Conference On Armenia’s Opportunities In Information Technologies Se

CONFERENCE ON ARMENIA’S OPPORTUNITIES IN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES SECTOR HELD IN FRANCE

Noyan Tapan
Apr 04 2007

ICI-LE-MULINO, APRIL 4, NOYAN TAPAN. An international conference
dedicated to Armenia’s opportunities in the IT sector took place in
the French city of Ici-Le-Mulino on March 30 with the participation
of experts and officials from Armenia, France, the US, Belgium and
various international organizations.

The Armenian delegation was headed by the RA Deputy Minister of Trade
and Economic Development Tigran Davtian, who made the main report on
the Armenian government’s policy in the IT sector.

Pierre Gyurjian, Deputy Director of McKinsey (Belgium), one of the
initiators of the Armenia 2020 Project, and Bagrat Yengibarian,
Director of the Enterprise Incubator Foundation, made speeches on
the current opportunities and development prospects of the Armenian
IT sector.

In his speech Deputy Director of Microsoft Corporation Vahe Torosian
appreciated the inpressive progress registerted in the Armenian IT
sector in recent years, underlining the importance of consistent
steps taken by the Armenian government, including the agreement
signed between Microsoft Corporation and the Armenian government
in early February 2007. Yervand Zorian, Deputy Chairman of the US
company Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE)
and Scientific Director of Virage Logic, spoke about the interest in
operating in the Armenian IT sector that foreign companies have shown.

According to a press release submitted to NT by the RA MFA Press and
Information Department, heads and representatives of nearly 50 French
companies attended the conference. The conference was organized within
the framework of Year of Armenia in France with joint efforts of the
Ici-Le-Mulino mayor’s office, the Armenian embassy in France and the
RA Ministry of Trade and Economic Development, and with the assistance
of the French-Armenian association G2iA, Items International (France)
and the OSCE Yerevan Office.

Attempt Upon Life Of Gyumri Mayor Will Not Be Disclosed, Aram Manuki

ATTEMPT UPON LIFE OF GYUMRI MAYOR WILL NOT BE DISCLOSED, ARAM MANUKIAN CONSIDERS

Noyan Tapan
Apr 03 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 3, NOYAN TAPAN. The April 2 attempt upon life of
Gyumri Mayor was a political retribution and this crime will be never
disclosed. Aram Manukian, Board member of Armenian National Movement
Party, stated at the April 3 press conference. In his words, Armenia
has been completely covered by a criminal cobweb. Criminalized elements
only participated in political processes by now, while henceforth
they will strive for becoming their main dictators.

As A. Manukian affirmed, RA authorities do not struggle against merging
of criminal and political worlds or do not wish to struggle. The ANM
Board member said that Armenia was left out of political and economic
stormy processes taking place in the South Caucasian region. "God
forbid that U.S. start military operations in Iran: our country is
not ready for such developments," A. Manukian said. In fact, as he
stressed, today Armenia has lost its immune system, as it cannot
resist either domestic or foreign challenges.

GUAM urges UN to recognize territorial integrity as basis for settl.

PanARMENIAN.Net

GUAM urges UN `to recognize territorial integrity as basis for
conflict settlement’
02.04.2007 14:41 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Valeriy Chechelashvili, the Secretary General of
GUAM (Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova), stated that the
principle of territorial integrity should be the basis in the
resolution of all conflicts. This principle should be recognized at
the level of UN resolutions.

He informed that GUAM offers the UN General Assembly a draft
resolution which includes this principle. `The UN General Assembly
will consider draft proposals submitted by GUAM member states on the
settlement of conflicts in Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Nagorno Karabakh
and Transdnistria, which target at supporting these countries within
their internationally recognized borders,’ he said.

The GUAM Secretary General stressed that the latest statements by
participants in the resolution process makes their loyalty suspicious
to this internationally accepted principle. `It is almost OK in words,
while we still have problems with respect to frankness in statements
by some participants in the settlement process,’ Chechelashvili noted.

