Real Incomes Of Armenian Population Increase By 12.7% In January-Feb

REAL INCOMES OF ARMENIAN POPULATION INCREASE BY 12.7% IN JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2007 ON SAME PERIOD OF LAST YEAR

Noyan Tapan
Apr 05 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, NOYAN TAPAN. In January-February 2007, monetary
incomes of the Armenian population made 229 bln 35 mln drams (about
636.5 mln USD), while monetary expenditures – 244 bln 124.2 mln
drams. According to the RA National Statistical Service, their growth
on the same months of 2006 made 18.8% and 19.4% respectively.

Real monetary incomes of the population (incomes less compulsory
payments, taking into account changes in the consumer price indices)
increased by 12.7% in January-February 2007 on the same months of 2006.

In January 2007, the average nominal monthly salary exceeded 3.4fold
the minumim salary – against 3.6fold in 2006. The highest salaries were
in the sectors of financial activity (185,496 drams), mining industry
(140,384 drams), and production and distribution of electricity,
gas and water (105,292 drams).

Palm Sunday in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
April 4, 2007

Palm Sunday in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin

The triumphal entry of our Lord Jesus Christ into Jerusalem is not only a
historic event, but also an opportunity for festive commemoration every year
on the last Sunday before Easter.  This year, Palm Sunday was celebrated
throughout the world and in all Armenian Churches on April 1.  In the Mother
See of Holy Etchmiadzin, His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All
Armenians, continued the tradition of blessing the children and presided
during a number of services focused on the youth.

In the Cathedral of All Armenians – Holy Etchmiadzin, the festive songs and
psalms of the Morning Service began early in the day.  At mid-morning, His
Holiness presided and offered the `Andastan’ service in the courtyard of the
Mother Cathedral, blessing the four corners of the earth and the willow
branches which were to be distributed to the faithful throughout the course
of the day.  Surrounded by hundreds of children, His Holiness blessed them
all, congratulating them and presenting them with gifts.

Prior to the commencement of the Divine Liturgy, approximately 250 young
boys and girls participated in a chalk-art competition in the courtyard of
Holy Etchmiadzin.  Rev. Fr. Khad Ghazarian, Director of the Youth Centers
jointly sponsored by the Mother See and AGBU, organized the annual event
which displayed the artistic talents of the children.  In the festive
atmosphere of music and singing, the young artists covered the stone
pavement with their colorful national and church themed drawings.  Similar
competitions were organized throughout the capital city of Yerevan as well.

As the Divine Liturgy commenced, many high-ranking state officials, guests
from abroad and thousands of faithful greeted the pontifical procession
entering into the cathedral with their willow branches and colorful
flowers.  The liturgy was celebrated by His Grace Bishop Ararat Kaltakjian,
Grand Sacristan of the Mother See.

At the conclusion of the service, the Pontiff of All Armenians offered a
prayer for blessing the children, extending to them his fatherly love and
special message.  Thousands of families, with children young and old,
continued to visit Holy Etchmiadzin throughout the day, bringing with them
willow branches, flowers, candles and their heartfelt prayers in celebration
of the feast.

www.armenianchurch.org

Policeman Kills An Armenian In Samtskhe Javakhk

POLICEMAN KILLS AN ARMENIAN IN SAMTSKHE JAVAKHK

ArmRadio.am
03.04.2007 15:12

Paata Chaviashvili, a patrol officer in Samtskhe Javakhk, shot killed
local resident Mikhael Kirakosyan. According to the data of the Imedi
TV the accident took place yesterday at about 4 p.m. when Kirakosyan
was riding from Borzhomi to Akhaltskha. The policeman opened fire at
him after the motorcyclist refused to stop.

The doctor on duty in Akhaltskha hospital David Jimchvelidze said
Kirakosyan was wounded in the left of his back. The exact reason of
the death will be determined through an examination. A criminal case
has been launched at the District Prosecutor’s Office of Samtskhe
Javakhk. The criminal has confessed his guilt.

The wife of the killed, Svetlana Amirkhanyan, demands to punish the
patrol officer to responsibility.

Dogs Don’t Bark For The GOP

DOGS DON’T BARK FOR THE GOP
By Ian Williams

AZG Armenian Daily
03/04/2007

Sherlock Holmes aficionados will remember the story about the dog that
did not bark. It sprang to mind this week as I strained to hear the
deafening sound of silence from the usual suspects – the Murdoch/Fox
hunters – who are so well trained to bay at the first hint of a UN
corruption story.

