Foreign Information Technology Companies Perform Orders Of 20-30 Mil

FOREIGN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY COMPANIES PERFORM ORDERS OF 20-30 MILLION DOLLARS A YEAR FOR ARMENIAN BANKS

Noyan Tapan

Ma y 15, 2008

YEREVAN, MAY 15, NOYAN TAPAN. Foreign companies receive orders for
IT production of 20-30 million dollars a year from Armenian banks,
the executive director of the Union of IT Enterprises of Armenia
(UITE) Karen Vardanian said at the May 14 press conference.

According to him, Armenian banks place orders for database development
and installation, as well as for other labor-intensive IT production
to be made by foreign companies. This is connditioned by the fact that
the banks are not sure that a local company to take the order will
not be liquidated or bought by another company in the near future,
as a result of which the bank may be left without services and the
necessary advice.

In the words of the executive director of the Union of Banks of
Armenia Mikael Hovsepian, the 22 Armenian banks place orders for
their software solutions with two local IT companies – Armenian
Software and L-Soft. The reason is that the software solutions of
the indicated companies are more localized – in accordance with the
Armenian legislation. According to K. Vardanian, these solutions are
mainly used for management of banks’ money flows and in the local
bank networks.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=113414

STAR Net Of Supermarkets Does Not Admit Ungrounded Price Increase In

STAR NET OF SUPERMARKETS DOES NOT ADMIT UNGROUNDED PRICE INCREASE IN FOOD MARKET

arminfo
2008-05-14 23:14:00

ArmInfo. ‘STAR net of supermarkets does not admit the ungrounded
price increase in the food market>, Executive Director of STAR Vahan
Kerobyan told ArmInfo during opening of the tenth supermarket in
Kanaker-Zeytun Yerevan community.

He said that the Company continuously observes the situation in the
world markets. "Rise in prices for foodstuffs from our suppliers
should be strictly grounded and have minimum affect on our clients’
budget", V. Kerobyan said.

Along with it, he said that the Company invested about $600,000 in
the opening of the tenth supermarket in a metro format (300 sq m)
in the STAR’s multi-format concept. "As known, the prime cost of the
rade area in small stores is much higher than in supermarkets of large
format. Therefore, the economy here differs and rests upon the products
with high margin, including hot dishes", V. Kerobyan said. He also said
that the number of the names of goods presented in the supermarket,
totals about 3.5 thsd units. "We do our best for every new supermarket
to be better than the previous ones in all the respects, including the
technological one. From this viewpoint, one may say with confidence
that this supermarket is equipped state-of-the-art, though we keep
on working with our permanent importers", he emphasized and added
that a system of full self-service functions in this supermarket.

Talking of the price policy in the new retail point, V. Kerobyan said
that STAR will keep suggesting the best combination of price and
quality to its clients. "According to its policy, STAR is targeted
mainly at the average population stratum", he emphasized. V. Kerobyan
also said that STAR schedules to open supermarkets in 2008 in Erebuni,
Davidashen and Achapnyak communities as well.

Russia Does Its Best To Provide For Real Conditions For Successful R

RUSSIA DOES ITS BEST TO PROVIDE FOR REAL CONDITIONS FOR SUCCESSFUL RESOLUTION OF THE KARABAKH CONFLICT

armradio.am
13.05.2008 16:12

Speaker of the Russian State Duma Boris Gryzlov declared in Baku today
that being one of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia "does
its best to create real conditions for the successful resolution of
the issue."

"We hope that during the meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani
Presidents on the sidelines of the summit in Saint Petersburg real
opportunities will be created for the continuation of the negotiation
process," Gryzlov said during the meeting with the Speaker of the
Azeri Mili Majlis Oktay Asadov.

"We can become the guarantor, create conditions for the negotiation
process, Russia, as a Co-Chair country of the OSCE Minsk Group, has
real opportunities to exert influence on other participants of the
negotiations," the State Duma Speaker stated.

For his part, Asadov expressed hoe that "Russia will intensify the
activity to resolve the Karabakh conflict."

