Government Grants Three-Year Vat Payment Deferment To Ararat Food Fa

GOVERNMENT GRANTS THREE-YEAR VAT PAYMENT DEFERMENT TO ARARAT FOOD FACTORY

YEREVAN, October 16. / ARKA /. The Armenian government has granted
today a three-year VAT payment deferment to Ararat Food Factory for
importing equipment worth over 300 million drams.

Economy minister Karen Chshmarityan said the company plans to import
ten large trucks to carry out also cargo transportation.

He said the trucks will ensure a stable circulation of products and
increase the volume of exports.

In 2010 the company established a factory for the production of natural
juices and created more than 100 jobs as part of its first-phase 1.6
billion drams worth investment program.

The minister said the company is carrying out the second phase of
the investment program worth 600 million drams in order to expand the
product range. He said due to new equipment the company will process
also tomatoes, apricots, peaches to get high quality raw materials
for the production of canned products.

Ararat Food factory is producing now natural juices and nectars, teas
and canned food, selling about 80% of the output in the CIS countries
and Europe under the brands “Ararat”, “Lina” and “Josie.” -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/business/government_grants_three_year_vat_payment_deferment_to_ararat_food_factory/#sthash.aeWm55sR.dpuf

Hotel Number Grows In Armenia

HOTEL NUMBER GROWS IN ARMENIA

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

11:31, 16 October, 2014

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 16, ARMENPRESS: The number of the hotel objects
has increased in a year in the Republic of Armenia by 72 and in 2013
their number made 229 in comparison with the previous year’s
157. The National Statistical Service of Armenia informed Armenpress
that the major part of the hotels – 75 – are located in Yerevan.

33 hotels function in the regions of Kotayk and Tavush, 31 – in Syunik,
17 – in Gegharkunik and 15 – in Vayots Dzor.

11 hotels function in the regions of Lori and Shirak and 3 –
in Aragatsotn.

Hotels are not registered only in Armavir and Ararat.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/780303/hotel-number-grows-in-armenia.html

ANKARA: Turkish FM: 1915 Incidents Being Used For Political Gain

TURKISH FM: 1915 INCIDENTS BEING USED FOR POLITICAL GAIN

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Oct 13 2014

Cavusoglu addressed members of US non-governmental organizations at
Turkish Association in New York. NEW YORK (AA) – Turkey’s Foreign
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has said that the United States should not
blindly accept certain countries’ version of events when it comes to
the 1915 incidents between Turkey and Armenia

The 1915 incidents took place during World War I when a portion of
the Armenian population living in the Ottoman Empire sided with the
invading Russians and rose up against the ruling Ottoman authorities.

The uprisings were followed by a decision by the Ottoman Empire to
relocate Armenians living in eastern Anatolia.

Addressing members of US non-governmental organizations at the Turkish
Association in New York on Saturday, Cavusoglu said that the peoples
of Armenia and Turkey have “enough common sense not to be fooled by
politicians and academics who have political motivations.”

“The 1915 incidents are being misused for political gain and votes,”
the foreign minister continued. He explained that the US must take
into account Turkey’s views about the incidents as well.

Cavusoglu also mentioned that the US and Turkey have a strong
alliance in matters pertaining to foreign policy and that the Turkish
community’s voice in the United States was becoming stronger by
the day.

The Armenian diaspora and the state of Armenia have both described
the incidents as “genocide” and have asked for compensation.

Turkey states that even though Armenians died during the relocation,
many Turks were also killed in attacks carried out by Armenian gangs.

“We should oppose and prevent this great sorrow in our history being
used for malicious purposes and for influencing our friends in the US
We should also show them what really took place with real, empirical
evidence,” he said.

In April, Turkey’s then Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan who
was elected president with popular vote on August 10 offered his
condolences for those Armenians who died during the incidents of 1915.

Festival Of Lavash And Armenian Dishes To Take Place In Armenia

FESTIVAL OF LAVASH AND ARMENIAN DISHES TO TAKE PLACE IN ARMENIA

15:51 14/10/2014 ” CULTURE

Nor Artik village in Aragatsotn province of Armenia will host a
festival of lavash and Armenian dishes on October 18, the Armenian
Culture Ministry reports.

The festival will be held for the second time. It was organized by
Association of Ashtarak Region Women NGO in cooperation with the
Culture Ministry and regional administration of Aragatsotn.

Public and educational institutions, families participate in the
festival.

Source: Panorama.am

Who Lost Turkey? An Ally Goes Rogue.

