"We Are To Punish Our Criminals"

"WE ARE TO PUNISH OUR CRIMINALS"

A1+
15 July, 2008

"I prefer that we punish our criminals ourselves, but sometimes people
have to turn to international courts as they do not find justice in
our country," declared Stepan Demirchian, Chairman of the People’s
Party, in reply to the intention of the All Armenian Movement to
bring Robert Kocharian before the Court of Hague.

"We have not discussed the issue in our party as it is more a public
decision. I desire that people answer for what they have done, and
that criminals are punished," concluded Chairman of the People’s Party.

Demirchian has no expectations from the ad hoc commission investigating
the 1 March events, as, according to him, the commission does not
enjoy people’s confidence and neither does the National Assembly.

According to Stepan Demirchian the only way out of the crisis is
holding free and democratic elections. Today Armenia faces dangerous
challenges and in order to meet them Armenia must have a stable
political background.

Demirchian is sure we are facing a difficult social, economic, moral
and political situation in Armenia and the Government’s attempts to
control the situation are not enough. The politician cannot spot any
improvements with the appointment of the new Prime-Minister and his
policy. "We cannot observe any improvements; the oligarchic system
is still running," states Demirchian.

Concerning Russia’s statement that it encourages Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity Stepan Demirchian reminded that besides Russia
many other countries have encouraged Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity. And though Russia is Armenia’s ally, it has its own
interests and can be in friendly relations with different countries,
including Azerbaijan.

Comstar Subsidiary Launches Armenia’s First

COMSTAR SUBSIDIARY LAUNCHES ARMENIA’S FIRST MOBILE WIMAX NETWORK

Teleclick.ca
July 15 2008
Canada

Cornet-AM, the Armenian subsidiary of Russian telecom operator,
Comstar, has built the Republic of Armenia’s first Mobile WiMAX
network.

The network, which uses 3.6- to 3.8-GHz frequencies and is based on
the 802.16e WiMAX technology, consists of 24 wireless base stations,
which are connected to one another via radio relay lines and rented
telecommunications channels. Equipment was provided by Airspan
Networks.

"We have implemented the first part of our strategic project aimed at
expanding our presence in Armenia," commented Comstar’s vice president
of Regional Development, Victor Koresh. "The next step involves the
development of the voice services in the Republic. Earlier this year,
Cornet-AM applied to the Public Service Regulation Committee of
the Republic of Armenia to obtain the numbering capacity of 60,000
telephone numbers."

First president of Armenia meets CoE Commissioner for Human Rights

First president of Armenia meets CoE Commissioner for Human Rights

2008-07-14 22:39:00

ArmInfo. The first president of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosyan met Council
of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights Thomas Hammarberg, who is
currently in Yerevan.

The first Armenian president’s office told ArmInfo that during the
meeting Thomas Hammarberg familiarized Levon Ter-Petrosyan with the two
main goals of his visit to Armenia: to study the independence of the RA
interim parliamentary commission on investigation of the March 1
events, as well as all the events concerning political prisoners and
arrests after March 1. Levon Ter-Petrosyan noted that on the basis of
Head of the Special Investigation Service of Armenia Andranik
Mirzoyan’s instruction given to prosecutors of all regions of the
country, thousands of supporters of opposition underwent terror,
beating, arrests and other persecution.

The meeting also covered issues related to political prisoners, as well
as problems connected with democratic institutions in Armenia.

"Sea Breeze – 2008" Manoeuvres Start In Odesa

"SEA BREEZE – 2008" MANOEUVRES START IN ODESA

ForUm
July 14 2008
Ukraine

Today, July 14, the ceremony of opening of bilateral Ukrainian-American
military manoeuvres "Sea Breeze – 2008" takes place in Odesa.

According to the press service of the Defense Ministry, the main
purpose of the current manoeuvres "Sea Breeze – 2008" is to train
actions of multinational staffs and forces during the planning and
holding of the peacemaking operation within NATO standards.

The leadership of the "Sea Breeze – 2008" manoeuvres is the first
deputy commander of the Naval forces of the Armed Forced of Ukraine
Viktor Maksymov and rear admiral of the Armed Forced of the USA
John Muir.

The militaries from 17 countries will participate in the manoeuvres. In
particular from Austria, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Great Britain, Armenia,
Greece, Georgia, Dane, Canada, Latvia, Macedonia, Romania, the USA,
Turkey, Ukraine, France Germany.

The "Sea Breeze – 2008" manoeuvres will be held until July 28.