Kathleen Chalfant, ‘Red Dog Howls,’ tackle the Armenian genocide

Los Angeles Times, CA
May 8 2008

Kathleen Chalfant, ‘Red Dog Howls,’ tackle the Armenian genocide

The veteran actress plays a 91-year-old survivor in the play.

By Patrick Pacheco, Special to The Times
May 11, 2008
New York

KATHLEEN Chalfant is recalling the first time she rented the British
actress Miriam Margolyes’ house in Tuscany, now an annual summer
ritual for the Chalfant family. "Let’s see, it was 10 years ago, just
after my brother’s death," she says, digging into a plate of crab
salad. "It will be 10 years. . . ." She pauses. "Oh, my God, that’s
today."

Just the barest flicker of emotion crosses over the 63-year-old
actress’ luminous blue eyes, even though Chalfant was close to her
brother, Alan Palmer, a San Francisco restaurateur and political
fundraiser. Her moving astringency is typical of the emotional
discipline she has brought to myriad great performances, including her
turns — rabbi, Mormon mother, Ethel Rosenberg — in Tony Kushner’s
"Angels in America" (for which she received a Tony nomination); her
Vivian Bearing, the acerbic John Donne scholar dying of cancer in
Margaret Edson’s "Wit"; and, more recently, her imperious matriarch in
Sarah Ruhl’s "Dead Man’s Cell Phone."

Now Chalfant is applying that extraordinary rigor in a new play, "Red
Dog Howls," in the role of Rose Afratian, a fierce and haunted
91-year-old survivor of the massacres of Armenians that began in
1915. Red Dog HowlsThe memory play by Alexander Dinelaris examines the
legacy of violence and its effect on Rose’s young grandson,
Michael. On the cusp of beginning his own family and while going
through his dead father’s personal effects, Michael discovers letters
that lead to a grandmother he’s never known, uncovering terrible
wounds for both. The play opens Wednesday at the El Portal Theatre in
North Hollywood.

"Kathleen is one of the few great actresses of the stage who can
handle stern comedy and enormous gravitas," Dinelaris says. "The
character may be 91, but the audience has to believe she could live
another 30 years. Kathleen conveys the age as well the strength of a
much younger woman."

Indeed, in the rehearsal that preceded lunch, under the watch of
director Michael Peretzian, Chalfant sparred with Matthew Rauch,
playing Michael, in a scene that alternated between Rose’s dry humor
and the tension of two strangers assessing the dangers and
opportunities of a first encounter. Yet for all of Chalfant’s cerebral
cool, what one notices is an earthly sensuality — traces of the
independent child of the ’60s she once was.

"It is a surprise," acknowledges Dinelaris. "But it’s there in the way
she moves, in the kind of visceral attachment she has toward food and
in the softness she has toward family."

All of which fits well into Rose, who in the course of the play not
only lets her grandson in on searing family secrets but also
challenges him to arm-wrestling (which she wins) and continually
badgers him to eat. The latter is of a piece with the Armenian
matriarch whom Chalfant played off-Broadway in Leslie Ayvazian’s "Nine
Armenians." But that domestic play shares little with the strong
echoes of Greek tragedy in "Red Dog Howls" — something that attracted
Chalfant, who majored in the classics at Stanford.

"The central issue for a lot of my work is that violence is
irredeemable, that it does great harm to both the perpetrator and the
victim," she says. For the ancient Greeks, that violence was most
often the result of a curse placed on a family because of some
horrendous misdeed. And although Chalfant says she admires "the
practicality, realism and irony" of the Greek philosophical worldview
— "This is just the way of the world" — she is much more a child of
the enlightenment.

"I believe in the redemptive power of reason," says Chalfant. "I don’t
believe in curses. Whatever curses there are, it is in the
psychological burdens which a parent may place on one’s
children. These things can be redeemed or stopped; I don’t think it’s
necessary for children to suffer from the same lunacy as their
parents."

Parents’ part

CHALFANT’S parents — William Bishop and Norah Ford — deeded to their
daughter a bifurcated vision of the world.

"My father was fierce, dark and misanthropic," recalls Chalfant of the
man who had been in the military and then later ran boarding houses
with his wife. "My mother was the bridge to the outer world —
beautiful, charming, funny, highly tolerant and very strong. It never
occurred to me that men and women weren’t equal. But both my mother
and her mother, Nelly, who was married five times, tempered that
strength by being very sexy."

