Armavia’s Air Park To Be Replenished With New A-319 Airbus In March

ARMAVIA’S AIR PARK TO BE REPLENISHED WITH NEW A-319 AIRBUS IN MARCH 2009

ArmInfo
2008-10-15 09:36:00

ArmInfo. In March 2009, Armavia’s air park will be replenished with
a new A-319 airbus produced in France, Deputy Director of Armavia
Rafael Avetikyan said during the ceremony of awarding a prize to the
company’s 500 000th passenger in 2008. He recalled that in 2009 two
more SU-100 SuperJet planes may enter Armenia, and the third one –
later. In May 2008 Armavia acquired an A-320. Avetikyan added that the
negotiations with Airbus consortium and Boeing company on acquisition
of A- 330 airbus and negotiations, he added.

At the moment, Armavia’s air park has 8 planes: two A-319 airbuses, two
A-320 airbuses, a Boeing-737, a Yak-42, an Il-86, and a CRJ-100. In
2007 Armavia carried a total of 572300 passengers by egular and
charter fights, this index being by 21% higher than in 2006.

African Actors Want Marry Armenian

AFRICAN ACTORS WANT MARRY ARMENIAN

Panorama.am
20:12 13/10/2008

It is interesting to know that African actors from "Zarama"
African company who arrived in Armenia to take part in "Hay Fest"
6th international festival liked Armenia and Armenian women that
they decided to find an Armenian girl to marry, Rafayel Tindaba,
the manager of the company told Panorama.am.

The company has been established in 1999 in Abijan by the initiative
of a group of fellows. The goal of the theatre was the protection
of rich heritage of Kod Divur and Africa, which were under threat of
disappearing in the aftermath of the modernizing world.

"Besides there are many children in Africa who live unsafe life. We
decided to involve such children in our groups," said Rafayel amd
added that they pay honorary money to children.

Talking about other problems in Africa, the manager of the company
said that in order to come and participate in the festival they have
asked many organizations to get financial support.

Ankara: Armenia: Economy Hit By Georgian War

ARMENIA: ECONOMY HIT BY GEORGIAN WAR
By Naira Melkumian

Journal of Turkish Weekly

Monday , 13 October 2008
Turkey

Authorities say country suffered substantial economic losses as a
result of August conflict.

The war between Russia and Georgia has cost the Armenian economy
nearly 700 million US dollars, the Yerevan authorities believe.

They say the economy was hit by severe blows to foreign trade, tax
collection and international investment. "The conflict [has been]
a serious test for the sustainability of the Armenian economy,"
said Prime Minister Tigran Sargsian.

Commentators say foreign trade plunged largely because of war-related
damage to the principal transportation routes between Armenia and
Georgia, through which much of the country’s imports and exports pass.

As a result, Georgian imports were cut by an estimated 121 million
dollars, slashing import tax revenue. At the same time, exports losses
amounted to about 52 million dollars.

The regional turmoil has also curbed the government’s ambitious plans
to boost income tax collection by 30 per cent this year. "Tension in
the area as a result of the South Ossetian conflict meant Armenia did
not collect the levels of income from tax anticipated in the budget,"
said Gagik Minasian, the head of parliament’s financial, credit and
budgetary issues commission.

But experts say the greatest damage caused to Armenia by the war has
been the temporary suspension of foreign investments, totaling about
300 million dollars.

"The region itself is not very attractive in terms of investment,
and, today, it has become way too insecure," said Heghine Manasian,
director of the Caucasus Research and Resource Centre, CRRC.

Manasian said the situation in Georgia had increased inflation and
curbed economic growth.

"If prices go up and people’s income remains the same, consumption is
likely to decline, meaning that traders won’t be able to sell their
goods. A difficult situation aggravated by the world financial crisis
might emerge," said Manasian.

However, the authorities denied that consumers had been hit by the
conflict, insisting that any price increases were caused by panic
buying.

"People queued for petrol for two days – because they panicked [that
supplies were going to run dry]," said Sargsian, noting that state
reserves of fuel had not been touched.

In the wake of the conflict – which officials believe has cost the
economy 680 million dollars – analysts say it is important Armenia
does not rely so heavily on the import and export of goods through
Georgia in future.

