Kalpakian Carpet Company Seeks To Work With Armenian Manufacturers

KALPAKIAN CARPET COMPANY SEEKS TO WORK WITH ARMENIAN MANUFACTURERS

October 17, 2013 – 14:34 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The first Armenian-Argentinean business forum
kicked off in Yerevan Thursday, October 17, with a delegation led
by Argentina’s Foreign Trade Secretary Beatriz Paglieri attending
the event.

The delegation included representatives of the sectors of
healthcare, pharmaceutics, information technology, food and beverages,
agro-chemicals, electronics, machinery, cosmetics, tourism, metallurgy
and textiles.

A representative of Kalpakian carpet production company Carlos
Alvarez also arrived in Armenia to present the company and establish
partnership with representatives of local textile sector. The company
was founded in 1922 in Hungary, with the production moved to Buenos
Aires in 1951. 18 Armenians are employed in production.

According to Armenian envoy Diego Ernesto Alvarez Rivera, the forum
will promote establishment of cooperation between the two country’s
entrepreneurs to take the partnership to a new level

The event was organized by Armenian Development Agency and Argentinean
embassy in Armenia.

CBS Network’s Streak Of Racism Continues

CBS NETWORK’S STREAK OF RACISM CONTINUES

Wednesday, October 16th, 2013

by Ara Khachatourian

CBS’s “2 Broke Girls” depicts Armenians as thieves

The CBS Television Network continues its streak of racism during its
primetime programming, this time targeting Armenians with a stereotype
that paints the entire community as thieves.

BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

In Monday’s episode of CBS’s moderate-hit “2 Broke Girls,” when a new
cappuccino maker is brought into the cupcake store by a co-worker,
he says he bought it for a cheap price from a person who stole it
but sells it at a profit, adding “it’s the Armenian way.” When the
character is pressed that he is not Armenian, he says “I know. But,
it’s the Armenian way.”

Incidentally, this not a first for the show or the network!

In 2011, The Hollywood Reporter wrote about the racial stereotypes
peppered in the scripts of “2 Broke Girls” against a Korean character.

This summer, however, saw the most blatant racism from CBS, when
several cast members of its hit reality series “Big Brother” used
racist slurs to describe or speak to fellow African-American and
Asian cast members. The network, at the time, defended its decision
to include those parts, saying it might promote a national discussion
on race.

Ironically, it was on the very same network, where Julie Chen host of
“Big Brother” and a co-host on “The Talk,” and wife of CBS President
Les Moonves, revealed to viewers that in an earlier job as a television
reporter, workplace racism forced her to get plastic surgery to
enlarge her “Asian eyes.”

Past characterization of Armenians in television shows from FX’s
“The Shield,” Showtime’s “Weeds” and others have sparked a debate
about how Armenians are characterized on television shows, with some
opining that the fact that Armenians are even being mentioned in
mainstream scripts is a step up.

However, we have yet to see a depiction of an Armenian character
in a television show-broadcast or cable-that reflects the history
of the Armenian-American community and the great contribution our
community has had in the advancement of American society. Instead,
our community continues to be portrayed as gang members, thieves and
drug dealers for dramatic and comedic effect.

The number of Armenians in the entertainment industry continues to
grow in an impressive pace both in front of and behind the camera,
yet the depiction of Armenians on TV and films continues to degenerate.

Perhaps, to expect CBS to draw the line at Armenians is a bit too much
given their most recent streak of allowing racism on the airwaves for
quick ratings, but certainly calling them on it will draw attention
to this harmful trend disguised as entertainment.

“2 Broke Girls” is produced by Warner Bros. Television and airs on
CBS on Mondays.

Peter Roth is President and Chief Content Officer, Warner Bros.

Television Group, and President, Warner Bros. Television. Nina Tassler
is Head of Entertainment at CBS.

Contact CBS: 51 W. 52nd Street New York, NY 10019-6188 1-212-975-4321
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

Contact Warner Bros. Television 4000 Warner Blvd.

Burbank, CA 91522 CA Tel. 818-954-6000 Fax 212-954-7667
[email protected]

http://asbarez.com/115142/cbs-network%E2%80%99s-streak-of-racism-continues/

Armenian MP Calls On Parliament Speaker To Ensure Her Safety

ARMENIAN MP CALLS ON PARLIAMENT SPEAKER TO ENSURE HER SAFETY

October 17, 2013 | 11:44

YEREVAN. – Armenian MP Zaruhi Postanjyan said law enforcers must
bring charges against those who were threatening her via media.

