Shakhtar 3-2 Al-Hilal: Henrikh Mkhitaryan goal author (video)

Shakhtar 3-2 Al-Hilal: Henrikh Mkhitaryan goal author (video)

22:20 – 19.01.13

Donetsk’s Shakhtar beat Al-Hilal 3-2 in the latest round of the
Matchworld Cup 2013 tournament.

Armenian midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan hit the first goal at the 20th
minute of the match. The score was evened at the 28th minute by Yu Ben
Su. But Shakhtar took advantage in the second half. After receiving a
pass from Arna, Rats became a goal author. The team’s last goal was
hit at the 88th minute by Tayson, who replaced Mkhitaryan after the
interval.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/01/19/shaxtar1/

Crime Boss Murder Won’t Mean Comeback For Russian Mafia

CRIME BOSS MURDER WON’T MEAN COMEBACK FOR RUSSIAN MAFIA
Vitaliy Belousov

RIA Novosti

Mafia Boss Gunned Down in Moscow

MOSCOW, January 18 (Alexey Eremenko, Alexandra Odynova, RIA Novosti)
– Aslan “Gramps Khasan” Usoyan was leaving his favorite restaurant
in central Moscow when a bullet from a silenced assault rifle hit
him in the neck.

The portly 75-year-old’s private guards pushed him back inside, but
more bullets sailed through the closed door, piercing the backside
of a woman nearby, costing her 4½ liters of blood. Usoyan’s consorts
sped him to the hospital in a Mercedes jeep, where doctors proclaimed
him dead on arrival.

Wednesday’s assassination robbed the Russian underworld of one of
its last legendary greats, and stirred up memories of the bloody turf
wars that grabbed headlines in the country’s “turbulent 1990s.”

But experts do not foresee a revival of the all-mighty “Russkaya
mafiya” of that time, with its glorified image and omnipresence in
pop culture. On the contrary, they believe Russian organized crime has
settled into a pattern similar to many other countries’, focusing on
a few lucrative, mostly illegal domains, but outgunned and outmanned
by government bodies, who have regained the upper hand over the past
decade or so.

“Organized crime has been marginalized in Russia in recent years,
returning to the niche it is supposed to occupy,” said sociology
professor Vadim Volkov, an expert on Russian mafia at the European
University at St. Petersburg.

Life After Gramps In press reports, Usoyan had long been labeled
Russia’s most influential “thief-in-law” – a title denoting a don of
the underworld both in Soviet and post-Soviet criminal culture. His
spheres of activity have been rumored to include drugs, guns and
construction materials, including some lucrative deals involving next
year’s Olympics in the southern Russian city of Sochi.

After his death, Russian media swelled with speculation, blaming the
hit on Usoyan’s numerous rivals, who supposedly opted not to wait
until his planned retirement later this year and the ascent of a
nephew he had carefully groomed as successor.

The Investigative Committee, roughly comparable to Russia’s FBI,
also said it was looking into a possible dispute among crime bosses
as the cause of Usoyan’s shooting.

Logically, predictions of impending gang warfare followed.

But similar forecasts abounded after the 2009 assassination –
possibly by the same killer, according to one tabloid – of thief-in-law
Vyacheslav Ivankov, known as Yaponchik or “Little Japanese.” And those
forecasts failed to materialize, at least in any high-profile way.

The Russian mafia has reached an era of stability, settling all its
major disputes and dividing up territory, said Alexander Gurov, a
former head of the State Duma Security Committee who made his name
in the Soviet Interior Ministry fighting organized crime in the 1980s.

“It took the Sicilian mafia about two centuries, a few decades for
the United States. It took the Russian mafia two decades,” Gurov said.

Racketeering Regulators One obituary called Usoyan, before his death,
“the last surviving mammoth” of a bygone age. Indeed, Gramps Khasan
emerged from a criminal subculture believed to have started taking
shape around the time of his birth, in the 1930s.

Soviet-era thieves-in-law, who earned their stripes in prison, had
intricate codes of etiquette and behavior enforced with no less
zeal than the Criminal Code. They eschewed the state and derived
sustenance from a classic mix of robbery and fraud, but gradually
also from a shadow economy that started taking root in the Soviet
Union in the 1960s, despite – or, perhaps, because of – bans on
private entrepreneurship.

And it was this very connection to business that came to play the
pivotal role in the rise of Russian mafia in the 1990s, experts told
RIA Novosti.

