ASBAREZ ONLINE [11-23-2004]

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11/23/2004
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1) Meeting with President Arkady Ghoukasian
2) Public Official and Former “Azadamard” Editor Mousegh Mikaelian Passes Away
3) Azeri Officer Admits Killing Armenian With Ax
4) Armenia Criticizes Atkinson Report on Karabagh

1) Meeting with President Arkady Ghoukasian

Among the many issues discussed between an Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(ARF) delegation and Mountainous Karabagh Republic President Arkady Ghoukasian
on Monday, were the upcoming Armenia Fund telethon, national dues for
Karabagh’s advancement, as well as steps to resettle the population of
Karabagh. Joining President Ghoukasian were the Representative of MKR in the
United States Vardan Barseghian, and Karabagh Archbishop Barkev Mardirossian.
A lengthy political discussion included means to counter Azerbaijan’s latest
anti-Armenian policy, and the Karabagh peace process.
The ARF Western Region delegation was composed of co-chair Avedik Ismirlian
and Hovig Saliba, along with Vahe Bozoian, Hrair Der Krikorian, and Anahid
Stepanian.

2) Public Official and Former “Azadamard” Editor Mousegh Mikaelian Passes Away

YEREVAN (ARF Bureau Press Office)–The distinguished career of Mousegh
Mikaelian came to an end on Monday, November 23, when the accomplished
official
passed away in the capital city of Yerevan.
Born in the Talin region of Zovasar in 1948, Mikaelian graduated from the
“Sasnashen” school and shortly after gained entry into Yerevan State
University’s Philology Department.
Having served as a staff member of several publications, including “Karoun,”
“Avantgard,” and “Sovetagan Hayastan,” Mikaelian moved on to establish the
weeklies “Ourpat,” and “Azadamard,” and the monthlies “Varoujan,” “Midk,”
“Zankag,” and “Asbarez.” During his prolific career, Mikaelian also authored
four books.
He joined the Armenian Revolutionary federation in 1989, and served as the
editor-in-chief of the party’s official publications “Azadamard” (1991-94),
and
“Yerkir” (1998-99).
In 1999, he was elected to Armenia’s parliament and served as a member until
2003, when he was appointed as the country’s Deputy Minister of Education and
Sciences.

3) Azeri Officer Admits Killing Armenian With Ax

(Reuters)–An Azeri officer who killed his fellow Armenian officer Gurgen
Margarian with an ax at a Budapest military academy pleaded guilty in court on
Tuesday, saying he took revenge for Armenian attacks on Azeris, Hungarian news
agency MTI reported.
“It was not my plan to be so cruel, savage,” 27-year-old Ramil Safarov told
the court. When asked why he almost severed the head of the victim, he said,
“because they did the same to 8,000 people of ours.”
In February, Safarov entered the Armenian’s room, stabbed him several times
with a knife, and struck him repeatedly with an axe, almost severing his head.
Both were participating in a NATO Partnership for Peace English language
course.
Safarov was charged with committing premeditated murder with extreme cruelty,
and faces possible life imprisonment if found guilty, a Budapest Capital Court
press official told Reuters.

4) Armenia Criticizes Atkinson Report on Karabagh

YEREVAN (Armenpress)–National Assembly Vice-speaker Tigran Torosian
criticized
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) rapporteur on
Mountainous Karabagh David Atkinson, for failing to consult with the OSCE
Minsk
Group, tasked to find a resolution to the conflict, and establish ongoing
contacts with Armenian and Azeri delegations before presenting his report
during PACE’s November 17 session in Paris.
According to Torosian, who heads Armenia’s delegation to PACE, Atkinson’s
recent report on Mountainous Karabagh had not changed greatly from its
September 14 report. He also said that while the draft resolution is improved,
it does not contain all proposals put forth by the Armenian delegation.
Concerned that Azerbaijan is increasingly being perceived in Europe as the
victim of the conflict, he said Armenian authorities must revise their
practical approach in order to counter Azerbaijan’s aggressive policy in
international organizations–especially in light of Turkey’s increased
backstage efforts to find a resolution.
The PACE report does call on both Armenian and Azeri officials to meet in
Strasbourg to decide on Karabagh’s future status. It also calls on the
conflicting sides to withdraw their troops and refrain from military
activates.
Torosian stressed the necessity for Armenia to intensify efforts in the
international arena, and refrain from a policy of mutual accusations and
“behind-the-scene” talks in parliament.

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BAKU: FM of Az. met ambassadors of EU and OIC member countries…

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Nov 19 2004

FOREIGN MINISTER OF AZERBAIJAN MET AMBASSADORS OF EU AND OIC MEMBER
COUNTRIES, CHINA AND USA
[November 19, 2004, 11:28:18]

On 18 November, foreign minister of the Azerbaijan Republic Elmar
Mammadyarov has met ambassadors of the European Union and OIC member
countries, as well as China and USA in Baku, AzerTAj said.

Expressing gratitude for accepting invitation to participate at the
meeting, Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said he highly assesses support
of the countries at the coming discussions in New York on inclusion
of item `Situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan’ in the
agenda of the 59th session of the UN General Assembly current year 29
October. Noting that resettling by Armenia of the population at the
occupied territories of Azerbaijan contradicts international legal
norms and the Section 949 of the Geneva Convention, stressed
necessity of principle position of the international community to
stop this illegal activity.

The Minister said that this does not mean replacement of the OSCE
Minsk Group, and the goal is attract attention of international
organizations to the problem.

Finally, minister Elmar Mammadyarov expressed hope for support of the
countries ambassadors of which took part at the meeting and that the
world community would show respect for international legal
principles.

ArmeniaNow news – 11/19/2004

ARMENIANOW.COM
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Headlines:

NEWS
Plenty to Talk About: Rhetoric continues to rise over appeal for General Assembly debate on Karabakh
The Margaryan Trial: Case of murdered Armenian officer to begin in Hungary
Guarding Against `Grip’: Armenia gets first vaccination for flu season
Football hopes: Armenia sweetens disappointing season
Calling Out Corruption: Youth union aims to reveal wrongdoing in education system

FEATURES
`Til Death Do Us Part’: Golden couple renew vows and recall 50 years together
NOT Outside Eye: An Armenian in America has a foot fight in returning to her heart
Seeing Green After 10 Years: UMCOR celebrates a decade in Armenia with a gift of trees
Outdated: Authorities use Socialist-era law to violate democratic rights

ARTS
Artistic Felons?: Armenian couple charged with crimes in Russia for exhibit on religion
Armenia Underfoot: New guidebook shows where to get high in Hyestan

For complete articles, please, see

NEWS
Plenty to Talk About: Rhetoric continues to rise over appeal for
General Assembly debate on Karabakh
By Aris Ghazinyan

The fact that the issue `On the situation on Azerbaijan’s occupied
territories’ was put on the agenda of the UN General Assembly session
still remains in the center of the attention of all structures
interested in the soonest settlement of the Karabakh problem. The
possible shift of the mediatory initiative from the sphere of the OSCE
Minsk Group to the plane of the UN, in official Yerevan’s opinion,
cannot promote a peaceful and just resolution of the conflict.

