18 food stores fined in Armenia in 2011

18 food stores fined in Armenia in 2011

17:19 – 15.01.12

Eighteen food stores were fined were fined in Armenia last year,
according, Armen Poghosyan, President of the Consumers’ Union, NGO.

Speaking to Tert.am, Poghosyan said the stores had to pay fines for
selling outdated products, particularly, dairy, soft drinks,
semi-prepared fish products and canned coffee.

`But very often the product dates are written in very small fonts not
visible to the unaided eye or they bear the price label,’ he said,
considering such attitude contempt against consumers.

Tert.am

Lernapat Mayor Drops Comp Demand from 1 Million to 1 AMD Against Het

Lernapat Mayor Drops Comp Demand from 1 Million to 1 AMD Against Hetq Reporter

hetq
00:06, January 14, 2012

During the January 13 preliminary hearing at the Vanadzor Court, in
which Lernapat Mayor Vano Yeghiazaryan is suing Hetq reporter Adrineh
Torosyan for slander, the plaintiff changed his financial compensatory
demand from 1 million AMD to a mere 1 AMD.

Mayor Yeghiazaryan is suing over an August 2011 Hetq article (`The
word `to graze’ directed at the mayor cost 1 million’) by Adrineh
Torosyan, covering a judicial dispute between the mayor and local
resident Gevorg Melkonyan.

In his original lawsuit Mayor Yeghiazaryan had demanded that Hetq
issue a public retraction of the `insulting and defamatory’
information, publish an apology and 1 million AMD in compensation,
including legal fees.

The dispute resulted from an article in the newspaper Zhamanak
entitled `Remove This Turk from Our Midst’ in which a number of
Lernapat residents, including Gevorg Melkonyan, expressed their
displeasure regarding the mayor’s work performance. Residents also
called the mayor a few choice names.

Due to the plaintiff’s motion, the trial has been postponed until February 14.

Photo: Adrineh Torosyan’s attorneys Tigran Yegoryan and Lousineh Hakobyan

Fédération des Assoc Arméniennes de Rhône-Alpes a tenu assemblée gén

ARMENIENS RHONE-ALPES
La FAARALP, partenaire incontournable de la région Rhône-Alpes
la Fédération des Associations Arméniennes de Rhône-Alpes a tenu son
assemblée générale

Samedi 14 janvier à Vienne (Isère), la Fédération des Associations
Arméniennes de Rhône-Alpes (FAARALP) qui regroupe une douzaine
d’associations de cinq des huit départements de la région tenait son
assemblée générale. Après la présentation des v`ux, le président
Arthur Derderian a rappelé les grandes dates des associations membres
de la FAARALP au cours de la saison écoulée. Parmi ces dernières, le
20e anniversaire de l’Indépendance de l’Arménie fêtée dans plusieurs
villes de Rhône-Alpes.

« Notre Fédération a apporté sa pierre à l’édifice de la Coopération
décentralisée entre la Région Rhône-Alpes et l’Arménie. Ses membres
ont répondu présent à toutes les sollicitations émises par les
départements, les municipalités et la Région. Ainsi de nombreux
projets ont progressé à Valence, Romans, Grenoble, Montélimar,
Saint-Etienne et Lyon » dit A. Derderian. Il poursuit « à partir de
septembre 2011, une enquête interne a été conduite auprès de nos
membres afin de mieux se connaître et appréhender le poids de la
FAARALP. Les résultats montrent que les différentes associations
adhérentes à notre Fédération disposent d’un total de plus de 800
membres adhérents et disposent d’un impact considérable au sein de la
communauté arménienne de la Région Rhône-Alpes en touchant lors de ses
manifestations près de 40 000 des quelque 100 000 membres de cette
communauté. Des chiffres qui traduisent l’importance de notre
organisation. Nos membres disposent de nombreux projets pour 2012 tels
que le jumelage Montélimar-Sissian, projet de coopération éducative et
technologique avec l’Arménie, le tourisme rural solidaire, le
développement du bio-gaz, un centre de formation agricole à Chenik ».
Les membres de la Fédération des Associations Arméniennes de
Rhône-Alpes se sont félicités également des nombreux articles sur la
FAARALP parus dans « Nouvelles d’Arménie Magazine », « Armenews », «
Azad Magazine », « Le Dauphiné Libéré », « Lyon-Mag » ainsi que des
radios telles que Radio Arménie Lyon. Le rapport moral et financier de
la FAARALP fut approuvé par les membres. Enfin des projets furent
abordés dont le développement de la visibilité de la Fédération par la
création d’un site internet et des plaquettes de communication.

dimanche 15 janvier 2012,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

BAKU: We offer our full support for the MG Co-Chairs to address NK c

State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan
January 13, 2012 Friday

We offer our full support for the Minsk Group Co-Chairs to address the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, OSCE Chairperson-in-Office

Baku 13 January

We`ll work closely with the OSCE Minsk Group to help settlement of
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, OSCE
Chairperson-in-Office, Ireland`s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Foreign Affairs Eamon Gilmore said in his speech in the first OSCE
Permanent Council meeting of this year.

