Armenian Diplomat Teaching Political Science Classes

ARMENIAN DIPLOMAT TEACHING POLITICAL SCIENCE CLASSES

States News Service
March 6, 2014 Thursday

AMHERST, Mass.

The following information was released by the University of
Massachusetts – Amherst:

Dr. Armen Baibourtian from the United Nations office in Armenia is
a visiting scholar and professor in Department of Political Science
for the Spring 2014 semester.

He is teaching two classes: “At the Crossroads: The Caucasus between
the East and the West” and “The Caucasian Knot: The US, the EU,
Russia, Iran, Turkey and Regional Perspective.”

“My goals in the classroom are not only sharing with students knowledge
about the region of the Caucasus,” he says, “but to also give them
a clue how to analyze international politics and define American
interest in that part of the world. I want them to grasp how things
work on the ground, not just in textbooks.”

A career diplomat, Baibourtian has worked with each of the countries
his courses focus on. He also had the unique experience of serving in
a number of posts immediately after Armenia gained its independence
and petitioned to become a new member state in the UN.

He has served as Foreign Policy Advisor to the Speaker of Armenian
Parliament, Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN in New York,
first Consul General of Armenia in Los Angeles, Armenian Ambassador
to India, Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia and Chief Negotiator
with the European Union.

Baibourtian’s holds two PhDs -in International Studies from Jawaharlal
Nehru University and in Modern World History from Yerevan State
University – has served as a visiting professor at the Center for
European Studies at Yerevan State University for many years and has
frequently lectured at universities across the US and in many of the
countries he represented as an advisor and diplomat.

“Teaching has kept me up-to-date with what the younger generations
think,” he says. “It is always mutually enriching.”

Armenian Pharmaceutical Production Increases By 30% In 2013

ARMENIAN PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTION INCREASES BY 30% IN 2013

IHS Global Insight
March 6, 2014

by Kavita Rainova

Pharmaceutical production in Armenia increased 29.9% year on year
(y/y) to AMD5.28 billion (USD12.75 million) in 2013, reports ARKA news
agency citing the country’s National Statistics Service. Furthermore,
as reported by ARKA, the country’s prime minister, Tigran Sargsyan,
has stated that the pharmaceutical industry annually reports a 35%
growth in exports.

Significance:The 30% y/y increase for 2013 follows previous reports
that the pharmaceutical production in the country increased by 25% y/y
in the period January-October 2013 (seeArmenia: 4 December 2013:). In
terms of the statement related to the pharmaceutical export growing
35% annually, the statistics would come as a positive development
for the country’s government given that the pharmaceutical industry
is one of the 11 industries included in the country’s strategies
for export-oriented industry development which was approved in 2011
(seeArmenia: 19 September 2013:). For the purpose of increasing
exports, for instance, it was reported in late 2012, that the country
intended to implement good manufacturing practice (GMP) standards
from 2013

Georgia Neurosurgeons Assist Armenian Physicians

GEORGIA NEUROSURGEONS ASSIST ARMENIAN PHYSICIANS

PR Newswire
March 5, 2014 Wednesday 9:00 AM EST

MACON, Ga., March 5, 2014

Mercer University School of Medicine and The Georgia Neurosurgical
Institutehttp://www.ganeuroandspine.comsigned a cooperative agreement
with the Yerevan State Medical University in Armenia to develop an
educational and research program for students and faculty of both
countries.

The schools will work together to promote postgraduate education
for Armenian neurosurgeons and provide opportunities for faculty,
medical students, and fellows at Georgia Neurosurgical Institute
(GNI) and Mercer University School of Medicine to visit and study
health practices and programs in Armenia.

The program represents an expansion of efforts begun in 2007 by GNI
neurosurgeon Arthur A. Grigorian, M.D. to train Armenian medical
students, residents and physicians in advanced vascular surgical
procedures that prevent and treat strokes. At that time, strokes
were the 3rd leading cause of death in Armenia, with a mortality
rate nearing 100%. In June 2010, Grigorian, an Armenian native,
helped establish a fully functional endovascular stroke center at
Yerevan State Medical University. To date, the center has provided
life-saving surgery to 250 patients, dropping the country’s death
rate from strokes to 30%.

