Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ArmenianNow - 06/05/2009

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

  • ArmenianNow - 06/05/2009

    ARMENIANOW.COM
    Administration Address: 26 Parpetsi St., No 9
    Phone: +(374 1) 532422
    Email: [email protected]
    Internet: www.armenianow.com
    Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact Babken
    Juharyan)
    Email: [email protected]



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


    June 5, 2009





    1. Emo in Yerevan: Eccentric and emotional teenagers challenge society




    2. First Time for Some Things: City Council election aftermath
    unique



    3. Violation techniques: Episodes from the municipal elections in
    Yerevan



    **4.** Double move over Teghut: What are the former and current first
    ladies of Armenia against?



    5. Winner takes all: Coalition `heavyweights' to take charge of
    Yerevan as opposition withdraws in protest of `disgraceful' vote



    6. One Step: California State Senate approves Genocide Awareness Act



    7.** Weathering the Storm: the significance of Armenia's emerging
    middle class



    8. Eye Witness Report: Dangers and disappointment on Election Day



    9. Business or office?: Skepticism lingers over government move to
    enforce either/or choice for officials



    10. Talking Talks?: Armenia, Azerbaijan in fresh summit on Karabakh **



    11. Vital concerns: Impact of iodine deficiency still felt in [officially
    recognized] iodine deficiency-free Armenia



    12. Anti-crisis smell: businessman in Vanadzor sets up garlic powder
    production**



    13. Sport: Armenia U-21 soccer team to play Swiss, Turkish coevals in
    Euro-2011 qualifiers**



    ************************************************ **************************
    1. Emo in Yerevan: Eccentric and emotional teenagers challenge society



    By Siranuysh Gevorgyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    When Argam and Nelly walk along the street together, many passers-by turn
    around to check them out. The teenagers dressed in black and pink attract
    attention with their haircuts with a front fringe closing one of their eyes
    and eyes heavily painted in black



    Argam and Nelly, both 18, are representatives of emo culture. (A popular
    youth movement mainly in the United States and Europe, with a wide internet
    community such as: http://emospace.ning.com/)



    Emos initially used to be fans of emo rock, and later emo culture was
    formed. The word `emo' is derived from the English word `emotional.' Emos
    are usually 12-18-year-olds; they wear either black or pink clothes, tight
    jeans, fingernails painted in black and listen to Emo music (Tokyo Hotel,
    AFI, Avril Lavine, etc.). (The first emo appeared in Yerevan in 2007.)



    Argam Babayan, 18, is believed to be the only `Emo boy' in Yerevan. Argam
    does not exclude that there might be other emo boys in the city, too,
    however, they are afraid to go out dressed like emo teenagers.



    `I am not afraid, I dress like this all the time, and I do not want to
    change myself. However, when I walk in the street folks can insult me any
    time. They point at me, they say that I am a girl, or they ask whether I am
    a boy or if I am gay,' says Argam, who might be mistaken for a girl because
    he wears his hair long and also wears pink bracelets.



    Emo teenagers say that there are about 20-25 emos in Yerevan, however only
    five of them are active in the theme. Argam says that it is because of the
    difficulty of being an emo in Armenia.



    `The real emo must have a very expressive appearance and only a few would
    dare to dress emo style here,' says Argam. (Besides emos there are minority
    groups of goths, punks, Satanists and other youth movements in Yerevan)



    Teenagers who consider themselves to be emo, are typically either sad or
    depressed, or they are extremely happy. Emos try to show the state of their
    mind to people around them by all means. Emo teenagers are never ashamed of
    their tears, and they can cry in front of many people. Depressed emos even
    try to hurt themselves, and cause psychological and physical pain to
    themselves. That's why the suicide rate is higher amongst emo youngsters
    than ordinary youngsters. (No emo suicide has been reported in Armenia
    though).



    Extremists even claim to believe that emo teenagers must commit suicide once
    they are 18 years old.



    `Sometimes we are simply very, very sad, and then we may become unruly,'
    says Nelly Movsisyan, who is an emo since she turned 16, but whose family
    disapproves.



    Once Argam, who has problems especially with his father, after quarrelling
    with him took too an overdose of aspirin and he slept, but in the morning he
    woke up quite healthy.



    `I do not understand why my father does not accept me the way I am. I do
    not
    do anything wrong, I do not smoke, I do not drink alcohol, I do not take
    narcotics,' he wonders.



    `Now he does not live with us, he lives with his second wife in Echmiadzin
    after my mother's death. But when he comes to Yerevan, he always provokes
    quarrels with me. And then I want to leave home,' Argam says.



    Now Agram lives with his two sisters. He works nightshift at a plastic
    bottle production shop at the Aparan waters plant. Argam says he got the job
    with great difficulty.



    `I worked in a supermarket, and one day my boss came and told me to cut my
    hair the next day and only then come to work. And without saying anything I
    simply quit the job,' says Argam.



    Nelly's father is more tolerant. She says her father works in Russia and
    some of his friend's kids are also emos.



    The emos Argam and Nelly meet very often, they go for walks in downtown
    Yerevan, more often in the city's area known as Cascade.



    `When nobody understands you, you try to find someone who would entirely
    understand you. Now I am very happy that we have met,' says Argam.




    *************************************** ***********************************
    2. First Time for Some Things: City Council election aftermath unique



    Gayane Abrahamyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    Yerevan City Council Elections proved no different from previous votes in
    terms of apparent fraud. Post-election developments, however, are proving
    unique.

    The first surprise was the oppositional Armenian National Congress's
    decision not to accept mandates, an unprecedented event in the history of
    independent Armenia.

    ANC, led by former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, said they earned at least
    35 mandates and that the 13 they were `given' came from the government
    rather than the people.

    `=85If we had accepted those mandates that would be from the authorities -
    fraudulent authorities, and so: no, we will not accept mandates,' declared
    Ter-Petrosyan an opposition rally on June 1.

    Many at the rally responded with anger saying that their votes were wasted,
    and maybe the opposition would have been able to take some steps as a member
    of the City Council.

    `This resembles Stepan Demirtchyan's step in 2005, when `Ardarutyn'
    (Justice) opposition alliance boycotted the process of holding rallies and
    did not come up with a constructive proposal, when, in fact, it was possible
    to change something,' Minas Sargsyan, master of political sciences, who was
    present at the rally, told ArmeniaNow.

    The political parties have a more restrained attitude to ANC's decision;
    People's Party leader Tigran Karapetyan welcomed it, assuring that he would
    do the same thing in a similar situation.

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation party's parliament faction leader
    Vahan Hovhannisyan as well gave positive assessment.



    `This is one of the cases, when I understand their logics, maybe if we had
    won places in the City Council but had witnessed the whole disgrace of the
    election process, we, too, would refuse to work in such a council,' former
    NA vice-speaker Hovhannisyan told ArmeniaNow.



    The Republican Party representatives are convinced that the opposition has
    disappointed its voters by taking such a step.

    `The City Council has serious liability and authority and those numerous
    voters gave their votes for that very reason, while this is a way of
    avoiding responsibility - something unacceptable not only to me personally
    but, I am sure, to the voters as well,' Republican Party spokesman Eduard
    Sharmazanov told ArmeniaNow.

    The second important novelty of May elections is the (also unprecedented)
    active involvement of the Prosecutor General' office, although many consider
    it an imitation of justice aimed at distracting from major violations and
    fraud.

    The day after the elections the prosecutor's office placed an order for
    recount of ballots, and moreover, detained a member of the Republican Party
    of Armenia (RP), member of the election commission of the polling station #
    8/05 Norayr Eghiazaryan and an RP supporter Armen Ohanyan for committing
    election fraud.

    Eghiazaryan was responsible for sealing the envelopes and overseeing the
    ballot-box at the polling station, and taking advantage of lack of knowledge
    on the part of 16 citizens that they themselves had to put their enveloped
    ballots into the ballot-box and gave those to him, Yeghazaryan did not put
    them in the box and took them out of the polling station.

    There he met a voter of that same polling station Armen Ohanyan and handed
    him those 16 ballots.

