Metro Prize

METRO PRIZE

5353.html
12:09:42 – 30/09/2009

Beginning from September 14, new card system started to operate at
the metro after K. Demirchyan. Starting from May 25, those people who
have recharged their cards two times participate in a competition
and 200 happy persons have the possibility to use the metro for 20
times free of charge.

The competition has been held already for three times though there is
no information on sold cards and winnings. In answer to our question,
they say it is a commercial secret.

The press secretary of the Metropolitan Ninel Vardanyan noted
in a conversation with us that the competition is held quite
justly. Computer chooses 200 people by chance, but there are many
people who do not take their prize, although there is a relevant
announcement in any corner of the metro. This non-taken money is
added to the prize of the next month and possibly very soon not 200
but 400 people will have the chance to win.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country-lrahos1

State Dept. Holds Emergency Capitol Hill Briefing On Protocols

STATE DEPT. HOLDS EMERGENCY CAPITOL HILL BRIEFING ON PROTOCOLS

-dept-holds-emergency-capitol-hill-briefing-on-pro tocols/
Sep 29, 2009

LOS ANGELES-Newly-appointed Deputy Assistant Secretary of State,
Tina Kaidanow, traveled to Capitol Hill Tuesday for a late afternoon
emergency legislative briefing to address growing Congressional
concerns regarding the controversial Turkey-Armenia protocols,
sources in Washington told Asbarez.

Among the topics reportedly discussed at the closed-door gathering were
Congressional sensitivity to the rapidly escalating and broad-based
Armenian-American opposition to the protocols, and the increasing
awareness of the intense pressure being applied upon Armenia by Turkey
and its allies to approve the protocols.

The harried briefing took place less than 48 hours after a major
10,000-person rally against the protocols in Los Angeles and on the eve
of President Serzh Sarkisian’s upcoming tour of Diaspora communities,
which includes stops in New York and Los Angeles. It is anticipated
that Sarkisian will be met with outrage over the protocols during
his tour from an energetically unified cross-section of the community.

A similar concern was evident during a press briefing at the Waldorf
Astoria Hotel in New York Monday, when Assistant Secretary of State
Philip Gordon was cautious to address the Turkey-Armenia protocols.

In response to a reporter’s question whether the State Department was
"afraid it’s [the process] was going to slide" before the six-week
deadline set by the protocols, Gordon conceded that there were bumps
in the road.

"Look, this is a difficult process that faces some political opposition
in both places, and it’s hard for both governments. If it wasn’t
hard, they would have normalized relations a long time ago. And
so when we say reasonable timeframe, we mean just that: that it’s
not just the process that we want to see – we welcome the process;
but we also want to see a conclusion to the process, and that’s what
we’re underscoring when we say that," said Gordon.

In reporting on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urging Turkey and
Armenia to carry out plans to normalize relations, Reuters observed
that her comments appeared to reflect uncertainty about whether
the countries will stick to their plan to sign the pact restoring
diplomatic ties and reopening their border by mid-October.

http://www.asbarez.com/2009/09/29/state

USAID/ARMENIA Suspended Program Might Be Recommenced

USAID/ARMENIA SUSPENDED PROGRAM MIGHT BE RECOMMENCED

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.09.2009 21:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On September 29, Vice Speaker of RA Parliament
Arevik Petrosyan met the Director of US International Development
Agency (USAID) Jatinder Cheema. The meeting focused on USAID/ARMENIA
suspended program recommencement, organizational matters and activity
spheres selection.

On behalf of RA NA Chairman Hovik Abrahamyan, Vice Speaker of RA
Parliament Arevik Petrosyan emphasized the importance of program
recommencement.

Within program frameworks, the parties discussed RA NA’s professional
and technical re-equipment. They stressed the importance of memorandum
conclusion to specify concrete collaboration sphere, RA NA press
service reported.