Dr. Ruben Fanarjyan, Chief of Neurological Surgery at Yerevan State
Medical University, says the agreement will stimulate collaborative
research and help develop programs that address pertinent health
problems in Armenia.

According to GNI President Dr. Joe Sam Robinson, Jr., approximately
25 medical students, residents, and physicians in Armenia have already
travelled to the U.S. to study at Georgia Neurosurgical Institute.

Under the new agreement, an expanded faculty/student exchange program
between Mercer University School of Medicine and Yerevan State Medical
University will provide opportunities for U.S. medical students to
observe and study in Armenia.

Dr. William F. Bina III, Dean of the Mercer University School
of Medicine said, “The fine work that GNI has done and will do
in Armenia will have far-reaching effects. This collaboration is
important for everyone involved; it greatly benefits the people of
Armenia and allows our students at Mercer to observe firsthand the
medical challenges in another country.”

In 2013, GNI’s Dr. Grigorian received an Armenian Presidential
Award for his efforts to train neuroscience specialists in advanced
surgical procedures. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan presented the
prestigious award.

Founded in 1954, Georgia Neurosurgical Institute is best known for
its breakthrough treatments, and is in the forefront of surgical
procedures and medical research GNI surgeons hold 28 patents for
medical devices and have written about 200 peer-reviewed articles.

There are four GNI locations in Georgia.

Contact: Jan Hardin/ Georgia Neurosurgical Institute
[email protected]: 478-733-2323

SOURCE Georgia Neurosurgical Institute

ANCA WR to Hold Town Hall Meetings in Colorado and Utah

Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
March 5, 2014

Contact: Elen Asatryan
Tel: 818.500.1919
Cell: 818.859.2421
Email: [email protected]

ANCA-WR TO HOLD TOWN HALL MEETINGS IN COLORADO AND UTAH

Los Angeles, CA – As part of its ongoing outreach initiative
throughout the western United States, the Armenian National Committee
of America – Western Region (ANCA-WR) will hold back-to- back Town
Hall Meetings in the states of Colorado and Utah. The Colorado Town
Hall meeting will take place on Sunday, March 16, 2014, 4:00PM, at
Church of God, 9375 Gaylord St., Thornton, CO followed by another in
Utah scheduled for Wednesday, March 19, 2014, 7:00pm at Arbat, 375 E.
3300 S, Salt Lake City, UT.

“The best part about our town halls is that it allows for a two-way
conversation with members of the community. While attendees learn
about our work, issues facing Armenian communities across the United
States, and how they can make an impact locally, we gain better
insight on local challenges and the kinds of resources needed in the
area,” stated ANCA WR Executive Director, Elen Asatryan. “We know
that the Colorado and Utah Armenian communities have seen a
significant change in demographics and growth in the past 10 years and
are confident that the town hall meetings will serve as a strong
foundation in incorporating strategies that will help attend to these
changes,” added Asatryan.

The ANCA-WR town hall series is an effort to reactivate and engage
Armenian American communities throughout the Western United States.
The meetings are led by ANCA-WR senior staff and Executive Board
members, who provide attendees with an overview of the organization,
its priorities, and recent developments effecting Armenian-Americans,
Armenia and Artsakh. After the presentation, community members have an
opportunity to ask questions, discuss issues of concern, make
recommendations, and learn about ways to get involved with ANCA
efforts locally.

The March 16th Colorado and Utah Town Hall Meetings and the March 19th
Utah Town Hall Meeting, which will be led by ANCA-WR Executive
Director Elen Asatryan and ANCA-WR Legislative Affairs Director Haig
Baghdassarian succeed those held in Houston, TX, Seattle, WA, Phoenix,
AZ, Las Vegas, NV, Fresno, CA, San Francisco, CA, and Boise, Idaho.

For more information about the upcoming ANCA Town Hall meetings
individuals are encouraged to contact the ANCA-WR office by emailing
[email protected] or by calling 818.500.1918.