Chalfant says that she learned everything she knows about acting by
carefully observing the colorful polyglot inhabiting her parents’
businesses, first a motel in Sacramento and then a 50-room boarding
house in East Oakland. She grew up there with her parents, paternal
grandfather and maternal grandmother, who often took her to the
movies. She was weaned on 1950s melodramas, like Rita Hayworth in
"Miss Sadie Thompson." But Chalfant says she was drawn to westerns. If
there was any childhood impulse to become an actress, it came from
fantasizing about one thing: to be kissed by a cowboy.

Much to her surprise, at 17, she had her first kiss in the music room
of the boarding house — from John Miller, "a Keith Carradine
look-alike and intellectual" who eschewed acting as superficial and
encouraged Chalfant to study ancient Greek language and culture. Three
years later, she broke Miller’s heart after she met Henry Chalfant, a
painter, and ran off to Mexico with him. They married in 1966 and went
to live in Europe, first in Barcelona, where their son David, now a
musician and record producer, was born. They then moved to Rome, where
Kathleen studied acting. "I remember when we were driving back from
Mexico, I told Henry, ‘I don’t want to be stuck teaching Greek to prep
school students.’ He said, ‘What do you want to do?’ Out of the blue,
I said, ‘I want to be an actress.’ "

Her start in acting

THE COUPLE returned from Rome to the U.S. in 1971, settling in
Woodstock, N.Y., where Henry ultimately became a photographer and
documentary filmmaker. After giving birth to a daughter, Andromache
(now a set designer), Chalfant and her husband moved to New York City,
where she began a career off-off-Broadway that would be distinguished
for its sheer breadth and versatility. The actress appeared in plays
by the likes of Jules Feiffer, Christopher Durang, Maria Irene Fornés
and Samuel Beckett before making her Broadway debut in 1975 in Greg
Antonacci’s "Dance With Me." "I just wanted work, and I wanted
challenges," she said. "Yes, a lot of my work has been political, but
it’s been mostly due to good luck."

That would include getting cast early on in the development of
Kushner’s "Angels in America" and landing the role of Bearing in "Wit"
(seen at the Geffen Playhouse in 2000). In the years between the
projects, however, Chalfant was beset with a "paralyzing" fear of
acting. "I’m not sure what caused it, but I was lucky to have a very
good therapist who gave me some good advice: Don’t think about
it. And, miraculously, it worked."

She admits, with a sheepish smile, that it might well have been
physiological. "I think since then I’ve been a much braver actress,"
she says. "Only in the last couple of years, since ‘Wit,’ has it
really dawned on me that I have some skills. Now it’s fun!"

It’s ironic that "Wit," a brutally poetic play about a woman
confronting death only with the salve of her beloved John Donne,
should be Chalfant’s life raft. "Who could have known that play about
a naked, bald woman in her 50s would have had such an impact?" she
says. While she was reaching what is arguably the pinnacle of her
career with "Wit," her brother Alan, who had since moved in with the
Chalfant family, was dying of cancer.

Asked if playing in "Wit," with its unsentimental yet clarifying view
of death, was a comfort at the time, Chalfant says, "What I came to
understand was death as a particular stage of life, a mysterious
progression in the life of all beings, not a very long one. I don’t
know what came before, and I don’t know what will come after. Frankly,
I’m more concerned with the here and now and making this life a little
better than how I found it."

After spending time plumbing the tragedy of the Armenian genocide in
"Red Dog Howls," Chalfant is looking forward to Tuscany.

"There is a beautiful loggia looking over an olive grove where we take
a lot of our meals," she says, brimming with anticipation. "Alan’s
ashes are buried there; we always remember to splash his grave with a
good Brunello."

BAKU: Anne Derse: Independent Media under Attack

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
May 5 2008

Anne Derse: "Development of the independent media as a strong
institution to support Azerbaijan’s democratic development is under
attack"

05 May 2008 [17:25] – Today.Az

The speech of US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Anne Derse, made during her
visit to the north-western region of Azerbaijan:

Ladies and gentlemen,

Thank you for inviting me. It is an honor to celebrate World Press
Freedom Day in the Center that is named after the National Hero of
Azerbaijan, courageous journalist Chingiz Mustafayev, who fell while
performing his duties as a journalist in 1991.

