US Ambassadors To Armenia As Seen By Armenian Political Scientists

US AMBASSADORS TO ARMENIA AS SEEN BY ARMENIAN POLITICAL SCIENTISTS

18:55 * 23.12.14

US ambassadors to Armenia are, first of all, US citizens and Armenia’s
friends, which is the basis for the formation of closer Armenia-US
relations, political scientists Styopa Safaryan and Ruben Mehrabyan
told Tert.am.

“Each of them made his contribution. Their professional level enabled
them to demonstrate more skill in particular situations in performing
their missions,” Mr Safaryan said.

He recalled John Ordway, who won Armenians’ hearts by his statements
on the Armenian Genocide.

Marie L. Yovanovitch highlighted human rights. John Heffern, who
specializes in regional studies, is famous for his statements as well.

Specifically, one of his latest statements dealt with the recovery
of the bodies of the downed Armenian helicopter’s crew members and
adequacy of the Armenian side’s actions.

Political scientist Ruben Mehrabyan pointed out the “human factor’s”
role in US ambassadors’ contributions in Armenia’s favor.

“Since Armenia gained independence US ambassadors that have worked in
Armenia have always had great liking for Armenia, Armenian people and
culture. Armenia, although a small country, has been and will remain
a most interesting country for US citizens.”

Numerous examples of the US ambassadors behaving as Armenia’s friends
could be cited. However, they first of all pursued the USA’s national
interests, Mr Safaryan said.

Richard M. Mills has been appointed as US Ambassador to Armenia.

Mr Safaryan expects him to be well-informed of the sensitive regional
problems.

“The Caucasus is a most complicated region, and US ambassadors are
appointed to prove that Washington is not looking at the Caucasus
through its fingers and will not appoint ‘come-and-go people.'”

Specifically, John Heffern is one of the best experts in cooperation
with NATO, while US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Richard Morningstar
and his predecessor Mathew Bryza are excellent experts in energy
and security.

With respect to Richard M. Mills, Mr Mehrabyan said that he is an
experienced diplomat.

“He is well-informed of Middle East problems. I think he comes during
a decisive period not only for Armenia, but also for the post-Soviet
states. I hope he will be assigned a most important mission here.”

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/12/23/USA/1544334

Whether Trumpets To Turn Into Court Proceedings For Teghout?

WHETHER TRUMPETS TO TURN INTO COURT PROCEEDINGS FOR TEGHOUT?

16:39 December 23, 2014

EcoLur

The pompous events dedicated to the commissioning of Teghout mining
complex on 20 December were marked with the visit of top officials of
Armenia and Atrsakh. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and government
official attended the opening ceremony, who congratulated and the owner
and managers of Vallex Group with success. Almost simultaneously two
statements were disseminated in the press, which drastically differed
from the official pompous statements made in Teghout.

One of them is Shnogh and Teghut villagers’ letter addressed to the
Danish Export Credit Fund demanding to suspend the loaning agreement
with the investor of Teghout project – Russian VTB Bank and to annul
the agreement with “Teghout” CJSC. The letter has been signed by 57
villagers. For them the figures announced at the opening ceremony,
for example, processing of 7 million tons of ore annually means that
their village will get dozens times more wastes containing ore elements
poisoning rivers and land areas.

Out of US $ 190 million, which annual value of copper and molybdenum
concentrates, the villagers will get nothing, if not take into
consideration miserable salaries to those employed at the company
and the money for leasing community land areas.

Reminder: at the very beginning the land areas of the villagers were
purchased at ridiculous price – 30-50 AMD for one sq. meter, while
orchards were purchased for 200-300 AMD. Those who refused to sell
their land areas, were made sell them through courts in line with
the formulation of the governmental resolution “eminent public domain”.

The letter describes in detail not only the violations of the domestic
legislation, but also the violation of those standards and norms
prescribed for the activities of the Danish fund.