WHO LOST TURKEY? AN ALLY GOES ROGUE.

The Weekly Standard
Vol. 20 No. 5
October 13, 2014 Monday

by Daniel Pipes, The Weekly Standard

Only 12 years ago, the Republic of Turkey was correctly seen as the
model of a pro-Western Muslim state, and a bridge between Europe and
the Middle East. A strong military bond with the Pentagon undergirded
broader economic and cultural ties with Americans. And then, starting
with the 2002 elections that brought the Justice and Development party
(AKP) and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, first as prime minister and now as
president, to power, Turkey dramatically changed course. Slowly at
first and then with increasing velocity since mid-2011, Erdogan’s
government began breaking laws, turned autocratic, and allied with
the enemies of the United States.

Even those most reluctant to recognize this shift have been forced to
do so. If Barack Obama listed Erdogan as one of his five best foreign
friends in 2012, he showed a quite different attitude by having a mere
charge d’affaires represent him at Erdogan’s presidential inauguration
a few weeks ago a public slap in the face.

What caused this shift? To understand today’s unexpected circumstances
requires a glance back to the Ottoman Empire. Founded in 1299, its
control over substantial parts of the European continent (mainly
the Balkan area, named after the Turkish word for mountain) made it
the only Muslim polity to engage intensely with Europe as Western
Christians rose to become the wealthiest and most powerful people on
the planet. As the Ottoman Empire weakened relative to other European
powers over the centuries, how to dispose of it became a major concern
of European diplomacy (the Eastern question ) and the empire came to
be seen as potential prey (the sick man of Europe ).

Turkey’s defeat in World War I occurred against this backdrop,
prompting the army’s outstanding general, Mustafa Kemal, to seize
power and close down the empire in favor of the Republic of Turkey,
far smaller and limited mainly to Turkish-language-speakers. For the
new country’s first 15 years, 1923-38, Kemal (who renamed himself
Ataturk) dominated the country. A strong-willed Westernizer, he
imposed a sequence of radical changes that characterize the country
to this day, and make it conspicuously different from the rest of the
Middle East, including laicism (secularism on steroids) and codes of
law based on European prototypes.

Starting almost immediately after Ataturk’s death in 1938, a reversal
of his secularism began. But the Turkish military, in its dual role
as the country’s ultimate political power and the self-conscious heir
of Ataturk’s legacy, placed limits on these changes. The military,
however, is a force for neither creativity nor intellectual growth,
so the adages of Ataturk, unceasingly repeated over the decades,
became stale and restricting. As dissent increased, the parties
holding to his 1920s vision stagnated, degenerating into corrupt,
power-seeking organizations. By the 1990s, their revolving-door
governments had alienated a sizable portion of the electorate.

In 2001, Erdogan and another Islamist politician, Abdullah Gul,
founded the AKP. Promising good government and economic growth based
on conservative values, it performed impressively in its inaugural
election of November 2002, winning just over one-third of the vote.

Erdogan focused at first on the economy and racked up Chinese-like
rates of economic growth. In foreign policy, he emerged as a
power-broker in the Middle East (for example, offering to mediate
peace talks between Israel and Syria) and became the West’s favorite
Islamist. In the process, he seemed to solve a centuries-old conundrum
of relations between Islam and the West, finding a successful blend
of the two.

In reality, it seems that Erdogan sought to reverse the Ataturk
revolution and return Turkey to an Ottoman-like domestic order and
international standing. With that in mind, he weakened the military
by contriving preposterous conspiracy theories its top brass had
ostensibly engineered. For reasons still unclear, the leadership of
the armed forces barely pushed back, even as its top officers were
arrested and the general staff eventually fired.

As the military surrendered, Erdogan took aim at his domestic rivals,
especially his longtime ally, Fethullah Gulen, an Islamist and leader
of a massive national movement with networks placed in key government
institutions. As Erdogan demonized his critics, he delighted his
base Turks who felt oppressed by Ataturkism. With each election,
he accrued more personal power, as did Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.

International relations followed a similar pattern, with an initial
set of modest foreign goals becoming, over time, ever grander and more
dangerous. A zero problems with neighbors policy enunciated by foreign
minister Ahmet Davutoglu began successfully as Ankara managed warm
relations with Syria and Iran, and mutually beneficial, albeit tepid,
relations with Israel. Even longtime foes such as Greece and Armenia
gained from Erdogan’s charm offensive. The great powers sought good
relations. The AKP’s neo-Ottoman dream of acquiring primacy among
its former colonials seemed attainable.

