Gift Contest Started

GIFT CONTEST STARTED

KarabakhOpen
13-05-2008 11:31:23

On May 12 the fourth annual pan-Armenian song contest Gift
started. Singers from Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia, Georgia, Russia,
Ukraine and Poland participate in the contest this year.

On May 12 Speaker Ashot Ghulyan met with the participants of
the context and the director of Yerevan Theater of Song Arthur
Grigoryan. The NKR honorary consul of culture Zoya Shakaryan
participated in the meeting.

On May 13 the songs will be in Armenian, on May 14 in some other
language, on May 15 there will be a contest of original performance
of a song. The ceremony of awards is on May 16.

The sponsors of the contest are benefactors Vahe and Veronique
Karapetian from the United States. The partner of the contest is
Antares Publishing House.

630 Family Doctors, Nurses Necessary For Optimal Medical Services In

630 FAMILY DOCTORS, NURSES NECESSARY FOR OPTIMAL MEDICAL SERVICES IN YEREVAN

ARKA
May 12, 2008

YEREVAN, May 12. /ARKA/. Yerevan’s outpatient treatment system needs
some 630 family doctors and nurses to render optimal medical services
to population, said Armen Sogoyan, head of the healthcare and social
welfare department, Yerevan Municipality.

The institute of family doctors is expected to be introduced by 2009,
the Yerevan Municipality reports.

For the past three years, 344 outpatient physicians and 205 nurses
have been retrained as family medical staff in Yerevan, Sogoyan said.

At present, 42 physicians and 43 nurses attend retraining courses. Some
427 family doctors and 255 nurses will work both in independent groups
as family doctors and individually.

The World Bank (WB) has allocated $20mln for the establishment of
the institute of family doctors in Armenia. As part of the WB credit
program, Surb Grigor Lusavorich (St. Gregory the Illuminator) and
Surb Astvatsamayr (St. Mother of God) hospitals will be modernized
in Yerevan.

BEIRUT: Opposition gunmen seize control of Hariri’s media empire

The Daily Star, Lebanon
May 10 2008

Opposition gunmen seize control of Hariri’s media empire
By Agence France Presse (AFP)

Saturday, May 10, 2008

BEIRUT: Militants allied with the opposition on Friday forced the
shutdown of all media operations belonging to the family of majority
leader and billionaire tycoon Saad Hariri.

The closure – which came as opposition fighters routed Sunni loyalists
of the government – concerned one satellite news channel, two regular
television stations, a newspaper and a radio station.

The media empire which was launched by Hariri’s father, Rafik Hariri,
the billionaire former prime minister who was assassinated in February
2005 in a massive Beirut seafront car bombing. The slain former Prime
Minister rose from humble beginnings to command an empire that
included flagship construction company Saudi-Oger, real estate
developer Solidere, banks and other companies – turning everything he
touched into gold.

His business activities and his rise as an influential Middle East
political leader often won the elder Hariri comparisons with Italy’s
billionaire politician Silvio Berslusconi who also sits atop a huge
business and media empire.

Future Television was launched in February 1993 at the height of
Lebanon’s post-war reconstruction frenzy, when Hariri was also busy in
multi-billion-dollar ventures to rebuild Beirut’s war-devastated city
center.

The guns of the 1975-1990 Civil War had gone silent only three years
earlier and the new high-tech television offered a wide scope of
family programmes, variety shows as well as news.

In 1994 Future Television launched a trial satellite broadcasting –
Future International – that also proved very popular with Arab
audiences.

In less than a year, Future International grew to become one of the
leading Arab satellite stations gathering the highest audience ratings
in the Gulf, Egypt and the Levant," according to Future Television Web
site.

"Like Future Television, Future International is a family TV that
promotes Lebanon as a place for reconstruction, civilization,
prosperity, coexistence, fun and good times."

Future Television restructured its ownership in 1996 and "now has
around 90 new shareholders, all from the Lebanese business, social and
media elite."

That same year it set up a Web site on the Internet, the first by a
Lebanese television.

