Arrests Continue

A1 Plus | 14:10:21 | 06-04-2004 | Social |

ARRESTS CONTINUE

Yesterday at 6:30 PM after Artashes Geghamyan’s meeting with the electorate
on the way from Yerevan to Shamshadin people in civil clothes stopped the
car of Serjik Ayvazyan, Chair of Shamshadin branch of “Republic” Party and
arrested him.

The same party member Vardan Sahakyan and the driver were arrested, too.
They were taken to an unknown place and it is not known yet where they are.

Last night the arrested heads of Arabkir, Zeytun and Ajapnyak branches of
“Republic” Party were released.

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NY ASA to host Richard Hovannisian April 7th

New York Armenian Students’ Association
PO Box 7876
New York, NY 10116-4634
Web:
Contact: [email protected]

April 6, 2004

Contact: New York ASA: [email protected]
WHAT: NY ASA and St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral presents:
Professor RICHARD G. HOVANNISIAN, UCLA

`LOOKING BACKWARD, MOVING FORWARD’

WHERE: Vartan Hall, St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016

WHEN: Wednesday, April 7, 2004, 7:00- 9:00 PM

FEES: Students/ASA members free
Donations to the ASA are welcome!

New York, NY – The New York Armenian Students’ Association and St. Vartan
Armenian Cathedral are honored to have Professor Richard G. Hovannisian of
the University of California, Los Angeles, speak on Wednesday evening, April
7, on the subject of his most recent publication, Looking Backward, Moving
Forward -a discussion on the Armenian Genocide, entailing the question of
how to move forward while not losing sight of the past, namely
universalizing the Armenian experience.

Professor Hovannisian is well known to the Armenian community as the Holder
of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at
UCLA and the founder and three-time president of the Society for Armenian
Studies. He is the author of numerous works on the Republic of Armenia,
1918-1920, the Armenian Genocide, and the historic Western Armenian
provinces. Hovannisian has received many honors for his scholarship, civic
activities, and advancement of Armenian Studies. He serves on the board of
directors of nine scholarly and civic organizations and has made numerous
television and radio appearances on issues relating to the Armenian people
and Armenian, Near Eastern, and Caucasian history. In 1990 he was elected to
the Armenian National Academy of Sciences, has been awarded honorary
doctoral degrees by Yerevan State University and Artsakh State University,
and has received encyclicals and medals from Their Holinesses, the
Catholicoses of Holy Etcmiadzin and of the Great House of Cilicia. Mort
recently, Dr. Hovannisian served as the historical consultant for the
National Geographic Magazine feature article on Armenia.

For more information about the NY ASA please visit

For more information about St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral please visit us
online at

http://www.asainc.org/newyork/
www.asainc.org/newyork
www.armenianchurch.org

Thousands protest in Armenian capital, call for bigger rally Friday

Thousands gather at protest in Armenian capital, call for bigger rally Friday

AP Worldstream
Apr 05, 2004

An estimated 8,000 opposition demonstrators gathered for a rally in
the center of the Armenian capital on Monday, and one of the protest’s
leaders said an even larger demonstration to take place Friday.

“A change of power is unavoidable,” Artashes Gegamian, leader of the
National Unity bloc, told the gathering. “Massive acts of protest will
begin April 9.”

Armenia is gripped by an array of dissatisfactions _ from poverty to
the unresolved status of the ethnic Armenian enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan _ which were aggravated by widespread
complaints that last year’s presidential and parliamentary elections
were fraudulent.

Unidentified youths smashed video and still cameras of several
journalists at the rally.

Some women at the rally circulated among police, giving them
carnations in an apparent echo of the roses given by protesters to
police in neighboring Georgia during last year’s massive
demonstrations that forced President Eduard Shevardnadze to resign.

BAKU: War may break out at any time – Azeri defence minister

War may break out at any time – Azeri defence minister

Space TV, Baku
31 Mar 04

[Presenter] A war between Armenia and Azerbaijan may break out at any
time while the Azerbaijani lands remain under the Armenian occupation.

[Safar Abiyev, Azerbaijani Defence Minister] Azerbaijan is living in
war conditions. The Azerbaijani lands have been occupied. While they
remain under occupation, a war may break out at any time.

You know what the situation is like in Armenia. There is a danger of
that happening for as long as the Armenian armed forces are on our
lands.

BAKU: Azeri pressure group protests upcoming visit by Armenian Min.

