RA Foreign Minister Not Scheduled To Meet OSCE MG Co-Chairs In Paris

RA FOREIGN MINISTER NOT SCHEDULED TO MEET OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS IN PARIS

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.03.2010 11:17 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian is not
scheduled to visit Paris for a meeting with Co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk
Group, RA MFA spokesman Tigran Balayan told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

According to Azeri media reports, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov will meet with the international mediators in Paris on
March 6.

The OSCE Minsk Group was created in 1992 to encourage a peaceful,
negotiated resolution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. The Minsk
Group is headed by a Co-Chairmanship consisting of France, Russia and
the United States. The main objectives of the Minsk Process are as
follows: Providing an appropriate framework for conflict resolution
in the way of assuring the negotiation process supported by the Minsk
Group; Obtaining conclusion by the Parties of an agreement on the
cessation of the armed conflict in order to permit the convening of
the Minsk Conference; Promoting the peace process by deploying OSCE
multinational peacekeeping forces.

Turkey Warns US Against Armenia ‘Genocide’ Bill

TURKEY WARNS US AGAINST ARMENIA ‘GENOCIDE’ BILL

Press TV
March 1 2010

Burak Ozugergin, spokesman of Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Turkey has warned the US against approving a draft bill that recognizes
as genocide the massacre of Armenians between 1915 and 1918 during
World War I.

The US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee is to decide
on Thursday whether to recognize as genocide the mass killing of 1.5
million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during the period.

Such a resolution would damage ties between Ankara and Washington and
undermine efforts to normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia,
Burak Ozugergin, spokesman of Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
was quoted as saying on Monday by the semi-official Anatolia News
Agency, Xinhua reported.

Describing the issue of "genocide" as a baseless allegation, Ozugergin
urged the House panel to "act with a sense of responsibility."

President Barack Obama promised during his election campaign that
his administration would recognize the Armenian massacre as genocide.

Last week, however, during a hearing at Congress, Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton underlined the importance of continuing rapprochement
process between Turkey and Armenia, saying that any step that derail
this process should be avoided.

Armenia has pushed for international recognition of the death of
Armenians under the Ottoman rule as genocide.

Inflation In Armenia Reflects Delayed Impact Of Dram’s Devaluation A

INFLATION IN ARMENIA REFLECTS DELAYED IMPACT OF DRAM’S DEVALUATION AND NATURAL GAS PRICE RISE: WB

ARKA
Feb 26, 2010

YEREVAN, February 26, /ARKA/. Inflation in Armenia reflects the delayed
impact of several factors, such as devaluation of the Dram in 2009
March, as well as the natural gas price rise, World Bank Yerevan
Office head, Aristomene Varoudakis said today.

Speaking at a news conference he said inflation at the end of 2009
exceeded Central Bank’s expectations reaching 6.5%, rising further
to 7% in January 2010.

Consumer prices in 2009 December grew year-on-year by 6.5%. In 2010
January a 1.7% inflation was registered. In terms of 12 months it
was 7%.

According to Varoudakis, Armenian inflation was affected also by
some other factors, particularly, by the rise of prices of sugar,
wheat and medications.

Aristomene Varoudakis also said Armenian banking system has high
liquidity level both in hard currency and Drams, but he added that
it is not used fully for allocation of loans. The 2010 government
budget projects a 4 ±1.5% inflation for 2010. The IMF projects a 6%
inflation.

Sergey Shakaryants: Missile Crisis Forming Around Caucasus

SERGEY SHAKARYANTS: MISSILE CRISIS FORMING AROUND CAUCASUS

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.03.2010 18:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Superpowers, namely Russia and the United
States, are waging struggle for installation of anti-missile systems
worldwide. The US plans to install missile defense shields in Romania
and Turkey. In response, Russia speaks about stationing S-400 systems
in some CIS states, as well as Iran." Sergey Shakaryants told a news
conference in Yerevan.

"A missile crisis is forming around Caucasus, with no forecasts as
to the date of its termination," he said. "Global processes like this
seem to push Karabakh issue, Armenia-Turkey border opening and Iran’s
nuclear program to the background."

Dwelling on the impact of Russia-US missile crisis on Karabakh conflict
settlement and Armenia-Turkey rapprochement, Mr. Shakaryants said
that the issues above will remain frozen until the missile crisis
is solved. "Still, a moment may come for Azerbaijan, driven to
desperation, to resume hostilities," he added.

"Turkish nationalists have apprehensions about the Armenian-Turkish
border opening, intensified by current Kurdization of Turkish regions,
adjacent to Armenia. Nationalists are concerned that Armenians and
Kurds may unite around a common goal, which runs counter to Turkey’s
national interests," the expert concluded.