The Soviet Union’s demise wreaked chaos in established state
institutions in Russia and other post-Soviet countries, leaving them
crippled and unequipped to deal with a new capitalist reality, said
Andrei Soldatov, editor-in-chief of Agentura.ru, a non-profit online
think-tank studying Russian law enforcement services.

Old bastions of law enforcement like police and courts were incapable
of helping newly emerging businessmen settle disputes or providing
them with protection, Soldatov said.

And so the mafia stepped in to fill the void.

Protection became a service offered by ubiquitous and highly
territorial racketeer gangs that settled conflicts through organized
showdowns involving dozens of people and, as often as not, a lot
of rapid machine gun fire. The country’s most prominent newspapers,
like Kommersant and the now defunct Segodnya, devoted daily spreads
to casualty reports and stories about thieves’-in-law activity.

The State Duma said in a report in 1998 that up to 40 percent of
private companies and 85 percent of banks nationwide were controlled
by organized crime.

A rare poll from 1998-1999, cited in a textbook by the Russian
Criminological Association, showed that 30 percent of businessmen in
Moscow were somehow involved with organized crime groups.

At the same time, the old-school Soviet criminal culture collided
with a new crop of gangsters, unencumbered by such elaborate rules
and balking at nothing to carve themselves a piece of someone else’s
juicy turf.

These SUV-driving, gun-toting, crimson-jacket-wearing thugs, who
constructed mammoth marble tombstones to their fallen brethren,
permeated the nation’s life and sensibility.

Kitschy, sappy and primitive tunes about the mafia’s struggles, known
as “chanson,” became a staple of Russia’s musical diet in the 1990s,
even among those who’d never been near a gun or jail, and the first
domestic films and television shows to rival Hollywood productions
were gangster tales.

This was also when the Russian mafia became a global phenomenon,
taking advantage of the newly opened opportunities for travel and
tapping immigrant communities abroad to join global networks of
drug, arms and human trafficking – and to popularize the notions of
onion-dome tattoos, perpetual scowls and ridiculous accents that can
now be found anywhere from a Grand Theft Auto video game to David
Cronenberg’s filmography.

The Silovikis’ Revenge The tide changed at the turn of the third
millennium, when the Russian state started to restore its functions
as arbiter and its coercive power.

Disputes could now be solved in arbitrage courts and protection
obtained from private security companies, said Volkov of St.

Petersburg’s European University.

Lower taxes in the early 2000s also delivered a blow to the shadow
economy, he said.

Most crucially, the security and law enforcement services, or
“siloviki,” resurgent under the presidency of ex-KGB officer Vladimir
Putin, could now provide high-level protection to entrepreneurs,
who were quick to capitalize on it.

“When the law enforcement services got their strength back, the
businessmen flocked to them,” said Soldatov of Agentura.ru.

The new system was very corruption-prone, with law enforcement
officials charging money for protection and abusing the law when it
suited them or businesses in their care, Soldatov said. By the late
2000s, the Russian business community realized it had been overwhelmed
and taken over by those it originally hired to protect it, he added.

Corrupt officials, or “white-collar criminals,” pose a much greater
danger to Russia today than the thieves-in-law, Gurov said.

But early in the game, the “siloviki” option looked much more
attractive than the mafia, with its violent gunfights and other rough
tactics. So the official-looking guys took away market share from
the shadier-seeming ones, both experts said.

No More Songs In 1998, Russian police estimated the number of known
thieves-in-law across the world at 1,560. But by 2010, the last
year for which statistics were available, they numbered about 150,
according to Russia’s Interior Ministry.

Back in 2008, declaring the war on the Russian mafia victorious,
the Kremlin disbanded police units combatting organized crime and
created an anti-extremism department instead, which busied itself
cracking down on political dissenters.

Russian organized crime has not disappeared, but its activity is now
mostly limited to traditional domains such as arms trade, illegal
drugs and prostitution, Volkov said.

“It is a part of the [society’s] eco-system, you could say, and nobody
[in the law enforcement services] sees it as a serious threat anymore,”
Soldatov said.

Many crime bosses have turned a new leaf, investing money earned in
the 1990s in perfectly legitimate enterprises, said Kirill Kabanov,
who heads the National Anti-Corruption Committee. The late Usoyan was
reported to run several hotels in southern Russia in addition to his
other pursuits.

