World Must Be Aware Of High Potential Of Armenian Engineers And IT S

WORLD MUST BE AWARE OF HIGH POTENTIAL OF ARMENIAN ENGINEERS AND IT SPECIALISTS

February 11, 2014 | 16:33

YEREVAN. – The world must be aware of the high potential of Armenian
engineers and IT specialists, co-owner of Minno Tablets Vahan
Shakaryan said.

Vahan Shakaryan commented on the decision to assembly Armenian tablets
in Armenia istead of China.

“Of course, we can produce them much cheaper in China because of
lower salaries there. But instead, we spent money on a business trip
of Armenian engineers who checked the quality of the tablets. So we’d
better spend money on salaries of our experts,” Shakaryan said during
a press conference on Tuesday.

He noted that the tablets will have the same brand name, Minno, while
supplied to the traditional markets of the U.S. and Latin America.

However, the devices will be supplied under the new brand ArmTab to
Arab states and former Soviet countries.

“We do it so that the world could become aware of the Armenian
specialists,” he emphasized.

Technology and Science Dynamics company will coordinate the development
and assembly of ArmTab tablets.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armenia Could Have Avoided Entering Customs Union – Political Scient

ARMENIA COULD HAVE AVOIDED ENTERING CUSTOMS UNION – POLITICAL SCIENTIST

February 10, 2014 | 12:32

YEREVAN. – Turning down the European Union (EU) and the Customs Union,
and becoming a bridge between these two organizations would have been
the best option for Armenia.

Political scientist Yervand Bozoyan stated the above-said at a press
conference on Monday.

“Had it not caused resentment by Russia, Armenia could have avoided
entering the [Russian-led] Customs Union. Armenia should have continued
to pursue a policy of complementarity, and become a pathway between
these two organizations,” Bozoyan said.

As per the political scientist, Armenian-Russian relations were
strategic in the 1990s, whereas they deteriorated in the 2000s.

The analyst expressed a conviction that, ten years ago, Armenia
accepted the fact that Russia was its strategic partner yet it was
trying to expand relations with western countries.

“Russia had a very negative attitude toward the [EU] Association
Agreement, as a result of which a doubt surfaced in Armenian-Russian
relations. Therefore [Armenia President] Serzh Sargsyan was compelled
to announce, in September of last year, about the [country’s] entry
into the Customs Union, so as not to lose its strategic partner,”
Yervand Bozoyan maintained.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Anti-Pension Reform Protest Spreading To Armavir

ANTI-PENSION REFORM PROTEST SPREADING TO ARMAVIR

11:59 * 11.02.14

The Armenian civic group protesting against the pension reforms is
now heading to the town of Armavir as part of its awareness campaign
against what is thought to be an illegitimate measure.

They were initially set to rally in front of the Yerevan Opera House
on Tuesday morning, but the public gathering was later postponed
until 2 pm local time.

Our correspondent says that the activists decided to go to Armavir
after reports emerged that the Sardarapat Museum’s director forces
his staff to pay salary taxes to pension funds.

The controversial pension reforms, which went into effect on January
1, require that all the Armenian citizens born after 1973 pay 5%-10%
of their monthly salaries to pension funds to secure what is claimed to
be their well-being after retirement. On January 24. the Constitutional
Court issued a ruling to suspend mandatory component of the amended
pension law. But despite the decision, many employers were later
claimed to be forcing their staffs to pay the salary taxes,

Employees of the Yerevan Opera House on Monday went on a strike to
protest against the funded pensions. After their rally in Yerevan’s
Liberty Square, it was announced that the protest would continue
this morning.

Tert.am has learned from an activist that many employees of the
Sardarapat Museum now complain that they have been threatened with
firing in case of failing to meet the administration’s demand.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Rosneft Thoroughly Studying Construction Of Rubber Plant In Armenia

ROSNEFT THOROUGHLY STUDYING CONSTRUCTION OF RUBBER PLANT IN ARMENIA – VOLINKIN

YEREVAN, February 11. /ARKA/. Russian Rosneft is thoroughly looking
into construction of a rubber plant in Armenia, Russian ambassador
to Armenia Ivan Volinkin said in responding reporter’s question about
the company’s plans on Nairit chemical plant in Yerevan.