"Two-thirds of foreign goods are coming through Georgian territory,"
said Andranik Tevanian, the director of the Institute for Political,
Economic and Legal Research. "This is why the Georgian conflict caused
delays to and even suspended the transportation of cargo."

While an alternative transport route through Iran has been proposed
as a solution, Tevanian believes it would be a prohibitively expensive
option.

There are also indications that Armenia is looking at alternative
ways of transporting goods through Georgia.

On a recent visit to Georgia, Armenian president Serzh Sargsian raised
the prospect of the building a new highway linking Yerevan with the
city of Batumi, the capital of the autonomous republic of Adjara in
southwest Georgia – cutting the current 700 kilometre route by about
a third.

Previously, much of Armenian exports were ferried through Georgia’s
land border with Russia, but the conflict has meant that Yerevan will
become more reliant on its neighbour’s Black Sea port.

"If we start working [on the Yerevan-Batumi route] today, in two
years’ time, we’ll have a transport route that is very important for
Armenian economy," Armenian transport and communications minister
Gurgen Sargsian told journalists recently.

Experts have also cited the importance of developing alternative trade
partners, emphasising the role Turkey could play. They say that the
continued closure of the land border between Turkey and Armenia costs
the economy around 500 million dollars annually.

The Armenian government hopes that the recent thawing of relations
with its western neighbour might offer new trading opportunities.

A direct electricity supply from Armenia to Turkey will start in 2009,
following the signing of an energy agreement during the visit of the
Turkish president Abdullah Gul to Yerevan in September.

"Developing closer political and economic relations with Turkey could
be a precursor for…developing Armenia’s economy," said Minasian.

But other analysts remain sceptical. While Tevanian acknowledged that
normalising relations with Ankara was important for the economy,
he pointed out that Armenia had so far gleaned few benefits from
the rapprochement.

"We’ve made a step towards Turkey, but it is Turkey that had so far
reaped political dividends in Europe – we see no tangible results
from the so-called warming yet," he said.

www.iwpr.net

New Permanent Representative Of Armenia Presents Credentials

NEW PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE OF ARMENIA PRESENTS CREDENTIALS

States News Service
September 30, 2008 Tuesday

The following information was released by the United Nations:

The new Permanent Representative of Armenia to the United Nations
(Vienna), H. E. Mr. Ashot Hovakimian, presented his credentials today
to Mr. Antonio Maria Costa, Director-General, United Nations Office
at Vienna (UNOV).

Mr. Hovakimian is also serving as Ambassador to Austria, the Czech
Republic, Hungary and Slovakia, a post which he assumed in 2006.

Mr. Hovakimian has served in many capacities in the course of
his career, among them: Ambassador to Poland (1999-2006) and to
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania (2000-06), Charge d’Affaires en pied to
Poland (1998-99), Director, Second European Department (Central and
South-Eastern Europe), Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Advisor to the
Minister of Foreign Affairs (1997-98), Head, Second European Desk,
European Department, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1996-97), First
Secretary, Embassy in Athens, Greece (1994-96), Charge d’Affaires ad
interim, Embassy in Athens, Greece (1993-94), Second Secretary and Desk
Officer for the Balkans, European Desk, Ministry of Foreign Affairs
(1992-93) and Researcher, Armenian National Academy of Sciences,
Yerevan (1988-92).

Mr. Hovakimian holds a doctoral degree in Slavic and Balkan Studies
from the Academy of Sciences, Moscow and a degree in Slavic Studies
from the Moscow State University. He speaks Armenian, Croatian,
English, Greek, Polish and Russian.

Mr. Hovakimian is married and has two children.

Members Of The Swiss-Armenian Parliamentary Group To Visit Armenia

MEMBERS OF SWISS-ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARY GROUP TO VISIT ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
Oct 7, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 7, ARMENPRESS: Members of the Switzerland-Armenia
parliamentary group of the Federal Assembly of Switzerland headed by
Kristin Egerzeg-Obrist will arrive in Armenia October 8.

Public relations department of the National Assembly told Armenpress
that on October 8 they are expected to meet with the Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan.

