Gold "Distillers"

GOLD "DISTILLERS"

c/country-lrahos15291.html
17:38:03 – 23/09/2009

The Chair of the Control Chamber of the Republic of Armenia on
September 23, presented data which arouse many questions in connection
with shops engaged in commerce of gold and precious stones and bodies
engaged in controlling these shops.

In particular, Ishkhan Zakaryan noted "PrimaGold", "Merkuri" and
"Gianni" shops which showed to have imported in 2007 only 200 gram,
525 gram and 17 gram of gold a month and in 2008 – 542, 433 and 0
gram of gold. "In case of a good wedding each of these shops may sell
several kg of gold", says Ishkhan Zakaryan.

http://www.lragir.am/engsr

In Q3 2009 Business Climate Index In Armenia Grew By 13.9% While Eco

IN Q3 2009 BUSINESS CLIMATE INDEX IN ARMENIA GREW BY 13.9% WHILE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY INDEX FELL BY 9.3%

ArmInfo
2009-09-23 17:58:00

ArmInfo. In Q3 2009 economic activity index in Armenia fell by 9.3%
to 109% against 118.3% in Q2 2009, reports the press service of the
Central Bank of Armenia.

As compared with Q3 2008 the index grew by 23.1% to 94.9%.

Business climate index grew by 136.9% as compared with Q2 2009 to
125.9% and by 19.4% as compared with Q3 2008 to 95.9%.

Consumer confidence index grew by 7.2% to 103% and fell by 1% to
86.7%, respectively.

In Q3 2009 economic activity index was evaluated at 62 points against
56.9% in Q2 2009, 48.1 points in Q1 2009, 65.3% in Q3 2008, 69.2
points in Q3 2007 and 74.5 points in Q3 2006.

In Q3 2009 consumer confidence activity was evaluated at 44.7 points
against 43.4 points in Q2 2009, 45.3 points in Q1 2009, 51.6 points
in Q3 2008, 52.4 points in Q3 2007, 50.3 points in Q3 2006.

In Q3 2009 business climate index was evaluated at 47.3 points against
37.6 points in Q2 2009, 33.5 points in Q1 2009, 49.3 points in Q3 2008,
50.9 points in Q3 2007, 53.1 points in Q3 2006.

The quarterly dynamics points out that the respondents’ expectations
have improved, particularly, by 9.7 points for the business climate
index, 5.1 points for the economic activity index, and 1.3 points for
the consumer confidence index. As compared with the third quarter
of 2008, the expectations of the respondents worsened for all the
composite indices: by 6.9 points for the consumer confidence index,
by 3.3 points for the economic activity index, by 2 points for the
business climate index.

The CBA press-service reports that in the third quarter of 2009,
the CBA held a public opinion poll among 1841 households and 841
enterprises of the industrial sector, construction sphere and service
industries. In the third quarter of 2009 the number of the polled
hoseholds grew by 37, and the enterprises of the industrial sector,
construction sphere and service industries – by 22 as compared with
the second quarter of 2009.

To note, the given public opinion poll, which has been held since
2005 among the operating enterprises (in the spheres of industry,
construction, services, including retail trade) and home economics
aims to assess the current economic situation and expectations. The
methodology of calculating indices is based on the principles worked
out by the Conference Board (USA) and Germany’s IFO Institute.

Glendale: SUV Slams Into Bakery

SUV SLAMS INTO BAKERY

Glendale News Press
09/09/22/publicsafety/gnp-crash092309.txt
Sept 22 2009
CA

Clean up begins after a vehicle lost control and went into Movses
Golden Pastry at 1700 block of Glenoaks Blvd. in Glendale at about
8 am on Tuesday, September 22, 2009. (Raul Roa/News-Press)

By Zain Shauk Published: Last Updated Tuesday, September 22, 2009
3:28 PM PDT

NORTHWEST GLENDALE — When a woman drove her car through the front
of Movses Golden Pastry five years ago, owner Armen Nazarian thought
he could protect his store by installing steel barriers in front of
the property. He was wrong.

