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Armenian Reporter - 11/18/2006

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  • Armenian Reporter - 11/18/2006

    ARMENIAN REPORTER
    PO Box 129
    Paramus, New Jersey 07652
    Tel: 1-201-226-1995
    Fax: 1-201-226-1660
    Web: http://www.armenianreporteronline.com
    Email: [email protected]

    November 18, 2006

    1. EU signs "Neighborhood Action Plan" agreements with Armenia,
    Azerbaijan , Georgia

    2. Heirs of Armenian Genocide victims to receive almost $8 million
    from New York Life settlement

    3. Armenian soldier wounded in Iraq; Defense Minister Sargsyan in
    Baghdad

    4. Vimpel set to buy ArmenTel from Greeks; promises to relinquish
    ArmenTel's controversial monopolies

    5. "Armenian Reporter" opens D.C. bureau; Emil Sanamyan is Washington
    Editor

    6. Editorial: Thankfully

    ************************************** *************************************

    1. EU signs "Neighborhood Action Plan" agreements with Armenia,
    Azerbaijan , Georgia

    Yerevan--On November 14 in Brussels, the European Union and Armenia
    signed a European Neighborhood Policy Action Plan. Under the plan,
    the EU will provide Armenia with aid, better trade relations, and
    greater political cooperation; Armenia, in turn, will adopt political
    and economic reforms. Similar plans were signed with Azerbaijan and
    Georgia on the same day.

    The EU is expected to spend an average of 25 million Euros ($32
    million) on the Armenia program each year for the first five years of
    the agreement.

    The EU high commissioner for foreign and security policy, Javier
    Solana, told RFE/RL that the EU's contribution increases if the
    recipient government "does things properly." Otherwise, "cooperation
    with the government will diminish."

    Mr. Solana added, "This is the same political technology that was
    applied to countries that later became EU members, sector by sector,
    chapter by chapter in a very well-organized fashion that we have
    tremendous experience in."

    Signing the accord on behalf of Armenia was Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian. Welcoming the plan's insistence on political and economic
    reforms, Mr. Oskanian noted that Armenia's "development depends not
    on natural resources but human resources; and therefore, we have to
    provide the necessary conditions to develop that resource."

    The Foreign Ministry announced that in the process of implementation
    of the plan, " Armenia's social, political and economic systems will
    begin to resemble European systems." Further, the plan allows for
    Armenia--and the two neighboring republics--to penetrate EU's
    internal markets.

    **************************************** ***********************************

    2. Heirs of Armenian Genocide victims to receive almost $8 million
    from New York Life settlement

    Los Angeles--Settlement checks totaling $7,954,362 will be
    distributed this week to more than 2,500 descendents of those killed
    during the Armenian Genocide of 1915. These checks resulted from the
    multi-million-dollar settlement reached in a class action lawsuit
    brought against New York Life Insurance Company.

    The lawsuit, originally filed in November 1999, stemmed from New York
    Life's nonpayment of life insurance benefits for those who died in
    the Armenian Genocide. These payments, together with the $3 million
    dollars already distributed to various Armenian charitable
    organizations, puts an end to an historic and groundbreaking case
    which was able to right a 90-year-old injustice.

    "Ten years ago, compensating these Armenians was a mere dream," said
    Vartkes Yeghiayan, one of the lead attorneys who represented the
    Armenian heirs and who originally conceived of this case 20 years
    ago. "This settlement was a small measure of justice for the
    Armenians."

    The Settlement Board, the body created by the Federal District Court
    to handle the distribution of the settlement, reviewed 5,692 claims
    and found that 2,515 of them could be traced to Armenians who had
    purchased life insurance policies from New York Life prior to 1915.

    Letters will be mailed to all claimants, with checks included for all
    claimants that were awarded compensation. Of the nearly $8 million in
    checks, Armenians in Armenia will receive the most, roughly $3.7
    million, followed by Armenians in the United States who will receive
    almost $2.7 million. Armenians in France occupy the third place and
    will receive a total of $656,413. In all, Armenians in 26 countries
    will receive compensation.

    For questions about the settlement, contact the Settlement Board at
    (213) 327-0740.

    *************************************** ************************************

    3. Armenian soldier wounded in Iraq; Defense Minister Sargsyan in
    Baghdad

    Yerevan-Senior Lieutenant Georgi Nalbandian, 25, a member of the
    Armenian regiment in Iraq, was seriously wounded in an attack on
    November 11. He was transported to a U.S. military hospital in
    Germany for treatment. Two other soldiers, one from Poland, the other
    from Slovakia, were killed in the attack. Mr. Nalbandian's right leg
    was amputated.