The television expanded yet again in December 2007 when it launched
Future News, a 24/hour, which broadcasts news in Turkish and Armenian
as well as Arabic, English and French.

The Hariri family also moved into radio in February 1995, setting up
Radio Orient which began broadcasting from Beirut before moving onto a
new base in Paris.

Like the television, Radio Orient focuses on news from and about the
Arab world, and Lebanon in particular, broadcasting in English and
French as well as Arabic.

Al-Mustaqbal newspaper was also founded in 1995 and continues to serve
as the mouthpiece of Hariri’s Future movement. – AFP

Shushi to celebrate its 15th anniversary with a Gala Dinner Dance

AZG Armenian Daily #088, 09/05/2008

Culture, Social

SHUSHI TO CELEBRATE ITS 15TH ANNIVERSARY WITH A GALA DINNER DANCE

With great excitement, The Shushi Armenian Dance Ensemble will
celebrate its 15th Anniversary with a Gala Dinner Dance, on Friday,
May 30, 2008, at St. Vartan Cathedral, NYC. In addition, plans for a
celebratory trip, aboard the Armenian Heritage Cruise, are also well
underway, for January, 2008. These eagerly anticipated events mark
Shushi’s continued success in perpetuating the dance of our Armenian
culture, for the preservation of the Armenian heritage for future
generations, along with its success in its extensive exposure of
Armenian dance and music, to non-Armenian audiences. To date, the
ensemble has had the opportunity to perform in numerous prestigious
cultural events in New York, New Jersey, Boston, California,
Philadelphia, and Washington, DC, as well as in Canada, Armenia and
Karabagh.

Shushi, founded in 1992, by Seta Paskalian-Kantardjian, the group’s
artistic director and choreographer, began with a few members, and has
evolved, today, into a group of 110 young (89 female, and 21 male)
dancers. The celebration of Shushi’s anniversary is truly a
celebration of the extraordinary accomplishments of Seta
Paskalian-Kantardjian who, through countless hours of her volunteered
time over the past fifteen years, continues to demonstrate her
tremendous dedication to our Armenian youth, and relentless drive to
enable them to maintain their heritage and identity.

Likewise, Shushi will be greatly honored by the attendance of
Mr. Vartan Abdo, as keynote speaker, at their May 30 Gala. Mr. Abdo is
the founder/director of the Armenian Radio Hour of NJ. He was born in
Jaffa, Israel, and moved to the US, in 1973, to further his
studies. He studied at Seton Hall University, majoring in
Mathematics. He is a full time associate professor of
Mathematics/Statistics at Union County College, Cranford, NJ and an
adjunct professor of mathematics at Seton Hall University, South
Orange, NJ. He has served the church as an ordained deacon and is
active in numerous Armenian organizations. His work within the
community was recognized by a `Gontag’ from His Holiness Karekin
II. He is married to Adrine Abdo, and lives in South Orange, NJ.

Mr. Abdo is a pioneer in our Armenian community, for his outstanding
work, over the past 30 years, in enlightening and informing our
community of relevant historical and current events, via the Armenian
Radio Hour of NJ. He has faithfully recognized and supported the
Armenian youth, including Shushi, since its inception.

We sincerely hope that you will join Shushi at its celebratory gala on
Fri, May 30, 2008 (cocktail hour at 7:30pm, dinner and program,
featuring Shushi dancers, 8:30 pm), and support its fundraising
efforts, including the group’s monumental opportunity to perform at
the Opera House in Armenia, on July 3, 2008.

