Ambassador of Brazil handed copies of her credentials to FM Oskanian

Ambassador of Brazil handed copies of her credentials to FM Oskanian

ArmRadio.am
08.09.2006 15:34

Today the Ambassador of Brazil to Armenia Renate Stille handed copies
of her credentials to RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian.

Minister Oskanian congratulated Mr. Stille on appointment and wished
her success in carrying out her responsible mission.

Turning to the high level of relations between the two countries, Mr.

Oskanian particularly emphasized that Brazil is one of the first
countries to recognize Armenia’s independence.

The Foreign Minister highly appreciated the decision to open an
Embassy of Brazil in Armenia, which is the first in the region. He
expressed confidence that it will greatly promote the development of
Armenia-Brazil bilateral relations.

In her turn, Mrs. Stille expressed appreciation for the current level
of cooperation between the two countries.

The parties attached importance to the reinforcement of the legal
field established between the two countries, the effective cooperation
within international organizations and the activation of trade and
economic relations.

Karabakh Leader, Breakaway Dniestr Region’s Rep Discuss Relations

KARABAKH LEADER, BREAKAWAY DNIESTR REGION’S REP DISCUSS RELATIONS

Arminfo, Yerevan
7 Sep 06

Stepanakert, 7 September: The president of the Nagornyy Karabakh
Republic, Arkadiy Gukasyan, has received members of a delegation
from Moldova’s Dniestr Region – Lyubomir Ribyak, the chairman of
the parliament’s commission on foreign affairs and Sergey Simonenko,
the deputy chief of the department on foreign affairs of the Foreign
Ministry – who are in Stepanakert to attend the festivities to mark
the 15th anniversary of Karabakh’s independence.

The sides discussed a number of issues concerning the economic
development of both republics and a peaceful solution to conflicts
in the post-Soviet area.

Azeri, Armenian FMs May Meet Over Nagorno-Karabakh Sept. 13

AZERI, ARMENIAN FMS MAY MEET OVER NAGORNO-KARABAKH SEPT. 13

RIA Novosti, Russia
Sept 6 2006

BAKU, September 6 (RIA Novosti) – The foreign ministers of Azerbaijan
and Armenia may meet in London September 13 to outline principles
for resolving a long-running territorial dispute, the Azeri minister
said Wednesday.

The conflict between the two former Soviet republics over
Nagorno-Karabakh, a region in Azerbaijan with a largely Armenian
population, first erupted in 1988 when it claimed independence from
Azerbaijan to join Armenia.

Over 30,000 people were killed on both sides between 1988 and 1994,
and over 100 died following a 1994 ceasefire. Nagorno-Karabakh
remained in Armenian hands, but tensions between Azerbaijan and
Armenia have persisted.

"There are plans to meet with [Armenian minister Vardan] Oskanyan
and co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group in London on September 13,"
Elmar Mamedyarov said.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk
Group was created in 1992 to encourage a peaceful resolution to the
conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh. The
group is co-chaired by U.S., Russian and French representatives.

Mamedyarov said Thursday he spoke by telephone with Bernard Fasier,
the French co-chairman of the Minsk Group, who suggested the next round
of conflict-resolution talks could be held in Paris September 12-13,
or in London September 14-15.

Mamedyarov said he agreed to meet with his Armenian counterpart and
was discussing the format to be adopted for the talks.

Azerbaijan and Armenia held the latest round of Nagorno-Karabakh
talks June 13 in Paris.

Management Of Yerevan Brandy Plant Denies Rumors About Sale Of Enter

MANAGEMENT OF YEREVAN BRANDY PLANT DENIES RUMORS ABOUT SALE OF ENTERPRISE

Yerevan, September 6. ArmInfo. The Yerevan Brandy Plant (EBC) has
spread an open letter, on behalf of the YBC President and Director
General, Erve Karoff, addressed to the leader of the Democratic party,
the RA Parliament deputy, Aram Sarkissyan, in which he denies the
rumors, spread by the deputy, about the plant sale.

It is noted in the letter that the Yerevan Brandy Company is not
subject to sale. "We are very proud of this branch of the "Perno
Ricard" Group and we connect many ambitious plans with it. During the
last 8 years we have proved our strive to the a long-term development
and increase of the "ArArAt " brand. Your recent statements in the
press contain serious and groundless accusations about our enterprise",
it is said in the letter.

To be noted, the Yerevan Brandy Company was sold to Perno Ricard Group
in May, 1999 for $30 mln and, at present, it is The biggest exporter
of the Armenian brandy and a leader in the grapes storage.

The volumes of sales in 2005 made uop 4,4 mln l of brandy.