The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the
largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots advocacy
organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination
with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the
Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country,
the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community
on a broad range of issues.

###

www.ancawr.org

EU Probes Corruption Claims At Turkish Gov’t Agency

EU PROBES CORRUPTION CLAIMS AT TURKISH GOV’T AGENCY

13:53 â~@¢ 05.03.14

The European Commission has launched an investigation into allegations
that a Turkish government agency misused EU funds, the Hurriyet Daily
News reports.

The probe follows reports in Turkish media of tender-rigging and
illegal recruitment at the Centre for EU Education and Youth Programs
in Ankara under former EU minister Egemen BagıÅ~_.

“The audit follows allegations of irregularities relating to a lack
of transparency for staff recruitment and a lack of compliance with
EU and national rules for procurement by the national agency,” the
Commission’s education spokesman Dennis Abbott told AFP in an emailed
statement March 5.

BagıÅ~_ was replaced as EU minister after he was implicated in a
major government corruption scandal that has set off the worst crisis
in Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s 11-year rule.

Dozens of Erdogan’s key business and political allies were rounded
up in December over allegations of bribery in construction projects,
money laundering, gold smuggling and illicit dealings with Iran.

Turkey’s interior, economy and environment ministers all resigned
from their posts after their sons were detained. The controversy has
since widened to implicate Erdogan himself, after recordings were
leaked online last week in which the premier can allegedly be heard
discussing with his son hiding large sums of cash and conspiring to
extort a bribe from a business associate.

The premier has accused supporters of self-exiled Islamic scholar
Fethullah Gulen, who wields considerable influence in the judiciary
and police, of launching the corruption probe to destabilize his
government ahead of key local elections on March 30 and presidential
elections in August.

Erdogan retaliated by sacking hundreds of police and prosecutors
believed to be linked to Gulen, who denied any involvement in the
scandal.

Armenian News – Tert.am

ANCA Voices Reservations Over US Advocacy For Armenia’s Controversia

ANCA VOICES RESERVATIONS OVER US ADVOCACY FOR ARMENIA’S CONTROVERSIAL PENSION REFORM

Wednesday, March 5th, 2014

Calls for U.S. to Remain Neutral on Armenia’s Pension Debate; Support
Exploration of Alternative Models of Reform

WASHINGTON–The Armenian National Committee of America is engaged in
ongoing discussions with the State Department and the U.S. Agency for
International Development regarding Armenian American concerns about
the negative impact of high-profile U.S. advocacy for increasingly
controversial pension reforms in Armenia.

“As Armenian Americans, core stakeholders in both the U.S.-Armenia
relationship and the enduring friendship of the American and
Armenian peoples, we are seriously concerned that our government’s
vocal support for this controversial pension reform is needlessly
straining America’s strong standing in Armenia,” said Aram Hamparian,
ANCA Executive Director. “We look forward to continuing our engagement
and remain hopeful that common-sense, middle-ground solutions will
emerge – in terms of both the substance of policy and the democratic
process of their implementation – that will work for all the people
of Armenia and serve to further strengthen American-Armenian ties.”

The ANCA, in meeting with U.S. officials last week, shared a detailed
analysis, prepared by economist Dr. Ara Khanjian of Ventura College,
regarding the shortcomings of the reform program being publicly
endorsed by the U.S. Embassy and USAID. Dr. Khanjian, who took part
in the meeting, provided a point-by-point review of the serious
shortcomings of the extreme model being backed by the United States.

While all stakeholders agree that the old pension system needs
reform, there is broad-based opposition in Armenia and among Armenians
worldwide to a 100% privatization of pensions. U.S. support for this
extreme model, embraced by only five other countries, comes despite
President Obama’s ardent opposition to even relatively modest efforts,
under President George W. Bush, to privatize a small percentage of
Social Security. A majority of the Senate and House also opposed any
privatization of Social Security in the U.S.