Consider. A senior official of a UN agency that Washington banned for
many years because of its alleged corruption and anti-American bias has
just resigned, shortly before the auditors closed in with a devastating
report. The official is a former legislator from the party currently
running his government back home – and currently mired in nepotism
and corruption scandals. Nominated by his President, once ensconced
in the agency’s offices, the official sliced and diced consultancy
contracts into segments smaller than $100,000 so that he could award
them on a no-bid basis to an influential company back home. To do so,
he used funds totaling over $2m earmarked to combat illiteracy in
Africa, and even used half a million at one point for a sycophantic
reception in honour of the spouse of the president who nominated
him. These charges were made in the French press three months ago,
and have been circulating among the knowledgeable ever since – even
though those who raised questions about the official found themselves
transferred from Paris to plum postings like Zimbabwe.

Wow. Are the Foxes hunting? Is the Wall Street Journal op-ed page
about to declare war on someone and demand US withdrawal from the UN?

No. The sound of silence is deafening. Why?

Elementary, my dear Watson.

The official concerned is former American Republican Congressman Peter
Smith, nominated by President George W Bush to go to UNESCO and reform
the organization after 19 years of American boycott. UNESCO is based
in Paris, and the auditors are those used by the French government.

The company that was the beneficiary of Smith’s Halliburtonesque
contracting practices was Navigant, a big Washington company whose
website, you will notice, does not claim any educational expertise
at all.

UNESCO critics claim he transferred over $200,000 from literacy
projects in Mauritania, Iraq and Palestine to bankroll the conference
hosted by Laura Bush and the White House in September last year,
where Ms Bush was feted as the Honorary Ambassador of the United
Nations Literacy Decade. The New York caterer was the beneficiaries
of the children’s loss.

Of course, it is possible that he is entirely innocent. But when you
consider the Oil for Food allegations, you have to wonder why some
parts of the fourth estate don’t show the same restraint before going
after foreigners, liberals and globalists of various hues.

Indeed, the relative silence is an interesting contrast to the
two-year furor over the Oil For Food programme. After hyperbolic talk
of billions of dollars improperly diverted, the scandal ended up as a
whimper, not a bang: The allegation is now that the former head of the
programme, Benon Sevan, received $160,000 over four years, which is
claimed to have come from a friend who bought oil from Saddam Hussein.

Sevan had declared it on his UN forms, saying it came from his aunt,
and denies any connection. (Of course, he is a Cypriot, and spent
a lifetime working for the UN, and had no known connection with the
GOP – so his guilt has been assumed from the beginning.)

But the silence is also reminiscent of the blanket over the $10bn
that the UN Oil for Food programme handed over to US occupation
authorities. Congressman Henry Waxman has been trying to find out what
happened – and has been quite successful in uncovering the serious
incompetence and corruption of the Americans who handled these huge
bricks of cash. His efforts have had less than one per cent of the
publicity of the unproven and frankly dubious Oil for Food scandal.

The lesson is clear. If you want to be corrupt in the UN, being an
influential Republican is as good as ticking the box for no publicity.

Tree Planting Org’d on Initiative of ARF "Nikol Aghbalian" Stu Union

TREE PLANTING ORGANIZED ON INITIATIVE OF ARF "NIKOL AGHBALIAN"
STUDENTS’ UNION

YEREVAN, APRIL 2, NOYAN TAPAN. A tree planting was organized on March
31 in the territory near the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute on the
initiative of the ARF Dashnaktsutiun "Nikol Aghbalian" students’
union. The union members planted on that day more than 100 poplars
which were given by the Hayantar (Armenian Woods) company.

In Union head Vahe Sargsian’s words, the goal of the initiative is to
pass the mystery of spring to the youth. In his words, that territory
is given meaning of new life through that tree planting.

U.S. counts on Azeri airdrome for military use

PanARMENIAN.Net

U.S. counts on Azeri airdrome for military use
31.03.2007 13:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The U.S. counts to use the Azeri airdrome if
necessary, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs Matthew Bryza told a news conference in Tbilisi.
`There are plenty of planes flying above Georgia and Azerbaijan
towards Afghanistan. Under such circumstances we want to have the
possibility to use the Azeri airdrome,’ Bryza said when asked to
comment on modernization of one of Azeri airdromes by American
specialists.

At the same time Mr Bryza said that the U.S. enjoys healthy
cooperation with Azerbaijan in the military sector and also cooperates
with Armenia in the defense sector, reports the New Region.

BAKU: Azerbaijan To Present Some Facts To UNESCO Fact-Finding Missio

AZERBAIJAN TO PRESENT SOME FACTS TO UNESCO FACT-FINDING MISSION

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
March 30 2007

"There are facts on Armenians’ archeological excavations in the
Azerbaijani region of Aghdam. We often hear Armenians’ statements
that our monuments belong to Armenia culture and architecture. We are
struggling against such cases," Culture and Tourism Minister Abulfaz
Garayev told journalists, APA reports.

