440 major taxpayers of Armenia paid AMD 20,3 bln to state budget

440 major taxpayers of Armenia paid AMD 20,3 bln to state budget in March 2011

May 21, 2011 – 11:10 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net –

According to the Analysis of Summarized Indices of Major Taxpayers’
Monitoring involving 440 major taxpayers, in March 2011 by the State
Revenue Committee, the major taxpayers paid AMD 20,3 bln to the RA
state budget in March 2011 that made 60,1% of the total tax revenues.

As of April 1, 2011, taxpayers’ overpayments amounted to AMD 92,9 bln.

At the same time, AMD 1833.9 mln were returned from the state budget
for VAT overpayments.

Corpse of old man found in Yerevan lake

Corpse of old man found in Yerevan lake

news.am
May 21, 2011 | 16:03

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s police received a call saying a corpse was found
near the lake in Yerevan on Saturday.

Rescuers arrived at the scene and took out dead body of a man, photo
journalist Gagik Shamshyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

The forensic examination reveled the man is 84-year-old Artashes
Hakobyan. According to preliminary information, there are no traces of
violence on the body.

Defense Ministry dismisses report by Zhamanak

Defense Ministry dismisses report by Zhamanak

15:05 – 21.05.11

Defense Ministry Spokesperson Davit Karapetyan has dismissed a report
that a ministry official met with a Karabakh war participant, and said
he would not receive a flat for `complaining about it’.

Samvel Mikaelyan, a participant of the Karabakh war, is said to have
been promised a flat by the Defense Ministry and attempted to start a
sit-in outside the French Embassy in Armenia in protest of the delay.

It comes after the Armenian daily Zhamanak, citing Samvel Mikaelyan,
reported that Karen Harutyunyan, an officer of the social department
at the Defense Ministry, met Mikaelyan and told him he will not get
any flat simply because of his decision to protest.

Samvel Mikaelyan is said to have lost one of his lungs during the
Karabakh war and was wounded in the head that caused a brain
concussion.

Tert.am

Justice court hands down controversy

Deseret News, Salt Lake City, UT
May 17 2011

Justice court hands down controversy
Published: Monday, May 16, 2011 9:44 p.m. MDT

It all began with a loose dog, a cell phone and a jail sentence.
Twenty months and dozens of legal proceedings later, the battle still
rages: Judge Keith Stoney v. the Peltekian family.

The Peltekian case has been a flash point in a grass-roots uprising
against Stoney and prosecutor Lindsay Jarvis, who recently resigned.
There has been a lot of he-said-she-said in the ensuing war of words,
but one thing seems clear: Something is wrong with Stoney’s courtroom,
if not the entire justice-court system. All of which is why the
Peltekians were invited to testify in front of the state Legislature
earlier this year.

In the summer of 2009, Ed and Elaine Peltekians left their son Ryan’s
dog in the care of Ed’s sister, Ann Bieker, while they went on
vacation. While they were gone, their dog got loose and was picked up
by the city. No problem, all they had to do was pay a fine, right?
Wrong. Ann, Ed and Ryan were forced to appear in Stoney’s court, where
they say they were abused and threatened for not pleading guilty to
three misdemeanors that would have meant thousands of dollars in
fines, a criminal record and probation.

“We were willing to pay a fee to get the dog out,” says Ed. “But we
were not willing to become criminals. We were treated as if we robbed
a store. Stoney threatened me with jail many times. I held my ground
and he didn’t like that.”

After several confrontational court appearances, Elaine decided to
record the proceedings against her son on her cell phone. “There is no
recorder in the court,” she says, “so they can do whatever they want.
We had no proof of what was happening. There were no signs that said I
couldn’t do it.”

When an officer of the court told Elaine that recording was banned,
she says she stopped. Moments later, she powered off the phone and put
it away. Then Stoney announced that he had been informed that someone
was recording in his courtroom, and Elaine was taken to a back room.

“It looks like someone is going to jail,” she says she heard Stoney
say as she was taken away. She was forced to wait the rest of the day
until the court was empty before she returned to appear before Stoney
for contempt of court. She apologized and explained that she didn’t
know it was against the rules. She was accused of recording a second
time after she had been asked not to, even though an examination of
her phone later revealed she had made only one recording.

“They say I pleaded guilty; I didn’t,” says Elaine. “They just took me
away. I wasn’t given a hearing.”

Elaine was handcuffed and driven to a jail in Springville, where she
was booked, dressed in orange pants and a striped shirt and roomed
with other inmates for 24 hours.

