120m drams set for repair of schools, public use facilities in Gyumr

ArmenPress
July 13 2004

120 MILLION DRAMS SET FOR REPAIR OF SCHOOLS, PUBLIC USE FACILITIES
GYUMRI

YEREVAN, JULY 13, ARMENPRESS: Authorities in the northern province
of Shirak are looking into proposals, submitted by local communities
for the use of 120 million drams, allocated by the government for
Work against Allowances program that is designed to provide seasonal
jobs to the unemployed. The money, earmarked for this year is 10
million less than for 2003.
The authorities have examined and approved 19 of 40 proposals, the
implementation of which will be backed by 28 million drams. Some 82
million are set aside for the administrative center Gyumri and
Akhurian.
The priority this year is on repair of schools and kindergartens,
gymnasiums and other facilities for public use.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Chechnya to open embassy in Azerbaijan – rights activist

Chechnya to open embassy in Azerbaijan – rights activist

Ekho, Baku
13 Jul 04

The Azerbaijani authorities intend to help Chechen refugees and do not
object to the opening of a Chechen representative office in Baku,
Chechenpress news agency, which is close to [rebel President] Aslan
Maskhadov, has said. Musavat Party chairman Isa Qambar has already
commented on this news in an interview with Chechenpress news agency.

[Passage omitted: reported details]

In an interview with Ekho newspaper, Chechen human rights activist
Mayrbek Taramov said that the former head of the Chechen
representative office in Azerbaijan, Ali Asayev, spread this news at a
meeting with the Chechen diaspora in Azerbaijan. The Chechen human
rights activist said that official Baku could have given the “green
light” to the opening of a Chechen representative office to spite
Moscow – after Armenian President Robert Kocharyan’s strongly-worded
speech at the Council of Europe. Taramov said that the Azerbaijani
authorities are aware of Russia’s active support for Kocharyan in the
Karabakh issue.

Taramov also said that Moscow is unable to exert pressure on Baku
today.

“Azerbaijan is no longer a state that can be spoken to in the language
of force. The situation in the Caucasus leaves much to be desired for
Russia.”

Moreover, “why should the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria not have its
representative office in Baku if a representative office of the
‘Nagornyy Karabakh Republic’ is operating in Moscow,” the Chechen
human rights activist said.

The Russian embassy told Ekho yesterday that Azerbaijan has been
properly cooperating with the Russian Federation in the fight against
international terrorism. The embassy also noted that official Baku had
already expressed its position on the issue during the terrorist act
in Nord-Ost [theatre siege in Moscow in October 2002].

In turn, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry press service said that
Azerbaijan regards all the republics of the Russian Federation as
parts of that state. Therefore, the Foreign Ministry does not have
direct contacts with any representative offices, the press service
said.

The Foreign Ministry said that it was cooperating directly with the
Russian embassy in Baku.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Ace in Hands of Armenia

ACE IN HANDS OF ARMENIA

Azg/AM
14 July 04

Touching upon the statement made of RA Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanian made in the U.S. recently, saying that Armenia can use its
right of “veto” and prevent Turkey’s becoming a PACE presiding country
in 2007, Haruth Sasunian, publisher of “Californian Courier” writes
that “During the conversation with the journalists RA Foreign Minister
exploded a bomb, stating for the first timethat Armenia will use its
right for veto, as Turkey is not on the relevant level, height.”
“Turkey is the only candidate for that year. The presiding country has
certain privileges and rights that can be used against Armenia. Taking
into account the policy conducted by them (the Turks) in the region in
the course of the past 12 years, that was too misbalanced and its
support to Azerbaijan, Armenia merely can’t stand Turkey as a
presiding country for a yeareven if it wished, ” Vartan Oskanian said.

“It is a courageous decision and I think it’s a right one. Such
decisions can’ t please the American authorities, that will try to
exert pressure and demand to reconsider the decision, as well as, we
should evade contradicting the U.S., but I think, that notwithstanding
all this, Armenia should make decisions taking into consideration its
own national interests and not the interest of a foreign country (the
U.S., Russia, France, China and Turkey),” Sasunian said.

