BAKU: DM: Armenia’s military leadership hides failures from public

Today, Azerbaijan
Feb 19 2010

Azerbaijani Defense Ministry: Armenia’s military leadership hides its
failures from public

19 February 2010 [20:11] – Today.Az

"Armenian troops violated ceasefire in various directions and
uninterrupted shooting occurred on Feb. 18, but they try to
misrepresent this fact,’ Spokesman for Azerbaijani Defense Ministry,
Lieutenant-Colonel Eldar Sabiroglu said.

He was commenting on Armenian media reports that the ceasefire was not
violated by Armenia and no loss was recorded on Feb. 18.

`Armenia is accustomed to tell lies. It acts the same way. They hide
their losses. The main reason is that they beware of the people. The
distrust in the army is growing. Therefore, Armenian military
leadership tries to conceal even minor failures on the front line.
They have rarely confessed something so far. Even the local TV
channels, press have been banned from covering the funerals of the
killed soldiers," Sabiroglu said.

"Armenia tries to misrepresent the fact that they violated ceasefire
and uninterrupted shooting occurred on Feb. 18. This is called
Armenian slyness,’ he said.

`The shooting began in the afternoon and lasted till the evening. At
18.00 the losses were equal. Soon after that, the enemy was obliged to
stop firing because of extra losses,’ he said.

/APA/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/62088.html

Means Of Transportation-Related Property And Collateral Rights To Be

MEANS OF TRANSPORTATION-RELATED PROPERTY AND COLLATERAL RIGHTS TO BE REGISTERED

T hursday, 18 February 2010

Chaired by Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, the Cabinet met in a
planned session at the Office of Government.

The decisions passed at the session initiated the introduction
of the institute of mandatory registration of property and
collateral rights concerning transportation means. The proposed
legislative changes streamline the process of registration of
means of transportation-related property and collateral rights,
the consequences of non-registration of such rights, other relations
concerning such registration. Considering that under current laws,
any change in property rights is subject to mandatory registration
(re-registration), the registration of such property rights will not
bring about additional obligations for new owners. Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan pointed out that the passage of said decisions follows
up on a presidential assignment. Therefore, the package needs to be
finalized and submitted to the National Assembly as soon as possible.

The government made changes and amendments to a previous decision with
a view to simplifying the procedure to follow in getting driver’s
licenses. In particular, those licenses received before February
21, 1992 in former SU States can be exchanged without taking a
qualification test.

This rule shall be applicable to such persons as are Armenian nationals
and work at foreign diplomatic missions and international organizations
operating in Armenia. The new decision cancels the requirement of
driving test papers and specifies simpler rules for taking driving
tests. A longer 5-year period is established for keeping of such
papers as are needed for the delivery of driver’s licenses.

In line with RA legislation, the government called back AMD 779.385.686
worth of assets from RA Police inventory (inclusive of traffic signs
and lights posted in Yerevan) and handed them over to Lusanshan
SNCO. This measure seeks to provide for better and operative use and
maintenance of said property.

The Government approved a number of legislative initiatives to be
submitted to the National Assembly in due course.

The executive approved the procedure to follow in selecting, appointing
and supervising the activities of tax inspectorate representatives. The
head of RA State Revenue Committee was told to prepare those taxpayer
registers needed for such selection and appointment and submit them
to the government before the deadline of March 1, 2010.

The Government further approved the results of the tender announced for
the Asian Development Bank-supported improvement of water supply and
drainage systems in Udjan, Aragatsoten, Nor Yedesia, Kosh, Dprevank,
Shamiram and Nor Amanos village communities, according to which the
consortium of Ashotsk Ltd and Kapavor Ltd is recognized to be the
winner of the tender.

