1.015 Vacancies Offered by July 1, 2004

1.015 VACANCIES OFFERED BY JULY 1, 2004

YEREVAN, JULY 30. ARMINFO. A total of 1,015 vacancies had been offered
by employers by July 1, 2004, 789 of them in trades.

The RA Employment Service reports that a total of 2,500 Armenian
job-seekers had been involved in the UN “Allowance for Work” program
by July 1, 2004. Special sewing courses have been organized for eight
workers, who later were employed. Twenty four disabled persons are
currently attending the sewing courses. 266 job-seekers, including
ten disabled persons, have taken computer training courses.

Skilled programmers, dealers, translators, insurance agents, brokers,
doctors turners, welders, jewelers and service workers are in great
demand on the market. An Armenian-Swedish-Lithuanian employment
program is being implemented as part of international assistance as
well.

ANKARA: If Accelerated Diplomacy Derails…

Zaman, Turkey
July 30 2004

If Accelerated Diplomacy Derails…

ALI H. ASLAN

What Transportation Minister Binali Yildirim said in defense of the
government after the train disaster was right in a way. A person who
does nothing, makes no mistakes either. However, just as one who
works has the right to make a mistake, it is also incumbent upon that
person to realize the mistake and try not to do it again.

When the issue is something that directly affects people’s lives,
like mass transportation, it is natural that expectations are high.
In issues concerning a whole nation’s destiny, like foreign policy,
it is much more essential to realize the mistakes on time and make
the necessary corrections.

Erdogan government is generally doing a good job on foreign policy as
well as in mass transportation. Our accelarated EU train is advancing
toward the station where membership negotiations will start. It is
doing so in great difficulty while struggling to repair the
broken-down political and economic infrastructure of the country. The
delay accumulated for so many years is being recovered. A dangerous
referendum curve on another delayed issue like Cyprus, was passed
without derailment. Turkey gradually has become a country that exerts
more influence in the region and has enhanced its contribution to
international peace. Relations between Turkey and the United States,
which has changed course during the parliamentary motion crisis, at
least seemingly working fine again. However, there is an issue that
has the potential to ruin this good course. And that is
Turkish-Israeli relations.

Don’t say, “Is it your job to write about Turkish-Israeli relations
from Washington?” If Turkey and Israel sneeze, many in Washington
catch cold. The virus spreads to the Turkish diplomatic mission,
lobbyists as well as official/private Americans dealing with Turkey.

As you know, the relation between

U.S.-Israel is even something more than a “strategic partnership.”
Actually, it’s a “strategic brotherhood.” Even though they live far
away from each other, they are like single-egg twins, who feel each
other’s pains. Almost everything that bothers the U.S. also bothers
Israel. The United States feels the same for anything that perturbs
Israel.

It is certain that what has been bothering Israel of late are Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s harsh statements. Using the term
‘state terrorism,’ to describe the things Israel does in Palestine,
the prime minister could be appeasing most of the Turkish people as
well as others in the region. However, this situation makes people,
who favor the wellbeing of Turkish-American-Israeli ties, and want
Turkey to reach to the EU station without any mishap, deeply
concerned.

When the prime minister made these remarks for the first time, early
evaluations in Washington were that it could have been a political
tactic in order to secure the Organization of the Islamic Conference
(OIC) term presidency for Turkey. That is, people had good thoughts.
This is because Erdogan is the one of the key AKP leaders, who has
been able to convince Americans and Israelis the most, that he has
changed although he comes from an anti-American and anti-Israeli
background. The prime minister worked a lot before and after he came
to power in order to eradicate any Jewish lobby doubts. This was the
right thing to do. International politics has to be played by the
rules. The U.S. influence on world policy and that of Israel and its
friends on U.S policy cannot be denied.

However, since Erdogan maintained this attitude against Israel after
Turkey took over the OIC term presidency, old chapters that were
about to be closed by Washington, are gradually being reopened.

First of all, those elements who never closed in those chapters, got
an upper hand in Washington. They had the opportunity to say to the
majority, who consider the AK Party government ‘workable with’,
“We’ve told you. They won’t ever change. See how they manifested the
anti-Semitism within themselves.”

Even though the prime minister says, “our criticisms are not directed
at the state of Israel or the Jewish people but at the Sharon
government”, most counterparts do not perceive it that way. The
expression used is “state terrorism,” not the “Sharon government
terrorism.” Firstly, they find the remark “state terrorism” too heavy
to bear. It even causes more trouble when a prime minister personally
utters these words. One of the leading people in the Jewish lobby
said to me, “The European Union also severely criticizes Israel but
never has it used such a term. Besides, while many countries consider
Turkey’s fight against the PKK as state terrorism, didn’t Israel
support Turkey?”