The American -Armenian community should show resistance to the members
of Bush ‘ administration that will try to exert pressure on
Armenia. Particularly, in this year of elections, we should use all
our force as an electors to resist the people that will demand from us
to make favour to Turkey. We should undertake a firm position in this
issue. We hope that the Armenian authorities will not repeat the
mistake committed in 1999.

If the U. S. and Turkey really want the latter become a presiding
country at PACE, they should stop the blockade of Armenia or recognize
the Genocide of the Armenians. This is one of the rare cases, when the
ace is in the hands of Armenia. And Armenia should use it in the best
way.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Prosecutor Refuses To Drop Criminal Charges Against Opposition

Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
July 13 2004

Armenian Prosecutor Refuses To Drop Criminal Charges Against
Opposition

By Hrach Melkumian 14/07/2004 01:46

On 30 April the Armenian Prosecutor General’s office opened a
criminal case against the “Artarutiun” opposition bloc in connection
with the mass demonstration in Yerevan on 12-13 April that was
violently dispersed by police.

The prosecutor’s office filed two charges for alleged “Calls for the
violent overthrow of the constitutional order” and “insulting a state
official.”

Some of the opposition activists arrested following the demonstration
have been set free; most of the cases have been dropped. Former
Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutiunian, a member of the radical
opposition party “Hanrapetutiun,” has been released from jail, but
the criminal charges brought against him have not been dropped yet.

A spokesman for the state prosecutor’s office told RFE/RL today that
there are no deadlines for bringing criminal charges against
opposition members, which means that more charges could still be
pending. One prominent opposition member, “Hanrapetutyun” party
leader Aram Sarkisian thinks the charges against the opposition will
never be dropped.

“They [the prosecutors] know that the opposition will sooner or later
become active again and this criminal case will help them to exert
pressure on certain people one more time,” Sargsian said. He believes
that the charges against the opposition could be dropped only if
there is a regime change in Armenia or if the opposition ceases to
exist.

Former Prime Minister Aram Sargsian affirmed that the opposition will
broaden its activities and launch a new campaign to oust the present
leadership before autumn. “Everybody understands now that the next
president of Armenia will be the one who succeeds in ousting Robert
Kocharian,” Sargsian told RFE/RL.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Glendale: Leaving for an exchange of ideas

Glendale News Press
LATimes.com
July 12 2004

Leaving for an exchange of ideas

Balboa Elementary teacher travels to Armenia to learn how country’s
education system works.

By Darleene Barrientos, News-Press

NORTHWEST GLENDALE – Balboa Elementary School teacher Maureen Miller
has helped tutor some of the district’s most gifted students. For the
next two weeks, beginning Friday, she will help teach students from
another culture, and, in the process, hopes to learn something
herself.

Miller will leave for Armenia, where she will stay with an Armenian
teacher and learn about students and teaching methods in the country.
The trip will be the beginning of a year-long working relationship
with her Armenian counterpart, connecting their students through
projects and the Internet. Miller was the lone Californian selected
for the program, sponsored by the U.S. State Department and the State
Department Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

“This trip is to introduce American teachers to their Armenian
partners and allow them time to get a sense of Armenian system of
education,” said Barbara Miller, chief operating officer for Project
Harmony, the organization coordinating the exchange.

“One of the criteria was a commitment to develop and execute the
project over the course of a year to make sure the district and the
community support the effort, and to show and express an interest in
multicultural education.”

Miller, who works part time teaching gifted students at Balboa,
applied for the program after seeing it on a bulletin Principal Linda
Milano compiles for her staff. Miller will return to Glendale on July
30.

Milano said she was so excited for Miller, she did not realize only
21 teachers were going through the program.

“I said, ‘You would be absolutely fabulous for this!’ I was so
excited when I got word that she was accepted,” Milano said.

The two teachers will work together to create either one long- or
several short-term projects for both their classes that will enable
their students to communicate via the Internet. Miller said she
believed she was chosen for the program because of her attraction to
technology, the Armenian culture and her willingness to commit to the
program.

