Grapes Collection-Garden To Be Created In Armenia

GRAPES COLLECTION-GARDEN TO BE CREATED IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Nov 8, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 8, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA ministry of agriculture
is currently carrying out work on creation of a collection-garden
of grapes.

The head of the ministry’s plant growing development and plant
protection department Garnik Petrosian said at the November 8 press
conference that about 42 million drams (129 thousand dollars) is
necessary for it. 3 million drams was allocated for the preliminary
work of planting this garden in 2007, another 5 million drams will
be allocated in 2008.

"As a result, we will have a grapes collection-garden covering an
area of 2.5 ha where our old sorts will be restored and preserved,"
G. Petrosian said. According to him, starting from 2009, fruit
collection-gardens, including apricot ones, will be created.

In the words of G. Petrosian, 900 tons of apricot, 500 tons of cherry
and 500 tons of peach was exported from Armenia in January-November
of this year.

Syria And Armenia To Boost Agriculture Cooperation

SYRIA AND ARMENIA TO BOOST AGRICULTURE COOPERATION
Thawra-Mazen

SANA
Wednesday, November 07, 2007 – 07:25 PM

DAMASCUS, (SANA) – Minister of Agriculture Adel Safar discussed
Wednesday with his Armenian counterpart Davit Lokian and an
accompanying delegation the standing cooperation and means of boosting
it in the interest of the two countries.

Dr. Safar affirmed the importance of activating agrarian cooperation
agreements in line with the level of the historic ties between the
tow friendly states.

For his part, the Armenian minister expressed his country’s desire
to enhance ties and cooperation in the agriculture and health domains
in addition to exchange the agriculture products.

Harvard University Center Features Armenian Exhibition

HARVARD UNIVERSITY CENTER FEATURES ARMENIAN EXHIBITION

ARMENPRESS
Nov 7, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS: An exhibition featuring the cultural
legacy of the Armenian town Nor Jugha (New Jugha) is on display at
Management and International Relations Center of Harvard University,
USA.

The exhibition displays photos taken by a prominent Armenian researcher
of Nakhichevan Argam Ayvazian and Steven Sim, a U.S. architect. The
majority of photos show architectural monuments of the region erected
between 10-th-17-th centuries.

The focus is on how these monuments looked in the past and now,
evidencing how Azerbaijan destroyed Armenian churches and cemeteries
with unique cross stones.

Steven Sim has made numerous trips across historical Armenia over the
last two decades taking pictures of all endangered Armenian monuments.

In 2005 he traveled to Nakhichevan to examine the Armenian churches
there, but found none. Steven Sim was the last non-Armenian who
witnessed destruction of the Armenian cemetery in Nakhichevan before
it was actually razed to ground in 2005.

He testified this to a European Parliament member, as a result
it passed a resolution condemning the destruction of the Armenian
cemetery.

The exhibition will be on display until November 19.

NKR: Martakert Problems By Real Solutions’ Variant

MARTAKERT PROBLEMS BY REAL SOLUTIONS’ VARIANT

Azat Artsakh Daily
06-11-2007
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]

On November 2nd, the NKR Prime Minister A.Haroutyunian paid a working
visit to Martakert region for discussing and checking a number of
questions of local sense.A considerable part of them were aroused in
enlarged session of regional board of administration, to which the head
of the Government showed direct participation. For him and Martakert
assets a subject of concerning discussion became the urgent problems
of making communal budgets, autumn sowing, application-complaints of
citizens, school building, pigs’ epidemic.

