Armenian foreign minister in Iran says situation stable back home

Armenian foreign minister in Iran says situation stable back home

Azg, Yerevan
13 Apr 04

Text of Tatul Akopyan’s report in Armenian newspaper Azg on 13 April
headlined “We are at an uncertain stage on Karabakh”

The domestic political situation is stable in Armenia, Vardan Oskanyan
has said in Iran. Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan said
yesterday at Tehran’s Mehrabad airport that “We are at an uncertain
stage on the Karabakh issue.” In an interview to Iranian state TV,
Oskanyan noted that, after the presidential elections in Azerbaijan,
official Baku had not expressed a specific position on the Karabakh
settlement. “On 16 April in Prague I shall meet Azerbaijani Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov. We hope that after that meeting Baku will
specify its position,” Oskanyan said.

Asked about Yerevan’s attitude towards the American programme “Greater
Middle East”, Oskanyan replied: “We are not aware of the details of
the programme; we know about it from the press, there have been no
discussions with us in connection with it.”

Yesterday evening, during a meeting with Armenian church
representatives in Tehran, Oskanyan touched on the domestic political
situation in Armenia. “The domestic political situation is stable in
the country, in a short period of time we can overcome the prevailing
situation. The authorities are ready to negotiate with the opposition
without preconditions. The domestic political situation leaves an
impression of instability, but in reality it is stable,” Oskanyan
said.

The Armenian foreign minister said that “In the business sense we are
very close to construction of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline.” The
Armenian ambassador to Tehran, Gegam Garibdzhanyan, said the problem
in the gas pipeline construction had been solved. He said that Iran’s
oil minister would soon visit Armenia and the final document would be
signed and construction of the 141km gas pipeline would
start. Garibdzhanyan said that construction of the Kadzharan tunnel
would start this year as well.

Today Oskanyan will meet the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National
Security Council, Hasan Rowhani, Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi and
the first vice-president of Iran, Mohammad Reza Aref.

AYF to Hold Protest at Turkish Consulate

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Youth Federation
Western United States
104 N. Belmont St. Suite 206
Glendale, CA 91206
Contact: Raffi Semerdjian
Tel: 818.507.1933
Fax: 818.240.3442
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

AYF to Hold Protest at Turkish Consulate

The Armenian Youth Federation Western United States Garo Madenlian Public
Affairs Office announced Monday that on Saturday April 24th starting at 4pm
the AYF will organize a large-scale protest in front of the Turkish
Consulate in Los Angeles.

`Our protest will not only demand justice from the Turkish government but
from the US government as well,’ said Sevag Garabetian, Director of the 2004
Protest. `All of AYF’s programs, projects, and events serve this great cause
either directly or indirectly,’ explained Garabetian.

The protest, which has taken place now for close to thirty years, is where
thousands of Armenian-Americans, particularly Armenian youth converge to
demand justice for the Armenian Genocide.

`The lives and memories of our 1.5 million ancestors can never be replaced,’
said Vicken Sosikian, chairman of the AYF Western Region. `However, we will
relentlessly pursue our just rights to the international recognition and
condemnation of the Genocide, to our lands in Western Armenia, and the
proper allocation of reparations to the Armenians,’ explained Sosikian.

The protest will begin at 4pm at the Turkish Consulate located 4801 Wilshire
Blvd. in Los Angeles. Water and first aid will be available.

The Armenian Youth Federation of Western United States strives to serve
Armenian American Communities west of the Mississippi through education,
athletics, political activism, cultural activities and social settings. To
learn more about the Armenian Youth Federation please log on to

#####

http://www.ayfwest.org
www.AYFwest.org.

Dashnaks Ready For Concessions

A1 Plus | 16:10:49 | 06-04-2004 | Politics |

DASHNAKS READY FOR CONCESSIONS

Dashnaktsutyun party issued Monday a statement with package of proposals to
the opposition in it.

Dashnaks offer opposition representatives membership in the
president-affiliated Security Commettee headed by Defence Ministry Serge
Sargssyan as one of the ways out of political turmoil in Armenia.

Dashnaktsutyun party board member Armen Rustamyan and Dashnaktsutyun
parliamentary fraction member Levon Lazarian answered the questions
journalists put to them.

Q:Was the statement coordinated with the coalition?

A.R.: This is a call for dialogue, which is already offered by the coalition
other member parties.