The Erdogan government’s Middle East policy is gradually being viewed
as pan-Islamist, especially by the Jewish lobby. Both the United
States and Israel do not see pan-Islamism in the region to be in
their interests. One should not expect the Judeo-Christian West
warmly favor a renewed Ottoman spirit in Turkey. Hence, it is no
surprise Turkey’s proposal to be a mediator in the Middle East was
not accepted by either Israel or the United States.

Nobody is saying let’s determine our Middle East policy solely in
line with Israel and U.S. policies. However, we must not forget that
we will still need to knock on the Jewish lobby’s door in Washington
for certain reasons, like the so-called Armenian genocide. Besides,
while we are already struggling with difficulty riding through our
broken-down state infrastructure with high-speed diplomacy, during
this critical EU period, when Turkey needs stability internally and
externally more than ever, shouldn’t we refrain from attitudes that
could give ammunition to internal and external elements who want to
derail our train?

Several thousand refugees from Az. threatened with Resettlement

ARMINFO NEWS AGENCY
July 29, 2004

SEVERAL THOUSANDS OF ARMENIAN REFUGEES FROM AZERBAIJAN THREATENED
WITH RESETTLEMENT FROM MOSCOW HOSTEL

YEREVAN, JULY 28. ARMINFO. Several thousands of Armenian refugees
from Azerbaijan are threatened with resettlement from Moscow hostel
in Molodtsova street.

According to Russian Mass Media, Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov instructed
that the refugees residing there since 1989 leave the building on Aug
1. The regional authorities intend to tear down the old buildings,
and the have already instructed that water and electricity supply to
these buildings be stopped on Aug 1. At the same time, according to
witnesses, representative of the local authorities apply uncivilized
methods to the residents, penetrating into their premises and
breaking and throwing the furniture out of windows. According to the
source, many of the Armenian refugees have not registered their
documents, through many of them have become Russian citizens.

Meanwhile, in his interview to the Armenian Public Television,
Armenian Ambassador to Russia Armen Smbatyan said that in this case
resettlement from illegal occupied territories is in question, he
explained that the building is accident-prone.

Armenian Businessman Committed Suicide in Penza Russian City

ARMENIAN BUSINESSMAN COMMITTED SUICIDE IN PENZA RUSSIAN CITY

27.07.2004 13:58

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A citizen of Armenia has committed suicide in Penza
Russian city by jumping out of the window of his suite, situated on
the 5-th floor of Russia Hotel. As reported by Interfax news agency,
the tragedy occurred July 26 at about 9 a.m. Resulting from the fall
the man got numerous fractures and died in the ambulance car. The
37-year-old entrepreneur from Yerevan had lived in Russia Hotel for a
week. Criminal proceedings are instituted on the occasion of the
suicide, the causes are being investigated.

Armenian PM speaks in favor of reopening Abkhaz section of railway

ArmenPress
July 26 2004

ARMENIA N PRIME MINISTER SPEAKS IN FAVOR OF REOPENING ABKHAZ SECTION
OF RAILWAY

TBILISI, JULY 26, ARMENPRESS: Restoration of railway communication
across Georgia’s breakaway region of Abkhazia topped the agenda of
Armenian-Georgian talks today in Tbilisi with participation of
Armenian prime minister Andranik Margarian and an extensive Armenian
delegation. “Armenia is greatly interested in the resumption of the
railway operation of the Abkhaz section,” Margarian told reporters
after concluding talks with his Georgian counterpart Zurab Zhvania.
He said though this issue is not linked directly to Armenian-Georgian
relations, the ongoing negotiations inspire some hopes that a certain
progress may be achieved in that direction “as Georgia has too
softened its position on this issue.”
“We hope that if not this year then some years later this problem
will be resolved,” Margarian said adding that the operating railway
is of vital importance not only for Armenia but for Georgia as well,
as deeper economic cooperation with the breakaway region may serve as
an additional resource for the peaceful settlement of the conflict.
Concerning the current level of trade and economic cooperation
with Georgia, Margarian said though its amount is growing day by day
the available potential is not used to the full extent. Overall there
are only 25 joint Armenian-Georgian ventures, which is not a good
figure, according to the prime minister, especially having in mind
traditional Georgian-Armenian ties, the huge potential of Georgian
Armenians, many of whom are engaged in businesses and serve as
government officials.
According to the Armenian prime minister, a bigger attention
should be devoted to building favorable conditions for private sector
cooperation, which he said is hampered by some security problems
Armenian businessmen run into on Georgian highways, despite a
recorded progress, following a Georgian government decision to cut
the number of road police officers.
“During our meeting with president Mikhail Saakashvili we learned
that Georgia is trying to introduce simplified customs procedures on
border with Armenia, supposed to facilitate cargo forwarding services
and if all these promises come true we may expect a great upsurge in
the volume of bilateral trade by the close of this year,” Margarian
said.
Margarian said also Armenia has proposed that a wholesale market
in Gogavan on the border, closed by Georgian authorities, reopen to
allow bordering provinces to establish contacts and start mutually
beneficial trade.
The Armenian prime minister also spoke about power supplies from
Armenia to Georgia saying Armenia’s power grid is run by private
companies which will supply as much electricity as Georgia would
request.

