Serge Sargsyan. "Compete In Compliance With Your Capacities"

SERGE SARGSYAN. "COMPETE IN COMPLIANCE WITH YOUR CAPACITIES"

A1+
[08:40 pm] 12 September, 2007

"Heydar Aliev’s wishes did not come true",- announced the RA Prime
Minister at the NA today. He reminded Aliev’s promise to equalize
Azerbaijan’s 2008 military budget with the RA whole budget. The
2008 RA budget, according to Serge Sargsyan, will be in 2,5 milliard
dollars. While Azerbaijan’s military budget in 2008 will be 1 milliard
dollars. "That means that Aliev’s wish did not come true".

The RA military budget will be 400 million dollars as was the whole
RA budget in 1998. Answering to the question of the representative of
"Orinats Yerkir" party related to the developing economy of Azerbaijan
due to oil and the possible threat on Nagorno-Karabakh, Serge Sargsyan
said: "Nothing threatens Nagorno-Karabakh’s safety". He also informed
that no developments were registered in Karabakh conflict settlement
process.

In his inquiry, Mher Shahgeldyan, a deputy used the phrase "the society
is seriously concerned with Karabakh problem". "I do not agree with
you since there are political powers, parties and individuals who
do not care of Karabakh, and will be happy if the war restarts and
we fail in it", said the Prime Minister. Later the journalists tried
to find out who Serge Sargsyan meant: "You know better, than I do",
replied the Prime Minister.

The Prime Minister answered to the question of the opposition himself
since they were of political character. He answered to the question
of Larisa Alaverdyan referring those citizens who where deprived
of their properties for the state needs and noticed that everything
needed was done to solve that problem and advised Mrs Alaverdyan not
to follow mass media, but meet citizens.

The Prime Minister was annoyed by the question of the representative
of "Heritage" party Styopa Safaryan, regarding the number 19 polling
station. When during pre-election period in Talin the "Republican
Party of Armenia" demanded to vote for Khachik Manukyan.

"Why don’t you compete in compliance with your capacities? Do you
enjoy talking about your failure?", said Serge Sargsyan and advised to
forget about post-election processes. Safaryan noted that he talked
about pre-election processes. "If you had noticed fraud cases, you
would have applied to court", said Serge Sargsyan and added that the
opposition representative agreed with the decisions of the Central
Electoral Commission.

NGO Stages Olympics Campaign To Help End Darfur Genocide

NGO STAGES OLYMPICS CAMPAIGN TO HELP END DARFUR GENOCIDE
By Howard Lesser

Washington, DC
12 September 2007

With China in an unrivaled position to influence Sudan to facilitate
an end to the genocide campaign in Darfur, various groups are posing
challenges for Beijing to boost its prestige as the host of next
summer’s Olympic games. The newly formed Olympic Dream for Darfur
campaign questions how China can uphold its international image as
Olympics host, while extending political cover and economic support
to help Sudan finance militia attacks against thousands of its own
citizens. To get China to sway Khartoum to end the violence, the
group’s director Jill Savitt says that engagement – not an Olympics
boycott – is the right approach.

"We’re saying to China, ‘You have this unique relationship. You have
protected Khartoum up until now, watering down, blocking, vetoing
every resolution. You can’t keep doing that and host the Olympics’,"
she said.

Allied since the 1990’s, Sudan and China trade heavily, with Khartoum
selling two-thirds of its petroleum exports to Beijing.

Their commercial ties are a prime example of China’s bid to increase
investments and gain political influence in African countries. China
also sells arms to Sudan and as such is seen as having an ability
to influence the Bashir government’s conduct of the Darfur conflict,
in which more than 200-thousand civilians have been killed and more
than two million villagers have been uprooted from their homes since
2003. With next year’s Beijing games focusing world attention on the
host country’s prestige, Jill Savitt says she hopes China will work
to change Sudan’s behavior to avert challenges from foreign visitors
and critics of the Darfur genocide.