Armenian TV Station May Be Permitted To Return To Air

ARMENIAN TV STATION MAY BE PERMITTED TO RETURN TO AIR

International Journalist’s Network
July 11 2008

Region :Eastern Europe-Central Eurasia
Country :Armenia
Topic :Television

Several media organizations are calling for the Armenian government
to allow the pro-opposition television broadcast channel A1+ to resume
their broadcasting after the European Court for Human Rights declared
that it should return to the airwaves in Armenia.

Last month the European Court for Human Rights claimed that the
Armenian government violated freedom of expression rights by denying
A1+, which is owned by the private Meltex Company, a license.

The Meltex Chairman Mesrop Movsesian, however, said the court ruling
does not guarantee that the TV station will return to the air.

According to Movsesian, the ruling merely provides an opportunity for
the station to bid on available broadcasting frequencies this fall,
when several broadcast licenses will expire.

Protecting The Wonders Of The World

PROTECTING THE WONDERS OF THE WORLD
Camille Agon

TIME
0,8599,1821948,00.html
July 11 2008

At its annual meeting in Quebec City this week, UNESCO’s World
Heritage Committee added another 27 sites to its already burgeoning
list of places of "outstanding universal value." Now wooden churches
in Slovakia, Weimar-era housing projects in Berlin, and Armenian
monasteries in Iran have been granted the same hallowed status as
the Statue of Liberty, Stonehenge, and the Temple of Angkor Wat. And
why not? There are plenty of ways to define "a human masterpiece of
creative genius," one of the several criteria for inclusion. But
now that World Heritage Status has been bestowed on 878 sites,
some wonder whether UNESCO has the wherewithal — and the will —
to protect its designated sites adequately.

Francesco Bandarin, the director of the World Heritage Center, ,
insists it does. The List is part of a convention adopted by UNESCO
in 1972 meant "to recognize and protect the world’s most significant
cultural and natural sites," he says. "Over the last 36 years,
the Committee and UNESCO have continued to work in line with its
original mission." The benefits of getting on the list, he says,
include increased visibility, more funding, and access to UNESCO’s
"knowledge and experience." Including private donations, the WHC has
an annual budget of about $20 million; most countries are expected
to implement and fund their own protection plans.

The mere designation as a World Heritage site, of course, can be a
boon: when the Ironbridge Gorge in Shropshire, England, was accorded
World Heritage Status in 1986, says Stuart Smith, a former director
of the museum there, "People suddenly realized they were living in
an incredible site. They started to appreciate it and respect it."

But increased public awareness can be a mixed blessing. In his
book Disappearing World: 101 of the Earth’s Most Extraordinary
and Endangered Places , heritage consultant Alonzo Addison lists
unsustainable tourism as one of the key threats to the world’s cultural
and natural wonders. And there is no doubt that a site’s presence
on the World Heritage List enhances tourist appeal. "A lot of state
parties are tempted to change this from being an environmental and
cultural treaty into a tourism promotion committee," says Lincoln
Siliakus, an activist with the Wilderness Society of Australia who
was in Quebec City for the WHC meeting."

Indeed, many preservationists see the WHC as instinctively reluctant
to declare sites endangered without a go-ahead from the government
involved. It’s one thing to decry the damage earthquakes wrought upon
the Iranian city of Bam, protracted civil war on the national parks of
the Congo, or the Taliban’s 2003 dynamiting of the massive Buddhas of
Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Valley. It is clearly another for the Committee
to confront the frequently negative impact that unchecked development
or mismanagement can have on sensitive locations.

In fact, no sites were added to the endangered list at this year’s
WHC conclave. Last year the Committee said it would de-list the
Elbe Valley in the German city of Dresden if construction proceeded
on a four-lane bridge that activists said would damage the valley’s
delicate landscape. Now that bridge is under construction — but the
Committee ruled it would "give Dresden more time" in the hope that
local opposition could reverse the damage.

Another highly controversial candidate for sanction also managed to
dodge a public bullet — for now. The prehistoric wall paintings of
the Lascaux Caves in Southwestern France have been under threat for
years from a series of fungus outbreaks that many feel were brought
on or exacerbated by the French government’s mismanagement of the
site. The US-based International Committee for the Preservation of
Lascaux (ICPL) argued before the Committee for sanctions, and its
chair, Laurence Léauté-Beasley, says Lascaux "came very close" to
being placed on the endangered list. Instead, the French government
agreed to a closer WHC monitoring of the site. "France will now have
to answer to the world community," she says. "They will have to be
transparent and accountable for the actions they have taken in the
past and will take in the future in the treatment of Lascaux." If
those efforts aren’t sufficient, Léauté-Beasley says, the committee
"retains the real option of inscribing Lascaux on the List of World
Heritage in Danger 2009." The hope is that conditions of the caves’
17,000-year-old art will improve to the point where the seriousness
of that threat won’t come to the test.