It is a complicated issue, and Rosneft is trying to find a mutually
beneficial solution, the ambassador said. The company is considering
construction of a rubber plant for eco-friendly tire production,
together with Pirelli, Volinkin said in his interview to Armenian
Public TV channel.

On December 25, 2013, Rosneft, Pirelli Tire Russia and Rosneft-Armenia
signed a memorandum of understanding in Yerevan to set up a joint
venture for butadiene-styrene rubber production.

Nairit specialists were doing more or less the same in the old
plant, which means they should be demanded in the new production,
the diplomat said.

Earlier, Armenia’s premier Tigran Sargsyan said Rosneft was planning to
invest 400 million dollars in construction of a new plant in Armenia.

Nairit was the only plant in the Soviet Union producing chloroprene
rubber. The plant was closed in 1989 for environmental reasons and
resumed operating partially in 1992. In 2006, 90% of Nairit’s shares
were sold to British Rainoville Property Limited for $40 million. The
remaining 10% belong to the Armenian government. The plant operations
were suspended in 2010. -0–

– See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/rosneft_thoroughly_studying_construction_of_rubber_plant_in_armenia_volinkin/#sthash.5DUYPCsZ.dpuf

Concert D’Aznavour En Mai En Armenie ?

CONCERT D’AZNAVOUR EN MAI EN ARMENIE ?

ARMENIE

Dans un entretien accorde a Hayastani Hanrapetoutioun, en marge du
tournoi d’echecs de Zurich, Charles Aznavour evoque la perspective
d’un concert en mai en Armenie a l’occasion de son 90ème anniversaire.

Venu au tournoi d’echecs de Zurich pour soutenir le champion armenien,
Levon Aronian, Charles Aznavour fait part de son amour pour le jeu
d’echecs que Missak Manouchian lui aurait appris dans son enfance.

Extrait de la revue de presse de l’Ambassade de France en Armenie en
date du 4 fevrier 2014

mardi 11 fevrier 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Une Societe Miniere Demeure Au Top Des Contribuables De L’Armenie

UNE SOCIETE MINIERE DEMEURE AU TOP DES CONTRIBUABLES DE L’ARMENIE

ARMENIE

Une societe minière et metallurgique allemande reste numero un des
contribuables au niveau des entreprises en Armenie, selon le Comite
national des recettes (SRC).

Selon les dernières donnees du SRC la societe Zanguezour
cuivre-molybdène Combine (ZCMC) a paye environ 38 milliards de drams
(94 millions de dollars) en divers impôts et taxes en 2013.

Proprietaire du groupe allemand Cronimet, la societe ZCMC est basee
dans la ville de Kajaran et emploie des milliers de personnes. La
societe exporte la quasi-totalite de ses concentres de production,
de cuivre et de molybdène.

Le reseau de distribution du gaz d’Armenie, ARG, est deuxième sur la
liste des 1000 plus gros contribuables du pays. Ses contributions au
budget de l’Etat s’elève a plus de 36 milliards de drams en 2013.

Le reseau entièrement detenue par Gazprom est suivie par K-Telecom,
la societe mère du plus grand operateur de telephonie mobile d’Armenie.

K-Telecom qui appartient aussi a une societe russe.

Parmi les autres grandes societes contribuables figurent un autre
operateur de telecommunications russe, des entreprises importatrices de
produits alimentaires de base et de carburant et la societe nationale
d’electricite.

Les classements SRC indiquent que le montant total des impôts payes
par les 1000 plus grandes entites commerciales d’Armenie atteint 665
milliards de drams. Le chiffre est equivalent a environ deux tiers
des recettes fiscales totales du gouvernement, qui a augmente de plus
de 15 pour cent l’annee dernière.

Le budget de l’Etat armenien pour cette annee prevoit une augmentation
du chiffre d’affaires similaire. Le gouvernement s’attend a ce que la
croissance economique et l’amelioration de l’administration fiscale
lui permette d’atteindre cet objectif.

