ANKARA: Armenians Next in Line for Native Language Broadcast

Armenians Next in Line for Native Language Broadcast

Zaman
07.05.2004 Monday

Following Turkish Radio and Television broadcasts in Kurdish, Armenian
representatives have demanded that the Supreme Board of Radio
Television (RTUK) offer broadcasts in Armenian as well.

In the statement filed yesterday, Armenian representatives said they
want to broadcast through their own radio and television station to be
established. Armenian Agos newspaper Editor-in-Chief, Hrant Dink,
said Armenian radio will begin this year. Armenians already have their
own schools and newspapers. Armenian radio has been a dream for 10
years, and the Armenian community has launched a donation drive to
help it be realized. It is expected that a total of US$300,000 will be
donated.

07.05.2004
Habib Güler
Ankara

Armenian premier favours ties with Turkey without pre-conditions

Armenian premier favours ties with Turkey without pre-conditions

Hayots Ashkharh, Yerevan
3 Jul 04 p 1

Text of unattributed report by Armenian newspaper Hayots Ashkharh on 3
July headlined “Without pre-conditions”

“The Republican Party of Armenia has expressed its position saying
that Armenia and Turkey should regulate their relations without
pre-conditions and establish diplomatic relations,” Prime Minister
Andranik Markaryan said yesterday asked about his assessment of a
statement by Armen Rustamyan [a member of the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation-Dashnaktsutyun] that the Dashnaks have certain reservations
about [Armenian President] Robert Kocharyan’s speech in the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe [PACE] concerning
Turkey.

According to Prime Minister Andranik Markaryan, unfortunately Turkey
has not yet replied to the suggestion to improve relations with
Armenia without such pre-conditions as the Armenian genocide and the
Karabakh issue. He pointed out: “We have adopted our position on the
Karabakh issue together with the president since 1998 and continue to
stick to that. Naturally, what he said in his address to PACE is
acceptable to us.”

Armenian, Russian police to step up fight against economic crimes

Armenian, Russian police to step up fight against economic crimes

Mediamax news agency
2 Jul 04

YEREVAN

The growth in the commodity turnover between Armenia and Russia
increases the likelihood of economic crimes being committed on the
territory of the two countries, Mediamax news agency reports that the
chief of the Armenian Police, Ayk Arutyunyan, said this in Yerevan
today, speaking at a briefing on the results of a session of the
united collegium of the Russian Interior Ministry and the Armenian
Police.

Arutyunyan said that in order to increase the effectiveness of the
joint struggle against economic crimes, it is necessary to intensify
cooperation between the two countries’ law-enforcement bodies.

Ayk Arutyunyan said that according to the results of the united
collegium, relevant departments of the Armenian Police and the Russian
Interior Ministry were instructed to take joint operational-preventive
measures to counteract the criminalization of the Russian and Armenian
economies.

Russian Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev stressed that the Yerevan
session could be described as special since specific measures in the
sphere of preventing economic crimes were adopted here.

BAKU: stagnation in political life in wake of presidential polls

Azeri daily says stagnation in political life in wake of presidential polls

Zerkalo, Baku
26 Jun 04

Zerkalo daily has surveyed Azerbaijan’s political scene in the wake of
the latest presidential election last October. The following is the
text of A. Rasidoglu’s report by Azerbaijani newspaper Zerkalo on 26
June headlined “Stagnation. Effectively nothing happens in political
life of Azerbaijan”; subheadings as published:

Analysts describe the current political situation in the country as
stagnant. The point is that, after the latest presidential election
[15 October 2003], effectively all parties have suffered a fiasco to a
certain extent.

Paradoxical though this might sound, this applies to the ruling New
Azerbaijan Party as well, which, despite the fact that it was
precisely itscandidate who has won the election, has nonetheless
failed to obtain the coveted “pieces of the cake of power”.

New Azerbaijan Party

After the election, the New Azerbaijan Party continues to “cruise on
its own”, without opponents on either its right or left. And now the
ideologists of the party openly say that they will never leave the
corridors of power.

In addition, despite the fact that, according to its charter, the New
Azerbaijan Party is currently managed by First Deputy Chairman of the
party[and Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev, in fact it is run by
Ali Ahmadov, executive secretary, who in principle does not hold any
administrative levers. Nonetheless, the party continues to hold its
dominating position in society.

However, whatever they might say both in and outside the country, the
New Azerbaijan Party is by far not the party which was headed by [the
late President] Heydar Aliyev any longer, because his death caused
thoughtless radicalisation of some senior party members, who demand
that government officials delegate the increasing share of their
authorities to party functionaries.

Essentially, the party functionaries who push the authorities toward
thoughtless radicalism cling to the totalitarian way of thinking, do
they not? This, in turn, leads to the demolition of the “temple of New
Azerbaijan members”, which Heydar Aliyev had built over 10 years.

And this is precisely when the first question arises: does Ilham
Aliyev need to strive for the consolidation of the party nomenclature?
The answer is unambiguous: he does, it is even necessary, as the point
is that New Azerbaijan’s nomenclature, certain of its
indispensability, might one day start to ignore orders of the new
president. And then it is all gone: this would certainly lead to
attempts to split power and leave Ilham Aliyev, who wants to make some
changes for the better, “overboard”. Obviously, functionaries from the
New Azerbaijan Party would have never dared to do this during the
Heydar Aliyevrule. This has become possible only now, for how else
should we qualify the newly chosen line of behaviour of some senior
New Azerbaijan officials who point out that they are untouchable?
Understanding this mood and undesirable processes, Heydar Aliyev would
say that he was the leader of not only the New Azerbaijan Party, but
also of all the nation.

It is most likely, however, that Aliyev Jr already understands how to
restrain the ambitions of his “loyal team-mates” who have become a
burden for him. And factors like the population being tired of the
rule of some of the senior members of the New Azerbaijan Party force
Ilham Aliyev to no longer resort to the services of such odious
persons.

But what political course can the new leader of the country uphold to
confront the functionaries’ scenario? And is the son capable of what
his father – a very skilled and, as universally admitted, very
exceptional and powerful politician – managed to accomplish?

Despite the extension of the tenure of all of “his father’s”
ministers, Ilham Aliyev has said on more than one occasion: “I would
like a new generation of property owners to emerge in our society. I
am certain that the people will then gain economic freedom. They will
no longer depend on officials, on so-called ‘big shots’. Then they
will make their decisions independently. The absence of economic
freedom of an individual means the absence of freedom of action- this
is my fundamental principle of freedom of an individual.”

In principle, this approach is a verdict for the senior members of the
New Azerbaijan Party and implies that the president himself has
consolidated his positions.

Musavat

Everyone thought that after the election, the engine of the opposition
camp- the Musavat Party – would muster its force and emerge from the
crisis. The court trial of the leadership of this party was supposed
to force Musavat into resorting to mass protest actions and other
radical moves. But for some reason, this party has failed to come to
its senses since the “16 October syndrome” [post-election riots] and
thereby loses its chance of self-resuscitation.

After the release from detention of its Deputy Chairman Rauf Arifoglu,
the head will find himself in quite a plight. Because Arifoglu is
perhaps the only politician in the country who strongly criticized his
chairman for his “failure to make Musavat the ruling party”. Moreover,
he formulated his statement roughly in the following way: “If I was
the head of Musavat, the party would be in power.” After this
statement, leaders of many parties started to think about their
political future. This statement stunned many people. The belief of
many leaders of opposition parties that the party was their property
was shaken. The realization of impossibility to privatize their
parties began to loom before their eyes. Maybe this is one of the
signs that the opposition comesof ageý [ellipses as given]

People’s Front of Azerbaijan Party

The People’s Front [of Azerbaijan Party, PFAP] is perhaps the only
leading party which entered the presidential race with the established
image of a serious organization which is ready to renounce its
personal ambitions to achieve a common goal. From the very outset and
to the end, the party supported the idea of a single candidate from
the opposition.

PFAP leader A. [Ali] Karimli’s ability to reach a compromise not only
saved him and his team – soon he might even be able to lay claims to
the Musavat and AMIP [Azarbaycan Milli Istiqlal Party] electorates.

By staging mass protest actions, the PFAP seized the initiative. But
the authorities had managed to create a team of “Trojan horses” around
it long before the presidential election, which greatly weakened its
positions.

Democratic Party of Azerbaijan

Virtually nothing remains of the former radicalism of this party after
the election. Perhaps the reason is that, by his thoughtless moves in
the run-up to the election, R. [Chairman Rasul] Quliyev brought the
party to the verge of disaster. The electorate of Democratic Party of
Azerbaijan leader Rasul Quliyev has finally realized, among other
things, that there is not even a single chance of former parliament
speaker returning to motherland.

AMIP

The leader of Milli Istiqlal [Etibar Mammadov] realizes very well that
while the authorities wield powerful resources, it is impossible to
combat them effectively. As a representative of one of the most
powerful electorates, “immigrants from Armenia”, he has set about
implementing the policy of fragmentation of the authorities’ public
support. He realizes that he is unable to stage mass protest actions
and does not believe in this method of struggle.

AUA and AIPRG Sign MOU to Advance Armenian Policy Research

PRESS RELEASE

July 1, 2004

American University of Armenia Corporation
300 Lakeside Drive, 4th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612
Telephone: (510) 987-9452
Fax: (510) 208-3576

Contact: Gohar Momjian
E-mail: [email protected]

AUA and AIPRG Sign MOU to Advance Armenian Policy Research

The American University of Armenia (AUA)and the Armenian International
Policy Research Group (AIPRG) signed a memorandum of understanding on June
16, 2004 with the goal of strengthening policy research in Armenia, the
region, and the Diaspora.

As AIPRG-Armenia Chairman, Nerses Yeritsyan, explained, `AUA and AIPRG will
jointly organize conferences and seminars designed to initiate policy
dialogue on important Armenian and Diaspora-related issues, and we look
forward to collaboration on major policy research programs.’

The Armenian International Policy Research Group is a new nonpartisan
association that researches and promotes discussion of public policy issues
both in Armenia and the Diaspora. AIPRG aims to consolidate existing
expertise on Armenian policy issues by bringing together accomplished
researchers and practitioners who specialize in economics, political
science, law, and government affairs.

The American University of Armenia is an affiliate of the University of
California system and is the joint undertaking of the ROA Ministry of
Education and Science and the American University of Armenia Corporation
(AUAC) in the U.S. AUA’s Research Centers comprise one of the many
strengths of the University and are important in achieving AUA’s objective
of stimulating positive change in Armenia and the region through policy
research and analysis.

AIPRG is housed temporarily in AUA’s School of Political Science and
International Affairs and will have the support of the Turpanjian Center for
Policy Analysis. The School’s Associate Dean, Dr. Lucig Danielian, stated,
`This is a wonderful opportunity to bring together experts from the Diaspora
and Armenia to address policy solutions to the critical problems facing the
nation and region. Our collaboration will be gearing up soon and we look
forward to making an impact on policy deliberation in Armenia.’

—————————————-

The American University of Armenia is registered as a non-profit educational
organization in both Armenia and the United States and is affiliated with
the Regents of the University of California. Receiving major support from
the AGBU, AUA offers instruction leading to the Masters Degree in eight
graduate programs. For more information about AUA, visit

Photo: L to R: AUA President, Haroutune Armenian and AIPRG-Armenia
Chairman, Nerses Yeritsyan

www.aua.am.

ARKA News Agency – 06/30/2004

ARKA News Agency
June 30 2004

Vardan Oskanian: present authorities of Turkey can and wish to hold
negotiations on establishment of mutual relations with Armenia

NKR Foreign Minister receives EU Special Representative in South
Caucasus

A bank with data of invalids is being founded in Nagorno-Karabakh
republic

*********************************************************************

VARDAN OSKANIAN: PRESENT AUTHORITIES OF TURKEY CAN AND WISH TO HOLD
NEGOTIATIONS ON ESTABLISHMENT OF MUTUAL RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA

YEREVAN, June 30. /ARKA/. Present authorities of Turkey can and wish
to hold negotiations on establishment of mutual relations with
Armenia, RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian stated today. He said
that during his unscheduled meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Regep
Erdogan it was confirmed that Turkey wants to establish bilateral
relations with Armenia. At this, he said that despite of previous
authorities of Turkey, present one indeed strive for settlement of
the issue.
Armenia and Turkey still do not have diplomatic relations. Corner
stone in relations between the countries is the fact of Armenian
Genocide in Ottoman Empire in 1915. L.D. –0–

*********************************************************************

NKR FOREIGN MINISTER RECEIVES EU SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE IN SOUTH
CAUCASUS

STEPANAKERT, June 30. /ARKA/. NKR Foreign Minister Ashot Gulian
received EU Special Representative in South Caucasus Heikki Talvitie,
NKR MFA told ARKA. During the meeting the parties discussed
perspectives of negotiating process of Karabakh settlement,
involvement of Karabakh in regional projects. Ashot Gulian spoke for
obligatory participation of Karabakh party in negotiations in case of
their recommencement and stressed that it comes from the logics of
negotiating process.
Gulian paid attention of Talvitie to the fact that since new
President of Azerbaijan Ilkham Aliev took the office, contacts
between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan stopped even at
non-government level and added that it does not contribute to
creation of atmosphere of trust and settlement of the problem.
Talvitie in his turn stressed the interest of EU in soonest
settlement of Karabakh conflict and establishment of stability in the
region. He said that EU plans to actively assist in settlement of the
conflict without replacing OSCE Minsk Group. L.D. –0–

*********************************************************************

A BANK WITH DATA OF INVALIDS IS BEING FOUNDED IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH
REPUBLIC

STEPANAKERT, June 30. /ARKA/. In Nagorno-Karabakh a bank with data of
invalids is being founded, according to NKR Minister of Social
Welfare Lenston Gulyan. According to him, the bank aims at more
detailed studying of the problems of invalids. He noted that about 3
thsd. invalids are registered in NKR as of today. They receive
monthly state pension and make use of the privileges. Most of them
come across the social problems, as well as those connected with
housing facilities, employment, treatment, etc. `In the created
database each invalid will have his/her register list, which will
contain all data about the person, such as education, specialty,
occupation, marital status, and housing facilities that would help to
solve housing problems of invalids’, he said.A.H. –0–

Negotiated Price

Agency WPS
What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
June 28, 2004, Monday

NEGOTIATED PRICE

SOURCE: Vremya Novostei, June 28, 2004, p. 2

by Nikolai Poroskov

The Duma has voted to ratify the adapted Conventional Forces in
Europe (CFE) Treaty by 355 votes in favor, 28 against, and two
abstentions. The CFE treaty is called the “cornerstone of European
security.” At present, this is the only legally functioning mechanism
of interstate arms control. The treaty was signed as far back as
November 1990 by NATO member states and Warsaw Pact states, aiming to
improve the security balance in Europe by means of reducing five
kinds of armaments: battle tanks, armored combat vehicles, artillery,
combat aircraft and attack helicopters. The Agreement on Adaptation
of the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe was drawn up in
Istanbul in November 2003. Russia insisted then that the Baltic
states and Slovenia must sign the treaty before they join NATO. NATO
ignored Russia’s position at the time, although new NATO Secretary
General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer promised that the Baltic states would
certainly join the treaty.

At the moment, some 30 European states and the US and Canada have
signed the treaty. However, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan have been
the only nations to ratify it so far. NATO member states say they are
prepared to ratify the adapted CFE treaty after Russia, but only
after Russian bases are withdrawn from Georgia and the Trans-Dniester
region. Russia sees no legal link here, and regards withdrawal of its
bases to be a subject for bilateral interstate talks. In the opinion
of Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov, Russia has already fulfilled the
demand on flank restrictions by removing two of four bases from
Georgia.

The main distinction of the adapted CFE treaty is that the levels of
arms permitted are determined individually for each state, rather
than according to a state’s affiliation with a military-political
bloc. This considerably reduces the ability of NATO member states to
deploy troops in other countries. Ratification of the CFE treaty will
yield many advantages to Russia. Firstly, according to Sergei Ivanov,
the treaty contributes to strengthening Russia by no-military methods
and is in line with our national interests. Secondly, the Russian
military will have to receive information about the location of NATO
aircraft across the entire treaty area. Besides, the Alliance will
have to inform Russia whenever over 18 aircraft are brought into the
application areas, and submit quarterly figures about the strength of
aviation in the area of NATO member states. Overall, the 19 “old”
NATO members will discard around 4,800 battle tanks, 4,000 armored
vehicles, and almost as many artillery systems. This is equivalent to
10 full NATO divisions. Russia won’t have to make any cuts, since we
are already within the parameters of the treaty (6,350 tanks, 11,280
armored combat vehicles, 6,315 artillery systems, 3,416 battle planes
and 855 attack helicopters). Besides, the increased quota for arms
for regular troops will enable Russia to preserve its military
presence in Armenia and Ukraine.

The Duma is urging states which have signed the CFE treaty to ratify
the adapted treaty, if only because the former version of the treaty
is out of step with the current situation. Formally, NATO has the
ability to deploy its arms and military facilities on the territory
of new member states, but doing so would raise doubts about arms
control and Russia-NATO relations on the whole. In case of an
emergency which could endanger Russia’s overriding interests, Russia
will take measures, “including measures which infringe the CFE treaty
limits.”

Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin

Returning to Beirut, An Architect Has Designs on Its Future

The Wall Street Journal
PAGE ONE

Returning to Beirut,
An Architect Has
Designs on Its Future

Bernard Khoury’s Plan
In Restoring a Building
Is Not to Forget the War
By BILL SPINDLE
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
June 25, 2004; Page A1

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Bernard Khoury stared up at an egg-shaped building,
half of it sheared away. A tangle of broken concrete, rusting girders
and bent steel rods stuck out the side. What remained was pocked with
bullet and shell holes. But for the Harvard-trained Lebanese architect,
here was something to behold. “It’s beautiful,” he said. “Like Beirut is
beautiful.”

Slated for destruction as recently as last year, the Beirut City Center
Building is among the last structures in Beirut’s once war-torn downtown
that still bear the scars of the war that raged off and on here until
1990. The building, constructed in the 1960s, has been empty since 1975,
when the conflict first broke out in the city commonly called the Paris
of the Middle East.

Beirut went on to suffer a decade and a half of shooting and shelling by
ethnic clans, religious fanatics and the Israeli, U.S. and Syrian
militaries. Since the end of the war, much of the area around the City
Center building has been restored through a monumental, and often
controversial, renewal effort led by a private development company,
Solidere, whose biggest investor, Rafik Hariri, is now Lebanon’s
billionaire prime minister.

Tourists once again fill downtown Beirut’s pavilions, which are lined
with Italian, French and Mediterranean cafés. The downtown renovation
has erased almost all signs of the war. Assem Salam, a prominent
Lebanese architect and Solidere critic, says it “has been done with a
total disregard for the memory of the city.”

But in a region where strife is again on the rise, the City Center
building’s path to preservation shows how Beirut’s turbulent past
continues to intrude on its present — and future.

Although Mr. Khoury, 35 years old, grew up in Beirut, he barely
remembers the distinctive egg-shaped dome from back then. The war
started when he was 7 years old. Downtown was especially contested
precisely because it was the area where the city’s ethnic and religious
hodgepodge — Druze, Maronite Christians, Shiite Muslims and
Palestinians — mixed each day and held competing claims. It became a
fearsome no-man’s land, divided by a “Green Line” demarcating the almost
completely Christian east side from the mostly Muslim west. Though
Christian, Mr. Khoury’s immediate family lived on the predominantly
Muslim side of the city, separated from relatives in the east.

Mr. Khoury left Lebanon in 1986 to attend the Rhode Island School of
Design, and then Harvard University’s architecture school, where he
became interested in the reconstruction of his hometown, just getting
under way. He returned with big ideas, mostly for the monumental
architecture he figured would mark the effort. But after more than a
dozen attempts to win major commissions, he came up empty. Solidere was
meticulously rehabilitating downtown, but largely in a refined French
Colonial style. Mr. Khoury bristled at this “postcard image” of the
Middle East. “There was just nothing here for me,” he says.

But after moving to New York in 1997 — for good, he thought — Mr.
Khoury was asked by a friend to design a dance club back in Beirut. The
project wasn’t exactly what he had aspired to, but he agreed to do it.
The site for the new club, eventually named B018, had a long history as
a refugee camp: Armenians congregated there around the first World War
and Palestinians in the early 1970s. In 1976, about 1,000 Palestinians
were massacred on the spot just after the beginning of the war.

Mr. Khoury says that kind of history can’t be ignored, even for a dance
club. So he designed a dark, bunker-like underground space with a
retractable roof and a dance floor studded with benches clearly designed
to evoke coffins. Criticized by some as utterly macabre, B018, named for
the number of an apartment where the club owner threw parties during the
war, attracted a big local and international following. It also won Mr.
Khoury a measure of acclaim in architectural circles.

That led to bar and restaurant commissions from Beirut to Berlin,
another city struggling to integrate its past with its present and
future through architecture.

Meanwhile, Solidere continued with its multibillion-dollar recasting of
downtown and frequently hired eminent architects and urban designers.
Despite long delays and financing headaches, the project helped put
Beirut back on the international bon vivant circuit. What was once the
local opera house is now a Virgin MegaStore. Officials talk of bringing
Formula One auto racing to town.

The next big phase of the project was launched earlier this month with
an international competition to design what’s known as Martyr’s Square,
a once bustling plaza where ethnic groups mixed more than almost any
place else in the country. It is now a barren swath of land. But plans
to revitalize the square have forced a confrontation with one painful
result of the war: Balkanized into sectarian enclaves, Beirut is still a
long way from the mixing pot it once was. Solidere planners want a
rejuvenated Martyr’s Square to help remedy that. “It’s the only place
where all the groups in the city really came together. That has to
happen again,” says Angus Gavin, who manages the urban development
division of Solidere. “If [downtown] works, it means the idea of a
multireligious, multiethnic society is back in business.”

Overlooking Martyr’s Square is the wreck of the Beirut City Center
Building. It was designed in the 1960s by Lebanese architect Joseph
Philippe Karam. At the time, Lebanon was coming into its own two decades
after gaining independence from the French. Beneath the large white
dome, which housed a theater and exhibition space, were six underground
floors of shopping and parking.

The war brought a long period of neglect. In the early ’90s Lebanon’s
finance ministry eyed the building as a headquarters, and even
constructed a foundation and four basement floors for a new tower next
to the egg before aborting the project. At first, Solidere recognized
little special about the building and planned to demolish it. But as
Solidere Chairman Nasser Chamma squired celebrity architects around town
in the past year, many were struck by the odd-shaped building next to
Martyr’s Square. “I’m glad we didn’t do anything to it,” Mr. Chamma
says.

Having decided to spare the building, Solidere officials didn’t know
what to do with it. But they did know who might: Mr. Khoury. He jumped
at the chance.

Classic restoration, though, isn’t what he has in mind. He plans to
surround the distinctive dome in huge red scaffolding that spreads out
over the whole property, giving it the permanent feel of a construction
site. The surface of the building will be left as is — bullet pocks,
mortar holes, crumbling plaster and all — wrapped in wire mesh. A
pavilion below the dome will be studded with windows onto the
subterranean floors, which will house gallery and exhibition spaces.

Solidere officials say they’re excited, and they especially hope the new
City Center will attract more young residents downtown. So does Mr.
Khoury. But if it does, he points out, the attraction will be the way
Beirut’s past and future intersect in its present. “It’s a complicated
situation, and I like complicated situations,” he says.

–Farnaz Fassihi contributed to this article.

Write to Bill Spindle at [email protected]

BAKU: Azeri opposition leader, US envoy discuss range of issues

Azeri opposition leader, US envoy discuss range of issues

Turan news agency
28 Jun 04

BAKU

Musavat Party leader Isa Qambar had a meeting with the US ambassador
to Azerbaijan, Reno Harnish, today.

The meeting discussed the public and political situation in the
country, the state of affairs in the field of democracy and human
rights, the problem of political prisoners, the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict, relations between Azerbaijan and NATO, including
US-Azerbaijani ties, the press service of the party reported. ?

Areni First National Wine Festival

PRESS RELEASE
Tufenkian Hospitality
21/1 Tumanian St.,

Yerevan Armenia 375001
Contact: Lilit Hakobyan
Tel: 374 1 520 911
Fax: 374 1 520 913
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

THE FIRST NATIONAL WINE FESTIVAL
Second Saturday of October (2004 10 09)
Vayots Dzor region, Areni Village,

Armenia

USDA and Tufenkian Hospitality are glad to announce the first national wine
festival in Armenia, with the aim to introduce an ancient Armenian tradition
of winemaking to the World.

More than just a showcase for great wine, the festival is a major event for
traditional food making and tasting, traditional crafts-making, and
folkloric performances.

The event program includes traditional dancing, singing, tight-rope
performances, a Marionette Theatre, food-making and tasting, wine-making and
tasting, traditional games, contests, art work, carpet weaving, and craft
items: their creation and presentation (materials used include stone, wood,
and local ceramics).

Villagers will sell home-made products, in their houses – yogurt (matsun)
and cream, honey, nuts and walnuts, vegetables, fruits, dried fruits, baked
goods, lavash, home-made jams and jellies, sweet sujukh, herbal teas
(including hip-rose & thyme), and all the other products that a typical
Armenian household usually prepares for its members.

Armenian companies will present such products as wine, cheese, dried fruits,
meat and fish products, and soft drinks.

Craftsmen will present their work, and visitors may try their hand at
replicating this art.

Armenian restaurants and cafes will organize an area for a one-day operation
of their businesses.

Children can draw in a nearby meadow.

At the Information Desk, visitors can learn about the history and historical
monuments of the region, including Gladzor Museum, the Selim Pass and
Caravanserai, and Noravanq Monastery. Find out more about the local climate,
the flora and fauna of the region, and the village itself. The Djermuk Spa
will also be present.

A qualified trilingual guide will take visitors to the local church for a
tour. This will be done according to a set schedule throughout the day.

For more information please contact us at 374 1 520 911, 105 ext., or e-mail
[email protected]

www.tufenkian.am