During the Thursday media conference, Postanjyan called on law
enforcers to remove the media articles containing threats against her.

The MP said she had addressed parliament speaker Hovik Abrahamyan with
a request to ensure her safety in the parliament, since four MPs from
the ruling Republican Party of Armenia had voiced threats against her.

Mrs. Postanjyan is always accompanied by two policemen.

Her requesst came in response to an interview of Deputy Sport Minister
Khachik Asryan with yerkir.am website. Commenting on Postanjyan’s
harsh question to the president, Asryan said Postanjyan should be
burnt alive.

During the question and answer session at the PACE plenary session
in Strasbourg, France, on October 2, Zaruhi Postanjyan had asked
Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan the following question:

“You have appeared here [in the PACE session] not by the will of
the people, but [rather] as a consequence of organized crime, the
theft of the Armenian people’s vote. Therefore you cannot de jure
represent the will and right of the Armenian people. [So,] I’ll give
you another question. Have you been to a casino in Europe and lost
70 million euros there? And who paid that amount in your stead?”

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

168 Zham: US Refuses To Resume Millennium Challenge In Armenia

168 ZHAM: US REFUSES TO RESUME MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE IN ARMENIA

10:06 ~U 17.10.13

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan’s visit to the United States
last December was followed by reports that the Millennium Challenge
Corporation (MCC) would resume its programs in Armenia this year.

The reason was the domestic political situation in Armenia, the
country’s declining pro-Russian orientation and adopting a policy of
European integration. However, according to the information at the
newspaper’s disposal, the US refused to resume the Millennium Challenge
projects in Armenia as the country did not meet the requirements.

Armenia’s decision in favor of the Customs Union must have had
influenced the US side’s intentions. It may also be the reason for
the postponement of the Armenian premier’s visit to the USA.

In response to the newspaper’s inquiry about the resumption of the
Millennium Challenge project in Armenia, the PR Department, Government
of Armenia, reported that the government has always cooperated with
the Millennium Challenge Corporation and had the opportunity to get
involved in the program.

“Armenia meets most of the requirements now. When the Armenian
government meets all the requirements, it will resume the negotiations
for involvement in the program,” says the report.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Le Secteur Ferroviaire Armenien Est En Pleine Expansion Selon Le Dir

LE SECTEUR FERROVIAIRE ARMENIEN EST EN PLEINE EXPANSION SELON LE DIRECTEUR GENERAL DE LA SCR

ARMENIE

Le secteur ferroviaire armenien se developpe rapidement, après de
longues annees de statu quo et de la depression a declare le directeur
general de la compagnie des chemins de fer du Sud-Caucase CJSC Victor
Rebets lors des festivites organisees dans Giumry a l’occasion de la
journee du cheminot.

Aujourd’hui les volumes du trafic ferroviaire sont en croissance,
tout comme le nombre de passagers a dit Victor Rebets.

La compagnie augmente le confort et les niveaux de service et la
vitesse des trains. Un programme de modernisation des infrastructures
de grande envergure est actuellement en cours a-t-il precise.

Victor Rebets a dit que les investissements ont totalise environ
90 milliards de drams entre 2008 et 2012, plus de 50 milliards de
depenses ont ete effectuees pour la modernisation des infrastructures.

jeudi 17 octobre 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

La Production Agricole De L’Armenie A Augmente De 7,1%

LA PRODUCTION AGRICOLE DE L’ARMENIE A AUGMENTE DE 7,1%

ARMENIE

La production agricole de l’Armenie en prix courants s’elève a
environ 467 milliards de drams entre janvier et août 2013 soit
une augmentation de 7,1% par rapport a la meme periode de l’annee
precedente, a rapporte ArmStat.

La production totale de l’agriculture et de la peche a augmente de
7,7% dans la periode de reference a plus de 478,6 milliards de drams,
selon le rapport.

La production animale a atteint environ 185,4 milliards de drams entre
janvier et août, soit une augmentation de 1,7% par rapport a la meme
periode de l’annee precedente. La production de la peche s’elevait
a 11,5 milliards de drams (32,7% d’augmentation), selon le rapport.

La production de lait a atteint 59000 tonnes, soit une augmentation
de 5,4% par rapport a août 2012.