Q: Do you view yesterday’s arrest of Republic party member Suren Surenyants,
attack on the head of the party’s Ararat office and today’s detention of six
opposition activists as a call for dialogue?

L.M.: If the opposition has no intention to abandon its ambitions of
obtaining power, it should dictate political situation.

Q: What way Dashnaktsutyun will act in the event of facing confrontation
with people?

A.R.: People don’t want confrontation. Dashnaks intend to do their best to
prevent confrontation. If we fail to avoid it, we will consider other
solutions.

Q: Don’t you think that deadlock situation is created?

A.R.: Incompatibility run high and tomorrow we can grow even worse. All
possible efforts should be made to prevent any clash.

Q: If clashes occur, don’t you think they can escalate into civil war?

A.R.: I don’t think confrontation can turn into civil war. There are some
rational ideas in the opposition stance but, at the same time, there is a
hard-line approach. Authorities consider the opposition as revolutionary
force. In all countries, the authorities’ main tool is the law. Our current
constitution gives the authorities sweeping powers while the opposition
activists put themselves above the law.

Q: If the coalition rejects your proposals, then what will be your attitude?

A.R.: Possible agreement could speed up our country’s development.

Q: Is it possible you will quit the coalition in case of failure to reach
accord?

A.R.: We are not fastened with the current status quo. Dashnaktsutyun party
is eager for compromise and ready to prove that right now.

Q: Asked about the idea of appointing opposition members to any post,
Defence Minister answered he found it ridiculous. How you imagine an
opposition representative in Security Committee?

A.R.: Any step will be well thought-out. Today’s situation needs concessions
from at least one side.

Q: Over what issues you are ready for compromise?

A.R.: Anticorruption campaign and constitutional reforms.

http://www.a1plus.am

SCADA system to ensure safety of gas-mine

ArmenPress
April 6 2004

SCADA SYSTEM TO ENSURE SAFETY OF GAS-MINE

YEREVAN, APRIL 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenian-Russian HayrusGazArd
company, the sole supplier of Russian natural gas to Armenia, plans
to put into action Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA)
satellite communication system in November. Deputy chief manager of
the company, Ashot Hovsepian, said the system’s installation will
cost some 800,000 euros.
He said gas transmission and distribution (T&D) companies depend
on the reliable operation of facilities over a widespread geographic
area. To maintain reliability of the T&D system, operators not only
require a regular and continuous flow of information as to how these
facilities are functioning, but they also must be able to contact
certain key facilities to make any operational changes needed to
maintain a properly balanced system.
Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems are
computer-based automated control systems that monitor and control the
transport of gas through pipelines. SCADA systems provide two basic
functions: real-time monitoring (sensing) and control at remote
sites.
The system is being installed by the German Siemens company, which
has chosen another German company, Plenexis, as a sub-contractor to
secure satellite communication.

The Charlotte Observer, N.C., 25-Year Job Column

Posted on Mon, Apr. 05, 2004

The Charlotte Observer, N.C., 25-Year Job Column

By Carol Smith, The Charlotte Observer, N.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune
Business News

Apr. 5 – EDWARD AZARIAN: Born Jan. 29, 1939, of Armenian immigrant
parents who escaped from Turkish Armenia during the genocide of 1915.
Has been with Clariant 31 years

THE ORGANIZATION: Clariant is a major producer of specialty chemicals
for uses ranging from clothing to cars, cosmetics to computers and
everything in between.

THE JOB: Accounting manager. My primary duties include the processing of
payments to Clariant suppliers.

OTHER COMPANIES: Principally with other Swiss companies including
Hoffmann LaRoche and Lonza.

AN ANECDOTE: A couple of years ago, I no sooner arrived in Las Vegas on
vacation than I received a message from one of my co-workers to call
ASAP because there was a problem. A product cost had been overstated by
some $20 million because an employee used a unit cost of $40 a pound
rather than 40 cents a pound. My co-worker recognized that the situation
was serious and she also knew, even though I was on vacation, that I was
available to help her deal with it.

I made a call to a programmer at 5 a.m. Las Vegas time to instruct him
to place an inventory hold on the product so that we could correct the
error before any product activity occurred. All turned out well because
we worked quickly and as a team and, to this day, she says she never
would have known how to handle this without the training and knowledge I
had shared with her.

BEST ADVICE: The best advice I received was from my Armenian parents.
They reminded me that as an Armenian, I should perform all tasks given
to me (no matter how mediocre) to the best of my ability.

MEMORABLE TIME OFF: Attending an auction to purchase some stamps for my
collection.