    `At home Ohanyan discovered that only one of the ballots was for the
    Republican Party, so he made 15 photocopies, placed those in the same
    envelopes and took them back to the polling station,' says an investigator
    of Special Investigation Service Gorik Hovakimyan.

    On June 3 the recount of ballots of the polling station # 8/05 took place at
    the prosecutor's office, the Republican's sack had 498 valid ballots written
    on it, whereas there were 454 valid, 7 non-valid and 15 photocopied ballots
    - the ballots copied by Ohanyan and Yeghiazaryan.

    Even more interesting was the content of sack with unused and cancelled
    ballots, where 77 valid ballots were found in favour of RP, and 98 torn
    ballots voting again for the Republicans.

    This was explained as a `mistake', however, the Heritage party member,
    parliamentarian Anahit Bakhshyan defines this as an apparent violation.

    `I am absolutely positive that those ballots had been voted for the
    Republicans and ready for ballot stuffing, but failed, so they ended up
    being torn and put among the unused and cancelled ballots,' Bakhshyan told
    ArmeniaNow.

    The drama of the 15 photocopied ballots still continues - the issue is under
    investigation by the prosecutor's office, meanwhile no attention has been
    paid at a more important fact that when the voting was over the number of
    late night and early morning voters grew by 5,000.

    This was noted by Heritage party representative at the Central Election
    Committee Zoya Tadevosyan.

    `It is not clear what happened during those few hours, since the total
    number of voters reported by all election districts in the evening, somehow,
    increased by 5,000 in the morning. I personally had talked to members of
    election commissions of our election districts and they had told me the same
    number as the one reported to CEC at night,' Tadevosyan said.

    During the CEC session on June 1 Tadevosyan tried to find out how the number
    of voters grew so drastically within a few hours, to which CEC Chairman
    Garegin Azaryan responded:

    `I cannot say why the number rose. Some polling stations might have missed
    the results from some polling stations while entering data on election
    districts. Or we might have had irresponsible commission members who did not
    count all the signatures,' he said.

    Tadevosyan disagrees, saying that it is possible not to count 10 or 20 or
    even a 100 signatures, but not 5,000.

    `If Azaryan doesn't know, then I do know very well why the number changed:
    of course in order to drastically increase the number of votes in somebody's
    favor. It is crystal clear,' says Tadevosyan adding that this incident
    proves that Armenian elections are held by Stalin's principle. `It doesn't
    matter how they vote, the way we count is what matters'

    **************************************** **********************************3. Violation techniques: Episodes from the municipal elections in Yerevan




    By Karine Ionesyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    Sunday's municipal elections in Yerevan were held with minor violations,
    according to the Central Electoral Commission, while the monitoring
    organizations came up with negative evaluations of the process, registering
    a number of violations.



    The Civil Society Institute, a Yerevan-based nongovernmental organization,
    observed the Sunday elections with the use of `ambulance cars' and
    registered at least 100 cases of violations. Besides, the hotline of the
    organization got more than 100 calls from citizens, and the ambulance cars
    responded to 74 cases. (The Civil Society Institute has conducted election
    observations since 2007. They provide free legal consultations, as well as
    register violations at polling stations.)



    `Amassing in and outside polling stations, cases of repeated voting, wrong
    installation of ballot boxes, campaigning, and ballot-box stuffing were the
    most often reported cases of violations,' says Artak Kirakosyan, the
    hotline's coordinator.



    One of the cases of violation was registered by proxies of the opposition
    Armenian National Congress (ANC) - Marine Nahapetyan and Karine Harutyunyan
    and proxy of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Dashnaktsutyun -
    Valeri Khachatryan, who reported wholesale ballot-box stuffing at polling
    station 8/24.



    `About 15-20 tall and well-built men came and blocked our way. Each of them
    took about 15-20 ballots out of their shirts and started to stuff them into
    the ballot box. Two people stuffed about 40 ballots, and when the third man
    tried to do the same, the proxy attempted to stop them from doing that,
    opening the ballot box. But they closed it on her hands,' says another ANC
    proxy Karine Harutyunyan.



    Proxy Marine Nahapetyan, who tried to prevent the third man from stuffing
    the ballot box suffered a finger injury.



    `It was clear that it was going to happen because before the incident
    amassing was registered here,' says Nahapetyan.



    The chairperson of the commission and her deputy were not at the scene when
    the ballot box stuffing was being done. Witnesses drew up a report
    mentioning even the license plates of the cars by which the men had arrived.


    `We were not here, and we do not know what had happened. We went to disperse
    those amassed outside, but later we heard some noise, and when we came it
    was already late,' said Seda Hakobyan, the commission's chairwoman, who
    eventually refused to register the case.



    Already the next day proxy Harutyunyan said that they had lost more than 200
    empty ballot-papers that were later stuffed by the above-mentioned young
    man. `So we could not later differentiate which ballots were stuffed, and
    which were not. But our polling station is already in the focus of
    prosecutors' attention. And we are planning to demand a re-count, since
    other violations were also registered.'



    Coordinator of the hotline Kirakosyan says that a greater panic rose at
    about 3.50 pm, when the fourth car registered gunshots near secondary school
    142. According to the preliminary data, the commission member from the
    Republican Party shot at the Prosperous Armenia Party's member, who was
    injured. However, this information was later refuted in spite of the fact
    that later people told representatives of the hotline that they heard
    gunshots. Besides, the heavy presence of police at the polling station
    looked strange.



    During the previous elections lawyers were taking care of the revelation of
    the most evident violations. But during these elections, as Kirakosyan says,
    they did not want to continue the cases from the legal point of view. `The
    experience of the previous years shows that people do not keep on struggling
    till the end, they withdrew their claims halfway through. So this time we
    will discuss the cases only with the help of sociologists, and we will
    provide the public with detailed information later.'



    Earlier this week, the Armenian Prosecutor's office announced arrests of
    two
    persons on suspicion of committing electoral fraud in the course of the
    elections. In a report released Tuesday it identified the suspects as Norayr
    Yeghiazaryan, who was a member of the district electoral commission at
    polling precinct 8/05 on May 31, and Armen Ohanyan, a voter at the same
    polling precinct.



    Additionally, the Prosecutor's Office reported that a criminal case had been
    instituted based on media publications alleging violations and fraud at
    polling stations 8/01, 8/05, 8/08, 8/09, 8/21, and 8/24.



    (On Election Day, ArmeniaNow reporter Karine Ionesyan worked on one of the
    20 Civil Society Institute `ambulance cars' providing rapid response to
    reported cases of violations)



    ************************************************ **************************
    4. Double move over Teghut: What are the former and current first ladies
    of Armenia against?



    By Karine Ionesyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    Armenia's former and current first ladies made environmentalists happy by
    effectively joining their longstanding campaign against a major industry
    project that conservationists say has a damaging environmental effect. Only
    several days later they realized they had put their signatures to a document
    they did not quite understand the essence of.



    Several days ago the signatures of ex-first lady Bella Kocharyan and current
    first lady Rita Sargsyan appeared next to the signatures of 5,000 supporters
    collected by activists of the Teghut Protection Group in favor of the
    struggle against the destruction of the Teghut forest and establishment of
    a
    copper-molybdenum mine there, one of the most controversial environmental
    issue of recent years in Armenia.



    In putting their first-lady hands to the petition, they inadvertently
    opposed the signatures of their husbands who, as heads of state signed
    orders paving the way for development of the mine.



    Assistant to the current first lady Vika Voskanyan confirmed that the ladies
    had signed the documents but insisted that they did not fully know what they
    were signing.



    `They were simply asked whether they join their campaign of protection of
    green areas. And they singed as citizens and not as wives of the
    presidents,' Voskanyan said.



    However one of the environmental campaigners, Mariam Sukhudyan, insists the
    ladies were aware what they were signing, moreover, Rita Sargsyan, as she
    says, made a clarification: `You mean the problem of Teghut mines?' And she
    got an affirmative reply, according to Sukhadyan.