La production d’~ufs a diminue de 3,6% a 45,7 millions de pièces
en août.

jeudi 17 octobre 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

Public Meetings Are Needed To Develop Concept For Solving Azerbaijan

PUBLIC MEETINGS ARE NEEDED TO DEVELOP CONCEPT FOR SOLVING AZERBAIJANI ARMENIANS’ PROBLEMS – RULING PARTY MP

October 16, 2013 | 14:17

YEREVAN. – The creation of a single organization is the most important
toward solving the problems of the Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan.

Ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) National Assembly Faction
Secretary Hovhannes Sahakyan stated the aforementioned during
Wednesday’s discussion of the problems facing Armenian refugees.

“The raising of issues by the public, the movement, the activeness,
[and] the impetus are very important for us. That is why I believe
this meeting should kick off the creation of a single organization
toward solving the problems of the refugees,” Sahakyan noted.

First and foremost, as per the RPA MP, it is important to work jointly
with the political and social organizations that already function in
this domain.

“Our faction stands ready to work more intensively toward developing a
conceptual document for solving the problems of the Armenian refugees,”
Hovhannes Sahakyan concluded.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

http://news.am/eng/news/176237.html

Naira Zohrabyan: A New Vector Of Armenia-EU Cooperation Should Be Fo

NAIRA ZOHRABYAN: A NEW VECTOR OF ARMENIA-EU COOPERATION SHOULD BE FOUND

by Marianna Lazarian
Wednesday, October 16, 16:35

Armenia and Europe should find the optimal form of cooperation that
will not run contrary to the Customs Union, Naira Zohrabyan, Head of
the Armenian Parliament Committee for European Integration, MP from
Prosperous Armenia Party, said at a conference “Four Years of the
Eastern Partnership: Results and Challenges” in Yerevan, Wednesday.

“Further cooperation with the EU is so far obscure for me. Actually,
we will be cooperating in the field of supremacy of the law, human
rights protection, and anti-corruption fight. There is need for a
new vector of cooperation now,” she said.

According to Zohrabyan, Armenia’s foreign policy has obviously changed
after 3 September. She complained that as an MP she has not seen the
text of the

Association Agreement and does not know what would Armenia gain by
signing it.

“If the document contains provisions that constitute threat to Nagorno
Karabakh and our country, as some experts claim, so why we had been
negotiating for it with Europe for 4 years,” she said.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=6F24C2C0-365F-11E3-AB0F0EB7C0D21663

Chinese Painting Exhibit Marks 5 Years At Armenian Confucius Institu

CHINESE PAINTING EXHIBIT MARKS 5 YEARS AT ARMENIAN CONFUCIUS INSTITUTE

WantChinaTimes, China
Oct 16 2013

Xinhua 2013-10-16 15:57 (GMT+8)

A two-day exhibition of Chinese paintings opened on Tuesday at the
museum of Hovhannes Tumanyan to celebrate the 5th anniversary of the
Confucius Institute in the Armenian capital.

The exhibition was organized by the Institute of Confucius at Yerevan
State Linguistic University and Dalyan University of Foreign Languages,
which is the new partner of the institute.

Tian Changchun, Chinese Ambassador to Armenia, addressed the opening
ceremony, underscoring the importance of Armenian-Chinese cultural
ties. He also expressed confidence that the institute will further
promote Chinese language and culture in Armenia.

Works by Chinese artists Liu Hong and Wang Chunli were on display in
the exhibition.

Naira Grigoryan, director of the Confucius Institute in Yerevan, told
Xinhua that the institute has facilitated Chinese language education
in Armenia via various activities, including the recent opening of
a Chinese language class in Gyumri, the second largest city of Armenia.

http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20131016000109&cid=1803

Armenia’sFight Against Gender Equality Morphs Into Fight Against EU

ARMENIA’S FIGHT AGAINST GENDER EQUALITY MORPHS INTO FIGHT AGAINST EU

Independent European Daily Express
Oct 16 2013

Wednesday, October 16, 2013 – 00:13Inter Press Service YEREVAN, Oct
15 (IPS) – Europe is getting a surprise bashing in Armenia over a law
on gender equality that many Armenians claim is designed to “promote”
homosexuality as a “European value.”

The strength of the backlash has prompted some political observers
to believe it is being artificially stoked in order to build popular
support for Yerevan’s decision last month to seek membership in
the Russia-led Customs Union at the expense of closer ties with the
European Union.

