Armenian president confident about China ties

Armenian president confident about China ties

Armenian Radio First Programme, Yerevan
1 Oct 04

President Robert Kocharyan’s state visit to the People’s Republic of
China has ended. He announced in Shanghai yesterday that Armenia has a
lot to learn from China. The president familiarized himself with big
construction sites and one of the world’s biggest business centres in
Shanghai.

Our countries are far away from each other, divided by vast territory,
culture and civilization, but we have a common point of view and
approaches to issues of vital importance, the Armenian president
stressed.

He expressed his confidence that Armenian-Chinese relations have
prospects of development. Robert Kocharyan is sure that the
negotiations with Chinese President Hu Jintao and other Chinese
government officials in Beijing will continue.

Parliament’s Decision May Impede Armenian MPs’ Participation In NATO

Parliament’s Decision May Impede Armenian MPs’ Participation In NATO Seminar

Baku today
30/09/2004 09:03

The participation of Armenian parliamentarians in the “Rose Roth”
seminar of NATO Parliamentary Assembly to be held in Baku in
November depends on the decision to be adopted by the Milli Majlis
(Azerbaijan’s parliament). AssA-Irada — This statement was made by
Araz Azimov, Deputy Foreign Minister also the Azerbaijani President’s
special envoy on Karabagh issue. Azimov noted that the Azerbaijani
MPs’ position will play a particular role in impeding the visit by
Armenian parliamentarians to Baku as well.

“The Azerbaijani parliament is the organizer of the seminar and should
express its position on the matter,” said Azimov, adding that Armenians
won’t be able to attend the seminar if Azerbaijani parliamentarians
reject their participation.

Araks Valley Is The Problem

ARAKS VALLEY IS THE PROBLEM

A1 Plus | 15:03:09 | 29-09-2004 | Politics |

“The situation around Karabakh arose because of stupid political
leadership”, Jirayr Sefilyan, Coordinator of social initiative for
“Protection of Liberated Territories” announced in National Press Club.

He considers there is no issue of liberated territories for the super
states. “Araks valley is the problem. Turkey doesn’t care whether
Aghdam is in the hands of Armenians or Azerbaijanians’. The task of
the super states is to take Araks valley, South Araks, South Syuniq
and Nakhijevan into their hands. The one controlling that territory
will control Southern Caucasus”.

Sefilyan thinks the solutions to Karabakhi conflict unfavorable to
Armenians are imposed on our Authorities in the form of pressures
because they are not legitimately elected. Sefilyan considers the
suggestion of Vladimir Putin on returning “the occupied territories”
and to hold referendums in Karabakh and Azerbaijan as pressure upon
Kocharyan.

Mr. Sefilyan thinks only leaving of the present regime as soon as
possible will save Karabakh. Jirayr Sefilyan excludes prospects of
returning the liberated territories. “If the Armenian people decide
that those territories must not be returned, no meter will be given
back”, Sefilyan announced.

By the way, Jirayr Sefilyan liked the statement of Vardan Oskanyan
saying “Karabakh has no price” and his speech. He called other
statements and actions of Authorities as nonsense.

Kerkorian’s main man looks to post-MGM life

International Herald Tribune, France
Sept 27 2004

Kerkorian’s main man looks to post-MGM life

Andrew Ross Sorkin NYT
He says sale wasn’t goal for him or boss

LAS VEGAS Alex Yemenidjian, the chairman and chief executive of
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, was sitting at his private pool outside his
high-roller villa at the Bellagio Hotel and Casino here recently.

He had just struck a $5 billion deal to sell MGM, the Hollywood studio
famous for its roaring-lion mascot and film franchises including
James Bond, to Sony and a group of investors after an agonizingly
long auction.

But he was not interested in talking about the deal. He wanted to
discuss why he never wanted to sell the company and why his boss,
the elusive billionaire Kirk Kerkorian, who controls MGM and who
has now bought and sold the studio three times since 1969, did not
especially want to give it up, either.

“There is a perception out there that Kirk is a seller if somebody
gives him a good price,” said Yemenidjian, cutting a Bond-like figure
in a double-breasted blue blazer with a yellow silk handkerchief
protruding from the breast pocket. “That isn’t true. I think it bothers
him that Hollywood thinks that he treated MGM as an investment toy. Not
one time did either Kirk or the board tell me, ‘I want you to clean
this company up and prepare it for sale.’ Not once.”

Yemenidjian, 48, has been dogged by his reputation as MGM’s
flipper-in-chief ever since Kerkorian installed him as its boss
in 1999. Back then, the company was beaten and battered, written
off as a has-been, a debt-laden stepchild of the studio that once
produced films like “Gone With the Wind” and “The Wizard of Oz.” And
when Yemenidjian arrived on the scene, he was a virtual unknown
in Hollywood. If anything, he was considered Kerkorian’s henchman,
an accountant experienced in making deals, not movies.