Minister of Foreign Affairs Vardan Oskanian has stated that the
inclusion of the Baku-initiated `question about territories’ into the
discussions in the UN format got the approval of only those entities
of international law that are practically against peaceful means of
settling the dispute.

At the end of last week Moscow was drawn into the debate when, during
a meeting of the heads of foreign ministries of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization, Oskanian leveled scathing criticism at
some members for their support of Azerbaijan. Taking the Azeri
viewpoint on the matter `is not consistent with all the details of the
conflict in Nagorno Karabakh as well as other approaches of the OSCE
Minsk Group – a structure that has the most comprehensive information
about the settlement process at its disposal,’ the minister
said. Oskanian further said that the positions of some states –
Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan – were `unclear’.

***************************************************************************
The Margaryan Trial: Case of murdered Armenian officer to begin in Hungary
By Zhanna Alexanyan

Court hearings are expected to begin November 23 in Budapest in the
trial of Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani Army officer charged in the
murder of Armenian Army officer Gurgen Margaryan February 19. The two
were in Hungary to attend a NATO-sponsored English training program.

Safarov attack Margaryan, 26, in his sleep. A second Armenian officer,
Hayk Mkuchyan escaped Safarov’s attack when alert by his Lithuanian
roommate.

Attorney Nazeli Vardanyan has been appointed by the Ministry of
Defense to represent Makuchyan and the family of Margaryan.

The trial will be conducted in Hungarian language, interpreted for the
Armenian and Russian sides. It was to have begun in June, however
Safarov filed an appeal to have the trial moved to Azerbaijan and to
have Safarov released from custody. The motions were denied.

It was only a week ago that Vardanyan learned that the trial was about
to begin. She says she has not had proper time to prepare, especially
as all documents are in Hungarian, and must be translated.

***************************************************************************
Guarding Against `Grip’: Armenia gets first vaccination for flu season
By Marianna Grigoryan

Garlic, vodka, raspberry and black currant tea…
Specialists say we should forget these Armenian methods and choose a
more civilized and trustful means of flu prevention.
This year, for the first time, flu vaccinations such as those offered
in many countries are being administered in Armenia. Medical groups
and organizations are sending out notices, letters and announcements,
encouraging the population to guard itself against `grip’.

***************************************************************************
Football hopes: Armenia sweetens disappointing season
By Suren Musayelyan

Armenia put a smile on their fans’ faces on Wednesday by ending a
series of four straight defeats and showing their best football of
this otherwise unremarkable 0-4-1 season.

Karen Dokhoyan’s second-half equalizer snatched a point from group
leaders Romania and raised hopes for a better continuation of his
team’s current qualifying campaign after the winter break.

Armenia coach Bernard Casoni did not hide his satisfaction with the
1-1 draw and the livelier football shown by his rejuvenated side.

***************************************************************************
Calling Out Corruption: Youth union aims to reveal wrongdoing in education system
By Gayane Lazarian

University student councils, political party youth unions,
organizations for young people and numerous Students attended a
roundtable discussion Tuesday (November 16) to discuss corruption in
Armenia’s field of higher education.

`Our goal is to make the causes of this vicious phenomenon known, to
call the public’s attention to this problem,’ said Karen Antashyan, a
member of the `Nikol Aghbalian’ student union of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (ARF), the hosts of the discussion. `We think
that these joint discussions will result in a proper solution to the
problem. Students must overcome the fear inside them, and the managers
of higher schools eventually must realize that corruption phenomena
are displayed because of their inconsistency. Youth organizations and
mass media also have something to do here.’

Part of the meeting’s purpose was to publicize results of a survey
conducted by the union in which 1,100 students from 11 state-run
institutes of higher learning were polled on issues relating to
corruption and education.

FEATURES

***************************************************************************
`Til Death Do Us Part’: Golden couple renew vows and recall 50 years together
By Marianna Grigoryan

Her white wedding gown is greeted with kindness and smiles, and with
her white hair gathered up under her veil, the bride, 73-year-old
Margarit Dallakyan paves her way ahead.

Fifty years ago she was a bride for the first time. Last Saturday she
repeated the event. And, both times, Hovanes Chulyan was the lucky
groom. It was in fact the couples `golden’ anniversary, and to
celebrate they duplicated the day they were joined, November 6, 1954.

The `newly’ weds celebrated with music of the zurna and dohl, with
dancing and singing. The wedding party attended in cars decorated in
festive colors; quite a change from the `rainy, sober day’ Margo
recalls from 50 years ago.

`Then, I was taken away in a wagon,’ she recalls. `There was no
wedding gown, nor any proper conditions or gifts, but this latest one
was the most gorgeous.’

In 50 years, Margo and Hovanes have carved out a life, raised a family
and have become grandparents. But on their first wedding, they didn’t
even know each other. Hovanes had repatriated from Aleppo, and had
made up his mind to get married, and the best choice turned out to be
Margo from Ijevan.

***************************************************************************
NOT Outside Eye: An Armenian in America has a foot fight in returning
to her heart
By Julia Hakobyan

Visiting the United States was a great challenge for me, but leaving
it turned out to be even more so.

After a month-long fellowship at Duke University in North Carolina, it
was time to go home. I was ready. But only large doses of tolerance
can prepare a person for international travel these days.

If you still doubt whether the US government takes enough measures to
protect the airspace and airports from the terrorist acts I can assure
you it does. Like all travelers, I was treated like a terror suspect.

Dogs sniffed handbags, unattended luggage was confiscated, cameras saw
me, even though I didn’t see the cameras.

***************************************************************************
Seeing Green After 10 Years: UMCOR celebrates a decade in Armenia with
a gift of trees
ArmeniaNow news brief

Yerevan’s decreasing `green zone’ got a boost today (November 19) with
the completion of a project that planted 1,000 trees in Motherhood
Park of the Malatsia Sebastia Community.

The trees were a gift from the United Methodist Committee on Relief
(UMCOR) and a ceremonial planting was held to mark the 10th
anniversary of UMCOR’s activity in Armenia.

UMCOR, an agency of the United Methodist Church, has been around since
1940, when it was formed to help alleviate trauma among survivors of
World War II. It now has a presence in about 90 countries. Its
offices were set up in Armenia in 1994 where it initially provided
healthcare aid. Over the past decade it has evolved to address
developmental needs, including offering loans for farmers.

Friday’s tree planting was in cooperation with the Armenian Tree
Project, which has planted some 580,000 trees at sites from Goris to
Gyumri, in an effort to fight Armenia’s serious deforestation problem.

`UMCOR believes that improving the environment is something that will
have a lasting effect on the families that live in Armenia and we are
honored to support such an important initiative in commemoration of
our 10 years of service to Armenia,’ said Warren Harrity, head of
UMCOR’s Armenia Mission.