Turkish, Azeri Presidents To Discuss Armenian-Turkish Rapprochement

TURKISH, AZERI PRESIDENTS TO DISCUSS ARMENIAN-TURKISH RAPPROCHEMENT

News.am
19:48 / 09/29/2009

Turkish President Abdullah Gul is to visit the Nakhichevan autonomous
republic, Azerbaijan, late this week. The next Summit of Turkic
countries is to be held there on October 2-3, 2009. The Azerbaijani
service of the Radio Free Europe reported that the Kyrgyz, Uzbek
Presidents are to take part in the Summit, with lower-ranking officials
to represent Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

The Turkish and Azerbaijani Presidents are to hold a private meeting
during the Summit and discussed the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement
and Nagorno-Karabakh peace process.

The Turkish Today’s Zaman reports that a week after the meeting the
Armenian and Turkish Foreign Ministers are to sign the Armenian-Turkish
protocols. During his visit to Nakhichevan, President Gul plans
to convince his Azerbaijani counterpart that Armenian-Turkish ties
will not be established to the detriment of the Turkish-Azerbaijani
relations.

Over 10,000 Call For Committee Vote On Armenian Genocide Resolution

OVER 10,000 CALL FOR COMMITTEE VOTE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Yerkir
28.09.2009 17:33

Yerevan (Yerkir) – More than 10,000 Armenian Americans from throughout
California, who gathered in Glendale yesterday for a grassroots
rally, called upon U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman and
longstanding friend of the Armenian American community Howard Berman
(D-CA) to immediately schedule a vote of his panel on the Armenian
Genocide Resolution, H.Res.252, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).

The grassroots resolution, prepared by the organizations serving
on the rally’s host committee, represents the broad range of
grassroots constituencies and Armenian American civic groups active
in California. It was read in full before the capacity crowd in
Pelanconi Park and adopted by a unanimous roar of approval from those
in attendance. A second resolution was also adopted that called on the
Armenian government to refuse to approve a set of highly controversial
protocols that represent a surrender of Armenian rights, security,
and dignity.

The complete text of the resolution is provided below.

RESOLUTION

A CALL FOR IMMEDIATE ACTION BY THE U.S. CONGRESS ON

THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

We, over ten thousand Americans of Armenian descent, gathered at this
political rally on September 27, 2009, at Pelanconi Park, in Glendale,
California, make this call for immediate action by the U.S. Congress
on the adoption of the Armenian Genocide Resolution.

We call upon our friend, Congressman Howard Berman, the Chairman of
the House Foreign Affairs Committee, to immediately set a date, in
the coming weeks, for a vote of his panel on the Armenian Genocide
Resolution, H.Res.252.

We encourage all the members of the powerful California Congressional
delegation, most notably Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Chairman Berman, and the
lead authors of this legislation, Adam Schiff and George Radanovich,
to ensure that this genocide- prevention measure is adopted by the
full U.S. House of Representatives.

Unanimously adopted on Sunday, 27th of September, 2009, at Glendale,
California.

A Labor Fair To Be Held October 2 In Dilijan

A LABOR FAIR TO BE HELD OCTOBER 2 IN DILIJAN

ARMENPRESS
Sep 29, 2009

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS: "State Employment Service" agency
of Armenian Labor and Social Affairs Ministry will organize a labor
fair October 2 in the Dilijan music college.

Head of the Agency Sona Harutyunian told Armenpress that 32 employers
will take part in the fair. This year the Agency has adopted a
flexible policy in the issue of organization of the fair to make it
more aiming. Formerly a study of proposals of the employers has been
conducted and the province been selected where there is job demand
and vacancies.

This year’s first labor fair was organized in Shirak in
September. According to S. Harutyunian it was rather successful;
1500 visitors were intended but more than 3000 people visited it.

"We had quite positive feedbacks from the employers as well as from
the job seekers. Many businessmen expressed readiness to take part in
the next fair. Such events give an opportunity to establish a direct
link between the employer and the job seeker," S. Harutyunian said.

At the start of October it will become known how many people have
been employed after the fair organized in the Shirak province.

On the whole the "State Employment Service" agency intends to organize
6 labor fairs by the end of the year.

Nalbandyan Met Lavrov

NALBANDYAN MET LAVROV

News.am
12:23 / 09/28/2009

RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan met his Russian counterpart
Sergey Lavrov within the framework of 64th session of UN General
Assembly in New York. Several mutual, regional and international
issues were discussed in the course of the warm and free-and-easy
meeting. Nalbandyan informed Lavrov of the Armenia-Turkey normalization
process details.

