Armenia confident its needs second telecom operator

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire
July 13, 2004

Armenia confident its needs second telecom operator

YEREVAN, July 13 (Prime-Tass) — The Armenian government is confident
that a second cell phone operator will enter the Armenian
telecommunications market, Armenia’s Justice Minister David
Arutyunyan told reporters Tuesday.

The Armenian government is currently holding talks with the Greece’
Telecommunications Organization (OTE) and domestic ArmenTel on the
issue, Arutyunyan said.

He noted that the arbitration process regarding the ArmenTel case is
still underway and would only be stopped if the negotiations yielded
positive results.

But the introduction of a second telecom operator to the Armenian
market would not necessarily resolve the situation, considering the
fact that ArmenTel controls Armenian fixed-line networks, Arutyunyan
said.

He also expressed hope that the talks to resolve the dispute between
the government and ArmenTel would prove successful.

On February 19, the government decided to make changes to ArmenTel’s
license due to the company’s alleged violation of the license’s
terms.

The amendments to the license were expected to come into force on
June 30.

The London arbitration court is currently hearing two suits, the
Armenian government vs the OTE, and ArmenTel vs the Armenian
government.

In 1997 OTE paid U.S. USD 142.470 million to gain control of the 90%
stake in ArmenTel that was formerly held both by the Armenian
government with a 41% stake and Trans World Telecom with 49%.

ArmenTel was granted the right to a monopoly for 15 years, according
to the agreement.

On September 8, 2003, the government decided to deprive ArmenTel of
its monopoly license, but the decision has not yet been enforced due
to the ongoing lawsuits against the company. End
From: Baghdasarian

$48,000 pledged for starting construction of center for handicapped

Armen Press
July 12 2004

$48,000 PLEDGED FOR STARTING CONSTRUCTION OF CENTER FOR HANDICAPPED

YEREVAN, JULY 12, ARMENPRESS: Levon Nersisian, the chairman of
Astghik (Starlet) union of handicapped people, told Armenpress that
nine international and local organizations pledged $42,000 in
donations for starting the construction of a rehabilitation center on
2 hectares of land in a Yerevan Nor Nork community, allocated to it
by a government decision. Nersisian said his union has developed a
program called Hope Shelter, which conforms all internationally
accepted standards of handicapped people care, which he said costs $6
million.
He said the Union hopes that the construction of the
rehabilitation center will be finished in 2008 and its full operation
will require another four years.
The program supposes a unique approach towards meeting the needs
of handicapped people. Around 60 disabled children are supposed to be
serviced by a 148-member staff. The center will also take care of
local old people and foreign old-age tourists.
From: Baghdasarian

Country reports & neighborhood plans in view for S. Caucasus trio

European Report
July 10, 2004

COUNTRY REPORTS AND NEIGHBOURHOOD PLANS IN VIEW FOR SOUTHERN CAUCASUS
TRIO.

The EU is set to draw up Action Plans with Armenia, Azerbaijan and
Georgia to boost ties under European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP),
although not before the European Commission has prepared in-depth
reports on the political and economic situation in these countries.
This was confirmed by the July 5-8 visit to the Southern Caucasus* of
‘shadow’ Enlargement/Neighbourhood Commissioner Janez Potocnik,
during which the ENP initiative was the primary focus. Commission
officials told Europe Information that the idea was to produce the
country reports by Spring 2005. The preparation of jointly-agreed
Action Plans could then get under way during the course of next year.
The word from sources in Yerevan, Armenia, where Mr Potocnik
concluded his visit, was that the country report would ideally be
finalised by the end of 2004, although realistically this was more
likely to happen by next Spring. EU Member States agreed to include
Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia in ENP on June 14.

* Georgia July 5-6, Azerbaijan July 6-7, Armenia July 7-8
From: Baghdasarian

New Iranian ambassador arrives in Yerevan

ArmenPress
July 8 2004

NEW IRANIAN AMBASSADOR ARRIVES IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JULY 8, ARMENPRESS: The newly appointed ambassador of the
Islamic Republic of Iran to Armenia, Ali Reza Haqiqian, has arrived
today in Yerevan. He will hand over his credentials to president
Robert Kocharian in a few days and will take his new tenure.
The appointment was made upon a proposal by Iranian foreign
minister Kamal Kharrazi. Haqiqian had previously served as a foreign
ministry director-general as well as Iranian charge d’affaires to
Baghdad.
Ali Reza Haqiqian was born in 1958 in Isfahan. He received a
uiversity education and has been working with Iran’s foreign ministry
since 1981, holding various positions in Iran’s embassies in Canada,
Germany and Iraq. The new ambassador is married and is father to
three children. He is fluent in English.
From: Baghdasarian