During the sitting, the Government adopted a total of thirty decisions.

http://www.gov.am/en/news/item/5032/

Catholicos Of All Armenians Garegin II Completed Visit In Jerusalem

CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS GAREGIN II COMPLETED VISIT IN JERUSALEM

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.02.2010 18:12 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The two-day visit of the Catholicos of All Armenians
Garegin II in Jerusalem was completed. Garegin II took part in
the event dedicated to 91-th birthday and 20-th anniversary of
enthronement of Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem Archbishop Torgom
Manoogian and handed him the Order of Saint Mesrop Mashtots. The
President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan awarded Archbishop for his years
of dedicated and fruitful service to the Armenian people.

According to the Office of Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, a meeting
of the Spiritual Board was held chaired by the Catholicos of All
Armenians Garegin II held. During the meeting participants discussed
issues of maintaining the property of the Armenian Church in Jerusalem,
as well as other problems of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II and representatives of the
Armenian clergy made a pilgrimage to Holy Sepulcher.

St. Mesrop Mashtots Order is awarded for significant achievements in
economic development of the Republic of Armenia, natural and social
sciences, inventions, culture, education, healthcare, and public
service, as well as for activities promoting scientific, technological,
economic and cultural cooperation with foreign countries. The law
on the St. Mesrop Mashtots Order has been in effect since July 26,
1993. It is named after Mesrop Mashtots.

The EBRD Expert Calls On The CBA To Decrease AMD Exchange Rate To Ma

THE EBRD EXPERT CALLS ON THE CBA TO DECREASE AMD EXCHANGE RATE TO MAKE IT CLOSER TO THE MARKET VALUE

ArmInfo
17.02.2010

ArmInfo.The national currency rate in Armenia should be reduced down to
its market value. EBRD Chief Economist Helena Schweiger told ArmInfo.

She believes that the Armenian Central Bank is still maintaining the
national currency rate, but it must reduce it down to its market value.

After sharp revaluation of Armenian dram in March 2009 the Central
Bank announced return to the floating rate policy. Then just within
an hour the currency market of Armenia experienced sharp revaluation
of the exchange rate from 307 to 355 AMD/1USD in average. Now the
highest purchase price of the US dollar and EUR in Armenia is 380
AMD and 521 AMD, respectively. The lowest sale price of the US dollar
and EUR is 382 drams and 523 drams, respectively.

Armenian Premier Cancels Visit To Israel Due To Possible Arrest

ARMENIAN PREMIER CANCELS VISIT TO ISRAEL DUE TO POSSIBLE ARREST

news.az
Feb 17 2010
Azerbaijan

Tigran Sargsyan "Tigran Sargsyan has canceled his visit to Israel
due to possible arrest."

Armenian Premier Tigran Sargsyan has canceled his visit to Israel
due to possible arrest, according to Aykakan Zhamanak.

Officially, the prime minister was said to have a high temperature
due to which he was obliged to cancel the visit.

The newspaper refers to sources in the government saying Sargsyan has
canceled his visit due to "smear acts" while being the head of the
Central Bureau, in particular, money laundering via the banking system
of Armenia and transfer of a part of it to the Arabic countries. These
amounts could be used to finance international terrorism, the newspaper
reads. Israel is well aware of the smeary acts by Sargsyan, therefore,
the Armenian leadership recommended him to cancel the visit to avoid
possible arrest.

Is The US Perpetually Rudderless? An Enduring Gift Of The Founding F

IS THE US PERPETUALLY RUDDERLESS? AN ENDURING GIFT OF THE FOUNDING FATHERS
David Kerans (USA)

en.fondsk.ru
16.02.2010

Recent revelations concerning the shakiness of the finances of Greece,
Portugal, Ireland, and Spain have sent shock waves far beyond the
financial community, and alerted wide sections of the world public to
the reality that the financial crisis begun in 2008 is far from over,
and could be entering a new phase. Wherever they may begin, defaults
on sovereign debt would rock ships of state, and send losses spiraling
out beyond their borders to the many sources of their funding. State
services and public order might suffer on a broad scale, with cascading
consequences for economies and for citizens’ quality of life.