RF Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in his turn met with his Turkish
counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu. In the course of the meeting officials
discussed the issues of Russia-Turkey political dialogue progress
as well as the realization of further bilateral trade and economic
cooperation arrangements, Information and Press Department of Russian
MFA reports.

The parties exchanged opinions on a number of crucial international and
regional problems, including the positive progress in Armenian-Turkish
relations, Iran’s nuclear program and the settlement of Cyprus dispute.

The Rise Of An Olympian

THE RISE OF AN OLYMPIAN

Glendale News Press
09/09/28/sports/gnp-spvanespart1092809.txt

Glenda le resident Vanes Martirosyan is an undefeated
welterweight.(Roger Wilson/News-Press) After learning sport of boxing
as a child, fine amateur career led to Olympics.

By Gabriel Rizk Published: Last Updated Sunday, September 27,
2009 10:12 PM PDT This is the first of a three-part feature story
on the life and career of undefeated Glendale boxing phenom Vanes
"The Nightmare" Martirosyan. It will run in consecutive installments.

Before the "Nightmare," there was just a dream.

The fame, honor and respect that Vanes Martirosyan has garnered as an
amateur prodigy, a teenage Olympian and a professional boxing prospect,
and the ultimate glory the fast-rising undefeated welterweight hopes
to yet capture as a world title holder — it all started as a gleam
in the eye of his father Norik Martirosyan.

And before the dream was Vanes’ to realize, it belonged to Norik.

Vanes "The Nightmare" Martirosyan, now 23 years old with a record
of 25-0 and presumably on the threshold of an imminent title fight,
has only distant memories of Abovyan, Armenia, where he was born and
lived until age 4, at which time he moved to the Glendale area with his
grandparents, father and mother Zhenik and his three siblings in 1991.

But it’s in the family’s homeland that this story begins.

As an 18-year old soldier in the Armenian army, Norik first learned
to box. It was there that he fell in love with the sport and came
home with modest aspirations of developing a life of his own in boxing.

His own father had different ideas.

"My grandpa didn’t let him fight, it was tough over there and he had
to work," Vanes says. "He wanted him to get a job and thought there
was no future in boxing over there.

"But [Norik] loved it, he’s always loved it."

The move to the United States, which occurred after Norik lost his
right hand in a grenade explosion while serving in the Nagorno-Karabakh
War against Azerbaijan, brought with it opportunities for Vanes and
his siblings t to enjoy a pastime, or even pursue a career, in boxing.

A rambunctious kid with tireless energy, Vanes frequently found himself
getting in tussles in the neighborhood around his family’s new home.

"I was always getting into fights at Maple Park," he recalls. "Not big
fights or anything, but when older guys would stand in front of me,
I would not back down, like bullies and stuff. I was little, but I
held my own."

In response, Norik found a local gym in Glendale where Vanes could
channel his vigor into learning to box and Norik could take all three
of his sons to train in his spare time.

"Every now and then, you could feel that he still had that feeling
inside him that my parents wouldn’t let him box and he believed in
himself that he would have been somebody special in boxing," Vanes’
uncle, Serg Martirosyan, says of his brother, Norik. "But there’s
always a border. Sometimes, [parents] want their kids to do what
they couldn’t do, but it’s not like [Norik] was forcing him. When
the coaches saw [Vanes’] talent, they told him, ‘Do whatever you can
to keep this kid having fun in boxing and stay in it and the time
will come.’"

That message was taken to heart. Vanes’ older brother, Vahe, eventually
discarded boxing in favor of swimming, while the younger Vatche took up
soccer. Vanes himself later wanted to quit boxing to play basketball,
but, sticking to the advice of Vanes’ coaches and his own motto of,
‘Once you start something you finish it,’ Norik never let Vanes stray
too far from the ring.

"He pushed me there and I started loving the sport," Vanes says.

Norik often left the technical training to Vanes’ coaches, content
to offer pointers and strategic advice where he saw fit. Rather, his
domain was overseeing the physical training and mental dedication
needed to forge a fighter — the rising at dawn, the running, the
hours in the gym — and stoking the internal fire that fuels the
effort. He made sure young Vanes’ motivation never lagged.

