Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ArmeniaNow-September 11/2009

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ArmeniaNow-September 11/2009

    ARMENIANOW.COM
    Administration Address: 26 Parpetsi St., No 9
    X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
    X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Filtere d: true
    X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Result: ApoEALLlqkpEtb/H/2dsb2JhbADLfgYChmOISQKCIgYJDQiBUA WBVHKIGw
    X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.44,375,1249282800";
    d="scan'208";a="194287487"
    X-L istprocessor-Version: 8.1 -- ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

    Phone: +(374 1) 532422
    Email: [email protected]
    Internet: www.armenianow.com
    Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact Babken
    Juharyan)
    Email: [email protected]






    September 11, 2009





    1. Party split: Expelled Heritage member comments on colleagues'
    activities



    2. Something to feel good about?: Armenia viewed as better for Doing
    Business & `efficiency-driven'



    3. 03/01 Report Due Soon: But Nikoyan probe says some questions
    remain unanswered



    4. Dangerous Game or Good Diplomacy?: Political debate on
    Armenia-Turkey protocols continues



    5. Global Crisis and Tourism: Armenian officials claim growth,
    specialists say slump in business



    6. Armenia-Turkey: Armenian Parliament is preparing for hearings
    of the protocol on normalization of bilateral relation between the two
    countries



    7. Sport: Armenia wants to host (Jr.) Olympics?








    1. Party split: Expelled Heritage member comments on colleagues' activities




    By Georg Khachaturyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    Expelled member of the opposition Heritage Party, former deputy chairman of
    the Party Movses Aristakesyan, at a meeting with journalists Friday,
    announced that he cannot answer the question as to who exactly is to blame
    for the inner Party split - external or internal forces.



    (Aristakisyan is next in line to succeed Heritage Party founder Raffi
    Hovannisian as MP after the latter gave up his parliamentary mandate earlier
    this week.)



    Aristakesyan said that the party itself often had contradictory viewpoints
    on Hovannisian's approach to party politics.



    `As the head of the Party, he was supposed to be more decisive,'
    Aristakesyan said.



    The Heritage board met on Wednesday evening to discus Aristakesyan's as well
    as political secretary Vardan Khachatryan's and representative of the Party
    to the Central Electoral Commission Zoya Tedavosyan's `undermining
    activities' within the Party.



    Aristakesyan also said that according to the Party regulations, while making
    decisions concerning separate members of the Party, the board must inform
    those people about it. The board was supposed to inform the three expelled
    members of the Party about the decision made concerning them in a written
    form, and only then, in if they did not appear, could they make a decision
    in their absence.



    Aristakesyan said that still in August he and several members of the Party
    turned to the board asking for a meeting to be called in order to get
    clarification concerning some issues. Besides, it was planned to discuss the
    claims of nine members of the Party concerning the election of the chairman
    of the Heritage Party Armen Martirosyan, whom the expelled members accuse of
    rigging the party vote during the July 2008 election of the Heritage
    governing body.



    Aristakesyan said that they demanded a report about 23 business trips of
    party members' (MPs from the Heritage faction) and Martirosyan refused to
    submit such a report, moreover, he refused to do so for the eighth time.



    `If the problem is not solved on the inner party level, we intend to turn to
    the Minister of Justice of Armenia,' Aristakesyan said.








    2. Something to feel good about?: Armenia viewed as better for Doing
    Business & `efficiency-driven'



    By Karine Ionesyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    Two international reports released this week have indicated that Armenia has
    improved as an environment for doing business and reached a qualitatively
    new stage in its global competitiveness - a rare positive development amid
    falling economic indicators and a pessimistic outlook in Armenia.



    The Doing Business 2010 report of the International Finance Corporation and
    the World Bank released on Tuesday ranks Armenia 43rd among 183 reviewed
    economies by the overall ease of doing business in the country, which is an
    improvement over last year's 50th position. Armenia's regional neighbors
    Azerbaijan and Georgia are ranked 38th and 11th respectively, a circumstance
    that in particular led Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili to publicly
    boast of his country having moved to the `highest league of the world
    championship in doing business.'