Armenian National Assembly Speaker Hovik Abrahamian will receive the
delegation in the NA. In the parliament the guests will also meet
with the members of the Armenia-Switzerland friendship group headed
by Ara Babloyan.

On October 9 the delegation will meet with the Armenian deputy
foreign minister Gegham Gharibjanian, deputy economy minister Ara
Petrosian. The delegation will also visit Armenian-Swiss specialized
school. On the same day the delegation will visit Tsitsernakaberd
and pay tribute to the memory of the victims of Armenian Genocide.

On October 10 the members of the delegation will be in the Karabakh’s
representation in Armenia. On the same day they will meet with the
Armenian vice prime minister Armen Gevorgian.

The delegation will also meet with the representatives of the
opposition. They will give a press conference in the NA.

On October 11 His Holiness Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II
will receive the delegation in Etchmiadzin.

On October 12 the delegation will visit Shirak province. On the next
day they will leave Yerevan.

Moscow: After seven years, interconfessional committee meets again

A release of the Department for External Church Relations of the Russian
Union of Evangelical Christians-Baptists. May be published freely. Release
#08-43, 600 words.

Truly a Great Meeting

—————————————– —————

After seven years, interconfessional committee meets again

M o s c o w — Following a hiatus lasting nearly seven years, the "Christian
Inter-Confessional Advisory Committee for the CIS-Countries and Baltics"
(CIAC) consisting of Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants reconvened in
Moscow’s Orthodox Pilgrims’ Centre on 2 October. The sessions were entitled:
"Christianity in the Contemporary World – National and Global". Vitaly
Vlasenko (Moscow), Director of External Church Relations for the Russian
Union of Evangelical Christians-Baptists (RUECB) and Protestant representive
on the three-man leadership team, enthused: "It was truly a great meeting."
He was surprised and pleased by the honesty and candidness expressed by the
25 church leaders from Armenia, Latvia, Belarus and Russia during the
non-public, five-hour-long segment of the discussions.

The Baptist pastor reported after the sessions on the pain and offence
Russians feel regarding the fact that their nation as a whole is blamed for
the short-comings and crimes of the erstwhile Soviet Union. Josef Stalin was
a Georgian with an Ossetian mother, his long-time secret police chief,
Lavrenti Beria, was a Mingrelian from Abkhazia. Cheka-founder Felix
Dzerzhinsky was a Pole from Belarus. Nikita Khrushchev, party head from 1953
to 1964, was from Ukraine. Only half of the Soviet Union’s citizens were
ethnic Russians; Pastor Vlasenko noted that millions of Russians also
suffered or died at the hands of the Soviet state.

Vlasenko appreciated the comment from the Armenian Orthodox representative
who asked: "Do we ever say thank you for the good our peoples did for each
other? The Soviet government rebuilt very many houses and factories
following WW II." Vlasenko added: "Many of us former Soviet citizens want to
remain friends, but it is our governments who drive us apart. Governments
tend to place all the blame on another nation; small nations claim to have
been misused by larger ones." He believes many Ukrainians have been unjust
in only stressing negative aspects of the Russian nation.

It was agreed at the meeting on 2 October to form a secretariat responsible
for planning and scheduling the CIAC’s future work. The secretariat will be
located in offices of the Moscow Patriarchy. Probably most active within the
secretariat will be Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin and Father Igor Vyzhanov
from the Patriarchy’s Department of External Church Relations. Besides
Vlasenko, the other two members of CIAC leadership are Kirill, Metropolitan
of Smolensk and Kaliningrad and head of Orthodox external relations, and
Pavel Pezzi, the Roman-Catholic Archbishop of Moscow Diocese – Russia’s
leading Catholic.

At Moscow consultations with the Geneva-based "Conference of European
Churches" (CEC) in February 2007, the decision had been made to resuscitate
CIAC. The CIAC, created in 1993 to ease communication between churches in
the countries of the former USSR, held major conferences in 1994, 1996 and
1999. It even organised a major youth conference in 2001. Yet its activity
was suspended by the Orthodox in February 2002 after the Vatican
surprisingly decided to upgrade its non-regional "apostolic administrations"
within Russia to four regionally-organised "diocese". The Orthodox view this
as serious breach of Russian canonical law. Regarding the CIAC-breakthrough,
Metropolitan Kirill stated at the closing press conference on 2 October: "I
cannot claim that all matters of dispute have been resolved and that all has
been absolutely normalised. But it is a fact that we are moving actively
towards overcoming these difficulties."