SURPRISING FACT: As a teenager, I raised chickens, sheep, pigs and even
had a Black Angus steer that I named “Sputnik,” having purchased him the
day of the first Russian space launch.

For submission information, contact Carol Smith:
[email protected]

—–

To see more of The Charlotte Observer, or to subscribe to the newspaper,
go to

(c) 2004, The Charlotte Observer, N.C. Distributed by Knight
Ridder/Tribune Business News. CLN, RHHVF, LONN,

http://www.charlotte.com

Armenia reiterates demand for Abkhaz railway opening

The Georgian Messenger
5 April 2004

By M. Alkhazashvili

ON April 1, Armenia’s Security Council Secretary and Defense Minister
Serzh Sarkisian paid a visit to Georgia and held negotiations with
local high-ranking officials regarding the restoration of the
Transcaucasian Railway which goes from Russia to Armenia via Georgia
and separatist-controlled Abkhazia. Other issues of their meeting
included the reduction of tariffs on cargo transported through
Georgian highways.

The issue of restoring the Abkhazia stretch of the railway first came
up one year ago at a summit held in Sochi between Russian President
Vladimir Putin and then Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze. At
that time, the two leaders agreed that this project was to be
conducted in parallel with the “safe and dignified” return of Georgian
refugees to the Gali region of Abkhazia.

Efforts to return displaced persons to the area have not met with
success, and on Friday the Secretary of the Georgian Security Council
Vano Merabishvili asked Armenia to use its leverage to facilitate this
return. “Armenia should use its special relationship with Russia and
play a more active and positive role in resolving the problem,” he
told reporters after the meeting. As land-locked Armenia has so much
to gain from the opening of the railway, Georgian officials suggested
to Sarkisian that his country use its influence on its strategic ally,
Russia, in order to accelerate the process of resolving the conflict.

At the same time when Sarkisian was in Tbilisi demanding the opening
of the railway, the Armenian activist groups in Abkhazia Krunk and
Mashtots, presented a list of demands to the Abkhaz separatist
government. They reminded the leaders that local Armenians played a
key role in “liberating Abkhazia from the Georgians.” This was despite
the fact that during the Abkhaz war of 1993, local Armenians fought on
both sides of the conflict. The growth in the Armenian population of
Abkhazia has caused the concern of separatist leaders and the fact
that resettled Armenians are occupying homes belonging to Georgians
forced out of the region could cause serious problems if and when the
Georgian refugees return to the region.

Georgian officials promised the Armenian guest that tariffs on
auto-transit cargo would be reduced and in addition, Merabishvili
apologized to Sarkisian for the inconveniences experienced by his
country when goods bound for Armenia were held up due to the recent
events in Adjara. As the crisis is not yet fully over, Merabishvili
advised Sarkisian to seek alternative routes for goods normally
transported via the Batumi Port and Sarpi Customs Check-point.

Weekend: Space: Food:

Weekend: Space: Food: SWEET TEMPTATION: Trays of sticky Middle Eastern
pastries will not only infuse your kitchen with the sweet aromas of
the Levant, but they will also offer an exotic alternative to the
usual Easter parade of cakes and chocolate, says NAYLA AUDI

The Guardian – United Kingdom

Apr 03, 2004 NAYLA AUDI

I’ve always been in the enviable position of coming from two religions
– at least, when it came to the delicious world of Lebanese sweets. As
a child, I longed for the Muslim Eid (festivities) to begin. I’d wait
impatiently for my paternal grandparents to bring two huge, flat trays
from the sweet shop. One tray would be filled with a dizzying array of
baklava, all drenched with sticky syrup made from sugar, water and
orange blossom, and sweets cooked with a heavy ashta (clotted)
cream. The other would hold several kilos of maamoul – traditional
semolina-based pastries – all of them individually wrapped. The
baklavas would be reserved for the family, but the dozens of maamoul
were duly handed out, along with a steaming cup of Arabic coffee, to
the many visitors who would come over the Eid to wish us good
fortune. (According to Lebanese tradition, guests should be served a
meal before the maamoul are passed around, but these days they only
get the biscuits.)

Our guests would either eat the maamoul there and then, or take some
home. Either way, I’d always manage to hide a few of these delicious
little pastries for myself, and would later munch them in my room,
savouring the crumbling, shortbread-style pastry filled with either
crushed walnuts, almonds and pistachios or crushed dates, and then
covered with powdered sugar.