    According to the World Bank press release, progress in Armenia is
    conditioned by reforms in three major areas - establishing businesses,
    obtaining loan information and cross-border trade.



    Economist Andranik Tevanyan, however, says despite improvement in obtaining
    loan information noticed by the World Bank, loans themselves remain hard to
    get.



    `Yes, banks today work transparently and provide loans at certain interest
    rates. But are these loans accessible for ordinary people? This is already
    disputable, since in reality interest rates are high and a loan is not
    affordable,' says Tevanyan, head of the Politeconomia Research Center.



    The other major report on Armenia released this week was the Global
    Competitiveness Report 2009-10 of the Geneva-based World Economic Forum
    (WEF). The report shows Armenia as retaining its previous Global
    Competitiveness Index and ranking of 97th among 133 reviewed economies. It
    also shows Armenia completing its move from the group of countries rated as
    `factor-driven' economies to the group of countries with `efficiency-driven'
    economies.



    According to the authors of the report, Azerbaijan, which has a higher Gross
    Domestic Product and is ranked 51st according to its global competitiveness,
    is still behind Armenia in terms of competitiveness quality, or its stage of
    development, as mineral resources make up to 98 percent of Azerbaijan's
    exports.



    `In order to strengthen our positions and get to the next group of
    `innovation-driven economies', Armenia needs to improve the efficiency
    of
    goods markets, technological readiness, as well as business environment,
    anti-monopoly policy and innovation activities,' said Manuk Hergnyan, head
    of the Yerevan-based Economy and Values research center, a WEF partner
    institute in preparing the report. `The current economic crisis conditions
    create more favorable conditions for creating motivations to take serious
    steps in this direction.'



    Hergnyan believes this drastic change is necessary because the Armenian
    economy is currently on the decline because of dwindling private cash
    remittances and shrinking housing construction.



    And in Tevanyan's opinion, the most essential here is to follow an
    anti-monopoly policy. He says his research center has a draft project on how
    to implement this in practice and is going to submit it to the National
    Assembly for discussion soon.



    `Today we need a competitive economic system, accessible and long-term loans
    and corresponding legislation,' concludes Tevanyan.





    3. 03/01 Report Due Soon: But Nikoyan probe says some questions remain
    unanswered



    By Gayane Lazarian

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    The National Assembly's Ad Hoc Commission that has conducted a probe into
    the 2008 deadly post-election clashes for more than a year will present its
    summary conclusions during the first week of the parliament's autumn session
    that starts Monday. But the commission led by the Republican Vice-Speaker of
    Parliament Samvel Nikoyan says questions on `a number of circumstances of
    deaths' remain unanswered.



    Ten people, among them eight civilians, were killed and more than 200
    injured in Armenia's worst violence that followed ten days of street
    demonstrations by the supporters of opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosyan
    protesting the official outcome of the February presidential election. The
    opposition accused the government of using lethal force against unarmed
    protesters and continues to hold it responsible for the death.



    A probe into the causes and circumstances of the clashes was launched in the
    Armenian parliament in June 2008. Yet, the chairman of the commission
    conducting the parliamentary inquiry says no answer has yet been found to
    the question of `in consequence of whose actions people were killed.'



    Representative of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) in
    the commission Artsvik Minasyan blames the investigation body for failing to
    establish the circumstances of the deaths.



    `The commission's evaluation in the matter of the clarification of the
    circumstances of the deaths is 99 percent dependable on the behavior of the
    investigation body. And if this body has not shown necessary professionalism
    or will, the only thing the commission can do is to state that we have
    failed to clarify it,' says Minasyan. `As a commission member, I evaluate
    the work of the investigation body as unsatisfactory.'



    Opposition member of the commission Aram Karapetyan thinks that the March 1
    crimes will be fully revealed only after a change of leadership in Armenia.



