21 Million Dram For Rebuilding Green Areas Of The Tsitsernakaberd

PRESS RELEASE
The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute
Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex
RA, Armenia Yerevan 0028
Contact: Arevik Avetisyan
Tel.: (+374 10) 39 09 81
Fax: (+374 10) 39 10 41
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

21 MILLION DRAM FOR REBUILDING GREEN AREAS OF THE TSITSERNAKABERD.

15.03.2008

As is informed from administration of information and public
relations of the government, in 2008, March 13 the government made a
decision to provide 21 million dram to the Ministry of Agriculture from
its reserved fund aimed for the contribution to rebuild and develop
forests of the country; to realize the project of rebuilding green areas
of the Tsistsernakaberd Memorial Complex. We state money is provided in
accordance with the law "On Budget System of RA".
Reminding that last year, on September 8, the Prime Minister of RA
Serge Sargsyan visited the Armenian Genocide Museum & Institute. Serge
Sargsyan got acquainted to the main problems in the vicinity of the
Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex. PM Serge Sargsyan gave necessary
instructions for the protection and development of the Tsitsernakaberd
Park. During the visit an arrangement was made to preserve, reform the
Tsitsernakaberd park, which is the most expand green area and the most
important ecological part of the capital. Moreover, a complete program
of future activities is to be developed and introduced to the government
of the Republic of Armenia.
The park area near the Genocide Museum & Institute is 98 hectare.
The main area project is going to be developed in the near future. The
irrigation system needs to be thoroughly reconstructed and reequipped
technologically. As well as to carry out reconstruction of the green
areas increasing the number of high qualified trees and decreasing the
bushes.
The realization of all these intended measures is going to be
thoroughly over in the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in
2015.

http://www.genocide-museum.am/

Prices Of Precious Metals Rise

PRICES OF PRECIOUS METALS RISE

Noyan Tapan
March 13, 2008

YEREVAN, MARCH 13, NOYAN TAPAN. The prices of precious metals fixed
by the agency "State Treasury of Precious Metals and Stones" of the
RA ministry of finance and economy for March 10-16 are higher than
the prices for March 3-9.

According to information on the ministry’s website, the purchase
price of a 1-gram ingot of chemically pure gold in line with the state
standard was fixed at 8,939.63 drams (about 28.9 USD), the sale price –
at 9,716.99 drams for March 10-16 – against 8,679.63 drams (2.99551%
growth) and 9,434.38 drams (2.99553% growth) respectively last week.

The purchase price of 1 gram of silver was fixed at 184.36 drams, the
sale price – at 200.39 drams for March 10-16 – against 171.89 drams
(7.25463% growth) and 186.84 drams (7.25219% growth) respectively
last week.

The purchase price of 1 gram of platinum was fixed at 20,106.36 drams,
the sale price – at 21,854.74 drams this week – against 19,451.99 drams
(3.36402% growth) and 21,143.47 drams (3.36401% growth) last week.

The purchase price of 1 gram of palladium was established at 5,033.69
drams, the sale price – at 5,471.4 drams this week – against 4,935.92
drams (1.98553% growth) and 5,365.13 drams (1.98075% growth) last week.

Putin Confirms His Inviting Sargsyan To Russia

PUTIN CONFIRMS HIS INVITING SARGSYAN TO RUSSIA

ARKA
March 11, 2008

YEREVAN, March 10. /ARKA/. Russian President Vladimir Putin
confirmed Monday his invitation sent to Armenian president elect
Serge Sargsyan. Kremlin press office reports.

RIA Novosti says referring to the press office report that Putin
congratulated Sargsyan on his election again confirmed his invitation
in Monday’s phone talk with the latter.

On Saturday, Armenian Constitutional Court declined presidential
candidates Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s and Tigran Karapetyan’s suits against
the central election commission.

The court left the commission’s recognition of Serge Sargsyan as
president elect unchanged.

According to the commission-announced final results of the 2008
presidential election, Serge Sargsyan won presidency by scoring 52.82%
of votes.

The commission says Ter-Petrosyan got 21.5% and Karapetyan 0.6%.

Both candidates insist that the election was rigged and demand the
court to void the results.

On February 20, Armenian opposition headed by former president Levon
Ter-Petrosyan launched protests in Yerevan’s Libery Square disputing
the results of the recent presidential election and insisting that
the election was fraudulent.

The police attacked protesters Saturday night. Protests continued in
the square near France’s embassy and city hall.

