Armenian Intellectuals Concerned Over Society’s Degradation

ARMENIAN INTELLECTUALS CONCERNED OVER SOCIETY’S DEGRADATION

22:08 â~@¢ 19.05.14

The recent incident in central Yerevan is evidence of Armenian society
losing values, writer Meruzhan Ter-Gulanyan told Tert.am.

He recalled “Red and Green” Sundays in Samtskhe-Javakhetia, Georgia,
many years ago. In early summer, people from all the villages would
go up to the Holy Cross church, sing and dance.

“But now if people are ready to shoot one another for a parking place –
it is degradation,” Ter-Gulanyan said.

“We are moving toward a materialistic world. Crude materialism makes us
fright for a parking place. This is a problem of our kind. A temporary
disorder has occurred,” he said.

Time comes when global changes take place, but people are not always
psychologically prepared for the changes.

“Many people want to make a good thing of it. More guys are making
a good thing of it now, like their fathers did. And they think they
can dictate their will in any situation. This is a hollow victory
tantamount to defeat. Such people are losers,” Ter-Gulanyan said.

With respect to the incident, sculptor Levon Tokmajyan said:

“They shoot at one another in broad daylight. Who gave the guns to
the people to fire and wound passers-by?”

This is anarchy, he said.

“Values have changed. People are embittered and hostile to one
another. There are scores of reasons for that,” Tokmajyan said.

He believes law-enforcement agencies should take drastic measures to
prevent such incidents.

“People fall victims to their showdowns. Too bad!”

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/05/19/vernisazh/

UCLA Armenian Studies Banquet to Honor Prof. Peter Cowe

UCLA Armenian Studies Banquet to Honor Prof. Peter Cowe

By MassisPost
Updated: May 15, 2014

LOS ANGELES ‘ The annual banquet of the Friends of UCLA Armenian
Language and Culture Studies, honoring the 30th anniversary of Prof.
S. Peter Cowe’s scholarly career and the 45th anniversary of the
Narekatsi Chair in Armenian Studies, will benefit the expansion of the
Armenian Studies program and particularly Western-Armenian instruction
at UCLA.

Organized jointly by the 30th Anniversary Committee and the Friends of
UCLA Armenian Language and Culture Studies, the banquet will take
place on the evening of June 1 at the London West Hollywood. Following
a cocktail hour at the hotel’s Marble Terrace, the banquet will be
held at the Kensington Ballroom, featuring the culinary creations of
globally renowned chef Gordon Ramsay. There will also be a number of
special surprises in celebration of Prof. Cowe’s Scottish background,
the organizers said.

`UCLA probably has the largest Armenian Studies program outside the
Armenian Republic,’ said Cowe, who heads the Narekatsi Chair. `This
year our primary goal is to raise funds to support our program in
Western Armenian and expand instruction in that medium by establishing
advanced-level courses.’

`Apart from its impressive history and the constellation of writers
that have elevated its capacity to express the whole spectrum of human
thought and emotions, Western Armenian remains an indelible part of
Armenian culture and has the potential to serve as a nuanced modern
medium of communication,’ Cowe continued. `At the same time, it is
clear from a number of metrics that Western Armenian is severely
challenged, and hence has been placed on the UNESCO list of endangered
languages. It is therefore all the more important for the local
Armenian community and the various Armenian schools to collaborate
with academic programs like that at UCLA to achieve a better
assessment of the issues involved and develop strategies to tackle
them.’

In this connection, Cowe explained, it is vital to sustain the UCLA
program in Western Armenian, under the direction of Dr. Hagop
Gulludjian, and expand it to include a set of third-year-level
courses, beyond the first- and second-year levels currently available.

A full-fledged Western-Armenian program will benefit not only the
regular student body at UCLA but also members of the local Armenian
community, enabling them to develop their command of the language,
communicate fluently in both oral and written forms, and thereby
participate more fully in Armenian culture and its development in
Southern California.

The Armenian Studies program at UCLA has seven instructors, who offer
a total of 26 courses in Armenian language, history, and culture.
Apart from an undergraduate Minor in Armenian Studies and a
concentration in the new Major in Middle Eastern Studies, the
Narekatsi Chair offers Masters and PhD programs, and currently has
seven doctoral students under Prof. Cowe’s supervision. UCLA is also
home to the recently inaugurated Armenian Music Program, with a course
taught by Vatsche Barsoumian and an Armenian Music Ensemble; as well
as the Armenian Archaeology and Ethnography Program, established in
2013 through a $2-million gift from Mrs. Zaruhy Chitjian.