    `The commission has failed to provide answers to several important
    questions. Such as: who ordered to shoot at people, whether the actions were
    coordinated through specially set-up headquarters at [President] Robert
    Kocharyan's, who were the members of those headquarters and did the gangs of
    oligarchs take part in the March 1 slaughter?' says Karapetyan, the leader
    of the opposition New Times party.



    The main opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC) alliance has alleged
    that a total of 950 sets of military outfit were issued to five senior
    officials and four members of parliament from the Defense Ministry
    warehouses on March 1, 2008. Those, the opposition claims, were worn by
    their own bodyguards and security personnel during the suppression of the
    opposition demonstrations.



    Three members of the parliament's Ad Hoc Commission, including United Labor
    Party Gurgen Arsenyan, Dashnaktsutyun parliamentary faction secretary
    Arshaluys Shahbazyan and head of the National Accord party Aram Harutyunyan
    visited the mentioned premises of the Defense Ministry to check the veracity
    of the information earlier this week.



    `We established as a result of our inspections that there was no transfer of
    property at the Defense Ministry on March 1, 2008. Only towels were issued
    on February 24 and beds on March 4. We have checked all registers,
    instructions and photocopied them,' said Arsenyan.



    Saying that logically such things would have been done without
    documentation, Karapetyan, however, added: `It is always a case during
    bloody deals that everything is done in writing so that those involved will
    not deny involvement later.' He said that the Defense Ministry might have
    simply withheld the information from the visiting commission members.



    Commission chairman Nikoyan said, however, that the questions raised in the
    reports by the opposition members of the disbanded Fact-Finding Group of
    Experts, including the claims about the `illegal issuance of uniforms'
    will
    also be incorporated in the final report due to be published next week.




    4. Dangerous Game or Good Diplomacy?: Political debate on Armenia-Turkey
    protocols continues



    By Gayane Lazarian

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    Political discussions continue on the draft protocols on establishing ties
    and developing bilateral relations between Armenia and Turkey, nearly two
    weeks after their publication. Opinions, as expected, are split and
    typically reflect political party persuasions.



    Aram Karapetyan, who leads the extra-parliamentary opposition New Times
    party, thinks with the current Armenian-Turkish relations President Serzh
    Sargsyan has trammeled Armenia into a `dangerous, complex and cruel game.'



    Karapetyan said at a press conference Thursday that Armenia should have
    launched its relations with Turkey with a precondition that the latter
    recognizes the Ottoman-era killings and deportations of more than 1.5
    million Armenians as genocide.



    `Why? The policy in the past ten years conducted by [former president]
    Robert Kocharyan and [his foreign minister] Vardan Oskanian, the main
    purpose of which was the recognition of the Armenian Genocide at
    international instances, has been totally left aside today,' said
    Karapetyan. `What does an unconditional Armenian-Turkish rapprochement
    mean?'



    The leader of the opposition party finds it strange that one nation can
    slaughter another and that victim nation should have no pre-condition.
    Furthermore, Karapetyan believes that Armenia should achieve a genuine
    separation of the Karabakh settlement from normalization with Turkey.



    Meanwhile, the Orinats Yerkir party, a junior partner in the Republican
    Party-led governing coalition, sees no snags in the protocols on
    establishing diplomatic ties and developing bilateral relations unveiled by
    Yerevan and Ankara on August 31.



    Heghine Bisharyan, who leads the Orinats Yerkir faction in parliament, does
    not share the views and concerns of Armenia's nationalist forces, notably
    the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, that the published protocols have a
    link with Karabakh.



    `I see no grounds for this concern. There is no reference to Karabakh
    anywhere in the protocol,' she says.



    And Tigran Karapetyan, who leads the People's Party, sees a risk for
    Karabakh in the protocols.



    `There is a point in the protocols by which the parties should contribute to
    processes taking place in the region. This way, Turkey gets the right to
    intervene in the Karabakh issue,' says Karapetyan.



    And New Times' Karapetyan suggests that by increasing Turkey's role in
    the
    region Armenia will in fact infringe upon the interests of Iran and Georgia.




    According to Karapetyan, if the protocols are ratified by the Armenian
    parliament, then `this parliament is not Armenian.'