After corresponding statements of executives of regional board of
administration, the Prime Minister A.Haroutyunian concentrated
the presents’ attention at the necessity of operative solutions
of today’s problems. In comparison with 2006 in Martakert region
this year very little autumn sowing was done. The executives mainly
gave reasons for little harvest of soilusers and by reduction of
opportunities. The Prime Minister attached importance to the problems
of showing proffessional assistance to the producers of agricultural
products. In connection with application-complaints of sitizens by
details of the statement represented at the sesion, this year more than
400 letters penetrated into the regional board of administration,
a great part of which were damands in view of acquisition and
repair of flats, supply of drinking water, many complaints were
registered also about local injustices. The head of the Government
instructed the chieves of the communities to be thoughtful towards
the inhabitants. Irrespective of everything, the Prime Minister said,
that a citizen would be in the focus of Goevrnment’s attention. After
the enlarged session of Martakert regional board of administration,
A.Haroutyunian visited Tlish. He got acquainted with conveniences
of newbuilthouse of arrangements. Then he had a direct meeting with
Talish people. The Prime Minister noted, that the first meeting by
status of Prime Minister with villagers began from Talish. He stated,
that he decided coming year by state means to build additional annex of
the school, new flats for young families, to improve water supply.The
head of the Government assured, that the village would be always in
the focus of the Government’s attention, would be possible assistance
directed to solution of local problems.(Administration of relations
with the NKR Government’s Information and Community).

Who Will Fund The New Anti-Corruption Strategy?

WHO WILL FUND THE NEW ANTI-CORRUPTION STRATEGY?

Lragir.am
07-11-2007 13:46:21

The Republic of Armenia set off to work out a new anti-corruption
strategy, said Gevorg Mheryan, an official of the president
administration in charge of anti-corruption affairs, on November 7
who took part in the presentation of the USAID Mobilizing Action
Against Corruption activity. Gevorg Mheryan told reporters, the
old strategy, the one adopted in 2001 has been fulfilled, and a new
strategy is now required. "The first anti-corruption strategy aimed
at a legislative reform, that is we are through with the second stage
of reforms, and in summer 2007 we were through with the goals set
by the anti-corruption strategy. The necessity for working out a
new anti-corruption strategy stemmed from the anti-corruption or
anti-corruption strategy commitments before a few international
organizations, GRECO, the World Bank, the OSCE," Gevorg Mheryan says.

According to him, the new program will aim to reveal the mechanisms
of legislative control. "In other words, we carried out reforms which
will be brought into being, their advantages and disadvantages will be
revealed, which will later allow avoiding mistakes in other efforts,"
Gevorg Mheryan says. According to him, the new strategy is in the
first stage of development, and it is still vague. "We think we will
have the full picture by May 2008," Gevorg Mheryan says. He says,
however, that one of the directions will be enhancing the controlling
function of the civil society. "Particularly, it will aim at completing
the legislation, improving the mechanisms which were introduced to
reduce corruption in the framework of the anti-corruption strategy,
to measure their effectiveness, controllability, disadvantages,
advantages. However, the full picture will be in May and June,"
Gevorg Mheryan says.

Gevorg Mheryan does not know the duration of the new strategy but
he says it will be a long-term strategy, probably designed for 5
years. Besides, Gevorg Mheryan does not know anything about the costs
and funding for the program.

The former strategy, for instance, cost 300 thousand dollars and was
funded by the World Bank. Gevorg Mheryan says for the new strategy
they have turned to donors. "They said they are willing to help us
with specialists, experts, funding. Certainly, it is going to be
transparent and traceable for donors. For instance, the OSCE office
will recruit experts on competitive basis, and the OSCE office will
finance them," Gevorg Mheryan says. He also says they are not focusing
on the necessary funding and are not waiting for the funding. By the
way, Armen Khudaverdyan, an official of the president administration,
heads the working group which drafts the new strategy.

Lithuania’s Foreign Minister To Visit Armenia

LITHUANIA’S FOREIGN MINISTER TO VISIT ARMENIA

armradio.am
07.11.2007 13:38

November 8-9 the delegation Foreign Minister of Lithuania Petras
Vaitiekunas will pay a two-day visit to Armenia.

During teh visit Mr. Vaitiekunas will have meetings with RA President
Robert Kocharyan, the Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II,
Speaker of the National Assembly Tigran Torosyan, Prime Minister
Serge Sargsyan, Chairmen of Parliamentary Standing Committees on
Foreign Relations and European Integration.

Petras Vaitiekunas will visit Tsitsernakaberd to lay a wreath of
flowers at the memorial to the Armenian Genocide victims.