The Narekatsi Chair maintains an active program of lectures and
seminars by visiting academics. In addition, together with the
Armenian Graduate Students Association, the Chair organizes an
international graduate-student colloquium in Armenian Studies
annually.

Cowe was appointed Visiting Associate Professor of Armenian Studies at
UCLA in 1996. Two years later, he established the Friends of UCLA
Armenian Language and Culture Studies, as a conduit to foster
community involvement through academic and cultural events and raise
financial support for the expansion of Armenological offerings at
UCLA. In 2000, he was named holder of the Narekatsi Chair in Armenian
Studies.

`It has been a great honor for me to work with Prof. Cowe for the past
17 years,’ said Anahid Keshishian, the Narekatsi Chair’s lecturer in
Eastern Armenian. `He has continuously inspired me, first as a
teacher, then as a colleague. I have witnessed his countless efforts
to raise the stature of the Narekatsi Chair. I have also seen the
enthusiasm of students who have been under his guidance. I wish him
many more years of successful teaching and research.’

Tickets to the June 1 banquet are priced at $150 per person. To
reserve your seats, call (818) 645-5571.

http://massispost.com/2014/05/ucla-armenian-studies-banquet-to-honor-prof-peter-cowe/

History’s forgotten catastrophe

Aberdeen Press and Journal, Scotland
May 17 2014

History’s forgotten catastrophe

With Iran to the south and Azerbaijan to the east, Armenia is
certainly stuck in a volatile part of the world. They most certainly
do not get on with Azerbaijan and, as for their relationship with
Turkey, well there’s certainly no love lost there. But more about that
later.

Surrounded by Islam of varying degrees of intensity – Armenia, I found
out, was the first country to convert to Christianity in 301 AD. That
said, there’s a wonderful almost Middle Eastern feeling here.

Stepping off the plane at Yerevan airport, the heat hit me like a
brick wall. It took an eternity to get through the hot, sweaty airport
but finally, with my luggage intact and visa in my passport, I was sat
on a ramshackle bus, heading to the capital.

I’d already booked myself into one of the few cheap B&Bs I could find
which, of course, was not in the centre but on the outskirts. Real
local, real poor area. I stepped off the bus and thought, “Oh aye,
this looks dodgy,” as I started to walk down this dirt poor street
right in the middle of a residential area. However, I quickly realised
that the Lonely Planet travel guide book was right when it said: “The
Armenians will kill you with kindness, if you’re offered hospitality,
don’t rebuff it!”

People waved and smiled at the alien as kids played happily in the
street. And every time I walked up and down that street, they always
remembered me. By day four I was having tea and a BBQ in the garden
with one family after they beckoned me over. They wanted their son to
get practice speaking English.

I slept an astonishing nine hours on arrival the first night, so in
the morning as I sat in a wee rustic café, I was really up for my
first famous Armenian coffee which I’d read about in advance.

While the Turks claim coffee as theirs, the Armenians do so likewise.
I ain’t going to argue. The Armenians call it soorch. I’d describe it
as a very potent, finely ground cup of lusciously rich rocket fuel.
Wow, hello world.

I walked for about 20 minutes, the heat already over 30 degrees, and
made it to the nearest metro station. As I headed down deep into the
tunnels, the temperature plummeted – oh what a godsend. So cool, so
refreshing, so welcome.

In the centre of Yerevan is Republic Square, a place where Stalinist
meets Armenian architecture; a stunning place that I loved just
wandering around at will, soaking it all up. From people on the
streets to café owners, the Armenians all seem friendly to strangers.
The interesting thing is – if you consider their history, they could
easily be forgiven for not being so friendly to outsiders.

With the world soon to commemorate World War 1, spare a thought for
the Armenian nation, for what it went through was horrific. In 1915,
our world experienced its first genocide when a staggering
one-and-a-half million Armenian men, woman and children died at the
hands of the brutal Turkish Ottoman Empire. Men were massacred or died
through slave labour, while woman and children died on death marches
through the Syrian Desert. Openly supported by the German government,
the plan was simply to eradicate the Armenian people – wipe them off
the face of the earth.