    Under Decree 1278-N of the Government (in 2007), during the whole period of
    the Teghut mine (Lori Province) exploitation works the logging of an area of
    357 hectares was allowed in accordance with the Armenian legislation.
    Already, an area of 21 hectares has already been cleared of vegetation. ACP
    Company, the same `Vallex Group', has the license for Teghut mines
    operation.



    The young activist, who used to protest in front of the buildings of
    different state administrative institutions, met the first ladies of Armenia
    in Victory Park where under their aegis Armenian showbiz celebrities were
    selling ice-cream for charity purposes. Before signing the petition,
    according to the activist, they attentively read it and it was mentioned
    that they demand to immediately cancel the project of exploitation of the
    Teghut copper-molybdenum mine in the northern Lori province, and to suspend
    all the preparatory works.



    It was mentioned in the petition the toxic wastes (sulfur, lead, arsenic,
    etc.) which appear as a consequence of the mine exploitation will penetrate
    into the soil, air and water. The existence of heavy metals in them causes
    cancer, sterility, birth of both mentally and physically handicapped
    children. And these cases are already registered in populated areas
    (Kajaran, Kapan in Syunik Province, and Alaverdi in Lori Province, etc.)
    near other mines.



    `So they (the first ladies) were against the program, which is implemented
    thanks to their husbands. And seeing their act Armenian showbiz celebrities
    - Shushan Petrosyan, Leyla Saribekyan joined them,' says environmentalist
    Sukhudyan.



    The representatives of the Teghut Protection Group do not know how much this
    petition may help, because up to now they received many promises from state
    departments, which remain unrealized. For example, last year they were
    received by Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan. They say he tasked the
    Armenian Ministry of Nature Protection to carry out an investigation for a
    25-year-program for the usage of the territory, and only then to exploit the
    mine.



    Sona Ayvazyan, representative of Transparency International, says that they
    suggested the Armenian Government should turn to the Netherlands'
    Independent Expert Commission, which could carry out the works even free of
    charge. But it was not done either. So they decided to take another step.



    `Taking into consideration the fact that many administrative acts have been
    adopted by different competent government bodies since 2001 and many
    violations were made in their adoption, such as violations of our
    intergovernmental laws, the Armenian Constitution, as well as different
    international laws, and no one takes it into consideration, we have decided
    to turn to the administrative court,' lawyer Hayk Alumyan, who is in charge
    of the case, told ArmeniaNow.



    Vahram Sahakyan, representative of `Vallex Group' Company, says that he is
    not aware of the accusations that the protectors of the forest are planning
    to submit. So, he says he cannot provide any comments. Sahakyan also
    discards environmental threats mentioned by activists, such as further
    pollution of air and water, extinction of many animals that are in the
    so-called Red Book of endangered species.



    `We do not do anything illegal, we said that from the very beginning, we
    cannot exclude all environmental threats. We plan to plant trees in 714
    hectares in different parts of Armenia instead of the deforested 357
    hectares. Besides, deforestation of a slight part will be made daily, so we
    cannot do animals any harm,' Sahakyan asserts.



    As for the pollution of waters, he entirely denies this, saying that they
    are going to use a closed system of circulation, and there will be no
    flowing off.



    Nevertheless, Teghut protectors reject all the reasoning, saying that they
    will present their viewpoint with proven facts in court. And meanwhile, on
    Friday, the day of Environment Protection, they planned a procession not
    only to Teghut, but also to other places having environmental problems, and
    trying to raise awareness about them once again.



    They plan to send the collected signatures to President Serzh Sargsyan,
    Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, Parliament Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan.
    Parliament member Zaruhi Postanjyan also plans to raise this issue in the
    Council of Europe in June.





    *************************************** ***********************************
    5. Winner takes all: Coalition `heavyweights' to take charge of Yerevan as
    opposition withdraws in protest of `disgraceful' vote



    By Sara Khojoyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    The process and results of the first Yerevan municipal elections satisfy
    only two out of six political parties and one bloc that ran for the body
    -
    the ones that will share between themselves 52 seats in the capital's
    65-seat municipal assembly, while the rest either demand a recount or just
    ignore the results of the vote.



    The main opposition force - the Armenian National Congress (ANC) that
    cleared the seven percent hurdle, taking third place, announced that they
    refuse their 13 mandates. (During the upcoming four years they will remain
    vacant). The same day that the ANC declared its decision, the Supreme Body
    of
    the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), which failed to
    clear the legally required vote barrier) announced that their representative
    at the Central Electoral Commission (CEC) will not sign the final report of
    the elections (this, however, will not affect the outcome of the elections).



    `What happened now has happened before. Once again the `district' and
    oligarch authorities, election bribes, as well as the implementation of
    administrative levers had great role in the elections,' Dashnaktsutyun said
    in an announcement, appealing to the authorities to show political will and
    annul the results of the elections in the polling stations where violations
    were registered.



    Just over half of Yerevan's roughly 771,000 eligible voters went to the
    municipal assembly polls on Sunday, with more than 47 percent of them
    casting their ballots in favor of the Republican Party of Armenia, according
    to the official preliminary results released by the CEC.



    The ruling party is followed by its junior coalition partner, Prosperous
    Armenia, with about 23 percent and the opposition bloc ANC - with about 17.5
    percent of the votes.



    Four political parties, namely Orinats Yerkir, Dashnaktsutyun, the Labor
    Socialist Party of Armenia (LSPA), and the People's Party failed to overcome
    the legal vote threshold. (Only one of these parties, Orinats Yerkir, gave
    a
    positive assessment to the elections. The party said its members did not
    register major violations and they only applied to the CEC for a re-count in
    several precincts.



    Political analyst Yervand Bozoyan foresaw that Orinats Yerkir and
    Dashnaktsutyun would not poll enough votes to enter the assembly. Clarifying
    his foresights, Bozoyan said that both parties are `in deep crisis.'



    `After the 2008 presidential election, Orinats Yerkir lost the electorate
    that trusted it after striking a deal with the authorities and now the party
    is in a real crisis, since no tool is left to recover that trust,' the
    analyst says. `After being represented in power for the last ten years,
    Dashnaktsutyun, quitting the governing coalition because of the disagreement
    concerning the issue of Armenian-Turkish relations, found itself in an
    indefinite situation. Dashnaktsutyun considers itself to be opposition,
    whereas in public perception it is not yet, because two months are too short
    a period for the public [to get that perception].'



    `Dashnaktsutyun is in crisis and it depends on its leaders whether it will
    ever overcome the crisis. And as for Orinats Yerkir, it will hardly ever
    manage to do that,' Bozoyan adds.



    The ANC, an umbrella structure for nearly two dozen opposition political
    parties and forces, that participated in the Yerevan elections as a bloc,
    has indicated reluctance to work with the current authorities as explanation
    to its decision not to pick the mandates it won.



    As the ANC estimates, the elections were accompanied with disgraceful
    violations, intimidation and held in an atmosphere of violence.



    `The authorities once again displayed their criminal essence. The criminal
    world, led by Samvel Alexanyan, even beat and kidnapped reporters, proxies,
    observers at Malatia [Malatia-Sebastia community],' declared ANC coordinator
    Levon Zurabyan at a press conference shortly after polls closed on Sunday
    evening.



    Analyst Bozoyan says the ANC also has its share of fault in the
    `disgraceful' elections.



    `Authorities always try to commit violations and they will always do that in
    a country in transition such as Armenia. However, it depends on how strong
    or weak the country's opposition is to be able to prevent these violations.
    In this respect we can state that the opposition has gotten weaker,' says
    Bozoyan.



    As he believes the reason for the ANC's getting weaker is the policy that
    they pursued for a whole year.



    The People's Party leader Tigran Karapetyan compared these elections to
    buying and selling and markets, where all the votes where purchased.

    `I am not satisfied with these elections. I think the overwhelming majority
    was given money, I compare the elections with buying and selling. What
    happened yesterday was market from top to bottom, where coalition parties
    were buying votes,' Karapetyan told ArmeniaNow.