The minister underlined that fighting against these negative cases
is not satisfactory.

"We express our protest to different organizations. But we have no tool
of pressure to prevent these actions in Aghdam or Western Azerbaijan,"
the minister said.

Garayev also said that necessary facts about the destruction of
cultural heritage in the Armenian-occupied Azerbaijani territories
have been gathered.

"We shall present these facts to the UNESCO’s fact-finding mission
to the region. We should prove that cultural heritage of Azerbaijani
people has been destroyed by Armenian invaders," he underscored.

CSTO PA Against Installment Of U.S. Anti-Missile Radar In Europe

CSTO PA AGAINST INSTALLMENT OF U.S. ANTI-MISSILE RADAR IN EUROPE

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.03.2007 16:51 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Parliamentary Assembly of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) is against installment of
U.S. anti-missile radar in Europe. "This decision contradicts to the
security provisions in the European region," Chairman of the Assembly
Boris Gryzlov stated to journalists in Saint Petersburg in the result
of PA’s first plenary session.

"The fact that the issue was included in the agenda of the session
confirms that all delegates are concerned over this situation
and consider necessary to adopt a corresponding statement," he
explained. "We see a certain concern not only among population of
those countries but also among people of Europe," Gryzlov stressed.

Boris Gryzlov said the commission of the Parliamentarian Assembly
is ordered to examine the issue and prepare a draft statement till
the second session of CSTO PA, which will be held October 2007,
ITAR-TASS reports.

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Hold A Regular Meeting

OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS HOLD A REGULAR MEETING

Panorama.am
21:09 29/03/2007

OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs, Yuri Merzlyakov, Matthew Bryza and
Bernard Fassier will meet in Vienna this week for a regular
discussion. Vladimir Karapetyan, Armenian foreign ministry press
secretary, told Regnum agency Matthew Bryza, who took part in the prime
minister’s funeral yesterday, said he will also go to the meeting.

Anjey Kasprchik, special representative of OSCE in South Caucasus,
will be present during the discussion.

The co-chairs will discuss the current pace of conflict regulation and
plan the meeting between Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign minister. The
meeting between Vartan Oskanyan and Elmar Mamediarov is expected
late April.

Balancing The Powers

BALANCING THE POWERS
by Marina Kozlova

Transitions Online, Czech Republic
March 29 2007

Recent talks with Russia and the United States may yet yield surprising
results for Uzbekistan.

TASHKENT, Uzbekistan | Two state visits to Uzbekistan in March
highlighted the country’s complex relations with its economic and
security partners – and those who would like to be.

The trip by U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Evan Feigenbaum,
the State Department’s top official in charge of Central Asia, was
long and rather strange. For six days, Feigenbaum held meetings with a
wide range of government officials, members of the business community,
and civil society representatives, but he was not received by either
the Uzbek president or the prime minister, and no agreements were
signed during the visit.

Asked whether his visit was evidence of improving U.S.-Uzbek relations,
Feigenbaum told reporters in Tashkent on 2 March, "I do not think my
visit in itself symbolizes anything."

A few days later, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov arrived in
Tashkent and met with President Islam Karimov and Prime Minister
Shavkat Mirziyoev. "We … confirmed our mutual commitment to
strengthen partnership, strategic, and alliance relations," he told
journalists. The two sides signed an agreement to establish a joint
venture to repair helicopters that is planned to start later this year,
with Russian companies holding at least 51 percent of the shares in
the venture.

But even if this looked like relations with Russia were on the
upswing while those with the United States are frozen in place,
quite the opposite seems to be the case.

Feigenbaum’s visit appears to have strengthened Uzbekistan’s hand
in dealing with Moscow. Tashkent made it known that it was unhappy
with the time frame and the amounts invested in two of the three
natural-gas projects Russian energy giant Gazprom is implementing
in the country. Gazprom has so far invested just $30 million of an
expected investment figure of $300 million. That this is due to delays
in granting Gazprom the development licenses for new gas deposits,
which were given only in late December, doesn’t seem to interest
the Uzbeks.

According to unofficial information, Uzbek officials now threaten to
develop gas export routes that would bypass Russia and link Uzbekistan
directly with some of its markets.

TASHKENT-MOSCOW TENSIONS

Both sides seem to be unhappy with the current state of relations.

Russian officials quoted by the local media said Russia was unhappy
that Uzbekistan had exported 67,000 cars to Russia in 2006 while
only some 3,500 went in the other direction. Russia’s deputy minister
for economic development and trade, Andrei Sharonov, also said that
Russian capital faced problems with convertibility and the repatriation
of profits.

For its part, Uzbekistan is displeased with a quota introduced by
Moscow on migrant workers – according to Russian media, some 1.5
million illegal Uzbek migrants now work in Russia. But Russia is
unlikely to change its policies just because of Uzbek concerns.

