Georgian Prime Minister To Arrive On Working Visit To Armenia

GEORGIAN PRIME MINISTER TO ARRIVE ON WORKING VISIT TO ARMENIA

YEREVAN, MARCH 11. ARMINFO. Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Nogaudeli
arrives on a working visit to Yerevan today on the invitation of his
Armenian counterpart Andranik Margaryan.

The Armenian governmental press-service informs ARMINFO that the
ministers of foreign affairs, finance, defense, energy, economic
development, as well as the Advisor of the Prime Minister, the Deputy
Head of the Department of Regional Cooperation of the Georgian Foreign
Ministry, and representatives of other departments of the country
are in the Georgian delegation.

Within the frameworks of the visit, the two countries’ prime ministers
will have a tete-a-tete meeting, which will result in an enlarge
meeting. Georgian premier will visit the Georgian Embassy in Armenia
and will meet with Armenian President Robert Kocharyan. On March
12 Zurab Nogaideli will visit the Memorial Complex for the Victims
of the Armenian Genocide. The premier will meet with Catholicos of
All Armenians Karekin II. The same day, the Georgian governmental
delegation will leave Armenia. Before departure at the airport
“Zvartnots,” Armenian and Georgian Prime Ministers will meet with
journalists to sum up the results of the visit.

ANKARA: The Armenian Issue

The Armenian Issue
BY HASAN PULUR

TurkishPress.com

Published: 3/9/2005

MILLIYET- I should first emphasize that there is in fact a historical
Armenian issue, which unfolded as follows: Imperialist states seeking to
split the Ottoman Empire forced Armenians loyal to the Ottoman Empire to
revolt against the empire and promised them an independent Armenian state in
return. This was a result of the empire~Rs decision to enter World War I on
the same side as Germany. France and Britain incited the Armenian revolt
against the Ottoman Empire in order to gain a strong hand in the Dardanelles
and the empire~Rs southern and eastern flanks. Thus, Armenians attacked
Turkish civilians and furthermore, Armenian soldiers in the Ottoman Army
deserted to the Russian Army.

The Ottoman government called on the Armenians to stop the violence.
Heedless, the Armenians continued and as a result, the Ottoman government
forced the Armenians in the region to emigrate. This was the only thing the
Ottoman Empire did to put a halt to the Armenian violence. During this
emigration, the Armenians had to fight neither the Ottoman government nor
the Turks, but the Kurds in the region. This is the incident which the
Armenians now call ~Qgenocide.~R

Historian Mete Tuncay wrote in an article published in the Journal of Social
History that in his view, the so-called Armenian genocide is a sort of myth
for the establishment of the Armenian state. ~QArmenians want Turkey to
recognize the so-called genocide and pay compensation and give land to the
Armenian state,~R said Tuncay. It is true that there is an Armenian issue,
but this is nothing more than a fight between two communities, as Ziya
Gokalp has noted.

People who talk about these issues as if they happened yesterday ignore the
ongoing killings in Iraq and the destruction of valuable works of ancient
civilizations in museums there.

Coordinator Of International Working Group For Search Of MissingVisi

COORDINATOR OF INTERNATIONAL WORKING GROUP FOR SEARCH OF MISSING VISITED
AZERI WAR PRISONERS KEPT IN STEPANAKERT

09.03.2005 03:45

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Within the frames of the agreements concluded with
the Nagorno Karabakh leadership coordinator of the working group for
the search of the missing, hostages and liberation of prisoners of
war in the Karabakh conflict zone Albert Voskanian visited Azeri
prisoners of war Khayal Abdullayev, Hikmet Tagiyev and Ruslan
Bakirov kept in Stepanakert. A. Voskanian noted that he inquired
about the psychological and health state of the war prisoners, the
amount and quality of food they receive and so on. â~@~There were no
complaints from their side. They look well and wish to return home. It
is my second attendance of the war prisoners. In accord with my
responsibilities I made the co-chairs and other regional coordinators
aware of the visitâ~@~], Albert Voskanian said. To remind, the Azeri
army soldiers were taken prisoners by the Karabakh defense army when
trying to cross the contact line on February 15.

–Boundary_(ID_3uKHqSdzbRy8//+mZva7rQ)–

Russia’s January GDP growth posted

RosBusinessConsulting Database
March 3, 2005

Russia’s January GDP growth posted

Russia occupies seventh place in the CIS in terms of GDP growth in
January 2005, the CIS statistics committee has reported. Russia’s GDP
grew 3 percent in the reported period, compared to January 2004.
Russia was ninth along with Kyrgyzstan in terms of GDP growth in
2004.

According to the committee, in January 2005 GDP growth was highest in
Belarus, namely 10.4 percent. GDP increased 9.1 percent in
Tajikistan, 7 percent in Azerbaijan, 6.5 percent in Ukraine, 5.5
percent in Kyrgyzstan, and 3.6 percent in Armenia. No data on GDP
growth in Moldova, Georgia and Kazakhstan were presented in the
report.