ANKARA: Turkish intelligence details rebel Kurd actions

Turkish intelligence details rebel Kurd actions

Hurriyet, Istanbul
4 Jul 04

Text of report by Ozgur Cebe, “The PKK purchased weapons worth 1.7m
dollars in a year”, published by Turkish newspaper Hurriyet (Ankara
edition) on 4 July

Diyarbakir, DHA: The security units determined that close to 1,500
armed terrorists connected to the PKK/Kongra-Gel Kurdistan Workers’
Party/People’s Congress of Kurdistan crossed into Turkey in the form
of small groups and that the organization had purchased weapons worth
1.7m dollars in the past year.

The intelligence units determined that the PKK started to make
preparations at 17 camps in northern Iraq against probable military
intervention by Turkey and the United States. It was stated that the
organization had purchased weapons worth 1.7m dollars from Iraq, Iran
and Armenia within the past year after the intervention of the United
States against Iraq. Among these weapons there are RPG-7 missile
launchers, Kannas-brand assassination weapons, Kalashnikov rifles,
G-3, G-1 and M-16 long-barrelled infantry rifles, Bixi heavy machine
guns, hand grenades and land mines.

Also, according to the intelligence reports, in the past six months,
the PKK organization has sent to Turkey over 1,500 armed terrorists in
small groups from the camps in northern Iraq and Iran.

In the report, it was warned that the groups could initiate mainly
hit-and-run and land mining actions and it was stated that Murat
Karayilan and the Northern Iraqi Fehman Husayn were at the head of the
armed wing of the organization. Recently, information was received
that the organization has reduced its political training to a minimum
and has increased its military training to eight hours a day .

The security units determined that a significant number of the seized
weapons belonging to the terrorists were Russian-made. Of the
Kalashnikov rifles, 71.6 per cent were of Russian origin, 14.7 per
cent were of Chinese origin, 3.6 per cent were of Hungarian origin,
and 3.6 per cent were of Bulgarian origin. It was also discovered
that 45.2 per cent of the weapons, such as the Kannas assassination
weapons, Bixi heavy machine guns, Arbiki, G-3, G-1 and M-16 were of
also of Russian origin, 13.2 per cent were of British origin and 9.4
per cent were of US origin. It is stated that 85.3 per cent of the
missile launchers were of Russian origin, 5.4 per cent of Iraqi
origin, and 2.5 per cent of Chinese origin. Of the anti-tank and
anti-personnel mines, 60.6 per cent were of Italian origin, 28.3 per
cent were of Russian origin, and 6.2 per cent were of German
origin. Of the defence and attack-type hand grenades, it was stated
that 72 per cent were of Russian origin, 19.8 per cent of US origin
and 8.0 per cent of German origin.
From: Baghdasarian

3-Day Clergy Conference by Western Diocese in October 2004

PRESS OFFICE
ARMENIAN CHURCH OF NORTH AMERICA WESTERN DIOCESE
3325 North Glenoaks Blvd.
Burbank, CA 91504
Tel: (818) 558-7474
Fax: (818) 558-6333
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

COMMUNIQUÉ

Organized by the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, a
Three-Day Clergy Conference will be held on October 20, 21, 22, at the
Diocesan complex, as part of the `Tarkmanchats Lsaran’. During the
three days of the conference, which is solely for clergy, a series of
twelve religiously themed lectures will take place.
Below we have outlined the topics that will be presented, along
with their lecturers.
1. His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Primate of the Western
Diocese, will present three topics: A) `The mission of the pastor
within
the life of the community and the realm of globalization’, B) `The
significance of Diocesan structures within intercommunity
collaboration’, and C) `The role of solitude, silence and prayer,
for
the formation of Christian spirituality’.
2. Very Rev. Fr. Dajad Yardemian will discuss the following three
topics: A) `The church of the third millennium; threats,
possibilities,
visions’, B) The Christian thought to escape from the world and the
sense of faith during the first centuries of Christianity, C) The
relationship between man-God in the view of David the Prophet.
3. Archpriest Dr. Fr. Zaven Arzoumanian’s topic is: `The influence
of the Heavenly Kingdom upon earth, according to the Parables’.
4. Dr. Fr. Stepanos Dingilian’s topics are: A) `Christian and
secular interpretations of human aspirations’, B) Christian spiritual
fulfillment within the career, C) `Preserving and nurturing the
sanctity
of the Armenian family’.
5. Archpriest Fr. Sipan Mekhsian’s topic will be: `The Armenian
Church – nationalism, golden age, hardships it has faced and future
concerns’.
6. Rev. Fr. Shnork Demirdjian’s topic will be: `The gradual
experience of spiritual growth with the faithful (beginner, acolyte,
apostle, leader)’.
The Three-Day Clergy Conference will take place every year in October,
in order to further expound on topics relating to ecclesiastical,
clerical, religious and spiritual life. The main goal is to continually
cultivate and renew the filed of knowledge of our clergy, and in doing
so, revitalize the spirit of service.
Very Rev. Fr. Dajad Yardemian is responsible for organizing the
aforementioned functions.