    Movses Shahverdyan, leader of LSPA, with the least number of votes, defines
    the Yerevan City Council elections as unfair, dishonest and lacking quality,
    as he says `the way they really were'.

    `At the polling station I went to vote - school #145 - our proxies counted
    20 votes by the second half of the day, whereas by the end-of-the-day
    calculations we were given only 10 votes,' says Shahverdyan.

    `That's not the issue, however, the issue is the phenomenon itself. It's not
    about us being upset because we did not pass [became a member of the City
    Council] and others did, but because the elections were held in such a way
    -
    elections mustn't be held that way, as it might bring our statehood to an
    end,' he added.



    **************************************** **********************************=

    6. One Step: California State Senate approves Genocide Awareness Act



    By Arpi Harutyunyan



    The California State Senate June 3 passed Senate Bill 234, the `Genocide
    Awareness Act'. On April 29, the Senate Education Committee voted
    unanimously in favor of SB 234, the `Genocide Awareness Act'. The Armenian
    Assembly of America (www.aainc.org), an early proponent of the measure
    introduced by State Senator Mark Wyland (R), activated its ARAMAC grassroots
    network in California to encourage support and passage of the bill.



    `The AAA works closely with elected officials and others to address issues
    concerning genocide recognition, genocide prevention and education. These
    are all related. Without education, genocide recognition and prevention are
    in jeopardy. SB 234, the `Genocide Awareness Act', is about education.
    Once
    passed, it will provide California high school students a unique opportunity
    to hear firsthand the witness accounts during some of the darkest times in
    human history. Hearing these oral stories will be one of the most compelling
    and gripping educational tools for anyone studying genocide,' said Assembly
    Country Director Arpi Vartanian.





    The Armenian National Committee of America (www.anca.org) also led efforts
    of the Armenian American community in the support of the legislation,
    sending activists to the California capital, Sacramento, and launching a web
    fax campaign to senators.



    `Truth and our commitment to education won today. Having worked with
    students in the classroom on this subject I know that oral histories are
    fundamental in helping convey the lessons we need to learn in order to
    prevent genocide and punish its perpetrators,' remarked Shant Hagopian, an
    ANCA Leo Sarkisian Internship alumnus and recent graduate from the
    University of California, Berkeley where he also volunteered with the Genocide
    Education Project <http://www.genocideeducation.org/>.


    Durin g the public witness hearing, Armenian Genocide denier Bruce Fein and
    the Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) testified against
    treating the Armenian example and parallel cases in Cambodia and Darfur as
    genocide. In response to the opposition's testimony, State Senator Joe
    Simitian (D), a member of the Education Committee, expressed his
    disappointment, especially given the incontestable historical fact of the
    Armenian Genocide and asked, `Why is it that genocide happens over and over
    and over again?...It happens because we are unwilling to step back and
    confront man's inhumanity to man.' The truth of the Armenian Genocide,
    Simitian stated, `has long been settled.'



    State Senator Christine Kehoe (D), Chair of the Senate Appropriations
    Committee, moved the bill directly to the Senate floor for a vote, stating,
    `The continuing events in Darfur remind me of the words of philosopher
    George Santayana who wrote: `Those who do not learn from history are doomed
    to repeat it.' Those horrific events only serve to raise the importance of
    acknowledging and learning from past events like the Armenian Genocide and
    the Holocaust. Making sure that Senate Bill 234 becomes law will help make
    sure that the Armenian Genocide is not forgotten for this and future
    generations.'



    AAA commends the efforts of State Senator Mark Wyland (R), State Senator
    Christine Kehoe (D), State Senator Joe Simitian (D), as well as all those
    who supported this bill, for believing that education is key to Genocide
    Awareness.



    `The Armenian Assembly applauds Senator Kehoe for promptly bringing this

    legislation to the floor for a vote,' stated Yeghig Keshishian, the
    Assembly's Western Region Director. `The Assembly would also like to commend
    Senator Wyland for introducing this legislation and thereby once again
    placing California in the forefront of national politics as it

    pertains to human rights education and genocide prevention.'



    Upon successful passage in the California State Assembly, State Senator
    Wyland's `Genocide Awareness Act' would then be signed into law by Governor
    Arnold Schwarzenegger. The bill requires the California Curriculum
    Commission to vote on the inclusion of an oral history component related to
    genocides as part of its high school curriculum, including the Armenian
    Genocide of 1915-1923. California pioneered new education standards by
    adopting the Model Curriculum for Human Rights and Genocide, which includes
    the Armenian Genocide.



    `The efforts of California's Armenian community were instrumental, and
    I am
    confident the community will continue to make its voice heard on this issue
    so that the truth and lessons of the genocide are not forgotten. The
    Assembly continues to lead efforts in working with the community and the
    State Senate to get this bill signed into law,' Vartanian stated.



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

    7. Weathering the Storm: the significance of Armenia's emerging middle=class



    By Richard Giragosian



    Of the many negatives effects on Armenia from the global economic crisis,
    one of the most significant long-term obstacles for the economic development
    of Armenia relates to the impact on the country's emerging middle class.
    Any
    threat to the emerging Armenian middle class is a serious concern, mainly
    due to its significance as a foundation for both society and the state.



    In this role, the emerging middle class serves as the foundation for both a
    vibrant market-based economy and as the bedrock of political stability
    within the broader society. In this way, the middle class is more than a
    traditional bourgeoisie, however, but is defined by three specific
    characteristics: entrepreneurship in economic and commercial activity,
    activism and participation in politics, and unimpeded mobility in both
    areas. But at its core, the most important facet of the middle class is its
    independence and autonomy from the state.



    Moreover, the development of a middle class is dependent on two important
    factors, one short-term and another long-term. The first prerequisite for
    the emergence of a vibrant middle class is one of access and opportunity.
    The
    structure of the society as a whole, and its economic and political systems
    in particular, must not be closed or divided between a small wealthy and
    powerful elite and a much larger impoverished and marginalized majority. This
    precondition is an immediate need, required for a budding middle class to
    emerge. But this is also a short-term need because once a middle class is
    allowed to take hold it tends to prosper quickly and become far too
    entrenched to surrender its position in society



    Once in place, a middle class generally represents the interests of society
    as a whole, rather than for any small ruling elite. It is this advocacy
    role that buttresses political and economic reform and confronts economic
    oligarchs and political demagogues alike. There is also a `trickle down'
    effect, with the middle class both serving and fostering civil society, free
    press and eventually a responsible political opposition.



    The development of middle class societies in the West has rested on three
    elements: employment, with rising wages, education, with expanding access on
    all levels, and property, through the ownership of homes, businesses and
    other properties. These three elements must be served by a second factor:
    access to credit markets.



    More specifically, the ability to secure and utilize reasonably priced, long
    term credit is essential to home ownership, through mortgages, to small
    business `start-ups,' by providing business loans, and for post-secondary
    education, through `student loans.' Each of these three areas reveals
    the
    traditional features of a middle class and indicators of the state of the
    middle class. But all are conditional on credit, which in turn is dependent
    on the formation (and regulation) of a modern banking sector.



    Thus, the development of capital markets in the region is essential for
    access to credit. Given the obvious linkage between such access to capital
    and credit and overall stability, economic growth and even poverty
    reduction, the modernization and expansion of capital markets in Armenia
    must become more of a priority for the government.



    For Armenia, what is also needed is a new focus on middle class-oriented
    development, with policies to promote access to capital and credit. Such
    policies have already proven successful in a number of countries, like
    Brazil, Mexico, and several Asian states. One of the most successful of
    these policies is `micro-lending,' an innovative development designed to
    give ordinary people access to credit to start a small business. This has
    contributed both to promoting economic growth and reducing poverty, as well
    as helping to expand an emerging middle class.



    Another related policy that holds promise for the country is a
    `mini-lending' program, a somewhat larger loan program for families and
    communities, rather than simply individuals or corporations. Such
    mini-lending programs offer targeted assistance for community-based business
    ventures and family-run small businesses. This too holds significant
    promise for national and local economic development in the face of deepening
    poverty and mounting disparities in wealth and income.