The police department says that the crowd started destroying nearby
shops and other buildings. According to the police’s report, eight
people were killed and 131 injured in the clash and 36 cars burnt.

President Kocharyan imposed state of emergency on March 1.

Sargsyan: Commodity turnover between Armenia and Russia grew

Serzh Sargsyan: Commodity turnover between Armenia and Russia grew
several times over last 5-7 years

2008-03-07 17:24:00

ArmInfo. ‘Armenian-Russian relations have rich past, very good present,
and I am sure, rich future’, Prime Minister of Armenia, Leader of the
Republican Party of Armenia Serzh Sagrsyan says in an interview with
Rossiyskaya Gazeta.

Serzh Sargsyan stressed that the commodity turnover between Armenia and
Russia grew several times over the last 5-7 years, rg.ru reports.
‘Russia is the key investor in Armenian economy. One of every three
dollars invested in our country by foreign partners is the share of
Russia’, he said. The Armenian premier stressed that leading Russian
companies operate in various sectors of Armenia’s economy. As regards
politics, S. Sargsyan says the bilateral relations in that sphere are
at the top level. He believes the political relations of the two
countries are based on strategic partnership meeting the interests of
both Moscow and Yerevan. Not only the political and economic spheres,
but also education and culture have potential for development, which
has not been used so far’, S. Sargsyan said.

Armenia: Authorities Advance Conspiracy Theory

EurasiaNet, NY
March 7 2008

Armenia: Authorities Advance Conspiracy Theory
03/07/08

Armenian leaders are now casting the March 1 bloodshed in Yerevan as
the product of an international conspiracy that sought the
revolutionary overthrow of the existing political order.

Speaking at a March 7 news conference in Yerevan, Armenian
Prosecutor-General Agvan Ovsepian asserted that `conspiratorial
foreign forces’ played a role in initiating the armed clashes between
anti-government demonstrators and state security forces that left at
least eight people dead. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive]. `Many factors related to the [March 1] events … provide a
basis for such a conclusion,’ Ovsepian added, according to an account
published by the Russian daily Izvestiya.

Meanwhile, in an interview published by Rosssiiskaya Gazeta on March
7, Serzh Sarkisian — Armenia’s prime minister, and, according to the
official results of the February 19 election, outgoing President
Robert Kocharian’s successor — claimed that the anti-government
protesters were intent on toppling the government. `It’s fair to say
that an attempt to organize a `color revolution’ in Armenia really
took place,’ Sarkisian insisted.

Overall, 350 individuals have been interrogated in connection with a
criminal probe being carried out by officials, Ovsepian said. So far,
53 individuals have been formally charged in connection with the
March 1 violence. Another 16 have been detained and are under
suspicion of wrongdoing, Ovsepian added.

Meanwhile, two members of parliament, Sasson Mikaelian and Khachatur
Sukisian, have apparently gone into hiding, Ovsepian announced. The
two, who are suspected of playing a role in organizing the
anti-government protests, were recently stripped of their
parliamentary immunity.

The government version is contradicted by eyewitness accounts of the
March 1 events. Participants in the anti-government protests insist
that security forces opened fire on a largely unarmed crowd. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. In addition, the
preliminary findings of Armenia’s ombudsman have indicated that the
Kocharian administration initiated the sequence of events that led
directly to the bloodshed. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive].

State of emergency restrictions have hampered the ability of
independent news organizations, both inside and outside Armenia, to
gather information, thereby hindering the ability to verify the
competing versions of events. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive].

The United States and key members of the European Union have not
challenged the Kocharian administration’s handling of the crisis,
even though as part of its all-out effort to stifle a free press, the
Armenian government pulled the plug on Armenian-language broadcasts
of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. In a March 7 editorial titled
`Dark Days in Armenia,’ the New York Times called on President George
W. Bush, along with European leaders, to `make clear to Armenia’s
government that such behavior is unacceptable and will jeopardize
future relations.’ A clear signal of disapproval is needed in order
to halt what the editorial described as a `slide into
authoritarianism’ by CIS states.

Amid the relative silence of the United States and EU, Armenian
authorities have started to vigorously attack the few Western
officials who have gone on record as criticizing the Armenian
government’s behavior. One such official is Terry Davis, the
secretary-general of the Council of Europe, who on March 3 called for
a quick end to the state of emergency. [For background see the
Eurasia Insight archive].