Alas, discerning analysts have spotted these cascading consequences
already in motion across much of the US, as state and municipal
governments begin to struggle with epic and seemingly intractable
budget shortfalls (1). By one count, at least seven large US states
(holding 35% of the population) are in more financial peril than any
of the aforementioned European nations (2). Little noticed amid the
headlines regarding Greece and the EU, the investment community has
even begun placing bets on a US federal government debt default down
the road. The implication of this sentiment is clear. It suspects
not merely that the US faces daunting economic problems, but that
the country is incapable of solving them.

Whatever the future may hold regarding the US government steering
an economic course and meeting its debt obligations, the financial
crisis that began in 2008 raised the appetite of the population for
far-reaching reform to levels not seen since the Vietnam War era, or
even the Great Depression. Fundamental issues such as the structure of
health care, the financial system, energy networks and global warming,
transport infrastructure, and unemployment insurance are all under
debate in Washington (the sacred defense sector is almost completely
excluded from consideration for reform, however). Surely, it would
seem, the government will now remedy at least some of the nation’s
most pressing problems, and point the country towards environmentally
sustainable wealth creation for all? Such was the broad-based
expectation upon President Obama’s ascension to power, at any rate.

The impotence of Washington to accomplish meaningful reforms over
the last year and the dimming prospects for substantive measures in
the foreseeable future have forced politicians, the White House, and
current affairs analysts to offer at least some rhetoric in the guise
of explanation (Democrats blame cynical Republican obstructionism,
Republicans blame Democratic so-called "radicalism" or "socialism",
etc.). Only a small minority of progressive columnists and Congressmen
(Bernie Sanders and Dennis Kucinich coming first to mind) has done
better, and unabashedly identified the proximate cause of gridlock:
namely, that lawmakers and the White House are to a significant
degree bought off by corporate campaign fund donors who pressure
the necessary authorities to stymie or dilute reforms. A deeper and
complimentary explanation, however, has gone more or less undiscussed:
the idea that the US Constitution itself has paralyzed the country,
and left no realistic hope of decisive measures on serious issues.

As Daniel Lazare argued forcefully in The Frozen Republic (3) a
decade and a half ago, the anti-majoritarian and anti-government
rationalization ethos of the US Constitution made it an obsolete
document already upon its composition. The executive, legislative,
and judicial branches are designed to inhibit each other. Within
the Congress, the Senate is designed to inhibit potential democratic
impulses from the House of Representatives, and, indeed, to stymie
majority opinion nationwide: each state, no matter how meagerly
populated, is guaranteed two votes in the Senate, which allows rural
interests ample opportunity to thwart reforms (for example, the 18
Senators from the 9 most populous states represent 22 times as many
people as the 18 Senators from the 9 least populous states). Further,
the division of authority within each chamber of Congress into myriad
committees and subcommittees leads to a profusion of corruption,
as each entity demands some form of tribute before it will allow
a bill to proceed (4) Meanwhile, procedural rules of the Senate
allow even a single member to stall confirmation of Presidential
appointments for long periods, a trick prominently in play right now
(5). In these circumstances, it is not surprising that the government
is so inefficacious despite facing a full menu of challenges.

Given the chronic, long-term absence of leadership from the legislative
branch, the burden of reform has been falling heavily on the judiciary
over the last few decades, a development the founding fathers did not
anticipate. The Supreme Court’s recent decision to relieve business
corporations of previously enacted restrictions on funding political
election campaigns is a glaring example of the trend (6). Supreme
Court rulings can do much to shape the country, but of course the
Court cannot substitute for the Congress and propel the many needed
reforms, even if it were so inclined.

And so government in the US is condemned to rudderlessness. Bad
regulations remain on the books; the public struggles to pin down which
authorities are responsible for bad laws; political gridlock frustrates
anyone trying to pursue reforms; serious discussion of how to deal with
modernity is hamstrung; Congress dodges issues in favor of demagogy.

So, what is to be done? The logical step would be to reform the
Constitution itself, in the interests of legislative efficacy and
majority rule. Proposals for alternative constitutions abound in the
literature of political theory, and many large countries successfully
revamped their constitutions when they appeared to have outlived
their usefulness (7). Indeed, in the late 1780s the US scrapped its
own original constitution, The Articles of Convention, in favor of
the current Constitution. Unfortunately, however, reverence for the
Constitution pervades the US so thoroughly that no discussion of
reforming it can even commence. Constitution idolatry amounts to a
striking "form of national thoughtlessness", as Lazare so poignantly
described it (8). Even if awareness of the poisonous nature of
the Constitution does eventually arise, the procedural barriers to
amending the document are towering: proposals must pass both chambers
of Congress by two-thirds majorities, then be approved in at least
three-fourths of all state legislatures (9).

Barring some sort of staggering national emergency that forces
reform, therefore, America will for the time being remain shackled
to a political system that effectively enshrines the right of elites
(through the Senate, first of all) to stifle any reforms they dislike.

It is no coincidence that the US population has steadily anaesthetized
itself, retreated from engagement in politics, and left the field clear
for business interests to steamroller the working and middle classes
and compete only against each other for the fealty of Congress and the
President (10). Absent some form of catastrophe, salvation from this
predicament might never come. Indeed, the previously indefatigable,
crusading liberal economist Paul Krugman was recently moved to declare
"We’re doomed" (11).

As bleak as the picture of US politics may look, however, rays of
hope might emerge. Americans might soon come to understand just
how corrosive the country’s enormous disparities in income are
to their social health, and mobilize at various levels to redress
inequality, step by step. A definitive international overview of
income inequality has now demonstrated the damage it does to the
physical and psychological health of people, at almost all rungs on
the income ladder, and regardless of a society’s GDP per capita
(12). This revelation could become a lightning rod to revive
progressive politics. We shall return to the theme shortly.

References:

1. For just one of myriad examples, from Los Angeles, see David
Zahniser and Phil Willon, "L.A. Council Delays Decision on Cutting
1,000 Jobs, , February 4, 2010.

2. Gregor MacDonald, "Seven States of Energy Debt", ,
February 5th, 2010.

3. Daniel Lazare, The Frozen Republic, New York, 1996.

4. The first prominent treatment of this feature of the US system
came from future President Woodrow Wilson, interestingly enough, in
his Congressional Government: A Study in American Politics (Boston
and New York, 1885). The Congress has about 300 separate legislative
committees now, which is three of four times what it had in Wilson’s
day. Over 100 of them are involved in the defense budget, e.g.

5. For the latest exasperated editorial on the matter, see Paul
Krugman, "America is Not Yet Lost", New York Times, February 8th,
2010, p. A21.

6. Even with the old restrictions in place, spending on federal level
political campaigns reached $5.3 billion in 2008. The lifting of the
restrictions will leave political candidates even more dependent on
securing resources from corporate campaign donors, obviously. Figures
on election campaign spending at the national and state level in
2008 appear in Robert Weissman, "A Disadvantaged Class? The Corporate
Speech Index", CommonDreams.org, February 12th, 2010.

7. Examples include and the 1832 Reform Bill in Britain, Denmark’s
abolition of the upper house of parliament and adoption of a new
constitution in 1953, a similar reform in The Netherlands in 1972,
Sweden’s adoption of a new constitution lodging the source of all
power in the people in 1976, France’s new constitution in 1958,
and Portugal’s in 1976 (list from Lazare, op. cit., p.179).

8. Lazare, op. cit., p.3. Some are at least getting on to the scent of
the argument for constitutional reform. Reviewing only lead columnists
from The New York Times, Bob Herbert notes a spreading dismay at
"chronic dysfunction and hyperpartisanship in much of the government"
("Time is Running Out", New York Times, February 6th, 2010, p. A19).