    An Emerging Middle Class as a National Resource



    For Armenia, especially in the wake of the global economic crisis, the
    middle class can also be seen as a natural resource, but quite different
    from the case of its neighbor Azerbaijan, for example, whose natural
    resource wealth has tended to significantly hinder political modernization
    and economic development in far-reaching ways. For the Azerbaijani model,
    there was an interesting lesson offered by a groundbreaking study that
    examined a set of 97 developing countries over a two-decade period and
    demonstrated that endowments of natural resources were found to be strongly
    linked to patterns of fundamental economic failure and distorted
    development.[1] <#_ftn1> Although followed by an impressive body of related
    studies, this 1995 study was one of the first to demonstrate that, on
    average, the more states are endowed with abundant natural resource (in
    terms of minerals and precious metals, energy, or even agriculture) wealth,
    the slower the rate of economic growth. The study further noted that states
    with little or no such resources enjoyed the highest rates of economic
    growth. And for states with moderate amounts of resources, economic growth
    rates stood at levels in between both cases.



    The study went on to trace the correlation between resource wealth and slow
    economic growth to the fact that such `unearned riches' hinder the
    development of political institutions and weaken the rule of law. Such
    resource-rich states, in the words of Fareed Zakaria in his 2003 book The
    Future of Freedom, merit the designation of `trust-fund' states, relying on
    the attractively easy revenue derived from energy or other resources rather
    than facing the challenging task of forging institutions and economic
    structures capable to garner national wealth of their own.[2] <#_ftn2>
    Examples
    of such `trust-fund states' abound among the oil producing nations and
    are
    geographically diverse, ranging from Saudi Arabia to Nigeria, but also
    including Azerbaijan. Clearly, the lesson for Armenia is to value and
    promote its own national resource, its emerging middle class, and avoid
    Azerbaijan's dangerous over-reliance on energy as its natural resource.






    =85=85=85=85=85=85=85=85=85=85=85= 85.

    Richard Giragosian is the director of the Yerevan-based Armenian Center for
    National and International Studies (ACNIS). `Weathering the Storm" is a
    weekly column exclusively for ArmeniaNow.



    *********************************** ***************************************8. Eye Witness Report: Dangers and disappointment on Election Day



    By Gayane Lazarian

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    I'm not as mysterious as I look, behind my huge, black sunglasses. This
    week I grew weary of explaining to anyone who asked that I injured my eye
    while fulfilling my journalistic duties.



    `Do not tell tales. They injured your eye deliberately, and you still say
    that they did it accidentally. (And by `they' it is understood to mean
    the
    commonly placed thugs who rig elections here.) Is there a need to work
    during those days, it's in vain. Those who should win will win,' says
    saleswoman Yebraxia, who works at the shop in our neighborhood.



    There is some truth in her words. As political analyst Yervand Bozoyan says,
    it is already long ago that no elections take place in Armenia, and the
    country needs systemic changes. Saleswoman Yepraxia and the analyst express
    the same opinion.



    I did my job during the Yerevan City Council elections as I did during the
    previous elections.



    On May 31, at 12:00 pm the top candidate on the ruling Republican Party,
    incumbent Mayor Gagik Beglaryan was entering the polling station.
    Photographers and cameramen started running immediately. The photo cameras
    start working. The journalists, especially the TV journalists got excited;
    they wanted to appear in the first lines. After a rude squash, everybody
    managed to take their places.



    Getting out of the ballot cell Beglaryan approached the ballot-box.
    Journalists and cameramen cried: `Look at us, once again, please, smile,
    and
    only then throw the envelope!' He did what he was asked to do. And later
    he
    approached the journalists to answer their questions. I looked at
    Beglaryan, and I thought that he smiled very victoriously. And at that very
    moment I felt a sharp blow on my face.



    Because of the unbearable pain everybody - journalists, Beglaryan, the
    chairman of the commission swam in front of my eyes. I tried to stand in my
    place, so that I managed to record at least a few phrases. Because, it is
    all the same, in such cases they usually do not speak long. But I felt that
    my sight was going weaker and weaker, and then my right cheek got warmer,
    something was streaming down my cheeks, yet not my tears.



    `Oh my God, did they've punched out my eye,' I thought.



    I touched my cheek, and I saw that I was bleeding. I forgot about the
    elections, I forgot Beglaryan and I ran out of the crowd. The blood was
    streaming down my face when Aram, press secretary of Beglaryan's
    headquarters, approached us: `What has happened, which mass media are you
    from? Be quick, be quick, bring ice, bring a car, get her to the hospital,'
    he was saying.



    In front of many fellow journalists my face was bleeding, and none of them
    stopped to help me: Beglaryan was in the center of everybody's attention.
    Even after the interview none of my colleagues approached me to ask what had
    happened. Not even the one whose microphone scraping my face nearly blinded
    me.



    Later we were at Erebuni Hospital. The employee of the reception hall
    registered the details of the incident. I told them that I was a journalist,
    that the incident took place during my work; that it was not deliberate; and
    they looked at me with surprise. They asked me `Are you sure?' And I
    answered `Yes, I am sure.' And I read the glance of the reception hall's
    employee: `May be they were beating each other; and it is good that they
    did
    not manage to take the poor girl's eye out.'



    To me, the Yerevan City Council Elections started and finished by
    Beglaryan's voting, by his wide and victorious smile, during which I got
    the
    blow on my face.



    An hour later I got phone calls from my acquainted journalists working at
    different mass media; they were saying, `Gayane, they say that a
    journalist's eye was injured, that it was taken out, was it you, Gayane,
    oh,
    we are so sorry.' And thus, I got many phone calls and letters. It turned
    out that everybody saw what had happened, yet nobody approached me, and did
    not ask me anything at that moment. Instead, they left and reported here and
    there that a journalist had been injured.



    In every election we report violence against journalists and condemn the
    perpetrators and stand united to stop it. It saddens me that a fellow
    journalist has not even apologized at nearly crippling a colleague by her
    own recklessness while scrambling to get the same sound bites that a dozen
    others would also have.



    The ophthalmologist told me that if the blow had been a millimeter higher
    I'd be blinded. I'm supposed to feel `lucky'. And I guess I'm supposed to
    wink when I tell strangers that it was an Election Day `accident'. Except I
    can't.



    ************************************** **********************************9. Business or office?: Skepticism lingers over government move to enforce
    either/or choice for officials



    By Sara Khojoyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    A recent government initiative to take a harder line on business owning
    officials in Armenia has drawn a familiar chorus of skepticism, with some
    experts branding it as populist and even ridiculous because of the numerous
    loopholes that they say still remain for those in power to continue to
    engage in entrepreneurial activities.



    To this effect, the government is set to railroad amendments through
    parliament to the laws `On Civil Service' and `On the Declaration of
    Incomes for Individuals', as well as the Criminal Code.

    At a cabinet meeting last month Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan said if
    approved, the amendments would constitute a serious step, since the
    institution of interest disclosure will be introduced.



    `This means that the law creates actual mechanisms to prevent officials
    -
    parliament deputies, government ministers - from being involved in business,
    to have them disclose/declare their interests, solve the issues with their
    dependants, so that the public, people have a chance to oversee, from now
    on, the full implementation of that constitutional norm in Armenia,'
    Sargsyan underlined.



    The Constitution clearly forbids officials - ministers and parliamentarians
    - from being involved in business or any other profit-seeking activity, with
    the exception of teaching or lecturing.



    That constitutional provision, though, is not followed in Armenia, since a
    number of parliamentarians are publicly known as successful businessmen.
    Some of these officials have monopolies, which many economic experts believe
    are the main obstacle to Armenia's economic development, especially in
    conditions of the continuing global economic crisis.



    By initiating this move the government also hopes to tackle the broader
    issue of corruption.

    `There is a need for public discussions of this law in the future in order
    to raise public awareness about the mechanisms to be applied,' said Premier
    Sargsyan.