“I was numb,” she says. “I had never been in jail. I haven’t even had
a speeding ticket in 15 years. My stepfather is a retired detective.
My mom worked in law enforcement. I did volunteer work for law
enforcement. Until it happens to you it’s hard to believe the abuse
that goes in (Stoney’s) court.”

Bieker was sentenced to a six months probation, and Ryan’s case was
overturned in district court, with the judge writing that Ryan’s
constitutional rights were violated. Ed’s case was dismissed, as well.

Elaine says she will file a complaint against Stoney with the Judicial
Conduct Commission. A district judge ruled that she never should have
been a criminal defendant, noting that she was never charged or
convicted of a crime.

And yet the case drags on. The city is appealing the district court rulings.

“To think this all started over a dog that got out of its yard,” says
state Rep. Ken Sumsion, R-American Fork.

Stoney has been silent and Jarvis defiant in various media reports
about Stoney’s courtroom controversies, but given the widespread
complaints it seems obvious that something is amiss. There are blogs
and websites devoted to Stoney’s removal – Votenoonstoney.com. There
have been protests and rallies against Stoney in Saratoga Springs.
Last month some 30 residents appeared at a City Council meeting to air
their grievances against Stoney and Jarvis. It turns out there are
many people with stories like the Peltekians’ in this small town of
26,000.

“This is much bigger than what happened to my family,” says Ed.

Which is why the Peltekian’s case has caught the attention of state
legislators. Says one legislator, “I am getting so many emails about
Stoney, I can’t keep up with it.” For that matter, he gets complaints
from around the state about what he calls “justice court nightmares.”

Says Sumsion: “It’s a big enough issue that more legislation is
coming. I can tell you that.” State Rep. LaVar Christensen, R-Draper,
agrees, calling justice courts “cash cows” for small town with little
oversight.

“They can do what they want,” he says. “There is no recourse in these
courts, no record. You’re a stranger in the court; everyone knows each
other. It’s them versus you. They can get you for anything they feel
like.”

The Peltekian case prompted the Legislature to propose two laws – one
that would require all justice courts to have recorders in their
courtrooms and another that would enable local citizens the ability to
vote judges out of office. The majority of Saratoga Springs residents
rejected Stoney in the election, but their votes were diluted by the
rest of the county.

If nothing else, common sense failed in the Peltekian case. “Couldn’t
he have just taken the phone?” says Christensen. “Did she really need
to go to jail? Contempt of court is knowingly violating specific
instructions.”

Meanwhile, life goes on for Elaine. She works in a hair salon and Ed
in construction. Her criminal record complicated efforts to rent a
home. Ironically, Ed, Elaine and their two kids moved to Utah four
years ago to get away from crime and the rat race in California.

“We wanted a better life for our children and family,” says Elaine.
“We move to a nice small town and all this happens.”

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700135988/Justice-court-hands-down-controversy.html

Police receive another false alarm about bomb in Zvartnots airport

Police receives another false alarm about bomb planted in Zvartnots airport

May 22, 2011 – 16:48 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net –

On May 22, the Armenian Police received a bomb threat warning related
to Zvartnots airport of Yerevan.

Deputy Head of the Public Relations Department at the RA Police Armen
Malkhasyan told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter that representatives of the
Armenian National Security Service and Ministry of Emergency
Situations arrived in the airport to search for the bomb. But it
turned out to be a false alarm.

This is the second false alarm about a bomb planted in Zvartnots
airport over a week.

Un soldat d’Azerbaïdjan tué près du Nagorny karabakh (officiel)

KARABAGH
Un soldat d’Azerbaïdjan tué près du Nagorny karabakh (officiel)

Un soldat d’Azerbaïdjan a été tué par les forces arméniennes à la
frontière proche de la région du Nagorny Karabakh, a annoncé samedi à
Bakou le ministère de la Défense.

Le sergent des forces azerbaïdjanaises a été tué lorsque des soldats
arméniens ont ouvert le feu vendredi, selon un communiqué du
ministère.

“Le soldat a été tué par un tireur embusqué. Une balle l’a touché à la
gorge”, a précisé à l’AFP un villageois de la région d’Agdam, Shamkhal
Adygozalov.

Les accrochages armés entre les forces arméniennes et azerbaïdjanaises
au Nagorny Karabakh se sont multipliés ces derniers mois, et 12
soldats au total y ont été tués depuis janvier.

L’Arménie, membre de l’Organisation du traité de sécurité collective
(ODKB), une alliance militaire menée par la Russie, est en conflit
depuis des années avec l’Azerbaïdjan pour le contrôle du Nagorny
Karabakh.