Yet within five and a half years, Yemenidjian turned around the
business by drastically scaling back productions, scoring a few
unexpected hits like the comedy “Barbershop” and the documentary
“Bowling for Columbine,” and by milking its library of more than
4,000 films.

He won respect on Wall Street, if not fans among the Hollywood elite.
Then he performed the final scene of the script that had been written
by critics the day he arrived: He sold the studio. In doing so,
he made a bundle for Kerkorian – who banked at least $2 billion –
as well as a small fortune for the company’s minority shareholders.

“Bringing an outsider’s viewpoint to Hollywood may not have
necessarily endeared him to the agents, movie stars and the rest
of the quote-unquote Hollywood community,” said Jack Liebau, the
principal at Liebau Asset Management, one of MGM’s largest minority
shareholders. “But from a shareholder’s standpoint, he’s exactly what
you’d want in the CEO of a publicly held company.”

But as Yemenidjian leaned back in his faux 17th-century Tuscan chair,
he said he still wished he could have ordered a rewrite and made his
own blockbuster acquisitions instead of selling.

“We tried to acquire other companies and they weren’t available,”
he said in a rare interview.

He listed targets that he said he had pursued vigorously: Vivendi
Universal, Sony Pictures, Paramount Pictures.

“There was nothing left to buy,” he said with a shrug. “There was no
place for us to go.”

How Yemenidjian, who, like Kerkorian, is of Armenian descent, became
Kerkorian’s top lieutenant, to run the last independent studio in
Hollywood and to sell it in a heated auction between Time Warner and
Sony could be its own dramatic release. There is even a potential
sequel: for all the sniping in the industry, Yemenidjian is being
talked of as a possible successor to Michael Eisner, who will step
down as chief executive of Walt Disney in 2006.

Yemenidjian was born in Argentina; his father was a shoemaker who
had fled Armenia. The family moved to Los Angeles when Alex was 13.

Yemenidjian graduated from California State University at Northridge
in 1977 and founded his own accounting firm. In 1989, Yemenidjian
went to a lunch that would change his life. A mutual friend of his
and Kerkorian’s, George Mason, a managing director of Bear Stearns,
planned for them to meet.

Two days later, he recounted, “Kirk asked me if I would take a leave
of absence from my firm for six months to work on a special project.”

Yemenidjian continued: “He never told me what the project was and
I never asked. When I showed up on January 1, 1990, I found out the
project was selling MGM.”

That was the second time Kerkorian would sell MGM. He had bought it in
1969, sold it to Ted Turner in 1986 and bought back a large chunk of
it only months later, when Turner’s financing fell apart. The second
sale, with Yemenidjian’s help, was to the Italian financier Giancarlo
Parretti in 1990. But Kerkorian would buy it back again in 1996.

The two hit it off immediately, creating what friends and associates
describe as almost a father-son relationship.

“He was the perfect man for Kirk – just perfect,” said Mason, who
plays a doubles tennis game at Kerkorian’s house every Sunday with
Yemenidjian and other friends. “People say Alex would throw himself
off a cliff for Kirk. He’s always had that attitude.”

Kerkorian, 87, who has not given an interview to the news media
in decades, said through a spokeswoman, “Alex is one of the most
accomplished CEOs I have worked with, and I am very happy with what
he and his team have achieved at MGM.”

Throwing himself into the role of Kerkorian’s right-hand man,
Yemenidjian worked on his mentor’s attempted takeover of Chrysler,
an effort to rescue Trans World Airlines and a bid for Pan Amercan
Airways. In 1995, Kerkorian sent him to Las Vegas to become the
president and chief operating officer of the hotel and casino company
now known as MGM Mirage.

But his Las Vegas act was cut short in 1999. Kerkorian had assigned
him to help find a replacement for Frank Mancuso, who was retiring
as MGM’s chief. Kerkorian rejected all the candidates and gave the
job to Yemenidjian, who had never worked in movies.

It was an audacious move. Yemenidjian hired Chris McGurk, president
and chief operating officer at Universal Pictures, as his own chief
operating officer, and the two went about shaking up MGM’s business
model.

Out went high-priced, risky picture deals. The James Bond films,
which had been released every two years, were moved to a three-year
schedule. Production budgets were cut.

The centerpiece of the turnaround was a renewed focus on additional
sales from the company’s library, typically an afterthought at other
studios. Bonuses were attached to sales of digital video disks and
marketing was redesigned. By 2003, the plan had succeeded. They may not
have created the next Miramax, but the company was no longer bleeding.

The New York Times

Turkey’s Admission to EU Favorable for Armenia: Armenian DM

TURKEY’S ADMISSION TO EU FAVORABLE FOR ARMENIA: ARMENIAN DEFENSE
MINISTER

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 24. ARMINFO. Turkey’s admission to EU is favorable
for Armenia, said Secretary of the Armenian Presidential Security
Council, Defense Minister Serge Sargsyan during his meeting with Vice
Chairman of the Assembly of West-European Union, Head of the Italian
delegation to the Union, Marco Zaker yesterday.