***************************************************************************
Outdated: Authorities use Socialist-era law to violate democratic rights
By Vahan Ishkhanyan

In the political calm of autumn that has replaced the contentious and violent outbreak of unrest last spring, a look back at how authorities reacted to oppositional party demonstrations shows a pattern of
oppression that lawyers and human rights specialists say must be abolished if Armenia is ever to become a legitimate independent republic.
Arrests, detainments, harassments carried out from April till June were a repeat of actions taken against citizens in 2003 when Armenia’s presidential elections turned into an international embarrassment for
the manner in which law enforcement and judicial bodies disregarded human rights, applied the law according to political expediency and disregarded the republic’s commitment to align itself with international
standards of civil behavior.
During the winter of 2003 and the spring of this year, more than 600 citizens were arrested and fined by courts for taking part in political rallies or for independently making public statements against ruling
parties. Most charges, an investigation of the cases has found, proved to be validated by application of a legal code adopted when Armenia was a Soviet Republic.
The infamous `Administrative Offense’ code was widely enforced to quell and discourage anti-government outcry. By it, a person can be jailed for 15 days, virtually without cause and according to the whim
of law enforcement.

ARTS
Artistic Felons?: Armenian couple charged with crimes in Russia for exhibit on religion

By Vahan Ishkhanyan
ArmeniaNow reporter

If painters Narine Zolyan and Harutyun Zulumyan were in Moscow now,
the wife and husband would likely be sitting in a court dock as
defenders.

The artists are facing criminal charges for an exhibition they put on
last year in Russia.

The exhibition, entitled `Beware, Religion!’ featured the work of 40
painters from several countries, whose installations commented on
religion.

The show was supposed to run for 20 days at the Andrey Sakharov
Center, but on the third day, a mob of religious zealots attacked the
exhibition, spraying paint onto some of the pieces and spraying onto
the walls: `You are cursed! You hate orthodoxy!’ Police had to come to
the center to disburse the angry mob.

Among the works attacked was Zolyan’s video in which she constantly
writes in black over a saying of a Zen Buddhist monk’s words: `I am
the only one in the sky and under the sky who deserves honor.’ Then
she washes the words away and with the clean fabric forms
handrails. Over the remnants of Zolyan’s exhibit, vandals wrote
`sacrilege’. (Click here to see images
)

A court in Moscow acquitted the vandals of charges and then initiated
a case against organizers of the exhibition, charging them with
creating ethnic and religious discord.

A trial began on November with three of the organizers in court, while
Zolyan and Zulumyan are in Yerevan, hoping to avoid prosecution.

Armenia Underfoot: New guidebook shows where to get high in Hyestan

ArmeniaNow newsbrief

Visitors to Armenia now have a guide for discovering the republic from
the side of a mountain, up the face of a rock wall or from naturally
adorned paths in 26 locations that accommodate expert climbers or
those who simply want a pleasant hike.

`Adventure Armenia’ is a 116-page guide sized to fit in a backpack,
that offers meticulous research, trail maps, color photographs of each
destination, tips and safety precautions for discovering Armenia in a
way that is far from the cafe and museum scene.

Co-written by ecological preservation advocate Jeffrey Tufenkian (a
native of Oregon) and Carine Bachmann, who grew up in the shadow of
the Swiss Alps, the guide is the result of three years of hiking and
climbing by the authors.

At a reception Wednesday at Artbridge Cafe in Yerevan, Tufenkian said
one purpose of the book is to re-introduce Armenia as a premier hiking
and climbing destination, a distinction it held during Soviet times.

ABOUT US
ArmeniaNow.com is published by New Times Journalism Training Center, a Non-Governmental Organization in Yerevan, Armenia.
The weekly website exists as a newsroom laboratory in which journalists and editors in Armenia are taught the application of methodology and theory of Western journalism.
Our goal is to produce real change in the approach of local journalists by immersing them in long-term training that makes clear how Western-style reporting works and what benefits it can bring when applied
to subjects in Armenia.
ArmeniaNow hopes to influence the style of journalism practiced by other publications both directly through making our material available to them free of charge, and indirectly, by taking some of their
reporters and editors on short-term attachments.
The training center grew from research and experience that shows that media in Armenia lacks objectivity, as it is almost entirely financed by special interest sources – primarily, political factions.
Consequently, journalists bound to the very practical need of survival, are encouraged to produce reports that satisfy the agenda of party politics.
The result is an atmosphere of distrust by readers, perpetuated by journalists and editors who, having inherited a legacy of State propaganda or opposition fanaticism, have never had a chance to practice
another method.
And, while various agencies exist to teach theory, ArmeniaNow is the first publication in Armenia to offer hands-on application.
We offer a journalistic approach unique to its environment with the hope that as other institutions of the new republic emerge – business, education, law, etc. – journalism, led by the example of ArmeniaNow,
eventually will follow the trend toward a democracy-based society.
ArmeniaNow journalists receive a stipend for their training and production of stories. Funding is made possible by private donations. For more information write to [email protected].

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MFA: FM Receives CoE Committee of Ministers’ Monitoring Group

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
375010 Telephone: +3741. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +3741. .562543
Email: [email protected]:

PRESS RELEASE
15 November 2004

Minister Oskanian Receives Council of Europe Committee of Ministers’
Monitoring Group

On 15 November, Minister Oskanian received Council of Europe Committee of
Ministers’ Monitoring group (also known as Ago Group) headed by Germany’s
Permanent Representative to CoE Ambassador Roland Wegener. This is the
second visit of Ago Group to Armenia to assess the country’s progress in
meeting the commitments made to the Council of Europe upon membership.

Ambassador Wegener stressed the importance of continuity and consistency of
the Group’s operation and briefed the Minister on constructive dialogue held
during the Group’s meetings with National Assembly Vice Speaker,
parliamentary factions and opposition representatives. The Group also
briefed the Minister on its views on constitutional reform progress, reform
of the electoral code and the need for a dialogue between the authorities
and the opposition, importance of ensuring equal conditions for the mass
media, progress of judiciary reform and things yet to be done.

Foreign Minister stated that the Group’s visits render an additional
momentum to the reforms and contribute to Armenia’s fulfillment of
commitments towards the Council of Europe. He further introduced Armenia’s
approaches and steps taken for meeting the CoE commitments. The Minister
stated that in spite of notable achievements, there is still much to be
done.

The discussion continued during a business dinner and involved exchange of
views on several issues of international concern, including latest
developments with Nagorno Karabagh conflict regulation. Minister Oskanian
expressed hope that after elimination of current bottlenecks, it would be
possible to register a serious progress in the conflict settlement.

On the same day, Minister Oskanian and Ago Group members held a press
conference in the Ministry’s Media Hall.