Azeri pressure group protests at upcoming visit by Armenian minister

Trend news agency
31 Mar 04

BAKU

Trend correspondent S. Agayeva: The Karabakh Liberation Organization
[KLO] will prevent the Armenian education minister [Sergo Yeritsyan]
from attending a session of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
Organization in Baku on 15-16 April, the KLO chairman, Akif Nagi, has
told Trend new agency.

It is unacceptable for a minister from the enemy country to
participate in the Baku session, Nagi said. The Azerbaijani
authorities must not let such a visit take place, he said. “Let the
Armenian education minister educate the jingoistic Armenian youth. He
has nothing to do here.”

The KLO intends to stage protest actions outside the buildings of
state bodies which organize the session, as well as outside the hotel
which will host the gathering.

Armenia’s Software Advantage

Armenia’s Software Advantage

McKinsey Quarterly
2004 Issue 1
p12, 3p

By Andre Andonian, Avetik Chalabyan and Pierre Gurdjian

Geopolitical problems and macroeconomic reforms are currently
preoccupying Armenia, but to achieve long-term growth and lift itself
out of poverty the former Soviet republic must also grapple with
microeconomic policy. Armenia should focus on developing the industry
sectors that have the best chance of competing globally and on
eliminating any barriers to productivity within them. Our study of this
landlocked economy in the Caucasus (Exhibit 1) suggests that software
and IT services are among its most promising sectors.

With annual growth of more than 20 percent since 1999, software and IT
companies now account for 2 percent of Armenia’s GDP — a proportion
comparable to that of India, the world’s leading offshore IT
destination. Businesses in this sector achieve much higher productivity
than the average for Armenia’s economy as a whole (11.5 percent of the
US level). Why the relatively strong performance? The software and IT
services sector is especially suited to exploit Armenia’s three
competitive advantages. First, it has a well-educated workforce with an
emphasis on science, a result of the country’s heritage as the Soviet
Union’s high-tech center. The second advantage is low wages: a software
and IT services specialist earns $2,400 to $6,000 a year, a quarter of
the average salary such a worker receives in India. The third is a five
million-strong diaspora across Europe and North America. Many of these
overseas Armenians are successful businesspeople and professionals in
the IT and software field and provide access to international business
networks as well as funding for Armenia’s development.

Foreign-owned and domestic companies in Armenia’s software and IT sector
have different average levels of productivity and somewhat different
barriers to
raising it. Some 25 foreign software companies, owned mostly by
businesspeople of Armenian descent, have set up offshore subsidiaries in
the country to develop
customized applications for their corporate parents. To attract the best
programmers and thus achieve the best labor productivity, these foreign
units offer salaries twice as high as domestic IT firms do. But labor
productivity is still only half of the US level, partly as a result of
the shortcomings of Armenia’s higher-education system, which produces
excellent programmers but not enough skilled project managers. For the
85 or so domestic companies that develop, program, market, and sell
packaged software at home and abroad, improving total productivity —
which currently stands at 25 percent of the US level — is even more
crucial. Among the managerial shortcomings these companies face is a
lack of market knowledge and business know-how. Furthermore, they don’t
always know what higher-value-added products to make for international
markets, and they sometimes don’t possess the business skills needed to
market and sell sophisticated products abroad (Exhibit 2, on the
previous page).

We recommend a series of steps in two areas to remove productivity
barriers and stimulate the growth of Armenia’s software and IT sector.
First, increasing the capacity and quality of the educational system is
critical for delivering the highly qualified graduates needed to improve
the sector’s programming and management skills. To this end, the
government should try to attract and retain teachers, professors, and
researchers by raising their salaries, which a: $100 to $200 a month are
low even by domestic standards. Partnerships between companies and
universities can also help. A large foreign-owned software company, for
example, currently supports a multidisciplinary university course that
combines semiconductor design and IT programming — important for the
development of higher value added products. One university cooperates
closely with IT start-ups by providing them with work space on its
premises. Computer science curricula should be modernized so that
technical courses are enriched by business know-how, such as project
management and business-case writing. Second, the government and the
domestic financial and high-tech sectors should team up to establish a
major investment fund and a promotional agency to channel private equity
money from the diaspora and other foreign sources into the software and
IT sector and thereby stimulate its growth.

Increasing the productivity of software and IT services alone won’t
carry Armenia’s economy to the next level, however. A handful of other
sectors — diamonds and jewelry, tourism, and health care — should also
be development priorities. Successful initiatives in the four sectors
could double their productivity, generate double-digit increases in
revenues annually through 2010, and raise their aggregate employment to
102,000, from 71,000. By first focusing on these potentially high-growth
sectors, Armenia could increase its foreign earnings and use the influx
of cash to raise domestic demand and boost other parts of the economy.