Presenting Ireland`s priorities for 2012, Deputy Prime Minister
Gilmore said I will be applying the principles of balance across the
three dimensions which are the hallmark of all successful
Chairmanships. We will be ambitious in taking forward work in all
areas in 2012 and will do everything in our power to achieve concrete
results and to deliver tangible benefits.

Ireland has always attached a particular importance to the Human
Dimension and we will approach our work in this area: working to
achieve full respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms,
democratic institutions and the rule of law, and working towards full
implementation of OSCE Human Dimension commitments.

Gilmore also pointed out that internet freedom, racism, discrimination
and intolerance in sport will be main topics, as well.

As part of these efforts, we intend to organise a Human Dimension
meeting in Dublin next June for OSCE participating States, at which we
will aim to move towards a common understanding of the issues at
stake, OSCE Chairperson-in-Office added.

On politico-military dimension of the Organisation, Gilmore underlined
that Ireland will seek to continue work on tackling transnational
threats such as organised crime, cyber threats including cyber-crime,
drugs, terrorism and trafficking as well as enhance arms control,
prevent and resolve conflicts and ensure stability and security across
the OSCE area.

As Chairperson-in-Office, I will seek ways in which progress can be
made towards lasting settlements of a number of conflicts in the OSCE
area. I have nominated two Special Representatives (Transdniestria,
South Caucasus) to assist and advise me on these issues during the
Irish Chairmanship. We also commend the continuing work of the OSCE`s
Minsk Group in addressing the long-running dispute over
Nagorno-Karabakh and look forward to working closely with the
Co-Chairs and other members of the Minsk Group during the year, Irish
Deputy Prime Minister said.

Gilmore stressed that a conference on the settlement of the conflicts
will be held in Dublin on April 27.

Why Eelam war not over in Washington

Sunday Times.lk, SriLanka
Jan 15 2012

Why Eelam war not over in Washington

The US capital can be a frontline for international combatants
By Emily Wax

Despite differences that spurred civil war and cost tens of thousands
of lives, the Tamils and the Sinhalese from Sri Lanka have at least
one thing in common: a love of tea. But some Tamil Americans say they
are cautious when they go to Dupont Circle’s Teaism because their
archenemies – the ethnically Sinhalese Sri Lankan Embassy staff –
might also be in there sipping Ceylon green from the old country.

“We would prefer not to have any big, public arguments right now,”
said Vimala Ranjithan, a Tamil American physician who lives in
Cumberland, Md.

The quarter-century-long civil war between the separatist Tamil Tiger
rebel group and the largely Sinhalese Sri Lankan government officially
ended in 2009. But halfway around the world, the two groups continue
to come to verbal blows, enduring awkward run-ins at seemingly neutral
locales.
“They can target you,” said Ranjithan, who wears a disguise with
sunglasses when she goes to a protest against what she considers the
Sri Lankan government’s discrimination against Tamils. She echoes a
fear that many Tamil Americans voiced in interviews: that their
critical words in Washington could result in the arrest or harassment
of relatives back home.

War is not over in Washington: Grace Williams carrying out her
boycott-Lanka campaign. Pic courtesy Washington Post/Sarah L. Voisin
Sri Lankan Americans aren’t the only Washingtonians who find
themselves avoiding their foes on the streets of downtown Washington.
The de facto capital of the world is a high-profile stage for
expatriate rivals who, on their own turf, might be engaged in
guerrilla warfare. Instead, they avoid one another at suburban strip
malls, skirt confrontation at embassy cultural events or duck punches
at political meet-ups when fights break out over conflicts that are
unfolding thousands of miles away.