“Because we have such a large Armenian population, I have an interest
in Armenia and that part of the world.” Miller said. “When we had the
huge influx of Armenian children in the ’90s, it was just something
that interested me. I took Armenian for the Non-Armenian for a year
at [Glendale Community College], and I got to know so many people in
Glendale who are Armenian.

“The culture is fascinating to me. Whatever I could do to make our
culture and their culture work together, I’m happy to do.”

Miller’s trip will not be the end of the exchange. She and her
assigned partner, Karine Jaghacpanyan, who teaches technology and
English in Vanadzor, the country’s third-largest city, are already
corresponding via e-mail. In October, Jaghacpanyan will travel from
Armenia to Glendale to visit Miller’s school and class.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

OSCE acts beyond frames of responsibilities, Armenian official says

Armen Press
July 12 2004

OSCE ACTS BEYOND FRAMES OF RESPONSIBILITIES, ARMENIAN OFFICIAL SAYS

YEREVAN, JULY 12, ARMENPRESS: A deputy parliament chairman Vahan
Hovhanesian from the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) argued
today that Armenia has joined Russia and seven other ex-Soviet states
to accuse the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE) of unjustly interference into their domestic affairs because
of the OSCE decreasing role in handling international issues. “The
responsibilities assigned to the OSCE are successfully carried out by
other international organizations, a clear indication of the falling
role of the OSCE,” he said.
In a joint statement ex-Soviet countries said last week that in
part the OSCE does not respect such fundamental principles as
non-interference in internal affairs and respect of national
sovereignty by meddling into their domestic affairs. The statement
was signed by Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova,
Russia, Tajikistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan. Georgia, Azerbaijan and
Turkmenistan refused to sign it.
Vahan Hovhanesian went on to argue that there is no now such a
problem that would require the OSCE’s joint efforts and therefore the
organization has to seek new initiatives, which, however, are beyond
its frame of commitments. He also added that Armenia cannot agree
with a motion, put forward by the OSCE leadership that resolutions
can be taken without a consensus.

Book Review: All life is here

Financial Times (London, England)
July 10, 2004 Saturday

All life is here

Ten years after writing a book that became a word-of-mouthsensation,
this author returns with a more ambitious novel: an epic story
displaying writing that is both lyrical and ruthlessly succinct

By HENRY HITCHINGS

BIRDS WITHOUT WINGS
by Louis de Bernieres
Secker & Warburg Pounds 17.99, 640 pages

Occasionally a novel comes along that redefines the contours of
popular fiction. Perhaps the best example of recent years is Captain
Corelli’s Mandolin, in which Louis de Bernieres blended sun-drenched
romance with epic gravity. Captain Corelli was a word- of-mouth
sensation, a beneficiary and then a mainstay of the emerging
book-group phenomenon. A few years ago it was barely possible to
travel on a commuter train or flop down on a beach without seeing
someone immersed in the story of the sleepy Ionian island convulsed
by the second world war. The book has sold nearly three million
copies in English, and has multiplied the number of tourists to
Cephallonia.

But de Bernieres has been slow to follow up his success; it is now
ten years since Captain Corelli was first published.

Birds Without Wings is, very obliquely, its sequel (or rather,
prequel). Its events periodically connect with those of the earlier
novel – for instance, we are reunited with the formidable Drosoula,
mother of Mandras the handsome fisherman. But here the story takes
place in Anatolia, not Cephallonia, and in the first quarter of the
last century, amid the crumbling fabric of the Ottoman Empire.
Specifically, we are in the remote village of Eskibahce (modelled, it
appears, on the real-life “ghost town” of Kayakoy near Fethiye).

Eskibahce is a polyglot colony of Turks, Armenians, Greeks and Arabs,
where Muslim and Christian happily rub shoulders. It is, like de
Bernieres’ previous half-imaginary societies, a place that unites the
chimerical poetry of Gabriel Garcia Marquez with the fine-grained
domesticity of Trollope.