Without referring to Davis or other critics by name, Victor
Sogomonian, Kocharian’s press secretary, pointedly told outsiders to,
in effect, mind their own business. `We must clearly realize that it
is not foreign officials, but rather [Armenian] authorities that are
in charge of the republic’s security,’ Sogomonian said.

Armenian Unrest Threatens Peace In Nagarno-Karabakh – Feature

ARMENIAN UNREST THREATENS PEACE IN NAGARNO-KARABAKH – FEATURE

Earthtimes
March 6 2008
UK

Moscow/Yerevan – Border fighting between Armenia and Azeri troops
in the disputed region of Nagarno-Karabakh turned to heavy artillery
shelling this week in the worst clashes since a 1994 ceasefire that
ended a six-year, full-scale war. Between 15 and 16 soldiers died
and dozens were injured in Wednesday night clashes according to
conflicting casualty claims by Armenian and Azeri officials.

Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov on Thursday accused Armenia
of initiating the battle to distract from violent post- election
opposition protests at home that led the president to impose a 20-day
emergency rule over the capital Yerevan.

But Armenian President Robert Kocharian hit back Thursday: "The Azeris
thought that the situation in Armenia had dulled the vigilance of
our armed forces in Karabakh, that all our large military divisions
had been relocated."

The unresolved status of Nagarno-Karabakh, an Azeri province controlled
by ethnic Armenian separatists, was the hottest topic in Armenia’s
February 19 elections and daily protests since then have led to
clashes with police in which eight people died Sunday.

The opposition’s leader, Armenia’s first post-Soviet president Levon
Ter-Petrosian, pledged to "correct" what he called "his biggest
mistake": bringing into government top military officials from
Nagorno-Karabakh such as incumbent Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh
Sarkisian, whose presidential election win he now refuses to recognize.

Ter-Petrosian accuses the Karabakh Clan, as his supporters have dubbed
them, of widespread corruption and nepotism, including signing over
control of crucial economic sectors to Russia, thereby transforming
a long-time alliance into a "vassal-sovereign" relationship.

Coming three weeks after Kosovo’s declaration of independence from
Serbia, Russia and the United States fear escalating tensions in the
region and have called for restraint.

The mountainous Caucasus region where Nagarno-Karabakh lies has
emerged as strategically important as it lies along gas routes from
the energy-rich Caspian Sea region to Europe.

Western powers fear further instability could disrupt gas routes and
further undermine a fragile security situation in the neighbourhood,
which is host to a Russian military base and borders Iran.

The United States and NATO declared Thursday that Kosovo’s independence
from Serbia could not serve as a precedence for Nagarno- Karabakh or
any other region.

Georgia’s breakaway South Ossetia region on Wednesday asked for
the European Union, the United Nations and Russia to recognize its
independence, bearing out Russia’s claim that Kosovo’s independence
would lead to a "parade of sovereignty" in the Caucasus.

Azeri President Ilham Aliyev firmly rejects Kosovo’s independence
as illegal and has upped rhetoric about using any means to achieve
unity ahead of October presidential elections.

"We have been buying military machinery, airplanes and ammunition to
be ready to liberate the occupied territories, and we are ready to
do this," Russian newspaper Noviye Izvestia quoted Aliyev as saying
on Thursday.

"The conflict will come to an international solution when Armenia
feels Azerbaijan’s force," he said.

Oil-rich Azerbaijan has increased its military spending to more than
1 billion dollars in 2008, provoking a mini-arms race with Armenia,
which in turn has hiked its military spending by 20 per cent in the
past year.

Thomas Gomart, head of the Russian/CIS programme at the Paris- based
Institut Francais des Relations Internationales, voiced concern over
the "evolution of the rhetoric" in a recent interview with Deutsche
Presse-Agentur dpa.

"The disproportion in the two countries’ military spending is
worrying. Azerbaijan’s expenditure could be compared to the total
Armenian budget," he said.

bservers also fear that Armenia’s post-election instability could
aggravate relations with Turkey which has allied with fellow Muslim
state Azerbaijan to blockade landlocked Armenia along its borders.

Ter-Petrosian, who was forced from power by the current leadership in
1998 for his proposal to compromise in peace talks with Azerbaijan,
has argued the blockades are killing Armenia’s possibilities for
growth. "Russia cannot be Armenia’s only road to the outside world,"
he has said.

But a construction boom and a healthy economy spoke in favour of
the established leadership in the recent elections, and despite
rallying thousand-strong opposition protests Ter-Petrosian remains
widely unpopular among those who recall the economic hardships of
the post-Soviet transition.