For reservations: Marie Zokian (201)745-8850

By Karen Saraydarian-Arslanian

Armenian foreign minister has first meeting with French counterpart

ARMENPRESS

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER HAS FIRST MEETING WITH
FRENCH COUNTERPART

YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenian foreign
minister Edward Nalbandian had May 5 his first
official meeting with French opposite number, Bernard
Kouchner, in Paris, which the foreign ministry in
Yerevan said proceeded in `a warm atmosphere.’
Kouchner was said to congratulate Nalbandian on his
appointment as foreign minister of Armenia and
commended his contribution to depending of French
Armenian partnership. He also expressed confidence
that Edward Nalbandian as foreign minister will
continue to help deepen French-Armenian relationships.
Both ministers emphasized dialogue and mutual
understanding between leaders of France and Armenia.
They expressed readiness to make every effort to
ensure close cooperation between the two nations.
Edward Nalbandian spoke about key priorities of the
new coalition Armenian government formed after the
presidential election. He also conveyed the opinions
of Armenia’s leadership on regional issues and ways to
settle its conflicts.
Nalbandian reconfirmed Armenia’s willingness to
continue talks over the Nagorno-Karabakh issue based n
a package of proposals designed by the OSCE Minsk
Group. He appreciated highly the cochairmen’s work.
Bernard Kouchner said France will continue to
support all efforts of the Minsk Group. He said France
assumes EU’s chairmanship in July and in this context
he referred to Armenia-EU partnership.
Speaking later to journalists Edward Nalbandian
said there is a clear demand now to reaffirm that
there is no alternative to the peaceful settlement of
the conflict. He said he will discuss this with Azeri
counterpart Elmar Mamedyarov when he meets with in
Strasbourg.

Tigran Sarkisian Continues To Receive Congratulatory Messages

TIGRAN SARKISIAN CONTINUES TO RECEIVE CONGRATULATORY MESSAGES

ARMENPRESS
May 4, 2008

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS: The government press office said prime
minister Tigran Sarkisian continues to receive congratulatory message
on the occasion of his appointment.

It said messages of congratulations arrived from prime minister of
Belarus Sergey Sidorsky, prime minister of South Korea Han Sin Soon,
prime minister of the People’s Republic of North Korea Kim En Ir,
prime minister or Vietnam Nguen Tan Zung and Thai prime minister
Samak Sundaravej.

The government press office said also congratulator messages to Tigran
Sarkisian were sent by presidents of Central Banks of Bulgaria and
Kazakhstan.

Armenia Welcomes Iran’s Balanced Policy To Nagorno-Karabakh Peace Pr

ARMENIA WELCOMES IRAN’S BALANCED POLICY TO NAGORNO-KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS

ARKA
May 4, 2008

YEREVAN, May 4. /ARKA/. Armenia welcomes Iran’s balanced policy to
the Karabakh issue, RA President Serge Sargsian said at his meeting
with Iranian Ambassador to Armenia Seyed Ali Saghaeyan.

Sargsian assured the Ambassador that Armenia is for A peaceful
settlement of the Karabakh conflict in conformity with international
law and nations’ right to self-determination, the RA President’s
press service reports.

Ambassador Saghaeyan stressed that Iran appreciates Armenia’s
restrained response to Azerbaijan’s bellicose statements.

The sides shared the opinion that the countries should join their
efforts to achieve stability and secutiry in the unstable region.

Press Freedom In Turkey

PRESS FREEDOM IN TURKEY

EuropeNews, Denmark

April 30 2008

With heightened polarization regarding issues of secularism,
nationalism, and separatism, reform efforts toward enhanced freedom of
expression stalled in 2007. The restrictive measures of the new Turkish
penal code, which came into force in June 2005, continued to overshadow
and undermine positive reforms achieved in the country’s effort to meet
European Union (EU) membership requirements, including a new Press Law
in 2004 that replaced prison sentences with fines. The EU accession
process and perceptions that the ruling Justice and Development Party
intends to undermine the country’s secular traditions have prompted
a nationalist movement that is driving a legalistic crackdown on free
expression by journalists and writers.

Status: Partly Free

Legal Environment: 20

Political Environment: 20

Economic Environment: 11

Total Score: 51

Constitutional provisions for freedom of the press and of expression
exist but are matched with provisions that restrict it and, in
practice, are only partially upheld. According to Bianet, a Turkish
press freedom organization, the number of prosecuted journalists,
publishers, and activists dropped to 254 in 2007 from 293 in 2006
(after a dramatic jump from 157 in 2005).

Yet the same organization reports that 55 individuals were tried over
the year under the penal code’s especially controversial Article 301
alone. This provision allows for prison terms of six months to three
years for "the denigration of Turkishness" and has been used to charge
journalists for crimes such as stating that genocide was committed
against the Armenians in 1915, discussing the division of Cyprus,
or writing critically on the security forces.