The GUAM Secretary General cited Grigoriy Karasin, the
Status-Secretary of the Russian Foreign Ministry, who originally
estimated the prospective for resolution of conflicts in Abkhazia and
South Ossetia in his interview with Boss magazine. `Particularly, he
does not unilaterally define Russia’s official position on territorial
integrity of Georgia. We would like to hear more exact signals in this
respect from the participants in the peace process, perhaps from
Russia as well,’ Chechelashvili said, Trend news agency reports.

India loses out to Armenia in number of super-growth companies

Times of India, India
April 1 2007

India loses out to Armenia in number of super-growth companies
[ 1 Apr, 2007 1022hrs ISTPTI ]

NEW DELHI: With domestic firms announcing new M&A deals every other
day, showing a huge appetite for growth backed by a robust economic
expansion, India has surprisingly lost its place as the world’s
second largest home to "super growth" companies to a relatively
unknown Armenia.

While the US has retained its top position on Grant Thornton
International’s Super Growth Index for third year in a row, India
suffered a dramatic drop to 14th position as the country’s proportion
of super growth companies halved from 34 per cent to 15 per cent.

India has been replaced by a newcomer Armenia at the second position
with 38 per cent proportion of super growth companies there, as
against 44 per cent in the US, said the study, released on Sunday, by
global consultancy major Grant Thornton.

There was a huge 56 per cent plunge in the number of super growth
companies in India. These are the companies with significant
above-average growth in areas like turnover and employment, it said.

The other top five countries in the league include Ireland (third),
the UK (fourth) and South Africa (fifth), all of which have improved
their rankings.

Other major climbers on the index include Russia, Philippines,
Argentina and Italy.

However, Hong Kong — another strong performer in 2006 at third
place, has also dropped out of the top ten list to 11th position this
year. Other major fallers in the chart include Malaysia and New
Zealand.

According to Grant Thornton International’s Alex MacBeath, the fall
of last year’s two strongest performers India and Hong Kong was the
most significant finding in the survey. "We expected continued strong
performance and may be one of them would possibly take top spot this
year," MacBeath said.

He added, however, that a drop in the number of super growth
companies should not be necessarily considered a bad thing for an
individual economy.

"Growth in employee numbers and turnover can only realistically be
expected to grow rapidly for a limited time before responsible
businesses take stock and review their growth strategies," he said.

There could be a consolidation in Hong Kong and India with those
super growth businesses of the last few years probably concentrating
on profitability rather than simply on high levels of growth,"
MacBeath said.

The Super Growth Index is published by Grant Thornton in its
International Business Report (IBR), which is based on opinions of
7,200 privately-held businesses in 32 countries and represents 81 per
cent of global GDP.

Petition To Extend Arrest Of Zhirayr Sefilian By Two Months To Be Fi

PETITION TO EXTEND ARREST OF ZHIRAYR SEFILIAN BY TWO MONTHS TO BE FILED TO COURT

Noyan Tapan
Mar 30 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 30, NOYAN TAPAN. The Investigative Department of the RA
National Security Service (NSS) made a decision to file a petition on
extending the term of arrest of Zhirayr Sefilian, coordinator of the
"Protection of Liberated Territories" NGO (the term expires on April
10) for two months. Ara Zakarian, lawyer of Z. Sefilian, told this
to NT correspondent.

According to the NSS Investigative Department, extension of the arrest
term is necessary for taking a number of investigative actions.

To recap, Z. Sefilian is charged by Articles 301 and 235 of the RA
Criminal Code – "Public Calls for Usurpation of State Power" and
"Illegal Keeping of Arms".

BAKU: An Azerbaijani MP Says Azerbaijan Will Face No Sanctions In PA

AN AZERBAIJANI MP SAYS AZERBAIJAN WILL FACE NO SANCTIONS IN PACE SPRING SESSION

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
March 30 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku/ Trend , corr. I. Alizadeh/ Rafael Husseynov, a
Member of the Azerbaijani Parliament of the Milli Majlis, Member of
the Azerbaijani Delegation to PACE (Parliamentary Assembly of Council
of Europe), has said that Azerbaijan will face no sanctions in the
forthcoming PACE Spring Session.

He noted that Azerbaijan had fulfilled most of commitments taken
before the Council of Europe. "I think that the forthcoming discussions
will hold normally, since the commitments have been fulfilled," said
Mr. Husseynov. The Azerbaijani MP also noted that as compared with
the period, when Azerbaijan had just joined the Council of Europe,
now, the number of those PACE delegates, who protect the interests
of our country, has increased.