A Burbank woman in the parking lot of Nazarian’s Glenoaks Boulevard
strip mall early Tuesday mistakenly slammed on the gas pedal of
her white Toyota 4Runner and barreled through the corner bakery,
evading a steel barrier and smashing through a storefront window,
refrigerators, tables and chairs, police said.

The SUV skidded to a halt on the property after crashing through a
second window and nearly rumbling off an elevated outdoor seating
area facing Glenoaks Boulevard, police said.

"I didn’t really expect that this was going to happen again," said
Nazarian, who snapped digital photos of the store as firefighters
and police helped clear warped steel wreckage and shattered glass
from around the vehicle.

Assortments of pastries and Armenian breads sat amid shards of glass
in broken refrigerated displays that cost about $10,000 each. Displays
had fallen from shelves along the back wall of the shop, Nazarian said.

The 2004 crash had cost about $30,000 to repair, but Tuesday’s damages,
combined with lost profits from days that Nazarian will have to close
for repairs and health inspector visits will likely triple that total,
he said.

He expected insurance to pick up the tab.

Glendale and Burbank firefighters used a rotary saw to clear a railing,
allowing them to move the 4Runner off the elevated seating area and
onto a flat-bed tow truck. No one was hurt, although employees at the
1755 W. Glenoaks store said they feared for their lives upon hearing
the SUV plow through the front of the shop.

"I just heard a boom, the store started shaking and I just saw the
car is coming and I ran," said Lusine Petrosyan, a cashier who was
working behind the store counter and looking the other direction when
the crash occurred.

She darted to the store’s back room with other workers, she said.

The accident was not only avoidable, but could have been deadly,
Glendale Police Officer Larry Ballesteros said.

"If somebody would’ve been standing at the counter ordering a tray of
fruit tarts or something, he would’ve been killed," Ballesteros said.

No charges are so far pending against the driver, Heranosh Baghomian,
because the accident occurred on private property, he said.

Nazarian, who owns the strip mall, was concerned not only that a
similar incident had happened before, but that another property he
owns, at the intersection of Chevy Chase Drive and Verdugo Road,
has also been struck twice by out-of-control drivers, he said.

"I’m very confused," he said.

Similar accidents have happened in the last two years, with drivers
ramming through a Starbucks on Foothill Boulevard and a Supercuts on
Glendale Avenue, injuring bystanders in the process, Ballesteros said.

"It’s too common," he said.

Nazarian questioned whether enough Glendale drivers were safe enough
to be on the roads, echoing concerns frequently raised by residents
fed up with the city’s notoriously accident-ridden streets.

The Department of Motor Vehicles is consistently working to improve
driver’s license testing standards, said spokeswoman Jan Medoza,
who insisted that most of California’s 26 million motorists are safe.

"We’ve got millions of drivers out there," she said. "It’s a numbers
game for sure."

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/articles/20

Armenian Government Pay Little Attention To Production Of Domestic G

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT PAY LITTLE ATTENTION TO PRODUCTION OF DOMESTIC GOODS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.09.2009 15:26 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenia’s government has paid little attention to
promoting local production over the last 7-8 years, Vazgen Safaryan ,
chairman of the Union of domestic producers said.

"A lot of time was missed to raise local production to a proper level,"
he said. Over the past 7 years, according to Vazgen Safaryan, the
Armenia’s population has invested about 30 billion dollars in local
production, AMD 15 billion products were sold in the local market. If
the government pursued a policy of local production development,
Armenia would have a well developed industry producing a large variety
of goods instead of imports.

"The Armenian-Turkish border would change government’s economic policy
towards promoting local production," Mr. Safaryan said.

Singapore’s Armenian link

The Straits Times (Singapore)
September 19, 2009 Saturday

Singapore’s Armenian link

The woman who bred and lent her name to Singapore’s national flower,
the Vanda Miss Joaquim, was Armenian.

So were the founders of Raffles Hotel, the three Sarkies brothers. As
was one of the men who started The Straits Times, Catchick Moses.

Together with about 100 or so other Armenians who lived in Singapore
in the 1800s, they made contributions to the city that were
disproportionately large, considering the size of their community.

By 1821, just two years after Stamford Raffles founded Singapore,
Armenian trading firms had already established themselves here.