"We would hope that there is not a genocide going on a year from now
still. If there is still violence and people are unable to leave the
camps where the refugees are, and the camps are not improved, China
is going to be concerned about what all of the reporters covering
the Olympics are saying. There are athletes, former Olympians,
current professional athletes, current Olympians, who care about
Darfur and who will very respectfully raise the issue when they’re
in Beijing. There are people buying tickets as spectators who care
about Darfur. We are considering pairing up people from the Darfur
region of Sudan who live in exile and buying tickets for them to go
to the Olympics to raise these issues," Savitt points out.

Although several activist groups have credited a so-called "Genocide
Olympics" campaign with influencing China’s recent UN Security
Council vote to approve forming a hybrid UN – African Union (AU)
peacekeeping force of 26-thousand troops for Darfur, Savitt argues
that the Olympic Dream for Darfur campaign does not believe that a
2008 Olympics boycott would be effective.

"I have not heard of any non-profit organizations calling for a boycott
of the Olympics about the Darfur issue. There were some presidential
candidates in France. There are some people in the US Congress who have
talked about the issue. But there’s no movement of anyone calling for a
boycott. And that’s for a very specific reason. As the Olympics near,
the world’s attention is going to be on Beijing about the ideals of
the Olympics, and we want to tap into that attention and throw it
over to the forgotten people of Darfur," she said.

Since the group’s formation four months ago, Olympic Dream for
Darfur backers have organized their own torch lighting relay events
to carry the Olympic spirit and a message of ending the violence in
Darfur all the way to China. Actress and UN Goodwill Ambassador Mia
Farrow launched the torch relay last month from western Sudan at the
Darfur-Chad border. Jill Savitt says torch has passed through Rwanda,
which experienced its own genocide thirteen years ago. It will also
travel to Armenia, Bosnia, Berlin, Auschwitz, and Cambodia before
arriving in Hong Kong in December.

"There are miles to go before there is security in Darfur," says
Savitt. "One of the good points now is that leaders are paying
attention to the issue. On the down side, there is this notion that
talking about the problem somehow addresses it – that trying is good
enough. Well, trying is not good enough. We have one thing that
must happen for us to stop our campaign, and that is adequate and
verifiable security on the ground in Darfur. It should happen. If the
United Nations, including China, want to see that happen, we should
be able to, as an international community, intervene in the fifth
year of a genocide."

Vartan Oskanian Thanked Baroness Cox For Endeavors For NKR Internati

VARTAN OSKANIAN THANKED BARONESS COX FOR ENDEAVORS FOR NKR INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.09.2007 18:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ September 10, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanian received Baroness Caroline Cox, member of the UK House of
Lords, who led the British delegation at the inauguration of NKR
President elect Bako Sahakian.

Thanking Baroness Cox for the endeavors for the international
recognition of Nagorno Karabakh, Minister Oskanian presented the
priorities of Armenia’s foreign policy and the current stage of the
Karabakh peaceful process.

He also briefed on the Armenian-Turkish relations and the Foreign
Ministry’s approaches to the international recognition of the Armenian
Genocide.

The UK delegation included Sir David Alton, member of the House of
Lords, the RA MFA press office reported.

They may need no election fraud

Lragir, Armenia
Sept 8 2007

THEY MAY NEED NO ELECTION FRAUD

The first fall guest of the Azdak Press Club after the summer holiday
on September 8 was Davit Shahnazaryan. His speech was on the upcoming
presidential election in Armenia.

`Considering that the political system of Armenia is badly sick, it
is clear why for the society and some organizations referred to as
political parties and their leaders, struggle, political struggle
will be possible in the presidential election in inverted commas, in
the event referred to as a presidential election, only if the first
president of Armenia participates in the political struggle. It is
evident for both the forces which support and which are against
Ter-Petrosyan and the society. This is a fact, as well as it is a
fact that we have never had such a politician and statesman like
Levon Ter-Petrosyan all through our history. This is a fact which
many might dislike,’ Davit Shahnazaryan says.

He thinks it should be so and does not think the rumors on
Ter-Petrosyan’s nomination are directed from somewhere.