"Our liberty depends on freedom of the press and that cannot be
limited without being lost." So spoke Thomas Jefferson over 200 years
ago. Without a free press, citizens have no access to independent
information about their government and its policies and
performance. Without a free press, citizens do not have the
information they need to hold government accountable, and
consequently, the risk of corruption, malfeasance and mismanagement is
great, especially in an oil rich state. Without a free press, there
can be no public exchange of ideas about national challenges and
priorities Without a free press, there is no real freedom.

That is why it is important that governments that respect freedom
vigorously uphold the right of journalists to work freely, without
fear of violence and persecution, and why it is important that media
adhere to the highest ethical and professional standards in carrying
out their important responsibility to inform the public. Criticism of
the government and government leaders is not treason, it is a hallmark
of true democracy. The US believes that libel and defamation should
not be criminal offences, journalists should not be imprisoned for
expressing their views, incidents of violence or harassment against
journalists to intimidate them into silence should be vigorously
investigated and prosecuted and governments in developing democracies
should work with civil society to develop a free, independent and
objective media to defend the people’s rights.

Speaking as the representative of a government which supports
Azerbaijan’s independence and sovereignty, which has great respect for
the people of Azerbaijan and for Azerbaijan’s history, culture and
accomplishments, and for Azerbaijan’s great potential as a leader in
the region, I must say that the recent physical attacks and the
ongoing smear campaign against Azadliq journalist Agil Halil and
continuing pressure and threats against pro-opposition and independent
journalists show that development of the independent media as a strong
institution to support Azerbaijan’s democratic development is under
attack. Current attitudes towards the media are more reminiscent of
Azerbaijan’s Soviet past than its democratic future. Many Azerbaijanis
and international observers who support Azerbaijan’s goals of
maintaining independence and promoting freedom, in the face of strong
regional pressures, share this view.

Throughout his short but meaningful life, Chingiz Mustafayev fought
for his people’s right to know. He traveled to the zones, swept by war
to report on tragic consequences of war and its innocent
victims. Scenes from Khojali, taped by Chingiz Mustafayev shook the
world and still continue to touch all peace-loving peoples. These
works demonstrate Chingiz’s courage and commitment to his motherland,
his profession, and the principle of media freedom. The best way to
honor his memory – and those of other pioneering Azerbaijani
journalists – is for us to support all journalists seeking to exercise
that fundamental democratic right in support of Azerbaijan’s
democratic future, and freedom for all Azerbaijanis.

Independent journalism serves the public by addressing and stimulating
a debate on issues of national concern. Just as Chingiz did,
journalists today have a responsibility to report on key issues of
national import, including Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan’s democratic
reforms, the use of its energy revenues, and corruption. I am doubly
happy to see the young generation of Azerbaijani journalists guided by
the courageous work of those, like Chingiz Mustafayev, who made
today’s journalism in Azerbaijan possible.

Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in renewing our commitment to
media freedom and wishing success to all the journalists in Azerbaijan
and everywhere else in the world.

Thank you.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/44794.html

DM: `Individual motives caused the capture of 4 Armenian citizens’

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 5 2008

Seyran Ohanian: `Individual motives inside the army caused the capture
of 4 Armenian citizens by Azerbaijani side’

[ 05 May 2008 13:21 ]

Yeravan-APA. `People guilty in Azerbaijan-capture of four Armenian
citizens will be punished’, said Seyran Ohanian, Armenian defense
minister, APA reports.