V. Karapetian Refutes Zaman Report on Negotiations b/w ROA, Turkey

VLADIMIR KARAPETIAN REFUTES ZAMAN’S REPORT ON NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN
ARMENIA AND TURKEY

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. No negotiations
are going on between Armenia and Turkey. Vladimir Karapetian, Acting
Spokesperson of RA Foreign Ministry, declared this commenting upon the
September 1 report of the Zaman Turkish daily at the request of NT
correspondent. According to the report of the above mentioned
newspaper, the negotiations of the officials of the two countries’
Foreign Ministries aimed at creating a joint commission of
"historians" between Turkey and Armenia that stopped in 2006 April are
going on at present. The Acting Spokesperson of RA Foreign Ministry
also excluded any consultation or discussion of Turkish and Armenian
diplomats on this issue in the near future.

On This Day – Aug. 31

ON THIS DAY – AUG. 31

News24, South Africa
Aug. 31, 2006

Today is Thursday, August 31, the 243rd day of 2006. There are 122
days left in the year.

Highlights in history on this date:

1990 – After Armenian Republic’s parliament declares a state of
emergency, 250 militant nationalists give up their weapons.

1290 – Jews are exiled from England by proclamation of King Edward 1.

1704 – Forces of Russia’s Czar Peter the Great take Narva in Russia.

1876 – Turkey’s Sultan Murad V is deposed on plea of insanity and is
succeeded by Abdul Hamid 2.

1886 – In one of America’s worst disasters, 110 people are killed
when an earthquake rocks Charleston, South Carolina.

1888 – Mary Ann Nicholls is found murdered in London’s East End. She
is the first victim of Jack the Ripper.

1900 – British forces under Frederick Roberts occupy Johannesburg,
South Africa.

1918 – Bolshevik troops attack British Embassy in Petrograd, Russia.

1922 – Czech-Serb-Croat Alliance is signed at Marienbad.

1923 – Italy starts a brief occupation of the Greek island of Corfu
after the murder of a boundary delegation.

1935 – United States President Franklin D Roosevelt signs an act
prohibiting the export of US arms to belligerents.

1942 – German general Rommel renews offensive against British at
Alam Halfa in North Africa in World War 2, but is driven back to
original lines.

1947 – The US Investigating Committee recommends that Great Britain
give up control of Palestine.

1957 – Malaysia gains independence as Federation of Malaya.

1962 – Trinidad and Tobago become independent nation within British
Commonwealth.

1971 – Cuba terminates the airlift that has brought 246 000, Cuban
refugees from Havana to Florida since December 1965.

1977 – Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith’s party wins the election and
gains all 50 white seats in parliament. The vote gives Smith a mandate
to negotiate with black leaders on greater political representation
for the country’s six million blacks.

1980 – Polish labour leaders sign agreements with Communist government
establishing for first time in a Soviet-bloc nation the rights to
strike and to establish free trade unions.

1982 – El Salvador defences minister Jose Guillermo Garcia Merino
discloses that the armed forces have suffered 3 657 casualties in a
year; bringing the number of people killed by rightists during the
three-year civil war to more than 35 000.

1986 – Moscow’s secret police hold US news correspondent Nicholas
Daniloff on spying allegations. His wife calls it a frame-up.

1987 – Government and opposition officials in South Korea agree on
revising constitution to clear way for direct presidential elections
and other reforms.

1990 – After Armenian Republic’s parliament declares a state of
emergency, 250 militant nationalists give up their weapons.

1991 – Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan become the ninth and tenth Soviet
republics to declare independence.

1994 – Irish Republican Army declares an open-ended cease-fire in
its 24-year campaign against British rule of Northern Ireland.

1995 – A bomb-laden car explodes in a crowded square outside Algeria’s
national police headquarters, killing 10 and injuring 15.

1996 – Iraq captures Irbil in northern Iraq, a key city inside the
Kurdish "safe haven" protected by US-led forces. It is Saddam Hussein’s
largest military action since the end of the Gulf War in 1991.

1997 – Typhoon Rex veers away from Japan’s main island of Honshu, but
the record rainfall it spawned forces thousands to flee their homes.

Flooding and landslides caused by the rains kill 14 people and
injure 45.

1998 – North Korea launches a new, more powerful long-range ballistic
missile that crosses over Japan’s main island and crashes into the
Pacific Ocean. The test draws strong protests from Japan and the US.

2002 – A Russian Mi-24 assault helicopter is shot down by a missile
in Chechnya. Both of the gunship’s pilots are killed. Chechen rebels
claim responsibility.

2004 – Militants in Iraq kill 12 Nepalese contract workers, in a
gruesome video discovered on an Islamic website, showing one of
them beheaded and the 11 others shot in a methodical series of
execution-style slayings.

2005 – Panicked by rumours of a suicide bomber, thousands of Shi’ite
pilgrims break into a stampede on a bridge in Baghdad during a
religious procession, crushing one another or plunging into Tigris
River. Nearly 1 000 die, mostly women and children.