"During the first years, we prepared documents concerning the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflicts, by including the four Resolutions of the
U. N. Security Council. However, when the word "occupant" was put
before the Armenian State, most delegates not only repudiated to
sign corresponding documents, but also treated us abusively. But,
time has passed, and as a result of the work, we could carry out,
their attitude to us has changed for the better. As a result of it,
some 300-400 PACE delegates signed documents that Armenian was a
country-occupant, and, moreover, in 2005, the Organization passed the
resolution that Armenia was really an occupant," said Mr. Husseynov.

Turkish Restoration Of Armenian Church Leaves No Room For Apology

TURKISH RESTORATION OF ARMENIAN CHURCH LEAVES NO ROOM FOR APOLOGY
By Ian Herbert in Van, Anatolia, Turkey

The Independent/UK
30 March 2007

Across a blue salt lake on an island surrounded by snow-capped
mountains in eastern Turkey, Armenian Christians were invited yesterday
to witness how the Turkish nation has restored one of their most
holy sites.

>From the bas-relief etched out of red tufa stone, to the frescoes on
the high conical roof, most of the ancient treasures were back on view
again at the 1,000-year-old Church of the Holy Cross, on the island
of Akdamar in Lake Van, eastern Anatolia. Except for the cross;
the same cross which was visible in early sketches of the church
and photographed in 1908, just before Armenians were rounded up,
never to return, in the city of Van at the beginning of what they
describe as their genocide at the hands of the Ottomans.

The church’s restoration had been sold to the world – and specifically
to the US, whose House of Representatives is about to consider a
resolution labelling the Armenian deaths genocide – as proof that
Turkey want to put things right with the Armenians. But, despite
the protests of the restoration project’s Armenian architect, a
cross was ruled out – as is any immediate prospect of this Christian
church being consecrated so Armenians might, occasionally at least,
pray here again. "The church is reopening as a museum and doesn’t
need a cross," Yusuf Halacoglu, the head of the Turkish Historical
Society, insisted this week. "Around 22,000 Ottoman buildings have
had crescents taken off when attacked. Other countries don’t give as
much attention to that."

The insensitivity set the tone for yesterday’s ceremony which,
despite the Turkish posters everywhere declaring Tarihe saygi, kulture
saygi ("Respect the history, respect the culture"), was a painful
and almost provocative statement of Turkey’s national identity. The
Armenian architect/bishop Manuel, who started building the church in
AD 915, employed Armenian master carvers to create Christian reliefs
of Adam and Eve, Noah’s flood and David and Goliath. But Turkey has
appropriated the holy site in a three-year, $2m (£1m) rebuild and was
making no secret of the fact. The Turkish cresent and a giant Ataturk
hung from the front of the church where, after a triumphal rendition
of the Turkish national anthem, the culture and tourism minister,
Atilla Koc, Turkey’s most senior government representative, made his
address. "We protect the cultural diversity and assets of different
cultures," he proclaimed during a speech in which the word "Armenia"
was not used once.

Perhaps it was just as well that only 29 people from Armenia had
travelled here – by road, via Georgia, because the Turks would not
open the borders to their cars or Van airport to their planes. But
those who did make the journey bore witness to the most extraordinary
man in the place.

Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan believes his people were the victims
of genocide – he calls it medzegherm(the great slaughter) – and
he would like the Turkish government to say "a simple sorry to my
people to ease the tensions". But he was prepared to take the Turks’
Akdamar gesture at face value in the hope that Armenians and Turks
can live together. "The government … has courageously completed
the restoration project," he said when he clambered to his feet.

"It is quite a positive move in Turkish-Armenian relations and I
offer my profound thanks." His only request was that the Turks allow
the church to become the site of annual pilgrimage, concluding in a
Christian ceremony, once a year.

It remains to be seen whether Turkey’s modernising Prime Minister
Recep Tayip Erdogan can let that pass. It is an election year and a
rising tide of nationalism is being fuelled in large part by the EU’s
frostiness about Turkish accession. Antagonising those who consider
further concessions to the Armenians an "insult to Turkishness" might
be politically contentious. It might also explain why Mr Erdogan,
a progressive who started the Akdamar project and has also launched
a History Commission to investigate the events of 1915, thought it
best not to attend yesterday’s ceremony.