But then Erdogan displayed the same arrogance abroad that he had
unleashed at home, and to much worse reviews. If a majority of the
Turkish electorate applauded his tongue-lashings, few foreigners did.

As the Arab upheavals changed the Middle East beginning in 2011,
Erdogan and Davutoglu found their accomplishments slipping away, to
the point that Ankara now has poor to venomous relations with many
of its neighbors.

The break with Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, perhaps the most
dramatic of Erdogan’s losses, has had many negative consequences. It
saddled Turkey with millions of unwelcome Arabic-speaking refugees,
led to a proxy war with Iran, obstructed Turkish trade routes through
much of the Middle East, and gave rise to jihadist forces. Hostility
to Israel ended Ankara’s strongest regional bond. Erdogan’s support
for the short-lived Muslim Brotherhood rule in Egypt turned into open
enmity toward the next government in Cairo. Threats against Cyprus
in the aftermath of its discovery of gas further soured an already
adversarial relationship. Turkish contractors lost more than $19
billion in Libya’s anarchy.

Internationally, a feint in the direction of buying a Chinese missile
system brought security relations with Washington to a new low.

Erdogan’s urging the millions of Turks living in Germany to resist
assimilation caused tensions with Berlin, as did Ankara’s possible
role in the murder of three Kurds in Paris. These outrages have
left Ankara nearly friendless. It enjoys warm relations with Qatar,
the Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq, and the Muslim
Brotherhood, including its Palestinian offshoot, Hamas.

Erdogan will face three challenges over the next year: electoral,
psychological, and economic. Having ascended to the presidency on
August 28 requires constitutional changes allowing him to become the
strong executive president he aspires to be. In turn, those changes
require the AKP to do well in the June 2015 national elections; or,
alternatively, to make substantial concessions to Turkish Kurds to win
their support for his ambitions. Now that the party finds itself in the
untested hands of Davutoglu, recently promoted from foreign minister
to prime minister, its ability to win the necessary seats is in doubt.

Second, Erdogan’s fate depends on Davutoglu remaining his faithful
consigliere. Should Davutoglu develop independent ambitions, Erdogan
will find himself limited to a mostly ceremonial post.

Last, the shaky Turkish economy depends on foreign money seeking higher
rates of return and a host of infrastructure projects to continue
growing. Here, Erdogan’s highly erratic behavior (ranting against
what he calls the interest lobby, rating agencies such as Moody’s,
and even the New York Times) discourages further investment, while
huge debt threatens to leave the country bankrupt.

With its youthful population of 75 million, a central location,
control of a key waterway, and eight mostly problematic neighbors,
Turkey is a highly desirable ally. In addition, it enjoys a position
of prominence in the Middle East, among Turkic-speakers from Bosnia to
Xinjiang, and among Muslims worldwide. The U.S.-Turkish alliance that
began with the Korean War has been highly advantageous to Washington,
which is understandably loath to lose it.

That said, one side alone cannot sustain an alliance. Ankara’s record
of friendly relations with Tehran, support for Hamas and the Islamic
State, undermining the authority of Baghdad, virulence toward Israel,
and threats against Cyprus make it a questionable, if not entirely
duplicitous, NATO partner. The Obama administration can signal that the
bullying tactics that have won Erdogan votes at home have won him only
animosity in the rest of the world. The White House can make clear
that unless major changes occur quickly, it will push for Turkey’s
suspension and eventual expulsion from NATO. If Erdogan insists on
acting the rogue, then that’s how its former ally should treat him.

Daniel Pipes is president of the Middle East Forum.

http://www.weeklystandard.com/author/daniel-pipes

Azerbaijani To Increase Defense Spending By 3,1%

AZERBAIJANI TO INCREASE DEFENSE SPENDING BY 3,1%

by Marianna Lazarian

ARMINFO
Tuesday, October 14, 16:57

The defense spending of Azerbaijan for 2015 will make 17.9 percent
of the state budget expenditures, APA reports.

According to the draft budget released by the Ministry of Finance, the
military expenditures for 2015 will be 3.1 percent higher than 2014.

It also includes expenditures on the financial provision of projects
and activities for special purposes. Funds are planned to be
allocated from the state budget for defense and security agencies.