    The draft amendments have not yet been put for parliament debates. But many
    experts in the field consider them useless.

    Ara Nranyan, a member of the National Assembly representing the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (ARF) faction, believes there is no need for such
    amendments in the legislation.



    `Our legislation seems to have solved all those issues: not only prohibiting
    public officials from being involved in business, the system of declaration
    of incomes is in place and all the officials, as well as businessmen,
    declare their income,' says Nranyan, who sits on the National Assembly's
    Standing Commission on Economic Issues.



    Beginning in January 2009, by the law `On the Declaration of Incomes for
    Individuals', not only officials (even if they worked as such one day only)
    and their dependents (wife, children) are obliged to fill in and submit a
    declaration of incomes, but also individual citizens of Armenia who have
    purchased or sold during one fiscal year more than 50 million ($135,000)
    drams' worth of real estate and /or over 8 million ($21,000) drams' worth of
    movable property.



    The State Revenues Committee is giving assurances that this is a step
    forward in the anti-corruption policy implementation and disclosure of
    officials involved in business, since people not being the businessman
    official's dependants, whom his/her property may legally belong to, will
    have to declare the sources of their income.



    Previously the law concerned only the officials. In 2003-2007, about 55,000
    officials holding senior or medium level positions in government filled in
    tax declarations, however none of the publicly known businessman-officials
    lost his post or mandate.

    In Nranyan's opinion, the issue is in enforcing the law and ensuring
    control.



    `We have a problem of expressing political will,' he says. `It is possible
    to find out who is involved in what kind of business right now; all one has
    to do is to check their incomes. If a businessman registers a major
    acquisition as of one of his relatives, then that relative has to write a
    declaration as well stating the source of the income with which he or she
    made such a big purchase.'



    `If the entity belonging to the official's relative is paying taxes and is
    transparent, then naturally it won't matter who is registered as the owner,
    however, most such enterprises, taking advantage of being under their
    patrons' umbrella, are enjoying `privileged tax' terms, meaning that
    the
    businessman is looking after his own business, which, on paper, belongs to
    his relative,' adds the young parliamentarian with a background in
    economics.



    Political analyst Yervand Bozoyan is convinced that the standard of living
    in Armenia needs to be raised to the level when people universally pay taxes
    before it becomes possible to achieve a separation of business and politics.




    `Now an official can register his business as if belonging to his nephew
    or
    cousin; whereas, when everybody has to declare their income that mechanism
    would not work anymore. But universal taxing will become a reason for huge
    discontent. And that is why the standard of living and welfare of the
    country has to rise,' he says.



    `And until that happens in Armenia, it is not serious to talk about
    preventing officials from being engaged in businesses activities,' stresses
    Bozoyan.



    Economist Bagrat Asatryan, who headed Armenia's Central Bank in 1994-98,
    shares this view.



    `There are outrageous phenomena and no one utters a word about them. They
    have to at least make a step to prevent or get rid of those and then only
    start talking. Otherwise, all of a sudden they stand up and declare - from
    now on, we are going to be honest. It can impress only people of nursery
    school age, and nobody else,' says Asatryan.



    `If the government wants to struggle against public officials' involvement
    in business, let those members of the government who have accumulated huge
    wealth and property during their time in office be disclosed. That's when I
    will start to believe, but not any sooner,' the economist concludes.



    ************************************ **************************************10. Talking Talks?: Armenia, Azerbaijan in fresh summit on Karabakh



    By Aris Ghazinyan



    Armenia and Azerbaijan announced no breakthrough but said they agreed to
    continue negotiations to find a solution to the longstanding
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, an international mediator announced after the
    Thursday meeting between the two countries' leaders in Russia.



    President Serzh Sargsyan of Armenia and President Ilham Aliev of Azerbaijan
    met to talk about Nagorno-Karabakh again on the sidelines of a major
    international economic forum in St. Petersburg - exactly a year after their
    first meeting in the Russian city.



    In-between the St. Petersburg summits, the two South Caucasus leaders,
    helped by international mediators brokering a solution to the longstanding
    dispute, held three more meetings -- in Moscow, Zurich and Prague within a
    year that proved eventful for the process - but not for a solution.



    The period after the previous Sargsyan-Aliev meeting in the Czech capital
    was marked, on the one hand, by activated communication in the sphere of
    Armenian-Turkish relations and, on the other hand, by Ankara's repeated
    moves to scuttle that activation by means of expressing a biased standpoint
    on the Karabakh issue that Armenia wants to be regarded separately from the
    context of its relations with Turkey.



    As widely expected, the meeting in St. Petersburg resulted in no
    breakthrough as the sides only announced an agreement to continue
    negotiations.



    `Nothing was signed, we had no such expectations - it was a simple exchange
    of opinions, the presidents exchanged ideas, opinions and now the work has
    to be continued,' said US co-chair of the Organization for Cooperation and
    Security in Europe's (OSCE) Minsk Group Matthew Bryza.



    `The presidents, as far as I understand, are going to meet again, but I
    can't say when exactly,' Bryza said shortly after the meeting.


    The one-on-one meeting between the Armenian and Azeri leaders took more that
    two and a half hours. When the negotiations were over the two were joined by
    the president of Russia and continued the discussion in a trilateral format
    at an informal dinner.



    Certain political forces and politicians expressed their ideas and
    expectations before the St. Petersburg summit.


    `I don't see an objective moment for finding mutually acceptable formulation
    in the course of the meeting between the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan,' stated Vahram Atanesyan, Chairman of the NKR National
    Assembly's Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs.

    Atanesyan emphasized the priorities of Nagorno-Karabakh's independence with
    the borders acceptable to its people and the strengthening of the national
    system of public administration and security. `At the moment I can't see a
    real perspective of consensus in Russia-US, Russia-EU and EU-US relations on
    this issue,' he said.

    Vladimir Kazimirov, former co-chair of the Minsk Group from Russia, also
    expressed his opinion before the latest meeting of the Armenian and Azeri
    presidents.



    `There is no clarity so far on when Nagorno-Karabakh will be back to the
    table of negotiations. By delaying it Baku is setting a trap for itself.
    '

    `Or maybe they are counting on Yerevan signing an agreement on behalf of
    Stepanakert as well? Who will force Karabakh into accepting an agreement
    that disregarding the NKR's interests? Baku? Wow! And how? By force, maybe?'
    said Kazimirov.


    ************************************* *************************************11. Vital concerns: Impact of iodine deficiency still felt in [officially
    recognized] iodine deficiency-free Armenia



    By Gayane Lazarian and Sara Khojoyan

    ArmeniaNow reporters



    The issue of shortage of iodine in water is considered a serious problem in
    Armenia, which, as a landlocked mountainous country, far from oceans and
    seas, is in the risk zone of IDD development (Iodine Deficiency Diseases)




    The lack of iodine in the human body can cause serious pathologies of the
    thyroid gland.



    Because of losing major trade links in consequence of the Soviet Union's
    collapse in 1991, the population of Armenia was deprived of iodinated salt.
    Even though now salt is being iodinated (the existed standard is 40+/-15
    milligram per kilo) in some regions of Armenia the problem is still acute,
    because the substance of iodine in salt is not enough to provide the
    required amount of iodine.



    According to the data of the Armenian Ministry of Health, in 2007
    hyperthyroidism (during which the gland produces more hormones than
    necessary, resulting in toxins being released into the system) was
    diagnosed for the first time among 458 people; of 2,334 who already had the
    problem. (The Ministry provides no data for 2008-2009)



    In 2006, there were 2,563 reported cases of hyperthyroidism in Armenia, or
    368 more compared to 2005. The same year, 724 people were diagnosed with the
    disease for the first time: 300 people more than in 2005.



    Armenia's provinces, Syunik and Lori, are considered as regions with a high
    risk of iodine deficiency because of the lowest substance of iodine in water
    and soil.



    Vruyr Hovhannisyan, head of Goris' (Syunik province) south territorial
    branch of `Jrmughkoyughi' (water-pipe sewerage) CJSC, confirms that their
    region, in fact, has the problem of iodine deficiency.