So desperate is Mr Erdogan’s government to demonstrate its tolerance
of Turkey’s 70,000 Armenian minority that it took journalists around
the country this week. The trip revealed more than the government
might have intended: Armenian schools in Istanbul where only the
Turkish version of history – ignoring 1915 – is taught; Armenian
priests who need metal detectors at their churches because of the
threat of extremists; and, at the newspaper offices of the murdered
Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink, a stream of abusive emails from
nationalists. (Dink’s last article communicated his exasperation at
the Turks’ initial selection of 24 April – the day when Armenians
mark the anniversary of the round-up of intellectuals in 1915 – as
the day of the Akdamar church reopening. That date was later changed.)

With the Armenian government unwilling to join Mr Erdogan’s
History Commission, Patriarch Mutafyan invokes the memory of Levon
Ter-Petrossian, Armenia’s former president, and his search for
common ground. Mr Ter-Petrossian wanted a monument on the countries’
border with the inscription, in Armenian and Turkish, of the words
"I’m sorry". It was never built.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry said yesterday that a request by
Patriarch Mutayfan that the cross be returned to Akdamar was being
referred to the culture ministry. "I’m praying that one day it will
be there," another Armenian church leader, George Kazoum, said before
the ceremony.

For now, the Armenians can only take comfort from the crosses which
no one can take from them. They were bathed in sunshine yesterday,
away from all of the Turkish stage-managed razzmatazz, on gravestones
in the Akdamar churchyard which have stood here through 1,000 years
of snow, storms, earthquakes and human carnage.

–Boundary_(ID_eAHITgy1lcVJvcSkp2XWDw)–

Small Departure, Large Problem

LEISURE & ARTS

Small Departure, Large Problem
The Smithsonian Institution needs an entirely new modus operandi.

BY ERIC GIBSON
Wednesday, March 28, 2007 12:01 a.m.

The only surprise in Monday’s news that Smithsonian Institution
Secretary Lawrence M. Small had resigned is that it hadn’t happened
sooner.

The reason for Mr. Small’s departure was the fallout on Capitol Hill
from an inspector general’s report that showed him billing the
Smithsonian for such lavish expenses as first-class air travel and
home maintenance costs–albeit with the approval of the Board of
Regents, the Smithsonian’s governing body. Mr. Small might have
weathered this storm as he had others during his seven-year tenure
were it not for threats by Sen. Charles Grassley (R., Iowa) and others
on the Hill to freeze a $17 million increase in the Smithsonian’s 2008
budget unless Mr. Small’s office changed its ways.

Mr. Small, who came to the Smithsonian from Fannie Mae after many
years at Citibank, has opened two new museums, renovated two others
and raised about $1 billion.

Yet for much of his tenure, it seemed he could not get out of bed
without igniting some controversy. Early on he caused uproar by
promising big donors control over the way their monetary gifts were
used, thus blurring the traditional church-state boundary between fund
raising and programming. He allowed General Motors and other
corporations to muddy the distinction between sponsorship and
commercial advertising. He installed as head of the renovated National
Portrait Gallery not an art historian but cultural historian Marc
Pachter, who blithely admitted to Lee Rosenbaum, for an article on
this page, that "I personally don’t do brushstrokes."

Things weren’t much better outside the Smithsonian, where Mr. Small’s
personal life repeatedly cast a pall over the institution. In 2004 he
was convicted of buying art containing feathers from birds on the
Endangered Species list, and then got into a tussle with the judge on
what form his community-service sentence should take. Last year, a
government report implicated him in the Fannie Mae scandal.

So now the Smithsonian must search for a replacement. Early reports
that Sheila P. Burke, a former political operative (she was once
Sen. Robert Dole’s chief of staff) and currently the Smithsonian’s
chief operating officer, is a serious contender for the post are not
reassuring. The Smithsonian doesn’t need another leader from outside
the world of the arts and sciences and unfamiliar with the unique
culture of the nonprofit world. What’s called for now is a figure in
the mold of the Carnegie Endowment’s Vartan Gregorian, who in stints
running Brown University and (most famously) the New York Public
Library showed that it is possible to raise money and maintain an
institution while keeping faith with the values it embodies.