Another statement was made by “Teghout Support” civic initiative, which
particularly says, “… We have huge amount of factual materials, based
on which we are going to issue a claim to court to stop illegal mining
activities in Teghout and to award damages. We are going to submit the
materials we collected to the criminal investigation bodies demanding
from them to initiate a criminal case…Not having any guaranteed
that in the presence of high-level corruption in Armenia we will be
able to reach justice in legal way, we also intend to apply to all
political forces, international organization and private individuals
so as to deprive Teghout project of international financial flows…”

Note by EcoLur: The financial chain of Teghout project includes:
“Teghout” CJSC, 100% shares of which are owned by offshore-based
“Teghout Investment Ltd” registered in Cyprus. 100% of voting shares
of the Cyprus company are owned by “ACP” CJSC, the owner of which is
Valery Mezhlumyan.

http://ecolur.org/en/news/mining/whether-trumpets-to-turn-into-court-proceedings-for-teghout/6910/

Armenian Rights Activist Concerned Of Corrupt Practices In Prisons

ARMENIAN RIGHTS ACTIVIST CONCERNED OF CORRUPT PRACTICES IN PRISONS

21:55 * 22.12.14

Problem solving in Armenian prisons is nirmally accompanied by corrupt
practices, a civic activist has said, commenting on the situation in
penitentiary institutions.

“A penitentiary institution is just part of a whole state, so it
represents the situation in thicker colors,” Chairman of the Helsinki
Committee’s Vanadzor Office Artur Sakunts told Tert.am.

He said corruption has remained an immune practice in the past ten
years ever since the penitentiaries became subordinate bodies to the
Ministry of Justice.

Sakunts said he finds that such mechanisms are often put in place
to prevent the system’s collapse. “Without corrupt mechanisms, the
procedures will give way to very serious problems,” he noted.

The activist further pointed to the low living standards of employees
of the sector and the inadequate approaches towards the problems
they face. “I do not see a political will for changes. But there is
a solution to the problem, so the authorities can solve them if they
wish to,” he added.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/12/22/saqunc/1543407

French Co-Chair Hopes For Intensification Of Dialogue Between Armeni

FRENCH CO-CHAIR HOPES FOR INTENSIFICATION OF DIALOGUE BETWEEN ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN

14:03, 23 Dec 2014

“2014 was controversial in terms of settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict,” the OSCE Minsk Group’s French Co-Chair Pierre Andrieu
told APA.

“Presidents Aliyev and Sargsyan have met three times at three summits
organized by Presidents Putin and Hollande and Secretary of State John
Kerry, and this reflects full commitments of the Minsk Group’s three
co-chair countries to resolve the conflict,” said the French co-chair.

The diplomat said that along with a number of diplomatic developments,
there also has been some tension on the contact line and along the
international border between the two countries which resulted in a
relatively high number of casualties compared to previous years.

“The shooting of civilians, especially the downing of a military
helicopter on November 12 is regrettable. This serious incident shows
that it’s necessary to take some measures to reduce the tension,
rebuild confidence, and prevent this sort of incidents from ever being
repeated. The joint statement adopted by the ministers of the Minsk
Group’s three co-chair countries during the OSCE Ministerial Council
held in Basel on December 4 highlights the same elements. I’d like
to get back to the Paris summit on 27 December which took place at
the French president’s invitation on May 11-13 in Baku and Yerevan.

This summit allowing the resumption of direct dialogue between the
two presidents was held in a relaxed and confident atmosphere. Three
co-chairs of the Minsk Group and Personal Representative of the OSCE
Chairperson-in-Office were involved in the negotiations. The outcomes
were significant. The presidents decided to soon start the exchange of
information on missing persons during conflict under the auspices of
the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the ICRC has already
started working in this field. It was decided that to discuss other
confidence-building measures at the appropriate time, and I hope that
it will happen soon. At the same time, the three presidents thoroughly
discussed the negotiations.

President Hollande urged Presidents Aliyev and Sargsyan to demonstrate
political will to overcome the divergences and prepare their people
for peace. Year-end holidays may be useful to think about this year’s
outcomes and future plans. Negotiations and contacts will continue
from January through the mediation of the OSCE Minsk Group. We hope
for progress in this compound file, as well as intensification of
dialogue between Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents at a new meeting
to be held in September 2015 as part of the United Nations General
Assembly as it was noted at the Paris Summit,” he added.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/12/23/french-co-chair-hopes-for-intensification-of-dialogue-between-armenia-azerbaijan/

South Caucasus Railway Company Invested Over 100bln Drams In Six Yea

SOUTH CAUCASUS RAILWAY COMPANY INVESTED OVER 100BLN DRAMS IN SIX YEARS – REBETS

YEREVAN, December 23. /ARKA/. The South Caucasus Railway (SCR)
company invested a total of 100 billion 858.1 million drams in rail
transport sector in the period from 2008 to 2014, general director
of the company Victor Rebets told reporters on Monday.