Nagarno-Karabakh native and war hero Sarkisian is expected to keep
up the hawkish stance set by his political mentor Kocharian during
his decade at the helm, perpetuating fears of a new war along the
border where gunfire breaks out regularly.

The EU’s Ring Of Friendship: Buddies In Baku, Amigos In Armenia

THE EU’S RING OF FRIENDSHIP: BUDDIES IN BAKU, AMIGOS IN ARMENIA
By Hans-Jurgen Schlamp

Spiegel Online
0,1518,539799,00.html
March 6 2008
Germany

Where does Europe end? The EU’s Neighborhood Policy seeks to ensure
prosperity and stability in countries bordering the 27-member club.

The problem is, the neighbors would like to join, too.

The tall, black-haired man scowls at the small blonde woman sitting
across the expansive conference table from him. She has been holding
forth for some time, accusing him of not adequately respecting
human rights, saying that the next elections must be run more
fairly than the last, and warning that freedom of the press must
finally be broadened. At the end of her monologue, she is somewhat
more conciliatory and allows that the country has made progress —
"but things could move faster."

Elmar Mammadyarov struggles to control his rising anger. He is
the foreign minister of the former Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan,
a land rich in oil and gas and sitting on the shores of the Caspian
Sea, north of Iran. And no one is allowed to talk to him like this
normally, except perhaps his boss, the president. But Mammadyarov makes
the effort because the woman sitting across from him is incredibly
important for Azerbaijan.

The outspoken guest is the Austrian Benita Ferrero-Waldner. The 59 year
old is the European Commissioner for External Relations and responsible
for the European Neighborhood Policy — and she regularly visits the
countries bordering the EU, from Morocco and Egypt, through Jordan,
Israel or the Ukraine, to Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan. She
frequently makes calls for more democracy and promises in return
"stability, security and prosperity."

FROM THE MAGAZINE Find out how you can reprint this DER SPIEGEL article
in your publication. The EU has already given over ~@8 billion ($12.2
billion) to 12 countries on its borders and plans to hand out another
~@12 billion ($18.2 billion) over the next six years. The result of
this investment, hopes Ferrero-Waldner, will be a region that is both
relatively prosperous and politically stable. The hope is that this
"ring of friends," as she has called the plan, will keep terrorists
away and unwanted immigrants at arm’s length.

But the rosy plan has a catch: Most of these neighbors aren’t just
interested in stability and prosperity, but they also have their
hearts set on eventually becoming full-fledged members of the EU.

Above all, it is the countries on the eastern edge of the European
continent that have gotten their hopes up — and not without
justification. Poland, Great Britain and the Baltic States all would
like to extend the borders of the EU as far as the Caspian Sea. The
region is waiting in the EU-enlargement line directly behind the
Balkans — it’s just that nobody is supposed to talk about it yet.

"No, no," denies the Austrian Commissioner, "membership perspective"
is not part of her plan. The neighborly friendship may extend to
substantial support, but not beyond. It is "a difficult, fine line
to walk," she says.

That may be true. But the greater EU cooperation with its neighbors
becomes, the more pertinent the old question that has plagued the
27-member group since its inception becomes: Where does Europe in fact
end? Is Georgia part of Europe? What about Morocco? Israel? And then,
of course, what about Ukraine?

DER SPIEGEL Does Europe extend to the Caucausus?

Ferrero-Waldner and her team have developed a separate "action plan"
with each of the 12 participants in the European Neighborhood Policy.

Europe helps with expertise and funding in areas such as
transportation, job training, energy supply, the training of customs
officers, police or judges, and in providing the poor with food
and clothing — and the countries themselves can choose where the
focus should lie. And then there is a bit of tutoring in the study of
democracy and the constitutional state thrown in — as, for example,
with Elmar Mammadyarov in Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital.

Ferrero-Waldner continues the mandatory lesson over dinner: When
will these three journalists, who were arrested without reason,
be released? Why is the government doing so little to improve its
relationship with Moscow? Well, answers a grouchy Mammadyarov, the
journalists must first file a petition for their release, which will
then be reviewed by a judge. And he would like improved relations
with Russia as well, but Azerbaijan is not going to kowtow. His
country, after all, has become a "well-performing mid-sized power in
the region."