Armenia must still resolve its conflict with neighboring Azerbaijan over
the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region and carry out macroeconomic reforms
to complete the transition to a market economy. But concentrating on
specific sectors such as software and IT services should allow Armenia
to move beyond basic stabilization and take the next steps on the road
to prosperity.

DIAGRAM: EXHIBIT 2: Armenia’s productivity gap: Estimated labor
productivity, index: total productivity for software/IT sector in United
States = 100

MAP: EXHIBIT I: Armenia in context: Major economic indicators, 2002

Will We Say ‘Never Again’ Yet Again?

Will We Say ‘Never Again’ Yet Again?
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Published: March 27, 2004

LONG THE CHAD-SUDAN BORDER – For decades, whenever the topic of
genocide has come up, the refrain has been, “Never again.”

Yet right now, the government of Sudan is engaging in genocide against
three large African tribes in its Darfur region here. Some 1,000
people are being killed a week, tribeswomen are being systematically
raped, 700,000 people have been driven from their homes, and Sudan’s
Army is even bombing the survivors.

And the world yawns.

So what do we tell refugees like Muhammad Yakob Hussein, who lives in
the open desert here because his home was burned and his family
members killed in Sudan? He now risks being shot whenever he goes to a
well to fetch water. Do we advise such refugees that “never again”
meant nothing more than that a Führer named Hitler will never
again construct death camps in Germany?

Interviews with refugees like Mr. Hussein ‘ as well as with aid
workers and U.N. officials ‘ leave no doubt that attacks in Darfur are
not simply random atrocities. Rather, as a senior U.N. official,
Mukesh Kapila, put it, “It is an organized attempt to do away with a
group of people.”

“All I have left is this jalabiya,” or cloak, said Mr. Hussein, who
claimed to be 70 but looked younger (ages here tend to be vague
aspirations, and they usually emerge in multiples of 10). Mr. Hussein
said he’d fled three days earlier after an attack in which his three
brothers were killed and all his livestock stolen: “Everything is
lost. They burned everything.”

Another man, Khamis Muhammad Issa, a strapping 21-year-old, was left
with something more than his clothes ‘ a bullet in the back. He showed
me the bulge of the bullet under the skin. The bullet wiggled under my
touch.

“They came in the night and burned my village,” he said. “I was
running away and they fired. I fell, and they thought I was dead.”

In my last column, I called these actions “ethnic cleansing.” But
let’s be blunt: Sudan’s behavior also easily meets the definition of
genocide in Article 2 of the 1948 convention against genocide. That
convention not only authorizes but also obligates the nations
ratifying it ‘ including the U.S. ‘ to stand up to genocide.

The killings are being orchestrated by the Arab-dominated Sudanese
government, partly through the Janjaweed militia, made up of Arab
raiders armed by the government. The victims are non-Arabs: blacks in
the Zaghawa, Massaliet and Fur tribes. “The Arabs want to get rid of
anyone with black skin,” Youssef Yakob Abdullah said. In the area of
Darfur that he fled, “there are no blacks left,” he said.

In Darfur, the fighting is not over religion, for the victims as well
as the killers are Muslims. It is more ethnic and racial, reflecting
some of the ancient tension between herdsmen (the Arabs in Darfur) and
farmers (the black Africans, although they herd as well). The Arabs
and non-Arabs compete for water and forage, made scarce by
environmental degradation and the spread of the desert.

In her superb book on the history of genocide, “A Problem from Hell,”
Samantha Power focuses on the astonishing fact that U.S. leaders
always denounce massacres in the abstract or after they are over ‘
but, until Kosovo, never intervened in the 20th century to stop
genocide and “rarely even made a point of condemning it as it
occurred.” The U.S. excuses now are the same ones we used when
Armenians were killed in 1915 and Bosnians and Rwandans died in the
1990’s: the bloodshed is in a remote area; we have other priorities;
standing up for the victims may compromise other foreign policy
interests.

I’m not arguing that we should invade Sudan. But one of the lessons of
history is that very modest efforts can save large numbers of
lives. Nothing is so effective in curbing ethnic cleansing as calling
attention to it.

President Bush could mention Darfur or meet a refugee. The deputy
secretary of state could visit the border areas here in Chad. We could
raise the issue before the U.N. And the onus is not just on the U.S.:
it’s shameful that African and Muslim countries don’t offer at least a
whisper of protest at the slaughter of fellow Africans and Muslims.

Are the world’s pledges of “never again” really going to ring hollow
one more time?