In 2014 alone, the company’s investments amounted to 6.5 billion
drams. A similar amount is planned for 2015, Rebets said.

According to the concession agreement signed with the Armenian
government, the SCR is obliged to invest 174 billion 559.9 million
drams in 2008-2038, of it 122 billion 349.9 million in infrastructures
and 52 billion 210 million drams in rolling stock.

“The company is making all the investments as per the concession
agreement; the amount of investments is not reduced, despite the fact
that freight volumes are lower than what is defined in the concession
agreement”, Rebets said.

All the funds have been used for modernization of infrastructures
to raise the level of safety and reliability of the operations,
the general director said.

The company has built and commissioned three main rail bridges to
replace three 1898 bridges, the oldest in Armenia Zamanlin bridge,
the Devil’s Bridge and Kober-Tumanyan section bridge.

Repairs included works on 349.1 kilometers of railroad, 70 switches,
52 crossings, 36 bridges and other facilities. A total of 616,000
railway sleepers were replaced and train stations were reconstructed
and modernized.

A total of about 1.4 billion drams was invested in reconstruction of
the rail junction in Sanahin.

The first electric train repaired in Armenia over the last 25 years
will be commissioned on December 25, Rebets said adding three more
trains are to be repaired in the country next year to further improve
reliability of the operations.

South Caucasus Railway, a subsidiary of Russian Railways, runs
Armenian Railway, which was handed over to the South Caucasus Railway
on February 13, 2008 for 30-year concession management with a right
to prolong the management term for other 10 years. ($1 – 456.17 drams).

-0-

http://arka.am/en/news/business/south_caucasus_railway_company_invested_over_100bln_drams_in_six_years_rebets/#sthash.XZz4NEXt.dpuf

Armenian President Speaks Of Challenges, Opportunities Ahead

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SPEAKS OF CHALLENGES, OPPORTUNITIES AHEAD

ECONOMY | 23.12.14 | 10:12

Some of the current year’s difficulties and uncertainties that have
objective reasons are likely to continue in Armenia in 2015, Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan said on Monday during a reception for the
business community held on the occasion of the approaching New Year
and Holy Nativity.

At the same time, he spoke about new opportunities offered by Eurasian
integration as Armenia prepares to enter the new economic grouping
of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan on January 1.

“Any state, any economy, even the most powerful economies like
the United States or the European Union, can always encounter
difficulties. In countries like ours these difficulties may happen
more often,” said President Sargsyan as quoted by his press service.

The head of state stressed that it is important that “at the moment
of these difficulties we should not seek someone to blame or put
responsibility on, and if the situation stabilizes a little, we should
not try to claim laurels for that.”

“In such situations it is important that we don’t panic and each
of us continues their duties. Then these difficulties are easier to
overcome,” the president stressed.

Sargsyan also addressed the prospects for the Armenian economy in the
context of the new integration processes and the country’s imminent
membership in the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union. According
to him, new integration processes open up new opportunities and new
challenges at the same time.

“I have no doubts that our entrepreneurs are competitive and have what
to say and will have their role in the new economic union as well,”
President Sargsyan said.

http://armenianow.com/economy/59551/armenia_2015_president_serzh_sargsyan

Claims That Aleppo’s Synagogues Have Been Destroyed Are False

CLAIMS THAT ALEPPO’S SYNAGOGUES HAVE BEEN DESTROYED ARE FALSE

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

Posted by Franklin Lamb on December 18, 2014

With respect to the Great Synagogue of Aleppo, although situated in
the district of the current front-line separating rebel from government
forces, it has not been destroyed and as of 12/16/2014 shows no signs
of damage.

Syria Jews

Editor’s note: Aleppo has been occupied by different empires and
rulers since antiquity, including Alexander the Great, the Byzantines
and the Ottomans, each left their legacy of art and culture behind
in the city. (Images: here, here,here, here, here and here)

by Franklin Lamb

Given the massive destruction in large parts of Aleppo, Syria’s
former economic juggernaut near the Turkish border, including in the
city’s Medina souk and Industrial zone, claims of even more
dire damage to Syrian heritage sites would perhaps be understandable.

Even if not backed up with probative material evidence and sometimes
made for political purposes by opponents of Syria’s government.