A handful of minor gangs from the past “that attract the youth through
a romanticized vision of crime” have survived, but only in remote
backwaters, Kabanov said.

“New ethnic Asian groups from Tajikistan and others” have emerged,
but “they are not yet rich and don’t wield much power,” he added.

Most importantly, the legend of the Russian mafia itself is fading from
the nation’s mind. There are no more daily briefs on goings-on in the
gangster world in the media, and a criminal career is not attracting
the young: According to a nationwide poll by state-run VTsIOM in 2009,
the list of young Russians’ dream jobs is topped by posts at national
gas giant Gazprom and the Kremlin administration. By contrast, media
in the 1990s often cited anonymous polls of high school students who
named “mafia hitman” and “prostitute” as their highest job aspirations.

Glorious mafiosi have been sidelined by college students and medical
interns on primetime television, and “chanson” performers are outsold
by a new breed of artists who, music reviewers say, sing essentially
the same songs, but with lyrics about love and life instead of gang
shootings and doin’ time.

“The Russian mafia is sticking to its old violent ways,” Volkov said.

“It’s just that the public isn’t paying much attention to it anymore.”

Unm Slams Ivanishvili For Naming Armenia As Model For Ties With Russ

UNM SLAMS IVANISHVILI FOR NAMING ARMENIA AS MODEL FOR TIES WITH RUSSIA, NATO

Civil Georgia, Tbilisi / 18 Jan.’13 / 20:29

President Saakashvili’s United National Movement (UNM) party said on
January 18 that PM Bidzina Ivanishvili’s remarks that Armenia was
“an example” for Georgia how it is possible to have good relations
with both NATO and Russia was “alarming” and “dangerous”.

“Armenia is our friendly state and I respect their choice, but Armenian
path and its relation with Russia and NATO cannot serve as [a model]
for Georgia; it is in conflict with Georgia’s state interests,”
UNM secretary general and former PM Vano Merabishvili said.

A senior UNM lawmaker Giorgi Gabashvili said that Armenia, which is a
member of Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO)
and which cooperates with NATO but does not seek its membership,
cannot serve as a model for Georgia’s foreign policy.

“It would amount to U-turn in Georgia’s foreign policy,” he said.

“This is very alarming and very dangerous for Georgia.”

Another UNM lawmaker Davit Darchiashvili said that “nothing more
scandalous and alarming” than that had been said by new government
since coming into power three months ago.

“If it was said because of lack of experience that’s also source of
alarm,” MP Darchiashvili said.

Foreign Minister Maia Panjikidze said on January 18 that there were
no changes in Georgia’s foreign policy.

“I do agree with the course that Georgia should try to have good
relations with everyone. That’s what every normal country tries and
many of them achieve it. What the PM said is that it’s desirable to
have good relations with everyone,” she said.

When asked during an interview with the RFE/RL Armenian service on
January 17, when PM Ivanishvili visited Yerevan, if Georgia’s foreign
policy priorities would change, he responded: “In the near future it’s
hardly [possible], but in general countries develop, people develop,
society develops and they change priorities, but I do not think that
in the near future we will be changing our priorities.”

“We have stated about our priorities for multiple times – that’s Europe
and Euro-Atlantic alliance; we will unwaveringly follow this path,”
Ivanishvili said.

“But in parallel to it a question arises: is it possible to combine
restoration of friendly relations with Russia and at the same time to
have good relations with NATO and to aspire towards NATO and to have
good relations with the United States and NATO-member states? I think
that here Armenia is a good example; Armenia gives a good example
for Georgia and it can be a source of envy in positive sense,” the
Georgian PM said.

“Armenia is on excellent terms with Russia and has friendly relations
with [Russia] while also being on excellent terms with the United
States and with other NATO-member states. So I think it’s possible
and I think that we have to and I believe that we will combine it,”
Ivanishvili added.

http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=25657

Minister – Expressionist

MINISTER – EXPRESSIONIST

Wednesday, 16 January 2013 15:45

On the eve of a new year, as you know, it is accepted to sum up the
year past. This practice is as old as the world, and Foreign Minister
of Azerbaijan Elmar Mamedyarov did not either break the tradition. In
an interview to some news agencies, he presented the activity of
his office in 2012 and touched upon a series of issues of the foreign
policy agenda. Judging by the statements of the Minister on the results
of the past year, we can conclude that Azerbaijan definitely completed
the year of 2012 with solid achievements at the international arena.