Pastor Vlasenko commented later: "I want to emphasize that these sessions
are not a part of the Ecumenical movement. The CIAC is simply an important
platform for interdenominational dialogue about our past and future."
Prominent dignitaries at this meeting included Edmund Ratz, Petersburg-based
Archbishop of the "Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Russia, Ukraine,
Kazakhstan and Central Asia". Protestants were in the majority at the
sessions on 2 October.

William Yoder, Ph.D.
Department for External Church Relations, RUECB
Moscow, 06 October 2008
[email protected]

Tel/fax: 007-495-954-9231

www.baptist.org.ru

Armenian Ombudsman Doubts Commission’s Statement

ARMENIAN OMBUDSMAN DOUBTS COMMISSION’S STATEMENT

A1+
[07:35 pm] 03 October, 2008

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Armen Harutiunian doesn’t instill
great confidence in the NA ad hoc Commission’s statement that the
organs seen in the Opposition’s footage belong to an animal and not
to a human being. He says that such conclusions can be drawn only
after getting the results of an international examination. Therefore,
he thinks the footage should be forwarded to international experts
for a further thorough study.

The Armenian Ombudsman welcomed Serzh Sarkissian’s initiative to set
up a fact-finding panel on the March 1 events. "I wish the panel were
set up as quickly as possible and began investigation."

Armen Harutiunian also added that he had reached an agreement with the
RoA police to inform the Defender’s office about their next actions.

The Ombudsman thinks that the current scene in the country deepens the
atmosphere of intolerance in the country. "I think that the first steps
to recover the situation should be taken by the Armenian leadership."

The Defender’s Office has received some 4096 written complaints over
the past nine years. They all evidence to the fact that human rights
are mostly violated by the Police, courts, Yerevan City Hall and
finally by other state bodies.

"Our law-enforcement bodies should not beg people for trust. They
should earn confidence by their actions," concluded Armen Harutiunian.

Plans To Isolate Armenia Likely To Be Shelved

PLANS TO ISOLATE ARMENIA LIKELY TO BE SHELVED

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.10.2008 15:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Information on Turkey’s doubts about expedience
of Kars-Akhalkalaki-Baku line is verisimilar enough, a Russian
expert said.

"The project had a goal to isolate Armenia. Aspired to segregate
Armenia from all regional communication projects, Azerbaijan showed
the highest interest in it," Andrey Areshev, expert at Strategic
Culture Foundation, told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

"I would like to mention that construction of another line from
Kars to Nakhijevan would ensure complete transport isolation of
Armenia. However, the situation changed when Russian Railways (RZD)
became the concessioner the Armenian Railways. One of major Russian
giants would hardly engage in abstract philanthropy. Anyway, plans to
lift isolation can be realized only in case of warming in bilateral
relations," he said, adding that Serzh Sarsgyan announced his intention
to invite his Turkish counterpart Gul when he was in Moscow.

Plans to isolate Armenia are likely to be shelved, according to the
expert. "Turkey’s position seems logical. It doesn’t wish to stubbornly
support Baku in Karabakh talks. Moreover, it coordinates its moves
with Russia and I would like to emphasize that Russian specialists
are engaged in reconstruction of the Gyumri-Kars line," Areshev said.

At UCLA, Shifting Racial Terrain

AT UCLA, SHIFTING RACIAL TERRAIN
[email protected]

Los Angeles Times
12:02 PM PDT, September 30, 2008
CA

A professor recently quit the admissions board out of suspicion that
black students were being disproportionately favored. But on campus,
a search for reaction quickly becomes a lesson in itself.

It’s kind of hard to talk about affirmative action in college
admissions when you have a black man from the Ivy League leading in
the home stretch of the race for the nation’s presidency.

How much more proof of equal opportunity do we need?

But I was alarmed last month by the stance of a UCLA political science
professor who resigned from the school’s admissions committee because
he suspects that "cheating" on the admissions process accounts for
the recent jump in blacks. He quit in protest after UCLA officials,
citing privacy concerns, declined to give him access to student
applications to test his suspicions.