In Washington’s international circles, the acrimonious relations
between long-standing enemies such as India and Pakistan, Palestinians
and Israel, and Tibet and China are well-known, not least because they
have some of the most organized and well-funded advocacy groups in the
country. But the alleged high-profile Iranian plot to assassinate the
Saudi ambassador to Washington while he dined at his favorite
restaurant was just one example of the subterfuge and animosities
still smoldering just under the city’s surface.

What happens in D.C.

>From his offices on Capitol Hill, Fred Turner’s job is to focus on how
these conflicts unfold on the ground in Washington. “The truth is that
Washington still plays an outsize role on the world stage. And what
happens in Washington gets reported back to Budapest, Bakou or Berlin.
Of course, that amplifies what happens here,” said Turner, deputy
chief of staff for the independent U.S. Helsinki Commission, a
government agency whose mission is to monitor the frozen conflicts,
human rights violations and security breaches in 56 nations in Europe
and Central Asia.

For example, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus has a K Street
office in Washington. Those who live there consider themselves an
independent country, even though the U.S. government does not
recognize them as one. It’s known to the rest of the region as
occupied Northern Cyprus, separate since Turkish troops invaded in
1974.

When the Helsinki Commission recently held a hearing on the
destruction of religious property “in Cyprus,” representatives of the
Turkish Embassy got upset and asked that the hearing’s name be
changed, Turner said. The commission invited the Government of Turkey
to participate, but it declined.
“We’re looking at these issues here every single day,” Turner said.
“Even a simple movie screening has instigated diplomatic fireworks.”

Frontline: Washington

One such fireworks display took place recently, when the Sri Lankan
Embassy hosted a screening of the government-produced film “Lies
Agreed Upon” during a briefing in Congress on rebuilding the country.
The documentary is a rebuttal of reporting by Britain’s Channel 4 News
on alleged war crimes perpetrated by the Sri Lankan government.

Tamil American groups in the area quickly voiced objections. Among
them was Grace Williams, a Tamil American who came to the United
States in 1978. During an interview, she lugs out an encyclopedia-size
photography book with the blunt title “Genocide in Sri Lanka.” It
includes hundreds of pictures of anti-Tamil riots, chronicles the
disappearances of Tamil men and lists names of allegedly assassinated
Tamil political party leaders.

This isn’t the first time that Williams, 54, a Bowie resident and
retired health-care advocate for special-needs children, has been
drawn back into the 26-year conflict. After she took part in a summer
memorial ceremony outside the Capitol honouring the Tamil dead,
someone speaking in the Sinhalese language left a threatening message
on her voice mail, she said.

“I called both my senators,” said Williams, who is also assistant
secretary of the U.S. Tamil Political Action Council, a Tamil activist
group. “They shouldn’t be doing this in America. But Washington is
where these fights are often fought – Washington is another frontline
of these conflicts.”

Sri Lankan Ambassador Jaliya Wickramasuriya said in an interview that
Tamil American groups are usually fronts for the Tamil Tigers, a rebel
movement long on the U.S. list of terrorist organizations. In 2006,
the FBI investigated the Tamil Rehabilitation Organization, which has
a branch in Cumberland, for allegedly financing the Tamil Tigers
through a tsunami relief fund. The U.S. Department of the Treasury
shut the charity down when the allegations were substantiated. (Tamil
Americans say the accusations were unfair and that funds were indeed
used to help victims of the tsunami.)

“We work with the U.S. and FBI to try and figure out who is connected
and who is not,” said the ambassador, who added that he thinks most
Tamil Americans just want to help rebuild the country. “The diaspora
is very active in Washington, and it keeps these issues alive, even
when people back home have moved on.”

Century-old hostilities

Although some of the tensions between international antagonists are
high-level and unfold in official channels, they also manifest
quietly, as chilly silences or suspicious glances between individuals
from warring nations.

On a recent evening, Ali Abudul Latif, a cabdriver from northern
Sudan, was surprised to find that the new nation of South Sudan, with
which his country spent years at war, was holding a conference in
Washington. Salva Kiir, the new country’s president, was even speaking
at a downtown hotel.

Latif fled Sudan because he was a teacher and didn’t want to fight.
But when he found himself picking up fares at the very hotel where
Kiir, once South Sudan’s top rebel commander, was being feted, it
wasn’t the taste of home he was looking for in Washington. “I’m still
wishing we could be one nation,” he said as he began to drive.
“Washington is far away from home, yet home to so many enemies.”
Time has proved as ineffectual as distance in quelling such disputes.