They are strengthening of the positions of the Azerbaijani Republic
in the world and acquisition of new partners through its membership in
the UN Security Council, cooperation with international organizations
for establishing peace and security in Africa and the Middle East,
partnership with NATO for restoring and strengthening peace in
Afghanistan, etc.

In short, no matter where you cast a glance – there are only
achievements. This is the rainbow foreign-policy picture painted with
the expressive colors of the Azerbaijani Foreign Minister. According
to Mamedyarov, the Azerbaijani diplomacy suffered only one
failure – it is to resolve the Karabakh conflict (surely, in the
favorite-for-it direction), and as you can easily guess, just due to
the “unconstructive position of Armenia,” which, in the minister’s
mind, remains the major obstacle. And in the rest, as it is said in
a famous comic song, “all is well, all is well”.

But, just a quick look at Mamedyarov’s assessments of Azerbaijan’s
foreign policy is enough to note a feature, which is important
for the “reporting year”: his long interview lacked the “main
achievements” of 2012 – the extradition of the Budapest murderer,
Safarov. Especially that the repatriation and hasty pardon of the
killer sentenced to life imprisonment, which were the result of the
shameful Azerbaijani-Hungarian deal, were called a great diplomatic
victory of Azerbaijan. Why doesn’t Mamedyarov include this “victory”
in the assets of the Azerbaijani diplomacy? Isn’t it because
this, in fact, criminal act, exactly described by former Russian
mediator Vladimir Kazimirov as “a blunder of Ilham Aliyev’s team”,
will merely spoil the idyllic picture made by Mamedyarov’s creative
imagination? Isn’t it also because it was severely condemned by many
international structures and prominent politicians, including the
heads of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing states? The opinion was
unequivocal – the pardon and glorification of the killer of a sleeping
man are incompatible with the concept of human morality; besides,
these actions of the Azerbaijani authorities struck a serious blow
to the Karabakh settlement process.

Of course, the Baku regime understands that its “diplomatic success”
didn’t only strike a blow to the peace process, but also seriously
stained and devalued the already questionable image of Azerbaijan at
the international arena, if one can generally speak of a political
image of Azerbaijan from the positive viewpoint (without counting the
petrodollars). And all the cheerful talks of the Azerbaijani Foreign
Minister on strengthening Azerbaijan’s position at the international
arena are suitable only for misleading their own people and are
hardly able to wash away the shame of Budapest and to save the face
of official Baku. Rather, the insatiable desire to neutralize the
negative impression of the Budapest killer’s history encourages the
Azerbaijani party to make false pacifist statements.

Realizing the expectations of the international community, constantly
calling for the peaceful settlement of the conflict and restoration
of confidence between the societies of the conflicting parties,
Mamedyarov represents his country as a supporter of peace and “a
guarantee of security, stability and progress in the region” (!!!).

Truly loose tongue! Mamedyarov noted even the possibility of “a real
program of the Nagorno-Karabakh region’s development to be offered
by Azerbaijan”. Then he went further, losing the sense of proportion
and reality, and uttered the following: “We perceive the Armenians,
living in Nagorno-Karabakh, as our citizens and we want them to live
in good conditions”. We will not comment here and now on the thesis of
the Azerbaijani Minister on “our citizens”, which has no legal basis.

We’ll only note that this hypocritical tolerance is demonstrated rather
to the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing countries and the international
community as a whole. It is worth noting that the international
Christian organization Open Doors has recently published a list of
50 countries where Christians are mostly persecuted.

Azerbaijan occupies the 38th place in the list. In short, we can
safely assume that the pacifist speech of Mamedyarov is aimed just
at one thing – to restore, at least in part, the lost reputation.

But, the whole problem of Azerbaijan is that the words of its
politicians run counter to their deeds. They do not wish to understand
that the restoration of their reputation is directly linked to
the restoration of confidence between the Armenian and Azerbaijani
people, for which, first of all, they should stop the policy of hatred
towards Armenians and should refuse of the threats of a new war. In
the meantime, the president of Azerbaijan, as it was on the New Year
eve, is delivering a refrain only on restoration of a different kind:
“We cannot allow the creation of the fictitious second Armenian state
on the historical (?!) lands of Azerbaijan. The time will come when
Azerbaijan will restore its territorial integrity by any means”. In
other words, the president disavowed the pacifist statements of his
own minister- expressionist.