Eskibahce is the novel’s heart. There is no clear protagonist, nor
any presiding narrative voice. Instead this is a story about the
disintegration of a community, and de Bernieres allows a multitude of
characters to jostle for attention, at first to suggest the richness
of the community’s life, and then to register its erosion.

Among these characters are Philothei, the local beauty, and her
admirer, Ibrahim the goatherd, who wins her affection with the gift
of a dead goldfinch; apparently inseparable friends Karatavuk and
Mehmetcik, whose childhood innocence gives way to savagery as their
society is torn apart by conflict; and the prosperous, sad Rustem
Bey, whose wife Tamara is stoned for adultery, and whose Greek
mistress Leyla gamely takes her place.

The cast is enriched by the presence of minor eccentrics such as
Mohammed the Leech Gatherer and Ali the Snowbringer (so-called
because on the night of his birth it snowed for the first time in 75
years), as well as charismatic figures of authority – the holy men
Father Kristoforos and Abdulhamid Hodja, and Iskander the potter, who
provides the book’s title when he reflects that “Man is a bird
without wings”, while “a bird is a man without sorrow”.

Real historical characters play their part too: Enver Pasha, the
Turkish minister who drew his country into the first world war by
attacking Odessa with the Nazis, the German general Limon von Sanders
and Mustafa Kemal, the brilliant commander known to posterity simply
as Ataturk.

It is the surge of military ambitions that explodes the sanctity of
Eskibahce and scatters its inhabitants. The strongest part of the
novel is an 80-page sequence which follows Karatavuk as he finds
himself fighting the allies at Gallipoli. “Intoxicated with the idea
of martyrdom”, he suffers in the trenches, surrounded by rotting
corpses, and frequently bent double with dysentery while flies drink
the moisture from his eyes. Troops eat their own donkeys. The bodies
of their dead comrades are used to buttress collapsing trenches. Yet,
in the depths of squalor, there blooms a generous camaraderie: de
Bernieres has a remarkable ability to evoke the tenderness of
relationships even as he depicts their brutality, and his mordant
sense of human comedy increases the pathos of what is, in effect, a
critique of militant nationalism.

Throughout the novel, the author switches deftly between minute
description – of the shape Leyla’s white cat, Pamuk, makes as she
shelters beneath her favourite orange tree, or of what maggots do to
a corpse – and wide-ranging historical synthesis. The strength of his
writing lies in that he can be both lyrical and ruthlessly succinct –
he can move seamlessly from energetic humour to poignancy, and from
easy charm to a searing anger.

These qualities run right through Birds Without Wings. It is a more
ambitious novel than Captain Corelli, and in many ways a better one.
But, with its slow beginning, complex geography, somewhat unfamiliar
historical territory, and (to British eyes) strange- looking names
and improbable orthography, it is unlikely to be as successful.

Hailstorm Damages Crops in Armenian District

HAILSTORM DAMAGES CROPS IN ARMENIAN DISTRICT

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
10 Jul 04

(Presenter) A hailstorm has hit Armenia’s Armavir district. The
farmers of this district have been deprived of their harvest, annual
income, and have got into serious debt. The farmers joke that what is
brought by water is also gone with water.

(Correspondent over video of villages damaged by hailstorm) About 810
hectares of vineyards, grain and vegetable fields of Armavir
District’s village of Janfida were completely damaged by a strong
hailstorm on Friday (9 July). The strong wind broke the windows and
roofs of schools, village and district houses and damaged the
village’s roads. Seven villages of the district have been greatly
damaged.

(Passage omitted: The farmers are complaining about their losses)

(Correspondent) Land is the only source of income for the farmers of
Janfida and other villages. The natural disaster has put these people
in a difficult situation. As well as being deprived of their annual
income, the farmers have got into serious debt. They do not know how
to return bank loans and pay interest rates. The farmers’ only hope is
the government’s support and selling at a high price the part of the
harvest that survived.

A special group set up in the district council is estimating the
damage caused by the hail.