Les recettes fiscales du gouvernement n’ont cesse d’augmenter, mais
elles restent encore assez modestes en proportion du PIB. Le ratio
de l’impôt sur le PIB etait inferieur a 18 pour cent en 2012, l’un
des indicateurs les plus bas dans l’ex-Union sovietique.

mardi 11 fevrier 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Une Association D’hommes D’affaire Met En Garde Contre L’union Douan

UNE ASSOCIATION D’HOMMES D’AFFAIRE MET EN GARDE CONTRE L’UNION DOUANIERE

ARMENIE

Une association d’homme d’affaires armeniens a exprime de serieuses
inquietudes sur les augmentations considerables dans les prix de
nombreux biens qui devraient resulter de l’adhesion de l’Armenie a
l’Union douanière de la Russie, la Bielorussie et le Kazakhstan.

Le gouvernement armenien a declare jeudi qu’il est conscient de
la hausse des prix probables et tente de les minimiser dans les
negociations d’adhesion en cours avec l’organe executif de l’union et
les trois Etats membres. Selon le vice-ministre de l’Economie Garegin
Melkonian, Erevan espère que des centaines de biens seront exoneres
de droits de douane plus eleves du bloc dirigee par la Russie.

Les frais communs s’appliqueraint a certains des 11500 articles
importes de la Russie, la Bielorussie et le Kazakhstan. Plus de
60 pour cent d’entre eux depassent les tarifs fixes par l’Armenie
refletant le regime commercial liberal traditionnel de ce dernier.

Gagik Makarian, president de l’Union Armenienne des employeurs, a
averti que les tarifs de l’Union douanière, s’ils etaient appliques a
l’Armenie, vont faire croître le coût de nombreux produits alimentaires
et de biens de consommation importes du reste du monde.

Le pays du Caucase du Sud enclave est fortement dependante de ces
importations.

Gagik Makarian estime que les prix de detail de la viande, des
produits laitiers, du ble, de l’huile de cuisson, du sucre, des
pommes de terre et autres legumes devraient augmenter de près de
15 pour cent. >
a-t-il dit aux journalistes.

Gagik Makarian a averti que de nombreux autres produits de première
necessite seraient egalement touches par des hausses de prix
similaires. En particulier, a-t-il dit, les prix des voitures
non-russes vendus en Armenie vont augmenter d’au moins 12 pour cent.

Gagik Makarian a ajoute que son association a transmis ses
preoccupations au ministère de l’Economie dans une lettre qui exhorte
le gouvernement a demander des exemptions tarifaires de l’Union
douanière. Mais il etait sceptique quant a la probabilite de telles
concessions.

Le vice-ministre Melkonian a revele, quant a lui, que le gouvernement
a deja demande au syndicat d’exonerer jusqu’a 850 articles importes
en Armenie de sa politique commerciale protectionniste. Mais il n’a
pas pu preciser si Erevan reussira a decrocher ces larges concessions.

mardi 11 fevrier 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Everyone In Armenia Wants Change In Power – Heritage Party

EVERYONE IN ARMENIA WANTS CHANGE IN POWER – HERITAGE PARTY

February 04, 2014 | 11:25

YEREVAN. – This rate of emigration from Armenia bespeaks the fact
that we have little time to pull the country out of this situation.

Opposition Heritage Party Vice-Chairman Armen Martirosyan noted the
aforementioned at a press conference on Tuesday.

“This is all due to our authorities,” Martirosyan noted, and expressed
a conviction that everyone in Armenia wants a change in power in
the country.

In his words, Armenian soldier Armen Hovhannisyan, who was killed as
a result of a repelled diversionary attack by the Azerbaijani military
last month, proved that the Armenian nation can defend itself.

“Armen showed us all that we are strong. I am sure that all of us can
create such a situation that the authorities will hold new elections
and everything will change,” Heritage’s official said.

As per Armen Martirosyan, if the aforesaid is brought to fruition,
all of Armenia’s civil initiatives will come together and celebrate
their victory.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armenia: Contemplating Kocharian’s Second Coming

Eurasia Review
Feb 8 2014

Armenia: Contemplating Kocharian’s Second Coming

By Marianna Grigoryan

The recent uptick in criticism of incumbent authorities by former
Armenian president Robert Kocharian is prompting speculation in
Yerevan that he is angling to make a political comeback.

The 59-year-old Kocharian, a Nagorno-Karabakh native, served as
Armenia’s president from 1998-2008. He has the reputation of a tough
political infighter with a taste for big business, big politics, and,
on occasion, windsurfing. The focus of his recent attacks has been
Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian, who Kocharian derided as “morally
defective,” “mediocre” and “helpless” (an appraisal delivered after
Sarkisian’s dismissal of economic growth under Kocharian as “a
bubble”). The public nature of the criticism served as a signal to
many political analysts that Kocharian wanted to return to the
political center stage.