Leonid MARTIROSSIAN Editor-in-Chief of Azat Artsakh newspaper

http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=902:minister-expressionist-&catid=3:all&Itemid=4

Cyprus: A Successful Eu Presidency By A Small Country

CYPRUS: A SUCCESSFUL EU PRESIDENCY BY A SMALL COUNTRY

The Cyprus Mail – 15 December 2013 –

CYPRUS managed to have a successful EU presidency despite its size
and economic problems, President Demetris Christofias said yesterday,
following the last European Council under his term.

“Cyprus has shown that despite its small geographical size and
despite its economic problems it held a quite successful presidency,”
Christofias said during a press conference that wrapped up the last
European Council of the Cypriot presidency that ends this month. “It
was indeed a very difficult task for us, a task however which I think
we have carried out with dignity.”

Christofias said the European Council meeting was another step towards
the completion of the economic and monetary union, adding that there
was still a long way to go and the momentum had to be kept up.

“The decisions that have been made and the directions that have been
given will to a large extent define the course of the European Union in
the next years,” he said. “The reform that is taking place with the aim
of more effective economic and financial governance also contributes
to facing faster the financial crisis that torments the Union.”

The President stressed however that approaches must be balanced and
targeted to safeguard social cohesion.

“The economic and financial policies that is, must be formed in such
a way that unemployment and poverty are substantially addressed and
social exclusion is prevented,” he said. “It is imperative that the
measures for fiscal consolidation are combined with measures that
promote social cohesion and the prosperity of European citizens.”

European Commission President Josι Manuel Barroso said there had
been some real achievements in the past six months.

“I will not quote all of them, but I think the Single Supervisory
Mechanism, Schengen governance, common asylum system are especially
important,” Barroso said.

European Council President Herman Van Rompuy praised Cyprus’
contribution in successfully closing the matter of the European Patent
after decades.

“It is the happy end to a 40 year-long Odyssey. And if you allow
me to continue that image: even if we do not know for sure on which
Mediterranean island the historic Odysseus lived, for Europe, in the
patent case, our beloved “Ithaca” clearly is Cyprus.”

Bako Sahakyan Visited Nkr Supreme Court

BAKO SAHAKYAN VISITED NKR SUPREME COURT

19:24, 18 January, 2013

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS: On 18 January President of the
Artsakh Republic Bako Sahakyan visited NKR Supreme Court, where he
partook at the festive event dedicated to the day of the workers of
judicial system and congratulated the representatives of the sphere
on the professional holiday.

As reports Armenpress referring to NKR presidential press office,
in his speech the President underlined that judicial power is one
of the most significant institutions of the democratic system and
civil society, without which it is impossible to consider contemporary
civilized state. According to Bako Sahakyan confidence of the society
towards the state, securing equality of citizens against justice and
law to a great extent depends on the effective functioning of the
judicial system too.

Bako Sahakyan emphasized that all the necessary institutional
conditions for the implementation of justice had been created in NKR,
at the same time adding that there still much to be carried out for
its proper accomplishment.

In this context Bako Sahakyan gave special importance to the raising
the professionalism of cadres, personnel training and retraining,
necessity of forming a solid cadre reserve, as well as continuous
improvement of the moral-psychological atmosphere within the system.

In the presence of NKR President there was also held an oath ceremony
of the newly-appointed judges of the NKR Court of first instance of
general jurisdiction.

Armenian President Instructs State Revenue Committee To Ensure Amd 1

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT INSTRUCTS STATE REVENUE COMMITTEE TO ENSURE AMD 15 BILLION MORE TAX REVENUE THAN BUDGET PROJECTION

YEREVAN, January 18. /ARKA/. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
instructed Head of the State Revenue Committee Gagik Khachatryan
to ensure the tax revenue exceeding the amount planned in the 2013
government budget by AMD 15 billion.

In the 2013 budget, tax and state duty revenue is projected at AMD
993.08 billion (by AMD 118.7 billion more than in the 2012 budget).

“I hope the committee will cope with this task,” he said. “I am
completely satisfied with the job done, and this should inspire
others.”

Nevertheless, Sargsyan said, there are many problems in the system
and there is still plenty to do here.