DIVAN OF THE DIOCESE
June 30, 2004
Burbank, CA
From: Baghdasarian

www.armenianchurchwd.com

DM satisfied with participation of Armenian officers in NATO Conf.

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
June 30, 2004, Wednesday

ARMENIAN MINISTER OF DEFENSE SERZHIK SARKISYAN WAS SATISFIED WITH
PARTICIPATION OF ARMENIAN OFFICERS IN CONFERENCE OF PLANNING OF NATO
MANEUVERS “COOPERATIVE BEST EFFORT – 2004”, WHICH TOOK PLACE IN BAKU

“I agree that we managed to participate in this conference. It was
decided that seven Armenian officers will take part in the maneuvers
in September. We will participate in any case and I should say that
Azerbaijan authorities took all the necessary measures for safety of
our officers in Baku,” Sarkisyan told journalists. He stressed that
the authorities of Azerbaijan and NATO guaranteed safety of officers,
who would come to Baku on September 14-26.

Sarkisyan was asked about the situation on the frontier between
Gazakh and Taush districts. He answered that Armenian side hadn’t
taken the offensive and had just foiled the plans of Azerbaijan side.

According to him, the aim of Azerbaijan side was capture of an
eminence and control of a water-pumping station. “Of course, we
couldn’t let them do it.” The minister said. According to him, two
Armenian servicemen – officer and ensign – were murdered. Sarkisyan
said also that there was some tension on this part of the frontier.

Source: Informational Agency Turan (Baku), June 28, 2004
From: Baghdasarian

The bare bones of Turkey

Sunday Age (Melbourne)
June 27, 2004 Sunday
First Edition

The bare bones of Turkey

by Claire Scobie

Louis de Bernieres sticks to the Aegean in his new novel. By Claire
Scobie.

Louis de Bernieres famously once likened “the pressure of trying to
write a second bestseller to standing in Trafalgar Square and being
told to get an erection in the rush hour”.

Captain Corelli’s Mandolin not only cast de Bernieres as a publishing
phenomenon, but at the height of Corellimania, tourism to the Greek
island of Cephallonia where the novel is set, rose by 20 per cent.
Since then more than 3 million copies of Captain Corelli have been
sold in English and it has been translated into 24 languages. So has
he succeeded with his latest novel, Birds without Wings?

“What, get an erection?” He chuckles. “Yes, to begin with I had a
ghastly sense of fatalism that everybody was going to say it wasn’t
as good as Corelli. . . Now I think it’s probably better, although it
may not be as cuddly or lovable.”

Louis de Bernieres, who was in Australia last month, is at 49 a
retiring, jovial man given to frequent bursts of belly-shaking
laughter and piquant English wit. Birds without Wings, 10 years in
the writing, is a sumptuous epic feast of love and war, about the
inhabitants of Eskibahce (literally the Garden of Eden), a town in
south-west Turkey at the turn of the 20th century.

Christians, Muslims, Armenians and Greeks co-exist, bound by history,
inter-marriage and friendship, until World War One heralds the
collapse of the Ottoman Empire and shatters their relative communal
harmony. It bears de Bernieres’ literary hallmarks – vast emotional
breadth, dazzling characterisation, rich historical detail (and
gruesome battle scenes), swerving between languid sensuality and
horror, humour and choking despair.

Its genesis was in de Bernieres’ fascination with the Turkish
accounts of Gallipoli – where, “as in Australia, Gallipoli has a role
of myth-making . . . Turks often think of Gallipoli as the point when
the Ottoman Empire was transformed into Turkey . . . because Mustafa
Kemal (later known as Ataturk) was the most important Turkish
commander at Gallipoli and then became the head of the republic”.