Rattaché à l’Azerbaïdjan pendant la période soviétique, le Nagorny
Karabakh a proclamé son indépendance, non reconnue par la communauté
internationale, après une guerre qui a fait 30.000 morts et des
centaines de milliers de réfugiés entre 1988 et 1994.

AFP

dimanche 22 mai 2011,
Sté[email protected]

L’Arménie poursuit ses recherches pétrolières et de gaz

ARMENIE-ENERGIE
L’Arménie poursuit ses recherches pétrolières et de gaz

L’Arménie poursuit ses recherches pétrolières et de gaz. Le ministère
arménien de l’Energie et des ressources naturelles examine le dossier
des licences pour les compagnies étrangères de prospection. Rappelons
que durant la période soviétique des études et forages étaient
effectuées en Arménie. Jusqu’à son indépendance de 1991 près de 120
forages étaient effectués dans la plaine de l’Ararat. Sans toutefois
aboutir à des résultats significatifs. Après la hausse importante des
prix du pétrole et du gaz, après l’an 2000 l’Arménie s’est remise à
effectuer ses recherches surtout dans le domaine du gaz. Selon toute
probabilité près du village de Varant, dans la région d’Armavir existe
des réserves de gaz évaluées à 3 milliards de mètres cubes. Une
société canadienne « TransEuro Energy » réalisa des travaux de
recherche. Jusqu’en 2009 d’autres travaux de prospection furent menés
dans les régions de Siunik, Vayots Tsor et Kegharkounik, réalisés par
la société canadienne « Vangold Resources Limited » et l’irlandaise «
Blackstairs Energy ». L’Arménie ne désespère pas de trouver des
gisements de pétrole et de gaz, d’autant que non loin de ses
frontière, en Iran et en Azerbaïdjan existent des réserves
importantes.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 22 mai 2011,
Krikor [email protected]

Turkish Mass Media Thank United Liberal National Party Of Armenia Fo

TURKISH MASS MEDIA THANK UNITED LIBERAL NATIONAL PARTY OF ARMENIA FOR “NAGORNO-KARABAKH: TRUTH AND FACTS” PROJECT

arminfo
Friday, May 20, 20:54

The Turkish TV company “Haber” has sent a letter of gratitude
to the United Liberal National Party of Armenia for holding the
“Nagorno-Karabakh: Truth and Facts” project covering the Karabakh
peace process, Press Secretary of the Party, Naira Karapetyan, said
during the presentation of the project on Friday.Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan was also present at the event.

“About 4 mln letters have been sent to the governments of foreign
countries and international organizations under the project. As a
result, we received positive responses from 30 countries, mostly
Spanish speaking ones”, Karapetyan said and stressed that at the
moment there is a strong basis for continuation of the project and
its possible extension.

The “Nagorno-Karabakh: Truth and Facts” project was held from April 8
till May 9 2011 and was aimed at informing the international community
of the current situation in the Karabakh peace process.

Weapons Sale To Azerbaijan By Some Csto Member States Contradicts Or

WEAPONS SALE TO AZERBAIJAN BY SOME CSTO MEMBER STATES CONTRADICTS ORGANIZATION’S CHARTER

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 20, 2011 – 18:47 AMT

Deputy Director of Caucasus Institute, political analyst Sergey
Minasyan said that CSTO member states should pursue a more responsible
policy and consider the interests of their allies in military and
technical cooperation with other South Caucasian states.

He recalled that, under provisions of Article 1 of the Collective
Security Treaty, the member states shall not participate in “actions
aimed against another member state.”

“The sale of huge number of weapons and military technologies
to Azerbaijan, which threatens Armenia, Á CSTO member state, with
hostilities, by CSTO member states immediately contradicts their own
obligations. Actually, these are “actions aimed against another CSTO
member state,” concluded Minasyan.

Year-On-Year Inflation In Armenia Recorded At 8.9% In April 2011

YEAR-ON-YEAR INFLATION IN ARMENIA RECORDED AT 8.9% IN APRIL 2011

/ARKA/
MAY 20, 2011
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, May 20. /ARKA/. Year-on-year inflation in Armenia was
recorded at 8.9% in April 2011, the National Statistical Service of
Armenia reports.

Consumer prices went 0.2% down in April, compared with March.

According to the statistical report, economic activity rose 7.7%
in April 2011, compared with the same month a year earlier, and 4%
compared with the previous month.

In the 2011 government budget, inflation in Armenia is projected at 4%
(±1.5%) and GDP growth at 4.6%.