Levon Ter-Petrosyan Met With The U.S. Ambassador

LEVON TER-PETROSYAN MET WITH THE U.S. AMBASSADOR

LRAGIR.AM
11:15:12 – 23/04/2009

On April 22, the Armenian first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan met
with the U.S. ambassador to Armenia Marie Jovanovich and her advisor
for political issues Steven Banks.

In the course of the meeting, the process of the Armenian and Turkish
relations normalization, the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, the Yerevan Mayor
elections, the democracy state in Armenia in particular the question
on the political prisoners and on the freedom of gatherings were
discussed. The implementation of the Millennium Challenges program
was also discussed. The representatives of the central office of the
Armenian National Congress Levon Zurabyan and Avetis Avagyan were
also present at the meeting.

Enhancement Of Migration Flows Supervision

ENHANCEMENT OF MIGRATION FLOWS SUPERVISION

LRAGIR.AM
16:13:14 – 21/04/2009

The Armenian branch of the PEOPLE IN NEED (PIN) Czech organization
jointly with the Armenian UN Association implements the project
"Enhancement of regulation of the migration flows in Armenia" within
the frameworks of the program "Cooperation of third countries in the
fields of migration and asylum".

The program includes three main features which will prevent the
illegal migration and will enable those, who want to return to Armenia,
to find their places here.

The department of the public relations of the Armenian branch of the
organization informs that the three main points of the program are:

1. To prevent the illegal migration flows of the Armenian population
2. To reintegrate those wanting to return to Armenia 3. To set up
a virtual fund which will enable our compatriots living abroad to
be well informed about the assistance which they may expect while
returning in Armenia.

The program will be carried into life in Yerevan, as well as in 4
regions of Armenia – Ghegharkunik, Shirak, Kotayk and Lori.

ANKARA: Fury Over, Bitterness Lingers In Azerbaijan

FURY OVER, BITTERNESS LINGERS IN AZERBAIJAN

Hurriyet
April 20 2009
Turkey

BAKU – Turkey and Armenia have never before come so close to
normalizing bilateral relations, and, similarly, Turkey and Azerbaijan
have never come so close to rupturing theirs.

It is not just a coincidence that shortly after refusing to come to
Turkey to attend an international conference, Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev went to Moscow and called Russia "a strategic partner."

"If Turkey opens the borders with Armenia, what will be the difference
for us between Turkey and Russia or Turkey and Iran?" said Asim
Mollazade, the leader of the opposition Democratic Reform Party.

The news that Turkey was preparing to normalize its relations with
Armenia has sent shockwaves through the Azerbaijani society.

In reality, not a single Azerbaijani official has talked openly
about the government’s discontent on the possibility of Turkey
normalizing its relations with Armenia without substantial progress
on the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. But the press has been fiercely
criticizing the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, and
everyone in Turkey knew that the media campaign was orchestrated by
the Aliyev administration.

"If the government does not want, there won’t be any discussion. But
lately, there was discussion everywhere, in universities, in the
press. Everyone was talking against Turkey. There has been a campaign
that Turkey has betrayed Azerbaijan. The government was behind it,"
said Arastun Orujlu, the head of East-West Research Center.

But the government is not alone in its frustration vis a vis
Turkey. The opposition also shares the government’s resentment toward
Turkey. "Opening the borders without a condition will be against the
interest of both Turkey and Azerbaijan. Normalization with Armenia
without progress on Nagorno-Karabakh will damage bilateral relations,"
said Nesib Nesibli, a member of parliament from the opposition
Musavat Party.

"In Azerbaijan, anything else is black and white between the government
and the opposition. But on the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh and relations
with Turkey, they are united," said a foreign observer who asked to
remain anonymous.

Situation calmed but bitterness remains Although recent statements from
Turkish officials that the borders will not be opened before progress
is made on Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave under Armenian occupation,
seem to have calmed Azerbaijanis, the bitterness remains.

Turkey and Azerbaijan have cultural, linguistic and religious
affinity. Their close relations and cooperation are often expressed
by the motto "one nation, two states." Although Turkey recognized
the independence of Armenia after the demise of Soviet Union, it has
never established diplomatic relations because of Yerevan’s efforts
to gain recognition of claims of genocide as well as its territorial
claims. Armenia does not recognize treaties signed under Soviet rule
that mark the borders in the Caucasus.