The controversial 2008 election and subsequent protests in which at
least 10 people were killed marred Kocharian’s exit from politics, and
still represents a major obstacle to a comeback. But conditions in
recent years have nonetheless changed. Armenia’s long-time leading
opposition force — the Armenian National Congress, led by another
former president Levon Ter-Petrosian – has lost momentum, while, at
the same time, public confidence in incumbent President Serzh
Sargsyan’s administration has eroded, in large part because of
continuing economic woes. Data from the National Statistical Service
show that poverty rates over the past five years have increased by 17
percent, while the number of people living beneath the poverty line
nearly doubled to 32.4 percent of the official 2012 population of 3.21
million people. At the same time, 246,000 people left Armenia for good
from 2008-13, according to the government.

The present circumstances, then, provide an opening for Kocharian.
“The interest toward him as a political figure first of all comes as a
result of the lack of a serious political team on which people could
place their hopes,” said Yervand Bozoian, an independent political
expert. “People want to see an alternative to current authorities.”

There is a tendency throughout the South Caucasus, some analysts say,
for people to yearn for a political messiah — someone who offers hope
for quick solutions to an array of complex problems. For some
Armenians, Kocharian represents just such a savior figure, given that
his presidential term is remembered, at least in retrospect, as
relatively successful.

“I would definitely vote for Kocharian because he has a political
will,” said Arsen Babaian, a 35-year-old manager in Yerevan. “He is a
strong politician and I don’t see any alternative to him.”

Leaders of the governing Republican Party of Armenia seem acutely
aware of their own party’s dwindling popularity, and the potential
threat to their grip on power posed by Kocharian. At a mid-January
news conference, one, Education Minister Armen Ashotian, tried to
undercut Kocharian’s credibility. He asserted that a Kocharian
comeback would be viable only if the country was in a “critical
situation” and there was a strong “demand by the people.” Neither
prerequisite exists, Ashotian quickly added. In addition, Kocharian
would need to plainly state that he wants to return to power,
something that he has not done.

Kocharian appears to prefer to keep people guessing.
Rabbit-out-of-the-hat moves have marked Kocharian’s career since 1997,
when former President Ter-Petrosian summoned him from Karabakh, where
he was serving as the de-facto leader of separatist forces, to become
prime minister of Armenia. A year later, after Ter-Petrosian’s
resignation, Kocharian himself won election as president.

Hmayak Hovhannisian, head of the Union of Political Experts, says
Kocharian may still have a cunning move or two left up his sleeve. A
so-called “Russian scenario” between President Sargsyan and Kocharian
– one becoming prime minister, while the other opts for president –
cannot be excluded in time for the 2017 parliamentary election and
2018 presidential election, he suggested.

Sargsyan, who served as prime minister, defense minister and interior
minister under Kocharian, has given no sign of being amenable to such
a bargain.

Political analyst Richard Giragosian, director of Yerevan’s Regional
Studies Center, sees little possibility for any such change. The
legacy of the 2008 political violence is probably too big an obstacle
to overcome for Kocharian. “Most Armenians hold Kocharian personally
and politically responsible” for the violence and bloodshed of March
2008, he underlined.

“As his public position has seriously faded, so, too, has his role in
being a relevant political figure,” Giragosian held. “Rather, what is
more likely is his continued attempt to influence politics.”

http://www.eurasiareview.com/08022014-armenia-contemplating-kocharians-second-coming/

Satirical Turkish site on trial for insulting religion

Jihad Watch
Feb 7 2014

Satirical Turkish site on trial for insulting religion

Robert Spencer

This is yet another sign of the erosion of Turkish secularism and its
galloping re-Islamization, but what is noteworthy here is that the
complaint was brought by Adnan Oktar (pictured above). Under the name
Harun Yahya, Oktar has published a huge amount of Islamic apologetics
material, including some `moderate’ Muslim explanations of why jihad
violence and suicide attacks aren’t justified in Islamic teaching, and
so non-Muslims need not be concerned about them. But he seems to have
no problem with the Sharia denial of the freedom of speech and
enforcement of the prohibition on any criticism of Islam.