`There are a number of parties and people called the opposition, who
are in reality the servants of the government. In reality, I think,
besides the candidate of the government there will be pro-government
candidates as well. I think it is self-evident, and it does not
depend on whether Ter-Petrosyan will be nominated or not,’ Davit
Shahnazaryan says. However, he thinks there will be political
struggle in the event called the presidential election only if the
ex-president runs in the election.

`If he is not nominated, as I have already stated once, if there are
no major changes in the Armenian opposition, there is no alternative
to the candidate of the government. Struggle, if we consider it
political, in authoritarian countries political struggle has a
mutated meeting different from that in democratic countries. Yes, if
there are no sudden changes, there will be no alternative to the
candidate of the government,’ Davit Shahnazaryan says.

Film & Music: Classical: Caravans In The Desert: Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Roa

FILM & MUSIC: CLASSICAL: CARAVANS IN THE DESERT: YO-YO MA’S SILK ROAD PROJECT BRINGS TOGETHER THE MUSIC OF THE CULTURES ALONG THE ANCIENT TRADE ROUTE FROM ASIA TO EUROPE.
Paul Cutts

The Guardian
Published: Sep 07, 2007
United Kingdom

Last year, a cellist made his solitary way down the marbled hallways of
power in Washington DC. In front of the House committee on government
reform, he pleaded with politicians to relax the visa restrictions
that were causing havoc for international artists hoping to perform
in the US. It’s rare for a classical musician to have the ear of
political leaders, a position rock stars such as Bono and Bob Geldof
seem to have monopolised in the media. But Yo-Yo Ma has that status,
in real and fictional life (he performed for the president in an
episode of The West Wing).

"While very few Americans have the opportunity to travel to rural
India, and even fewer to rural Kyrgyzstan," Ma testified, "the arts
allow everyone to catch a glimpse into these other worlds through their
music, their dance and their art. Encouraging artists and institutions
to foster these artistic exchanges – bringing foreign musicians to
this country and sending our performers to visit them – is crucial."

It’s not suprising Ma takes a global perspective. He was born in Paris
to Chinese parents in 1955, and moved to New York aged seven. "My
biggest goal in life, even as a child, was the wish to understand,"
explains a youthful and fresh-faced Ma when we meet on a wet Sunday in
Manchester. "When we moved to America, everything was so confusing to
me. The world was hard to understand because we had moved countries
and languages. But it was also impossible for me to make choices
between cultures. Why, as an eight-year-old boy, should I give up
lovely croissants and go for white bread just because I lived in the
US now, not Paris?"

It’s exactly that cross-cultural awareness that has fuelled the Silk
Road project, of which Ma is founder and artistic director. It’s an
artistic exploration of the cultures found along the ancient trade
routes connecting Asia with the Mediterranean.

Many of the Silk Road musicians first came together at a workshop at
the famed Tanglewood Music Centre in Massachusetts in 2000, under Ma’s
artistic direction. Since then, various combinations of these artists –
from Armenian duduk virtuoso Gevorg Dabaghyan to Mongolian composer
Byambasuren Sharav – have intermingled western and non-western clas
sical, folk and popular music in Silk Road performances and commissions
in Europe, Asia and North America.

Today, the ensemble is an ever-evolving group of musicians and
composers giving concerts and making acclaimed recordings. It even
led to a year-long Silk Road festival and education initiative in
Chicago that culminated this June and inspired New Impossibilities,
Ma’s latest recording with the city’s famous symphony orchestra.

As a geographical reality, the Silk Road encompasses more than 3
billion people – over 60% of the world’s population. But to Ma, as an
idea it exists everywhere: "When we talk about a Silk Road experience,
we don’t mean simply the cultural exchange brought about by caravans
travelling across deserts, but something much broader. Whether the
intercultural development of the tango in Argentina or the transport
of indigo dye from India to Cape Verde to the Caribbean, to the term
blues to the jeans we wear today, the collaboration and creativity
of mini Silk Roads have given birth to some of the most extraordinary
cultural evolutions."