    And Orinats Yerkir's Bisharyan said: `All presidents [of Armenia] wanted to
    get the border opened. Now a period has come when efforts are successful=85 We
    will back the country's president so that he solves this problem and thank
    God that the coalition is of this opinion.'






    5. Global Crisis and Tourism: Armenian officials claim growth,
    specialists say slump in business



    Georg Khachatryan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    The world financial crisis has affected - not greatly but to some extend
    -
    the development of tourism in Armenia. Although official numbers speak about
    progress in the sphere of tourism in Armenia, experts, on the other hand,
    point out a slump.



    According to Anahit Papazyan, director of Levon Travel tourist agency, the
    effect of the world crisis on tourism in the country will be more tangible
    in 2010.



    She says that in 2008 a number of booked trips to the South Caucasus and
    Armenia in particular were annulled, first because of the March 1 tragic
    events in Yerevan and then because of the August war in Georgia.



    `It was only a month ago that we started recovering the level we used to
    have in 2007, before then we had worked with a loss,' says Papazyan.



    She stressed that tourist agencies register in their statistics not only
    tourists but also generally visitors to Armenia, including foreign citizens
    coming here on business trips.



    During the first two quarters of 2009, according to official data, 207,729
    tourists visited Armenia (0.1 percent more than during the same period last
    year - 207,500).



    According to the head of tourism department of Levon Travel David Khachiyan,
    more than 700 tourists have visited and will be visiting through their
    agency, mostly from the USA, Italy and France. Ninety percent of the
    visitors from the States are Diaspora Armenians, whereas their number makes
    50 percent among those coming from France.



    As Khachiyan says, the average cost of travel packages in Armenia, including
    accommodation (hotels), meals and one-day or multi-day sightseeing
    tours, makes
    about $100-$150 per day per person.



    Armen Hakobyan, representative of the Armenian Hotel Association, shares the
    opinion that the global crisis has had its negative effects on the
    development of tourism in Armenia.



    According to him, another problem emerged in 2009, because of the budget
    reduction of many Armenian families many of them could not afford spending
    their vacation at resorts in Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.



    As for travel services, he says, the prices have not dropped. Hakobyan also
    pointed out that tourism is among the rare spheres where there is no
    monopoly and hotel owners can set their own tariffs for their service.



    He says that many construction projects in this sphere are frozen with no
    investments expected in the nearest future.



    Mekhak Apresyan, head of the department for Tourism and Regional Economic
    Development at the RA Ministry of Economy, says there are a number of
    objective factors due to which there is no decline in the tourism sphere and
    Diaspora is one of them.



    `Diaspora has always had a special input in the development of tourism in
    our country as well as the economy in general,' says Apresyan, adding that
    this factor is especially tangible in the current circumstances of economic
    crisis.



    Apresyan says that the majority of visitors belong to senior age-group with
    established preferences which, he thinks, cannot be affected by the crisis.







    6. Armenia-Turkey: Armenian Parliament is preparing for hearings of the
    protocol on normalization of bilateral relation between the two countries




    Analysis by Aris Ghazinyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    Last week the Heritage Party opposition faction submitted to the NA Standing
    Committee on Foreign Relations an initiative on holding a referendum on
    Armenia's adoption of the protocols envisaging normalization of
    Armenian-Turkish relations.



    `This initiative was born with a consideration that the issue of
    Armenian-Turkish relations is of vital importance for Armenia and it is for
    such cases that the law on referendums has been recently passed. It's time
    to apply that law,' stated MP Larisa Alaverdyan.



    It should be noted that in the evening of August 31 the Foreign Ministries
    of Armenia, Turkey and the Federal Department on Foreign Affairs of
    Switzerland reported the beginning of bilateral political consultations on
    the two protocols initialed with Switzerland's mediation - `Protocol
    on the
    Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between the Two Countries' and
    `Protocol on the Development of Bilateral Relations'.



    The parliament hearings will be held before October 14 according to the set
    timeframe of six weeks which coincides with Armenian President Serzh
    Sargsyan's scheduled visit to Turkey.