The Lithuanian Foreign Minister will visit Vanadzor to participate
in the opening ceremony of the Lori Fund.

West Mulling New Sanctions Against Iran Countdown To War?

WEST MULLING NEW SANCTIONS AGAINST IRAN COUNTDOWN TO WAR?

=5251&CategoryID=6
6 Nov 06

Iran has warned the United States that it would find itself in a
"quagmire deeper than Iraq" if it attacked the Islamic Republic.

The warning last week, by the head of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard
Corps, a target of new US sanctions, announced a week earlier, added
to the angry rhetoric between the two old foes which has prompted
speculation of possible American military action.

US President George W. Bush has suggested that a nuclear-armed Iran
could lead to "World War III". Washington insists it wants a diplomatic
solution to the issue of Iran’s nuclear program, but a US official
said last week more "tough-minded diplomacy" was needed.

"If the enemies show inexperience and want to invade Islamic Iran,
they will receive a strong slap from Iran", Mohammad Ali Jaafari
said in comments carried by the Fars news agency. "The enemy knows
that if it attacks Iran, it will be trapped in a quagmire deeper
than Iraq and Afghanistan, and it will have to withdraw in defeat",
he told a parade in Iran.

The five permanent members of the Security Council were expected to
meet in London on November 2 to discuss a possible third round of
UN sanctions.

In Vienna, US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas
Burns said that Teheran would have a price to pay if it did not
cooperate with the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic
Energy Agency, and halt uranium enrichment.

"It’s very important that we send this message that there is going
to be a price to what Iran does. And that price will be increased
isolation and heightened sanctions", Burns told journalists ahead of
a meeting with IAEA chief Mohammad El-Baradei.

"If Iran has not suspended its enrichment program in Natanz by a couple
weeks’ time, that’s going to be a highly relevant factor" as it will
show Teheran has not complied with UN Security Council resolutions,
Burns said.

The Security Council has already passed two resolutions calling
for sanctions if Iran does not fully suspend its enrichment and
reprocessing activities and the United States is pushing for a third.

"Iran has chosen the route of sanctions", Burns said.

Ahead of his meeting with El-Baradei, he added that the US took issue
with comments the director-general had made in the past "that would
seem to indicate that sanctions might not work."

El-Baradei sparked controversy in the US when he told CNN that he
had no evidence that Iran was building nuclear weapons and emphasized
the need for "creative diplomacy" rather than sanctions.

"I don’t see any other solution than diplomacy and inspections",
El-Baradei said.

Burns repeated calls for the Security Council to pass a sanctions
resolution on Teheran as soon as possible, and he urged the European
Union to impose further sanctions and for major trading partners to
cut ties with Iran.

The five permanent Security Council members — the US, China, Russia,
France and Britain — and Germany were meeting on Friday in London
to discuss strengthening UN sanctions against Teheran.

Washington accuses Teheran of seeking nuclear weapons and has never
ruled out the option of military action to end its defiance. Iran
insists it wants only to generate electricity for a growing population.

Rafsanjani: ‘A menacing climate of fear’ In Teheran meanwhile,
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, an influential former president,
warned Iran to be alert in the face of "unprecedented" actions by
its arch-foe the United States.

"Since the [1979] revolution, the enemies have plotted a lot, but
the current situation is unprecedented. Therefore everybody must be
alert", the cleric said, according to the state-run IRNA news agency.

"The movements and the presence of US forces and their supporters in
the region is unprecedented, as is the creation of a menacing climate
of fear", he told army commanders in a speech.

Rafsanjani’s cautious tone contrasted with the rhetoric of his
political rival, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has brushed off
the idea of an American attack on Iran, saying US forces are too
bogged down in Iraq.

Ahmadinejad famously said in September that his mathematical skills
as an engineer and faith in God made him sure that US forces would
not launch an attack.

After suffering a defeat by Ahmadinejad in the 2005 presidential
election, Rafsanjani has staged a political comeback in the last year,
winning the chairmanship of the Assembly of Experts, an influential
clerical body.