Turkey closed its border with Armenia when Armenia began its occupation
of Nagorno-Karabakh and the regions surrounding the enclave. Until
recently, Turkey tied normalizing its relations with Armenia to the
solution in Nagorno-Karabakh.

But over time this connection has weakened. Under the pressure
of several parliamentary decisions that recognize Armenia’s
claims of genocide, Turkey has sought to normalize relations with
Armenia. Turkish President Abdullah Gul’s visit to Armenia in September
was a turning point, as secret talks between the two countries that
had started before the visit gained new momentum. The two sides
are said to have reached an agreement upon a protocol that draws a
timetable for normalizing relations. But it has been unclear to what
degree a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has been included
in the protocol.

Azerbaijanis have hard time understanding the benefit of opening the
borders without visible progress in their talks with Armenia. "There
is no reason to give such a gift to the Armenians at this stage,"
said Nesibli.

"Whatever the level of relations between Turkey and Armenia, the
Armenian diaspora will not stop its efforts for the recognition of
genocide claims all over the world," said Mollazade. "I will be the
first one to argue for the opening of the borders if I knew it would
be for the benefit of Turkey."

He dismissed claims that trade with Armenia would flourish as a result
of opening of the borders. "The trade between Turkey and Azerbaijan
is incomparable with the potential trade with Armenia," he said.

"Azerbaijan has been asked not to go to war with Armenia to get back
its land. But we have been waiting for the past 17 years. The only
peaceful way for us to convince the Armenians to release those lands
is Turkey," he added.

He also dismissed claims that improving relations between Turkey and
Armenia would lead to progress in Armenian-Azerbaijani talks. "Yerevan
was ready for talks. But after there were signs of a breakthrough
with Turkey, our negotiations started to drag on," he said.

An oil- and gas-producing country, Azerbaijan’s economy has seen
steady growth since the late 1990s. It is one of the few countries
in the region not affected seriously by the global economic
crisis. Nagorno-Karabakh remains the only stumbling block in its
economic development and integration in the world political system.

"Nagorno-Karabakh is the No. 1 issue in this country. That’s why
the public outcry about Turkey has been quite ubiquitous. There is
certainly a sense of being abandoned by the big brother," said a
foreign observer.

"I can’t believe Turkey can do that," said Ennagi Ismailoglu, a taxi
driver, adding: "Our relations will be seriously damaged if Turkey
opens the border with Armenia."

ANTELIAS: HH Aram I meets the Grand Mufti of Syria Sheikh Ahmad Badr

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I MEETS THE MUFTI
OF THE SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC

On Thursday 16 April His Hoiness Aram I met Sheikh Hassoun Halabi in Aleppo.
The Prelate Bishop Shahan Sarkissian and the Moderator of the Church Council
Mr. Daron Avedissian accompanied His Holiness.

Catholicos Aram I is currently in Aleppo on the occasion of the forthcoming
youth pilgrimage to Deir Zor (Syria), the place of the Genocide where most
of the one and a half million Armenians lost their lives.

His Excellency the Mufti and His Holiness Aram I have known one another for
many years. The two Religious Leaders assessed the current status of
Christian-Muslim dialogue both locally and regionally, and expressed the
hope that these will have their impact on other levels.

##
Photo: os/Photos377.htm#2
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/v04/doc/Phot
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/

Presidents Of Armenia And Iran Highly Appreciate The Results Of Serz

PRESIDENTS OF ARMENIA AND IRAN HIGHLY APPRECIATE THE RESULTS OF SERZH SARGSYAN’S OFFICIAL VISIT TO TEHERAN

ArmInfo
2009-04-15 13:34:00

ArmInfo. At the joint press-conference when concluding on the two-day
discussions President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan and President of Iran
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad highly appreciated the results of Sargsyan’s
official visit. The agreements on fulfillment of the programmes in
the sphere of energy, transport, trade and banking signed by the
two presidents are evidence of this, press-service of the Armenian
president reported.