Professionalization of Minority Media in Armenia

International Journalists’ Network
Published by the International Center for Journalists

Armenia

Professionalization of Minority Media in Armenia

Mar 10, 2005 – Mar 11, 2005

Workshop

In Yerevan, Armenia. Organized by the Media Diversity Institute for editors
and media managers from minority media outlets in Armenia. Topics to be
covered will include: research, targeting content to consumers, marketing
and distribution, revenue streams and budgeting. For information on any of
these upcoming events, visit
or contact MDI at
[email protected], telephone +44 20 73800 200 or fax +44 20 73800
050.

http://www.media-diversity.org/events/MDI%20events2005.htm

Parliamentary Election In Kyrgyzstan Was Free and Open

PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION IN KYRGYZSTAN WAS FREE AND OPEN

Novosti

2005-02-28 11:20 * KYRGYZSTAN * ELECTION * ASSESSMENT *

BISHKEK, February 28 (RIA Novosti) – The parliamentary election, held
in Kyrgyzstan last Sunday, was legitimate, free and open. This is said
in the statement by the mission of observers from the Commonwealth of
Independent States, which the head of the headquarters of the mission
of observers from the CIS Asan Kozhakov read out to journalists
on Monday.

At the same time he pointed out that in the course of the voting the
observers from the CIS noted a number of violations, which, however,
could not influence the results of the election. In particular, some
ballot boxes were sealed with a violation of the established rules,
the putting of markings on the voters’ hands led to dragging out of the
voting, and problems relating to the rosters of voters emerged. Many
of the above-said shortcomings were eliminated on the spot.

The observers from the CIS visited 1,277 polling stations in 71 out
of the 75 majority constituencies.

The CIS mission included the official delegations from Azerbaijan,
Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

As Mr. Kozhakov explained, Ukraine officially stated that it would not
appoint its representatives to the CIS mission. So, he rejected the
accusation, voiced by a representative of the Ukrainian delegation
at the press conference, that the CIS mission ignores the Ukrainian
delegation’s opinion. “Ukraine carried out monitoring on a bilateral
basis,” Mr. Kozhakov explained.

$1.7 million raised for Hai Dat activities

$1.7 million raised for Hai Dat activities

28.02.2005  15:25    

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Over 180 Armenians from Armenia, Russia, Middle
East and Europe attended the banquet on February 26 in Paris to donate
funds for the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Bureau’s Hai
Dat activities.

As reported by the ARF press service, about $1.7 million was raised
and the donations continue. Cilicia Catholicos Aram I, ARF Bureau
representative Hrant Margarian, Armenian ministers, religious leaders,
politicians and public figures were among the participants.

Henry Papazian, the chairman of the organizing committee informed
that the keynote speaker, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
could not participate in the event due to health problems.

ARF Western Europe Central Committee representative Murad Papazian,
European Armenian Federation for Justice chairperson Hilda Choboian,
ARF Bureau representative Hrant Margarian took turns to speak on the
work completed.

Later in the day, Hrair Soghomonian read out the names of the
contributors and the sums they had donated; $555,000 were donated
from Armenia and Russia, $325,000 from Lebanon, $150,000 from Iran,
$200,000 from the Persian Golf Arab countries. There were also
donations from the UK, France, Belgium, Greece and other countries.

–Boundary_(ID_loGfxU4DwFNISgBb8ssPOA)–

Karabakh cannot be returned to Azerbaijan – US envoy

Karabakh cannot be returned to Azerbaijan – US envoy

Mediamax news agency
25 Feb 05

YEREVAN

The Armenian National Committee of San Francisco has reported that the
US ambassador to Armenia, John Evans, has stated that despite the
USA’s policy of recognizing the territorial integrity of states,
“everybody understands that Karabakh cannot be returned to Azerbaijan,
because this will be a disastrous step”.

Speaking at a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community
in San Francisco on 19 February, John Evans said: “If Yerevan and Baku
agree on the settlement, I think that everybody will be ready to back
them,” the Armenian National Committee told Mediamax news agency
today. “If they reach an agreement, we cannot change that,” the
American diplomat said.

Commenting on the sensational statement by the press secretary of the
Azerbaijani Defence Ministry, Ramiz Malikov, that “in 25 years Armenia
will no longer be on the map”, John Evans described it as “outrageous”
and stated that “it evoked all the bad memories of the Armenians”.

One puzzler doesn’t ruin Shield’s season

Sun-Sentinel.com

One puzzler doesn’t ruin Shield’s season

By Phoebe Flowers
— Rob Lowman Film Writer Los Angeles Daily News
Posted February 27 2005

There comes a segment near the end of the third season of The Shield that is
immediately recognizable as the moment the show went too far. That such a
thing is even possible in a cop drama that has in its past featured, for
example, criminal suspects having their faces seared on stove burners may
seem unlikely. But the final scene of the episode titled “Strays” takes a
character to a place both inexcusable and, more important, unbelievable.