The Assembly of Experts is the body charged with supervising and
choosing Iran’s all-powerful supreme leader. Rafsanjani also heads
the main political arbitration body the Expediency Council.

Gulf states suggest compromise Arab states in the Gulf have come up
with a compromise aimed at defusing the crisis between the West and
Iran over its disputed nuclear program, a specialized Middle East
publication said last week.

The six-member Gulf Cooperation Council has proposed to Iran that it
create a multinational consortium to provide enriched uranium to the
Islamic republic as a way of resolving the standoff, The Middle East
Economic Digest (MEED) reported on its website.

It said Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal told MEED in
London that the plan would mean Teheran could continue developing
nuclear energy while removing fears that the project was a cover for
an atomic weapons drive.

"We have proposed a solution, which is to create a consortium for
all users of enriched uranium in the Middle East", he said.

"[We will] do it in a collective manner through a consortium that
will distribute according to needs, give each plant its own necessary
amount, and ensure no use of this enriched uranium for atomic weapons",
MEED quoted Prince Saud as saying.

Under the reported GCC plan, its members — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) — would
establish a uranium enrichment plant in a neutral country outside
the Middle East.

The plant would produce nuclear fuel that would then be provided to
Middle East countries seeking to harness atomic energy.

Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Libya and Yemen as well as the six GCC states
have all said that they want to pursue peaceful nuclear projects.

Prince Saud told MEED he believed the new plant "should be in a
neutral country — Switzerland, for instance".

"Any plant in the Middle East that needs enriched uranium would get
its quota. I don’t think other Arab states would refuse. In fact,
since the decision of the GCC to enter into this industry, the other
Arab countries have expressed a desire to be part of the proposal".

He added that Iran was considering the GCC offer.

"We hope the Iranians will accept this proposal. We continue to talk to
them and urge them not only to look at the issue from the perspective
of the needs of Iran for energy, but also in the interests of the
security of the region.

"The US is not involved, but I don’t think it [would be] hostile to
this, and it would resolve a main area of tension between the West
and Iran".

Meanwhile, Iranian officials said they were satisfied with the results
of their latest talks with the UN atomic agency.

The talks were part of a deal the International Atomic Energy Agency
clinched in August for Iran to answer outstanding questions over its
atomic program so the IAEA can conclude a four-year investigation
into its nature.

Scholar links Bush’s US and Hirohito’s Japan A leading American
scholar of wartime Japan has said that the Bush Administration’s "war
on terror" bears close parallels to Japan’s past militarism through a
defiance of international law. Herbert Bix, who won the Pulitzer Prize
in 2001 for his landmark biography of the wartime Emperor Hirohito,
said he believed US aerial bombings and alleged use of torture in
Afghanistan and Iraq constituted war crimes.

"The current American rampage in Iraq and elsewhere, not to mention
the Bush Administration’s threats of war against Iran, so clearly
replicates Imperial Japan during the period when its leaders willfully
disregarded international law and pursued the diplomacy of force",
Bix said during a visit to Tokyo last week.

Japan defied the Nine-Party Treaty guaranteeing China’s sovereignty,
signed in 1922 in Washington, when Japanese troops invaded Manchuria
in 1931.

Bix compared Japan’s action to current American efforts to scuttle
the Treaty of Rome establishing the International Criminal Court,
which President George W. Bush argues could unfairly target Americans.

He also said that senior US leaders — not just rank-and-file soldiers
— should have been held to account for the killings of 24 civilians
in the Iraqi town of Haditha.

"US war criminality is justice institutionalized, as Japan’s once was",
Bix charged.

"In today’s America, torture is not only standard battlefield practice
in the so-called war on terror. Torture is celebrated in American
popular culture as evidenced by the popularity of ’24’, a TV program
in which the hero confronts a ticking bomb scenario… designed to
justify torture".

But Bix, a professor at the State University of New York at Binghamton,
said he remained optimistic for change as most Americans were opposed
to "the Washington consensus".

Bix is best known for writing Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan,
in which he described the emperor as a shrewd architect of the war.