The law, titled On Equal Rights and Equal Opportunities for Men
and Women, was first mulled in 2009 and went into effect in June
with the broad aim of enforcing gender equality in all aspects of
daily life and outlawing gender discrimination. That may sound like
business-as-usual among EU members, but for Armenian society, where
men generally receive pride of place, it quickly sparked pushback.

Opponents have relied on scare tactics. Social media campaigns against
the gender equality law used images of young men wearing garish make-up
and transgender couples kissing each other to call for a fight against
“warped Western values,” and to “maintain family values.”

The campaigns also featured videos and articles that claim,
incorrectly, legislation in Denmark, Germany, Norway and Sweden allows
for incest and pedophilia, and strongly encourages same-sex marriages.

Such legislation, the advocates added, could be in store for Armenia.

The fear-mongering efforts hinge on the law’s definition of “gender” in
Article 3 as “acquired, socially fixed behavior of different sexes.” To
many Armenians, the word “acquired” is seen as code for homosexuality.

Although the backlash against the law began almost as soon as it
was adopted, it seemed to intensify after President Serzh Sargsyan
announced in early September that Armenia was ready to join the
Kremlin-led Customs Union.

At a Sep. 9 press conference, Archimandrite Komitas Hovnanian, a
prominent figure within the Armenian Apostolic Church, warned that
“[a] new religious movement is being formed which campaigns for
homosexuality, pedophilia, incest and other immoral things.”

“Everybody should be concerned with this,” Hovnanian instructed
journalists. “If we are Armenians, we have to take steps to prevent
this decadent phenomenon.”

Some MPs have proposed amendments to remove from the law references
to the word “gender,” but the suggestion has done nothing to lessen
the intensity in the debate. On Oct. 11, one Facebook group planned
to march in Yerevan against the gender law and so-called “European
values.”

The term has become a catch-all that embraces not only equal rights for
women – itself highly controversial for this conservative, patriarchal
society – but tolerance toward same-sex marriages and any sexual
minorities; anathema for most people living in the South Caucasus.

By contrast, Russia, which recently passed a law banning so-called
“homosexual propaganda,” is seen as a more virtuous model for
emulation.

“Armenian traditions and European values are very hard to combine. If
Europe accepts homosexualism and same-sex marriages, this does not
mean that they are acceptable for traditional Armenian families,”
commented sociologist Aharon Adibekian. “So, this is the main reason
for the approach displayed by society.”

He cautioned that the backlash against Europe has been brewing ever
since Armenia, in the 1990s, pledged to sign international agreements
to defend the rights of minorities.

While the anti-gender-equality campaign may seem extreme to outsiders,
it has had an impact. Leda Hovhannisian, a 38-year-old Yerevan
resident with a secondary-school level of education, says that,
despite the potential advantages for finding a well-paying job, she
now is horrified at the thought of her 16-year-old son ever going to
study in Europe or the United States.

“No, by no means! I would never want my child to travel to those
places where drug addiction, homosexuality and other forms of abuse are
widespread,” she stressed. “We hear about it every day. God forbid! I
would never allow him to go there.”

Others assail the campaign as nonsensical. “Unfortunately, many
people don’t even realise that this is a result of misinformation,”
commented 26-year-old computer programmer Emma Babaian.

Some administration critics believe that Facebook-spread warnings that
“the wind of perversion blows from the West” reveal an ulterior motive
on the part of authorities. Sargsyan’s administration, they contend,
wants to bolster public support for its decision to opt for Russia’s
economic embrace, rather than the EU’s.

Officials in Brussels have said an association agreement between the
EU and Armenia is incompatible with Yerevan’s looming membership in
the Customs Union.

“This was a carefully planned campaign, which was followed by the
recent heavy criticism over European values, as well as adoption of
the gender equality law which evoked fury among society, and all these
factors were exploited to discredit Europe,” argued Stepan Safarian,
secretary of the opposition, pro-Western Heritage Party.

Galust Sahakian, deputy chair of the governing Republican Party of
Armenia and head of its parliamentary faction, dismissed the notion.

“This is absurd,” Sahakian responded. “The law on gender equality has
nothing to do with diplomacy” and efforts to encourage public support
for the Customs Union. “They should not connect it either to Europe,
or to diplomacy, Russia or the whole world.”

Editor’s note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am. This story originally appeared
on EurasiaNet.org.

http://www.iede.co.uk/news/2013_3228/armenias-fight-against-gender-equality-morphs-fight-against-eu