If you look to the commentary track, featuring creator Shawn Ryan, producer
Glen Mazzara and actors Catherine Dent (Officer Danny Sofer) and Jay Karnes
(Detective Dutch Wagenbach), for explanation of this perplexing plot
development, you won’t find one. On the contrary, it features Ryan bragging
that “Strays” was the favorite episode of FX, the apparently freewheeling
network that has aired The Shield since 2002. Guest director David Mamet
(Spartan, State and Main) may have had something to do with their blind
enthusiasm.

And yet, “Strays” is at odds with a season that is otherwise as smart, wild
and enthralling as those that have preceded it. Ever since Detective Vic
Mackey (Emmy winner Michael Chiklis) stormed into an interrogation room in
the series premiere to assure a suspect that he was “a different kind of
cop,” The Shield has constituted the most entertaining law-enforcement show
on television. Look at The Wire, HBO’s intricate police procedural, as the
equivalent of reading an edifying story about sequoia trees in The New
Yorker. The Shield, on the other hand, is Britney’s unauthorized honeymoon
diary in Us Weekly. 24 wishes it were this audacious or addictive.

Chiklis, who also pinch-hits as a producer and director, is the star of the
show as Mackey, who with his lumpy bald head and stocky physique is easily
the least likely sex symbol since Tony Soprano. The season picks up with
Mackey and his colleagues on the “Strike Team,” a cowboyish lot with
gleefully unorthodox crime-fighting methods, having stolen a huge amount of
cash from Armenian gangsters. The next 14 episodes find them discovering
just how bad an idea that heist was.

The journey is somewhat better than the destination, however. “Breaking
Episode 315,” an hour-plus featurette focusing on the making of the season
finale, is a perhaps excessively detailed behind-the-scenes portrait. And it
doesn’t do anything to distract from the fact that the episode feels less
like catharsis than it does a setup for season four. But luckily, we only
have a few weeks until it premieres on FX.

The Shield — The Complete Third Season, not rated, 700 minutes, $59.98.

Phoebe Flowers can be reached at [email protected].

Funny but not essential

Director Barry Sonnenfeld left out what he considers the funniest scene in
Get Shorty, the clever 1995 adaptation of novelist Elmore Leonard’s wry take
on Hollywood. The reason? “It seems to me that if you’re trying to make a
movie to entertain people, you want to entertain people. As horrible as
recruited audiences are, I’m one of the directors that needs them. I need to
see which jokes are working and which aren’t.”

In Get Shorty (the sequel Be Cool is out next week without Sonnenfeld), the
director edited out a scene with Ben Stiller, John Travolta and Gene
Hackman. Stiller is a recent film-school grad shooting a low-budget horror
flick for Hackman’s low-rent producer Harry Zimm and Travolta’s hood Chili
Palmer, who is trying to muscle into Tinseltown.

“The scene was funny, but it didn’t serve the overall movie,” says
Sonnenfeld. “So get rid of it. Don’t bore your audience.” Not to worry, the
scene is included on the just-released special edition of the film.

As for how much reality Get Shorty has in relation to the cutthroat business
of making a Hollywood movie, Sonnenfeld’s answer is simple: “Get Shorty was
letting the film business off easily.”

Get Shorty (Special Edition), rated R, 105 minutes, $29.95.

Transeuro Energy Begins Prep Work on Armavir Prospect in Armenia

Transeuro Energy Begins Prep Work on Armavir Prospect in Armenia
Interfax Information Services, B.V.
Friday, February 25, 2005

The Canadian corporation Transeuro Energy (formerly Indusmin Energy) has
started preparation work to explore for oil and gas at a licensed block in
the Armavir region of Armenia, Andranik Agabalian, head of the fuel and
energy resource department at the Armenian Energy Ministry, told Interfax.

He said that when the weather improves the corporation will start to carry
out field work to decide on a location for a first well. Agabalian said that
Transeuro Energy has concentrated its efforts on searching for natural gas,
given the industrial structure in Armenia, which does not have any oil
refining capacity, but which has a developed gas transportation system. As a
result, gas production for industrial use is more promising than oil
production, he said.

Agabalian said that the company has promised to invest at least $10.5
million in prospecting for oil and gas in Armavir region. The company will
continue where the U.S.-registered Armenian-American Exploration Company
(AAEC) left off in the late 1990s. AAEC drilled a 3,524-meter exploration
well 30-km north of Yerevan, but did not discover any hydrocarbons there.
The company spent $28 million on drilling and seismic exploration.

Agabalian said that in March this year an agreement is to be signed with
Transeuro Energy to carry out exploration work at another block – in the
northeast of Armenia, covering the Tavush and Lori regions.

Armenian territory is split up into six license blocks. Transeuro Energy
chose the block in the northeast based on its own research and forecasts.

Indusmin Energy was renamed Transeuro Energy in fall 2004. The company
opened an office in Armenia a little later.