No sooner is the Eid over than the Christian festival of Easter
begins. As tradition dictates, women in my mother’s family gathered a
few days earlier and began the ritual of making the Christian version
of maamoul. These are similar to the Muslim kind, just smaller. Once
the semolina and butter was mixed, my strict Armenian Orthodox
grandmother would then pass the dough through incense, to “purify it
against the evil spirits”. The dough was then shaped – either with
old-fashioned wooden moulds or by hand – and stuffed with crushed
dates or nuts. The walnut, almond and pistachio-stuffed maamoul were
formed into oval, egg-like shapes; the date variety were more circular
and doughnut-like. The shape was important: the round maamoul
signified the crown worn by Jesus as he was led to be crucified, while
the egg-shaped one symbolised the sponge he was given to quench his
thirst. Each woman would then be handed a small pair of tweezers and,
with meticulous care, we’d pinch the surface of the maamoul, the
resulting effect symbolising the thorns on Jesus’s crown. The dozens
of maamoul were stored away and taken out to offer to well-wishers.

Unlike the Muslim version, however, the Christian maamoul are not
wrapped. They are eaten on Easter day itself – as a way to break the
40-day Lent. Real eastern Christian fasting requires abstention from
animal products, including butter, eggs and milk, so the maamoul
pastry made with butter was a perfect way to break the fast. Modern
women, however, see Lent as a way to abstain from sweets altogether
(as a great weight-loss technique) and use the maamoul to ease
themselves back into the world of desserts.

Today, such traditions remain relatively unchanged. As Easter
approaches, the main question among Christian women is still, “Have
you made the maamoul yet?” (I must add that sampling each other’s work
, and seeing whose are best, is a great source of gossip.) Sweet shops
do a roaring trade to those who didn’t perform the Easter ritual.

Lebanese sweets have earned a distinct reputation worldwide. One
well-known Beirut pastry shop, Bohsali, receives emails from all over
the globe asking for its sweets to be shipped over to ex-pats and
non-Lebanese alike (abohsali.com.lb). It was the same Bohsali family
who, in the middle of the 19th century, first “Lebanised” Turkish and
Greek sweets. Back then, they had a little shop near the port, and the
owner, Salim, came across baklava in shipments from Turkey and
Greece. The sweets were a big hit among Beirutis and, in time, Salim
learned to make his own. Soon, he and his son had expanded their
repertoire, and the store’s reputation began to spread. (In 1914,
while Lebanon was still under Ottoman rule, it was officially
appointed supplier to the king.) The sweets began to grab the
attention of the Lebanese bourgeoisie, who had until then ordered
their baked goods from swinging Cairo, thus establishing Lebanese
sweets as a favourite delicacy.

Last December, the Bohsalis won first prize at the Academie Lebanese
de la Gastronomie (a branch of the international Academie de la
Gastronomie). Today, there are dozens of Lebanese sweet shops
throughout the country and their pastries are distributed worldwide.

Another Lebanese sweet offered regularly is ghoraybeh, an off-white,
crumbly biscuit made with butter and flour. Whether bought in or
homemade, the pastry can either be large or small – the small ones are
only slightly bigger than a nut. Again, it was the Bohsali family who
were behind both the size and initial popularity of ghoraybeh.

Whichever sweet is offered, however, no visit to a Lebanese home is
complete without a cup of hot Arabic coffee. It’s usually made in a
special kettle, or raghweh, which you can buy in most Middle Eastern
shops.

Ghoraybeh

Makes 40 biscuits.

200g butter or lard

100g icing sugar

300g fine semolina

100g shelled pistachio nuts

Work the butter until soft, ideally by hand. Blend in the sugar, then
add the semolina making sure you get a homogenous mixture. Shape the
dough into small round biscuits or into half-moons, sticking the edges
together. Decorate each biscuit with a pistachio nut.

Bake at medium heat (180C/350F/ gas mark 4) for 10 to 15 minutes. The
biscuits should not be allowed to brown – a proper ghoraybeh retains
the initial off-white colour of the dough.

Maamoul

Traditionally, these pastries are filled with a mixture of almond,
pistachio and walnut or with dates. These days, orange blossom water
and rosewater are sold as a matter of course in most major
supermarkets; failing that, try a Middle Eastern store or
delicatessen. These quantities are enough to make 80 pastries – that
may sound a lot, but once you’ve tried one, you’ll get through them in
no time at all.