According to tradition, the foundation for the Great Synagogue in
Aleppo was constructed by King David’s General, Joab ben Zeruiah,
(circa 950 BCE), after his conquest of the city.

In the wake of the continuing conflict, questions from some quarters
have repeatedly surfaced regarding the status of the 5th- or 6th-
century Byzantium period, Great Synagogue of Aleppo. Known locally as
Joab’s Synagogue or Al-Bandara Synagogue, lore has it that the
building’s foundation was laid by King David’s general,
Yoav, whom Jewish tradition holds captured Aleppo. Maimonides, in
his letter to the rabbis of Lunel, speaks of Aleppo as being the only
community in Syria where Torah learning survived.

The Times of Israel reported on 10/16/2012 that “Aleppo,
once a trading center for Muslims, Armenians and Syrian Christians,
was also home to one of the world’s oldest Jewish communities
with its Great Synagogue which is now destroyed.” One of the US
based anti-Arab Zionist organizations, the notorious Anti-Defamation
League (ADL) claims that the synagogue was bombed by the Syrian army,
with similar false reports being circulated via politically motivated
internet conspiracy theories.

Another writer for the Jewish Times lamented: “While we continue
to hear of the damage inflicted on Aleppo, it is almost unfathomable
what is happening to its treasure trove of Jewish antiquity and
Synagogues within its borders.” Claims have been made that
Syrian government barrel bombs destroyed the cultural heritage site
nearly two years ago.

These accusations and statements are patently false.

Susan Harris wrote in November of 2012 about massive damage in Syria
to Jewish heritage sites, including in Aleppo, but without offering
specific data, the author implied a frenzy of antisemitism.

“Not only are the antiquities of Islam being destroyed, but a
site of great interest to Jews sits in the eye of a hurricane swept
in by the Arab Spring. For hundreds of years the Great Synagogue of
Aleppo was the home to the Aleppo Codex, written around 930 CE.”
And that it was caught up in “A labyrinth of medieval Jewish
structures recently set ablaze, and the last fragile structural
remnants of earlier civilizations crumbling into ash heaps under the
weight of prolonged violence.” This statement is also false. The
Codex has not been burned.

Articles and alarmist propaganda on the subject of Aleppo’s
synagogues have appeared with titles like

“What’s left of Jewish Heritage in Syria”, “Who
will save the remains of Syria’s ancient synagogues?”
(JTA), “Jewish Aleppo, Lost Forever The Syrian diaspora in
Israel watches its once-vibrant ancestral home fall to ruin in the
country’s civil war” (Joseph Dana 8/22/2012). They are
all misleading.

There have however been thefts of Syrian cultural artifacts; most of
them have been done by agents of Israel. During a 10-year period in
the 1980s, a collection of Jewish objects were stolen and smuggled out
of Syria to Turkey by then-Chief Rabbi Avraham Hamra. The collection
included nine ancient Bible manuscripts, known as the Ketarim, each
between 700 and 900 years old. In addition, there were 40Torahscrolls
and 32 decorative boxes in which the Sephardic Torah scrolls were
held. Israel offered a bizarre rationale that the thefts of antiquities
belonging to Syria were “necessary because official requests
for permission to take them out of Syria were denied”. Were
this excuse to be accepted our global heritage in Syria and elsewhere
would likely soon disappear.

Exterior view of the Shrine of the Book Aleppo codex. In January 1958,
the Aleppo Codex was smuggled out of Syria and sent to Jerusalem to
be placed in the care of the chief rabbi of the Aleppo Jews.

Another theft of Syrian cultural heritage is The Aleppo Codex,
believed to be the oldest manuscript containing the entire Hebrew
Bible. It was stolen from the Great Synagogue of Allepo according
to locals by the Mossad and in 1957 it was smuggled out of Aleppo to
Israel, where it was presented in 1958 to President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi,
and today it is housed in the Ben-Zvi Institute. The Aleppo Codex,
part of Syria’s cultural heritage, is considered by some experts
to be the most authoritative, accurate source document, both for
the Biblical text and for the vocalization and cantillation. Some
scholars claim in has greater religious and scholarly import than
any other manuscript of the Bible. Unbeknownst to the thieves, 295
of the original 487 leaves of the Codex remain in Aleppo near the
grand synagogue protected by a Syrian gentleman who was a volunteer
caretaker and groundskeeper of sorts for many years. Apparently when
the thieves pried open the vault underneath the basilica’s
basement floor they failed to notice a cloth wrapping underneath what
they stole or that the Codex had been divided for apparent study. The
people of Syria and all who value cultural heritage await the return
of the looted Codex from its thieves.

For over a week earlier this month, with the much-appreciated
assistance of security personnel, this observer moved around Aleppo
visiting endangered archaeological sites in order to chronicle
some of them as part of a two-year research project across this
cradle of civilization. Field visits and testimony of neighbors near
Aleppo’s 11 synagogues present probative evidence that while
they, as with many sites in Aleppo and elsewhere, are currently
endangered, as of mid-December 2014 these places of worship, which
are a valued part of Syria’s cultural heritage, are locked
and secured. They do not exhibit signs of vandalism and are being
watched over by authorities and by Syrian citizens in their respective
neighborhoods.

The courtyard of the Great Synagogue of Aleppo

With respect to the Great Synagogue of Aleppo, although situated in the
district of the current front-line separating rebel from government
forces, it has not been destroyed and as of 12/16/2014 shows no
signs of damage. The may be partly due to the fact that both sides
have been widely criticized for endangering Syria’s heritage
and, with the exception of Da’ish (IS), appear to be taking
greater care these days in selecting “military targets.”
Another reason may be because the Great Synagogue is located on a
side street of little apparent strategic import that has experienced
no armed conflict. As recently as two decades ago it was in use until
Aleppo’s remaining Jews left and as with other Jewish sites in
Aleppo and across Syria, including cemeteries, schools, and communal
properties, are now under government protection.

Rather than destroy Jewish heritage in Syria her government and people
have preserved and repaired them when necessary. As of mid-December
2014 only 13 Jews remain in Aleppo according to Rabbi Avraham Hamra
with nine men and eight women, all over sixty years of age. One of the
last to depart Aleppo was Dr. Haim Cohen, a general practitioner who
lived down the street from the Samoual Synagogue, which this observer
visited on 12/11/2014. Dr. Cohen used to frequent a shop across from
the entrance to the Samoual Synagogue, which I also visite,d and
according to the shop owner who has been in the same location for 47
years and whose main work these days includes the mending of piles
of military uniforms there has been no damage to synagogues in the
Governorate and certainly not to the Great Synagogue of Aleppo.

Beirut Maghen Abraham synagogue under repairs.

In February of 2011, coincidentally the month before of the beginning
of the current Syrian crisis, President Assad signed an executive order
to repair the Al-Raqi Synagogue in the old Jewish quarter of Damascus
by the end of the month as the renovation of 10 other synagogues in
Syria’s major cities continued. On 12/11/2014 this observer
photographed some randomly selected Aleppo synagogues, including the
one in the Samoual district, and found them locked and saw no signs
of desecration. Rather, normal citizens exhibit protective attitudes
toward these heritage sites and even tend to keep the outside areas
cleared of leaves and trash. Government workers also perform daily
trash pickups along streets where the synagogues are located. Officials
advised this observer that Syria sees the rebuilding of Jewish Damascus
and repairs to synagogues across Syrian in the context of preserving
the secularism of Syria and its culture heritage of which Jews were
historically an important part.

Bashar al Assad,President of Syria

Two months before the President signed the executive order to repair
synagogues, Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference
of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, discussed the
Jewish synagogues and cemeteries in Syria and he reported that he
received a “very positive response from Assad.” Syria
Jews centered mainly in Brooklyn NY whose numbers are estimated at
85,000, maintain close ties with Syria. Some of them visit their
birthplaces and conduct regular business relations in the country
often experiencing criticism and pressure from the Zionist regime
still occupying Palestine.

In November 1989, the Syrian government facilitated the emigration
of 500 single Jewish women, who greatly outnumbered eligible Jewish
men in Aleppo. During the 1991 Madrid Peace Conference Syria agreed
to ease restriction on its Jewish population. As a result, Syria
lifted many restrictions on its Jewish community, and allowed Jews
to leave on condition that they not emigrate to Israel. Beginning on
the Passover Holiday of 1992, more than 4,000 remaining members of
the Aleppo and Damascus Jewish community were granted exit permits
and within a few months, thousands more left for the United States,
France or Turkey. Approximately 300 remained in Syria, most of them
elderly all choosing to stay in the culture their families had lived
in for many generations.