    In a news release, the U.S. embassy in Yerevan expressed "its deepest
    concern" for the soldier and thanked him and his Armenian colleagues
    "for their vital role in the international coalition fighting the
    global war on terror."

    The attack occurred while the soldiers were returning from a mission
    to defuse mines, the Armenian Defense Ministry announced. The bomb
    exploded near the town of Al Kut in Wasit province as a multinational
    convoy was returning to base.

    Armenian troops, now in their fourth rotation, have been deployed to
    Iraq since January 2005. The contingent of 46 soldiers includes truck
    drivers, bomb detonation experts, physicians, and officers. They
    carry out only humanitarian operations.

    Meanwhile, Armenia's defense minister Serge Sargsyan began a
    previously scheduled trip to Iraq to visit the Armenian soldiers and
    meet his Iraqi counterpart. Mr. Sargsyan has asked the National
    Assembly to prolong the service commitment of the Armenian detachment
    in Iraq. "Armenia cannot only be a security consumer. It ought to
    have its modest but consistent contribution to the world security
    processes," Mr. Sargsyan told reporters. "As time shows, our officers
    and soldiers are on an important and difficult mission, but it is
    first of all Armenia that needs this mission, and by their duty our
    soldiers once again confirm that Armenia is a full-fledged state."

    A sixth rotation of Armenian troops left for Kosovo this week.

    After recovering, Mr. Nalbandian, the wounded soldier, is expected to
    return to Armenia to continue his military service.

    **************************************** ***********************************

    4. Vimpel set to buy ArmenTel from Greeks; promises to relinquish
    ArmenTel's controversial monopolies

    YEREVAN--In what may be the largest business transaction in Armenia's
    history, the Russian mobile operator Vimpel Communications is buying
    a 90 percent stake in Armenia Telephone Company (ArmenTel) from the
    Hellenic Telecommunications Organization for 341.9 million Euros
    ($436.3 million) plus about 40 million Euros in debt.

    The Armenian government's Public Services Regulatory Commission
    approved the sale on November 14.

    ArmenTel holds a monopoly on landlines in Armenia, for which it has
    about 600,000 subscribers. It holds about 40 percent of the mobile
    market with about 400,000 mobile subscribers. It also holds a
    monopoly on Internet data transmission.

    Vimpel says it will relinquish the monopolies ArmenTel holds within a
    year. It says it will compete by increasing the quality and variety
    of ArmenTel's services. It is expected to make a $100 million
    investment in Armenia in 2007.

    Vahe Yacoubian, a Los Angeles attorney representing the Armenian
    government in its dealings with ArmenTel, says that Vimpel has
    offered to give up the Internet data transmission monopoly
    immediately.

    "Both sides are interested in completing this process as soon as
    possible as VimpelCom itself states that they think that an open
    market is better for their company's business and profits," Yaghubian
    said, according to RFE/RL.

    Vimpel operates phone services in Russia and Kazakhstan. It has
    recently acquired cellular operators in Ukraine, Tajikistan,
    Uzbekistan, and Georgia.

    Whereas the main Russian investors in Armenia have in the past been
    state companies, Vimpel is publicly traded. The largest shareholder,
    at 33 percent, is Altimo, part of Mikail Fridman's Alfa holding
    company, which is publicly traded in the U.S. A Norwegian company,
    Telenor, is the second-largest shareholder at 27 percent.

    Another Russian company that took part in the tender and for months
    claimed to have won it has closer ties to the Russian state.

    ****************************************** *********************************

    5. "Armenian Reporter" opens D.C. bureau; Emil Sanamyan is Washington
    Editor

    Yerevan--The "Armenian Reporter" has established a bureau in the
    nation's capital, announced Vincent Lima, the newsweekly's editor.
    Emil Sanamyan has been appointed Washington editor of the "Armenian
    Reporter" and will lead the bureau.

    "Our community recognizes that what goes on in Washington is
    important for Armenia, Artsakh, and Armenian-Americans," Mr. Lima
    said. "True to our calling as an independent newspaper, we are doing
    what we must in order to bring our readers first-hand accounts of
    these goings on."

    The "Reporter"'s Washington Bureau will follow developments of
    interest in the administration and Congress, at the Armenian Embassy
    and Nagorno-Karabakh office, and in Washington think tanks. It will
    also report on the activities of Armenian lobbying and advocacy
    groups and on Armenians in Washington--officials, staffers, visitors,
    and interns.