The level of U.S. advocacy for this pension reform model is widely
viewed, in Armenia and the U.S., as potentially harming America’s
standing in Armenia. The U.S. position on this measure is also seen
as running counter to a number of values prioritized by USAID in its
FY 2013-2017 Country Development Cooperation Strategy for Armenia,
including transparency, consensus-based policy-making, and responsive
and accountable governance. Read the USAID strategy document.

While there is broad consensus that the old pension system was deeply
flawed and needed replacement, only very narrow support exists for
the extreme model adopted by Armenia’s ruling party.

As a remedy, the ANCA is proposing that the U.S. government should
refrain from further public endorsements of this controversial
reform and, instead, publicly support an open exploration – among
political leaders and the general public – of alternate reform
models – including U.S. Social Security, hybrid systems, and the
total privatization model.

Background: The pension system adopted by Armenia’s ruling party and
endorsed by the U.S. government is an extreme model, in which 100%
of pension or social security taxes are allocated to individual
private pension accounts. Internationally, there just five other
countries with such an extreme pension model: Chile, El Salvador,
Mexico, Kazakhstan and Nigeria, and the global trend, since the 2008
economic crisis, has been for governments to move decisively away from
privatization. The analysis prepared by Dr. Khanjian covered a broad
array of problems inherent in extreme pension reforms – many shared
by the IMF and the World Bank – including financial market and labor
market risk, adverse impact upon women, budgetary considerations,
increased fees, and lack of sufficient regulatory oversight. Within
Armenia, he noted, no significant political leader outside the ruling
party supported this reform, while the previous president and every
opposition party represented in Parliament opposes its implementation.

http://asbarez.com/120241/anca-voices-reservations-over-us-advocacy-for-armenia%E2%80%99s-controversial-pension-reform/

515,340 Pensioners In Armenia In 2013 With Average Pension Amounting

515,340 PENSIONERS IN ARMENIA IN 2013 WITH AVERAGE PENSION AMOUNTING TO 29,122 DRAMS

YEREVAN, March 5. /ARKA/. The number of pensioners in Armenia reached
515,340 by the end of 2013, and an average size of pension was 29,122
drams, the National Statistical Service reports referring to the
labor and social affairs ministry’s figures.

According to the statistical report, there were 512,505 insurance
premium payers and social pensioners in the country in 2013 – 306,856
of them were women and 205,649 were men.

The number of pensioners connected with military service was 5,185,
and their average pension amounted to 16,517 drams.

The obligatory fund pension system was introduced in the country in
January 2014. The system targets all those citizens born later than Jan
1, 1974. The accumulated funds will enable future retirees to shape
the size of their pensions at own discretion. Under the reform plan,
people will send to their accumulative pension account 5% of their
salaries every month, and another 5%, but no more than AMD 25,000,
will be added by the government. ($1- AMD 414.16). –0—-

– See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/society/515_340_pensioners_in_armenia_in_2013_with_average_pension_amounting_to_29_122_drams/#sthash.tfVA7kCW.dpuf

Hollywood Caves In

HOLLYWOOD CAVES IN

J. Hoberman writes about Nazi pressure on Hollywood film-makers (LRB,
19 December 2013). In the early 1930s the Austrian novelist Franz
Werfel wrote The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, an epic about a small
community of Armenians who, during the First World War, resisted
rather than succumb to a genocidal Turkey. The book was a bestseller
in Germany and Austria, and was translated into many languages,
including English.

In the mid-1930s MGM bought the movie rights, did its own translation
of the novel, and even went into pre-production, with Clark Gable as
the lead. But the studio shut it down soon afterwards when Turkey’s
ambassador to the US, Mehmed Ertegun, said that if the film was made
Turkey would launch a global boycott against MGM. Since then several
Hollywood personalities – Sylvester Stallone, for one – have expressed
interest in filming the novel, only to withdraw from the project later.