Armenian president also met Secretary of Supreme National Security
Council Saeed Jalili to discuss the relations between the two nations
being dynamically developing since Armenia’s independence, as well
as high level of the political dialogue.

Serzh Sargsyan also met spiritual leader of Iran Seyyed Ali
Khamenei. They said they are sure that only the situation in the region
based on peace, stability and mutually beneficial cooperation may lead
to development of the peoples living in it. Highly appreciating Ali
Khamenei’s activity in the matter of enhancing of the Armenian-Iranian
relations Sargsyan thanked him for care in the matter of protection
of the Armenian historical monuments at the territory of Iran.

Within the frames of his visit Serzh Sargsyan also visited the tomb
of the founder and leader of Iran Ayatollah Khomeini and laid a
wreath. The president also had a warm meeting with representatives
of the Armenian Diaspora of Iran.

Shrjadardz Monthly Celebrates Third Anniversary, Opens New Horizons

PRESS RELEASE

Children of Armenia Fund (COAF) – Yerevan Office
53-55 Pavstos Buzand Street, 0010
Yerevan, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Inessa Grigoryan
Tel: (+374 10) 522076; 562068
Fax: (+374 10) 522076
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

Children of Armenia Fund – New York Office
162 Fifth Avenue, Suite 900,
New York, NY 10010, USA
Contact: Samantha Wagar
Tel: 212 – 994 – 8234
Fax: 212 – 994 – 8299
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

Shrjadardz Monthly Celebrates its Third Anniversary

and Opens New Horizons for Rural Youth

April 14, 2009; Armavir District, Armenia ¾ The first ever
inter-village newspaper Shrjadardz, founded by the Children of Armenia
Fund (COAF) in 2006, celebrates its third anniversary and intends to
expand into a regional media outlet for Armavir District of Armenia. In
addition to a number of innovative columns introduced in the monthly for
the past year, Shrjadardz opened new horizons for the members of local
youth clubs in Journalism and Public Relations, by including in its
issues the children’s articles on various cultural and community-related
topics.

Three years of continuous efforts and contribution from COAF staff,
Shrjadardz journalists, cluster village mayors and other supporters of
the monthly brought a great deal of excitement and inspiration to the
population of COAF’s Model Cluster, and the periodical became one of
their beloved and most anticipated media outlets in the region.
Nowadays, through Shrjadardz the villagers from Argina, Dalarik,
Karakert, Lernagog, Miasnikian and Shenik are the first to read about
cluster-wide activities, lives of ordinary people, various topics in
healthcare, education and socio-economic areas, useful pieces of advice
for housewives and their kitchen corner, helpful announcements. In the
words of Ani Abrahamyan, Karakert School Teacher and Journalism Youth
Club Instructor, "Thanks to its content-full information, today
Shrjadardz (meaning "transformation" when translated into English) has
become a part of our daily community life and fully covers the very
transformation taking place in our villages from day to day."

More recently, COAF and Shrjadardz editorial staff jointly organized an
event in the Karakert School to mark its third-year anniversary and
present prizes to the winners of various contests announced through the
monthly. Participating in the event were guests from village schools,
pre-schools and health clinics, and members of rural youth clubs in PR &
Journalism from cluster communities. These youth clubs, coupled with a
chain of other clubs in healthy lifestyle, agribusiness, civic
education, ecology and logics have been established and facilitated in
partnership with Heifer International since 2008.

In the event COAF was represented by Ovsanna Yeghoyan, Head of COAF
Programs and Naira Gharakhanyan, Health and Social Programs’ Manager.
COAF representatives welcomed the guests and introduced the history of
Shrjadardz for the past three years. In her speech, Alla Ayvazyan,
Shrjadardz Editor expressed her heartfelt thanks to all those who
believed in the monthly and made it a reality. She also congratulated
the winners and encouraged young rural journalists to be more involved
in the development of their communities.

Apart from the event and on the occasion of past three-year activities,
Shrjadardz staff conducted a customer satisfaction survey in a number of
communities throughout the region and revealed that 95% of rural
residents considered the monthly a significantly positive activity, and
89% of those involved in the survey highlighted the importance of its
informational aspect. There are, however, some drawbacks, such as the
monthly’s inaccessibility throughout other communities of the district
and more detailed approach to the content, which need to be improved in
the nearest future.