He confirmed that Armenian citizens Vanik Zmboyan, Artem Zohrabian,
Karen Torosian and Agasi Enokian had been captured in Nakhchivan
direction of the front. The minister acknowledged that incident based
on individual motives inside the army caused the capture of
above-mentioned persons. Armenian newspapers reported that incident
happened inside military unit as a result of offences against the
newcomer soldier. `There was a problem between the newcomer and his
fellow soldiers and he called his friends to help him. A number of
civilians arrived in military unit in cars and have beaten offenders
of the young soldier. According to unofficial sources, commander of
the military unit have been forced to shoot into the air to calm down
scuffles and called police officers. When police arrived the civilians
escaped from the scene. One of the drivers not known the territory
moved to the mined area and entered into the Azerbaijani territory. As
thus four Armenian citizens have been captured by Azerbaijani
side’. It is interesting that Armenian newspapers couldn’t explain how
the vehicle passed through the mined area and described it as a
miracle. Seyran Ohanian said they kept situation around the captives
on focus. `We regularly keep in touch with Azerbaijani side. The
captives are in normal conditions and will be returned soon. We have
to reason from this incident and to increase attention to the
education-instructional work in military units. The fact will be
investigated and all guilty people, including commanders of military
units will be punished’.

Azerbaijani side spread information that captured Armenians entered
into the Azerbaijani territory to commit terrorist attacks and
sabotages.

Armenia reduces copper, ferromolybdenum output in Q1

Interfax News Agency, Russia
May 4 2008

Armenia reduces copper, ferromolybdenum output in Q1

YEREVAN May 4

Armenia reduced copper concentrate production 6.8% year-on-year in
January-March to 14,895 tonnes, the National Statistics Service said.

Ferromolybdenum production fell 7.7% to 1,267 tonnes.

Zinc concentrate production grew, by 12.8% to 1,165 tonnes, molybdenum
concentrate was up 1.1% to 2,048 tonnes, aluminum foil soared
85.4-fold to 1,051 tonnes and converter copper rose 9.5% to 1,655
tonnes.

Opp to nominate single-whole candidates at local government election

Armenian opposition to nominate single-whole candidates at local
government election

2008-05-04 17:38:00

ArmInfo. The opposition parliamentary faction Heritage has been
observing various options of
participation in the local government election. As a member of the
Heritage party faction Larisa Alaverdyan told ArmInfo correspondent,
the party still has no candidate to local government election. For his
part, another deputy from the Heritage party Vardan Khachatryan added
that at present the party is observing suggestions of other opposition
parties about nomination of single-whole candidates at the local
government election.

To note, local government election in Armenia will be held on 18 May.
According to official data of Central electoral Commission of Armenia
no candidate from the opposition has nominated his candidacy at the
forthcoming election.

OSCE Will Arrange Another Monitoring Of Azerbaijan-Armenia Conflict

OSCE WILL ARRANGE ANOTHER MONITORING OF AZERBAIJANI-ARMENIAN CONTACT LINE

DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
April 30, 2008 Wednesday

The press service of the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry reports that
monitoring the state of affairs on the Azerbaijani-Armenian contact
line in the environs of the settlement of Alibeili (Tovuz district)
will take place on April 29.

The monitoring will be arranged in accordance with the mandate of
the personal representative of the OSCE chairman.

Monitoring of the situation from the Azerbaijani side will be carried
out by Personal Representative, Andrzei Kaspsic, and his assistants
Peter Key and Antal Herdic.

The situation from the side of the territories occupied by the Armenian
army will be monitored by personal representative’s assistants Imre
Palatinus, Irgi Aberle, and Jaslan Nurtazin.

Armenian FM Outlines Country’s Foreign Pollitical Priorities

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER OUTLINES COUNTRY’S FOREIGN POLITICAL

Interfax News Agency, Russia
April 30 2008

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian briefed the heads of the
diplomatic missions accredited in Yerevan about Armenia’s foreign
political priorities on Wednesday.

"Armenia will continue to the strengthen strategic partnership with
Russia and will take steps to expand cooperation and friendly relations
with the United States," Nalbandian said.

"The European direction has become among the priorities for Armenia’s
foreign policy," he said.

As regards international organizations, Nalbandian said Armenia
would develop cooperation with the UN, the OSCE (Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe), the Council of Europe and other
international institutions.

Armenia is also willing to normalize relations with Turkey without
any preconditions, he said.

"Armenia attaches significance to ties with its close neighbors,
with which its enjoys friendly cooperation, and is also prepared to
make every possible effort to normalize relations with the neighbors
in relations with which it still has some problems," he said.