Just a few kilometres on a hill outside Yerevan is Tsitsernakaberd,
the Museum of the Armenian Genocide. I took a taxi out of town and
spent the day there. A very moving experience. The museum itself is
actually underground and was full of very harrowing pictures,
Holocaust style, that are near impossible to describe here. As I
wandered the museum, I once again had these thoughts: The world
rightly so talks about the Nazi Holocaust, but precious little is ever
said about Communist crimes, and practically no one talks about the
Armenian genocide. 1,500,000 murdered – have you even heard about it?

Above ground, there is a massive memorial consisting of a 40m high
spiral next to a circle of 12 basalt slabs that lean over to guard an
eternal flame. The 12 slabs represent the 12 lost provinces of west
Armenia (that to this day are still under Turkish control). Many
Armenians believe the slabs huddle like refugees around a fire while
on their way to being deported.

But it’s a piece of nature that in some way is the eternal reminder of
what happened. Mount Ararat, the gigantic snow-capped peak that was
the symbol of everything Armenian, stands at over 16,000 ft. Armenians
can see Ararat every day, yet can’t go there, for since 1915 Mount
Ararat has stood on Turkish soil and they’ve no intention of handing
it back. That must be very painful indeed.

Nearby the basalt slabs, there is a row of trees planted by foreign
lenders to show respect to those who were killed in the genocide. For
decades, the Turkish government denied any responsibility whatsoever.
It said that the genocide never happened and that the documents and
photos are fake.

Earlier this year their tone changed and they talked about “shared
pain” and expressed “condolences,” over deaths in WW1. But they still
don’t accept that the genocide took place.

Nothing other than Ankara recognising what happened, coupled with a
full apology, will suffice for the Armenian nation.

It all happened one hundred years ago, next year.

WW1 is not just about trenches in France, you know.

http://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/Article.aspx/3686277

There is no real step showing any positive change ` New Times party

There is no real step showing any positive change ` New Times party of Armenia

May 17, 2014 | 13:05

YEREVAN. ` Armenia’s history does not have a prime minister, or a
president, who has not promised to create equal conditions for
everyone, opposition New Times party Chairman Aram Karapetyan told
Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Karapetyan stated the aforesaid commenting on Wednesday’s meeting
between PM Hovik Abrahamyan and representatives of the country’s big
businesses, during which they had spoken about ensuring equal
opportunities in Armenia’s economy.

`I consider this yet another manifestation of populism. There is no
real step which will show that there can be any positive change,’ he
stressed.

In his words, Armenia’s economy can change and develop solely through
systemic changes.

`The problem is that the development concept for today’s Armenia does
not allow the economy to develop.

`For [making] systemic changes in the economy you need to start from
the political, legislative, intellectual domains. It’s impossible to
just `pick up’ the economy and make systemic changes,’ Aram Karapetyan
noted, in particular.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armenia: New Hopes And New Fears

ARMENIA: NEW HOPES AND NEW FEARS

Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso, Italy
May 16 2014

Mikayel Zolyan | Yerevan

The 99th Anniversary Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide and the
20th anniversary of the Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire have recently
interweaved marking the two main external challenges for today’s
Armenia

Two dates of symbolic importance for Armenia passed recently. One
is well-known all over the world: April 24 marked 99 years since
the Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey. Another date is less known
outside of the region: on May 12, exactly 20 years ago, the ceasefire
that put an end to the war in Nagorno-Karabakh was signed. These
two dates symbolize what can be considered the two main external
challenges for Armenia today: Armenia-Turkey relations and the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. During the latest weeks there have been
certain developments in both issues that may be signs that status quo
is changing. However it is still hard to say whether these changes
are for better or for worse.

Nagorno-Karabakh: New Initiatives and New Obstacles

Against the background of the crisis in Ukraine, where Kiev, Moscow,
Brussels and Washington are unable to stop the escalation, the
ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh suddenly seems almost a success story.

Of course, today’s imperfect peace is fragile: Azerbaijan and Armenia
are effectively divided by a frontline and engaged in an arms race.

Time after time border incidents take place, sometimes with tragic
consequences, as soldiers are killed or wounded, mostly by sniper
fire. However, in spite of all this, the ceasefire has largely held
for 20 years, remarkably, in the absence of a peacekeeping force in
the region.

Sergey Minasyan, vice-director of Caucasus Institute, a Yerevan-based
think tank, says that two major factors have contributed to the
continuing relative peace. One is the balance of power: though
Azerbaijan has been heavily arming itself, Armenia has so far managed
to keep up, partly through its alliance with Russia and membership in
the CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organization). The other factor
is the presence of international institutions, first of all the OSCE,
or more precisely, the so called OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, i.e.

Russia, the U.S. and France.

Recently, the newly appointed US representative James Warlick
has been the most active among the mediators. Thus, he initiated a
series of meetings with stakeholders, including, for the first time,
representatives of Armenian and Azerbaijani Diasporas in the U.S.

Later, he issued a statement, in which he voiced the main principles
that have been on the table of negotiations for several years.

Warlick’s activity has made him a target for angry reactions from
both sides: Azerbaijani government was unhappy about his meetings with
US Armenians, and both Armenian and Azerbaijani media criticized his
statement. However, if Warlick’s aim was to lift the veil of secrecy
surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh talks and to revive the debate around
the peace plan, he definitely succeeded.

In his statement Warlick also stressed the importance of 2nd
track diplomacy, i.e. contacts between civil society. However, the
future of citizen diplomacy when it comes to Nagorno-Karabakh is
today uncertain. On April 30, Azerbaijani well-known journalist Rauf
Mirkadyrov, who had participated in numerous citizen diplomacy programs
with Armenian colleagues, was detained by Azerbaijani authorities
on charges of spying for Armenia. Several days later, two prominent
representatives of Azerbaijani civil society, who also participated
in such programs, Arif and Leyla Yunus (they are husband and wife),
were detained with similar charges.

This is the first case when such charges are leveled at participants of
citizen diplomacy efforts. The authorities, whether in Yerevan, Baku or
Stepanakert, have traditionally tolerated 2nd track diplomacy efforts,
mostly sponsored by the West, even though these programs were often
viewed with suspicion. Participants of such initiatives were sometimes
harassed by nationalist activists, police or security services, but
they were not jailed. It is hard to say whether the recent arrests are
a conscious attempt to stifle citizen diplomacy programs or an attempt
to silence government critics. Since Ilham Aliev came to power, Baku
has been more suspicious of such efforts than Yerevan and Stepanakert,
since it saw them as legitimizing the status quo.

Whatever the case, recent arrests have had a chilling effect on
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace-building initiatives, like the EU sponsored
ambitious EPNK program and increased the level of overall tension in
the region. Marina Nagai, from the London-based International Alert
NGO, which has worked in the field for years and is today part of
the EPNK, says that “The concept and purpose of peacebuilding is
often not fully understood and fraught with wrong expectations and
misconceptions… this partly explains the reason why the societies
and authorities might treat peacebuilding initiatives, particularly
dialogue and joint activities, with suspicion and mistrust.”

Armenia-Turkey: a Public Relation Stunt or Genuine Change?

When it comes to Armenia-Turkey the situation is quite ambiguous too.

On the one hand the Armenian-Turkish protocols signed in 2009 seem
dead, and propaganda warfare is intensified in expectation of 2015,
the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. On the other hand,
there are signs that Armenia-Turkey relations may be not as frozen
as they seemed until recently.

On April 23 Turkish prime-minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a
statement, offering condolences to the “grandchildren of… Armenians
who lost their lives in the context of the early twentieth century”.

The rest of the statement for most part reproduced the official
Turkish version of events, i.e. Armenians in 1915 were subject to
“relocation” rather than genocide, therefore Armenians’ suffering
was a consequence of war and “difficult times for Ottoman Empire”,
just like “the suffering for Turkish, Kurdish, Arab, Armenian and
millions of other Ottoman citizens”. Thus, Erdogan’s statement
by no way means recognition of genocide, or even of the fact that
Armenians were deliberately targeted by the Ottoman state. However,
in any case Erdogan’s statement attracted a lot of attention since
it is the first time a head of Turkish government has offered his
condolences to Armenians in relation to the events of 1915.

On May 2, Turkish foreign minister Davutoglu published an article,
elaborating on Erdogan’s message. Like Erdogan, Davutoglu, while
remaining within the framework of the official Turkish position
on 1915, tried to strike a conciliatory note: he acknowledged the
prominent role of Armenians to the Ottoman Empire, and even mentioned
some prominent Ottoman Armenians, including musician Komitas, who was
one of the victims of 1915 (though he survived the exile to desert,
he lost his sanity and never recovered).

Too little, too late?

For most Armenians, however, both in Armenia and in the Diaspora,
these messages are “too little, too late”. Aram Hamparian, head of
the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) called Erdogan’s
statement “denial repackaged”, and Serzh Sargsyan’s chief of staff,
Vigen Sargsyan, described it as “an advanced form of denial”. Refusal
to acknowledge that Armenians in 1915 were subjected to deliberate
extermination continues to anger Armenians, and the conciliatory
tone of Turkey’s leaders is undermined by the continuing blockade of
Armenia by Turkey. However, while rejecting Erdogan’s view of history,
the Armenian government also was careful to include a conciliatory
message: Serzh Sargsyan’s April 24 statement emphasized that “we do not
consider Turkish society as our enemy”, and devoted a whole paragraph
to “Turks who lent a helping hand to their Armenian neighbors”.

Commentators note that changes in the Turkish leaders’ tone may be a
result of a changing Turkish strategy in expectation of 2015. While
the Turkish government is not ready to recognize the events of
1915 as genocide, today, after genocide recognitions by several
countries, the advent of Internet and increasing openness of the
Turkish society, simply dismissing the issue as “Armenian propaganda”
is no longer an option. Another reason behind Erdogan’s attempt to
strike a conciliatory tone may be geopolitical. Some commentators
are talking about an attempt on the part of mediators to revive the
Armenia-Turkey normalization process. Conciliatory notes in both
Erdogan’s and Sargsyan’s statements can be a sign that these efforts
have not been completely futile.

Civil society efforts

In any case, in one respect the Armenia-Turkey relations are strikingly
different from the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh. In spite of all
the ups and downs of government diplomacy, civil society contacts
have been steadily strengthening for several years. Armenian and
Turkish NGOs have been engaged in citizen diplomacy efforts long
before the Armenia-Turkey protocols, and these contacts are further
expanding today. A group of Armenian journalists and NGO activists
went to Turkey on April 24, where they took part in the Armenian
genocide commemoration organized by liberal Turkish groups. Visits
of Turkish civil society representatives to Armenia have also become
routine. Marine Manucharyan, whose NGO Civic Forum is engaged in both
Armenian-Turkish and Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation efforts,
says that the two processes are very different. In the first case, in
spite of some significant obstacles, there is also significant support
for dialogue within the societies. But, in the second case, she says,
things are more difficult: “With the recent events in Azerbaijan,
we are afraid that there will be no people left who would be willing
to cooperate with us”.

http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Regions-and-countries/Armenia/Armenia-New-Hopes-and-New-Fears-151970

Food Of Armenian President And PM May Be Classified

FOOD OF ARMENIAN PRESIDENT AND PM MAY BE CLASSIFIED

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
May 16 2014

16 May 2014 – 9:55am

The Armenian government proposes classifying expenses for the food
of the president, speaker of parliament and the prime minister,
Armenia Today reports.

The opposition said yesterday that the idea of classifying food
expenses appeared after the scandal surrounding Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan’s spending of about $200,000 during a visit. Deputy Director
of the NSS Arzumyan Arutyunyan indirectly confirmed the expenses.

Speaker of Parliament Galust Saakyan explained that classification
of information about food and visits will not make a secret out of
the president’s and the prime minister’s expenses.

The Armenian government proposes classifying expenses for the food
of the president, speaker of parliament and the prime minister,
Armenia Today reports.

The opposition said yesterday that the idea of classifying food
expenses appeared after the scandal surrounding Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan’s spending of about $200,000 during a visit. Deputy Director
of the NSS Arzumyan Arutyunyan indirectly confirmed the expenses.

Speaker of Parliament Galust Saakyan explained that classification
of information about food and visits will not make a secret out of
the president’s and the prime minister’s expenses.

US Ambassadorship Nominations: Statement Of Nina Hachigian Nominee

AMBASSADORSHIP NOMINATIONS; COMMITTEE: SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS

CQ Congressional Testimony
May 15, 2014 Thursday

CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY TESTIMONY-BY: NINA HACHIGIAN, NOMINEE
AFFILIATION: THE ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN NATIONS (ASEAN)

Statement of Nina Hachigian Nominee, Ambassador The Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)

Committee on Senate Foreign Relations

May 15, 2014

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee,

I am deeply honored to appear before you today, and humbled by the
confidence that President Obama has shown in me with this nomination.