Book publishers, translators, and intellectuals have also faced
prosecution for "insulting Turkish identity." In January, Hrant
Dink–editor-in-chief of the Armenian weekly Agos, who was prosecuted
for a second time under Article 301 in July 2006 for confirming his
recognition of Armenian genocide allegations–was the victim of a
carefully plotted assassination carried out by a 17 year old. Charges
against Dink under Article 301 were subsequently dropped, but both
his son and the owner of Agos were convicted on the same charges for
the same case in October.

In November, two policemen were charged with knowing about plans
to kill Dink and failing to report it; the trials of all 19 people
charged in connection with the murder were ongoing at year’s end.

Article 277 of the penal code was invoked in 2007 to charge 14 people
with "attempting to influence court decisions." Article 216 penalizes
"inflaming hatred and hostility among peoples" and is most frequently
used against journalists who write about the Kurdish population or
are perceived to degrade the armed forces.

23 people were charged on this count in 2007 and, in May 2007, a court
of appeal overturned the prior acquittal of two professors charged
under this article in 2005 for a report in which they discussed the
term "citizenship of Turkey" as it relates to minorities, a concept
being debated in preparation for a new "civil" constitution. The
court ruled that the discussion constituted a "social danger" and more
specifically, "… a danger to the unitary state and the indivisibility
of the nation." Nationalist lawyers groups, such as the Great Lawyers’
Union, credited by many human rights groups for leading the push for
prosecutions, continued to bring insult suits over the year.

Despite a September 2006 declaration of commitment by Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan to revise Article 301 and heightened pressure
from international press freedom watchdog groups to abolish it
following Dink’s murder, no progress was made by year’s end; many
believe the government dropped the issue in the context of election
concerns. Erdogan himself continued to launch a number of defamation
suits against members of the media; in October, newly elected President
Abdullah Gul promised changes in the period ahead.

Convictions against journalists are made much less frequently than
are prosecutions, but trials are time-consuming and expensive. A
total of six convictions were made for charges under Article 301 in
2007 (nine were acquitted). In a positive development, the Supreme
Court of Appeals confirmed a lower court’s prior decision to drop
the Article 301 case against Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk in August.

While Bianet also reports that the number of threats and attacks on the
press increased in 2007, threats and harassment remain significantly
more prevalent than acts of violence. The Dink assassination marked
the culmination of a deliberate plot believed to be developed by
nationalist forces, or the "deep state"–a vague network involving
members of the state bureaucracy, military and intelligence apparatus.

It was not a popular or commonplace crime, and journalists’ work is
not regularly compromised by fears of violence. Instability in the
southeastern part of the country does infringe upon journalists’
freedom to work, however.

In April, three employees of a Christian publishing house in the
Malatya province of southeastern Turkey were brutally murdered and
a newspaper owner was killed in the southeastern province of Van
in September, though no evidence proved the murder to be related to
freedom of the press. The issue of police violence against journalists
was raised by the abduction, assault, and death threats against
journalist Sinan Tekpetek by police in Istanbul in late July.

June 2006 amendments to the Antiterror Law allow for imprisoning
journalists for up to three years for the dissemination of statements
and propaganda by terrorist organizations. The new legislation raises
concerns that the broad definition of terrorism could allow for
arbitrary prosecutions, particularly for members of the pro-Kurdish
press who are sometimes charged with collaborating with the Kurdish
Workers Party (PKK). According to Bianet, 83 people were charged in
cases of "terrorism" over the year.

The Supreme Council of Radio and Television, whose members are elected
by the Parliament, has the authority to sanction broadcasters if they
are not in compliance with the law or its expansive broadcasting
principles. It is frequently subject to political pressure. Some
editors and journalists practice self-censorship out of fear of
violating legal restrictions, and Turkish press freedom advocates
contend that self-censorship has become more prevalent as a result
of the onslaught of prosecutions under the new penal code.