Thomas Friedman offers similar sentiments in "Never Heard that Before"
(New York Times, January 31 st, 2010, p. WK10). And Paul Krugman’s
editorial "America is Not Yet Lost" (New York Times, February 8th,
2010, p. A21) pinpoints the obstructionism inherent in certain
Senate procedures, and calls for their adjustment. Many others are
at least asking "Is the system broken?" The notion of overhauling
the constitution has not surfaced, however.

9. Between 1911 and 1929 progressive members of Congress made 18
proposals to make the process of amending the Constitution easier.

Alas, all failed to pass.

10. For a typical lament, regarding a specific set of unrealized
reforms, see former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich’s "Who is Killing
Financial Reform?"

( 369/whos-killing-financial-reform).

The year 2009 is now known to have been the biggest year ever for
the political lobbying industry: Arthur Delaney, "It’s official: 2009
was Record Year, for Lobbying, Despite Recession", Huffington Post,
February 12th, 2010.

11. Paul Krugman, "Clueless", February 10th, 2010,
clueless/.

12. Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, The Spirit Level: Why Greater
Equality Makes Societies Stronger, New York-Berlin-London, 2009.

http://gregor.us
http://robertreich.org/post/371113
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/10/
www.latimes.com

Armenia’s Peacekeepers Arrive In Afghanistan

ARMENIA’S PEACEKEEPERS ARRIVE IN AFGHANISTAN

Aysor
Feb 15 2010
Armenia

The 40-member contingent of Armenia’s peacekeepers arrived Sunday,
on February 14, in Afghanistan’s capital, launching a mission to
provide security as part of the NATO-led International Security
Assistance Force.

Armenian troops reached their place of deployment in the northern
Afghan city of Kunduz where they will serve along with Germany’s
contingent. It’s worth mentioning, that Armenian brigade came
from Germany, where they participated in four-week trainings since
December 2009.

A spokesperson for the Defense Ministry of Armenia said that Armenian
peacekeepers will go into the question of accommodation and reverse’s
tasks these days, and on February 16 they will go to Kunduz’s airport
to learn the region and objectives.

Tribute To Hrant Matevosyan On 75th Birth Anniversary

TRIBUTE TO HRANT MATEVOSYAN ON 75TH BIRTH ANNIVERSARY

Friday, 12 February 2010

Hrant Mateviosyan would be 75 today, if he were alive. On his 75th
birth anniversary, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan went to the pantheon
after Komitas to pay homage to the famous writer.

In attendance were scholars, political figures, art workers,
writers, theatrical actors, teachers and schoolchildren. Speeches
were delivered by Armenian Writers’ Union chairman Levon Ananyan and
well-known publicist Zori Balayan. Honored artist Azat Gasparyan and
the pupils of the school after Hrant Matevosyan recited extracts from
Matevosyan’s novels.

http://www.gov.am/en/news/item/5027/

Abkhazia Invites Representatives Of Nagorno Karabakh Republic

ABKHAZIA INVITES REPRESENTATIVES OF NKR

AZG DAILY
12-02-2010

Nagorno Karabakh

According to "Golos Rossii" radio station, more than 120 officials
are invited to participate in today’s inauguration ceremony of
newly elected President of Abkhazia Sergey Baghapsh; among them
representatives of Russia, Transdniestria, South Ossetia, Republic
of Nagorno Karabakh, as well as Nicaragua and Venezuela that have
recently recognized the independence of Abkhazia.

Sukiasyan Taken To Police Station

SUKIASYAN TAKEN TO POLICE STATION

12/sukiasyan
06:43 pm | February 12, 2010

Politics

Today at about 4 pm. Saribek Sukiasyan, the brorher of former
opposition parliamentarian Khachatur Sukiasyan was taken to the
Erebuny Division Police.

He is still in the police. His advocate is denied access to the
building.

It is due to mention that Special Forces have broken down the doors
of Sil Group Company today.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2010/02/