Alongside with a number of economic, education, infrastructure and
health programs, the publication of Shrjadardz makes an integrated part
of COAF’s social development component within the framework of its
Comprehensive Rural Development Program in Armenia. Ultimately, the
monthly aims at improving communication inside cluster communities,
strengthening the links among villagers and rural public institutions
and their staff, and preparing rural youth to become professional and
competitive journalists throughout the region and the country, by
opening for them new horizons for self-development and growth.

# # # #

www.coafkids.org
www.coafkids.org

Turkish MPs leaving for Baku to inform public about developments

Turkish MPs leaving for Baku to inform public about developments
between Turkey and Armenia

armradio.am
11.04.2009 13:55

Members of the Turkish Parliament’s Friendship Group with Azerbaijan
are planning to visit Baku to inform Azerbaijan’s press and public
about the recent developments between Turkey and Armenia, according to
Mustafa Kabakçı, head of the group.

"We are going to go to Azerbaijan to inform them as we see that there’s
information pollution there," Kabakçı said Friday, the Anatolia news
agency reported. He said contrary to Azerbaijani press reports,
Turkey’s policy has not changed.

"Our efforts to solve the regional problems peacefully and to develop
cooperation in the region continue. Turkey has always been on our Azeri
brothers’ side," he said. Both President Abdullah Gül and Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an have several times assured Baku that
Turkey’s sensitivities over the Nagorno-Karabakh problem remain same,
Kabakçı said.

"We believe that our brotherhood [with Azerbaijan] will strengthen," he
said. The date of the visit will be set next week.

Also, Turkey has prevented a group of Azerbaijani journalists from
traveling to Kars, an eastern Anatolian town on the border of Armenia,
to protest Ankara’s talks with Yerevan to open the border, which has
been closed since 1993, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

Armenia Govt. Comes To Aid Of Crisis-Hit Construction Sector

ARMENIA GOVT. COMES TO AID OF CRISIS-HIT CONSTRUCTION SECTOR

03_4/10/2009_1
Thursday, April 9, 2009

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–In what could be a major boost to one of the largest
sectors of Armenia’s economy, the government approved on Thursday at
least 20 billion drams ($54 million) in credit guarantees for local
construction firms hit hard by the economic crisis.

"The state guarantees will enable builders to attract credit resources
from commercial banks," Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan said during a
weekly session of his cabinet. He said the approved sum is earmarked
for the "first phase" of the financial support, suggesting that the
government is ready to increase it later on.

The Armenian construction industry has expanded massively in recent
years, generating about one quarter of the country’s $12 billion
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) last year. The building boom, fuelled
by strong demand in expensive housing and office space, has been a
major driving force behind Armenia’s double-digit economic growth.

The sector stopped growing and began contracting with the onset of the
global economic downturn last fall. The decline is particularly visible
in Yerevan where work at many of the dozens of construction sites
has ground to a halt in recent months. The risk-averse Armenian banks
are reportedly reluctant to make new loans to construction companies.

"Today the liquidity rate of commercial banks is extremely high,"
Sargsyan told ministers. "They have accumulated resources, and the
only factor that restrains them from increasing the volume of lending
is risk assessment." The credit guarantees offered by the government
will make them finance construction projects far more readily, he said.

According to the prime minister, construction firms needing such
guarantees will have to apply to a special task force coordinating
the government’s anti-crisis measures and to offer real property
as collateral. "Presumably, preference will be given to those
incomplete construction projects whose degree of completion is at
least 75 percent," he said. "Obviously, the purpose of that is to
put completed apartments up for sale as soon as possible."

Whether those apartments will quickly find buyers in the existing
economic conditions remains to be seen. The Central Bank of Armenia
(CBA) announced on Thursday that it will spend 5 billion drams to set
up next month a new mortgage lending company that will make housing
loans cheaper and more accessible for Armenians. The CBA said the
company’s authorized capital will grow sharply by the end of this
year as a result of similar investments expected from the Armenian
private sector and foreign investors.