Jirair Tutunjian Toronto

http://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n05/letters

Kocharian Fixed Court Ruling Against Ter-Petrossian: Constitutional

KOCHARIAN FIXED COURT RULING AGAINST TER-PETROSSIAN: CONSTITUTIONAL COURT JUSTICE TO US OFFICIALS

09.02.2011 17:10 epress.am

In yet another US cable (this one dated Mar. 7, 2008) released by
whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks on Aug. 30, 2011, then US Deputy
Chief of Mission (DCM) to Armenia Joseph Pennington notes embassy
officials were approached by Valery Poghossian (pictured), one of
Armenia’s nine Constitutional Court justices, on Mar. 6, 2008, for
a secret meeting in which he declared that then president of Armenia
Robert Kocharian fixed the court’s upcoming Mar. 8 decision to decide
against the complaint by ex-president Levon Ter-Petrossian (LTP)
alleging vote fraud in the disputed February 19 presidential election.

“Poghossian said he personally had been pressured by the Presidency,
and alleged some of his colleagues had as well. The justice said
‘absolute tyranny’ now prevailed in Armenia, and fretted the fixed
decision could have ‘unpredictable consequences’ for the country. He
warned that if the international community allowed the authorities
off the hook after the fixed decision, it would do irreversible
damage to Armenia, and doom any fading hopes the country still has
for democracy,” Pennington wrote.

Poghossian approached US embassy staff and, according to the cable,
alleged that Kocharian fixed the upcoming Mar. 8 decision of the
Constitutional Court that will rule against LTP’s election result
complaint.

“Late on Mar. 4, on the eve of the court’s hearing of LTP’s
complaint, Poghossian said he was contacted by phone and summoned
to the Presidency by someone speaking on behalf of the president’s
chief of staff. Initially taken back by the call, he said he laughed
at the caller before refusing the summoning. He then ignored repeated
calls placed to his office that evening.

“Poghossian alleged that at least three of his colleagues answered
similar summons to the presidency earlier on Mar. 4, though he cannot
prove it. He said he obtained this information from reliable sources
who saw the justices inside presidential offices that day. He also
told Emboffs [embassy officials] that the presidency threatened to
fire his brother who works there if he could not convince Poghossian
to answer the summoning. Poghossian, who has been absent from the
court’s hearing of the complaint the last three days, and as a result
cannot participate in the final decision, said illness prevented him
from being present. But he confided that even if he were healthy,
he would not appear at the hearings.

“When Poghossian said he raised the issue of presidential pressure with
his justice colleagues, his concerns were ‘rejected.’ He also alleged
that one of the judges, Justice Kim Balayan, has been co-opted by the
authorities via the recent appointment of his son Tigran Balayan as
the new spokesman at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

(Note: The former spokesman, Vladimir Karapetian, was fired with
five other diplomats in late February after publicly criticizing the
authorities’ handling of the election. End note.) Poghossian said his
stance on the case, and absence from the hearing, could have personal
consequences for him after the hearing, though he did not specify what
those were. He confided, however, that he had ‘grounds to be scared.’
He also noted that if not for the pressure they were being subjected
to, almost all of the justices would decide in LTP’s favor.

“Poghossian averred that the court’s fixed decision could be
‘catalytic’ in escalating existing tensions and fomenting new
violence. He said ‘absolute tyranny’ now prevailed in Armenia, where
it was impossible to solve issues by legal means. He said the current
‘moral and psychological’ atmosphere created by the ruling regime,
in addition to the declaration of the state of emergency and its
very harsh restrictions, placed the Constitutional Court under great
pressure to hew the directives of the authorities.

[…]

“Despite the climate of fear the authorities seek to create,
Poghossian said it was conceivable that LTP could attract hundreds
of thousands of supporters in the street after the lifting of the
state of emergency. In this case, Poghossian said he did not rule out
a scenario where the authorities would extend, or reimpose emergency
control if they felt their grip on power was being challenged. He also
said the authorities were brazen enough to follow through on their
threat to arrest LTP, even though they had no legal right to do so.

But ‘they can do anything they want to’ lamented Poghossian.

[…]

“During the meeting, Poghossian shared that at various points in
the 1990s he headed the KGB and national police in Armenia. Emboffs
proceeded to quiz him on post-violence reports of unreported dead,
and allegations that army units from Nagorno-Karabakh were brought
in to quell the violence. He said information made available to him
‘by virtue of who I used to be’ suggests the reports are not entirely
baseless.