But overdue as it was, Mr. Small’s departure will amount to very
little unless it becomes an occasion to address some longstanding
problems. The first is the Smithsonian’s governance.

As the preceding résumé shows, the Board of Regents should have picked
up on plenty of warning signs that Mr. Small was more of a liability
than an asset. Or was he? Whatever his failings as an administrator,
he certainly knew how to raise money, and it’s hard to escape the
conclusion that as long as Mr. Small kept the checks coming in, the
Regents were only too willing to look the other way. At least until
his actions threatened the support of the Smithsonian’s primary source
of funding: Capitol Hill.

More fundamentally, there is the Smithsonian’s governing structure
itself. The Board of Regents is headed by the chief justice and
includes the vice president and assorted members of Congress along
with a number of private citizens. Whatever luster these public
officials add to the Smithsonian’s letterhead, it’s unrealistic to
expect them to exercise meaningful oversight given their other
responsibilities. (Oh, to have seen Chief Justice Roberts’s expression
when he learned that, besides running an entire branch of government,
he was responsible for 18 museums and research facilities, plus a
zoo.)

Beyond governance, the Smithsonian’s entire basis of operations needs
review. At the moment, Congress provides some 70% of it’s roughly $1
billion annual budget, with the institution itself responsible for the
rest. That may be an enviable figure to some (public largess to most
cultural institutions amounts to far less), but it so limits the
Smithsonian’s other revenue-raising options that it’s like wearing
golden handcuffs. Close the gap by charging admission like other
museums? Out of the question, says Congress. Visitors have already
paid admission with their taxes. One previous secretary who floated
that idea was warned that for every penny the institution took in at
the gate, Congress would dock its appropriation accordingly.

This is the financial environment Mr. Small was forced to operate
in. You can criticize his fund-raising methods, his often skewed sense
of priorities and his insensitivity to the intellectual culture of the
Smithsonian. But under the circumstances, what choice did he have
other than to aggressively cultivate private and corporate donors?

The Smithsonian doesn’t just need a new secretary. It needs an
entirely new modus operandi.

Mr. Gibson is The Wall Street Journal’s Leisure & Arts features editor.

Copyright © 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

http://www.opinionjournal.com/la/?id=110009863

Armenia’s SCPEC leadership expresses condolences

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 26 2007

ARMENIA’S SCPEC LEADERSHIP EXPRESSES CONDOLENCES BECAUSE OF PM’S
DECEASE

YEREVAN, March 26. /ARKA/. Head of the State Commission on the
Protection of Economic Competition (SCPEC) of Armenia Ashot
Shakhnazaryan and the Commission staff expressed condolences because
of decease of Armenia’s Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan.
The SCPEC press service that the text of the condolence said that the
life lived by Margaryan is an example for Armenia’s every citizen, as
many problems in the sphere of competition found solutions with the
direct participation of the deceased PM.
"Andranik Margaryan’s decease is a very big loss for the whole
country," said the condolences of the SCPEC.
Armenian Prime Minister, Chairman of the Republican Party Andranik
Margaryan died from heart attack at the age of 56 on Sunday morning.
Margaryan has led the Government since 2000. L.M. -0–

Russian mobile operator MTS interested in purchasing assets in ROA

Mediamax, Armenia
March 27 2007

Russian mobile operator MTS interested in purchasing assets in
Armenia, but does not have `acceptable proposals’

Yerevan, March 27 /Mediamax/. The Russian mobile operator MTS is
interested in purchasing assets in Armenia, but does not have
`acceptable proposals’ at present.

Mediamax reports that the Spokeswoman of MTS Irina Osadchaya said
this, commenting on the media publications, according to which the
Russian Company holds talks on purchasing the Armenian mobile
operator `VivaCell’.

`MTS is interested in purchasing assets in all the CIS states,
including Armenia, however at present it does not have acceptable
proposals on purchasing mobile operators in Armenia, satisfying the
criteria of strategy in the sphere of mergers and takeovers’, Irina
Osadchaya stated in an interview to Mediamax.