For the pastry

500g butter, melted

1kg fine semolina

250ml rosewater

250ml orange blossom water

Pour the melted butter over the semolina, mix well, cover, and leave
the mixture at room temperature overnight. The next day, add the
rosewater and the orange water and blend well. The resulting dough is
the basis for the biscuits.

Now make the stuffing of your choice:

Almond, pistachio and walnut stuffing

200g crushed almond, pistachio and walnut

2 tbsp sugar

1 tbsp orange blossom water

1 tbsp rosewater

Combine the ingredients in a bowl, then stuff the mixture into the
prepared dough either by hand, or with a traditional wooden maamoul
mould. Shape into round or oval biscuits. Bake on medium heat for 10
to 15 minutes.

Crushed date stuffing

200g crushed dates (called tamer, sold ready-crushed in Middle Eastern
stores )

50g butter

1 tbsp orange blossom water

1 tbsp rosewater

Mix the dates, butter, orange blossom water and rosewater, then stuff
and bake as with the nut stuffing above.

Lebanese coffee

You can find this in Middle Eastern stores where it is sold plain or
flavoured with cardamom. Use a small kettle, or buy a raghweh. Use
small coffee cups, one of which should be used to measure out the
correct amount of water. Makes four cups.

6 coffee cups water

7 full tsp Lebanese coffee

6 tsp sugar (optional)

Place the ingredients in a small kettle or pan, then bring to a boil
and take off the heat. Bring the resulting liquid to the boil a
further two times, then begin by transferring the coffee-infused foam
from the top of the pot in to each of the cups. Now pour in the
coffee, leave for several moments, in order to allow the grounds to
settle, and serve piping hot

BAKU: Azeri defence chief’s visit heralds new stage in ties with USA

Azeri defence chief’s visit heralds new stage in ties with USA, analyst says

Yeni Musavat, Baku
30 Mar 04

Azerbaijan and the USA are about to expand their military ties and
Russia cannot prevent this, prominent Azerbaijani political analyst
Rasim Musabayov has told Yeni Musavat newspaper in the wake of the
Azerbaijani defence minister’s visit to the USA. Upgrading the
infrastructure and improving the level of the local personnel are on
Washington’s agenda, the analyst said. The following is the text of
Z. Safaroglu’s report by Azerbaijani newspaper Yeni Musavat on 30
March headlined “What did Abiyev bring from America?” and subheaded
“Rasim Musabayov: The stage of closer cooperation with the USA begins
in Azerbaijan”; subheadings inserted editorially:

Azerbaijani Defence Minister Safar Abiyev has completed his one-week
visit to the USA. He has had various meetings at the Pentagon,
National Security Council, US Congress and State Department. The
meetings discussed expanding cooperation in fighting terrorism and the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Education of Azerbaijani
officers in the USA was another topic that was discussed.

Positive development

There can be no doubt that the defence minister’s visit to the USA is
in itself a positive development, at least for two reasons. First,
Abiyev’s visit had been put off for so long. Second, the visit
coincided with the period when Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev was
making overtures to Russia. It is plain to see that Washington by no
means is prepared to let Azerbaijan leave its military and strategic
orbit. The nature of topics which were discussed in the USA shows that
apart from terrorism issues there is a conflict of interests in the
region with Russia in terms of security strategy.

Obviously, Washington intends to continue its policy of strengthening
its military positions in the South Caucasus, especially in Georgia
and Azerbaijan. This is also confirmed by reports in the Russian
media which – right after Abiyev left for the USA – said that the USA
would station its mobile military base in Azerbaijan, even though US
Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, regarded as the second
person in the US State Department, said at the last press conference
before his departure from Azerbaijan that America did not intend to
set up a mobile military base in Azerbaijan.

Visit heralds new stage in relations

Can Abiyev’s visit to the USA be described as a success? Are there any
aspects to it which remain secret?

Political analyst Rasim Musabayov believes that first of all the visit
heralds the beginning of a new stage of closer cooperation between the
USA and Azerbaijan. “It may be that America – as Armitage and other
officials have said – does not intend to station its troops in
Azerbaijan, but the agenda includes upgrading Azerbaijan’s
infrastructure to the level where it can be used by the USA, ensuring
air defence for that infrastructure and bringing the local personnel
into line with US standards.”

In Musabayov’s view, such cooperation is beneficial not only to the
USA, but Azerbaijan as well. “The USA will implement in Azerbaijan a
plan similar to what they did in Georgia under the Train and Equip
programme. We are to be interested in that.”