`Satirical Turkish site on trial for insulting religion,’ from
Al-Monitor, February 5 (thanks to Jerk Chicken):

One of Turkey’s most popular websites, the satirical Sour Dictionary
(Eksi Sozluk), is on trial for insulting religion. Forty contributing
writers have been charged following a complaint by popular Islamic
figure Adnan Oktar. The trial kıcked off Jan. 14 with 27 of the
defendants in attendance.

Oktar, in his complaint to the prosecutor, claimed that some entries
in the dictionary included comments that amounted to insults of
religion and prophets. The entries he cited and for which the
prosecutor eventually pressed charges include jokes that the Prophet
Muhammad and Allah had `sent money’ to Turkey’s Housing Development
Administration and that Jesus Christ and religious people were of low
intelligence. Other examples include an entry on suggestions for a
100th name for Allah in addition to the 99 names Muslims have for
their god and another titled `Allah’s official sponsors.’

The prosecutor is seeking jail terms of six to 12 months for the Eksi
Sozluk writers. The defendants disputed the charges against them at
their first hearing, arguing that they had no intention of insulting
religion and that their comments fell within the scope of freedom of
expression. A second hearing was scheduled for Feb. 17.

A string of similar legal cases in recent years indicate that
accusations of insulting religion, especially Islam, is being used
with increasing ease and frequency to press criminal charges. Emma
Sinclair-Webb, a Turkey researcher for Human Rights Watch, says that
the trials point to a new trend. What was once an epidemic of cases of
`insulting Turkishness’ are now being replaced by those of `insulting
religion.’

Al-Monitor readers will recall that world-famous Turkish pianist Fazil
Say was sentenced to 10 months in jail for insulting Islam and its
prophet on Twitter. His sentence was eventually suspended but remains,
dangling over Say’s head.

Another prominent figure convicted of the same charges is the
Turkish-Armenian intellectual Sevan Nisanyan, for making the following
remarks in a television program: `I don’t believe that Muhammad was a
prophet. I don’t believe in the existence of a prophethood
institution. I find it absurd that anyone could claim receiving
special revelations from god. To me, that’s impertinence. Muhammad
must have either lied or had hallucinations.’

Nisanyan was given 13 months in jail. Although he is yet to begin
serving his sentence, Nisanyan was sent to prison in January to serve
a two-year term over a small structure he built in violation of
construction laws on his own land in the village of Sirince, in Izmir
province. As explained in Al-Monitor, many in Turkey are convinced
that construction regulations were used as a pretext to punish
Nisanyan for his outspoken views on the Armenian genocide and critical
opinion of religion.

Other cases demonstrate that even people who refer to religious
figures in a critical context can end up in court on charges of
insulting religion. Take, for instance, Canan Arin, a lawyer from
Antalya who was charged after she said that the Prophet Muhammad had
married an underage girl. Her trial was suspended conditionally, but
she will find herself back in court if similar charges are brought
against her over a period of three years.

Cartoonist Bahadir Baruter was also charged and faced a year in jail
over a cartoon he drew of a mosque wall with the inscription `There is
no Allah, religion is a lie.’

The zealous pursuit of `insults to religion’ extends beyond the
courts, with media outlets facing administrative sanctions. The
Turkish CNBC-e channel, for instance, was fined by the Higher Board of
Radio and Television over an episode of `The Simpsons’ deemed
offensive to religion.

Even though no one ended up behind bars in the above cases, the mere
fact that people stand trial and risk jail sentences no doubt
seriously intimidates the defendants as well as anyone with critical
views on religion. The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has
come under fire for promoting `religious chauvinism.’ It appears that
prosecutors who endorse the AKP’s views or vie to win the government’s
favor are working hard to come up with such cases.

The prosecutors use the seemingly general wording of `insulting
religion,’ but all the cases pursued thus far have concerned comments
deemed to be offensive to Muslims. Insults and hate speech against
Jews or Christians clearly do not merit similar vigilance.

In this charged context, the case against Eksi Sozluk is likely to
produce a serious bullying effect on social media. It is an alarming
trial that calls for close monitoring.

http://www.jihadwatch.org/2014/02/satirical-turkish-site-on-trial-for-insulting-religion