With the dawning of the 21st century, there was only a small, largely
elderly community left in Aleppo. Jews were still officially banned
from politics and government employment, and did not have military
service obligations. Jews were also the only minority to have their
religion mentioned on their passports and identification cards.

Though some were occasionally subjected to harassment by Palestinian
protesters during violence in occupied Palestine, the Syrian government
took measures to protect them.

The government protected Jewish primary schools for religious
studies, and Hebrew was allowed to be taught (today Hebrew is one
of the languages SANA, the Syrian News Agency presents its news item
in). Every two or three months, a rabbi from Istanbul visited Aleppo to
oversee the preparation of kosher meat, which most residents froze and
used until his next visit. The community gradually shrank. From 2000
to 2010, 41 Syrian Jews left for occupied Palestine, and its numbers
further dwindled as members of the largely elderly community died.

In 2001, Rabbi Huder Shahada Kabariti estimated that there were still
200 Jews in the country, of whom 150 lived in Damascus, 30 in Aleppo,
and 20 in Qamashli. In 2003, the Jewish population was estimated to
be fewer than 100. In 2005, the U.S. State Department estimated the
Jewish population at 80 in its annual International Religious Freedom
Report. In May 2012, one year into the Syrian civil war, it was
reported that only 22 Jews still lived in Syria, all of them elderly
and living in Damascus, in a building adjoining the city’s only
functioning synagogue. This report was not accurate. As of December
2014, approximately 15 Jews remain in Aleppo according to Rabbi Avraham
Hamra with nine men and eight women, all over sixty years of age.

The author,Franklin Lamb, a former Assistant Counsel of the US House
Judiciary Committee at the US Congress and Professor of International
Law at Northwestern College of Law in Oregon, earned his Law Degree at
Boston University and his LLM, M.Phil, and PhD degrees at the London
School of Economics. Lamb is Director, Americans Concerned for Middle
East Peace, Beirut-Washington DC, Board Member of The Sabra Shatila
Foundation, and a volunteer with the Palestine Civil Rights Campaign,
Lebanon. He is the author of The Price We Pay: A Quarter-Century of
Israel’s Use of American Weapons Against Civilians in Lebanon. He
can be reached at: [email protected]

________________________________

A Short History of Modern Syria

ues-have-been-destroyed-are-false/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Szaf0MtPQfY
http://www.veteransnewsnow.com/2014/12/18/513138-claims-that-aleppos-synagog

NCCAL Hosts Exhibition For Armenian Artist Maro Sargsyan

NCCAL HOSTS EXHIBITION FOR ARMENIAN ARTIST MARO SARGSYAN

Kuwait News Agency, Kuwait
Dec 22 2014

22/12/2014 | 10:51 PM | Kuwait News

KUWAIT, Dec 22 (KUNA) — The National Council for Culture, Arts
and Letters (NCCAL) inaugurated Monday an art exhibition for
Armenian painter Maro Sargsyan at the Art Hall in Abdullah Al-Salem
neighborhood.

The displayed collection comprises of 35 paintings showing the peculiar
features of Armenian formative art.

“The exhibition is organized by the NCCAL in cooperation with
the Armenian Embassy in Kuwait in implementation of the cultural
cooperation agreement signed between the two friendly countries,”
Assistant Secretary General of NCCAL Mohammad Al-Asousi.

“The art events are one of the most effective means to strengthen
people-to-people relations.” This is the third formative art exhibition
hosted by NCCAL in cooperation with the Armenian Embassy and the
first of Sargsyan, he said.

Al-Asousi noted that a workshop would be organized to bring together
Sargsyan with Kuwait counterparts and lovers of formative arts
in Kuwait.

http://www.kuna.net.kw/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=2415627&language=en

The Best Jewelry And Watch Coffee-Table Books Of 2014

THE BEST JEWELRY AND WATCH COFFEE-TABLE BOOKS OF 2014

JCK Magazine
Dec 21 2014

By Victoria Gomelsky, Editor-in-Chief

Three weeks ago, I moved to a two-bedroom apartment in the same complex
I’ve lived in since February 2010: a groovy collection of terraced
duplexes known as Monroe Manor and located on Beachwood Drive, the
canyon street that leads straight to the Hollywood sign.

(Fun fact: Joey Tribbiani, the Friends character played by Matt
LeBlanc, lived in the complex in the popular sitcom’s 2004 spinoff,
Joey.)