For his research de Bernieres trawled through the Ottoman archives,
reading primary sources in French (the diplomatic language), visited
Turkey three times and spent two weeks walking the Gallipoli battle
fields, where his maternal grandfather had fought and was shot three
times in one day. Some 40 years later, still suffering from war
wounds, “he shot himself, a late casualty of the war,” says his
grandson.

“Gallipoli was moving and made me feel very sad. Bones are coming to
the surface everywhere . . . and you have no idea whether they are
French bones or Anzac bones, or British or Sikhs. That makes you
understand the fatuousness of nationalism because you can’t tell the
nationality of a bone. You can’t tell if it is a Muslim or Christian,
just a human bone.”

While Birds was not written as a modern fable, “it necessarily is a
parable”, he says, reflecting his hatred of “certainties,
absolutism”, nationalism and religious dogma.

De Bernieres says he was an “obstinate and wilful child”, traits he
still holds dear today. He read voraciously and recalls once “trying
to dig to Australia in the orchard” but only getting “about four-feet
down”. Aged 18 he briefly served in the British army but quit
because, he “didn’t want to be told what to do”, and was much happier
strumming Bob Dylan ballads on his guitar and writing poetry.

He then travelled to Colombia, working as a teacher and part-time
cowboy. The experience had a lasting impression and aged 35, while
still teaching in London, he wrote his debut, The War of Don
Emmanuel’s Nether Parts, inspired by South American magical realism.

Two more Latin American novels followed until “by happy accident” he
stumbled across the history of Cephallonia, inspiring Captain
Corelli, for which he was awarded the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize in
1995.

When the film of Captain Corelli was released in 2001, much was made
of de Bernieres’ disdain. In fact he has seen it five times, thinks
the cinematography is “marvellous”, but only wishes it could have
been “a European art-house film rather than a Hollywood blockbuster”.

He is prepared for the criticism that Birds may invite. “I am trying
to offend everybody with perfect fairness, so it should be offensive
to Turks, Greeks and Armenians.” In it he has included animals,
children and old people, who he believes are under-represented in
literary fiction.

His last endearing semi-fictionalised work, Red Dog, chronicled the
exploits of a “splendid dog” Red, from Karratha in Western Australia
who he immortalised as the canine hero who hitches rides and drops
vile “stinkers”.

De Bernieres describes writing as “a pleasure . . . a compulsion that
comes upon me, a useful form of obsessive madness I suppose. I get
obsessed about music, about golf, but they come and go, and writing
is like that”.

He has many books on the go – one about eccentric characters from the
village in which he grew up, another about the life of his paternal
grandfather. The fortune earned from Captain Corelli has given him
the freedom to choose what to write and when – he had no contract for
the latest until it was finished. A few years ago, he moved to a
Georgian rectory in Norfolk but still drives his veteran Morris Minor
Traveller.

“It’s very strange to have enough money for the first time in your
life,” he says. “Instead of buying one good pair of quite expensive
trousers you go and buy 10 cheap ones.”

In the past few years he has alternated between furious bursts of
writing, inventing words (“Shakespeare did so I don’t see why the
rest of us can’t”), gardening, pottering and serenading his cat with
his mandolin or the robins with his flute.

De Bernieres always shows the final manuscript to his partner,
actress and director Cathy Gill, 32, who is not impressed by how
famous he may be.

Finally, he says he wants to be remembered for taking the British
novel out of north London and onto a world stage.

Birds without Wings will be published this week by Secker & Warburg
at $49.95
From: Baghdasarian

Argentine FM arrives in Russia to give economic coop a boost

PRAVDA / RIA Novosti, Russia
June 25 2004

Argentine Foreign Minister arrives in Russia to give economic
cooperation a boost

11:39 2004-06-25
One of the goals of the Argentine Foreign Minister’s current visit to
Moscow is to boost economic cooperation between his country and
Russia.

Speaking at a news conference in Moscow, Rafael Antonio Bielsa said
the Argentine government’s current confidence-building measures were
aimed at getting the national economy out of a deep crisis. Argentina
is trying to make its trade policy predictable and to rise investor
confidence, the minister said, expressing hope that his country’s
relations with Russia would benefit from these steps.

Russian and Argentine officials will sign a framework agreement on
the use of nuclear power for peaceful purposes at a special ceremony
Friday, Mr Bielsa revealed to the media. “One of a Russo-Argentine
joint venture’s senior executives is currently visiting Moscow, and
[cooperation in the] nuclear energy [industry] will be discussed
within the framework of the 2nd Russia-Argentine business forum, now
underway in Moscow,” the minister said.