    "I am truly delighted to join the Reporter staff," Mr. Sanamyan said.
    "This is a unique and exciting opportunity to contribute to the
    understanding of the United States' policymaking, particularly as it
    relates to Armenian concerns."

    "Emil Sanamyan is a great resource for our readers. He is not afraid
    to pick up the phone, call a source, and get to the bottom of
    things," said Chris Zakian, managing editor of the "Reporter." "And
    he knows whom to call. As a researcher and analyst, he has been
    following news, attending talks, reading reports, and networking in
    Washington for years."

    A graduate of the University of Arizona, Mr. Sanamyan has studied,
    worked, and lived in Washington since 1998. While attending the
    George Washington University's Elliott School of International
    Affairs, he served as assistant to the Representative of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic in the United States. Since 2000 and until
    recently, he was Research and Information Associate at the Armenian
    Assembly of America.

    Mr. Sanamyan and his wife Oksana make their home in Rosslyn, VA.

    ********************************************* ******************************

    6. Editorial: Thankfully

    It is the week before Thanksgiving, and we are counting our
    blessings.

    Armenia celebrated the fifteenth anniversary of its independence this
    year, a joyous milestone. And it is the fifteenth anniversary too of
    the overwhelming vote of the people of Karabagh in favor of
    independence.

    Armenia has a long way to go, of course. But we can be grateful for
    the progress that has been made over the past year. The economy has
    attracted increased investments; there are thousands of new jobs.
    This progress is reflected in double-digit growth in the gross
    domestic product, coupled with low inflation.

    The progress will continue--in the economy as well as in the
    political and

    social arenas.

    Only this week Armenia and the European Union signed a European
    Neighborhood Policy Action Plan. The plan helps Armenia implement
    political and economic reforms, while lifting trade barriers and
    investing perhaps 125 million euros ($160 million) in the country
    over the next five years.

    This April Armenia and the United States signed the Millennium
    Challenge Compact, which invests a much-needed $237 million in
    Armenia's rural infrastructure.

    Both programs come with strings attached: Armenia must fulfill
    commitments to political, economic, and social reforms. But these
    strings are not encumbrances; they insist simply on the
    implementation of commitments Armenia has chosen to make. These
    commitments are in line with our collective desire to see a more
    democratic, more transparent, more prosperous, and peaceful country.

    * * *

    Meanwhile, we have seen Armenian issues take an ever-higher
    international profile over the past year. In April, PBS broadcast a
    documentary on the Armenian Genocide. The broadcast got the attention
    of major newspapers thanks to our collective response to an
    ill-advised decision of the network brass. The decision was to
    balance out the well-balanced documentary with a panel discussion
    that gave legitimacy to falsifiers of the historical record.

    The Genocide stayed in the news, grabbing headlines again in late
    September when President Jacques Chirac announced that France
    considered recognition of the Genocide a precondition for Turkey's
    accession to the European Union. EU officials who were trying to get
    Turkey to meet other agreed-upon preconditions condemned the
    announcement. But the French opposition agreed with the president on
    this one--making the precondition very real.

    Armenians and the Armenian Genocide grabbed headlines again in
    October when Orhan Pamuk--one of the growing circle of Turkish
    intellectuals at odd with the national chauvinism of his country's
    old elite--won the Nobel Prize for Literature. The same day, the
    French National Assembly voted in favor of a bill that would
    criminalize denial of the Genocide.

    The publication with much fanfare this week of Taner Akcam's book, A
    Shameful Act, is a further step in the right direction.

    * * *

    The year has also been replete with cultural happenings: concerts,
    dance performances, plays, photo exhibits, films, novels, radio
    shows, and so much more have made it a joy to be part of the Armenian
    community.

    Our gratitude is not simply for the events, but for the people who
    make them possible. The events reflect an enormous investment of
    time, energy, talent, and money by activists, by scholars, by
    artists, by engaged philanthropists, by government officials and
    pressure groups alike.

    We say, "Thank you," and we say, "Let's carry on."

    * * *

    If it's Thanksgiving, it's time for the Armenia Fund Telethon. It's
    time for an extravaganza of live entertainment from some of the most
    popular Armenian talent around. It's time for engaging hosts. It's
    time to see the work your donations last year have made possible.
    It's time to watch online ( www.armeniafund.org) or tune in. And it's
    definitely time to call in.

    ********************************************* ******************************
    Direct your inquiries to [email protected]
    (c) 2006 CS Media Enterprises LLC. All Rights Reserved
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