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

Americans feel upbeat, poll finds

THE WASHINGTON TIMES
November 11, 2004

Americans feel upbeat, poll finds

By Jennifer Harper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

America’s mood is upbeat: The Harris Poll’s annual “Feel Good Index” finds
the nation happy with home, family and friends – with the biggest increase
in positive feelings emanating from “morals and ethics.”
Life, in fact, seems downright harmonious, with 98 percent reporting
they’re pleased with their family relations, according to the poll, which
surveyed 1,016 U.S. adults Oct. 14-17.
Ninety-five percent feel good about their homes, 92 percent praised the
quality of their lives overall, 91 percent were positive about their social
lives, 88 percent said they were happy about their health and 85 percent
gave thumbs up to their standard of living.

All of the figures are increases from last year’s poll results by as much as
six points.
In addition, two-thirds of married respondents reported they were happy
with their spouses – up seven points from last year, and the highest number
in the history of the survey itself, which dates back to 1997.
The survey reflected one concern that proved paramount during the
presidential election last week.
It found that 77 percent felt positive about “the morals and values in
their community,” up seven points since last year and 12 points since 1997.
Another 55 percent applauded “the morals and values of Americans in
general,” up 8 points since last year, and 21 points since 1997.
Those numbers represent “the highest point ever” for values
measurements, the survey noted.
Election Day exit polls revealed to many stunned Democrats that 22
percent of voters identified the importance of “moral values” as their
primary motivation in the voting booth – an issue cited more than any other
concern, including the economy and terrorism.
These so-called “values voters” supported President Bush over
Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry 80 percent to 18 percent.
Forty-three percent of the respondents in the Harris survey said they
felt good about the nation’s economy, up eight points from last year’s
polls. The figure stood at it highest point – 68 percent – in 1999 and 2000.
Its lowest point was 39 percent in 2002 .
The survey reflected other financially based attitudes: 60 percent were
happy with their jobs, down four points from last year. Sixty-two percent
felt good about their financial security, up three points from last year.
The actual “feel good” index is 74 when all the numbers are averaged, up
four points from last year and the same as it was in the pre-September 11
days of 1999. The highest number on record was 75, in 1998.
Meanwhile, the United States is a relatively satisfied nation, at least
according to the most recent “World Values Survey,” conducted 1999-2001, a
massive poll charting social and political change in 65 countries over three
years by a consortium of sociologists and academics here and abroad.
They advise that “factors that make people happy may vary from one
country to the next” in the survey, which is conducted every four years.
The latest numbers rank the United States the 16th-happiest nation on
the planet.
Nigeria was the happiest country, followed by Mexico, Venezuela, El
Salvador and Puerto Rico. The least happy were Russia, Armenia and Romania.

CENN — Daily Digest – November 15, 2004

CENN — NOVEMBER 15, 2004 DAILY DIGEST
Table of Contents:
1. Tuesday: MPs to Probe Government over BP Pipeline Safety Fears
2. Keeping Tbilisi Clean
3. Minister of Energy Thinks Shah-Deniz Natural Gas not Enough
4. Georgia’s Tumultuous Oil Fortunes
5. Greens Demand Restoration of ecological taxes
6. Society for Democratic Reforms (SDR)
7. Rumors on Earthquake in Armenia are “Information Terror”
8. About 135km of Irrigation Networks to be Restored and Created in
Yerevan in 2005
9. Yerevan’s Municipality Seriously Deal with Reservoirs Pollution
Problem
10. Some 80,000 Tones of Grapes Purchased in Armenia in 2004
11. FAO Provides Armenia with $400,000 for Mountainous Districts
Sustainable Development
12. US Embassy Provides $140 Thousand to Public Organizations of Armenia
for Development of Communities
13. Presentation of Guide “Basis of Human Development” Takes Place in
Yerevan
14. Conflicting Reports About Cause of Elephant’s Death
15. Bush Adds Countries Eligible for US Aid
16. Gas Pipeline from Iran
17. A Toxic Tannery in Garni
18. Mckinsey & Co Unveils Findings of a Research on Armenian Tourism
19. NGOs 2004 Conference and Exhibition
20. NGO AGAINST PESTICIDES
21. Armenia Report Shows Significant Decline in Poverty
22. A Day to Prevent Environmental Causes and Results of War
23. EIA Report Submitted to the Ministry of Environment of Georgia
`Asphalt-concrete Plant in Isan-Samgori, Tbilisi’ by the `Viragi’ Ltd.
24. EIA Reports Submitted to the Ministry of Environment of Georgia

1. TUESDAY: MPS TO PROBE GOVERNMENT OVER BP PIPELINE SAFETY FEARS

Press advisory from the Baku Ceyhan Campaign

Tuesday 16th November:

MPs probe government over BP pipeline safety fears

ECGD quizzed at Parliament Committee hearing

WHAT: Commons Trade & Industry Committee will cross-examine the Export
Credits Guarantee Department (ECGD) over its support for BP’s BTC
pipeline

WHEN: Tuesday 16th November, 9.30am

WHERE: Portcullis House, Thatcher Room

Followed by:

Press conference on evidence of pipeline safety, human rights fears

WHAT: Press conference summarizing evidence presented to Committee – on
safety breaches, and on human rights abuses connected with the project

WHO: Chaired by Simon Thomas MP

Presentations by senior project engineer, by campaigner recently
returned from Turkey, by independent investigator of BP cover-up of
critical internal reports WHERE, WHEN: Portcullis House, Room O,
immediately after the Committee hearing.

A government agency will come under scrutiny tomorrow for its role in a
controversial BP pipeline being built from the Caspian Sea to the
Mediterranean.

MPs will quiz the Export Credits Guarantee Department – which gave a £60
million guarantee to the project – over whether it took safety and human
rights concerns into account. Campaigners have accused the ECGD of
accepting BP claims at face value, and ignoring warnings of dangers.

The Committee, which will be cross-examining the head of the ECGD in
parliament on Tuesday, has received evidence from the Baku Ceyhan
Campaign and others, that ECGD failed to exercise proper supervision of
the project, and ignored internal BP reports of major environmental
risks. Failed design and construction measures could lead to a major oil
spill.

ECGD approved support for the project without even talking to project
staff who had accused the company of cutting corners on safety, and
failed to act on evidence of human rights abuses connected with the
project.

Campaigners and senior professionals who worked on the pipeline will
present their concerns at a press conference, chaired by Simon Thomas
MP, after the Committee hearing.

More information:

Anders Lustgarten, Baku Ceyhan Campaign: 07973 164 363

Greg Muttitt, PLATFORM: 07970 589 611

2. KEEPING TBILISI CLEAN

Source: The Messenger, November 9, 2004

The Sheraton Metechi Palace Hotel joined forces with the Tbilisi
Municipality early Saturday morning November 6, 2004 to assist the local
community in cleaning up Vera Park. The general manager of the hotel
said that the project was intended to be an example to Tbilisi citizens
to keep their city clean and tidy.