Mr Bielsa said President Nestor Kirchner had asked him to convey an
invitation for Vladimir Putin. The Argentine government is working
hard to make the Russian leader’s visit possible before the end of
this year, he added.

At a ceremony in Argentina’s Embassy, national Argentine awards were
presented to Russian politicians and people in the arts who had made
outstanding contributions to the promotion of cooperation and
friendship between the two nations. The awardees included former
world chess champion Anatoli Karpov, Armenian community activist Ara
Abramyan, and choreographer Igor Moiseyev.

In his acceptance speech, the 98-year-old Moiseyev said: “Being in
love with Argentina as I am, I feel deeply moved, and will take your
award of honor close to heart. That you have taken notice of my
endeavors inspires me to continue working, however challenging this
may turn out to be for me.”
From: Baghdasarian

Books: Bugged by the past amid Istanbul’s flights of fancy

The Independent, UK
June 25, 2004

BOOKS: BUGGED BY THE PAST AMID ISTANBUL’S FLIGHTS OF FANCY

by Alev Adil

The Flea Palace
By Elif Shafak
trans Muge Gocek
MARION BOYARS pounds 9.99 (444pp) pounds 9.99 (free p&p) from 0870
079 8897

Elif Shafak is a young Turkish novelist with a prodigious output: she
is only 33, and The Flea Palace is her fourth novel, with a fifth,
written in English, due later this year. Her literary success and
journalism mark her out as a figurehead of a new generation of
writers, who use literature to reconfigure Turkish identity, and its
relationship to the country’s history.

Shafak was born in France and educated in Spain before returning to
Turkey as a young adult. Thus she has a doubled, and marginalised,
Turkish identity. Perhaps this helps enable her to cast a fresh eye
on modern Turkey, and to celebrate the contradictions and
incoherences that its past has bequeathed to the present. She is free
from many of the modernist literary, and political, orthodoxies that
are part of Kemal Ataturk’s cultural legacy.

Like Georges Perec’s Life: a User’s Manual, The Flea Palace is a
novel constructed around the daily routines of the inhabitants of an
apartment building. Bonbon Palace is a microcosm of contemporary
Istanbul: a city of contrasts and contestations, where both
continents and cultures meet. The old and the new; Orthodox
Christianity, secularism and Islam; the rich and the poor; the East
and West; the ancient and the postmodern – all co-exist in an urban
kaleidoscope.

In a chaotic neighbourhood, on the site of two ancient cemeteries,
one Muslim, the other Armenian, the dilapidated, bug-infested
apartment building is home to a cast of colourful characters. Built
by Pavel Antipov, an aristocratic Russian emigre based in Paris,
Bonbon Palace was a gift for his unstable wife Agripina. This
grandiloquent gesture of reparation for the tragedies the Antipovs
endured during their brief stay in Istanbul in the 1920s failed to
restore Agripina’s sanity. But the block becomes home to many
subsequent tragedies, and comedies too – Shafak’s black humour
ensures the two usually go hand-in-hand.

The weave of disparate narratives about the residents – from Madam
Auntie, the eccentric old lady in the penthouse, down to Musa the
ineffectual caretaker in the basement – has a picaresque charm that
blends the quotidian with a touch of magic realism. This spiral of
stories within stories is organised around a central enigma that
haunts all the residents: a mysterious, intensifying stench of
rubbish, and the attendant plagues of insects that infest the
building.

There are some engaging male inhabitants in Bonbon Palace, including
the twin hairdressers whose salon is a social hub, and the drunken
philosophy lecturer pining for his ex-wife. But the most complex
characters in the novel are women. Despite their strength, they
dissipate their energies in fruitless ways.

Hygiene Tijen makes a compulsive bid to expunge her house of all
bacteria. Nadia, the Russian scientist, carves lamps out of potatoes
to stave off her obsession with her unloving Turkish husband’s
infidelity. The young and beautiful Blue Mistress spends her time
waiting for the olive-oil merchant who keeps her. Jewish Ethel, an
outrageous socialite, expresses her greed for love and life by going
on drunken binges. Female obsession and thwarted desire are at the
heart of the decay that haunts the building – although it is male
indiscretion that leads to the tragic denouement.

Alev Adil’s latest collection of poems is Venus Infers’ (NE Publications)
From: Baghdasarian