In April, members of Washington’s Armenian community held a silent
vigil at the Turkish Embassy to commemorate the Armenian genocide of
1915 to 1923. On the other side of the street, vigil participants say,
those sympathetic to the Turkish government, which does not
acknowledge that the events of the era constituted genocide, waved
baseball bats and sang and danced in the streets. The police were
called.

Turkish people who attended the counter-rally but asked not to be
named said they were simply mocking the idea of protesting such an old
issue. “It’s totally rude,” said Aram Hamparian, who lives in Bethesda
and is executive director of the Washington-based Armenian National
Committee of America. “Armenian Americans were deeply hurt to see that
allies of Ankara were not simply denying the Armenian genocide but
actually celebrating the destruction of an entire nation.”

Seeking a voice

Perversely, many of these combatants are drawn to Washington for the
same reason: Its proximity to the U.S. government makes it an ideal
base for lobbying efforts. “Our arsenal is not weapons,” said Nick
Larigakis, president of the American Hellenic Institute, which
promotes U.S. relations with Greece and Cyprus and is often at odds
with Turkey’s goals. “It’s having a voice in Washington where we can
use the rule of law to provide credibility to our arguments.”

Sometimes there are victories.

Turkey was allegedly denying religious freedom to Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew, who is head of the Greek Orthodox minority in Istanbul
but also the spiritual leader of all Orthodox Christians.
But steady lobbying by the Greek community here to recent
administrations helped pressure Turkey to improve religious freedoms
there, said Andy Manatos, who, along with his father, Mike Manatos,
runs one of Washington’s most powerful lobbyist firms.

“Washington is far and away the most effective place if you want your
issues addressed,” said Manatos, who focuses on international issues
and also does pro-bono work for the Greek Orthodox Church. “If you can
convince the most powerful people in the world of the truth of your
cause, I know of no place in the world better for advocating your
issue.”

Protesting, but warily

…On a cold December day, on the cobblestone streets of Old Town
Alexandria, the Tamil American community said their fight was far from
over. They were holding up signs that read, “Victoria’s Dirty Little
Secret” and “Big GAP in ethics” in front of Banana Republic and the
Gap, warning shoppers to check labels, lest they buy clothing made in
Sri Lanka, where they say human rights violations are continuing and
Tamils are being forced off their land by the government.

“We need jobs in America, not in a country accused of war crimes,”
they chanted. The wind was piercing, but under a banner that read
“Stop Tamil Genocide” they had their cause to keep them warm. And
Williams and the other protesters were there, dressed in oversize hats
and sunglasses – just in case the enemy was watching.

http://www.sundaytimes.lk/120115/Timestwo/int08.html

Putin bids farewell to legendary agent Vartanian

Interfax, Russia
Jan 13 2012

Putin bids farewell to legendary agent Vartanian

MOSCOW. Jan 13

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin arrived at the Troyekurovskoye
cemetery on Friday to bid farewell to prominent Soviet intelligence
agent Gevork Vartanian, who died on January 10, aged 88.

The head of government laid flowers on Vartanian’s coffin and spoke to
his relatives.

Other officials who came to bid farewell to one of the most famous
Soviet agents included current head of Russia’s Foreign Intelligence
Service (SVR) Mikhail Fradkov and his predecessors Yevgeny Primakov
and Sergei Lebedev. The Armenian ambassador, Vartanian’s former
colleagues and representatives from the Armenian diaspora also arrived
to pay tribute.

Gevork Andreyevich Vartanian was born to Andrei Vasilyevich Vartanian
in Rostov-on-Don on February 17, 1924. In 1930, when Gevork was six
years old, his family moved to Iran. His father was linked to the
Soviet foreign intelligence and left the USSR at its behest. Disguised
as a merchant, Andrei Vasilyevich conducted active intelligence work.
It was under his father’s influence that Gevork became an intelligence
agent.

Gevork joined the Soviet intelligence service at the age of 16, when
he established direct contacts with NKVD (Soviet secret police) agents
based in Tehran in February 1940. At the behest of one of them,
Vartanian led a special group to detect Nazi agents and German spies
in Tehran and elsewhere in Iran. In two years alone, his group
identified around 400 people who were linked to German intelligence in
one way or another.

Amir (Vartanian’s operational name) was actively involved in providing
security for the Tehran summit of the Big Three allied leaders in
November-December 1943. In 1951, he returned to the USSR and graduated
from the Yerevan University with a degree in foreign languages.

After that he worked as an agent in extreme and difficult conditions
in various countries. Vartanian and his wife Goar, who accompanied him
throughout this long-term mission, returned to the USSR in the fall of
1986.