About fifty hotel associates and Tbilisi Municipality officials
participated in the project, leading the hotel to comment in its press
release that `the appearance of the Sheraton Metechi Palace staff and
management together with Tbilisi Municipality representatives in the
clean up of the park serves as a role model for Tbilisi community,
demonstrating how easy it is to take care of our surroundings.’

The hotel’s public relations director Tamriko Vardiashvili told The
Messenger that this is not first time the hotel has been involved in
such a project. `Our tradition is to help nature and do such projects
regularly. Our aim this time was to clean Tbilisi’s oldest park — Vera
Park – and we were greatly helped by Tbilisi Municipality to realize our
project,’ stated Vardiashvili.

General Manager of the Sheraton Metechi Hotel Richard Deutl said that
the hotel, along with Sheraton’s mother company Starwood Hotel, feels
greatly responsible for the community and the environment where they are
doing business.

Deutl told The Messenger that their aim was to show the community in
Tbilisi that cleaning parks and preserving the environment is not a
responsibility that can be left solely to the Municipality, or Sheraton
Hotel, but is the responsibility of each and every body.

`We wanted to set an example to our people. The environment concerns all
of us; it does not need a lot of effort or funds to keep a park clean
and tidy. It breaks my heart when I sometimes see people not caring for
their native environment. With today’s projects we want to set an exempt
for those individuals and support the local community,’ said Deutl.

Deutl stated that the hotel’s charitable activities are not limited to
the environment, but also include collecting money for children,
shelters and hospices. `It is very difficult to do in one particular
area because there are so many people in need and so many areas we can
help. We do not want to focus on just one issue. This was the first time
that we did this kind of project, but it will not be; nor will it be the
only kind of activity,’ stated Deutl.

Head of the City Serves Shalva Tskhakaia praised the hotel’s initiative
ad said he hoped it would set an example to others.

`I hope that it will be an example for other private companies and
organizations to similar things perhaps seen once a week. I also hope
that it will be an example for city residents too and that every
Saturday people will clean those places where children walk ad play. Our
main wish is to see such initiatives come from the population itself.
The Mayor’s Office will always support such proposals,’ stated
Tskhakaia, adding that the mayor’s office had helped both physically and
with equipment.

3. MINISTER OF ENERGY THINKS SHAH-DENIZ NATURAL GAS NOT ENOUGH

Source: The Messenger, November 10, 2004

On November 6, 2004 Minister of Energy Nika Gilauri gave an interview
with Prime News in which he skeptically evaluated the importance of
Baku-Erzerum natural gas pipeline for Georgia.

According to Mr. Gilauri, the amount of natural gas that will remain in
Georgia in lieu of transit tax will not fully meet the country’s demands
and so cannot be considered as a cheap alternative source, which can
replace the natural gas imported from Russia.

In his interview, Mr. Gilauri noted that only in 2007 would Georgia
begin receiving its free 5% of Shah-Deniz gas. Georgia will be able to
purchase a further 5% at reduced price of USD 55, but this is only $5
less than gas import from Russia by Gazprom.

Furthermore, as reported in Rezonansi, Mr. Gilauri notes that Georgia
uses approximately one billion cubic meters of natural gas annually and
expects that demand will increase in the future. According to the
schedule, around 200 million cubic meters are expected to pass through
the pipeline in 2006, meaning that Georgia will receive a paltry 20
million cubic meters, only a fraction of its requirements.

This situation leads the minister of energy to argue that the Georgian
side must participate in negotiations to directly import Shah-Deniz
natural gas from Azerbaijan before the project is activated because
otherwise Georgia will only be able to receive more gas in the unlikely
event that Turkey does not want its share. Mr. Gilauri’s comments
undermine the belief of some analysts that the Baku-Erzerum gas pipeline
will allow Georgia to gain energy independence from Russia.

4. GEORGIA’S TUMULTUOUS OIL FORTUNES

Source: The Messenger, November 11, 2004

A sharp increase in oil prices should encourage oil-producing countries,
but in Georgia production has noticeably decreased. Analysts note that
in the 2005 budget draft noting is allotted for oil precondition
Georgia. On the other hand, by next year the construction of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline is scheduled to finish and Caspian oil will
transmit via Georgia to western markets.

Currently, there are 15 oil wells operating in Georgia. According to
geographic studies, the country has potential reserves of 2 billion
tones of oil. The country’s territory is divided into licensed blocks
for exploration. In eastern Georgia, the British-America company Canargo
is leading exploration and production, and in the Black Sea territorial
waters, the British company Anadarko-Georgia is conducting research.

But according to the Georgian newspaper Bankebi da Pinansebi (Banks and
Finances), oil production has markedly reduced in Georgia in the last 4
months. The paper notes that many oilrigs have halted operation.
Canargo’s well in Ninotsminda was closed as well because of a blowout
that damaged nearby villages. `It is said that oil wells are
deliberately closed,’ reports the newspaper, adding that it thinks that
these are `intrigues planned by large banks.’

Meanwhile, Georgia is waiting for the completion of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline set for the mid-2005. Although the pipeline
is very close to being finished, protesters insist that the pipeline
poses a threat to the surrounding nature and on November 8, 2004 the
Academy of Science of Georgia and several NGOs presented a new demand
that the pipe be rerouted to less sensitive areas.

A more serious threat to the project lies outside of Georgia in England,
where The Sunday Times reported on November 7, 2004 `BP is on a
collision course with a parliamentary inquiry that it has misled over
the safety of a strategic international pipeline project baked with ?60m
of public money.’

According to the paper,’ The oil giant is withholding evidence,
including confidential laboratory results that cast serious doubt on the
project’s long term safety and a secret plan to bury the 1,000 mile oil
pipeline without fully testing it for leas.’

If MPs demand an independent audit, the pipeline could face major
construction delays forcing the company to carry the financial burden
that it hopes to transfer to other entities when the pipeline enters
operation.

One positive indicator is a new oil terminal under construction in
Qulevi near port of Poti. The terminal consists of 16 reservoirs and
Georgian analysts point together with the Batumi Oil Terminal. Both of
these terminals rely heavily on rail transit and the ability of the
country to manage and maintain its rail system.

5. GREENS DEMAND RESTORATION OF ECOLOGICAL TAXES

Source: The Messenger, November 12, 2004

Among the critics of the new tax code are Georgina’s Greens. They are
now demanding Parliament to reinstate the 11th clause of the code that
calls for a tax on pollution. The Greens argue that the abolishment of
the tax will only worsen the ecological conditions in Georgia.

According the tax code, already passed its first hearing in Parliament,
taxes on pollution that have been in place since 1993 will be abolished
According to the tax, entrepreneurs had to pay the tax for polluting the
air or water and any polluting material also had to be removed. In 1995
the budget gained USD 130, 000 from these taxes and in 2002 over USD 8
million.