Owner of the weekly Nokta magazine stopped its publication in April
after the magazine’s investigative articles on the military prompted
a police raid on its offices. Charged with spreading PKK propaganda
under the Anti-Terrorism Law, the Gundem newspaper was suspended for
15-30 day periods four times over the year. Broadcasting bans were
reportedly issued against a few stations during the pre-election
period, and the government censored coverage of PKK attacks in
southeastern Turkey in October.

Media are highly concentrated in four major conglomerates, which
subtly pressure their editors and journalists to refrain from reporting
that will harm their business interests. This could include avoiding
criticism of the government or potential advertisers, both of which
could have contracts with other arms of the companies.

Turkey’s broadcast media are well developed, with hundreds of
private television channels, including cable and satellite as well
as commercial radio stations.

State television and radio provide limited broadcasting in minority
languages, now including four local radio and television stations in
Kurdish. This marks a major step forward for freedom of expression,
although critics say that the broadcasts are too restricted and quality
is poor. The quality of Turkish media is low with a greater prevalence
of columns and opinion articles than pure news, but independent
domestic and foreign print media are able to provide diverse views,
including criticism of the government and its policies. An estimated
22.5 percent of the Turkish population accessed the internet in 2007.

The video-sharing web site, YouTube was blocked in March and again in
September for airing videos perceived to insult government leaders and
founder of the Turkish republic, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. [Editors note:
Turkey also blocked WordPress.]

http://europenews.dk/en/node/9741

8.8 Percent Economic Growth In 2007

8.8 PERCENT ECONOMIC GROWTH IN 2007

KarabakhOpen
30-04-2008 11:43:34

On April 29 the NKR National Assembly kicked off the discussion of
the annual report on the performance of the state budget in 2007.

The authorized representative of the government Nver Baghdasaryan,
the deputy minister of finance, said in 2007 the economic growth
was 8.8 percent, and the GDP totaled 70.8 billion drams. The volume
of production totaled 22.4 billion drams, which is up by 6.4 percent
compared with 2006, the volume of agricultural production totaled 23.8
billion dram, and the volume of construction totaled 20.8 billion drams
(growth 18.2 percent).

The representative of the government read out the information that
last year 1500 jobs were created, mostly in education, production
and governance. The average salary was 68,610 drams. People’s income
increased by 19.3 percent and expenses increased by 18.4 percent
compared with 2006.

Member of Parliament Benik Bakshiyan was interested in the annual
flow of financial means to Karabakh. The deputy minister said the
real volume should not be judged by remittances. The member of
parliament asked to present at least the bank information. However,
Nver Baghdasaryan did not utter any number because he did not know.

The report on budget performance will be discussed till May 7 by all
the committees and factions.

Assets Of VTB Bank (Armenia) Grow 22.7% Over 1st Q To AMD 84.9bln

ASSETS OF VTB BANK (ARMENIA) GROW 22.7% OVER 1ST Q TO AMD 84.9BLN

ARKA
April 30, 2008

YEREVAN, April 29. /ARKA/. Assets of VTB Bank (Armenia) has grown
22.7% over the first quarter to AMD 84.9bln, Valery Ovsyannikov,
general director and chairman of the directorial board of the bank,
said on Tuesday.

"The bank’s credit portfolio reached AMD 45.1 billion after growing
12% over the quarter and liabilities totaled AMD 63.5 billion after
rising 31%", he said.

Ovsyannikov said that the bank ranked seventh to ninth on various
indicators in the previous year. Shareholders were unhappy about such
a result.

However, later that year and earlier this year the bank firmly occupied
the 4th position on assets, credit portfolio and liabilities.

Ovsyannikov said if things keeps running this way, the bank will be
among three leaders by late 2008.

VTB Bank Armenia (former Armenian Savings Bank) was established
in 1923.

Russian VTB Bank is the only shareholder of VTB Bank Armenia.

The bank’s assets totaled AMD 69.1 billion, credit portfolio AMD 40.2
billion and liabilities AMD 48.4 billion.

VTB Bank Armenia has 89 branches in Armenia, provinces and
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. ($1 = AMD 308.17).