Vartanian continued to serve until 1992. He was awarded the Hero of
the Soviet Union title, and many orders and medals, as well as the
highest state awards.

kk rb

Bulgaria Scraps Armenian Genocide Declaration Once Again

Novinite, Bulgaria
Jan 11 2012

Bulgaria Scraps Armenian Genocide Declaration Once Again
Domestic | January 11, 2012, Wednesday

Bulgaria’s Parliament did not support the fifth consecutive attempt on
behalf of the far-right Ataka (Attack) party to pass a declaration
recognizing the Ottoman Empire’s genocide against Armenians
(1915-1922).

On Wednesday, Ataka leader Volen Siderov pointed out that it was
completely normal for “a patriotic party like his” to support the
recognition of the Armenian genocide.

“To hide certain events from your history because they are bad for you
as a country is demagogy in my opinion,” Siderov pointed out.

Lyutvi Mestan, a key MP from the ethnic Turkish Movement for Rights
and Freedoms party, opposed Ataka’s suggestion, stating that the
Parliament was not an institution that should determine historical
truths as the highest instance.

“The Bulgarian Parliament should not deal with that topic,” Mestan declared.

According to Bulgaria’s last census, some 600 000 ethnic Turks live in
the country, forming the country’s largest minority. Armenians, though
considerably fewer in number, are also among Bulgaria’s significant
minorities.

http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=135619

Iran to raise electricity exchange with neighboring countries by 50%

Iran to raise electricity exchange with neighboring countries by 50 percent
Economic Desk
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On Line: 07 January 2012 17:24
In Print: Sunday 08 January 2012

Iran will exchange up to 15 billion kilowatt hours (BkWh) of
electricity with its neighboring countries by the end of the current
calendar year (March 19, 2012), up 50 percent year on year, Iran power
generation transmission and distribution management company (TAVANIR)
managing director stated.

Iraq and Turkey have respectively the most exchanges of electricity
with Iran, Homayoun Haeri added, the Mehr news agency reported.

The country is currently exchanging electricity with Afghanistan,
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Pakistan, Nakhichevan, Turkey and
Turkmenistan and plans to add 5,000 megawatts of capacity to its power
grid annually.
According to the Iranian Energy Ministry statistics, the country will
be exporting up to $1 billion in electricity by March 2012.
Iran’s total power generation capacity stands at 63,403 megawatts (MW)
while total length of the power grid exceeds 780,000 kilometers.
Exchange of electricity with neighboring countries reached 1,341 MW in
late December 2010. The top exporter was Armenia with 237 megawatts,
and the top importer of Iranian electricity was Iraq with 650
megawatts.
Iran seeks to become a major regional exporter of electricity and has
attracted more than $1.1 billion in investments to build three new
power plants.

http://tehrantimes.com/economy-and-business/94311-iran-to-raise-electricity-exchange-with-neighboring-countries-by-50-percent

Russia to strengthen military base in Armenia-expert

Russia to strengthen military base in Armenia-expert

January 14, 2012 | 14:52

YEREVAN. – Armenia and Russia cannot stay aside if Israel attacks
Iran, military expert Artsrun Hovhannisyan told journalists on
Saturday.

If U.S. and Israel decide to launch war against Iran, they can hardly
be stopped. However, it is possible to influence the development of
the events as a whole.

`On the background of the upcoming parliamentary elections in Iran,
such possibility is small. Armenia, in its turn, should weaken tension
as much as possible. Undoubtedly, Yerevan is dealing with it through
its diplomatic channels,’ he said.

As for Russia’s role in the region, Kremlin is important, while the
only Russian military facility in the South Caucasus is a military
base in Armenia’s Gyumri.

`Thus, we can conclude that the Russian military base will be
modernized, improved and strengthened. Moscow will try to strengthen
its military presence in the region within the framework of the
existing Armenian-Russian agreements or just concluding new ones,’ the
expert concluded.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armenia forward signs contract with Russian FC

Armenia forward signs contract with Russian FC

January 14, 2012 – 10:26 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenia forward Marcos Pizzelli, who played for
Ukraine’s Metallurg in 2011, signed a 3-year contact with Russia’s
Kuban FC.

`Pizzelli is a qualified player with international experience and I’m
confident that he will help strengthen our team’s potential. He can
act both as forward and attacking halfback,’ Kuban sports director
Sergey Doronchenko said.

Kuban is 50th with 50 points in Russian Premier League standings.