One owner of a Yerevan-based construction firm, who asked not to be
identified, cautiously welcomed the announcement. "It will probably
have an indirect positive impact," he told RFE/RL.

The businessman also said that his company is continuing its operations
despite the crisis. "We hope to be able to sell apartments," he said.

"We don’t worry about sales," said another builder, who also spoke
on condition of anonymity. "It’s just that the economic situation is
pushing apartment prices down."

"Targeted" assistance to struggling Armenian businesses is one of the
elements of the government’s strategy of reducing the fallout from the
global recession. Sargsyan announced recently that the anti-crisis
task force has already allocated 25 billion drams ($68 million) in
financial aid to 18 firms. Most of that aid is understood to have
taken the form of equity investment.

The government also disbursed in February a $10 million loan to
Armenia’s largest metallurgical enterprise mostly owned by a German
group. The Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Plant is due to use the money
for modernizing its facilities and boosting output in the coming years.

www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=413

Ankara-Yerevan Rapprochement Strains Turkey’s Relations With Azerbai

ANKARA-YEREVAN RAPPROCHEMENT STRAINS TURKEY’S RELATIONS WITH AZERBAIJAN
By: Emrullah Uslu

Jamestown Foundation
April 9 2009

Rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia has been fast tracked as
diplomats intensified their work in the past two months on possible
ways of addressing the issue (EDM, February 10, March 27). Ankara
and Yerevan now appear poised to find a solution to their bilateral
problems. However, Azerbaijan’s leadership is dissatisfied by
the prospect of any rapid improvement in Turkey’s relations with
Armenia. On April 2 Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
said, "If the border is opened before Armenian troops withdraw from the
occupied territories of Azerbaijan, it will run counter to Azerbaijan’s
national interests. We have conveyed this opinion to the Turkish
leadership" (Hurriyet Daily News, April 2). Azerbaijan’s President
Ilham Aliyev played the energy card and warned: "before finding a way
to solve the Karabakh problem, if Turkey cuts a deal with Armenia we
could cut off the natural gas flow to Turkey" (Referans, April 2).

Azerbaijan and Russia’s Gazprom recently signed a "memorandum of
understanding" on long term cooperation on natural gas investment
(Referans, April 2). This development was considered as a critical
move from Azerbaijan, since it is one of the supplier countries in
the troubled Nabucco pipeline project. In addition, President Aliyev
declined an invitation from President Abdullah Gul to attend the
United Nations Alliance of Civilizations UNAOC forum in Istanbul,
preferring instead to send his daughter to represent the country,
conveying his discomfort over Turkish-Armenian reconciliation (EDM,
April 8).

Turkish opposition parties and pressure groups have also raised
objections against the possible re-opening of the Turkish-Armenian
border. The leaders of the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP)
and Nationalist Action Party (MHP) have criticized the government’s
rapprochement policies (CNNTurk, April 7). Moreover, the Federation of
Turkish-Azerbaijani Circles (FTAC) sent letters to Turkish President
Gul and Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan expressing their concern. In
its letter to Erdogan the FTAC asserted that "no Turk would want to
see Turkey opening its border with Armenia unless Armenia withdraws
its troops from Azerbaijani land" (CNNTurk, April 5). In addition,
new internet forums have been set up to help organize protests
against the Turkish government’s policy of rapprochement with Armenia
(Zaman, April 9). Public protests, although currently small-scale,
have also begun in the cities of Kars, Gaziantep, Igdir and Amasya
showing popular discomfort surrounding Turkey’s reconciliation policy
(, April 9).

While Azerbaijan and the Turkish opposition parties have objected to
Turkey-Armenian reconciliation before resolving the Karabakh problem,
the U.S. has encouraged Ankara to press ahead. President Barack Obama
during his recent visit to Turkey underlined the U.S. position:

We have already seen historic and courageous steps taken by Turkish and
Armenian leaders. These contacts hold out the promise of a new day. An
open border would return the Turkish and Armenian people to a peaceful
and prosperous coexistence that would serve both of your nations. That
is why the United States strongly supports the full normalization of
relations between Turkey and Armenia (Today’s Zaman, April 7).