    Some political analysts and politicians think that the protocols have a
    number of unacceptable formulations and phrases from the viewpoint of
    Armenia's interests.



    Vahan Hovhannisyan, member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    Dashnaktsutyun (ARF) Bureau, stated that Dashnaktsutyun had never spoken
    against the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border, however, they are not
    happy with the price the Armenian authorities are ready to pay for it to be
    achieved.



    `Protocols providing for taking steps aimed at reconciling Armenia and
    Turkey have to be reconsidered, because the way they are now is
    unacceptable.'



    One of the regulations in the protocol says: `Confirming again bilateral
    and
    multi-lateral obligations of equal rights, sovereignty, non-intervention in
    other countries' domestic affairs, recognition of territorial integrity of
    states and stability of state borders, the parties=85 '.



    `It is quite obvious that the `other countries' implies first of all
    Azerbaijan, and the phrase `non-intervention in other countries' domestic
    affairs' refers to the Nagorno Karabakh issue exactly as Azerbaijan's
    `domestic' affair,' points out Moscow political analyst Samvel Nazaryan.



    `The Armenian authorities can say whatever they want and however they want,
    but there is no other interpretation. The sited regulation unambiguously
    localizes the most important issue of today's history of Armenia within the
    state borders of Azerbaijan making it that country's `domestic affair''.



    Azerbaijani mass media have rushed to announce that there is the prospect of
    official Baku submitting a draft resolution on the respect of Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity on the basis of the Armenian-Turkish protocol to the
    UN General Assembly.



    `Taking into account the international euphoria in reference to this
    document and the not less euphoric state of the Armenian authorities, there
    is little doubt that Azerbaijan's resolution draft would be passed,' says
    Nazaryan.



    Another point in the controversial protocol completes the above mentioned
    one: `Confirming mutual recognition of the common border between the two
    countries based on the corresponding international-legal agreements=85'



    `This regulation means that the Armenian authorities are officially
    renouncing any territorial claims, depriving future presidents of Armenia of
    international-legal grounds to raise this issue in the perspective,' says
    political analyst Garegin Gabriyelyan, head of the Keni Center.



    The Armenian-Turkish border, in reality, amounts to not only space but time
    as well. It is not simply a couple of hundred kilometers dividing one part
    of historic Armenia from the other, it is several alternating centuries
    during which many different monstrous acts have been carried out against the
    Armenian population, among which is the Armenian Genocide. It was during the
    Genocide that the length and contours of the current `Armenian-Turkish'
    border were drawn.



    `Hence, to speak about recognizing the current border means signing a
    complete and unconditional capitulation of the Armenian cause, and agreeing
    with the Turkish that `the events of the early 20th century had no
    consequences for the Armenians,' stresses Gabriyelyan.



    Member of Parliament of Nagorno Karabakh Maxim Mirzoyan, while speaking
    about the process of settling the Armenian-Turkish relations, stated:



    `I do not think that the Armenian-Turkish relations can be successfully
    settled. In any case, like it or not, Turkey is our neighbor and we have
    unsettled issues with it, and until they are called to account for what they
    did, we have no right to build any relations with Turkey.'



    Representatives of the Armenian authorities have made statements on this
    issue as well.



    `If the protocols on establishing relations initialed by Ankara and Yerevan
    are not in Armenia's interests, people will protest and start rallying,'
    says Galust Sahakyan, deputy chairman of the ruling Republican Party of
    Armenia.





    7. Sport: Armenia wants to host (Jr.) Olympics?



    By Suren Musayelyan



    Olympics

    Meeting International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge in
    Switzerland on Monday, Gagik Tsarukyan, the President of the National
    Olympic Committee of Armenia (NOCA), expressed Armenia's desire to host the
    third Junior Olympic Games in 2018.

    According to a NOCA report (www.armnoc.am), Tsarukyan also offered the IOC
    and the European Olympic Committee to hold meetings of the executive
    committees in Armenia where `there are all corresponding conditions for
    that.' The NOCA president also stressed that Armenia has all necessary sport
    settings for `competitions of any scale.'

