Chief Cardiologist Of Yerevan: Healthcare System Of Armenia Has Many

CHIEF CARDIOLOGIST OF YEREVAN: HEALTHCARE SYSTEM OF ARMENIA HAS MANY DOWNSIDES

arminfo
Thursday, June 21, 17:30

The profession of a doctor should be the most honorable, but the
attitude to medical workers is rather negative in Armenia, the
chief cardiologist of Yerevan, deputy director of Yerevan Cardiology
Institute, Parunak Zelveyan, said at today’s press-conference.

He also added that just for this reason some people take a right to
beat doctors. He means the fact that on 17 June the security guards
of the restaurant “Harsnakar” owned by Ruben Hairapetyan severely
beat a group of military doctors dining there. Vahe Avetyan, one of
these doctors, is on the verge of death.

He said that the healthcare system of Armenia does not let to reach
much success in this sphere as there is no single law which would
systemize the healthcare in the country, in particular, delivery of
free of charge medical aid. “Unlike the developed countries, there is
no social advertising in Armenia, which would give an opportunity to
the people from time to time to listen to the precautionary measures
so that to prevent many dangerous diseases”, – he said and added that
the healthcare system of Armenia has many downsides, in particular,
high tariffs of medical survey.

Era Of Oligarchs’ Arbitrariness Ends

ERA OF OLIGARCHS’ ARBITRARINESS ENDS
Naira Hayrumyan

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 15:56:53 – 21/06/2012

The very first session of the National Assembly showed that not
only the authorities but the entire political system of the country
is changing.

The harsh criticism the program of the government encountered
in the National Assembly proved that the institution of political
responsibility is being formed in Armenia. And even if the Republican
Party approves and affirms confidence in government, everyone knows
that the parliament stages a real harsh political fight.

An important change took place. What had previously been called by
the authorities opposition’s populism has now become a demand of
responsibility. Not the program of the government but the extent of
responsibility of the prime minister for the emigration, the rate
of dram, the growth of poverty and economic decline in general is
discussed.

During independence, the institution of political accountability
has never been operational in Armenia. People could be arrested
for stealing a chicken, while the collapse of the entire economy
was considered just a mistake, and everyone has the right to make
mistakes. The institution of responsibility is not laid down in the
legislation. The judges who pass verdicts which are later dismissed
by courts of higher instance are never held responsible.

The next step of the opposition should be institutionalization of
responsibility. The current and former authorities who did not have
adequate opposition and political opponents did everything they could
to deprive the society and their opponents of mechanism of control
and accountability, recall or resignation in case of defaults.

Now there is opposition in Armenia, and it is proven in the first
session of parliament. But the opposition will never come to power if
it does not insist on the introduction of the institution of political
responsibility and revocation of the ruling forces. Democratic
governance is a very simple mechanism. People elect those who bring
the best program, monitor its implementation, and if the promises are
not met, they do not re-elect the same party but hold it responsible.

Armenia has even taken away the right to monitor implementation of
election pledges.

If the parliamentary opposition succeeds in introducing this
mechanism, it may ensure full democratic transition of the political
system. Although it is minority in the parliament, the opposition can
do that. Strange though it may seem, with the help of the president.

Whatever is said about Serzh Sargsyan upholding the interests of the
oligarchic class, the latter is evidently becoming a burden for him,
and he wants to create mechanisms to curb the oligarchs and his own
party. He will hardly be proud of the incident in Harsnakar or Samvel
Alexanyan’s cynical reaction.

The best mechanism is the opposition. It is not accidental that Serzh
Sargsyan did everything he could to have the whole opposition enter
the parliament. Judging by the confusion of Hovik Abrahamyan and
stunned Republicans who are not used to resistance, Serzh Sargsyan
has succeeded.

Oligarchs are also stunned because they suddenly met people in
parliament who can show them to their real place. And it does not
matter that Samvel Alexanyan swaggers and Galust Sahakyan shouts. They
understand that the good days have passed, and true political fight
has started.

The most important thing is that all this is shown on TV, and
now everyone knows that Stepan Demirchyan or Nikol may show Samvel
Alexanyan to his place. The era of arbitrariness of the oligarchs is
coming to an end. Another shock and it will die.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments26630.html

Hovik Abrahamyan Snapped At Vardan Oskanyan

HOVIK ABRAHAMYAN SNAPPED AT VARDAN OSKANYAN

02:39 pm | Today | Politics

Member of the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) faction Vardan Oskanyan
asked the NA Chairman to speak on the maintenance order after the
speech by deputy of the Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) faction
Artashes Geghamyan.