Vivacell-MTS General Manager Ralph Yirikian Visited Lebanon

VIVACELL-MTS GENERAL MANAGER RALPH YIRIKIAN VISITED LEBANON

s16971.html
18:36:20 – 25/02/2010

VivaCell-MTS, a subsidiary of "Mobile TeleSystems" OJSC, informs that
the story of the Company’s hard path to success full of achievements
was revealed to the Lebanese Armenian high school and Haigazian
University students. VivaCell-MTS General Manager Ralph Yirikian
visited Lebanon as a completion of the "Business with a Mission"
project launched earlier last year that covered most of the Armenian
educational institutions, and met with the large youth base eager to
learn more about businesses in the motherland Armenia.

Being hosted at his brithplace was a good chance for VivaCell-MTS
General Manager Ralph Yirikian to share his experience of success.

"VivaCell-MTS has deserved the fame of Armenia’s leading mobile
operator. This was not an easy path to pass, but the willingness to
see the fruits of our labors would help overcome all the hardships. We
managed to succeed, because we chose the proper model of management,
we chose to never hesitate in our success and we were guided by the
understanding of the Corporate Responsibility towards our community. I
owe this to VivaCell-MTS family and my birthplace, because years
ago my notion of homeland and the decision to be useful to it were
formed here. We managed to success because we believed. I want to see
that very flame of faith in success burning in the eyes of the young
people sitting here today. Believe me, there is nothing more pleasant
than the feeling of achievement," VivaCell-MTS General Manager Ralph
Yirikian told the audience.

The meeting was informative and inspiring. The young people got a
clear notion of the abilities necessary for success and the aptitudes
of leadership. They also had a chance to get a closer look at the
story of success of Armenia’s leading mobile operator.

February 24th through 26th, in the frame of his meetings with the
Armenian community in Lebanon, and in addition to the Haigazian
University, VivaCell-MTS General Manager visited the following
educational institutions:

Mesrobian High School (Bourj Hammoud) Armenian Catholic School Kevork
Harboyan High School (Zalka) Armenian Catholic School St. Hripsimiantz
High School (Fanar) Armenian Catholic School Armenian Evangelical High
School (Beirut) Armenian Central Evangelical High School (Ashrafieh)
Shamelian Tatigian High School (Bourj Hammoud) Armenian Evangelical
School Yeghishe Manougian High School (Dbaye) Armenian national
college Sophia Hagopian High School (Bourj Hammoud) Armenian national
college Daruhi-Hovaguimian High School (Jesr El Basha) AGBU School
Hayg Arslanian Djemaran (Mezher) Hamazkayin School

A draw was organized for the students of those educational
institutions. 6 winners of the draw have got an opportunity to visit
Armenia and engage in a walk through the cultural-historical sites of
Armenia. VivaCell-MTS will fully cover all travel and stay expenses
of the students in Armenia. Dedicated VivaCell-MTS employees will
introduce their peers from Diaspora to life in Armenia. VivaCell-MTS
believes that the trip will provide the students from the Diaspora a
unique opportunity to meet with diverse group of the populations. For
these students, the trip is expected to become one of the highlights
of their student years and one of the most memorable events in their
entire life.

"Any Armenian all around the world has now a family back home with
VivaCell-MTS opening all doors to make our compatriots even prouder
of their homeland. Our achievement is dedicated to each and every
Armenian no matter where he/she is," added Ralph Yirikian.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society-lraho

AYF, ACYOA Call To Protest In Front Of Azerbaijani Embassy

AYF, ACYOA CALL TO PROTEST IN FRONT OF AZERBAIJANI EMBASSY

ayf-acyoa-call-to-protest-in-front-of-azerbaijani- embassy/
February 25, 2010

WASHINGTON (A.W.)-On Fri., Feb. 26, the Washington chapters of
the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) and the Armenian Church Youth
Organization of America (ACYOA) will hold a protest in front of the
Azerbaijani Embassy in Washington.

The protest will be in memory of the victims of the pogroms of the
Armenian population in the Azerbaijani city of Sumgait in February
1988. The organizers call on Armenians of the Greater Washington area
to join them in protest "against the bloody response to the peaceful
demands of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabagh for freedom."

The protest will be held from 4-5 p.m., in front of the embassy,
2741 34th St., NW Washington, D.C.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/02/25/

Government Of Armenia To Approve 60 Million Drams To Subsidize Inter

GOVERNMENT OF ARMENIA TO APPROVE 60 MILLION DRAMS TO SUBSIDIZE INTEREST RATES UNDER PROGRAM "AFFORDABLE HOUSING TO YOUNG FAMILIES"

ArmInfo
25.02.2010

ArmInfo.The Government of Armenia approved 60 million drams to
subsidize 2% of interest rates under national program of Affordable
Housing to Young Families, Thursday. Deputy Minister of Finance
Pavel Safaryan presented the project and said that the amount will
be provided in the first half of 2010.