Anna Vartanyan for “Aylur”.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian official says foreign funds make nuclear plant “more safe”

Armenian official says foreign funds make nuclear plant “more safe”

Arminfo
8 Jul 04

YEREVAN

The head of the Armenian State Atomic Inspection Directorate, Ashot
Martirosyan, has told an Arminfo correspondent that the programme of
technical upgrading of the Armenian nuclear station will cost 40m
dollars. He said that the money will be used to carry out some
technical and logistic measures which will make the station more safe.

Ashot Martirosyan said that the US had recently announced the
allocation of 1m dollars to be used when the station would close for
major repairs on 23 July this year. The head of the Armenian State
Atomic Inspection Directorate said that the assistance was mainly
provided by the USA and the European Union although the latter has
lately become less active in the allocation of funds for these
purposes. “The European Union has helped us a lot in improving the
station’s safety as part of TACIS programme however, this help has
lately been frozen due to political constraints,” he said. He added,
however, that since the station remains to be a high risk facility,
the EU will continue to allocate funds to improve its safety. Britain
has also allocated funds towards that. He noted that Russia provides
only technical support in maintaining the plant’s safety at a proper
level.

[Passage omitted: recap of reports on earlier funds]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Government must be more resolute in relations with NATO

Azeri paper urges government to be more resolute in relations with NATO

Zerkalo, Baku
10 Jul 04

The problem brought about by the participation of Armenian officers in
the Cooperative Best Effort-2004 exercises within NATO’s Partnership
for Peace seems to be drawing to an end.

We have effectively witnessed the Armenian’s victory in this
diplomatic and procedural struggle. And they appear not to have
applied any particular effort to visit Azerbaijan and attend a
preliminary conference for the mentioned NATO exercises. Apparently,
they have simply used ordinary technical facilities by applying to
appropriate bodies in Brussels. This time the Armenians were more
careful not to repeat the past when they could not attend similar
conferences thanks to our efforts.

It turns out that the authorities and society stick to completely
different positions on the issue. The authorities proved too weak to
withstand the pressure from NATO officials and, in a move to justify
themselves, said this was an international event and if the Armenian
officers were to be barred from attending the conference it would deal
a blow to Azerbaijan’s international image and strain its relations
with NATO.

To be frank, we are surprised at the position of NATO
officials. Because unlike Armenia, Azerbaijan is actively cooperating
with NATO. Why does Brussels insist on the participation of the
Armenian officers in the exercises held in Azerbaijan knowing only too
well that this hurts the feelings of our people? Are there
pro-Armenian forces in Brussels who think that the Armenian officers
must attend the exercises by all means? And our authorities hope that
after seeing how fast Azerbaijan is developing, the Armenian officers
will realize that their position is not right and urge their leaders
to sit down at the negotiating table with Azerbaijan.

Let’s note, however, that the Armenians are unlikely to understand
that. First of all, because they will hardly be able to visit the
sites that testify to high living standards (high-rise buildings,
roads, factories, etc.). Secondly, why do they need to see everything
with their own eyes if they can easily see Azerbaijan’s achievements
using the advantages of our 21st-century world?

[Passage omitted: minor details]

The latest developments have set a dangerous precedent. Azerbaijan is
not a NATO member yet but is already retreating under pressure from
the alliance. Our country’s defeat in the issue, though not material
or physical, is beyond doubt. And this deals a moral blow to our
international image as of a partner country. In other words, it
appears that Azerbaijan can make concessions if put under pressure.

We have been hearing quite often that seven Armenian officers are
expected to come to Baku within NATO’s Partnership for Peace programme
in September. A short while ago the deputy foreign minister, Araz
Azimov, said two Armenian officers might attend the exercises. What
will our government’s reaction be? How will society respond? Or, more
importantly, what is to be done?

My suggestion: The foreign affairs and defence ministries have got to
make it clear to NATO officials in a harsher tone than before that
this must not happen again. In principle, our authorities have already
sent the message. Or the mentioned state agencies have to put forward
the initiative to hold activities within Partnership for Peace in
another country aspiring to a NATO membership, such as Ukraine or
Georgia. I don’t think Azerbaijan will end up losing a lot by refusing
to host the alliance’s exercises on its soil.

[Passage omitted: minor details]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress