VTB Bank (Armenia) Launches Call Deposit VTB-Victory

VTB BANK (ARMENIA) LAUNCHES CALL DEPOSIT VTB-VICTORY

ARKA
May 8, 2009

YEREVAN, May 8. /ARKA/. VTB Bank (Armenia) has launched a new call
deposit VTB-Victory on the eve of the May 9 Victory Day, the bank’s
press service reports.

The 91-day deposits (both in the national and foreign currencies) of
Armenia’s citizens (both residents and non-residents) have bonus rates
(in the range of 2% for dram deposits and 1% for foreign-currency
deposits) and are tailored for veterans, military servants and the
personnel of the Armenian and Russian defense ministries, as well as
national security services, general prosecutors’ offices and ministries
of home affairs.

The bank offers for free a VISA card for all depositors. Clients can
sign a contract on VTB-Victory deposit in all the branches of VTB
(Armeia) Bank.

The deadline is August 31, 2009.

The deposit is insured by the RA law guaranteeing remuneration of
bank deposits.

According to General Director of VTB Bank (Armenia), launching the
deposit, the bank aimed at assisting the Armenian society, particularly
those people who once made an immense contribution to their country.

VTB Bank (Armenia), former Armsavingsbank, joined VTB Group in
April 2004.

Russia’s VTB is the absolute shareholder of the bank.

Stopping Iran’s Nuclear March Is Futile

STOPPING IRAN’S NUCLEAR MARCH IS FUTILE
By Joseph A. Kechichian

Gulf News
May 7 2009
UAE

Vartan Gregorian, the erudite president of the Carnegie Corporation
of New York, a grant-making institution founded by Andrew Carnegie in
1911, penned a thoughtful 12-page draft model letter for US President
Barack Obama to consider sending to both the Supreme Leader of Iran
as well as its President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

It is an exceptional document that contextualises key issues regarding
Iran’s quest for nuclear capabilities.

Gregorian, a Tabriz-born Armenian-American historian with a stellar
academic record, is the author of several books, including the
acclaimed Islam: A Mosaic, Not A Monolith. True to his style, the
draft letter is well thought-out, and rich in detail.

It opens with a long overdue recognition that "Americans are deeply
mindful and respectful of the renowned achievements and rich cultural
legacy of Iranian civilisation, which reflect an unparalleled degree
of historical continuity".

It then identifies three epochal contributions which etched the Iranian
character ever since. With Zoroastrianism, Gregorian summarises,
Iranians "affirmed man’s absolute free will to choose between evil
and a Divine Creator, and our common destiny to face a final Day
of Judgment".

This is a fundamental building foundation for later analysis but oh
so valuable in and of itself.

At a later stage, the academic highlights how under the Achaemenid
Empire, enlightened leaders like Cyrus and Darius defined tolerance
and pluralism.

"It was Cyrus the Great who decreed that ‘all should be free to worship
their gods without impediments or persecution’ – a proclamation unique,
not only for its time, but for centuries to come", acknowledges the
author. Few outsiders appreciate the value such ideas have in molding
Iranian perceptions.

With the advent of Islam, Gregorian underscores, "Iranians, drawing
on their own early beliefs, helped to develop and then adhered to
Shiite Islam."

He continues: "It was during this period that Iran became the seat
of Islamic learning and gave to the world its science, philosophy,
theology, arts, and architecture."

Because such an expose was seldom made public in the post-1979
US-Iranian environment, the tone of the letter sets the stage for
significant policy differences. In fact, with this putative Obama
letter, Gregorian wants the US to answer President Ahmadinajed’s
far-ranging, 18-page March 2006 dispatch to former US president George
W. Bush, which was cavalierly ignored.

It may be worth recalling that the Iranian focused on major religious
values, history, and international relations in his correspondence,
and was deeply disappointed that his initiative was brushed aside.

Prodded by pro-Israeli forces that wished to launch pre-emptive
attacks against Iran, Bush disregarded the Ahmadinejad memo,
as Washington pigeonholed Iran into his infamous ‘axis of evil’
categorisation. To his credit, Gregorian touches upon past mistakes,
invokes American understanding, and reminds Iranians that the US came
under new management on 20 January 2009.

Iranians and Americans "enjoyed remarkably positive relations", he
writes, because "the US [always] defended [the country’s] territorial
integrity". Gregorian stresses that were it "not for America’s
efforts, Iran might have been broken up" and, in frank statements,
concedes that Washington "promoted the shah’s ambitions to make Iran
a regional superpower".

He then places a few choice words in Obama’s mouth that will shock: the
US "did not recognise that a nationalist, secular, and democratic Iran
would have been a great counterforce against communism," concluding:
"We were wrong."

This is a polite way of saying that Washington was mistaken to help
organise the 1953 coup against former Iranian prime minister Mohammad
Mossadeq.

Although a slew of painful policies followed, including the
444-day hostage ordeal as well as the failed April 24, 1980, rescue
mission that cost eight American servicemen their lives, the letter
acknowledges that today Washington continues to have grave concerns
about Iran’s nuclear programmes.

Yet, even on this front, the author clarifies how Washington assisted
Tehran – as early as 1957 – to acquire nuclear power through the
Atoms for Peace programme. In 1975, then secretary of state Henry
Kissinger signed a National Security Memorandum, which affirmed that
the "introduction of nuclear power will both provide for the growing
needs of Iran’s economy and free remaining oil reserves for export
or conversion to petrochemicals".

The letter reminds Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and
Ahmadinejad that it was Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who called nuclear
power ‘the work of the devil’, although doubts remained as to whether
current efforts are strictly for peaceful purposes. According to the
putative letter, Washington offers to "discuss [Iran’s] legitimate
aspirations as a regional power and to cease all talk of ‘regime
change’."

In short, everything would be done to discourage Tehran from acquiring
nuclear weapons, ostensibly to prevent a regional arms race.

While the letter closes with wishes for improved relations and a direct
quote from Imam Ali calling for tolerance, mercy, and compassion,
it does not include any references to Israel’s nuclear weapons,
or to Iranian fears of a potential assault on its nuclear facilities.

Consequently, and even if Ahmadinejad fails to win another presidential
term on June 12, Khamenei is not likely to sacrifice this critical
national security initiative. For precisely the reasons Gregorian
enunciates, Iran will become a nuclear power, sooner rather than later.

Dr. Joseph A. Kechichian is a commentator and author of several books
on Gulf affairs.

Armenia Launches Food Recall Project

ARMENIA LAUNCHES FOOD RECALL PROJECT

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.05.2009 20:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Consumer rights NGOs recently conducted social
polls among public organizations, business structures, certification
bodies and state-government structures. As shown by poll results,
all the above bodies find citizens’ awareness, mutual cooperation and
transparent activities extremely important, Abgar Yegoyan , Chairman of
Consumer Rights Union, told a PanARMENIAN.Net correspondent. "There is
no transparency among different bodies, so it’s necessary to exchange
information on a single Web site," he said.

According to Mr. Yegoyan, the first step has already been made. "Three
month ago, we wrote a letter to the State Inspection on Food Security
and Veterinary at the Ministry of Agriculture, with a request to
provide information on the amount of annual fines. The information
is now available on our Web site," he said, adding that relevant
cooperation among state government bodies also shows the government’s
interest in introducing quality certificates. "Certainly, certificates
do not rule out corruption risks. To raise consumers’ awareness,
we proposed the initiative of creating a Web site," he added.

In this connection, Mr. Yegoyan encouraged private organizations to
work transparently, without avoiding checkups by state bodies. "Primary
importance should be attached to consumers’ opinion, because in
conditions of competitiveness, consumers prefer certified products
conforming to quality standards," he said.

Mr. Yegoyan will participate in ISO – 26 International Workshop to be
held in Canada on May 14. The workshop will be devoted to corporate
liability issues. As noted by Chair of Consumers Rights Union, the
the European states participating in the conference will represent
Romania, Serbia and Armenia.

Yegoyan also added that the organization is elaborating special
food recall procedures. "We have now launched a pilot project in
the sphere of dairy products," he said. According to Mr. Yegoyan,
this will enable consumers to give preference to conscientious food
producers. In such cases the burden of guilt will fall upon sellers,
as producers are always willing to take back their products.

As mentioned by Mr. Yegoyan, the organization plans to submit the
project to the approval of 8 large production companies. As to
consumers, they will be informed of producer’s willingness to take
back products for further repossession and utilization. "That will
be the first step in the sphere," Head of Consumers Rights Union said.

A round table on "Transparency and Liability in the Sphere of
Food Certification and Checkups" has been held in Yerevan with
the participation of Agriculture and Health Ministry officials,
certification agency representatives etc.

Armenian Foreign Minister Meets Benita Ferrero-Waldner

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER MEETS BENITA FERRERO-WALDNER

ArmInfo
2009-05-07 01:03:00

ArmInfo. Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian met EU
Commissioner for External Relations and European Neighborhood Policy
Benita Ferrero-Waldner in Prague, Wednesday.

As the Armenian Foreign Ministry press-service told ArmInfo,
the meeting covered issues of Armenia-EU cooperation, including
the European Neighborhood Policy Program. Touching upon the May 7
summit of the Eastern Partnership program, Nalbandian stressed that
Armenia is ready to actively participate in the given program. At
Ferrero-Waldner’s request, Nalbandian presented the situation with
normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations. On behalf of the
European Commission, Benita Ferrero-Waldner supported the steps
in this direction. The parties also discussed possibilities of the
Karabakh conflict settlement, as well as regional security.

EU Opens Landmark Summit With Ex-Soviet States

EU OPENS LANDMARK SUMMIT WITH EX-SOVIET STATES

Agence France Presse
May 7 2009

PRAGUE (AFP) — European Union leaders opened landmark talks Thursday
with six former Soviet states, aiming to foster stability and closer
ties while reassuring Russia that this was not an EU power play.

The Eastern Partnership initiative "should not be a renewal of two
blocs East and West, it should not be a fight for influence," said
outgoing Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek, whose country holds
the rotating EU presidency.

The main goal of the partnership was to "accelerate political
association and further economic integration" between the 27 EU
nations and Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine,
said the participants in an agreed summit statement.

That was not expected to assuage Russian opposition to the project,
which Moscow sees as an attempt to downgrade its own influence in
its backyard.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday warned against
the creation of "new dividing lines" in Europe.

However EU External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner
described it as a win-win situation.

"This is our common neighbourhood and I think we (EU and Russia)
should be both very happy to have more stability," there said as she
entered the talks.

Ukraine’s President Viktor Yushchenko, also arriving for the talks,
called the Eastern Partnership "a first roadmap" for relations
with Europe.

"There is a financial support from the EU and an understanding that
there should be more cooperation with its neighbours," he said.

Brussels says the new scheme is designed to foster stability in the
region, thanks in part to EU aid, and is not handing out the carrot
of eventual EU partnership.

Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen stressed that eventual EU
membership was not part of the plan.

"This partnership does not open the door to membership at all… that
is very important," he said.

War and political strife in Georgia, riots in Moldova and political and
economic upheaval in Ukraine underscore the need for action, but some
of the wind has been taken out of the sails of the Eastern Partnership.

The project was the initiative of the Czech Republic, which holds
the rotating EU presidency till the end of next month.

But the Czech government has fallen and will be replaced on Friday.

Prague was also unable to convince key EU leaders to attend. British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Spanish
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and Italian counterpart
Silvio Berlusconi were among the no-shows.

Overall the meeting was turned into something of a semi-summit,
with just over half of the 27 EU nations represented by their heads
of state or government.

A senior European Commission official said the absences increase
the danger of "policy for the East made by countries from the East
(of the EU), and a policy for the Mediterranean made by Mediterranean
countries".

The summit statement displays some of the tensions over the eastward
rapprochement. Subtle but key text changes in the final version
reflecting the wishes of western Europe — France, Germany and the
Benelux countries in particular — not to go too far with the project.

The six partner nations are clearly referred to as "Eastern European
Partners" whereas the Czechs wanted to drop the "Eastern" tag.

The reference "long-term goal" was also added to a paragraph on visa
liberalisation.

During France’s term at the EU helm last year, Sarkozy launched a
"Mediterranean Union" to bolster ties with countries around the sea’s
rim, but that forum has since stalled.

A brief Russia-Georgia war last August also highlighted the need to
look further east, not least because some of the partner countries
are key transit nations for Europe’s energy needs.

The EU is also keen to reach out to Belarus after recent progress made
on improving democracy under President Alexander Lukashenko, although
the man dubbed the "last dictator in Europe" was not attending.

Online Directory Launched At The Nkr Mfa Library

ONLINE DIRECTORY LAUNCHED AT THE NKR MFA LIBRARY

Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
2009-05-06 16:21

An online directory providing a digest of the available literature
is launched at the NKR MFA library.

The directory is divided into sections and sub-sections, in particular,
Politics and Political Sciences, Theory of International Relations,
History of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Diplomacy,
International Organizations, Global Issues of the Present,
International Conflicts, Russia and the CIS, Political Science,
Domestic Situation and Domestic Policy, Geopolitics, Psychology,
History, Philosophy, Religion, and others. A special place is occupied
by the literature on the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict.

The online directory’s creation was aimed at simplifying the search
of the corresponding literature and making the library accessible
for various strata of the Republic’s population.

Elders’ Election Campaign Launched

ELDERS’ ELECTION CAMPAIGN LAUNCHED

Panorama.am
11:53 02/05/2009

Elders’ elections campaign has been launched today. The Central
Electoral Committee reports that the Republican Party of Armenia,
Prosperous Armenia, Armenian Revolutionary Federation, Country
of Laws, People’s Party, Working Socialist Party of Armenia and
Armenian National Congress are registered to participate in the
elections. According to the source the candidates that the parties
have nominated are Gagik Beglaryan, Harutyun Qushkyan, Artsvik
Minasyan, Heghine Bisharyan, Tigran Karapetyan, Movses Shahverdyan,
Levon Ter-Petrosyna.

The Electoral Committee will defined in its today’s session the
schedule and agenda of providing broadcast opportunity to the
candidates to conduct their electoral campaigns.

Ceremony Commemorates Armenian Genocide

CEREMONY COMMEMORATES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
Vironique Leduc

Courrier Bordeaux/Cartierville
ticle-332181-Ceremony-commemorates-Armenian-genoci de.html
May 4 2009
Canada

The Armenian community of Montreal and Laval commemorated the 94th
anniversary of the Armenian genocide, which took place in 1915 during
the First World War. It is difficult to count the number of deaths, but
this event would have cost the life of more than a million Armenians.

Nearly 400 people took part in a religious ceremony at Marcelin-Wilson
Park on April 24 in front of a monument in memory of the victims
of genocides.

Councillors Noushig Eloyan (Bordeaux-Cartierville) and Mary Deros
(Park-Extension), both of Armenian origin, took part at this time
of reflection. "Our deceased will not rest in peace as long as this
genocide is not recognized by the whole world," said Deros.

Eloyan, whose grandparents were survivors of the genocide, spoke about
the ceremony as a collective duty of memory. "That our deceased are
reassured, they will never be forgotten."

The ceremony was followed by a demonstration in Ottawa before
Parliament and the Turkish embassy.

http://www.courrierbc.com/ar

Theater: Andrea Martin Wrings Laughs From Royal Role

THEATER: ANDREA MARTIN WRINGS LAUGHS FROM ROYAL ROLE
By Jerry Tallmer

The Villager
ndreamartin.html
April 30 2009

Courting a second Tony with a hop, skip and jump

Funny, what a little hop, skip, and jump can do. It might even win
her a second Tony Award to put alongside the one she captured in 1992
for her performance as a cynical gag writer in the Broadway musical of
"My Favorite Year."

"Yes, I did devise it" — that hop, skip, and jump — Andrea Martin
confesses, "but it doesn’t seem like such a big thing to me. It just
seemed natural to the character, who has to do so much."

So much hard labor, she means. Here’s a bit of it, in the chirpily
delivered words (without music) of Juliette, the stoical all-purpose
royal chambermaid played by Andrea Martin in Eugene Ionesco’s "Exit
the King" at the Ethyl Barrymore:

In winter when I get up, it’s still dark, and I’m frozen…Even
in summer when I get up, the sun is barely risen…I wash all the
household linen in the laundry tubs. My hands hurt, the skin is all
cracked…I empty the chamber pots. I make the beds … I polish the
floors. I sweep and sweep and sweep. There’s no end to it…And since
we don’t have gardeners any more, I hoe and I dig. And I sow…And
then — then I do yesterday’s washing up. Plates covered in grease
and fat. And then I have to cook … After that I still have to serve
at the table …

"Exit the King" is a comedy, of a sort, but it isn’t a barrel of
laughs. It is, in fact, absurdist playwright Ionesco’s good hard look
at death — the unwilling death, in this case, of a king (Geoffrey
Rush) whose once vast empire has totally fallen apart, gone to seed,
militarily, economically, every which way.

Juliette the chambermaid has to cope not only with the cantankerous
self-deluding king but also with the king’s two queens (Susan
Sarandon, Lauren Ambrose), a quack royal doctor (William Sadler),
and a simple-minded stentorian armored guard (Brian Hutchison).

No, not only had Andrea Martin never seen this play before but, she
confesses, "I’d never seen any Ionesco before." (Short pause.) "He’s
mostly explored in the world of academia, isn’t he?"

She got the part "the way the majority of actors get jobs — just
a pure audition" before director Neil Armfield and casting director
Daniel Swee, "And then I heard nothing for seven months." And then
the phone rang.

At first bite, "Exit the King" is "not easy at all to read, but
once you’re in it, it’s like Shakespeare, the words support it, they
just flow off your tongue. The original’s written in French [though
Ionesco’s blood was Romanian]. I’m fluent enough in French," she says,
"to understand it."