Just how much has changed in recent years can immediately be seen
during rush hour in Baku. Traffic jams stretch as far as the eye can
see, with rusty old trucks from the Soviet era stuck bumper-to-bumper
with highly polished sport utility vehicles. In 2007, economic growth
was around 25 percent, thanks to oil and gas bubbling out of the
ground. The gulf between rich and poor has widened considerably,
and beggars stand in front of Armani and Escada shop windows.

An internal EU paper on Azerbaijan takes note of the economic progress
the country has made. Nevertheless, when it comes to democracy, freedom
of the press or human rights, the official message in the paper is
that of "persistent difficulties." That also goes for Azerbaijan’s
neighbors, Georgia and Armenia — and Ferrero-Waldner is not shy
about voicing her concerns there as well.

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Moreover, the strong nerves that often earn her ridicule at
home serve her well. In the Caucasus, she often faces hard-boiled
nationalists. What the spokesperson of a human rights organization —
financed by the EU — says of Armenia, applies to Georgia as well:
"There is an extremely corrupt political leadership, no free judicial
system, no free press, and the elections are no freer than they were
in the Soviet Union."

But those are only the "horror stories," says Georgian Prime Minister
Vladimir Gurgenidze. He speaks English with an American accent and
greets people by singing out "Hi, everybody!" Of course there are
improvements that need to be made, he says — and that’s why his
country needs help from Brussels. "Europe is in our hearts and our
minds," gushes Gurgenidze. "We want free trade with you, facilitation
of visas and EU membership."

Georgia will be joining NATO soon, says Gurgenidze, at the latest when
there is a Democrat in the White House. And there are already Georgian
soldiers in both Iraq and Afghanistan. "The Americans recognize that,"
adds Gurgenidze smugly, looking at Ferrero-Waldner, his European guest:
"It’s good to have friends."

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/

ANCA: U.S. Should Expand Level Of Dialogue With Nagorno Karabakh

ANCA: U.S. SHOULD EXPAND LEVEL OF DIALOGUE WITH NAGORNO KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.03.2008 16:50 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the wake of renewed threats this week against
Nagorno Karabakh by Azerbaijan’s President and the March 4 military
attack by the Azerbaijani military against defensive positions
in the Mardakert region in northern Nagorno Karabakh, the Armenian
National Committee (ANCA) alerted members of Congress and the broader
Washington, DC foreign policy community to the growing danger that
Azerbaijan represents to U.S. interests in maintaining peace and
stability in the Caucasus region.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, known for his inflammatory
anti-Armenian rhetoric, stated that, "We have been buying military
machinery, airplanes and ammunition to be ready to liberate the
occupied territories and we are ready to do this."

In letters circulated yesterday afternoon to Congressional offices,
the ANCA called on Senators and Representatives to voice their support
for Nagorno Karabakh’s democratic progress and development, to hold
Azerbaijan accountable for its belligerent rhetoric and aggressive
actions, and to promote peace by expanding the level of dialogue
between the U.S. and Nagorno Karabakh.

President Of Armenia: Image Of Our Country Damaged

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA: IMAGE OF OUR COUNTRY DAMAGED

arminfo
2008-03-06 10:22:00

ArmInfo. Armenia’s image has been damaged, President of Armenia Robert
Kocharyan said at a press conference on March 1 in Yerevan.

‘Look back at how Armenia looked a month ago. It was said to be
the most stable and rapidly developing country in the region’, the
president said.

‘Frankly speaking when I watch the video records of the incidents
I am ashamed to admit and I cannot believe that it happened in our
country’. The president said everyone ‘must be strong and brave enough
to consciously evaluate the incidents and work together to restore both
the country’s image and the international attitude to our country’.

BAKU: Azerbaijan’s Defense Minister Safar Abiyev Visiting Terter, Pl

AZERBAIJAN’S DEFENSE MINISTER SAFAR ABIYEV VISITING TERTER, PLACE OF RECENT FIGHTING WITH ARMENIANS

Today
/43587.html
March 6 2008
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan’s Defense Minister Safar Abiyev is currently in Terter.

The information was confirmed by the press service for Azerbaijan’s
Defense Ministry.

It was noted that the executive powers of Terter are holding a session
by results of 2007.

"S.Abiyev takes part in this session. MP Aynur Guliyeva, elected from
this region, is also in the region", the press service announced.

It was noted that the visit is not connected with the tense situation
on the front line.

"S.Abiyev’s visit to Terter is a pure coincidence. Each year
the Defense Minister takes part at the session by results of the
previous year. This time, the events just coincided", the press
service reported.

http://www.today.az/news/politics