    IOC President Rogge reportedly praised Armenia's efforts in developing
    sports and said he was aware of large international competitions that
    Armenia has hosted. Rogge also said that cooperation between the IOC and the
    NOCA will gradually strengthen, which will `enliven sport life in Armenia.'

    (Source: www.armnoc.am)



    Judo



    The European junior judo championships opened in Yerevan on Friday, with the
    official weigh-in of athletes, preliminary fights and finals in three out of
    eight weight categories.



    Around 400 athletes from 40 countries of Europe are participating in the
    championships. Armenia is represented by eight male athletes competing in
    all weight divisions, and six female athletes competing in five out of
    eight divisions.



    The championships to be held through September 13 are also being attended by
    participants from Azerbaijan - the first Azeri athletes to visit independent
    Armenia. Armenian authorities had provided security guarantees to the Azeri
    athletes and delegation members while they were in the Armenian capital.



    In a recent media interview Armenian Judo Federation President Alexan
    Avetisyan said he expected tough competition for medals at the Yerevan
    championships. At the same time, he said he hoped for several medals to be
    won by Armenian sportsmen.



    Soccer



    Armenia have improved the record in the current FIFA World Cup 2010
    qualifying campaign after beating Belgium in Yerevan 2-1 on Wednesday. The
    latest victory still leaves Armenia in the bottom position of the six-nation
    group with only four points in eight games. Armenia have got a real chance
    to catch up with and outstrip currently fifth-placed Estonia (5 points) in
    the two remaining games - against reigning European champion Spain in
    Yerevan on October 10 and Euro-2008 semifinalist Turkey in Bursa on October
    14.



    `I notice a qualitative change in the play of the Armenian team. Our team
    has a potential. One should believe in their own strength and be
    self-confident,' said Armenia head coach Vardan Minasyan of the team's
    performance as he spoke at a press conference after the match. Meanwhile,
    Bosnia-Herzegovina took another major step towards finishing second in the
    group, next to Spain, and hope for winning qualification through a playoff.
    On Wednesday, the Balkan outfit held their main rival Turkey to a 1-1 draw
    at home and still have a four-point advantage with only two rounds to go.



    Boxing



    Three Armenian boxers reached quarterfinals at the continuing AIBA world
    championships in Milan, Italy. Andranik Hakobyan (75 kg), Azat Hovhannisyan
    (57 kg) and

    Hovhannes Danielyan (48 kg) held their fights on Wednesday. Only Hakobyan,
    however, managed to beat his opponent to reach the semifinal and secure at
    least a bronze medal for his team.



    Six other Armenian boxers in the rest weight divisions were beaten by
    opponents at earlier staged.



    For complete information on the championships, see the official website at
    www.aiba.org



    Chess



    Armenian women's national team (including Elina Danielyan, Lilit Lazarian,
    Lilit Galoyan, Nelli Aghinyan, Siranush Andriasyan, coach - Arsen
    Yeghiazaryan) haveg been taking part in the world team championships held in
    Ningbo, China, September 1-12. The other participants of the championship
    are the national teams of China (1st and 2nd), Georgia, India, Poland,
    Russia, Ukraine, the USA, and Vietnam. Before the last round of the
    championships, Armenia is in the fourth position, with 17 points, behind
    Russia, Ukraine and China.



    Meanwhile, Armenian grandmaster Levon Aronyan has good chances to become the
    winner of a four-man two-round Grand Slam Masters Final being in Bilbao,
    Spain, September 5-12. His opponents are Alexander Grischuk (Russia), Sergey
    Karyakin (Ukraine), Alexei Shirov (Spain).



    After the fourth-round victory over Grischuk Aronyan has nine points (3
    points are appointed for a win according to this tournament's regulations),
    with one defeat and three victors. With two more games to play, Aronyan is
    in clear first place with a 3-point advantage over the Russian.



    (More information is available here
    http://www.bilbaofinalmasters.com/2009/en_ind ex.asp)
Working...
X