She’s fluent enough in French because her quadruple college education
(Stevens, Emerson, the Sorbonne, and Emerson again) put her in Paris
in the turbulent years of 1968-69 — assassinations of Martin Luther
King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy in America, student revolt and workers’
strikes in France and elsewhere.

"And there I am, in Paris, studying at the Jacques Lecoq School of Mime
— the same place Geoffrey Rush studied mime." Oscar-winner Geoffrey
Rush is from Australia — as is this production of "Exit the King,"
in an adaptation by him and director Arnfield. Oscar-winner Susan
Sarandon was born and bred in this city. Andrea Martin is a product
of — guess where — Portland, Maine.

The name and work of Eugene Ionesco was, as it happens, introduced to
the United States of America in 1954, at the tiny Tempo Playhouse on
St. Mark’s Place, by a young woman from Brooklyn named Julie Bovasso
when Andrea was still a little kid up in Portland, Maine. Julie,
in her early 20s, had walked over the bridge from Brooklyn to build
that playhouse with her own hands, and there produce — and star in —
the dramas not only of Ionesco but Jean Genet and Michel de Ghelderode
and others – all unknown or but barely known until then in America.

The Andrea Martin of today had never heard of any of this either, and
was eager to learn more. She was going to read up on Julie Bovasso,
she said. Then, parenthetically: "One of the best gifts of doing this
play is seeing so many young people seeing Ionesco for the first time."

The part of Juliette in "Exit the King" is now being played by
… Andrea Papazian.

Well, it might have been, if Andrea’s grandfather, who’d reached
America during the Armenian Holocaust of 1919, hadn’t changed his
name from John Papazian to John Martin when he saw the name "MARTIN"
splashed on the side of some truck.

"My mother’s name was Sybil Marougian, so I’m 100 percent full-blooded
Armenian on both sides," says the actress.

She had bee-lined it to New York as soon as finally finishing at
Emerson College, in Boston — "theater became everything to me" —
and walked into a job with a touring company of "You’re a Good Man,
Charlie Brown." That gave her Equity card and nailed her into "the
surreal life of theater." Too late to get out now. She lives alone
on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Her two grown sons — Jack, 27,
and Joe, 26 — are both involved in music. Their father, from whom
she is divorced, is film director Robert Dolman.

You know, the hop-skip Juliette of "Exit the King" is told, you could
really write a book. Call it: How to Steal a Show.

"Oh my goodness," said the royal chambermaid.

See? Even without trying, she’s doing it.

EXIT THE KING Written by Eugene Ionesco Adapted by Neil Armfield and
Geoffrey Rush Directed by Neil Armfield Through June 14 At the Ethel
Barrymore Theatre 243 West 47th Street (212) 239-6200 or Telecharge.com

http://www.thevillager.com/villager_313/a

BH’s Motto In Yerevan Council Of Elders Elections Will Be "Our Word

BH’S MOTTO IN YEREVAN COUNCIL OF ELDERS ELECTIONS WILL BE "OUR WORD IS ACT"

Noyan Tapan
May 1, 2009

YEREVAN, MAY 1, NOYAN TAPAN. The official election campaign of Yerevan
Council of Elders elections is launched on May 2, and the Bargavach
Hayastan (Prosperous Armenia) party is ready for full participation in
it. Khachik Galstian, the Spokesperson of BH leader Gagik Tsarukian,
reported at the May 1 press conference. According to him, an event
will be organized on May 2, during which BH’s preelection program
will be presented officially.

BH’s main motto is "Our Word is Act," which, according to him, more
aptly characterizes the way passed by G. Tsarukian, BH’s style of
acting. The second motto is "Trust and Demand." "If only there is
sufficient vote of confidence one can demand full-value fulfillment
of all promises and preelection programs," K. Galstian said.

According to G. Tsarukian’s Spokesperson, the information that BH
representatives give out bribe of 5 thousand drams to Yerevan residents
does not correspond to reality. Moreover, he assured that BH will use
all possible means to fight voter buying and to hold fair, transparent
elections. According to G. Galstian, BH has a stable electorate and
does not need to take away or to buy people’s vote. And he called
Yerevan residents for being free and voting of their own free will
and with their own conscience if even they take a bribe.

Speaking about the vacant ministerial posts as a result of ARFD’s
leaving the coalition K. Galstian said that BH has well-prepared
specialists, who are able to head those ministries. According to
him, they will also consider normal the circumstance if only RPA
representatives take those posts. "Gagik Tsarukian has never fought
to take any post and BH does not pretend on any post," he assured.