It seems the Turkish government appreciates the difficulties in
opening the border prior to satisfying Azerbaijan’s concerns. Obama
has recognized Baku’s sensitivities on the issue and directly involved
himself in the process of explaining Washington’s position. After his
visit to Turkey, Obama held telephone conversations with Azerbaijan’s
president Aliyev about his support for Turkish-Armenian efforts to
normalize relations (CNN Turk, April 8).

Nonetheless, Ankara is optimistic about improving its relations with
Yerevan, despite these objections. Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman,
Burak Ozugergin, stated that "the developments on the talks between
Ankara and Yerevan are promising and we are happy about that" (CNN
Turk, April 5). As a sign of progress, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry has
now changed the conditions for reconciliation that were previously
posted on its website. These were: 1) Armenia should officially
recognize the existing border between Turkey and Armenia, 2) Armenia
rescinds its claim about Armenian "genocide" and 3) Armenia must
end its invasion of Azerbaijan’s territory. In late March however,
the Foreign Ministry altered its website (Haberturk, April 9). The
Turkish language section contains a statement that "ill-disposed
policies pursued by Yerevan towards its neighbors have discouraged
Turkey to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia." However, the
English version adds: "Armenia continues to disregard the UN Security
Council Resolutions Numbers 822, 853, 874, and 884, disrespecting the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan by occupying over 20 percent of
Azerbaijani territory" (, April 9).

These factors indicate that Ankara has been pursuing a carefully
calculated foreign policy changes. Therefore, it is expected that the
Turkey-Armenia rapprochement will be gradual in order to ensure its
steady progress. Reportedly the border between Armenia and Turkey
will open incrementally. According to this plan, it will be opened
initially as a purely symbolic gesture and will only open once each
week. In the meantime, diplomatic relations will commence with both
parties declaring their intention to open embassies in Ankara and
Yerevan. In addition, the plan refers to the Karabakh problem and
requests that Armenia withdraws its troops from the five provinces
of Karabakh it currently occupies (Sabah, April 9).

www.azg.am
www.mfa.gov.tr

"I Shall Never Flee My Country"

"I SHALL NEVER FLEE MY COUNTRY"

A1+
07:44 pm | April 08, 2009

Politics

The trial of Armenia’s ex foreign minister Alexander Arzumanyan and
Suren Sirunyan lasted about 4.5 hours.

"I am a guarantee myself. My name and my biography can serve as
a guarantee. I am one of the constructors of this country. I am
well known in this city. Every dog knows me. I was arrested for
my political stance and activity and I have nowhere to flee," said
detainee Alexander Arzumanyan in support of Lawyer Liparit Simonyan’s
motion. The lawyer motioned the court to review Arzumanyan’s restraint
for the latter has been in custody for a year and a half but his
guilt hasn’t been proved.

According to the legislation, during the pre-trial investigation a
person cannot be kept under arrest more than a year.

Arzumanyan said he is not going to flee the country and will attend
all court sederunts.

"Prosecutor Piloyan cannot even dream of my flight. If the charges
brought against me were real, my crime would have been proved. We
won a war in a year and a half and liberated seven territories,"
said Alexander Arzumanyan.

The lawyer later motioned to let out his client on bail but the
motion was turned down. Before that Judge Mnatsakan Martirosyan
had already rejected the lawyer’s petition to terminate prosecution
against Arzumanyan.

Arzumanyan says he has already lodged a complaint with the European
Court about his unlawful custody and is certain to win.

"Can you imagine the torrent of verdicts to be poured on the Republic
of Armenia because of your actus reus? As a RoA citizen I feel deeply
offended that I cannot seek justice in my country and have to appeal
to international instances.

In her addressing speech Suren Sirunyan’s Lawyer, Varduhy Elbakyan
noted that her client had been arrested after voicing support for
Armenia’s first President Levon Ter-Petrosyan and having telephone
talks with Alexander Arzumanyan on March 1, 2008. Varduhy Elbakyan
motioned that the court stop prosecution against Suren Sirunyan.

Judge Martirosyan didn’t even consider the motion saying it was not
filed in due time.

The next trial is scheduled for April 9.