–Boundary_(ID_ID1H3bXPjUoPLv5RsdKfBA)–

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/

BAKU: Russia Open For Military Cooperation With Azerbaijan: Ambassad

RUSSIA OPEN FOR MILITARY COOPERATION WITH AZERBAIJAN: AMBASSADOR

Trend News Agency
July 8 2008
Azerbaijan

Russia is prepared to military cooperation with Azerbaijan. "Russia is
open for military cooperation with Azerbaijan. However, presenting of
any military ‘toy’ exclusively to Azerbaijan is out of question,"
Vasiliy Istratov, the Russian ambassador to Azerbaijan, told
journalists on 8 July.

The Defense Ministries of Azerbaijan and Russia have an agreement on
bilateral cooperation. The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry cooperates
with 50 countries.

The ambassador said that Russia is prepared to render maximal
assistance to find a solution to the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict. However, the military cooperation does not mean military
assistance to Azerbaijan in the settlement of the conflict, the
diplomat said.

The conflict between the two countries of the South Caucasus began
in 1988 due to Armenian territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Since
1992, Armenian Armed Forces have occupied 20% of Azerbaijan including
the Nagorno-Karabakh region and its seven surrounding districts. In
1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement at which
time the active hostilities ended. The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk
Group ( Russia, France, and the US) are currently holding peaceful
negotiations.

Aznavour To Be Honorary Officer Of Order Of Canada

AZNAVOUR TO BE HONORARY OFFICER OF ORDER OF CANADA

Windsor Star
Ontario
July 5, 2008 Saturday

Legendary French singer Charles Aznavour is being named an honorary
officer of the Order of Canada, an appointment given to non-Canadians.

Gov. Gen. Michaelle Jean will present the award today at her official
residence at the Citadelle of Quebec, the day before Aznavour is
scheduled to perform as part of Quebec City’s 400th anniversary
celebrations.

Aznavour, 84, was born in Paris to Armenian immigrants and began
performing as a boy. Known as the Frank Sinatra of France, he was
discovered by Edith Piaf and has recorded some 1,000 songs in a
career spanning 60 years. He has also appeared in more than 60 movies,
including Francois Truffaut’s Shoot the Piano Player (1960).

RA FM: Armenian-Czech Relations Develop Successfully

RA FM: ARMENIAN-CZECH RELATIONS DEVELOP SUCCESSFULLY

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.07.2008 12:13 GMT+04:00

The Armenian-Czech relations are developing successfully in a bilateral
format and in the framework of EU and ENP, Armenia’s Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian said at a joint news conference with his Czech
counterpart Karel Schwarzenberg.

"We have signed an agreement on cancellation of double taxation
of property and income and a memorandum on cooperation between the
Armenian and Czech Foreign Ministries," Mr. Nalbandian said.

"Czechia will assume the EU rotating presidency in 2009 and I am
hopeful that it will help strengthening of relations between our
countries. Armenia established a diplomatic outpost in Prague two years
ago and we expect Czech Embassy to open in Yerevan soon," he added.

For his part, Minister Schwarzenberg voiced hope that his first visit
will help to expand cooperation. "It’s my first visit to Armenia and I
am glad to be the first Czech Foreign Minister to be in your country,"
he said.

Touching on the Karabakh conflict, the Czech Minister said, "We stand
for a peaceful resolution of the conflict. But, under international
agreements, Czechia supports territorial integrity of states."

Price decrease follows price increase

Panorama.am

19:26 05/07/2008

PRICE DECREASE FOLLOWS PRICE INCREASE

In January-May of 2008 Armenian purchasing market registered 7.4%
price increase and in June 0.5% price decrease has been
fixed. According to the Armenian Statistic Service the price of food,
including alcoholic drinks and cigarette decreased by 1.3% and the
price of other products and service increased by 1.3% and 0.1%.

Compared with the previous year, in June 2008 7.3% price increase has
been fixed in consuming market, and compared with May 2008 1.4% price
increase is fixed.

Source: Panorama.am