Moscow’s support of Uzbekistan after the brutal suppression of an
uprising in the town of Andijan in May 2005, where scores were
killed by troops firing on demonstrators, has pulled Uzbekistan
closer to Russia. When the government ignored numerous calls by
inter-governmental bodies and international human rights organizations
for an independent, international investigation into the Andijan
massacre, the country’s relations with the United States and other
Western states soured while Russia stood by its side.

In late 2005, both states signed a security pact that created a
military alliance and allowed each country to intervene if the other
were the victim of aggression by a third state. The agreement also
allows the use by either party of the other’s military facilities.

Uzbekistan’s ties with Russia were also strengthened when Uzbekistan
in 2006 joined the Eurasian Economic Community comprising Russia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan, and rejoined the
Collective Security Treaty Organization, a grouping of the same member
states and Armenia, from which it withdrew in 1999.

GAS HOLDS THE KEY

But at the center of Uzbekistan’s relations with the outside world
may well be energy.

The country sits on massive reserves of natural gas, and annually
produces 60 billion cubic meters of gas. Five billion cubic meters
is exported to Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan, and even more
to Russia: 9 billion cubic meters in 2006 and an expected 13 billion
cubic meters this year. (Most of the gas Uzbekistan produces goes to
domestic consumption.)

Given demand for cheap energy on world markets, Uzbekistan may well
feel that the virtual stranglehold Russia has on Uzbek exports
is depriving Tashkent of much-needed revenue and restricting its
foreign-policy options.

It is by no means clear that Feigenbaum promised Tashkent help with
alternative routes to bypass Russia, thereby allowing Uzbekistan more
control over who it sells to and at what price. But Feigenbaum had
this to say during his 2 March news conference: "For the last 200
years, Central Asia has been oriented toward the north and west. We
respect that and we acknowledge it. But the most dynamic economies
in the world today are to the east and south of Central Asia, in the
Pacific Rim and in the areas around India. One thing we hope to do
is to help create economic opportunity by working with Central Asian
countries to forge links to the global economy, including South Asia."

In a speech in Washington two weeks earlier, Feigenbaum said: "What
we want to do is to help Central Asians forge some new connections:
to trade and investment opportunities, cross-border energy projects,
additional deep-water ports, and the enormous possibilities of the
global market."

As if on cue, Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, who visited
Tashkent later in March, told officials that his country wished to
buy Uzbek natural gas and electricity.

There are signs that one potential huge gas customer may be moving
toward closer ties with Uzbekistan. In May, the European Union is due
to consider lifting the mild sanctions it imposed to punish Tashkent
for its intransigence over Andijan.

In November, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told
journalists in Bukhara, "There is no reason to stick to the sanctions
or to stick to them in the present form."

In late February, the official newspaper Pravda Vostoka ran an
article by Rafik Saifulin, a political scientist from Tashkent,
praising recent attempts at dialogue between Uzbekistan and the EU,
United States, and Japan. "It is necessary to think jointly about
ways to create new, promising opportunities for cooperation and to
modernize traditional relations [with world powers]," Saifulin wrote.

BACK TO RUSSIA?

Some believe, however, that Uzbekistan’s foreign relations are not
just a matter of laying a few pipes. The government’s willingness to
work with Western companies also took a dive as Tashkent upped its
pressure on Western organizations of all kinds over the past two years.

Gas deliveries to China could be hampered by mountainous terrain
while deliveries to Pakistan would be affected by instability in
Afghanistan. There have been suggestions Uzbekistan could supply
Europe through proposed new westbound pipelines. Here too the potential
pitfalls are many. Iran’s mixed reputation makes a route across that
country liable to political uncertainty, while Uzbek participation
in the U.S.-backed trans-Caspian Sea pipe could be hampered by poor
relations with Turkmenistan, underscored by Karimov’s failure to
attend the funeral of Turkmen president Saparmurat Niyazov in December.

"Uzbekistan has little choice but to stay close to Russia," Dosym
Satpayev, director of the Assessment Risks Group, a non-profit research
organization based in Almaty, Kazakhstan, told TOL.

And even if Karimov turns to the West again, there is no guarantee
that Western investors will return to Uzbekistan. Karimov needs the
West so that he will not be considered a dictator and Uzbekistan will
be taken as a civilized state, the analyst said, similar to successful
Kazakhstan. In addition, he said, Karimov feels "regional jealousy"
when he looks at his more prosperous neighbor, Kazakhstan.

On top of that, Russia recently reminded Uzbekistan of its debt of
some $700 million, which Tashkent has not serviced since 1998.

Cutting ties with Russia may yet prove harder than the Uzbek government
may hope.

Marina Kozlova is a journalist based in Tashkent.