In 1835, the Armenian community built Singapore’s first church, the
Armenian Apostolic Church of St Gregory the Illuminator, which still
stands today.

At its peak, the community numbered more than 150, but numbers fell as
many emigrated after World War II. Today, fewer than 50 Armenians
remain, a mix of expatriates and locals.

A landlocked mountainous country in Caucasus, Armenia has a population
of just over three million, far outnumbered by the estimated eight to
10 million who live abroad.

Squeezed between Iran, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia, the country is
about 40 times the size of Singapore and has had a turbulent past.

From the 15th century to the 1900s, it was ruled by the Ottoman
Empire. The Soviet Union took over in 1922, and when that broke up in
1991, Armenia reclaimed its independence. Since then, it has moved to
liberalise its economy, the key drivers of which include agriculture
(18per cent) and construction (27per cent). It is looking at building
up new growth areas in IT, communications and tourism.

Armenia trades mainly with Europe, the Middle East and the former
Soviet states. Russia is its biggest trading partner.

LESLIE KOH

UM-Shmum, UM-Boom

Ma’an News Agency, Palestine
Sept 19 2009

UM-Shmum, UM-Boom – Uri Avnery

Published yesterday (updated) 19/09/2009 21:59 Justice Richard
Goldstone
[MaanImages]Is there no limit to the wiles of those dastardly
anti-Semites?

Now they have decided to slander the Jews with another blood
libel. Not the old accusation of slaughtering Christian children to
use their blood for baking Passover matzoth, as in the past, but of
the mass slaughter of women and children in Gaza.

And who did they put at the head of the commission which was charged
with this task? Neither a British Holocaust-denier nor a German
neo-Nazi, nor even an Iranian fanatic, but of all people a Jewish
judge who bears the very Jewish name of Goldstone (originally
Goldstein, of course). And not just a Jew with a Jewish name, but a
Zionist, whose daughter, Nicole, is an enthusiastic Zionist who once
`made Aliyah’ and speaks fluent Hebrew. And not just a Jewish Zionist,
but a South African who opposed apartheid and was appointed to the
country’s Constitutional Court when that system was abolished.

All this in order to defame the most moral army in the world, fresh
from waging the most just war in history!

Richard Goldstone is not the only Jew manipulated by the world-wide
anti-Semitic conspiracy. Throughout the three weeks of the Gaza War,
more than 10 thousand Israelis demonstrated against it again and
again. They were photographed carrying signs saying `End the massacre
in Gaza’, `Stop the war crimes” `Israel commits war crimes’, `Bombing
civilians is a war crime’. They chanted in unison: `Olmert, Olmert, it
is true ` They’re waiting in The Hague for you!’

Who would have believed that there are so many anti-Semites in
Israel?!

The official Israeli reaction to the Goldstone report would have been
amusing, if the matter had not been so grave.

Except for the `usual suspects’ (Gideon Levy, Amira Hass and their
ilk), the condemnation of the report was unanimous, total and extreme,
from Shimon Peres, that advocate of every abomination, down to the
last scribbler in the newspapers.

Nobody, but nobody, dealt with the subject itself. Nobody examined the
detailed conclusions. With such an anti-Semitic smear, there is no
need for that. Actually, there is no need to read the report at all.

The public, in all its diversity, stood up like one person, in order
to rebuff the plot, as it has learned to do in the thousand years of
pogroms, Spanish inquisition and Holocaust. A siege mentality, the
ghetto mentality.

The instinctive reaction in such a situation is denial. It’s just not
true. It never happened. It’s all a pack of lies.

By itself, that is a natural reaction. When a human being is faced
with a situation which he cannot handle, denial is the first
refuge. If things did not happen, there is no need to cope. Basically,
there is no difference between the deniers of the Armenian genocide,
the deniers of the annihilation of the Native Americans and the
deniers of the atrocities of all wars.

>From this point of view, it can be said that denial is almost
`normal’. But with us it has been developed into an art form.

We have a special method: when something happens that we don’t want to
confront, we direct the spotlight to one specific detail, something
completely marginal, and begin to insist on it, debate it, examine it
from all angles as if it were a matter of life and death.