Russia cannot prevent it

“At any rate, Abiyev gives the impression of an advocate of closer
military cooperation with the West.” As for the reaction which such
contacts could spark in Russia, Musabayov said that the Kremlin would
naturally dislike this relationship and envy it. “However, Russia is
in no position to prevent this. How can it object to that? Moreover,
the USA will do this all within quotas.”

Speaking about military education of Azerbaijani servicemen in the
USA, Musabayov said: “It is known that the USA assists Azerbaijan in
securing its borders and exchanges information in this regard. In
addition, they help us in security issues in the Caspian Sea. In my
opinion, this assistance will continue. Although Armenia stated its
protest to Armitage in this regard, the reality is that while we may
receive more assistance in absolute terms, but when calculated per
capita, Armenia is ahead of Azerbaijan. This means that there are
opportunities to increase that assistance.”

Democracy and military ends

Finally, we should mention a subtle point. The Azerbaijani public and
the democratic camp are concerned that America may sacrifice its
interest in democracy in order to achieve military ends. Are there
serious grounds for such concern? Incidentally, Abiyev could be asked
the following question in Washington: is his ministry not concerned
about lawsuits that it filed against Yeni Musavat newspaper, colossal
damages that the court obliged the newspaper to pay, and the
newspaper’s plans to close down as a result?

Musabayov replied our question as follows: “From a tactical
standpoint, there can be grounds for such concern. US President George
Bush has said that Washington will not forget its strategic interest
in democracy and human rights. Yet, I believe that this will be done
in the form of recommendations, rather than open criticism. Washington
wants Azerbaijan to modernize and has not given up this
pursuit. However, it wants modernization to be accomplished by the
Azerbaijani government.”

IEC negotiates 20m Euros for reconstruction of Yerevan 1 Hydro power

ArmenPress
March 29 2004

IEC NEGOTIATES 20 MILLION EUROS CREDIT FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF
YEREVAN-1 HYDRO POWER PLANT

YEREVAN, MARCH 29, ARMENPRESS: The International Energy
Corporation (IEC), a Yerevan-based subsidiary of the Russian RAO UES,
said it is now negotiating a 20 million euro credit from German KFW
bank, which it wants for a major reconstruction of Yerevan-1 hydro
power plant, one in a chain of small hydro power plants, known as
Sevan-Hrazdan cascade. The IEC said negotiations are in the final
stage.
Yerevan-1 plant is the main supplier of electricity to the
capital. IEC experts estimate that the full reconstruction of the
Cascade, built between 1930-1962, which provides for almost 20
percent of all produced power, they will need tens of millions of US
Dollars.
The German bank had already allocated some 18 million euros for
reconstruction of Kanaker hydro power plant, which IEC has pledged to
return together with interest rates.
IEC was founded by Russia’s giant RAO UES to manage the
Sevan-Hrazdan cascade and was granted a 15 year-long permission for
energy generation.
A representative of the IEC said no negotiations are carried with
Turkey on sale of Armenian electricity, but added that the export of
Armenian electricity to Turkey is considered promising and that a
relevant scheme is being now discussed. He also said the export will
face no technical problems requiring only small-sized financial and
know-how investments.
Armenian electricity production capacities allow now to export
electricity to Iran and Georgia concurrently with meeting domestic
demands. With regard to Iran there is electricity swap in summer and
winter. The volume of electricity sold to Georgia has grown to 3
million kw/per hour daily.

BAKU: On goals of US dep. secretary of state’s visit to Azerbaijan

AzerTag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
March 26 2004

ON GOALS OF US DEPUTY SECRETARY OF STATE’S VISIT TO AZERBAIJAN
[March 26, 2004, 12:55:38]

Ambassador of the United State of America to Azerbaijan Reno Harnish
told journalists that US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
would arrive in Baku to discuss military cooperation between the two
countries, combat against international terrorism, implementation of
oil and gas projects and way of solution to the Armenia-Azerbaijan,
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Asked whether USA intend to deploy its
military installations in Azerbaijan, the Ambassador gave a negative
answer adding that journalist draw too much attention to this
question. According to him, however, the U.S. militaries are going to
conducts trainings in military units of the Azerbaijan Army to
provide high-level defense of maritime, land and air frontiers of the
country.

In conclusion, Mr. Harnish stressed that Washington was interested in
building Azerbaijan National Army in line with western standards.