The authors of the new tax code, as they were trying to decrease the
payload for taxpayers, abolished at least eleven taxes including the
ecological tax. Another argument against the tax was that it encouraged
corrupt agreements, but now the Greens claim that the abolishment of the
pollution tax practically frees those entrepreneurs who severely damaged
the environment from the responsibility.

Despite the fact that Georgian industry is practically ground to a halt,
environmental pollution is growing at a high tempo. The fact that many
large factories have shutdown leaving behind decaying hulks with now
environmental controls is one reason. Another is the profusion of micro
industrial on plants that do everything from breakdown scrap metal, to
process chemicals or trade oil products with virtually no outside
controls.

According to the Green’s data, annually 1,2 million tones of dangerous
products are released into Georgia’s skies, 408 billion liters of
tainted water is releases into the water table that then without any
cleaning us used for agricultural purposes and household consumption.

Greens are seeking the government not to allow the abolishment of the
pollution tax because it removes a method of punishment for business
that taint natural resources but it is also against Georgia’s
Environmental Protection drat laws.

Their chances of having any influence are slim but they strike accord
with many Georgians who value the county’s nature. Their only problem is
figuring out how to transform this love of nature into practical steps
to protect it.

6. SOCIETY FOR DEMOCRATIC REFORMS (SDR)

Address: AZ 1117, house 11/103, kvartal 5057-68, Bilajari, Baku,
Azerbaijan

Tel/fax: (+994 12) 441 38 20
Mobile: (+994 50) 323 70 24
E-mail: [email protected]

Date: November 14, 2004
Baku

PRESS RELEASE

The initial stage of the monitoring conducted by the Society for
Democratic Reforms within the project `Monitoring of Socio-Economic
Impacts of the BTC’ in Garadagh, Hajikabul, Agdash, Yevlakh, Ujar,
Kurdamir, Agsu, Kazakh, Tovuz, Goranboy, Samukh, Shamkir, and Agstafa
regions has finished. The first report on this stage has already been
prepared. Monitoring revealed that BTC Co. obligations on the Main
Export Pipeline (BTC MEP) construction, as well as the guidelines of the
World Bank, International Financial Corporation, European Bank of
Reconstruction and Development, and other international financial
institutions had been violated. As a number of important issues on
environmental and social fields were not resolved, it caused
dissatisfactions in the regions.

To see the whole text please see:

7. RUMORS ON EARTHQUAKE IN ARMENIA ARE “INFORMATION TERROR”

Source: ARKA, November 8, 2004

Rumors on earthquake in Armenia are “information terror”, the Head of
National Seismic Protection Service Alvaro Antonian stated today.
According to him, the information does not correspond to the reality
similar events cannot be forecasted.

The Chairman of Association of Armenian Seismology and Earth Physics
Sergey Balasanian noted that similar provocations existed earlier as
well, in 90s after Spitak earthquake. “I can assure that no one can
predict exact date of earthquake”, he said. Note today classes in some
schools were cancelled due to spread information on earthquake in
Armenia.

8. ABOUT 135 KM OF IRRIGATION NETWORKS TO BE RESTORED AND CREATED IN
YEREVAN IN 2005

Source: Arminfo, November 8, 2004

In total about 135 km irrigation networks will be restored and created
in Yerevan in 2005. Head of the Department of Nature Protection of
Yerevan’s municipality Romik Kosemian informed journalists.

According to him, the authorities will need 560 mln drams for
implementation of the program for restoration of irrigation networks.
About 270 mln drams from this amount will be allotted by community
budgets of the capital. “For the remaining amount the authorities of
Yerevan will appeal to the government of Armenia for a help”, Kosemian
noted. According to him, the restoration of the irrigation networks will
promote full irrigation of 600 ha of land areas. Besides, a program has
been elaborated for planting of trees and gardens in Yerevan’s park
Tsitsernakaberd and creation an irrigation network with the 7.5 km
length. According to him, this program will be aimed at prevention of
fires.

9. YEREVAN’S MUNICIPALITY SERIOUSLY DEAL WITH RESERVOIRS POLLUTION
PROBLEM

Source: Arminfo, November 8, 2004

Yerevan’s Municipality in cooperation with Environment Protection
Ministry and State Water Economy Department has drafted a program for
2005 to legislatively control the enterprises whose work directly effect
on the state of the capital’s reservoirs.

The head of the department Romik Kosemyan says that the program
envisages inspections at all the capital’s enterprises. 26 of 35
companies inspected in 2004 had no right for spillway. They were fined
and warned that unless they stop polluting reservoirs they will be
closed down. Process water treatment plants at 10 of 24 enterprises
proved to be inoperative.

There are some 12,000 enterprises in Yerevan.

10. SOME 80,000 TONS OF GRAPES PURCHASED IN ARMENIA IN 2004

Source: Arminfo, November 8, 2004

79.1 thousand tons of grapes were purchased in Armenia in 2004 as
against 50.9 thousand tons in 2003, Head of the Agriservice Department
of the Armenian Agricultural Ministry Mikael Grigoryan told ARMINFO.

He said that the greatest volume of grapes was purchased by Yerevan
Brandy Company (some 19,000 tons). Yerevan brandy-water-vodka plant
“Ararat” purchased 8.820 thousand tons. CJSC Artashat winery 8,000 tons,
AKZ LTD (winery in Ararat region) 6,500 tons, MAP – 5,520 tons. Head of
the department said that Great Valley company purchased insignificant
quantity of grapes and the remaining processing enterprises of the
country numbering two dozens. The average purchase price was 150 drams
per 1 kg, the “Areni” sort was purchased for 250 drams.

11. FAO PROVIDES ARMENIA WITH $400,000 FOR MOUNTAINOUS DISTRICTS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

Source: Arminfo, November 8, 2004

FAO has provided Armenia with almost $400,000 for implementing the
program “Sustainable Development of Mountainous Districts.”

At a working meeting today UN Resident Coordinator, UNDP Resident
representative Lise Grande said that the program is to develop economy,
enhance social equality and protect environment in the country’s
highlands. The program is expected to help the local population to
overcome poverty through optimal and effective use of natural resources.
The illegal felling of trees is leading to land degradation and
deteriorated agriculture. A relevant strategy will make accessible
drinking and irrigation water, key roads, markets and information in the
highlands.

The program director, deputy territorial administration and
infrastructure coordination minister Vache Terteryan says that a pilot
project will be implemented in the village of Aragats, Aragatsotn region
and the village of Brnakot in Syunik. The local residents will be
provided with food and technical assistance. The project will be carried
out for 2 years to provide a methodological basis for a program.

12. US EMBASSY PROVIDES $140 THOUSAND TO PUBLIC ORGANIZATIONS OF ARMENIA
FOR DEVELOPMENT OF COMMUNITIES

Source: ARKA, November 9, 2004

US Embassy provides $140 thousand to public organizations of Armenia for
development of communities in the frames of Community Self-Help Fund. In
the frames of the program 10 projects directed on restoration and
repairs of schools, kindergartens would be selected. At least 10% of the
budget of the project must be the assets of the community. Three-year
program Community Self-Help Fund is conducted by USAID since Nov 2003.