Today’s Birthdays: Theophile Gautier, French author (1811-1872); Maria
Montessori, Italian doctor and educator (1870-1952); William Saroyan,
US writer (1908-1981); Buddy Hackett, US actor/comedian (1924-2003);
Van Morrison, Irish singer (1945); Itzhak Perlman, Israeli violinist
(1945); Richard Gere, US actor (1949).

Thought for Today: Show me the country in which there are no strikes
and I’ll show you that country in which there is no liberty – Emma
Goldman, American anarchist (1869-1940).

Karabakh Receives Letters Of Congratulation On The Occasion Of The 1

KARABAKH RECEIVES LETTERS OF CONGRATULATION ON THE OCCASION OF THE 15TH INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY

Armenpress
Aug 31 2006

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 31, ARMENPRESS: The foreign ministry of the
Nagorno-Nagorno Republic (NKR) said in connection with the 15th
anniversary of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic’s proclamation its
authorities have been receiving letters of congratulation.

"I wish the people of Artsakh (Karabakh) peaceful, secure and free
future and send my warmest congratulations on occasion of the 15th
anniversary of Artsakh’s independence", – is said in the letter of
first Ambassador of the USA to Armenia (1993-1995) Garry Gilmor.

"I sincerely congratulate the brave people of Artsakh, NKR President
and the Government on occasion of the 15th anniversary of independence
of Artsakh and wish all the best", – is said in the message of
publisher and editor of ‘California Courier’ newspaper Harout
Sasounian.

Congratulations from social and political figures of different
countries of the world on the occasion of the 15th anniversary of
independent statehood of Nagorno Karabakh are coming, the foreign
ministry said.

BAKU: Russian President Putin Is Against Serzh Sarkisian As Kocharia

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT PUTIN IS AGAINST SERZH SARKISIAN AS KOCHARIAN’S SUCCESSOR?

Today, Azerbaijan
Aug. 30, 2006

Armenian President’s press secretary Viktor Soghomonian gave a press
briefing in Yerevan.

Kocharian’s press secretary was also asked to comment on a recent
report published in the "Iravunk" weekly, which, citing its sources,
suggested that Russian President Vladimir Putin had openly spoken
against Armenia’s powerful defense minister Serzh Sarkisian as
Kocharian’s successor.

"I haven’t discussed publications of that type with the president
for a long time, because very often they are so absurd that even do
not deserve discussing," Soghomonian said.

He said the relations between Kocharian and Sarkisian were normal and
that there was no conflict between Armenia’s ruling Republican Party
and Prosperous Armenia, a newly established pro-government party led
by tycoon Gagik Tsarukian, RFE/RL Armenian service informs.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/29573.html

BAKU: Aram Sargsian: "Armenia Lost Real Chances To Participate In Gr

ARAM SARGSIAN: "ARMENIA LOST REAL CHANCES TO PARTICIPATE IN GREAT SILK WAY"

Today, Azerbaijan
Aug. 29, 2006

China’s and Kazakhstan’s participation in the construction of
Kars-Tbilisi-Akhalkalaki-Baku railway is another failure of Armenia’s
Foreign Ministry.

Aram Sargsian, chairman of Democratic Party of Armenia, said this in
the interview to ArmInfo that Armenia had real chances to contribute
to construction of an alternative railway in Near East from Europe
and the Central Asia, convincing the interested sides in necessity
to restore the railway connection through Abkhazia. In response to
the issue of ArmInfo whether RA Foreign Ministry would manage to do
what RF Foreign Ministry failed to, Sargsian said that Russia has
quite complicated relations with Georgia and Armenia could act as an
active subject in this direction.

He emphasized that in 1998, in the course of the TRACECA conference in
Baku, Armen Darbinian’s, Head of Ministerial Cabinet of Armenia, report
on construction of railway communication from Europe to the port of
the Near East aroused interest of the European Ministers. "In order to
reach the Near East ports, the Europeans have to sail across 5-6 seas,
and it isn’t surprising that we had been receiving the messages of 10
European Ambassadors during a month after the report," he said. He
believes that Armenia missed the opportunity to participate in the
Great Silk way, after refusing to hold the summit of the European
Transport Ministers.

In response to the request of ArmInfo to comment on the fact that the
draft law directed to isolation of Armenia was declined by the US
House of Representatives and supported by the country in the chair
of Shanghai Organization for Cooperation (earlier DPA stated that
strengthening of SHOC is a favorable factor for the foreign policy
of Armenia), Sargsian said that it is quite natural, as China gets
dividends from direct railway communication with the Turkish ports,
while USA is too far and isolated with oceans. He added that Armenia
had to display interest to SHOC in time to get the support of China
for realization of its alternative "Great Silk Way."