Take the Yom Kippur war. It broke out because for six years, beginning
with the 1967 war, Israel had cruised like a Ship of Fools,
intoxicated with victory songs, victory albums and the belief in the
invincibility of the Israeli army. Golda Meir treated the Arab world
with open contempt and rebuffed the peace overtures of Anwar
Sadat. The result: more than 2000 young Israelis killed, and who knows
how many Egyptians and Syrians.

And what was furiously debated? The `Omission.’ `Why were the reserves
not called up in time? Why were the tanks not moved in advance?’
Menachem Begin thundered in the Knesset, and about this, books and
articles galore were written and a blue-ribbon judicial board of
inquiry deliberated.

The First Lebanon War was a political blunder and a military
failure. It lasted 18 years, gave birth to Hizbullah and established
it as a regional force. And what was discussed? Whether Ariel Sharon
had deceived Begin and was responsible for his illness and eventual
death.

The Second Lebanon War was a disgrace from beginning to end, a
superfluous war that caused massive destruction, wholesale slaughter
and the flight of hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians from
their homes, without achieving an Israeli victory. And what was our
debate about? For what was a commission of inquiry appointed? About
the way the decision to start the war was taken. Was there an
appropriate process of decision making? Was there orderly staff work?

About the Gaza War, there was no debate at all, because everything was
perfectly alright. A brilliant campaign. Marvelous political and
military leadership. True, we did not convince the Gaza Strip
population to overthrow their leaders; true, we did not succeed in
freeing the captured soldier Gilad Shalit; true, the whole world
condemned us ` but we killed a lot of Arabs, destroyed their
environment and taught them a lesson they will not forget.

Now, a profound debate on the Goldstone report is going on. Not about
its content, God forbid. What’s there to discus? But about the one
point that is really important: was our government right in deciding
to boycott the commission? Perhaps it would have been better to take
part in the deliberations? Did our Foreign Office act as foolishly as
it usually does? (Our Ministry of Defense, of course, never behaves
foolishly.) Tens of thousands of words about this world-shaking
question were poured out from the newspapers, the radio and TV, with
every self-respecting commentator weighing in.

So why did the Israeli government boycott the commission? The real
answer is quite simple: they knew full well that the commission, any
commission, would have to reach the conclusions it did reach.

In fact, the commission did not say anything new. Almost all the facts
were already known: the bombing of civilian neighborhoods, the use of
flechette rounds and white phosphorus against civilian targets, the
bombing of mosques and schools, the blocking of rescue parties from
reaching the wounded, the killing of fleeing civilians carrying white
flags, the use of human shields, and more. The Israeli army did not
allow journalists near the action, but the war was amply documented by
the international media in all its details, the entire world saw it in
real time on the TV screens. The testimonies are so many and so
consistent, that any reasonable person can draw their own conclusions.

If the officers and soldiers of the Israeli army had given testimony
before the commission, it would perhaps have been impressed by their
angle, too ` the fear, the confusion, the lack of orientation ` and
the conclusions could have been somewhat less severe. But the main
thrust would not have changed. After all, the whole operation was
based on the assumption that it was possible to overthrow the Hamas
government in Gaza by causing intolerable suffering to the civilian
population. The damage to civilians was not `collateral’, whether
avoidable or unavoidable, but a central feature of the operation
itself.

Moreover, the rules of engagement were designed to achieve `zero
losses’ to our forces ` avoiding losses at any price. That was the
conclusion our army ` led by Gabi Ashkenazi ` drew from the Second
Lebanon War. The results speak for themselves: 200 dead Palestinians
for every Israeli soldier killed by the other side ` 1400:6.

Every real investigation must inevitably lead to the same conclusions
as those of the Goldstone commission. Therefore, there was no Israeli
wish for a real inquiry. The `investigations’ that did take place were
a farce. The person responsible, the Military Advocate General,
kippa-wearing brigadier Avichai Mendelblit, was in charge of this
task. He was promoted this week to the rank of major general. The
promotion and its timing speak a clear language.