Trainers, coach d business associates have come and gone over the
years, but Vanes has always kept his father closest. Versed in the
European style of boxing favored in Armenia and an avid student of
American boxing since emigrating, Norik is a wellspring of knowledge,
which his son consults daily.

"To this day, my dad still teaches me things," says Vanes, whose
next fight will reportedly be for the World Boxing Organization
Intercontinental title on Dec. 19 in Cancun, Mexico. "He knows a
lot about boxing. He can see a weakness in an opponent. Whoever I’m
fighting, he just looks at them on the scale and whispers something
to me.

"To this day, he wakes up with me in the morning at 5 a.m. and we go
running, he’s there all the way with me. He’s never missed a fight."

Once his first teacher, now his most trusted advisor, Norik remains,
as always, a steadying and comforting presence for Vanes.

"I’ve always loved boxing," Norik says through Vanes’
translation. "It’s been my dream and now I want to accomplish both
of our dreams at the same time."

Vanes is known for a dedication to training that he says grew out of
simply loving to be in the gym as a kid and looking up to the older
men there. Early on, he was most often the youngest.

"We had an 8- or 9-year old requirement to be a member, but I remember
he and his dad were so persistent, I waived that age requirement so
he could join," says retired Glendale Police Officer Ron Williams,
who operated the Police Athletic League youth boxing program, of
which Martirosyan was a member from age 7 to 14. "From the beginning
he had a great work ethic, but he was a little troubled in school. He
was a kid with a lot of energy and I think his focus was not directed."

On more than one occasion, Williams suspended Martirosyan from boxing
for academic issues, but each time he would work his way back in and
his dedication to the boxing program, which provided semi-professional
instruction and was affiliated with the Amateur Boxing Assn. and local
and nation ed in Montrose and he would ride his bike from Montrose and
back after training every day," Williams says. "He was an exceptional
athlete. …He was focused, even at a young age, to do the training
and the road work and heavy bag work. All the boring things about
the sport, he was there in the hopes to succeed."

Williams says that Martirosyan was sparring by about 8 and before he
left the club was holding his own in sparring sessions with men much
older and bigger.

What Martirosyan recalls as his first real amateur fight occurred
when he was 12 in a gym at Villa Park in Pasadena.

"They didn’t have an opponent for me and I started crying because
there was nobody for me to fight," Vanes says.

Norik scrambled to find an opponent at the gym, coming back with a
kid a couple years older and about 10 pounds heavier. Not long after,
Martirosyan had won his first ever boxing match.

Martirosyan went 120-10 as an amateur, but a good share of the
obstacles he overcame during those years were outside the ring, as
sacrifices were necessary to support a budding career that required
him and Norik to travel to competitions and tournaments.

"They had tough and good days with boxing, especially in the amateur
years," Serg says. "When the family emigrated here from Armenia,
financially, they were in a bad situation. Traveling, expenses, going
to hotels when he was 12 or 13 years old … they didn’t have money
even to rent a hotel. [Vanes and Norik] just stayed in a car until
the morning when [the fights] started.

"But, finally they came through to where Vanes is right now and
that brought them together more because of the things that they went
through together."

Only 17 years old and a proven talent in the amateur ranks, Martirosyan
began to turn his attention toward a run at the Olympics early in 2004.

His first shot at an invite to the Olympic trials was at the
U.S. Championships in Colorado Springs, Colo., where his bid was
derailed by a loss resulting from a low blow against Rudy Cisneros
that he s to this day.

"That was the politics of USA boxing," Vanes says. "[Cisneros] was
[U.S. assistant Olympic Coach] Al Mitchell’s [guy].

"He went on to the finals and he lost to Austin Trout, who I beat
twice."

To keep his Olympic dream alive, Martirosyan had one option — return
home for the Western Olympic trials and win five fights in five days
to qualify for the Olympic trials.

As he tells it, the long-term plan entering the 2004 Western trials
was to make the U.S. team for the 2008 Beijing games with little real
expectation of actually making it to Athens.