I finally unpacked my books this past weekend. As I stacked the
coffee-table tomes in tiny towers around my new living room, I stopped
to admire some of the new titles I received this year, a collection
of glossy odes to our industry. If you’re still shopping for holiday
gifts for someone enamored with the jewelry and watch business–or
you’re feeling generous enough to give them out as a gift with purchase
(classy move!)–you can’t go wrong with one of these.

Sevan Bicakci

Not for nothing is the Turkish-Armenian jeweler Sevan Bicakci known
as the “problem solver of the Grand Bazaar.” The technical mastery
displayed in his award-winning creations–including a collection of
carved gemstone rings blooming with tulips, crowded with cupolas, or
bearing the likenesses of his favorite sultans–is unparalleled. See
for yourself in this gorgeous $165 doorstop written by Vivienne Becker
and published by Assouline.

Loaded with brilliantly shot photographs of Bicakci’s beloved Istanbul,
the book has plenty of narrative backbone to satisfy the readers
among you. I was hooked from the first sentence:

“His name means ‘bladesmith,’ and his story has become a legend of our
time: an epic saga of toil, tribulation, and triumph, of heartbreak
and heroism, of the passion, power, and glory of gold and gems; a tale
that might once have been told by a wandering troubadour roaming the
towns and villages of the mighty Ottoman Empire.”

http://www.jckonline.com/blogs/chain/2014/12/21/best-jewelry-and-watch-coffee-table-books-2014

Ukrainian Fund Invests $30 Million In Troubled Armenian Carrier

UKRAINIAN FUND INVESTS $30 MILLION IN TROUBLED ARMENIAN CARRIER

Eturbo News
December 20, 2014 Saturday

YEREVAN

YEREVAN, Dec. 20 — A Ukrainian investment fund announced the purchase
of a 49 percent stake in Armenia’s leading airline on Friday, pledging
to help restart soon its commercial flights that were suspended two
months ago.

Vladimir Bobylev, the chief executive of the East Prospect Fund,
pledged to invest at least $30 million in the troubled Air Armenia
carrier. Armenian news agencies quoted him as saying that it plans
to replace and expand the company’s small fleet of aircraft in the
coming months.

It was not clear how much the fund, registered in the British Virgin
Islands but headquartered in Kiev, paid for the minority share. It
valued Air Armenia at $50 million on its website.

Air Armenia specialized in cargo shipments by air until Armenia’s
flagship airline, Armavia, went bankrupt in April 2013, leading to
the full liberalization of the Armenian civil aviation sector. The
small carrier took over some of Armavia’s flights later in 2013.

Air Armenia halted the flights to a dozen destinations in Russia and
Europe in late October as a result of a financial dispute with Russia’s
national air navigation service. It accused the Rosaeronavigatsia
agency of scaring away its customers with false statements about its
outstanding debts. Aviation experts believe that the company also
struggled to compete with much larger Russian airlines.

According to Bobylev, Air Armenia is currently undergoing restructuring
and should be able to resume flights in March. “I would like our
fund to be presented not so much as a new Air Armenia shareholder
but as an investor,” the Arka news agency quoted him as telling a
joint news conference with Arsen Avetisian, Air Armenia’s director
and main official shareholder.

“We have understandings on $30 million [in investments] for the first
phase of operations but won’t confine ourselves to that figure,”
he said.

On its website East Prospect presents itself as a fund manager
specializing in “problematic assets.” Its investment portfolio,
estimated at $2.5 billion, mainly consists of mining operations
in Ukraine.

Air Armenia CEO Arsen Avetisyan said the airline will resume flights
in 2015 March. He said the airline is working now to bring back two
its planes which are in Amsterdam for an overhaul.

He said the agreement with East Prospect Fund was signed December 12
and now it owns 49 percent in Air Armenia. The remaining 51 percent
belong to the CEO.

According to Arsen Avetisyan, in 2015 the airline will operate
five aircraft to make flights to Thailand, China and some other
destinations.

In late October, Air Armenia decided to restructure its finances
and change the flights schedule after seeing an 80 percent drop in
air tickets sales. In a statement in late October Air Armenia blamed
the dramatic drop on a ‘panic’ among investors and customers after
Rosaeronavigatsia, a Russian federal air navigation service, said
the Armenian airline had huge outstanding debts.

Air Armenia began operating commercial passenger flights in 2013
after the bankruptcy and liquidation of Armenia’s national air
carrier Armavia.