So it is clear that there is no chance of the Israeli government
belatedly opening a real investigation, as demanded by Israeli peace
activists.

In order to be credible, such an investigation would have to have the
status of a State Commission of Inquiry as defined by Israeli law,
headed by a Supreme Court justice. It would have to conduct its
investigations publicly, in full view of the Israeli and international
media. It would have to invite the victims, Gaza inhabitants, to
testify together with the soldiers who took part in the war. It would
have to investigate in detail each of the accusations that appear in
the Goldstone report. It would have to check out the orders issued and
decisions made, from the Chief of Staff down to the squad level. It
would have to study the briefings of Air Force pilots and drone
operators.

This list suffices to make it clear why such an investigation will not
and cannot take place. Instead, the world-wide Israeli propaganda
machine will continue to defame the Jewish judge and the people who
appointed him.

Not all the Israeli accusations against the UN are groundless. For
example: why does the organization investigate the war crimes in Gaza
(and in former Yugoslavia and Darfur, investigations in which
Goldstone took part as chief prosecutor) and not the actions of the US
in Iraq and Afghanistan and the Russians in Chechnya?

But the main argument of the Israeli government is that the UN is an
anti-Semitic organization, and its Human Rights Commission is doubly
anti-Semitic.

Israel’s relations with the UN are very complex. The state was founded
on the basis of a UN resolution, and it is doubtful whether it would
have come into being at precisely that time and those circumstance had
there been no such resolution. Our Declaration of Independence is
largely based on this resolution. A year later, Israel was accepted as
a UN member in spite of the fact that it had not allowed the (then)
750 thousand Palestinian refugees to return.

But this honeymoon soured quickly. David Ben-Gurion spoke with
contempt about UM-Shmum (`Um’ is the Hebrew for `UN’, the prefix `shm’
signifies contempt). From then on to this very day, Israel has
systematically violated almost every single UN resolution that
concerned it, complaining that there was an `automatic majority’ of
Arab and communist countries stacked against it. This attitude was
reinforced when, on the eve of the 1967 war, the UN troops in Sinai
where precipitously withdrawn on the demand of Gamal
Abd-al-Nasser. And, of course, by the UN resolution (later annulled)
equating Zionism with racism.

Now this argument is raising its head again. The UN, it is being said,
is anti-Israeli, which means (of course) anti-Semitic. Everyone who
acts in the name of the UN is an Israel-hater. To hell with the UN. To
hell with the Goldstone report.

That is, however, a woefully short-sighted policy. The general public
throughout the world is hearing about the report and remembering the
pictures they saw on their TV screens during the Gaza war. The UN
enjoys much respect. In the wake of the `Molten Lead’ operation,
Israel’s standing in the world has been steadily going down, and this
report will send it down even further. This will have practical
consequences ` political, military, economic and cultural. Only a fool
` or an Avigdor Lieberman ` can ignore that.

If there is no credible Israeli investigation, there will be demands
for the UN Security Council to refer the matter to the International
Criminal Court in The Hague. Barack Obama would have to decide whether
to veto such a resolution ` a move that would cause grave harm to the
US, and for which he would demand a high price from Israel.

As has been said before: UM-Shmum may turn into UM-Boom.

***Uri Avnery is an Israeli writer and founder of the Gush Shalom
peace movement. A member of the militant Zionist Irgun movement as a
teenager, Avnery served in Israel’s Knesset from 1965-74 and
1979-81. He is author of the recently revised novel, 1948: A Soldier’s
Tale – The Bloody Road to Jerusalem.

s.aspx?ID=226892

http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetail

First pan-Armenian forum of lawyers starts

First pan-Armenian forum of lawyers starts

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Minister of Diaspora Ms. Hranush
Hakobian received the participants of the first pan-Armenian forum of
lawyers on the evening of September 18.

According to a report of the Ministry of Diaspora, Ms. Hakobian stated
that the pan-Armenian professional forums organized by the Ministry of
Diaspora represent one of the best ways to consolidate the potential of
the Diaspora and use it for Armenia’s development. In her words, there
are many issues to be discussed with Diaspora Armenian lawyers, and
their experience will be of great use in Armenia.