But Martirosyan got a fortuitous break in a bizarre turn of events
involving the two fighters considered the favorites to qualify for
the U.S., Andre Berto and Juan McPherson.

In a head-to-head bout early in the trials, Berto injured McPherson
with a flagrant foul that rendered McPherson unable to return to
the trials. A dispute over that ruling led to Berto eventually being
disqualified, as well, and he later ended up competing for Haiti.

"[Norik] just said to enjoy it, get some experience, fight these guys
and see how you feel," Martirosyan says. "I started beating these
ranked guys, not only beating them, but I was knocking some of them
out. Little by little, I got the confidence."

It was at the Western trials that Martirosyan got the nickname he
still sports, during a win over Timothy Bradley.

"I knocked him down in the first round and I had him out in the last
round," Martirosyan said. "I almost knocked him out and that’s where
I got the name ‘Nightmare.’ The crowd started yelling my name saying,
‘Nightmare.’"

Martirosyan made it through to the Americas qualifier in Tijuana,
where he defeated local favorite Pedro Monsivais on March 18 in front
of a hostile crowd before dominating Tureano Johnson of the Bahamas
in a third-round technical knockout in the quarterfinals and edging
Canadian Adam Trumpish in the semifinals.

"I don’t know if it has hit me yet," Martirosyan told the News-Press
following the sh, which guaranteed him a spot on the Olympic team by
virtue of reaching the final round. "It was kind of a dream."

The Olympics were already secured, but Martirosyan had some unfinished
business with his finals opponent, Berto, who had handed him his only
loss in the Western trials, which was later vacated.

"My hand was swollen and I couldn’t fight, but I told everybody,
I’m gonna fight," Martirosyan says. "I have to prove to everybody
that I deserve to be on the team."

Martirosyan came out victorious, 25-21, in a four-round decision behind
a strong fourth-round rally and claimed the gold medal for the trials
in the welterweight division, but that was far from the only windfall
that came about as a result of Martirosyan’s surprising run through
the qualifier.

Among those in attendance was preeminent boxing manager Shelly Finkel,
who was already aware of Martirosyan, but was ultimately swayed by
his compelling win over Berto.

"I saw him at several other tournaments before the trials and I said,
‘This kid is special, he has all of this ability,’" recalls Finkel, who
has represented former world champions Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield
and Pernell Whitaker, among many others. "He showed a lot of guts in
the Berto fight, I remember, where he was hurt and he came back. It
was really special. I thought I’d like to work with this kid."

When Martirosyan went on to Athens, Norik, Serg, Vatche and his cousin
Eiloush all enjoyed a ringside view of his fights, courtesy of Finkel.

"We hadn’t even signed anything with him yet," Vanes says, "but he
would do nice things because he liked the way I boxed."

On Aug. 15, Martirosyan won his Olympic debut, easily beating Algerian
Benamar Beskine, 45-20. A tougher challenge awaited four days later
in the Round of 16 against Cuban Lorenzo Aragon, who was a favorite
to win the gold.

Aragon jumped out to a 14-4 lead over the first two rounds before
Martirosyan won the third, 4-3, and fought to a draw in the fourth
and final round.

"We e Olympic test event and he adapted his style from that meeting,"
Martirosyan told the Associated Press following the 20-11 loss. "He
holds you, pulls you back and makes it look like you’re holding,
and you’re not. It frustrates you. I thought I scored more points,
and I thought I should have won."

Says Finkel: "[Vanes] was still just beginning, he was young with
a lot of energy. He was just coming into his own and it might have
been a little bit too early for him [to medal]."

Following the 2004 Olympics, Martirosyan had a decision to make.

Fresh off an Olympic debut that showed promise for a 2008 medal run,
he could remain an amateur and continue training for what his father
held as the ultimate achievement — bringing a gold medal back for
the U.S. Or, with a power player manager waiting in the wings to
sign him and begin opening doors, he could turn professional ahead of
schedule and begin the arduous pursuit of a different kind of glory,
the world title …

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/articles/20

S Ohanyan Receives Ambassador of the Russian Federation to Armenia

Seyran Ohanyan Receives the Ambassador of the Russian Federation to
Armenia

mp;p=0&id=997&y=2009&m=09&d=27
25. 09.09

On the 25th of September, 2009 the RA Minister of Defence Seyran
Ohanyan received the newly appointed ambassador of the Russian
Federation to the Republic of Armenia Mr. Vyacheslav Kovalenko.