The book remains highly controversial in Japan, where most historians
have portrayed Hirohito, who was never prosecuted and stayed on
the throne until his death in 1989, as a figurehead detached from
war planning.

Oil crisis exercise bares US ‘impotence’ It’s August 2009, oil prices
have topped 150 dollars a barrel and a secret uranium plant has been
detected in Iran.

Teheran and Caracas are slashing oil exports by 700,000 barrels to
punish the West for sanctions, and the US military is ready to move
its entire Pacific fleet into the Middle East to counter threats.

It may be tomorrow’s headlines, but on November 1 a high-powered
panel of Washington insiders acting as the US president’s national
security council found they would face almost impossible choices
and be powerless in such a case, baring the United States’ growing
inability to lead in global crises.

"In this kind of hostile environment [Iran and Iraq] would have the
upper hand", argued Gene Sperling, former President Bill Clinton’s
national economic adviser, who played the treasury secretary in
the exercise.

It "would make us look impotent", he added.

"This scenario could start tomorrow," said retired General John
Abizaid, the former US Central Command chief.

In a separate development, Abizaid suggested that US troops might
remain in the Middle East for as long as the next 50 years.

Put on by the Securing America’s Future Energy (SAFE) and the
Bipartisan Policy Center, the unscripted one-day simulation sought
to emphasize the danger of the extremely narrow gap between world
oil production capacity and demand, and the heavy US dependence on
oil imports.

But it exposed the strained US military’s incapacity to project its
power over multiple regions, and the ability of even comparatively
small countries to provoke a world political and economic crisis.

To play a White House team reacting to the news in real time, SAFE
brought together nine former top presidential advisors and officials
with intimate knowledge of national security affairs.

The "council" included former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin playing
the president’s national security advisor, former Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage as secretary of state, former Navy Secretary
John Lehman as secretary of defense, and Philip Zelikow, a former
National Security Council official as national intelligence director.

The scenario they woke up to on May 4, 2009 was the loss to world
markets of one million barrels a day in oil supplies when saboteurs
in Azerbaijan caused the shutdown of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline.

The action heightened geopolitical tensions in the region and sent
oil prices from the mid-90 dollar range to 115 dollars a barrel.

With the stock markets plummeting, the council has to advise the
president what to say and do, and finds its hands tied by the strains
of the Iraq war and by domestic politics.

"Energy Secretary" Carol Browner — head of the US Environmental
Protection Agency in the 1990s — says the president can release
oil from the strategic reserve to lower gasoline prices, or call
for conservation with lower speed limits, a Sunday driving ban,
and other measures.

Looking at possible Russian or Iranian involvement in the Azerbaijan
blast, "joint chiefs chairman" Abizaid says the strategic reserve
has to be kept for military needs.

Others say the public and Congress would not accept forced
conservation.

With no information on who made the Azerbaijan attack — Armenians?

pro-Russian elements? Iran? — the defense and intelligence officials
say they have to be on alert but do not know what else to do.

"Our ability to project power into this area is very limited. We are
strung out all over the globe", said Lehman, noting that the military
hasn’t begun to rebuild after years in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Rubin points out that with global production capacity almost at its
maximum, there is little possibility of replacing the lost oil flow.

"It shows how weak our hand is", he says, as the group falters on
urging the president to do more than assuage US consumers.

Three months later, the situation has drastically worsened. A secret
uranium enrichment plant was discovered in Iran, confirming its nuclear
weapon ambitions; oil production in Nigeria has been curtailed by
rebel attacks.

As the council meets, Iran has just replied to threatened new Western
sanctions by cutting back its oil production and Venezuela follows
suit, sending prices past 150 dollars.

The president’s advisors say there are no short-term measures to
soften the economic or political blow. They also admit sanctions
on Iran have little effect, that high oil prices and short supply
actually encourage producer cutbacks.

Militarily, with Israel threatening to take action on Iran itself,
the Pentagon says the US has to project force in the region. But
doing so means moving the entire Pacific fleet to the Middle East,
ceding power in the Pacific — and Taiwan — to China.

After years following the 9/11 attacks of not demanding sacrifice of
its people, the new crisis has brought things to a head, Lehman said,
as he suggests restarting the draft.