Incidentally, Russia’s Defense Minister Sergey Shoygu visited Baku
yesterday. According to the “Komertsant” daily, a part of Shoygu’s
talks was about the arms delivery. In 2010-2012 contracts were made
between Russia and Azerbaijan for the arms delivery for about $4
billion, In 2014 Azerbaijan will buy armament from Russia for $1
billion, the daily says.

Bako Sahakyan, Ara Abrahamyan Attend Opening Of New School Building

BAKO SAHAKYAN, ARA ABRAHAMYAN ATTEND OPENING OF NEW SCHOOL BUILDING IN STEPANAKERT

17:44 14/10/2014 >> SOCIETY

Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan together with President of
the Union of Armenians of Russia Ara Abrahamyan attended the opening
of the new building of Stepanakert basic school N6.

President Sahakyan thanked Ara Abrahamyan for financing the
project, noting that it is among the best manifestations of the
Motherland-Diaspora cooperation.

Primate of the Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church
Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, Prime Minister Ara Harutyunyan and
other officials participated in the event, the Artsakh Republic
President’s press service reported.

Source: Panorama.am

Eduard Sharmazanov Says Cyprus Is Among The Countries Armenia Can Re

EDUARD SHARMAZANOV SAYS CYPRUS IS AMONG THE COUNTRIES ARMENIA CAN RELY ON

by Tatevik Shahunyan

ARMINFO
Tuesday, October 14, 16:59

Vice Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Eduard Sharmazanov and Head of
the Cypriot delegation the 131st Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary
Union (IPU) in Geneva Averof Neophytou discussed issues of the
Armenian-Cyprian cooperation on sidelines of the event.

The sides highly appreciated the warm friendly relations between the
parties. In this light, Sharmazanov said that Cyprus is one of the EU
countries Armenia can rely on at various international organizations.

As for the Karabakh conflict and the Cyprus issue, Sharmazanov said
that the two countries’ stands do not run contrary to each other. He
called inadmissible occupation of the part of Cyprus and Armenia’s
blockade by Turkey.

Sharmazanov thanked Cyprus for recognition and condemnation of
the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey and suggested the Cypriot
colleagues to hold an exhibition at the Cyprus Parliament timed to
the centenary of that tragedy. The Cypriot delegated welcomed the idea.

Montserrat Caballe Performs In Stepanakert

MONTSERRAT CABALLE PERFORMS IN STEPANAKERT

18:16, 14 Oct 2014

On 14 October Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan was present
at the concert of the world-famous opera singer Montserrat Caballe
held at the Stepanakert Revival Square.

Bako Sahakyan noted that Montserrat Caballe has her unique place
in Artsakh’s life and has made a substantial contribution to the
development of culture in the country, which the President qualified
among the best manifestation of sincere friendship and humanity.

Primate of the Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church
Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, prime-minsiter Ara Haroutyunyan and
other officials were present at the event.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/10/14/montserrat-caballe-performs-in-stepanakert/

Putin Is A Gift For West And His Life Will Be Prolonged

PUTIN IS A GIFT FOR WEST AND HIS LIFE WILL BE PROLONGED

Igor Muradyan, Political Analyst
Comments – 14 October 2014, 23:38

Not a long time ago Putin insisted that the Russian General Staff
develop an operative plan of a large-scale landing operation in
Nikolayev and Odessa in order to annex these territories and thereby
leave Ukraine land-locked. It is clear that this would lead to the
annexation of Transdniestr and the Danube territories, which would
further strengthen Russia’s positions in the Black Sea Caucasus,
as well as the Mediterranean.

For a long time Moscow refused this plan because it would lead to a
clash with NATO. Developments that had not been planned by Russians
took place in the southeast of Ukraine which are occupied by Russian
troops. It became known that in the result of military actions the
Russian population is being displaced from these territories whereas
the Ukrainian population continues to stay there.

Each day of the war costs Russia 1-3 million dollars but this is
not the end. Russia did not succeed taking Mariupol, on which the
prospects of the southeast depended. The Ukrainians have moved on
to new methods of military actions, underground and guerilla war is
underway. The Russian propaganda has run out of resources and there
are new propaganda scenarios.

Having received the assistance and support of the West, Ukraine quickly
reorganized the armed forces. Of course, completion of this work will
last for many years but irregular groups of militants were bidden,
which was a success.

Moscow’s attempts to initiate protests of the Russian population of
Ukraine caused a backlash among Ukrainians and terrifying excesses
in several places. Russians and Ukrainians of Ukraine demonstrated
wisdom and did not go for such initiatives. Otherwise, Ukraine would
have turned to a bloody medley.