Oskanyan started his speech by asking how many minutes he had to speak,
and NA Chairman Hovik Abrahamyan answered that he had a minute.

“You mentioned my name twice and could have given me two,” Vardan
Oskanyan suggested.

“Quantity has nothing to do with quality,” said the NA Chairman and
closed the subject.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2012/06/21/vardan-oskanyan

HAK’s Zourabyan – "This Government Can’t Be Trusted"

HAK’s Zourabyan – “This government can’t be trusted”
Grisha Balasanyan

HETQ
11:33, June 21, 2012

The Armenian parliament today resumed its discussion of the
government’s program outline for the next five years and this afforded
HAK MP Levon Zourabyan to take the podium and declare that the issue
really being discussed was confidence in the new government.

Zourabyan said that the issue of confidence in the government must
be discussed against the backdrop of its track record.

“How can a government that has faked 500,000 – 700,000 votes be
accountable to its people?” asked Zourabyan.

The HAK parliamentary leader said it is impossible to have faith in
a government whose policies have led to an artificial appreciation
of the AMD propped up by the Central Bank infusing $1 billion in
reserves and the growth of the national debt.

Zourabyan said that as a consequence of government policies domestic
producers are being squeezed while businessmen with links to government
are being protected.

“Not only can we ensure the fate of citizens in the hands of these
authorities, we must free ourselves from them as soon as possible,”
Zourabyan declared.

Zhoghovurd: Gas Stove, Gas Cylinder, Tank Accumulator For General Ma

ZHOGHOVURD: GAS STOVE, GAS CYLINDER, TANK ACCUMULATOR FOR GENERAL MANVEL’S ROOM

Panorama.am
21/06/2012

MP, chairman of Yerkrapah Volunteer Union, General Manvel Grigoryan
ordered to bring several interesting objects into his parliament room,
Zhoghovurd reports. The objects included a gas stove, a gas cylinder,
a tank accumulator and several other such items, the paper says and
reminds that an obsidian fridge was brought into his room several
days ago.

According to the paper, General Manvel remains one of the most
influential Members of Parliament, and even many of his colleagues
feel embarrassed to talk to him.

Lfik Samo Supported His Friend Hayrapetyan

LFIK SAMO SUPPORTED HIS FRIEND HAYRAPETYAN

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 12:31:02 – 21/06/2012

Vardges Gaspari, opposition, held a protest on June 20 in front of
the National Assembly in relation to the Harsnakar incident. Gaspari
was holding a poster written “Ruben Hayrapetyan – a murderer” when
suddenly Samvel Alexanyan (Lfik Samo) approached Gaspari standing
in front of the NA entrance and seized the poster. After, Vardges
Gaspari started shouting “Alexanyan – hooligan” when a fat young man
pushed Gaspari to the ground.

Recall, Samvel Alexanyan and Ruben Hayrapetyan say of being close
friends, so Alexanyan decided to support his friend seizing Gaspari’s
poster. Then, Alexanyan’s bodyguard decided to support his boss and
pushed Gaspari to the ground. Though, perhaps, it was not Alexanyan’s
bodyguard, but his “office employee” because once Alexanyan said that
he has no bodyguard, but only “office employees”.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country26624.html

Charles Tannock: Europe’S Risky Tolerance Of Tension In The Caucasus

EUROPE’S RISKY TOLERANCE OF TENSION IN THE CAUCASUS

Published 19 June 2012 – Updated 20 June 2012

Military tensions have grown in recent weeks between Armenia and
Azerbaijan. Charles Tannock argues that the EU should take steps to
diffuse the situation.

Charles Tannock is a member of the European Parliament from Britain.

“Almost unnoticed beyond the specialist foreign policy community,
there have been around a dozen heavy incidents of exchanges of sniper
fire and artillery shelling between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the
last two months.

In this time, more than 10 soldiers have been killed, and those foreign
policy pundits who still maintain the concept of “frozen conflicts”
being dormant affairs that can be safely ignored should know that
half of these incidents did not take place in the disputed territory
of Nagorno-Karabakh itself, but at the recognised international
borders between the two states, which are both part of the European
Neighbourhood Policy and the EU’s Eastern Partnership.

This recent escalation smacks of the rising tensions before the
Georgian-Russian war in 2008. After years with numerous smaller
incidents, the international community gets used to a certain
instability, and while peace negotiations fail due to the lack of
political will between the hostile parties, the frequency and gravity
of the incidents slowly escalates and in spite of European “calls
upon both sides” for restraint, real war actions can suddenly unfold.