    He shows the data received from Kapan's territorial laboratory of
    `Jrmughkoyughi', which show that the percentage of iodine in Akner,
    Mukhuturyan and Shakeh water springs, supplying the town of Goris and its
    region, as well as the town of Kapan and its region, is zero.



    Zemfira Ghazaryan, head of the Water Control Department at Lori's
    `Jrmughkoyughi', says that there is no iodine in any of the seven water
    pipelines supplying the town of Vanadzor (Lori province).



    `There is no iodine in the springs. This is the reason why goiter is so
    widely spread here,' she says.



    Mary Khurshudyan, general endocrinologist of Syunik Province explains that
    because of the shortage of iodine the thyroid gland may enlarge.



    `There are several types of goiter - no disorder in function, weakening, and
    paralyzing (of the gland),' she says. (Goiter is an enlarged thyroid gland,
    it is developed when there is a stable lack of iodine in the blood, when the
    amount of thyroid gland hormones in the blood is abruptly decreased.)



    `The endocrine function of the gland is weakened in case of hypothyroidism.
    The lack of hormones in the blood produced by it is expressed by sleepiness,
    the work of the heart slows down, disorders of menstruation cycle are
    registered, which, in its turn, brings to sterility,' says Khurshudyan.



    Armine Petrosyan, 36, from Goris, is diagnosed with hypothyroidism. `I feel
    discomfort very often, especially in spring. I am short of breath. I have
    terrible headaches, I feel weak, I get tired,' she says.



    Ara Kurenkov, endocrine-surgeon of the Surgical Department at the `Goris
    Medical Center' CJSC, explains what happens during hyperthyroidism or toxic
    goiter: `In this case the gland produces more hormones than necessary, as a
    result of which intoxication takes place. The heart starts working faster,
    the nervous system becomes supersensitive, a person feels frightened, s/he
    sleeps very bad and sweats all the time.'



    General endocrinologist of Sisian (Syunik province) Armenuhi Dovlatyan says
    that they have no official data, but she can say that at least one in ten in
    their region has problems connected with disorder of thyroid gland's
    function.



    `The number of people having diseases connected with thyroid gland
    reaches15,000 in Sisian.
    There are also people who suffer from toxic goiter. And the patients who
    suffer from enlarged gland, when the function is not disordered are not
    registered; however, there is really a great number of them,' the doctor
    says.



    Edward Toromanyan, Head of `Armenia' Endocrinology Center, says that only
    cases of hyperthyroidism are registered in Armenia; and if only those
    indexes are taken into consideration, it would turn out that there is no
    problem of diseases in Armenia connected with the disorder of thyroid
    gland's function.



    `The registered indexes of diseases are deceptive also because they might be
    the numbers of those applying to policlinics. And that is a completely
    different index, and it would not show the picture of the disease. For
    example, there are people who have a slightly enlarged thyroid gland, and
    since they do not feel discomfort, they do not turn to the doctor,' he
    explains.







    The number of toxic thyroid-hyperthyroidism patients in Armenia



    1990



    1995



    1999



    2000



    2001



    2002



    2003



    2004



    2005



    2006



    2007

    Diagnosis for the 1st time according to years

    644

    331

    286

    441

    417

    398

    421

    433

    384

    724

    458

    Total number of patients

    3438

    2668

    1953

    1993

    2009

    2122

    2362

    2178

    2195

    2563

    2334





    In the late 1990s, UNICEF and the Armenian Government launched a program
    that aimed at eliminating iodine deficiency.



    In 2005, an epidemiological research was held at 30 schools, among 911
    children (eight-ten-year-olds). It showed that Armenia overcame the problem
    of iodine deficiency among the population by means of salt.



    `The research showed that 97 percent of our households use iodinated salt,
    and the limit is 90 percent, and if the index is more than 90, it means that
    we have excellent results,' says Mihran Hakobyan, an employee of the UNICEF
    Healthcare Department.



    After all, in August 2006, Armenia was recognized as a country that had
    overcome iodine deficiency by UNICEF, the World Health Organization (WHO),
    and the International Council for the Control of Iodine Deficiency Disorder.



    Zemfira Ghazaryan pointed out that even though the government solves the
    iodization problem by means of iodizing table salt, in the Lori region 5 in
    10 people have thyroid gland problems, especially women. `And queues to
    endocrinologists are not getting shorter,' she says.



    Along with the growth of endocrine diseases, a low level of awareness is
    observed among the population. Many people do not know that lack of iodine
    in the body must be compensated for by properly using iodized table salt.



    Satik Gevorgyan, a resident of Sisian, does not even know why iodized salt
    should be used, although she suspects she has goiter: `I don't even know
    that there is no iodine in our water and that it can cause goiter. One must
    be a doctor to know those things.'



    Chief endocrinologist of Lori region Flora Elizbaryan also believes the fact
    that thyroid gland function abnormalities are widely spread in Armenia is
    related to improper use of table salt by the population.



    `Is our population aware that iodine is destroyed in the salt under
    sunlight, do they know that salt must be kept in a dry and closed container,
    away from the sun to prevent it from going bad? Do our women know that salt
    must be added to meals in the last place? All this is very important, I
    think the increase in the number of diseases is immediately related to these
    problems,' she says.



    The UNICEF representative, referring to the awareness stage of the project
    on overcoming iodine deficiency, says that it was not realistic to
    personally inform all the residents: `We used all the medical and
    educational institutions to make it possible to raise awareness. Of course,
    we cannot say whether or not they effectively carried out the
    awareness-raising activities, but that is another issue.'



    `One way or the other, now salt has such a quality that if a person uses
    it
    in normal amounts, the lack of iodine is compensated for,' he adds.



    Toromanyan, admitting all this, also points out that the problem of thyroid
    gland diseases will always be present in Armenia: `We really have a problem,
    and we always will, because we are an endemic zone.'



    As proof of the above words, the `Towards healthy motherhood' project was
    carried out in Goris in 2007 by the `Goris Women's Center' NGO. The NGO used
    the grant in the amount of 3.7 million dram (about $10,000) to organize
    examination of the thyroid gland and diagnostics for 15-year-old girls in
    Goris and four villages of the Goris region. More than 140 girls were
    examined at the first stage of examination, of whom 43 (about 30 percent)
    were found to have hormonal abnormalities.



    However, the Ministry of Health, where examination data had been sent, did
    a
    new examination and found different data.



    `Only 8 percent of those who underwent examination organized by the NGO
    were
    found to have hormonal abnormalities, (11 out of 140 girls who had been
    examined). Of the 29 girls who underwent medical examination on the spot,
    only two had clinical signs of thyroid function abnormality,' stated the
    Ministry.



    Ekaterina Hayrapetyan, Head of the Laboratory of `Goris Medical Center'
    CJSC, was one of the doctors of the examination (from `Goris Medical Center'
    CJSC). She says that the Ministry of Health has not taken their study
    seriously: `Although we detected quite a high percentage of cases against
    the general background, the Ministry of Health gave us a hostile reception.
    It is clear: they will deny it, because `if there is no problem, there is no
    pain in the neck'.'



    The head of the Goris Laboratory says that they have examined the hypophysis
    gland (controlling growth). If the hypophisis hormone is abnormal, the
    others will inevitably have abnormalities as well. Teenage girls will become
    mothers in the future, and the problem may turn into sterility.



    `Our aim was to have them accept the project and get the state to test the
    hypophysis gland,' Hayrapetyan says.



    `It would be desirable that the examination be financed by the state, it
    costs 9,000 drams (about 24 dollars),' endocrine-surgeon Kurenkov says.
    `In
    medicine prevention is cheaper than treatment. I think the government should
    stretch a helping hand and finance thyroid gland surgeries as well, because
    those are among the most expensive surgeries.'



    In Yerevan, nodular endemic goiter surgery costs 450,000 drams (about 1,200
    dollars), in Goris - 100,000 drams ($270). According to Kurenkov, `for
    residents of Goris region 100,000 drams is also a large sum of money, let
    alone 450,000 drams.'



