotional as Iranian
Ambassador. He said Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry is dealing with this
matter and Deputies should be “careful” with their statements.

Deputy Asim Mollazade has proposed Milli Mejlis to take steps to
protect forests in Zangelan and Kelbajar regions, which are cut down
by Armenian occupants.

Opposition Deputy Panah Huseyn said authorities of Sabirabad region,
where he was elected as Deputy, do not allow him to meet with his
electors. He accused Ramiz Mehdiyev, head of presidential
administration, of that. But speaker failed to explain to Deputy why
he is not allowed to meet with his electors.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Orinants Erkir Youth Union Proposes Developing State Strategy on…

YOUTH UNION OF ORINANTS ERKIR PARTY PROPOSES DEVELOPING STATE STRATEGY
OF YOUTH ASSISTANCE IN HOUSING SECURITY SPHERE

YEREVAN, MARCH 24, NOYAN TAPAN. The Youth Union of the Orinats Erkir
Party (OEP) finds that it has become urgent to develop and implement a
state strategy of youth assistance in the sphere of housing security
with the aim of raising the marriage and birth rate, reducing the
number of divorces and developing the marzes in Armenia, which was
stated at a round table-discussion held on March 23. Samvel Farmanian,
member of the OEP Youth Union, said that according to the CIS
Statistical Committee data, in 2005 the population of Armenia grew by
0.1%, while that of Azerbaijan – by 4.4%. Besides, according to the RA
official statistics, the number of divorces increased by about 25% in
the country in the same year. S. Farmanian pointed out that the
current conditions of mortgage crediting are not conducive to the
solution of the housing problems facing the Armenian youth. In his
words, the state should work out certian mechanisms in order to deal
with these problems. Particularly, it is expedient that the state take
a 200 mln dollar credit from the World Bank for the construction of
settlements and buildings for young people. He noted that some
Diasporan Armenian benefactors are prepared to take part in the
solution of the youth housing problems in case of availability of a
clear and transparently implemented state program. The OEK Youth Union
member Armen Khechikian in his turn explained that only 10-15% of
Armenian young people earn an amount equivalent to 400-700 dollars a
month, which allows to get and repay mortgage loans with a repayment
period of 5-7 years and the lowest annual interest rate of 13% in
order to buy a 12 thousand dollar apartment. In his opinion, the state
may set up a youth mortgage fund to deal with issues related to
payment of loan interests. One of the ways to provide Armenian young
people with apartments is introduction of tax privileges for banks
that give mortgage loans to them. Another way is setting up a
guarantee fund of youth mortgage loans repayment. Other countries’
experience in the sphere of youth housing provision was also discussed
during the event. Particularly, thanks to a fund established in
Ukraine, young people have the opportunity to take mortgage loans at a
5% annual interest rate, whereas in other cases the same rate makes
10.6%. The students of higher educational institutions of Sverdlovsk
region (Russia) were given the opportunity to participate in the
construction of their own apartments, get loans and repay them in 4
years.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Parliamentarians’ Opinions of Andre’s Song Are Not Unequivocal

PARLIAMENTARIANS’ OPINIONS OF ANDRE’S SONG ARE NOT UNEQUIVOCAL

YEREVAN, MARCH 24, NOYAN TAPAN. “To tell the truth, it could be better
but I think that it is not a bad song,” Samvel Balasanian, Head of NA
Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) faction, expressed such an opinion at
the March 24 press briefing speaking about the song to be performed by
Andre at the “Eurovision-2006” musical contest. The MP also mentioned
that personally he likes the song and considers that the song’s clip
is a success “though it contains some Arab elements”. Mher
Shahgeldian, member of the same faction and Vice-Chairman of the
party, also thinks that the song could be better. Meanwhile, he noted
that “a song and music are issues of subjective perception”. In the
opinion of Viktor Dallakian, Secretary of the Ardarutiun (Justice)
faction, “this performance corresponds to the taste of the current
authorities”. Not questioning the estimation given by RPA faction
head Galust Sahakian, who qualified this song as Tatar-Mongolian, he
mentioned that Sahakian is “rather experienced in music and has a good
taste in this sphere”. Personally Viktor Dallakian among Andre’s songs
most of all likes the song “My Love to You” and is sorry that a song
of another kind has been chosen.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress