‘Lebanese Armenians: Their Past and Future’

AZG Armenian Daily #175, 30/09/2005

Diaspora

‘LEBANESE ARMENIANS: THEIR PAST AND FUTURE’

Conference within Framework of Haykazian University’s 50th Anniversary

“The Lebanese Armenians: Their Past and Future” conference launched at the
Haykazian University under the aegis of Doctor Tarek Mitry, Lebanese culture
minister. The conference is dedicated to 50th anniversary of the Haykazian
University. 16 scientists from over 10 countries participated in the
conference. Mira Yardemian, head of PR Department of the University,
informed.

Dr. Fauzi Atuen, representative of the Lebanese Culture Ministry,
Christopher Murray, US deputy ambassador to Lebanon, Juliet Woor, PR
official of the US Embassy to Lebanon, Hakob Bagratouni and Yeghia
Tcherechian, members of the Lebanese Parliament, as well as the
representative of Beirut’s Mayor were present at the conference. Various
scientists from the United States, Canada, France, Argentina, Egypt, Syria,
Germany and Italy, including Claude Mutafian, Hilmar Kazer, Vahe Tashchian,
Ara Sanjian, Aida Buchikanian, Nikola Miliorino, Araksi Terunian-Khacherian,
Khachik Ter-Ghukasian, Ohannes Gyokchian, Rouben Avsharian, Armen Urneshian,
Nora Salmanian, Rubina Artinian and Aspet Kochikian held speeches. Verzhina
Svazlian and doctor Shoghik Ashekian represented Armenia in the conference.

By Hakob Tsulikian

MTV: System Singer Visits Congressman’s Office To Push Genocide Bill

MTV.COM News

System Singer Visits Congressman’s Office To Push Genocide Bill
09.28.2005

Band, meanwhile, is about to shoot a video for ‘Hypnotize.’

Singer Serj Tankian had some personal business to attend to this week
before System of a Down could shoot their next video. Personal and,
well, global.

Before the band left for the second leg of its fall tour with the Mars
Volta (see “System Of A Down/ Mars Volta Tour Dates Announced”),
Tankian promised his 97-year-old grandfather he would do his best to
convince Congressman Dennis Hastert (R-Illinois) to bring the Armenian
Genocide Resolution to a vote, an issue long close to System of a Down
(see “System Of A Down Make The Political Personal At Souls
2005”). And he did just that Tuesday outside the Speaker of the
House’s Batavia, Illinois, office.

Tankian joined members of the Armenian National Committee of America,
the Armenian Youth Federation and his own Axis of Justice organization
in a rally and then read a heartfelt letter he delivered to Hastert’s
office in support of the pending legislation, which would officially
recognize Turkey’s slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and
1923.

With the resolution, which overwhelmingly passed the bipartisan
International Relations Committee, Hastert can either bring it to the
House of Representatives for a vote or let it expire.

“It’s all in his hands, he’s the man,” Tankian said of Hastert, who
spoke in support of recognizing the genocide on the House floor in
1994. “The thing is that a similar resolution was going around in 2000
as well and he was the speaker of the House then, but at the time
[President Bill] Clinton had written a letter asking him not to bring
it up to vote, citing concerns that had to do with Turkey. In 2004 he
also had the opportunity to bring another resolution to vote on …
and that didn’t happen either.

“I’m sure that there’s a lot of lobbying going on from the Bush
administration, from the military-industrial complex that sells a lot
of weapons to Turkey, and a whole host of corporate lobbyist firms
that don’t want this thing to pass, but the truth has to come out, and
more so in a democracy than anywhere else,” he continued. “So we’re
fighting the good fight.”

Hastert was not at his office Tuesday and was unavailable for comment
Wednesday (September 28).

Kocharyan & EU Repr. To S.Caucasus Discuss Settlement Rocess Of NKCo

KOCHARIAN AND EU REPRESENTATIVE TO S. CAUCASUS DISCUSS SETTLEMENT PROCESS OF NK CONFLICT

Noyan Tapan News Agency
Sept 29 2005

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 29, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Issues concerning
practical cooperation program envisaged within the framework of the
New Neighborhood policy of the European Union were discussed at the
September 29 meeting of RA President Robert Kocharian with Ambassador
Heiki Talvitie, the Special Representative of the European Union to
South Caucasus.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA President’s Press Office, the
sides discussed the settlement process of the Karabakh conflict as
well, touched upon regional problems and development programs.

The process of the Constitutional reforms was also spoken about.

Robert Kocharian and Heiki Talvitie attached importance to the
constitutional reforms estimating those as a new opportunity of
development and strengthening democracy in Armenia.

Talvitie Does Not Rule Out Individual Approach To South Caucasus Sta

TALVITIE DOES NOT RULE OUT INDIVIDUAL APPROACH TO SOUTH CAUCASUS STATES

Pan Armenian News
29.09.2005 05:23

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The discussions of the European Neighborhood Policy
program should have started September 1. However these were delayed
due to the complicated relations between Azerbaijan and one of the
EU member states, EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus
Heikki Talvitie stated at a joint news conference with Armenian FM
Vartan Oskanian. He also noted that the EU has commitments to protect
any state that is part of it.

In his words, it is necessary to make it clear first and only after
the problem with the country in question is solved the discussions
with the South Caucasian states will start. “We equally work for
starting the discussions with all of the three countries of the
region,” H. Talvitie said. The balance towards the South Caucasian
states is necessary to convince them that regional cooperation is
important, he added. He hoped for the problem to be solved by early
October. If not, he did not rule out the opportunity of EU approach
to the South Caucasian states on an individual basis. It should be
noted that the other day the Republic of Cyprus vetoed the candidacy
of Azerbaijan and blocked Baku participation in the EU Wider Europe:
New Neighbors Program. The suspension fo the Program is due to the
Cyprus attitude towards Azerbaijan due to direct air flights between
Baku and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. The Greek Cyprus
has officially raised the issue of suspension of aid to Azerbaijan
in the EU. Besides, in the course of the news conference in Yerevan
H. Talvitie noted the dynamics in the talks over settlement of the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict. There is certain progress in the issue, he
remarked at that. Speaking of the constitutional changes in Armenia,
he said, “We find that these changes in the Constitution are correct
and these will benefit Armenia.”

TBILISI: Finnish President In Tbilisi

FINNISH PRESIDENT IN TBILISI
By Christina Tashkevich

The Messenger, Georgia
Sept 29 2005

Rustaveli Avenue on Wednesday adorned with Finnish and Georgian flags;
the road was closed as President Tarja Halonen arrived at the Tbilisi
Marriott Georgia’s ambitions to join the European Union and the role
of the EU in the settlement of conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia
were on the top of the agenda during the first visit of Finland’s
head of state to Tbilisi.

The President of Finland Tarja Halonen arrived in Tbilisi on Wednesday
for a two-day visit that included a meeting with Georgian President
Mikheil Saakashvili.

Saakashvili once again noted that Georgia is trying diligently to
settle the conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia peacefully.

At a briefing in Parliament with the Finnish president on Wednesday,
he said that Georgia does not want upheaval at a time when it “needs
economic development.”

Saakashvili said his government is ready to work together with Russia,
the United States and the countries of the European Union in settling
the conflicts.

“I hope that during consultations together with the Russian Federation
we are able to create such mechanisms to avoid further problems,”
Saakashvili said.

President Halonen said at the briefing that Finland is well informed
about the current state of the conflicts in Georgia and that Georgia
can rely on her country’s support in this issue.

She called on sides to look for mechanisms that can resolve the
conflicts in a peaceful way. “Peaceful settlement is the most
sustainable solution,” she said.

Georgian Minister of Foreign Affairs Salome Zourabichvili noted on
Wednesday that Finland will receive the EU presidency in the second
half of 2006. “This will be the time when we will enter into the
fulfillment phase of the action plan and when the issue of further
EU expansion will be raised,” she said.

The Georgian media reports that also on the agenda during Halonen’s
visit were prospects for Finnish businesses investing in Georgia.

Aleksandre Rondeli, the president of the Georgian Foundation for
Strategic and International Studies, praised Finland as an “exemplary
country” and its president as “a famous politician who knows what’s
going on in the region.”

President Halonen is on a tour of the Caucasus countries spanning
the dates September 26-30. She arrived in Tbilisi on Wednesday from
Armenia and after Georgia will move on to Azerbaijan, together with
her husband, doctor Pentti Arajarvi.

The Helsinki daily Helsingin Sanomat reported this week that this is
not Halonen’s first visit to the Caucasus. She visited Georgia in 1980
and Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1996 as Finland’s Minister for Foreign
Affairs, when she contributed to negotiations on the Nagorno Karabagh
conflict. However, it is the first visit of a Finnish president to
Georgia after the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991.

“The EU is heavily involved in the development of the three
countries. Georgia is especially keen to develop its ties with the
West, and all three are seen as likely to join the E.U. at some time
in the future,” the newspaper wrote on September 26.

Halonen’s visit comes less than two months after a delegation of the
Finnish Border Department headed by department chief Jaakko Smolander
arrived in Georgia. During the delegation’s three-day stay in early
August, a joint declaration on cooperation was signed between the
two country’s boarder guards and the Finnish representatives toured
Georgia’s northern frontier with Russia.

During her visit to Georgia President Halonen also met with the
Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli and Speaker of Parliament
Nino Burjanadze.

Days Of Byelorussian Culture In Armenia

DAYS OF BYELORUSSIAN CULTURE IN ARMENIA
By Marietta Makarian

AZG Armenian Daily #174
29/09/2005

Culture

The official delegation of Byelorussia, headed by culture minister
Leonid Gulyayko is expected to arrive in Yerevan today. From September
30 to October 2 famous “Pesnyari” choir and “Khoroshki” dance ensemble
will perform in Yerevan and provinces of Armenia. Within the frameworks
of the Days of Byelorussian Culture in Armenia, the National Gallery
will display Byelorussian icons, the “Moscow” cinema will feature a
series of Byelorussian films and famous singers of Byelorussia will
perform at Aram Khachatrian’s House-Museum. A gala concert at the
National Opera and Ballet Theatre on September 30 will signal the
start of Days of Byelorussian Culture in Armenia.

ANKARA: ‘EP Decision Has No Effect On Negotiation Process’

‘EP DECISION HAS NO EFFECT ON NEGOTIATION PROCESS’
By Cihan News Agency

Zaman, Turkey
Sept 28 2005

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said Turkey’s accession
process to the European Union will not be affected by today’s decision
taken in the European Parliament.

The EP earlier today decided in favor of a call for Turkey to recognize
the so-called Armenian genocide allegations and for imposing the
recognition as a pre-condition for membership.

NKR: Fires

FIRES

Azat Artsakh, Republic of Nagorno Karabakh
Sept 28 2005

Harvesting of grain is over. At the NKR Department of Emergency
we were told that out of the 62 thousand 650 hectares under wheat
49.4 hectares was destroyed by fire. The damage totaled 45 million
980 thousand drams. In 2004 338.8 hectares out of 57 thousand
660 hectares was destroyed by fire, and the damage totaled 38
million 798 thousand drams. Since January 1, 2005 76 fires have
been reported in the republic, and the damage totaled 4 million 142
thousand 600 drams. In 2004 the number of fires was 76, the damage
totaled 40 million 103 thousand 765 drams. According to the head of
the Department of Emergency Gregory Gasparian, on September 16 two
houses burnt down in the village of Avetaranots. According to him,
it was impossible to fight the fire because the fire brigade had to
drive 55 km to reach the villages, but they managed to save the two
neighbouring houses. G. Gasparian said the department had requested
the NKR government to station fire brigades in several areas in the
regions of the republic.

Russia Tightens Grip On Armenian Energy Sector

RUSSIA TIGHTENS GRIP ON ARMENIAN ENERGY SECTOR
Emil Danielyan

EurasiaNet Organization
Sept 28 2005

Russia has enhanced its already dominant role in Armenia’s energy
sector by buying the country’s electricity grid after years of
behind-the-scene maneuvering. The Armenian government gave the green
light recently to the formal takeover of the Electricity Networks
of Armenia (ENA) utility by a subsidiary of Unified Energy Systems
(UES), the state-controlled Russian power monopoly.

UES and other Russian energy firms already own or manage several
major power plants that account for as much as 80 percent of Armenia’s
electricity production. In addition, they are the sole suppliers of
the country’s main energy resources: natural gas and nuclear fuel.

The Armenian government’s decision followed a request submitted by
Midland Resources Holding, a British-registered company that privatized
the Armenian power utility three years ago. Under its contractual
obligations, Midland could not resell ENA to another foreign investor
without official consent. When the government announced its approval
of the sale on September 23, Energy Minister Armen Movsisian suggested
that Yerevan was swayed by the Russian company’s pledge to assume
Midland’s commitments to make substantial capital investments in the
Soviet-era network.

“With this decision, the government legalized a deal between a buyer
and a seller that was effectively struck long ago,” commented the
Yerevan daily Hayots Ashkhar.

UES had been the de facto owner of ENA since June 2005, when it signed
a controversial “management contract” with Midland. The Russian giant,
acting through one of its offshore subsidiaries called Interenergo
BV, paid $73 million for the right to manage the utility and receive
its profits. Both the World Bank and the US Agency for International
Development challenged the legality of the deal, arguing that the
Armenian government, suspiciously silent on the issue, had not been
officially notified of the agreement’s signature beforehand.

UES and Midland countered that they did not need a government
approval for their agreement because it fell short of a formal
acquisition. Still, the two companies eventually decided to formalize
ENA’s sale to the Russians and go through relevant legal procedures.

The move was welcomed by the World Bank and USAID. “I am pleased to
see that the rules are now being followed,” the head of the bank’s
Yerevan office, Roger Robinson, told reporters on September 13.

However, critics of the President Robert Kocharian’s administration
remain concerned about the Russian takeover of ENA, saying that
it could render Armenia even more dependent on Russia, its main
political and military ally. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive]. They also fear that Moscow may now completely monopolize
Armenia’s energy sector and nullify the results of sweeping reforms
undertaken over the past decade. These measures allowed Armenia to not
only end the severe power shortages of the 1990s, but also to develop
an electricity surplus, enabling Armenia to export electricity to
neighboring Georgia and Iran. A key component of that reform effort
has been the structural separation of the facilities that generate,
transmit and distribute electricity.

In 2003, UES was granted ownership of several Armenian hydro-electric
plants and the nuclear power station at Metsamor in return for
repaying the latter’s $40 million debt to Russian nuclear fuel
suppliers. Armenia’s largest thermal power plant, located in the
central town of Hrazdan, was also handed over to Russia in 2002 as a
result of a similar equities-for-debt swap. [For background see the
Eurasia Insight archive].

Movsisian insisted that this fact will have little bearing on ENA’s
operations. The energy sector, he argued, is tightly regulated by
Armenia’s Public Service Regulatory Commission (PSRC), a supposedly
independent body that sets utility tariffs. UES Deputy Chairman Andrei
Rappoport made a similar point in a September 20 interview with the
Russian Regnum news agency. “The fact is that the most important member
in this market is the commission on regulating public services,”
Rappoport said. “It regulates the state policy on setting tariffs
for each actor of the market, on issuing licenses on their activity,
confirming and coordinating contracts.”

Western donors seem to agree with this line of reasoning. “The very
important thing in a utility is the strength of the regulator,” said
the World Bank’s Robinson. “We have great confidence in the regulator
here in Armenia.”

Russia, however, faces growing competition in Armenia’s energy
market from the country’s southern neighbor, Iran. After months of
deliberations, the Armenian leadership has decided to accept Iran’s
proposal to complete the construction of another large thermal power
plant in Hrazdan. Officials say a state-run Iranian company will invest
$150 million in the plant. In exchange for finishing construction of
the plant, the facility’s electricity will be delivered to Iran, as
a payment-in-kind. The facility will be powered by Iranian natural
gas that will be pumped to Armenia through a pipeline currently
under construction. [For additional information see the Eurasia
Insight archive].

Yerevan has reportedly faced strong pressure from Moscow to accept
an alternative proposal from UES and Russia’s GazProm gas monopoly
for completing the construction of this plant. Rappoport admitted
that there has been a “certain rivalry on this issue” between Moscow
and Tehran.

Further competition could come in the form of a $150 million
reconstruction of an old thermal power plant in Yerevan, financed by
the Japan Bank for International Cooperation. Armenian officials say
the electricity produced at the modernized facility will be twice
as cheap as that of the Russian-owned Hrazdan plant. Only time will
tell if this is enough of a competitive edge for the new owner of
the Armenian power grid.

Editor’s Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
political analyst.

Pre-Election Hubbub In Gyumri

PRE-ELECTION HUBBUB IN GYUMRI

A1+
| 20:30:54 | 26-09-2005 | Politics |

On September 23 in the Shirak region the phase of putting forward
candidacies for the elections of local governing bodies started. The
first candidacy was that of the Gyumri present mayor Vardan Ghoukasyan.

At 05:00 p.m. the Local Electoral Committee N34 which includes
79 electoral areas in Gyumri had received 21 applications for
the posts of aldermen. 13 of the candidates do not belong to any
party, 4 of them represent the Republican Party, and the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation, the Orinats Yerkir Party, the Union for
National Self-Determination and “Democracy and Labor” Parties have
one candidate each.