In an age when the countries along the Silk Road have become the
faultline of cultural and political conflict, Ma’s project has far
deeper resonances.

Its scope has inevitably led to major challenges – not least the
very visa chaos about which Ma complained on Capitol Hill. Two of
his Iranian musicians, despite having performed in the States eight
times before, had to fly to a consular office in Dubai twice over
three months before obtaining visas for a recent US tour. The process
cost $5,000 and much resentment.

But Ma insists the project is "a way of examining our differences
without looking at present-day political realities". Ma also sees
the Silk Road project as a way of challenging classical music’s own
orthodoxies and insecurities in an age dominated by pop music. "Nobody
today grows up listening to just one type of music – it’s impossible,"
says the musician who, in 2002, performed with Sting during the
opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. "I’m
neither optimistic nor pessimistic about the outlook for classical
music. I think if we partake in a tradition, we have to ask how it
is going to live on. You have to ask if what you are doing is seeding
something, something you actually believe in. I could be playing the
cello and just figured out the most fantastic way to play a phrase,
but nobody would realise that point unless I could communicate it to
them effectively."

Just as Ma’s willingness to learn isn’t restricted by musical genre,
nor is his determination to communicate restricted by medium. It’s one
reason why his appearances have not been confined to concert halls, why
he has also been willing to appear on TV shows such as Sesame Street:
"So often, music education seems to be about bringing kids to the
concert hall, which is great, but on the TV show I was a guest invited
into their world. That’s really powerful, and it means that the cello
and a cellist is never going to be an unfamiliar figure to those kids."

As well as his discography of 70-plus recordings and regular TV
appearances, he’s also exploited the potential of film. In the 1990s,
he made Inspired By Bach, a memorable series of films based around
the six Bach Cello Suites, the musical Mount Everest every cellist
hopes one day to climb and for which Ma has won one of his numerous
Grammy awards.

The films were collaborations with – among others – choreographer
Mark Morris and garden designer Julie Moir Messervy in Canada. As
well as providing further evidence of Ma’s intellectual openness and
curiosity, it’s also a tantalising glimpse into what directions he
might have taken had he chosen not to pursue music.

"My true passion is to contextualise," he says. "I don’t know whether
I would have the talent to be anything other than a musician – but
growing and cultivating is what musicians are all about. So, in a
way, the film about the garden was a metaphor for life. Music is very
ephemeral, but I’ve always thought that the creation of music was what
made us evolve from hunter-gatherers. Like music, a garden is not just
about creating something beautiful – it’s also about the struggle
to get there. And, like music, it’s not about winning anything,
it’s about being able to build something over a period of time.

"It’s what I think we are trying to do with the Silk Road," he
concludes, "but there’s still a huge amount of digging to do to touch
on those shared connections."

Yo-Yo Ma’s latest Silk Road recording, New Impossibilities, is out
now on Sony Classical.

HSBC Bank Armenia Opens Two New Branches

HSBC BANK ARMENIA OPENS TWO NEW BRANCHES

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Sept 5 2007

YEREVAN, September 5. /ARKA/. HSBC Bank Armenia opens two new
branches. The official opening ceremony will be held in the bank’s
headoffice on September 15, the bank’s administration reported.

Among the participants of the presentation will be member of Board
of HSBC Holdings plc David Badd who was the first executive director
of HSBC Bank Armenia CJSC. Complete package of information about
financial and other activities of the bank will be presented at the
press conference.

HSBC Bank Armenia CJSC (daughter enterprise of HSBC Bank plc) was
registered on September 25 1995. HSBC Bank plc owns 70% of the shares
of HSBC Bank Armenia and is the daughter enterprise of HSBC Holdings
plc. The remaining 30% belong to foreign Armenian investors. As of
June 30 2007, the bank’s assets totaled AMD81bln, with total capital
making AMD9.4bln, balance profit AMD 6.4bln, profit for January-June
2007 AMD 1.9bln. Currently, the bank has four branches. ($1 =
AMD336.83).