The Armenian Defense Ministry told ARMINFO that Minister Sargsyan
pointed out the necessity of establishment of diplomatic relations
with Turkey without preconditions. However, to solve all the issues
official Ankara must recognize the Armenian Genocide, Sargsyan
said. In his turn, Marco Zaker said that he fully agrees with the
Armenian minister and will include this issue in his report. Serge
Sargsyan said that Armenians consider themselves Europeans, though to
enter the European family, Armenia is still to pass a great way. Zaker
said that his mission is to prepare a report on security issues in the
region. He said that stability and security of the Caucasus are
important for Europe. Sarge Sargsyan added that security issue is one
of the most important issues for Armenia, and, naturally, this issue
is in the focus of attention. He said that the South Caucasus is a
very sensitive region, especially in the context of international
problems. The program of Karabakh conflict must be solved exclusively
in a peaceful way on the basis of mutual concessions, the Armenian
minister added. He informed Marco Zaker of the three important
principles advanced by the Armenian party. At first, Karabakh cannot
be part of Azerbaijan. Second, Karabakh cannot exist isolated and must
have a land boundary with Armenia. And, the third, it is necessary to
ensure very strict guarantees of security. As regards Armenia’s
relations with Turkey, the minister said that Turkey’s admission to
the EU is favorable for Armenia. The sides discussed the issues of
struggle against terrorism.

Next 3 days parliament not to view issue of sending military to Iraq

PanArmenian News
Sept 25 2004

WITHIN NEXT THREE DAYS ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT NOT TO VIEW ISSUE OF
SENDING ARMENIAN MILITARY SPECIALISTS TO IRAQ

25.09.2004 13:44

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The issue of sending Armenian medical officers and
combat engineers to Iraq is not on the agenda of the forthcoming
3-day session of the National Assembly, chairman of the commission
for defense, national security and home affairs Mher Shahgeldian
reported. At the same time the agenda includes 23 bills and 16
international conventions. To note, according to the statement made
by Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian on September 22, the
issue of sending the Armenian servicemen to Iraq is exclusively
within the frames of humanitarian aid assigned for the reconstruction
of the country.

Armenia’s foreign debt totals over 1bn dollars

Armenia’s foreign debt totals over 1bn dollars

Yerkir web site
24 Sep 04

YEREVAN

As of 30 June 2004, Armenia’s foreign debt totalled 1.07bn dollars, of
which loans received under Armenia’s state guarantee amounted to
858.9m dollars (80.2 per cent). The Armenian Central Bank’s foreign
debt amounted to 211.4m dollars (19.8 per cent), Armenpress news
agency reports.

The Armenian Finance and Economy Ministry reports that Armenia’s state
debt has dropped by 0.8 per cent as against the same period in 2003
and by 2.5 per cent as against 31 December 2003.

As of 30 June 2004, 90.1 per cent of Armenia’s foreign debt are loans
from different creditors, and the remaining 9.9 per cent falls to the
share of loans from double sources.

[Passage omitted: minor details]

Armenian president to visit China from 26 Sep

Armenian president to visit China from 26 Sep

Xinhua news agency
21 Sep 04

(New China News Agency)

Beijing, 21 September: At the invitation of Chinese President Hu
Jintao, President of the Republic of Armenia Robert Sedrakovich
Kocharyan will pay a state visit to China from 26 to 30 September,
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan told a regular press
conference here Tuesday [21 September].

What Will Kond Residents Do?

WHAT WILL KOND RESIDENTS DO?

A1 Plus | 19:25:39 | 15-09-2004 | Politics |

Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan, Defense Minister Serj Sargssyan
and Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan didn’t partake in exchange of
questions and answers in Parliament.

Only “National Unity” MP Napoleon Azizyan from Opposition was
present. His question concerned the problem of 1500 residents of Kond
Commune of Yerevan and he criticized activity of Mayor.

“Mr. Zakharyan, you weren’t born in Yerevan and you can’t know
psychology of Kond people. They can treat guests but will put
ungrateful people in their place”, he addressed Yerevan Mayor.

Mr. Azizyan announced that Mayor had launched a campaign against
the old residents of Yerevan and wants to exile them to resettle the
old Yerevan with other people. “What will be the fate of 1500 Kond
people?”, Azizyan asked.

NATO delegate remarks on Armenian Genocide

NATO DELEGATE REMARKS ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

A1 Plus TV, Armenia
Sept 15 2004

YEREVAN, 15.09.04. Speaking at a news conference on Tuesday after
meeting with Armenia`s officials, head of Germany`s NATO delegation
Markus Meckel, said Armenia plays a key role in the stability of the
South Caucasus, adding that neighbors should maintain good relations
for common security. A visiting delegation of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the NATO member states arrived Monday in Yerevan. Meckel
acknowledged the Armenian genocide, and maintained it must be
recognized by the international community. Meckel, a lawmaker, is a
member of Germany`s Social Democrat party, and a former East German
Foreign Minister.