13. PRESENTATION OF GUIDE “BASIS OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT” TAKES PLACE IN
YEREVAN

Source: ARKA, November 9, 2004

Presentation of guide “Basis of Human Development” took place in
Yerevan. The guide was developed by UNDP and Yerevan State University.
According to the dean of YSU Economic Faculty Haik Sargsian, it is a
unique guide, which represents analysis of principles of human
development and peculiarity of this condition in Armenia. According to
UNDP Regular Representative to Armenia Lise Grande, the idea of “human
development” lays in the base of UN activity. “GDP growth as we see on
the example of Armenia not always means successful human development”,
she said.

According to UNDP research, Armenia is recognized most progressive
country of the region on the index of human development. Armenia placed
82nd in the list of 177 countries. Azerbaijan took 91st position,
Georgia – 97th, Turkey and Iran are at 88th and 101st positions
respectively.

14. CONFLICTING REPORTS ABOUT CAUSE OF ELEPHANT’S DEATH

The Hindu, India
November 9, 2004
Our Staff Correspondent

There have been conflicting reports over the death of the eight-year-old
elephant Komala that was to fly out to Armenia as a Gift of Goodwill.’
The animal died on October 22, 2004 barely a few days before it was to
be gifted to Yerevan Zoo in Armenia.

It is learnt that the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) report received
by the Police Department rules out poisoning, while the member-secretary
of the Karnataka Zoo Authority, R.S. Suresh, today claimed that the
report that they received from Institute of Animal Health and Biological
suggested poisoning as the cause of death.

In the light of conflicting reports, the governing council of the zoo
decided to meet the Police Commissioner, Praveen Sood, to find out the
contents of the report submitted by the FSL.

Even as the reports were received by these two agencies, the governing
council of the zoo met here. The meeting was attended by the Principal
Chief Conservator of Forests, R.M. Ray; the executive director the zoo;
Manoj Kumar; the Mayor, Dakshinamurthy; and the zoo authority
chairperson, Susheela Keshavamurthy. While taking stock of the
situation, the meeting took the versions of the employees, who all along
have been demanding action against veterinary doctors for alleged
dereliction of duty. The closed-door meeting discussed steps to be
initiated to protect the animals and other measures to be taken to
improve the situation in the zoo.

Mr. Suresh told presspersons after the meeting that they had received
complaints from the employees against the veterinarians, and that some
had complained even against the zoo Deputy Director, Chandrashekar.
Measures, both administrative and security, had been taken to strengthen
the security at the zoo, and the security officer of the zoo,
Govindaraju’s services had been discontinued already, he said.

Mr. Suresh said that of the three doctors, one had been transferred
already, and measures were being taken to appoint another veterinarian
on contract. Meanwhile, the employees of Sri Chamarajendra Zoological
Gardens demanded action against the doctors in the light of the FSL
report.

15. BUSH ADDS COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR US AID

Source: Agence France Presse – English, November 9, 2004

President George W. Bush has expanded a list of countries eligible for
US aid in 2005 under his Millennium Challenge Account program, White
House spokesman Scott McClellan said in a statement Tuesday.

Bush added Morocco to MCA-eligible nations Armenia, Benin, Bolivia,
Georgia, Ghana, Honduras, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mali, Mongolia,
Mozambique, Nicaragua, Senegal, Sri Lanka and Vanuatu, said McClellan.

Six other countries — Burkina Faso, Guyana, Malawi, Paraguay,
Philippines and Zambia — were declared eligible in 2005 for Threshold
Program grants designed to help them qualify for MCA monies, the
spokesman said.

They will join Timor-Leste, Kenya, Sao Tome, Tanzania, Uganda and Yemen.

To be eligible for money from the so-called Millennium Challenge Account
— expected to total five billion dollars by 2006 — countries must
demonstrate commitment to three standards: ruling justly, investing in
their people and encouraging economic freedom.

16. GAS PIPELINE FROM IRAN

Source: Petroleum Economist, November 9, 2004

The government is discussing co-operating with Gazprom over building the
140-km gas pipeline from Iran. Construction of the Armenian section was
due to begin before the end of October.

17. A TOXIC TANNERY IN GARNI

Source: INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISTS OF ARMENIA / HETQ ONLINE, November 10,
2004

“When we reached the village, we saw that waste water was flowing
through the village streets; the stench was unbearable. It was an
unsanitary situation, to say the least,” recalled Derenik Mkhitaryan,
the head of the Kotayk Marzpet’s Office’s Department of Agriculture and
Ecology. This stench was emanating from Garni, famous for its
four-thousand-year-old pagan temple. The sewers were blocked, and
chemical waste from the local tannery flooded the village. After the
National Security Service sounded the alarm, officials from the
Marzpet’s Office visited the tannery to find out what was going on.

The tannery, Sazovar Ltd., was established in the early 1990s in a barn
that had been built thirty years earlier. It is owned by Samvel
Harutiunyan, Gagik Yeghiazaryan, and Zorik Grigoryan. When we visited
the factory it looked abandoned; there was a pile of hides on the floor
and some outdated equipment. We were accompanied be a relative of one of
the owners, Garnik Yeghiazaryan. Their accountant, Atom Martirosyan,
answered our questions. “Yes,” he admitted, “Sometimes people here
complain about the smell.” The accountant noted that they were repairing
the blocked sewer. It is possible, meanwhile, that extremely toxic
substances have already mixed with the local drinking water. And the
seepage of contaminated water into farmland may have tragic
consequences.

As long ago as 1999, villagers complained in writing to the local mayor.
The mayor himself confirmed that such an alarm had been raised and
urgent measures had been taken to keep the toxic waste out of the
drinking water supply. That was five years ago, but the problem is still
all too real for the people of Garni.

The head of the Abovyan Inspection Service of the Ministry of Ecology,
Mkrtich Vanoyan, noted that his agency plans to carry out an inspection
of the factory at the end of this year. But the deputy head of the State
Anti-Epidemic Sanitary Inspection of the Ministry, Marietta Basilisyan,
explained, “In the past, a company like that could only be licensed
after they received a positive evaluation from our inspectors. This
procedure has not been in place for a few years now, ‘so as not to
create additional obstacles for producers.’ But a necessary condition
does exist now- when a manufacturer is licensed, it must inform our
agency and be registered by us. Often, businesses conceal the fact that
they have been licensed and operate secretly, underground. We haven’t
been informed about the factory in Garni at all. We haven’t heard of it
or received any complaint in writing.”

The tannery has successfully avoided any control by state agencies,
control that they say “complicates matters.”

The accountant assured us that they have certain documents but didn’t
show them to us, saying, “They are kept by the director and he is not
here.”