Science And Education Financed In Amount Of 72.1 Billion Drams From

SCIENCE AND EDUCATION FINANCED IN AMOUNT OF 72.1 BILLION DRAMS FROM STATE BUDGET IN 2006

Noyan Tapan
Sep 5, 2007

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN. 72.1 bln drams (about 173.3 mln USD)
was allocated from the RA state budget to the sphere of science and
education in 2006. The fulfilment index made 88.5%. The deviation
is mainly conditioned by a low implemenation index of grant and
credit programs on elementray, main and secondary education. Without
these programs, the fulfilment index made 99.5%. There was a growth
of allocations with respect to all subgroups of the education and
science sphere as compared with 2005, as a result of which expenditures
grew by 18.6%, the RA deputy minister of finance and economy, chief
treasurer Atom Janjughazian said at the September 5 joint sitting of
the RA National Assemly standing committees.

According to him, 72% of expenditures on the sphere of education and
science or about 52 bln drams was allocated for the comprehensive
education system.

The annual program was fulfilled by 84.9%. The deviation was mainly
caused by delay in incurring expenses envisaged by the Lincy Foundation
grant programs, as well as by underfulfilment of the education quality
and conformity credit program implemented with the assistance of the
World Bank.

In 2006, over 4.3 bln drams was allocated from the state budget to
general special programs whose implementation index made 98.1%, 2.3
bln drams – to out-of-school education (99.9%), and about 5.3 bln
drams – to higher and post-graduate special education programs (99.9%).

5.2 bln drams was allocated to science, which made 99.8% of the
envisaged amount. Financing of science was done by basic, target-progam
and contract principles. Allocations to science grew by 25.1% as
compared with 2005, which is due to an increase in salaries, social
insurance payments, in the number of post-graduate students and their
scholarships, as well as by a growth of capital expenditures.

Armenian Genocide: Israeli Leader Calls To Examine Past But Look Ahe

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: ISRAELI LEADER CALLS TO EXAMINE PAST BUT LOOK AHEAD

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.09.2007 14:19 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "The past is historians’ business. No bill can
change it," Israeli President Shimon Peres said a meeting with Turkish,
Israeli and Palestinian entrepreneurs when commenting on the Armenian
issue and possible passage of the H. Res. 106 by the U.S. Congress.

In response to Ankara-forum chairman’s protest against the
Anti-Defamation League’s decision on the Armenian Genocide, Mr Peres
said, "No bill can change the past.

History can be studied by historians only."

"The work of politicians will be targeted at the future. To understand
the value of the future one should properly examine the past," he said,
Anadoglu news agency reports.

His Holiness Karekin II Defrocks Rev. Fr. Yeprem Sarkisian

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: 
September 6, 2007

His Holiness Karekin II Defrocks Rev. Fr. Yeprem Sarkisian

His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians,
has issued a Pontifical Order dated September 1, 2007, whereby Rev. Fr.
Yeprem Sarkisian has been defrocked for insubordination.

As of this day, the defrocked clergyman is a member of the laity and shall
be known by his baptismal name of Haroutiun Sarkisian.

www.armenianchurch.org

BAKU: Military Expenses In Azerbaijan’s Public Budget To Increase Ne

MILITARY EXPENSES IN AZERBAIJAN’S PUBLIC BUDGET TO INCREASE NEXT YEAR – AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENT
E. Huseynli

TREND News Agency, Azerbaijan
Sept 4 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / Military expenses in Azerbaijan’s public budget
for 2008 will increase, the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said
at a meeting on 4 September.

"Military expenses in Azerbaijan have increased several times,"
the President said. It should be noted that military expenses in the
public budget of 2007 make up AZN 1bln.

According to President Aliyev, the formation of an army in Azerbaijan
is a priority state issue, ITV channel quotes.

"Azerbaijan can liberate its occupied territories in any way,
Armenia should understand that," the President said.

As for the state of refugees and internally displaced persons,
the President said that all tent settlements in Azerbaijan will be
removed by the end of this year.

Nine tent settlements were removed during the last three years. There
are tent settlements still in Azerbaijan’s Saatly, Sabirabad, and
Imishli regions.