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/29497.html

Multi-Ethnic Matches Spurned

MULTI-ETHNIC MATCHES SPURNED
By Nune Hakhverdian in Yerevan

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
Aug. 21, 2006

Marrying a foreigner in Armenia, especially an African, can cause
raised eyebrows.

Michael, Anna and their two sons.

Murtada, Naira and their son. Photos by Piruza Khalapyan.

Armenia is a practically mono-ethnic state, with very few instances
of mixed marriages, which makes those who do make inter-racial matches
stand out all the more.

"I bring up my children in the spirit of Christianity and I tell them
that all people are equal, regardless of the colour of their skin
and their faith," said Anna, who lives in Yerevan with her Nigerian
husband Michael and their two small sons Joseph and James.

The two dark-skinned boys do suffer racial abuse in their kindergarten
or on public transport. "I just get furious when they call my children
‘negroes’," she said.

"I don’t feel comfortable in Yerevan," added Michael, who despite
owning his own business, an Internet cafe, wants to take his family
away from Armenia to a more multi-racial society.

Despite living in Armenia for nine years, Michael has not integrated
well and speaks only a few phrases of Armenian.

Michael and Anna’s was the first marriage officially registered
between an African and an Armenian, more than ten years ago and it
is still a very rare case in Armenia.

Ethnographer Hranush Kharatian, who heads the Armenian government’s
department on national minorities and religious issues, notes that
Armenians comprise 97.8 per cent of the population and that they have
little experience of interacting with other nationalities.

She also said that an ancient tradition of self-preservation and
of fostering national identity in the face of adversity had served
Armenia well but carried with it suspicion towards foreigners who
wanted to marry ethnic Armenians, both in Armenia itself and in the
worldwide diaspora.

Yet this attitude, she said, is prevalent in a society, which suffers
from huge migration problems.

"I think foreigners in Armenia will definitely encounter problems,"
Kharatian went on. "Our state does not have an active immigration
policy, there is no discussion of attracting new workers or stimulating
population growth. We don’t have gaps in our workforce, on the contrary
we don’t have enough jobs.

"A person who has an unusual appearance or whose skin is a different
colour tries to lead the life of an ordinary citizen, but the extra
attention he gets from society makes his life public property."

According to official statistics, in the 18 months between January
2005 and the end of June 2006, there were 864 marriages between
Armenians and foreigners out of a total of 20,000 unions overall.

"I think any of our women who marry blacks are our enemies," said
a middle-aged man with higher education questioned by IWPR on the
street in Yerevan. "Armenian blood should not be mix with the blood
of blacks. If you marry a foreigner then he should at least be white."

His view was typical of many ordinary Armenians asked to comment on
the issue.

Murtada came to Armenia from Sudan nine years ago as a tourist and
married an Armenian named Naira. They live in Yerevan and Murtada,
who trained as an economist, works as a driver.

"I’m not concerned by the extra attention that gets paid to us, but
I worry about Murtada," his wife told IWPR. "He is a very sensitive
person and he can be insulted by a sideways glance."

"I can’t hide the colour of my husband’s skin," she went on, expressing
hope that their son Bashir, who speaks Armenian like a native will
not suffer from the same problems as his father.

Mira, who is Korean, moved from Moscow to Armenia with her Armenian
husband Ashot. She said that the two of them, both artists, had
encountered few problems and had had more trouble in Georgia, where
they also lived for several years.

Ashot acknowledged that it was easier for his wife, an Asian, to fit
into Armenia than for an African to do so. But he said he was worried
by the country’s intolerance towards foreigners. "The more developed
a country is the better it treats its foreigners. Poorly developed
countries put obstacles in the way of foreigners," he said.

"We need time to live together so that Armenians get used to the idea
that black-skinned people can adapt to our way of life, speak Armenian
and live like Armenians," said Vladimir Mikaelian, a psychologist.

He argued that Armenian ignorance about foreigners stemmed from lack
of historical experience rather than sheer prejudice. "We know the
customs of Arabs, Turks and Persians," he said. "And we get our ideas
about black people from the media and ascribe to them traits which
we learn about second-hand."

Mikaelian also mentioned a good example of racial prejudice being
overcome: the popular black television performer Hrant Hovsepian,
known as Blond, who has an adoptive Armenia mother.

"If Armenia wants to develop then it ought to understand that, one way
or another, foreigners will keep on coming here," said Elza Guchinova,
who is herself an ethnic Kalmyk and is doing comparative research
on the mono-ethnic societies of Armenia and Japan. "[Urban centres]
all over the world are ethnically diverse and it’s impossible to stop
this process."

Nune Hakhverdian is a reporter for 168 Hours newspaper.