Armenia and world:

Ankara plays rather a safe game in the issue of the Armenian Genocide

Turkey has never acknowledged an exact number of deportees or deaths.

March 10, 2009
A month before the 94th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire The New York Times published an interesting article by Sabrina Tavernise. According to a long-hidden document that belonged to the Interior Minister of the Ottoman Empire, 972.000 Ottoman Armenians disappeared from official population records from 1915 through 1916. The numbers are published by Murat Bardakci, the Turkish author and columnist, in a book that is a collection of documents and records that once belonged to Mehmed Talat, known as Talat Pasha, the primary architect of the Armenian deportations.
Economy:

World financial crisis blighted the Armenian job market

According to analysts' assessments, demand for specialists in PR, marketing and graphic design will decrease dramatically.

February 23, 2009
The impact of the world financial crisis on the Armenian economy and social state of people has already become perceptible, especially in the population employment sector. The alarm has already sounded for a number of employment agencies: employers' offers are decreasing in ratio with the increasing labor supply.
Politics:

In 2008 the major event in the region was the visit of Turkish President to Yerevan

Towards the end of the current year we all witnessed the unprecedented venture of Turkish intellectuals "Armenians, we apologize" which once again proved the reluctance of Turks to reconcile themselves to their own history, as well as showed the profound

December 25, 2008
The year of 2008 was also a time of reformatting the South Caucasus Region. After the «five-day» war of Georgia against South Ossetia it became clear that new division lines were to be outlined in the region. No doubt unwilling to do it himself, President of Georgia made a «regal» present to RF that had long been waiting for an opportunity to gain revenge against the USA for the too profound an interference it had in the solution of Caucasus problems. The result was a much more chaotic bedlam in which even the most «skillful» states were unable to "catch a fish".
 
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