The number of black freshmen jumped from 96 students in 2006 to 235
students this fall. That’s in a freshman class of almost 5,000.

Dwindling black admission at UCLA has been a source of hand-wringing
for years, since the state voted to outlaw the use of race as a factor
in admissions decisions. Now numbers are beginning to climb, thanks
to outreach efforts and a switch to a holistic admissions process that
considers students’ life circumstances, not just GPA and SAT scores.

I worried about the message the professor’s protest would send to
UCLA’s black students. So I visited the campus Monday to find out
how they were faring during this first week of classes.

Did they feel isolated, unwelcome, invisible?

I worried about not finding enough black students to talk to. What
I didn’t count on was my own confusion:

I couldn’t tell who the black students were.

The first girl I approached looked at me blankly when I began my
interview. Turns out she’s not black, but Indian. The daughter of a
convenience store owner, the first in her family to attend college.

The brown-skinned guy with big sunglasses and bushy hair? Not black,
but Armenian.

The young man on the skateboard, wearing a polo shirt and an Afro pik
in his hair, was black, but waved me off. He was late to political
science class.

Most of the black students I spoke with didn’t want me to use their
names. "It’s counterproductive to complain," one freshman from Long
Beach said. "I’m here, I’m grateful for the opportunity. I’m not
going to get caught up in what people think."

And I found myself pondering my own awkward position. How long do I
hover, waiting to approach a black girl who is deep in conversation
with a white classmate, to talk about racism and isolation?

It made my mission seem like an irony. And I felt like a dinosaur,
trying to use my circa-1970s orientation to interpret today’s shifting
racial terrain.

I was looking for someone to "represent," to give voice to my own
concerns and frustrations over black access to higher education.

They were worried about finding Haines Hall, cramming for the
semester’s first test, making it to biology class.

Then I spotted Steven Williams seated alone at a patio table on the
commons near the School of Law. I figured he wasn’t a freshman; not
just by the gray in his beard but the look of detached bemusement on
his face as he surveyed the bustling yard.

At 43, he’s not your typical UCLA student. He’s a Fairfax High graduate
with a checkered history: a series of dead-end jobs, a 10-month prison
term for passing bad checks, unrelenting family drama.

Four years ago, he got serious about education, enrolled in Los Angeles
City College and resurrected his high school dream of becoming a
Bruin. With a 3.75 GPA and a resume loaded with community service
commitments, he transferred from City College to UCLA as a junior
this fall — one of 100 black students admitted as transfers.

Does the controversy over black admissions bother him? Yes, but he’s
a generation older than most new students — closer in age to me than
to them. "My first thought was ‘Here it is 2008 and we’re still caught
up in this ’40s mindset, people trying to hold us back,’ " he said.

But like me, he got a quick reality check.

On his first day of class, he had a set-to with a professor over
a scheduling error. He was fuming, until he encountered a black
administrator who noticed his distress. She talked him down and shared
another perspective.

"She told me it was just a difficult day for everybody. They were
busy, frustrated . . . Not to take it personally. Because it wasn’t
about me at all.

"I was ready to believe it was racism, but she kind of took me behind
the scenes to look at it from another way."

Chalk that up as the first lesson of the new semester, for the new
student and the dinosaur.

Prelate Commemorates Sourp Kevork Name Day With Laval Community

PRELATE COMMEMORATES SOURP KEVORK NAME DAY WITH LAVAL COMMUNITY

armradio.am
01.10.2008 09:28

Under the Auspices of His Eminence, Archbishop Khajag Hagopian, Prelate
of the Armenian Prelacy of Canada, a special ceremony celebrating
the feast Sourp Kevork was held during Divine Liturgy at its namesake
church in Laval.

His Eminence was joined by Sourp Kevork’s pastor Archpriest Hrair
Nicolian during this service in honour of one of the most venerated
Saints in the Eastern & Oriental Orthodox Churches, Eastern Catholic
Churches, as well as the Anglican Church.

Canonized during the fifth century, Sourp Kevork is the patron Saint
of many countries and cities and is revered as a liberator of captives
and the defender of the poor.