Congratulating the ambassador for taking the post, the RA Minister of
Defence hoped that, while he officiates, the friendly relations of the
two countries and the Armenian-Russian strategic cooperation will be
even more strengthened.
At the end of the meeting the parties discussed matters regarding the
participation of the Armenian and Russian military groups in the CSTO
Collective Forces of Fast Reaction Maneuvers in Kazakhstan on the
1st-16th of October, the opening of a modern language laboratory in the
RA Ministry of Defence for teaching Russian, reopening the monument
built in Giumri in the memory of the Russian victims in the
Russian-Turkish war in 1777-1778.

http://www.mil.am/eng/index.php?page=2&a

Azerbaijani Anti-Armenian Information System

AZERBAIJANI ANTI-ARMENIAN INFORMATION SYSTEM
Foreword

24 September 2009
;nid2 9

The issue of the information provocations carried out by Azerbaijan
and its allies in regard to the RA, NKR and Armeniancy in general is a
topic of constant discussions in Armenian society. But till recently
these problems has not been taken as a serious challenge to our
national security. Probably, it was conditioned by the fact that
Azerbaijani information operations, by their content, were made-up and
far from any political, factual and scientific realities.

Meanwhile, it is known that the appropriate interpretation and
psychological perception of the events in the modern age is often more
important than the essence and the content of what had happened. Let
us also mention that information policy of Azerbaijan serves to
self-affirmation of the society formed in that country and it
implements in that society the aggressive revanchist
ideology. Understanding the problems under the aforementioned
conditions, it is necessary to state that the active presence of
Azerbaijani information factor in the global information space is a
serious challenge to the Armenian states and Armeniancy.

The tendency of making a point of the informational factor and the
threats to our state system clearly outlined after the programme
declaration of the president of the RA in 2008. As a result the
Security Council of the Republic attached to the president set a new
commission on the study of the issues of the informational security
(IS), which not only elaborated the IS conception of the RA but also
actualized it in state and political plane. Let us mention that this
work is also mostly conditioned by those developments.

It is also remarkable that the given study is a result of the
collective inter-agency work, in which experts of the Ministry of
Defence’s Institute for National Strategic Studies after Drastamat
Kanayan, the Chair of Sociology of the ESU and `Noravank’
educational-research foundation took part. Such an inter-agency style
of work is especially efficient in the IS sphere researches.

It is obvious that the challenges and the problems directed against
our society are not only restricted by Azerbaijani factor. At the same
time, the theme chosen under such conditions is, undoubtedly,
topical. It is necessary to mention that the current information war,
just like the military conflict against the RA and the NKR in the
past, was initiated by the neigbour republic. It is also obvious that
Azerbaijan, which has no necessary historical and civilization
traditions and sufficient spiritual and intellectual resources, will
be defeated in that information war, just as it was in the `hot war’.

At the same time the knowledge of the enemy’s strategy is a guarantee
of success. In this context the study of the Azerbaijani information
system is more than topical. The complex of such studies will even
more allow comprehending and coordinating our own actions.

The purpose of the given work is to reveal the peculiarities of the
methodology implemented by Azerbaijan in the information sphere as
well as the presentation of the current condition of the information
resources of that country.

In the first chapter the modern theoretical conceptions of the
information security and information war as well as the tasks of IS of
Armenia in the context of the Azerbaijani informational policy are
presented. In the second chapter the system of Azerbaijani
anti-Armenian information policy and the methodology implemented in
the informational actions are discussed. In the Chapter 3 the
technologies and methods used by Azerbaijani media to form the image
of the `enemy Armenian’ are presented on concrete examples. The
peculiarities of the `electronic hacker’ attacks carried out by
Azerbaijan are discussed in the forth chapter. In the last chapter
some information about Azerbaijani centres, which play active role in
the informational sphere, are presented.

http://www.noravank.am/en/?page=news&amp