History appears to be repeating itself, but there are three main
differences.

First, among Armenia and Azerbaijan, only Azerbaijan has an interest
in mobilising troops at the risk of escalating to an outright actual
war. While the situation between Russia and Georgia was more blurred,
only Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and his government openly
and repeatedly threaten their neighbour with war, whereas Armenia
does not and would logically have no such interest.

After decades of discrimination, the majority ethnic Armenian
population of Nagorno-Karabakh sought independence during the fall
of the Soviet Union. In 1991, when the young Republic of Azerbaijan
used force to restore “order”, the independence movement took up
arms and with military assistance from Armenia proper they liberated
Nagorno-Karabakh and the conflict carried on until the legally still
binding cease-fire of Bishkek was signed in 1994.

Azerbaijan claims that these territories are occupied, but since Stalin
allocated them in 1921 under Soviet rule (arbitrarily) to Azerbaijan,
it has done nothing to convince the local Armenian population of the
benefits of Azerbaijani rule. The only time most of the local people in
Nagorno-Karabakh have felt to be living without fear of discrimination
and with a relative physical security came after 1994, and thus neither
Armenia nor the de-facto Nagorno-Karabakh Republic have any interest
in the renewed use of force – as they would be fighting for what?

The second current difference is the potential scale of this possible
war. It is very different from the Georgian situation in 2008, as
Azerbaijan and Armenia could see bombs and rockets fall on their
capitals and the large-scale destruction of key places of civilian
infrastructure. In Azerbaijan, oil rigs and pipelines, vital to their
petrodollar economy, are all within simple artillery range of the
Karabakhi army, and Armenian rockets can easily reach the refineries
on the Caspian shores near Baku.

These places have been the major vital financial resource for
Azerbaijan’s large defence budget, which, as President Aliyev proudly
proclaimed, exceeds Armenia’s total state budget and allows the
possibility of “liberating Karabakh in 10 days”.

In short, both sides can erase everything positive that has been
built up in the past 20 years since independence. Armenia is in a
close defence alliance with Russia, while Azerbaijan is supported by
its ethnic “brother nation” Turkey.

Iran is at odds with Azerbaijan due to Azeri revanchist and irredentist
claims on Iranian soil and fears international peacekeeping troops
on its northern border, given its virtual pariah status over the
Iranian nuclear quest. Georgia fears Russian troops spreading out in
the South Caucasus to aid Armenia. It is most unlikely that such a
war would be restricted simply to Karabakh.

Also knowing the complex local geography and huge natural resources,
it is impossible to predict whose troops would finally end up exactly
where. Only one thing is certain: the human tragedy and economic
costs would dwarf anything seen in Europe, at least for the last 20
years since the Balkan wars. To add to further turmoil as the world
is facing an economic slump, with the eurozone crisis and US and
Chinese growth dampening, the expected collapse of Azerbaijani oil
and gas supplies would cause a rapid rise in world-wide crude prices
and strangle any green shoots hopes for renewed global economic growth.

The third main difference is the position of Europe. While the EU has
traditionally been closer to Georgia than to Russia, the EU desperately
seeks a balanced relation with both Armenia and Azerbaijan. After the
above mentioned hostile incidents, EU High Representative Catherine
Ashton and foreign ministers in the EU’s capitals all “called upon
both sides” to show restraint, despite clear evidence about which
side had started the recent provocation.

Azerbaijani state-controlled media reported that “Azerbaijani armed
forces prevented one more provocation of the Armenian army” and that
“it was identified that the Armenians were carrying out digging work
along the front line” (the internationally recognised state border).

One might assume that the Armenians are allowed to dig on their
own territory as much as they like and that “preventing” such a
“provocation” with the disproportionate use of artillery fire, as it
happened on the 25 April in the Tavoush region, might have sparked an
international outcry. And even though ever since the Eurovision song
contest (held in Azerbaijan’s capital), most of Europe is now better
informed about the undemocratic nature of th0 government in Baku,
no Belarus-type EU sanctions have been threatened or even discussed.

The EU today possesses all the instruments necessary to make a
difference. If we have learnt anything from the Georgian war of 2008,
we must now use them to avert the possibility of the worst horror
scenarios occurring in our near eastern neighbourhood.