The president said many were skeptical about the previous year’s tax
revenue and was opposed to the idea of raising the benchmark projected
in the 2012 budget by AMD 101 billion. However, the committee has
successfully fulfilled the task.

He said that the implemented tax reforms had upgraded Armenia’s ranks
in international ratings.

“I am convince that time will come when the committee officers will
no longer be considered as enemies,” he said. “This hostile atmosphere
starts melting away, and this is very important.”

In 2012, the government intended to intensify tax inflow by improving
tax administration and lessening shadow dealing, while now it plans to
enlarge tax revenue by using other instruments. About AMD 31 billion
of AMD 118.7 billion of extra tax revenue will come as a result of
legislative changes, and AMD 27.7 billion through administrative
mechanisms.

Besides, the enforcement of the effect from the new income tax law
enforced on January 1, 2013 and from the raised floor wage has been
taken into account in tax revenue calculations.

AMD 934.3 billion is projected given the previous year’s result and
macroeconomic processes.

In the 2013 government budget, tax revenue is projected at 21.88%
of GDP against the 20.73% projected in the 2012 budget. ($1 – AMD
406.30). -0-

Serj Tankian To Support Raffi Hovhannisyan During The Election Campa

SERJ TANKIAN TO SUPPORT RAFFI HOVHANNISYAN DURING THE ELECTION CAMPAIGN
Anna Nazaryan

“Radiolur”
18:41 18.01.2013

Raffi Hovhannisyan says incumbent President Serzh Sargsyan will be
his main competitor at the forthcoming presidential elections. He
invited President Sargsyan to a debate.

Hovhannisyan did not rule out the probability of boycott, if it’s
necessary. However, he urged another candidate Andrias Ghukasyan to
refuse from the idea of hunger strike.

According to the leader of the Heritage Party, the issue of unification
of political forces may emerge is there is a run-off.

Is Raffi Hovhannisyan ready to congratulate the winner? “I will
congratulate, but mire likely, I’ll accept congratulations,” he said,
adding, however, that he won’t do that if the elections are held in
the same manner as over the past 20 years.

Raffi Hovhannisyan will start the campaign from the Liberty Square
on Monday. During this election campaign he will be supported by Serj
Tankian, soloist of the “System Of A Down.”

Hovhannisyan urged all citizens to participate in the elections.

Chief Of Military Medical Directorate Of The Armenian Armed Forces S

CHIEF OF MILITARY MEDICAL DIRECTORATE OF THE ARMENIAN ARMED FORCES SACKED

YEREVAN, January 18. / ARKA /. Armenian defense minister Seyran
Ohanian has fired the chief of the Military Medical Directorate of the
Armenian Armed Forces, Colonel Artashes Parsadanyan, following reports
of several non-combat deaths of conscripts at military hospitals from
various diseases.

The latest was Armenak Lazarian who died on Thursday morning from
acute cardio-respiratory failure at the Central Military Hospital. He
was preceded by Norayr Sahakyan who died last December in a military
hospital.

Speaking at a news conference today the minister said prosecutors
opened criminal investigations into both cases. Ohanian said also
the people who are responsible for a traffic incident on January 16
that killed one serviceman, Arthur Gevorkian and wounded an officer,
will also be punished. At the same time, the minister said progress
in the work of the military medical service is evident.

“A set of studies conducted in 2012 show that that the sickness rate
in the army has dropped, mainly because of preventive measures,”
he said. -0-

Most Of Armenian President’s Election Pledges Failed – Activist

Most of Armenian president’s election pledges failed – activist

TERT.AM
17:33 ~U 18.01.13

The action group of the newly created Mission party is calling on
voters to take an active part in the voting in the upcoming
presidential election by voting “against all.”

The group also calls on the parliamentary groups to add this point to
ballot papers for voters to have a choice.

“If the changes fail to be made within reasonable timeframe, we will
apply to the Constitutional Court,” Manuk Sukiasyan, an action group
member, told journalists on Friday.

Referring to a party-made analysis, the socio-economic situation has
been getting worse in Armenia in recent five years. The economic
policy does not allow citizens to start up businesses.

“Our mission is to make the Armenian passport the weightiest document
regardless of which political force rules,” Mr Sukiasyan said.

The economist Mesrob Arakelyan, Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan
failed to keep most of his election pledges.

“We propose serious tax reforms – exempting small and medium
businesses from taxes,” Mr Arakelyan said.