BAKU: British DoD funds English lessons for Azeri officers

British Ministry of Defence funds English lessons for Azeri officers

Ekho, Baku
27 Mar 04

Ekho newspaper has learnt that at the moment nearly 20 Azerbaijani
navy officers are intensively studying English with the help of the
British Council. The latter is involved in cultural and education
activities in Azerbaijan. The British Council’s marketing manager,
Namiq Quliyev, has told Ekho that their organization has actually
organized a course for officers of the Azerbaijani armed forces.

“The course is being held not at the British Council office, but on
the territory of the National Military Academy. This is a joint
project of the British Ministry of Defence and the Azerbaijani
Ministry of Defence. The purpose is to teach officers
English. Generally speaking, this programme is being implemented in a
number of CIS countries and is called Peacekeeping English Project.
The British Ministry of Defence has been implementing this project
jointly with the defence ministries of Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia,
Uzbekistan, Ukraine, etc,” Quliyev said.

According to Quliyev, the newly-independent countries, thus, get an
opportunity to be closely involved in NATO’s Partnership for Peace
Programme and other international military events. “Precisely for this
reason, the British Ministry of Defence has organized this project and
the British Council has been administering it on CIS territory.” The
British side covers all project costs.

There are several English language classes in our country. A total of
50 army and navy officers are attending the classes.

[Passage omitted: Details of project]

In turn, the head of the press service of the Azerbaijani Ministry of
Defence, Ramiz Malikov, has said that “several English courses have
been organized for our officers “. According to him, all branches of
troops cannot be engaged in the training, but officers from different
branches of troops are represented at the courses.

“These courses are obviously to ensure more effective interaction
between our officers and foreign officers during exercises. Studying
English by officers is one of the conditions of the army’s proximity
to NATO standards. Our officers study English not only in Baku, but
also in Turkey, the USA, Hungary and so on. One should first learn to
speak one language, then it will be easier to learn NATO standards,”
Malikov said.

Ruling Coalition Released Statement

A1 Plus | 21:48:59 | 26-03-2004 | Politics |

RULING COALITION RELEASED STATEMENT

Ruling coalition parties have eventually handed down their long-awaited
statement.

Calls inciting people to civil unrest is being heard in the republic in
recent months. Those making them are pointing their fingers at some
outstanding problems and trying to oust the current authorities, the
statement says.

The coalition members have never denied the fact that there are many
troubles – mostly social – they don’t distance themselves from these
problems and have collective sense of commitment toward people. That’s why
the coalition parties find it important to state that in the wake of
parliamentary elections after scrutinizing the situation in the country they
adopted stance of comprehensive approach to the problems. A number of
feasible programs have been worked out to ensure the country development.
The coalition is convinced it will solve the problems. 2004 will be crucial
year for fulfillment of promises given in the course of election campaign,
the statement says.

Authorities are being formed in due time as a result of election, not
between elections. Any attempt to involve the country in early elections can
jeopardize security of our republic that faces many challenges.

Political forces united in coalition intend to achieve the goals specified
in their memorandum such as improving lives of thousands of peoples, halving
poverty and rooting out corruption.

The coalition is sure that its program implementation will lead to visible
progress. At the same time, all attempts to violate the Constitution must be
prevented by law enforcement bodies, the statement says.

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Armsberbank to become Russian Vneshtorgbank subsidiary

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
March 24, 2004 Wednesday

Armsberbank to become Russian Vneshtorgbank subsidiary

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

One of largest Armenian banks — Armsberbank became a subsidiary bank
of the Russian Vneshtorgbank. Under the agreement signed on Wednesday
Vneshtorgbank purchased the controlling interest or 70 percent of the
Armenian bank stock.

Vneshtorgbank President Andrei Kostin noted that this is the first
such action on the post-Soviet space. The purchase of the Armenian
bank is another step to implement the strategy of the Vneshtorgbank
development that envisages the development of the network of
subsidiary banks in Europe and CIS countries.

“The political stability, rapid economic growth and certainly growing
needs of the country’s economy are among causes of Vneshtorgbank
activities in Armenia,” Kostin emphasized. Armsberbank will provide
loans to Russian enterprises operating in Armenia including the
national gas producer Gazprom, power grid United Energy Systems of
Russia and Airlines Sibir.

Apart for the investment activities the Vneshtorgbank leadership
intends to continue development of traditional banking services for
population, Kostin pointed out.

“Armenia will gain much from the deal,” one of leading Armenian
businessmen and chairman of the Armsberbank board Mikhail Bagdasarov
remarked. According to him, “Vneshtorgbank coming to Armenia cut the
distance between the countries and their economies, and it will make
Russia and Armenia closer.”