    `There are people for whom 1,000 drams (about $3) is also a large sum of
    money, but those people do not belong to any of the socially vulnerable
    groups, defined by the state and cannot get state-financed treatment,' the
    endocrine surgeon says.



    Head of the `Goris Women's Center' NGO Lena Hovsepyan says that another
    reason why the Ministry of Health was opposed to their project is that the
    project had not been preliminarily coordinated with the Ministry (this has
    been written in official letter from Ministry of Health).



    `We really fought for it, but we have come up to a wall, on which the
    Ministry of Health wrote that the shortage of iodine in the country has been
    overcome. But overcoming the shortage of iodine does not mean overcoming the
    diseases that were caused by iodine deficiency in the past 15 years,'
    Hovsepyan stresses.





    This investigation is done with support from the Danish Association for
    Investigative Journalism / Scoop (www.i-scoop.org).

    ****************************** ********************************************12.** Anti-crisis smell: businessman in Vanadzor sets up garlic powder
    production



    By Naira Bulghadaryan

    ArmeniaNow reporter



    The first amount of garlic powder produced in Vanadzor was successfully
    consumed in the domestic and international markets, encouraging the
    producers to double the production of that piquant spice. (The powder is on
    sale in Europe, Russia and Georgia).



    The idea of garlic powder production belongs to businessman Armen Galoyan
    from Vanadzor who conceived it while studying the local market. Galoyan
    found out that local sausage producers use garlic powder of Chinese
    production, which he says is of low quality. In February Galoyan and four of
    his friends set up the production of garlic powder `Miasin' (together)
    in
    Vanadzor with a loan from the World Bank (WB), which within the framework of
    `Rural Enterprise and Small-Scale Commercial Agriculture Development
    Project' (RESCADP) allocated $37,000 (13.5 million drams).



    Some 1.5 hectares of land were planted with garlic and three tons of garlic
    powder was produced, which was sold out. The support from the WB and the
    Ministry of Agriculture stopped in February, however, the partners decided
    to keep on cooperation at the expense of the revenues obtained from this
    production.



    The next amount of powder product of `Miasin' trademark, as the partners
    foresee, will be produced in September, when the harvest will have been
    gathered. This time they planted garlic in three hectares land instead of
    the previous 1.5 hectares.



    Galoyan says they plan to expand production; they have already made
    arrangements with residents of several villages of the province concerning
    garlic planting and selling. The only problem is the garlic of Chinese
    production, which, as the authors of the initiative say, is rather cheap.



    However, it is not possible to find garlic powder of Chinese make in
    Vanadzor. Elmira Sargsyan, a 54 year-old housewife, even though has no
    idea about the existence of garlic powder, but she says that she uses garlic
    at her kitchen.



    `If garlic powder is sold at shops, it will be more effective to buy it.
    Let's say, one kilogram of garlic powder can be used for a whole year,' says
    Sargsyan.



    Galoyan's estimations showed that the prime cost of Chinese garlic powder is
    30 drams (8 cents) and one kilogram of this product sells at 1,500 drams
    ($4) in the Armenian market. Meanwhile, one kilogram of Lori garlic powder
    is 6,500 drams



    Despite a successful sale of the initial batch of the product locally, the
    entrepreneurs still plan to focus on expanding to foreign markets. At the
    same time, they say the enterprise is trying to gain a foothold on the
    domestic market with such products as dried fruits and berries.

    **************************************** **********************************= 13. **Sport: Armenia U-21 soccer team to play Swiss, Turkish coevals in
    Euro-2011 qualifiers



    By Suren Musayelyan



    Soccer



    Armenia's U-21 National Team were in training in Yerevan June 1-4 before
    leaving for Switzerland where they will play that country's team as part
    of
    2011 Europe U-21 Championship qualification round.



    The Switzerland vs. Armenia U-21 match will take place on June 5 (kickoff
    time: 11.00 pm Yerevan time) at Bergholz Stadium in Wil. A Serbian referee
    team led by Bosko Jovanetic will officiate the match.



    Armenia U-21 will play their next qualifier in Yerevan against Turkey on
    June 9. The match will be held at Republican Stadium in Yerevan (kickoff:
    8.00 pm Yerevan time). The match will be officiated by a referee team from
    Belgium led by Cristoph Virment.



    Armenia U-21 National Team is in the 2011 Europe U-21 Championship
    qualification round second group with Turkey, Ireland, Switzerland, Georgia
    and Estonia.



    Armenia U-21 head coach Flemming Serristlev in Yerevan spoke with respect
    about the next rivals but added: `We should not be afraid of anyone.'



    The Danish specialist said the main goal of any team below the senior level
    is to prepare footballers for the main team. `We will get ready for every
    game in a special way, with expectations to win=85 I never participate in any
    game or tournament without a desire to celebrate victory,' Serristlev added.




    Earlier this week, President of the Football Federation of Armenia Ruben
    Hayrapetyan urged soccer fans in Armenia to provide support to the team and
    be `the twelfth player' at the Yerevan stadium during the match against
    Turkey.



    Addressing a message to all fans Hayrapetyan said: `I am convinced that with
    your help and great dedication of our lads we can achieve a success.'



    Meanwhile, in the Armenian Premier League championship, leader FC Pyunik
    celebrated another win last weekend beating FC Kilikia in an away game 3-1.



    In other Round 10 matches Banants beat Shirak 5-1, Ulis beat Gandzasar 5-0
    and Ararat lost to Mika 0-1.



    Pyunik leads with 28 points, followed by Mika and Banants (23 and 21 points,
    respectively). With 10 defeats in as many games, last season's runner-up
    Ararat is bottom in the eight-club league table, 7 points behind Gandzasar.



    In the 11 round of matches this weekend Ararat will be hosted by reigning
    champion Pyunik. Elsewhere, Banants will host Mika, Shirak will host Ulis
    and Gandzasar will play Kilikia.



    (Source: Football Federation of Armenia)



    Boxing



    Team Armenia finished successfully in the International Boxing Association
    (AIBA) world junior championships (for 15-16-year-olds) held in Yerevan May
    23-30.



    Represented in all 13 weight categories, Armenia managed to win one gold,
    two silver and four bronze medals.



    Koryun Soghomonyan (46 kg) beat in the final an Indian coeval, while Jonik
    Tonoyan (54 kg) and Hayk Khachatryan (70 kg) lost to a Cuban and Irish
    boxers, respectively. Four Armenian boxers lost their semifinal bouts and
    won bronze medals.



    Thus, Armenia got an AIBA world junior champion for the first time.



    In the team competition, Armenia finished third -- behind Russia (5 gold and
    4 bronze medals) and Cuba (2 gold, 1 silver and 4 bronze medals).



    By and large, AIBA has praised the level of organization of the
    championships in Yerevan - the first-ever world boxing championships at any
    level to be held in Armenia.



    A record number of nations for this AIBA event, 42, were represented in the
    Yerevan championships. The total number of athletes reached 255.



    It emerged late last week that Armenia will seek to host European boxing
    championships in 2010. At a press conference in Yerevan on May 30, President
    of the Boxing Federation of Armenia Arman Muradyan said Armenia will make a
    bid for the event.



    Regnum.ru reported that AIBA President Dr. Ching-Kuo Wu, who attended the
    press conference, evaluated as high Armenia's chances for hosting the
    continent's championships.



    Moscow is also known to be seeking to host the 2010 championships and has
    already submitted its bid.



    (Sources: Boxing Federation of Armenia, AIBA, Regnum.ru)


    ************************************* *************************************=

    ------------------------------

    [1] <#_ftnref1> Jeffrey Sachs and Andrew Warner, `Natural Resource
    Abundance and Economic Growth,' National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
    Working Paper No. W5398 (Cambridge, MA: NBER, December 1995).
    http://www.nber.org/papers/w5398



    [2] <#_ftnref2> Fareed Zakaria, The Future of Freedom: Illiberal
    Democracy at Home and Abroad (New York: W.W. Norton, 2003), P. 75.
Working...
X