The EU should clearly threaten sanctions against anyone unilaterally
using disproportionate force in this conflict, and we must insist
on the removal of snipers and on having EU observers along the line
of contact and the state borders. Incidentally, Armenia has already
agreed to this.

Before signing the next oil trade treaty with Baku, this should be
the EU condition, or we might soon have very different prices to pay
for oil and more importantly a tragic human catastrophe in Europe’s
east with large-scale casualties. In addition, there could be large
flows of refugees heading in our direction with all that this might
mean in economic terms in terms of additional burdens on our already
stretched public resources.”

http://www.euractiv.com/global-europe/europe-risky-tolerance-war-escal-analysis-513406

Armenia’s First Lady Bountiful

ARMENIA’S FIRST LADY BOUNTIFUL
by Giorgi Lomsadze

EurasiaNet.org
June 19 2012
NY

Surveys show that Armenians tend to believe that the man has to be
the principal moneymaker in a family. But looks like the country’s
presidential family is bucking that trend. Judging by official income
disclosures, President Serzh Sargsyan lives, financially speaking,
in the shadow of his richer wife, Rita.

While the president was scrimping together a modest annual income in
drams of some $34,900 (salary plus accruals on loans) in 2011, Rita
Sargsyan was busy making the dram equivalent of $41,000, reported
the investigative news service Hetq. Perhaps because of his modest
revenue, the Armenian president did not do any large-scale shopping
or investment in 2011, if we go by his income declaration.

In neighboring Georgia, President Mikheil Saakashvili seems to be
the breadwinner in his family. President Saakashvili’s annual salary
in laris is just $1,000 higher than that of his Armenian counterpart,
while his wife, Sandra Roelofs, has not disclosed any earned wages for
2011. Saakashvili owns more property than his wife, but the his and
her bank accounts seem to be about the same size in that family. As
of May 16, 2012, the president reported about $85,000 in his bank
accounts (in dollars, euros and laris), while the first lady has
above $86,000 worth of euros and laris.

Many in Armenia and Georgia are skeptical about such official income
disclosures, but, in their richer neighbor, Azerbaijan, even that is
not available. Both President Ilham Aliyev and his wife, Mehriban
Aliyeva, are reported to have vast business interests, but there
appears to be no official data out there to show who brings home more
money at the end of the day.

Armenians To Meet With Kan. National Guard Leaders

ARMENIANS TO MEET WITH KAN. NATIONAL GUARD LEADERS

El Dorado Times

June 19 2012

The Associated Press

Two top military officers from the republic of Armenia are in Kansas
this week to meet with senior National Guard leaders in Topeka and
observe training in Salina.

The visit comes as Armenia’s military transitions from a conscripted
force to one with a professional noncommissioned officer corps. The
Kansas National Guard has been joined with the former Soviet republic
in a partnership program since 2003.

The program’s director, Lt. Col. Brent Salmans, says the Armenian
delegation will receive briefings in Topeka on the roles and
responsibilities of noncommissioned staff officers.

On Wednesday and Thursday, the Armenians will observe operations at
the Great Plains Joint Training Center in Salina. They’ll also visit
the Officer Candidate School at the 235th Training Regiment.

http://www.eldoradotimes.com/newsnow/x1915456102/Armenians-to-meet-with-Kan-National-Guard-leaders

British Royal Court’s Main Invited Conductor To Direct Armenia’s Phi

BRITISH ROYAL COURT’S MAIN INVITED CONDUCTOR TO DIRECT ARMENIA’S PHILHARMONIC AGAIN

news.am
June 20, 2012 | 15:10

YEREVAN. – Armenian capital city Yerevan’s Aram Khachaturian Concert
Hall will become the venue Thursday for a concert directed by the
British Royal Court’s main invited conductor Christopher Warren-Green,
during which renowned pianist Bernd Glemser will perform. This was
informed during the press conference held Wednesday at the Armenian
State Philharmonic.

To note, the two musicians had taken part in last year’s fifth final
concert of the Yerevan International Music Festival.

Christopher Warren-Green noted that he fell in love with the Armenian
Philharmonic Orchestra the first time he conducted it. In his words,
he came for a second time because this orchestra and its conductor
are marvelous.

In his turn Bernd Glemser noted that he very much liked this orchestra
with which he played several times. He also stated that the Orchestra’s
level is gradually getting higher.

He informed that he has performed works by the great Armenian composer
Aram Khachaturian and that he knows other Armenian composers yet has
not played their creations. But he did not rule out the possibility
of including the works by Armenian composers in his repertoire.