“He said he had information that the death toll had been reduced
by the authorities, and that some families had been forced to sign
fabricated death certificates before they were allowed to recover
relatives’ remains. He said he ruled nothing out, given the nature
of the regime,” reads the cable.

In his commentary at the end of the cable, Pennington writes:

“We have no way of confirming Justice Poghossian’s allegations, but
the fact that one of Armenia’s highest-ranking public servants reached
out the way he did is revealing in itself. Poghossian was appointed
Justice during the LTP administration, and while he didn’t hide his
political sympathies, it’s possible that recent political events have
jaundiced his views. That said, his apprehension appeared bona fide,
and Emboffs had the sense he was acting out of a feeling of patriotism
for his country.”

http://www.epress.am/en/2011/09/02/kocharian-fixed-court-ruling-against-ter-petrossian-constitutional-court-justice-to-us-officials.html

Turquie : La Reforme Constitutionnelle Doit Etre Une Priorite Absolu

TURQUIE : LA REFORME CONSTITUTIONNELLE DOIT ETRE UNE PRIORITE ABSOLUE

Publie le : 05-03-2014

Info Collectif VAN – – Le Collectif VAN vous
invite a lire ce Communique de presse publie sur le site du Parlement
europeen le 4 mars 2014.

Parlement europeen

La reforme constitutionnelle doit etre une priorite absolue pour la
Turquie, selon les deputes

Communique de presse – Elargissement / Relations exterieures –
04-03-2014 – 11:42

Les deputes de la commission des affaires etrangères ont exprime de
profondes inquietudes face aux recents developpements en Turquie
concernant les allegations de corruption de haut niveau, dans une
resolution adoptee lundi sur les progrès realises par la Turquie
en 2013 en vue de son adhesion a l’EU. Ils ajoutent qu’une reforme
constitutionnelle doit etre une priorite absolue pour la modernisation
et la democratisation du pays.

La resolution regrette la suppression des procureurs et des officiers
de police en charge des enquetes sur l’origine de la corruption et
appelle les autorites a assurer le bon fonctionnement de la Cour des
comptes, soulignant l’importance vitale d’une justice independante
et de la separation des pouvoirs.

Les deputes insistent sur l’importance de la Turquie en tant que
partenaire strategique de l’Union europeenne. Ils s’inquiètent du
manque de progrès concernant la reforme constitutionnelle, notamment
la suspension des travaux du comite de conciliation du parlement turc
sur les amendements constitutionnels.

Ils mettent en avant l’importance d’un dialogue renforce et d’une
cooperation etroite entre l’UE et la Turquie sur le processus de
reforme pour que les negociations continuent de fournir a la Turquie
des points de references clairs et credibles. Ils souhaitent que le
Conseil fasse des efforts pour l’ouverture des chapitres de negociation
23 et 24, qui portent sur la justice et les droits fondamentaux,
et sur la justice et les affaires interieures.

Restriction des libertes

La commission parlementaire fait part de ses profondes inquietudes
concernant les nouvelles lois sur internet, qui introduisent des
contrôles et une surveillance excessifs de l’accès a internet, et
concernant les nouvelles lois judiciaires, qui pourraient empecher la
Turquie de repondre aux critères de Copenhague pour l’adhesion a l’UE.

Par ailleurs, le texte appelle les autorites a repondre aux
manifestations publiques avec plus de retenue et a fournir un cadre
juridique pour restaurer les droits de propriete de toutes les
communautes religieuses.

La question kurde et la reunification de Chypre

Dans leur resolution, les deputes encouragent les autorites turques a
mettre en place les reformes necessaires pour promouvoir les droits
sociaux, economiques et culturels de la communaute kurde, notamment
par l’education dans les ecoles publiques kurdes. Concernant Chypre,
ils saluent la declaration commune des dirigeants des deux communautes
de relancer les discussions sur la reunification de l’île, soulignant
l’importance de cette reunification.

REF. : 20140303IPR37433

Retour a la rubrique

Source/Lien : Parlement europeen

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=78879
www.collectifvan.org