The minister underlined that by accepting the invitation to participate
in the forum entitled "The Armenian Legal Thought and the Challenges of
the 21st Century", the lawyers who have come to Homeland have already
been repatriated because the return means not only physical presence
but also the "return of thought, soul, and heart".

62 lawyers from 16 countries and 9 ones from the Nagorno Karabakh
Republic have already arrived in Yerevan to attend the first
pan-Armenian forum of lawyers. The opening ceremony of the forum will
be held at the Hall of Sittings of the Armenian government on September
19.

Hovhannes Hovhannisyan: Armenian-Turkish Relations Had To Have Start

HOVHANNES HOVHANNISYAN: ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS HAD TO HAVE STARTED EARLIER
Siranush Muradyan

"Radiolur"
18.09.2009 17:35

Representative of the Armenian National Congress, leader of the Liberal
Party Hovhannes Hovhannisyan considers that the Armenian-Turkish
relations had to have started earlier. "We had to start earlier,
since it would enable Armenia to enter regional integration processes.

Hovhannes Hovhannisyan said he welcomes President Serzh Sargsyan’s
initiative of establishing bilateral relations with Turkey. "I
welcome this step. He is going to solve issues, but any solution has
its price."

The leader of the Liberal Party is confident that the pre-signed
protocols include preconditions, but they are written in the language
of European diplomacy.

Why did the Armenian National Congress refuse to participate in
yesterday’s discussions dedicated to the Armenian-Turkish relations?

"Because it was a formal discussion and because discussions in this
format often yield no results," Hovhannes Hovhannisyan said.

Edward Nalbandyan To Take Part In 64th Session Of UN General Assembl

EDWARD NALBANDYAN TO TAKE PART IN 64TH SESSION OF UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

ArmInfo
2009-09-17 12:13:00

ArmInfo. Foreign Minister of Armenia Edward Nalbandyan will take part
in the 64th session of UN General Assembly. The visit will be held
from September 26 to 29, Head of the Armenian Foreign Ministry’s Mass
Media Relations Department Tigran Balayan told ArmInfo.

When asked if a meeting of the Armenian FM with his Azerbaijani
counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov in New York has been scheduled,
T. Balayan replied that currently he can only confirm Nalbandyan’s
participation in the UN General Assembly’s work.

To note, OSCE MG Russian Cochairman Yuri Merzliakov said in an
interview with APA that MG cochairmen will meet the Armenian and
Azerbaijani foreign ministers in New York to discuss the scheduled
meeting of Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s presidents in Kishinev. To also
note, according to the Azerbaijani media, E. Mammadyarov will be in
New York on September 21 – 27 with a visit.

International Financial Reporting Standards To Be Introduced In Arme

INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING STANDARDS TO BE INTRODUCED IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Sep 17, 2009

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 17, NOYAN TAPAN. A protocol on the completion of
the official translation of the International Financial Reporting
Standards was signed between the RA Ministry of Finance and the USAID
on September 17, which was followed by the ceremony of handing over
the standards translated into Armenian. The International Financial
Reporting Standards were translated and edited under the program of
reforms in Armenia’s accounting sector with the assiatance of the
USAID Financial Sector Deepening Project.

The indicated program envisages introducing the International Financial
Reporting Standards in Armenia.

Armenian Minister of Finance Tigran Davtian pointed out the importance
of bringing the financial processes in Armenia into line with
international standards. "The USAID has ensured the translation of the
standards into Armenian, and we should be able to take the respective
actions and make changes so that these standards will really work in
Armenia," he said, adding that the application of the standards will
allow Armenia to satisfy the modern accounting requirements.

Head of the USAID Armenia Mission Economic Unit David Hull said the
translation of the International Financial Reporting Standards will
create a legal field for their application in Armenia. In his words,
it is necessary to have modern accounting standards in order to do
commercial deals in a proper way and to ensure an "open business"
climate in the country.

He informed those present that the International Accounting Standards
Board has developed and published new standards for small and medium
enterprises.

He underlined that their adoption is of primary importance to Armenia
because the majority of Armenian companies are small and medium
enterprises which will operate by the new standards.