Moscow seems to be satisfied with the halves of Donetsk and Lugansk
that the Russians were able to take under their control. However, the
Russians are in embarrassment because they do not understand how to
report this occupation in a more or less legitimate way. The Russian
humanitarian science has not offered anything worth attention but
apparently it was not willing to offer anything. Russia does not need
these territories, not even in strategic terms but they are necessary
for Putin’s image. This is the purpose of this mess.

However, Russia is mainly focusing on the ways of escaping the
international isolation in which this huge country has appeared. The
United States and NATO have achieved their goals, i.e. created the
premises for the political and economic isolation of Russia, and they
need not weaken the isolation and return Russia among “designated”
countries.

It is clear that such tendencies as decrease of oil prices are
something new in the world and Europe and are intended to force Russia
to put up with the requirements of the West.

Russia’s two hopes – China and Germany -demonstrated extreme egotism.

China is trying to benefit from this difficult situation for Russia
and pump resources out of Russia for reasonable prices. Unlike other
states, Germany has used this situation to turn Russia to a priority
market for German industries.

Developments in Russia were an effective lever for normalization of
the global economy, shrinking and expanding of the European and Asian
markets, initiation of micro-crises of a regional scope.

An important goal is to mobilize and provide new purpose to NATO
which needs purposes for its goals and objectives.

“In some ways, NATO should thank Vladimir Putin,” Heather Conley,
senior vice president for Europe, Eurasia, and the Arctic of the
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) said. “It
was really searching for its purpose … and it was having a fairly
significant identity crisis. And it has now not only been repurposed,
it’s been reinvigorated.”

NATO purposes are a political and economic locomotive, first of
all, for the defense industry. At the same time, in its present
situation Russia is becoming a suitable target for manipulations
in all directions. The role of low-pay security guard is envisaged
for Russia in Eurasia to parry the expansion of China and Islamic
radicals towards Central Asia. At the same time, it is a scarecrow
for Central Europe and Japan.

Strangely, Russia is going through a transition from red
authoritarianism to a right one, and there is no chance to avoid this
path because the present regime is falling to pieces, and nobody has
a vision of the next regime. Among the narrow circles of Moscow-based
politicized authors Sergey Kurginyan preferred describing the current
political period in Russia as “rise before fall”, as well as the
“price for ignoring post-modern rules”.

However, the West does not mind Putin’s further rule, which guarantees
continuation of non-professionalism and profanation. Vladimir Putin is
a gift for the West and his political life will be possibly prolonged.

According to Moscow think-tanks, there are no groups in Vladimir
Putin’s team because there is no motivation to create groups. Everyone
is thinking for themselves, and everyone is trying to figure out the
future of the team and the president and thereby figure out their
own future. This indicates embarrassment.

The army is especially dissatisfied which is receiving a new
introductory note every week, first of all, on Ukraine’s goals. The
Ministry of Defense has already received a note on what problems are
coming up, , especially with the budget.

The Kremlin is sending all kinds of recommendations to government
agencies relating to certain goals in nearby regions, including the
South Caucasus. Apparently, Vladimir Putin is linking his image to
success in these directions which, however, leads to more problems.

The hangout of the Eurasian company in Minsk demonstrated how helpless,
uncertain and weak Russia is, and all it is capable of is influencing
Armenia. Relations with Belarus and Kazakhstan became uncertain
and suspicious.

The Eurasian project is transforming to an instrument of Turkish policy
and Azerbaijan’s caprice and difficult problems with the future state
of Russia are linked to the Eurasian project. This project will always
remain a marker of isolation and blockade, marginal existence of all
the participants.

To a certain degree such formations as CSTO and the Eurasian project
are favorable for the United States and NATO because the target
and borders of influence of Russia have been identified. They have
become a giant buffer on the Eurasian space in which Russia acts as
a watchdog of this degrading area.

Under such conditions, even without possible big conflict in Central
Asia involving Russia, the conflict in Ukraine which has become
chronic is sufficient to realize the model of Vietnam for Russia, i.e.

a lasting battle with ensuing consequences.

Ukrainian “Vietnam” will resolve a lot of issues of European security
and will waste huge resources of Russia’s. Will the South Caucasus
succeed staying aloof of these developments? Not, of course. The
South Caucasus is fully involved in these developments, and the closer
the countries of the region are connected with Russia, the worse the
consequences will be for them.

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/comments/view/33100#sthash.FeLBd9yp.dpuf