My Armenian grandmother, whose locket I am wearing, had only a grade
school education. When she came to this country, fleeing persecution
and poverty in her homeland, I don’t think she could have imagined
the path that would bring me here. Her younger son served in the
U.S. Air Force during the Korean War. He earned a Ph.D. in math,
married another professor from Germany (my mother, who later became
a small business owner), and they had a daughter who ended up at this
table. I am my grandmother’s American dream.

My parents would also have been very proud of this nomination. I would
like to introduce my husband. My family is more important to me than
anything, and I wouldn’t be here if he and our two children were not
willing to embark on a genuine adventure. I’ve been working on U.S.

Asia policy for some 15 years now, since I left the staff of the
National Security Council first as the director of the Center for Asia
Pacific Policy at the RAND Corporation, and now as a Senior Fellow
at the Center for American Progress. In those jobs, I traveled to the
region frequently and had the opportunity to meet with Asian leaders
and work closely with my Asian counterparts.

I am thrilled by the prospect of entering government again, and
serving my country, if confirmed as the next Ambassador to ASEAN. I
want to acknowledge the key role that members of the Senate and
of the House have played in recognizing the growing importance of
ASEAN, including creating this position in 2006. I will count on
your continued engagement if confirmed. Just as the rebalance to
Asia is an important part of the Administration’s foreign policy,
engagement with ASEAN plays a central role in the rebalance.

Increasingly, the most challenging issues in Asia – energy security,
territorial disputes, climate, human trafficking – can only be solved
multilaterally. ASEAN is at the heart of Asia’s institutions, providing
the architecture to work through these issues, and that is why as
Secretary Kerry said last year: “The partnership that we share with
ASEAN remains a top priority for the Obama Administration.” What binds
the ten countries in ASEAN together is their commitment to non-violence
and the rule of law. We share those values, and we share ASEAN’s vision
of a peaceful, prosperous rules-based order in the Asia-Pacific. If
confirmed, and with your help, I will work with ASEAN to further our
common values, including human rights for the people of Southeast Asia.

The United States has other important interests in the region including
economic opportunity. Southeast Asia’s over 600 million people already
are America’s fourth largest export market, supporting over half
a million US jobs. ASEAN is pursuing an integrated ASEAN Economic
Community, and the United States is supporting that effort.

In 2012, President Obama established the U.S.-ASEAN Expanded Economic
Engagement initiative to promote increased U.S. trade with and
investment in the region, and to encourage ASEAN countries to join
high-standard trade agreements. If confirmed, and with your help,
I will continue this work to expand U.S. businesses’ access to the
growing ASEAN market, creating more jobs for Americans and realizing
ASEAN’s own goals.

Energy, environment and climate are critical issues in Southeast Asia.

As a Californian, I especially welcome the chance to engage with the
region on how to protect oceans and rivers–these critical natural
resources that provide food security and economic livelihoods for
so many. Our engagement with ASEAN is also about its people, many
of whom are our relatives. Over 6 million Americans identify with an
ASEAN ethnicity.

The region is young. Sixty five percent of ASEAN’s people are under
the age of 35. With the Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative that
President Obama launched in April, we are looking to build ties with
the leaders of tomorrow, giving them a platform to work across ASEAN
borders to solve social and economic challenges.

All of our interests in Southeast Asia ultimately rest on the peace
and stability made possible by our enduring security presence in the
Asia Pacific. Two treaty allies, the Philippines and Thailand, are
members of ASEAN, and all five Pacific allies are members of the East
Asia Summit. The U.S. response after Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines
shows the unique capabilities our military and civilian agencies bring
to bear and demonstrates our deep and abiding commitment to addressing
both traditional and non-traditional security challenges in the region.

Half of the tonnage of the world’s ship-based cargo passes through
the South China Sea. The United States has a national interest in
the unfettered flow of this commerce and in freedom of navigation
and overflight in these waters. We have a deep stake in ensuring
that the territorial and maritime disputes in the South China Sea
are solved peacefully, without coercion, force, or intimidation and
in accordance with international law.

Unfortunately, we have seen lately what appears to be a pattern of
unilateral actions by China to advance its territorial and maritime
claims, the latest of which is China’s introduction of an oil rig
into disputed waters near the Paracel Islands. This is provocative and
raises tensions, and it highlights the need for claimants to clarify
their claims in accordance with international law. America supports
ASEAN’s strong and unified voice on these disputes and its efforts to
manage them in a manner that is consistent with a rules-based regional
order and international law. We encourage ASEAN and China’s efforts
to conclude a meaningful Code of Conduct. A peaceful, rules-based
process will benefit all the claimants, big and small and help preserve
regional peace and stability.