"We are facing a mortal threat to our way of life here", he muses.

http://www.mmorning.com/articleC.asp?Article

"October 23 Events Contribute To The Increase In Rating Of Levon Te

"OCTOBER 23 EVENTS CONTRIBUTE TO THE INCREASE IN RATING OF LEVON TER-PETROSIAN," SPECIALIST OF ELECTORAL TECHNOLOGIES BELIEVES

Noyan Tapan
Nov 6, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, NOYAN TAPAN. During the electoral campaign
of the presidential elections an elector is attracted not by the
programs presented by the candidates but by the pre-electoral
image created by them. This statement was made by Armen Badalian,
a specialist of electoral technologies, at the press conference held
on November 6. According to him, in order to provide success for
any candidate in the elections, the team of the latter should take
into consideration the fact what president people want to have, with
what features he should be endowed, and then present its candidate
with that very features. In the words of Armen Badalian, when making
a choice "the model of dominant stereotype" plays a decisive role
among people. For example, the image of Karen Demirchian in the 1998
elections corresponded to the value system of the Soviet Armenia, and
Robert Kocharian was a new strong personality, who had won his case,"
Armen Badalian said, mentioning that as a result both the first and
the second had their influence on the ballot of the people.

Referring to the pre-electoral tactics adopted by the first President
of the Republic of Armenia, Armen Badalian mentioned that it is
very important for Levon Ter-Petrsoian to always be in the center
of media. The September 21 speech, the October 26 mass meeting,
as well as his meeting with the representatives of the former rival
Dashnaktsutiun, in particular, according to Armen Badalian, served to
that very aim: to the creation of information occasions. "The detention
of a group of supporters of the first president on October 23 even
more contributed to the increase in the rating of Levon Ter-Petrosian:
he was like Christ, who came to set his apostles free, when he visited
the police station."

Diaspora Consumes Armenian Wine

DIASPORA CONSUMES ARMENIAN WINE

A1+
[02:19 pm] 06 November, 2007

"No legal norm prohibits a producer to write on the bottle whatever
he wants, while each label should give information about the wine,
provide information about the place where the wine was made, about its
history and give information about those who have made the wine. But
today we have to believe in each information written on the label",
says President of Wine-Makers Association of Armenia Avag Harutunyan.

This and many other problems hamper the export of the Armenian wine.

"About 2 million bottles were exported from Armenia in 2006, while
Georgia used to export 40 million bottles and Moldova 200 million
bottles to the Russian market.

"One bottle of Armenian wine costs 2 USD, the price of the exportation
is 0,5 USD, thus the Armenian wine costs about 3-5 USD. They are the
cheapest wines. In this regard Armenian wines are competitive with
wines costing 1-3 USD. On the other hand Armenia is perceived with
its cognac by the world" says Mr Harutunyan. He considers that the
main consumer of the Armenian wine in abroad is the Armenian Diaspora.

Avag Harutunyan considers that Armenia should answer to two main
questions during its 70-year-old activities in this field – how the
Armenian sorts of grape feel in the European technological system and
how the European sorts feel on our land. European standards demand
defined technologies for growing grape, restrictions of some sorts
and certain deadlines of harvest.

Mr Harutunyan ensures that the grape growing in a valley does not
correspond to the European standards.

Grape growing in Syunik and Tavush regions is more qualified.

"Thousand hectares of lands are left uncultivated, while grape
corresponding to the European standards may grow there", mentioned
Avag Harutunyan.

CNN and EuroNews will continue broadcasting spot ads about Armenia

CNN and EuroNews will continue broadcasting spot ads about Armenia

armradio.am
03.11.2007 14:40

In 2008 The CNN and EuroNews will continue broadcasting spot ads about
Armenia. Chairman of the Tourism Department of the Minister of Trade
and Economic Development Mekhak Aptesyan told journalists today that
the draft budget for Fiscal Year 2008 envisages 180 million AMD for the
broadcasting of the spot ads.

The same amount of money was allocated for the purpose this year’s
budget.