55.5% Increase in Number of Deals with Immovable Property Recorded

55.5% INCREASE IN NUMBER OF DEALS WITH IMMOVABLE PROPERTY RECORDED

YEREVAN, JULY 23. ARMINFO. A total of 45,953 deals with immovable
property were recorded in Armenia in the first half of 2004, which is
8.8% more than in the corresponding period of 2003.

According to the information reported by the RA State Registry of
Immovable Property, 19,061 deals (41.5%) were alienation, 16.7%
primary registration, 9.7% lease, 7.6% pledge, 0.5% privatization,
8.3% inheritance, and 15.7% other types. As against the first half of
2003, a 40.1% increase in the number of alienation transactions, which
influence the market most of all, was recorded in the first half of
2004, and a 3.2% increase as against the second half of 2003. In the
first half of 2004, 39.6% of alienation deals were recorded in
Yerevan. During the period under review, 67.3% of 6,613
purchase-and-sale deals involved flats. As against the corresponding
period of last year this index increased by 15.7%, and decreased by
17.7% as against the second half of 2003.

ANKARA: Pushing EU Entry, Turkish PM Starts French Visit

Turkish Press
July 19 2004

Pushing EU Entry, Turkish PM Starts French Visit
AFP: 7/19/2004

by Hugh Schofield

PARIS, July 19 (AFP) – Turkey`s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
held talks in Paris with his French counterpart Jean-Pierre Raffarin
Monday at the start of a three-day visit to push Turkish entry into
the European Union.

Speaking to reporters at Ankara airport, Erdogan said that in his
meetings with French leaders he would “explain what steps we have
taken in order to align ourselves with the EU and where we are in
terms of implementation (of reforms).”

The prime minister, whose Justice and Development Party (AKP) has
Islamist origins, was to lunch with President Jacques Chirac Tuesday
after a meeting with business leaders. He will also see the heads of
the three main political parties before leaving Wednesday.

A crucial period is approaching for Turkey`s application bid, with
the European Commission due to give its opinion in October on a
possible opening of negotiations, followed by a decision in December
by European leaders on whether enough progress has been made towards
the EU`s reform demands.

Erdogan was expected to use the French visit to build up support in
the European country which has seen probably the most heated public
debate over the suitability for the EU of a predominantly Muslim and
Asian nation.

While Chirac has indicated in recent speeches that he now regards
Ankara`s progress to EU membership as “irreversible” and spoken of
its “historic and very ancient European vocation,” many in his own
government are deeply opposed to its accession.

In addition opinion polls indicate that a majority of the population
is against Turkey`s admission to the 25-nation body.

“The opposition comes in various forms: fear of Islam and immigrants
at one end, fear of seeing Europe dissolve into a vast free-trade
zone for others,” said Eddy Fougier of French Institute for
International Relations (IFRI).

France also has a large Armenian community of some 450,000 people,
whose pressure in 2001 secured the official recognition by the French
parliament of the Armenian genocide. This remains a highly
contentious issue between Ankara and Paris.

The opposition Socialist party said Monday it supports Turkish entry
“as long as the accession criteria are respected,” but both Chirac`s
ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) and its junior partner the
Union for French Democracy (UDF) are sceptical.

“Europe`s historical identity is indissolubly linked — not with the
religious convictions of Europeans today — but with a cultural and
political model fashioned by 15 centuries of Christianity… Turkey
is a stranger to this history,” said UDF Euro-deputy Jean-Louis
Bourlanges.

The left-wing daily Liberation said in an editorial that the
“sticking-point between Europe and Turkey is not Islam or
Christianity, but the secular basis for social ties and institutions.
Turkey will have its own place in Europe … once it has given up
Sunni Islam as the de facto state religion.”

But it went on in more encouraging vein: “There is no convincing
reason to think that Islam is not in its essence compatible with
democracy and secularism. Helping Turkey to prove this should be an
uplifting challenge for Europeans.”