An effective ASEAN will have lasting benefits for the region and for
our shared future. If confirmed, and with your help, I will commit
myself to deepening our ties with this important organization. Thank
you for the opportunity to testify today, and I am happy to answer
your questions, now or at any time in the future.

Vice Speaker Of Armenian Parliament: Customs Point Between Armenia A

VICE SPEAKER OF ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT: CUSTOMS POINT BETWEEN ARMENIA AND NAGORNO KARABAKH IMPOSSIBLE

by Tatevik Shahunyan

ARMINFO
Friday, May 16, 14:23

No customs point can be opened between Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh,
Vice Speaker of the Armenian Parliament, Republican Party Spokesperson
Eduard Sharmazanov says commenting on the latest statement by Anton
Azarov, Division Head at the Eurasian Economic Committee. Azarov said
that the borders of the Eurasian Economic Union would be laid within
the existing borders of Armenia.

Sharmazanov said Armenia and NKR are a united economic space and
Armenia promotes economic development of NKR as much as possible.

According to him, Azanov is not the very official to afford such
statement.

Parliamentarian From ANC: After 30 September, Government Will Start

PARLIAMENTARIAN FROM ANC: AFTER 30 SEPTEMBER, GOVERNMENT WILL START PUSHING THROUGH THE MANDATORY FUNDED PENSION SYSTEM WITH RENEWED VIGOR

by Ashot Safaryan

ARMINFO
Friday, May 16, 18:26

After 30 September, the Government will start pushing through the
mandatory funded pension system with renewed vigor, Aram Manukyan,
Secretary of the Armenian National Congress Faction in the Parliament,
told ArmInfo.

He is sure that with the amendments to the Law on Funded Pension that
was passed by the Parliament on 15 May, the Government tries to gain
time. One should not cherish illusions for any concessions from the
authorities, he said.

“In addition, before 30 September, the Government will be forcing
the big and small establishments in the country to pay fees to the
pensions funds from their own budgets, creating an false impression
of participation in the mandatory system. They need to ensure the
necessary indicators by all means possible,” Manukyan said.

The parliamentarian cannot say if the civic protests will calm down
or not. “Anyway, we urge the citizens not to loosen up and fight till
the very end,” he said.

On 15 May the Armenian parliament approved the extended option of
amendments to the law “On funded pension” that was submitted by the
government. Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Artem Asatryan
said that the bill suggests adding a provision that will relieve
the citizens falling under the pension reforms of the responsibility
for non- payment or failure to meet the time limit for the relevant
payments. In addition, if a citizen files a statement that he refuses
to participate in the accumulative system, the employer has the
right not to make the relevant calculations to transfer the pension
contributions.

Heritage Party Rep: Pressured "From Above," Employers May Ban Their

HERITAGE PARTY REP: PRESSURED “FROM ABOVE,” EMPLOYERS MAY BAN THEIR EMPLOYEES TO FILE STATEMENTS REFUSING FROM MAKING PENSION PAYMENTS

by Ashot Safaryan

ARMINFO
Friday, May 16, 14:21

The amendments to the Law On Funded Pension initiated by the Government
and passed by the Parliament are, inherently, a halfway measure, unable
to give a long- term solution to the problem. Armenian Parliamentarian
from Heritage Party Tevan Poghosyan told reporters on 16 May.

The parliamentarian fears that pressured ‘from above’ employers will
simply ban their employees to write a statement refusing to make
compulsory pension payments over time. “After a while, the government
may declare that most of the citizens do not refuse from the funded
pension and return to the initial version of the law,” Poghosyan said.

According to him, it would be logical if the citizens who do not oppose
the funded pension wrote applications for voluntary participation in
the funded pension system.

The oppositionist thinks the authorities manipulate and the amendments
made to the law seek to weaken the public movement, otherwise, they
would settle the problem once and forever.

On 15 May the Armenian parliament approved the extended option of
amendments to the law “On funded pension” that was submitted by the
government. Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Artem Asatryan
said that the bill suggests adding a provision that will relieve
the citizens falling under the pension reforms of the responsibility
for non- payment or failure to meet the time limit for the relevant
payments. In addition, if a citizen files a statement that he refuses
to participate in the accumulative system, the employer has the
right not to make the relevant calculations to transfer the pension
contributions.