Earlier on February 16 the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) registered
the Universal Credit Organization "Housing for Young Families" on the
basis of the Bill on national target program of affordable housing
to young families approved by the Government of Armenia on Jan 29 2010.

This is a social program consisting of two components. Mher
Yedigaryan, Housing for Young Families UCO Executive Director says
the first component is government subsidizing of interests on the
mortgage loans and the second component is provision of inexpensive
resources to lending companies for on-lending to young families on
preferential terms. Loans will be provided at the annual interest of
10.5%, including 2% to be subsidized by the government. The value of
the property must not exceed 16 mln AMD, and the requested prepayment
will be 30% of the housing value. The loans will be provided for up
to 10 years. Contenders for loans under the given state program are
the family couples, whose summary age does not exceed 60 years. At
the same time, either of the persons is not to be older than 35. In
addition, a single parent under 30 may also make use of the program.

To receive a loan, the average monthly budget of young families
including assistance by parents and relatives should be 300-350
thsd AMD.

Yasmin Levy At Cadogan Hall, SW1

YASMIN LEVY AT CADOGAN HALL, SW1

The Times
February 26, 2010
UK

Ancestral Sephardic songs made for a potent display from the Israeli
singerClive Davis

Recommend?

At one level, the Israeli singer’s message is profoundly pessimistic:
Yasmin Levy tells her audience that Ladino – the Sephardic language of
an ever-shrinking minority scattered across the globe – is doomed to
extinction. Those who use it in daily life are growing older by the
day; the younger generation, including Levy herself, has lost that
instinctive connection. Hebrew or Spanish have taken its place. Yet
she sees performances of the ancestral songs as a way of preserving
the words and imagery, and in that respect, she is winning her battle
against history.

Whether or not she needed to delve so deeply into the affinities with
flamenco has been a moot point among her admirers. Levy sometimes
seemed so eager to explore the byways of Andalusia that her voice
slipped into a shrill and overbearing tone. It was a relief to find
her reining in the excesses on her stylish new album, Sentir.

Cadogan Hall’s acoustics were not best suited to Levy’s incantatory
vibrato, but this was still a potent display from a defiantly
multicultural group that included an Armenian reeds player, Vardan
Hovanissian, and a Scottish guitarist, Cuffy Cuthbertson. If some of
the intimacy of the studio recording was lost in this spacious setting,
Levy calmly drew her audience closer with playful introductions and
translations that undercut the often melancholy and fatalistic content
of the songs themselves. "Did I make you miserable yet?" she asked
jokingly at one point. Sometimes, in fact, she tried too hard to make
us feel at home: the stark poetry of the songs – a contemporary blend
of Ladino and Spanish – works well enough on its own austere terms.

As Hovanissian and his colleagues took their concise solos, Levy
prowled the stage, essaying delicate, Zen-like dance steps. On the
serene ballad Una Pastora she was left alone on the stage as she
communed with the voice of her late father, the revered musicologist
Yitzhak Levy. Elsewhere, the soaring arrangement of Leonard Cohen’s
Hallelujah fitted neatly into the mix, and at the end the stirring
Balkan pulse of Jaco transformed the venue into something resembling
a sun-dappled village square.

Opposition: Armenia’s Penal Institutions Regime’s Business Units

OPPOSITION: ARMENIA’S PENAL INSTITUTIONS REGIME’S BUSINESS UNITS

news.am
Feb 25 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s penal institutions are serious business units serving the
incumbent regime. It is no coincidence that the Armenian Minister of
Justice and chiefs of penal institutions rank among millionaires,
the former political prisoner, Chairman of the Democratic Homeland
Party Petros Makeyan stated at a panel discussion "Political views
in Armenia."

He pointed out that political prisoners are not at all protected in
Armenia. Moreover, their fate is "in the king pins’ hands."

"They are doing their best to earn as much money as possible — this
is the real worth of Armenia’s penal institutions. Especially now
that this wolf Ashot Giziryan is ordering about there," Makeyan said.

In his turn, the former minister of foreign affairs and political
prisoner Alexander Arzumanyan said: "At present, Armenia’s judicial
system is a criminal gang performing punitive functions."

The former political prisoner Grigor Voskerchyan pointed out that "lazy
and illiterate investigators" are working at Armenia’s prosecutor’s
offices. "It was only two months after I was arrested that trumped
up charges were brought against me," he said. Voskerchyan added that
investigators are "reluctant to probe or prove, but they only plant
bugs and then bring charges against you."