Wisconsin Tourism chief considering in-state jobs strategy

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI
July 17 2004

Tourism chief considering in-state jobs strategy
Overseas workers nab much of the summer employment

By SCOTT WILLIAMS

Wisconsin’s top tourism official is considering stepped-up efforts to
promote summer job opportunities in the tourism industry as many
attractions recruit workers from overseas despite unemployment here.

Tourism Secretary Jim Holperin said he has no indication that theme
parks and other popular destinations are intentionally passing over
Wisconsin workers. But he said the state lacks a comprehensive
strategy for matching Wisconsin’s jobless to tourism jobs, which
often go to workers from Poland, Finland or other foreign countries.

A state job center in Wisconsin Dells, for example, has stopped
sending representatives to job fairs in Milwaukee, relying instead on
the Internet to reach job seekers in the state’s largest metropolitan
area.

“There might be a programmatic gap,” Holperin said, meaning not
everyone who needs a job is being reached by existing programs.

Destinations in the Dells, Door County and other popular tourist
spots began wide-scale recruiting of foreign workers, typically
college students, when low unemployment in the late 1990s created a
labor shortage. Although the economy has since gone flat and
Wisconsin joblessness is up, many attractions continue hiring from
out of the country for their summer seasonal help, citing other
forces in the marketplace.

Some say residents who live in Milwaukee and those who live in other
areas of high unemployment cannot be coaxed into relocating for the
summer, and that young people in Wisconsin generally must return to
school before the tourist season ends.

At Landmark Resort in Door County, Personnel Director Joanne Stanzel
has hired several college-aged students from Armenia and Romania,
primarily for housekeeping jobs.

Stanzel said some Wisconsin residents seem uninterested in the
drudgery of scrubbing bathrooms and arranging bedsheets.

“Even in desperate times they don’t want to do housekeeping,” she
said. “It’s sad to say.”

One housekeeper, Lilit Vasilyan of Romania, said she worked as a
waitress in her home country but wanted to visit the United States
this summer to improve her English.

Vasilyan, 20, said she is enjoying her job at Landmark and is most
impressed by Door County’s natural scenery.

“I imagined how it would be,” she said. “It’s beautiful.”

Armenian NPP to be halted for 65 days of repairs

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 16, 2004 Friday 2:31 PM Eastern Time

Armenian NPP to be halted for 65 days of repairs

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

The Armenian nuclear power plant will be stopped for planned repairs
and fuel loading in the small hours of July 31. The repairs will take
65 days, Armenian NPP General Director Gagik Markosyan told Itar-Tass
on Friday. The power plant will be connected to the Armenian
electricity network on October 4.

That will be the largest repair in the entire history of the Armenian
nuclear power plant, Markosyan said. The power plant’s main computer
will be replaced with $1 million from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Eur550,000 from the TACIS program will help to replace 37 switches,
six kilovolt each. The power plant’s safety will thereby be upgraded.
The fourth turbo-generator will be repaired, and blades of two
turbo-generators will be replaced.

The Armenian nuclear power plant was commissioned in 1979 and halted
after the devastating earthquake of 1989. The mothballed power plant
was restarted in 1996 with the assistance of Russian specialists. The
second unit of the power plant provides for about 40% of all
electricity in Armenia. A Russian-Armenian intergovernmental
agreement put the Armenian NPP under control of Inter UES, a
subsidiary of the Russian Unified Energy System grid.

Meanwhile, the European Union insists on closure of the Armenian
nuclear power plant that is located 40 kilometers west of Yerevan.
The Armenian authorities say that the power plant can be closed only
if the country obtains other sources of energy.

SOME 10 TREES CUT IN AN AREA OF 500-600SQ. METERS IN ISAHAKYAN STREE

SOME 10 TREES CUT IN AN AREA OF 500-600SQ. METERS IN FRONT OF BUILDING
#28 IN ISAHAKYAN STREET IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JULY 14. ARMINFO. Today in the morning, some 10 trees were
cut in an area of 500-600sq. meters in front of the administrative
press building #28 in Isahakyan street in Yerevan.

The builders told ARMINFO that a 4-5-meter-deep pit will be dug in the
area, which implies the felling of dozen trees growing in the
area. Reliable sources told ARMINFO that an entertainment club is
expected to be constructed in this territory. The club will belong to
RA Minister of Territorial Administration and Coordination of
Infrastructures Hovik Abramyan.

Despite the appeals of journalists and NGOs to the Yerevan
Municipality, Center Community and Nature Protection Ministry, since
yesterday, felling proved to be inevitable. Head of the Department for
Green Plantations, Center Community, told ARMINFO that the
construction is started without permission.