NPR Transcript: Mother, Son Create A New Life For That Old Sweater

MOTHER, SON CREATE A NEW LIFE FOR THAT OLD SWEATER

National Public Radio (NPR)
February 24, 2010 Wednesday

Think about the far, dim reaches of your closet, where that
stretched-out sweater sits patiently waiting. Or maybe it’s one
that’s too tight or out-of- fashion, or just plain ugly. Well,
a new, very small-scale operation called Reknit will take that old
sweater and repurpose it into something usable: a scarf or gloves
or a hat. You send in the offending sweater, along with 30 bucks,
and Gayane Avanian will unravel it and reknit it into something new.

Gayane Avanian is a computer programmer by day, a reknitter by night.

She joins us from Boston, along with her son, Haik Avanian, a graphic
designer who joins us from Toledo. Welcome to you both.

Ms. GAYANE AVANIAN (Computer Programmer): Hi.

Mr. HAIK AVANIAN (Graphic Designer): Hello.

BLOCK: And we mentioned this is a small-scale operation – really,
just the two of you. And there’s a note on your Web site, Haik:
Because I only have one mom, we’ve decided to limit orders to the
first 30 for February.

Mr. AVANIAN: Right. I mean, after the unexpected response in January,
we really didn’t know what to expect, and so we just put up that note
and decided that 30 was a manageable number per month.

BLOCK: For just one mom.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. AVANIAN: Yeah.

Ms. AVANIAN: I’m glad he did.

BLOCK: You’re glad he did.

Ms. AVANIAN: Yes.

Mr. AVANIAN: Yeah, I mean, this way, we don’t really have to worry
about, you know, what if all these people order, and then, you know?

BLOCK: Right. And let’s explain here that you offer one reknitted
item per month. Last month, it was scarves. This month, Gayane,
you’re knitting fingerless gloves, and people can go to the Web site
and vote on what the item for March will be, right?

Ms. AVANIAN: Yes, and then on the last day of February, Haik will
redesign the page. He will change the colors, and then he will change
the item.

BLOCK: And so far, at least for March, it looks like hat is in
the lead.

Mr. AVANIAN: Yeah. I think…

Ms. AVANIAN: Yeah, I need to get ready.

BLOCK: You need to get ready?

(Soundbite of laughter)

BLOCK: And how long does it take you to unravel one and to turn it
into something else?

Ms. AVANIAN: Altogether, I think I will say like, about seven,
eight hours

BLOCK: Your family is originally from Armenia, and it sounds like
knitting really runs in the family. Is that right, Gayane?

Ms. AVANIAN: Yes. In Armenia like, almost all women there know how to
knit at least the simple things. And I learned to knit from my mom,
and she learned it from her grandma. My mom is real good knitter.

Mr. AVANIAN: And I think that’s what’s interesting is, you know, taking
something that’s fairly normal to us, and it’s a really resourceful
thing, and then just kind of sharing that part of our culture with
as many people as we can here, which is kind of my favorite thing
about the whole situation.

BLOCK: Gayane, do you get any notes in the packages when people send
in their sweaters?

Ms. AVANIAN: Yes, sometimes, and I really like the notes because
they’re always nice: Thank you for doing this. Can’t wait to get my
scarf back or gloves back. Sometimes they – like, I got a note from
a woman who said, this jacket was knitted by my grandma. Please,
if you can incorporate the buttons from it to the scarf and if no,
could you please send the buttons back? So I tried to incorporate
the buttons and send it to the woman.

BLOCK: Well, Haik, what do you think? Do you want keep this project,
really, with just you and your mom, or do you think you should expand
it and make it bigger?

Mr. AVANIAN: I mean, I’ve gotten so many different emails about,
you know – I’ve gotten emails from people offering me to hook me up
with their friend who has a friend in South Korea, who has a factory,
and people asking if they could be one of the moms because they don’t
really believe that it’s just one mom.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. AVANIAN: I’ve seen other skeptical, kind of, discussions online
talking about how this was probably just some giant factory full of
people working. I think for us, the whole reason the thing worked is
because it was so small and simple. And I think if we overcomplicate
it, it’ll stop being fun and it might stress us out. It’ll stress my
mom out.

BLOCK: You don’t want that, Gayane?

Ms. AVANIAN: No. I kind of like it because I consider this as, like,
Haik’s gift to me. And I just want to have a small and have, like,
a reasonable amount of orders.

BLOCK: Well, Haik and Gayane Avanian, thanks for talking with us.

Mr. AVANIAN: Thank you so much for having us.

Ms. AVANIAN: Thank you.

BLOCK: That’s Haik Avanian and his mother, Gayane, talking about their
Internet project Reknit. And you can see some of the reknit items at
our Web site, npr.org. Haik was in Toledo, and Gayane in Boston.

Ms. AVANIAN: Bye, Haik.

Mr. AVANIAN: Bye, take care.