We found out that Sazovar, Ltd. received permission from the Agency on
Water Resources Management of the Ministry of Ecology to use water from
the village drinking water network, along with a document outlining
permissible limits of discharge into the local sewer system. This
system, by the way, flows into the Garni Gorge so popular with locals
and tourists alike.

Srbuhi Harutiunyan, chairman of the Social and Ecological Association,
told us that dangerous substances were used in the tanning process.
“6-valent chromium compounds and acids are used. When working with
6-valent chromium, the factory must have a local station with proper
equipment for preliminary purification. The purification station can be
build only after the design has been approved by the corresponding
services of the Ministries of Ecology and Health. In such stations,
hazardous substances must be ‘fished out’ of the waste and salvaged. If
the salvaged substances are dangerous for the environment by their
chemical composition, they must be reprocessed, after which they should
be transported to another location. Permission for this is given by
officials from the sanitary service of the Ministry of Ecology.”

In the past, in order to open a tannery, a company had to submit a
design that included a description of the purification equipment to be
used. The design had to be approved by the local sanitary agency, which
would then supervise construction and be involved in the opening of the
factory. Today, this procedure is no longer followed.

Was Sazovar Ltd. given permission or supervised when it went into
operation years ago?

To find out, we went to the head of the Abovyan branch of the
Anti-Epidemic Sanitary Inspection of the Ministry of Ecology, A.
Melikyan. He told us, “The factory has been in operation for a long
time. I can’t say whether they have permission or not.” It turned out
that years ago, an inspection of the Garni tannery was conducted by the
Department of Ecology of the Kotayk Marzpet’s Office. The inspection
revealed that the factory didn’t meet sanitary and ecological standards.
There was no purification equipment; toxic waste was dumped into the
sewer system, and flowed from there into the Garni Gorge. Following
this inspection, production was shut down and the owners promised to dig
septic pits to purify the waste. We weren’t shown these pits, although
we were assured that they existed.

The fact is, the tannery in Garni violates every safety standard. “Even
if septic pits exists, it doesn’t matter, they represent time bombs not
only for this village, but for the entire population of the republic,”
Srbuhi Harutiunyan warned. “In accordance with existing anti-epidemic
and sanitary standards, the use of ‘absorbing pits’ is forbidden, since
substances that are extremely hazardous to the health mix with
groundwater and penetrate agricultural fields and pastures. They can
penetrate below the earth-crust into deeper layers to reach the Ararat
Valley from Garni, and even farther.”

18. MCKINSEY & CO UNVEILS FINDINGS OF A RESEARCH ON ARMENIAN TOURISM

Source: ArmenPress, November 10, 2004

Funded by 2020 Project, McKinsey and Co consulting agency is developing
a project on prospects of tourism development in Armenia. The agency is
supported by the Armenian Ministry of Economy and Trade and AEPLAC.

Yesterday the head of McKinsey, Andreas Mershner, Moscow office manager
Avetik Chalabian and an adviser Nikolai Shikhvtsov unveiled their
findings in Armenia Mariot hotel. The presentation was attended by
representatives of respective agencies, travel agencies, public and
donor organizations.

According to Shikhovtsov, the rise in the number of tourists from 41,000
in 1999 to 206,000 in 2003 is very impressive. Some 30% of increased
tourist flow was connected with celebrations of Christianity as a state
religion in Armenia. However, this indicator is by three times lower
that Armenian used to have during the Soviet Union. In the words of the
adviser, a concerning fact is that only 15% of the visitors are “true
tourists.”

According to McKinsey research findings, only Yerevan is in the position
to provide proper facilities to international travelers. Other regions
of Armenia lack such. According to A. Chalabian, the size of investment
in tourism industry is not small but it should be coordinated.
Otherwise, they may yield short-term results.

19. NGOs 2004 CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION

Source: Armenian NGO News in Brief – 10/11/2004

On October 15-17, 2004 the Academy for Educational Development, with
financial support of USAID and in collaboration with World Learning and
the AAA NGO Training and Resource Center, organized the NGOs 2004
Conference and Exhibition. Almost 280 NGOs from all regions of Armenia
participated in this event, introducing their programs and discussing
new ways of networking with stakeholders. Representatives of state
structures, international and donor organizations and experts also
participated in the event, which highlighted various sectors of NGO
activities. NGO representatives shared their experience and knowledge
and discussed common issues. Among the topics addressed during 14
working sessions/roundtables of the conference were NGO Collaboration
with State and Local Governments, NGO Collaboration with International
Donor Organizations and Diaspora, NGO Collaboration with the Business
Community and Mass Media, Developing Regional and Community-Based NGOs,
NGO Code of Conduct, NGO Legislation, NGOs and Poverty Reduction, NGOs
and Fighting Against Corruption. During the conference, NGOC specialists
A. Lazarian, N. Harutiunyan and A. Kurdova spoke respectively on the
Armenian Picture of NGO-Business Cooperation: Analysis and Suggestions;
Strategic Approach to Fundraising; NGO Legislation and Taxation.

Contact: Academy for International Development
10 Aygedzor St.
Tel.: (374-1) 26-69-36; 26-69-87
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

20. NGO AGAINST PESTICIDES

Source: Armenian NGO News in Brief – 10/11/2004

On October 11, 2004, on the initiative of the Armenian Women for Health
and Healthy Environment NGO, a theatrical performance was held in the
Verin Dvin village school of Ararat marz. The performance, the message
of which was using foods free of pesticides, was part of the NGO’s For A
Toxic-Free Future In Armenia project. Its goal is to reduce the risk of
exposure of pesticides on human health and environment in Ararat marz.
Dissemination of fact sheets, information sheets, posters, newspaper
articles and organizing TV programs and performances are aimed at
raising the awareness of the population of ten villages on pesticides
and their harmful impact on health. To promote cooperation with local
and regional authorities, healthcare institutions and NGOs, seminars,
lectures and other meetings on the topic Preventing Exposure of
Pesticides are organized. The project is implemented with financial
assistance received from AAA NGO Center through USAID.

Contact: Elena Manvelyan
Armenian Women for Health and Healthy Environment NGO
24 Saryan St., #65
Tel.: (374-1) 62-66-20
E-mail: [email protected]

21. ARMENIA: REPORT SHOWS SIGNIFICANT DECLINE IN POVERTY

Source: Eurasianet Organization, November 10, 2004

A recent economic survey in Armenia, showing a significant decline in
the number of citizens living in poverty, has placed President Robert
Kocharian’s administration in a somewhat awkward position. While
Kocharian has been eager to show Armenians that living standards are
improving, the report’s findings could complicate the Armenian
government’s efforts to secure international aid for poverty-reduction
programs.

The annual survey of household incomes by the National Statistical
Service, a non-governmental agency, contained a full range of startling
statistics. Among the most surprising: the percentage of Armenians
living below the poverty line fell from 50 percent in 2002 to 42.9
percent in 2003. Similarly, the number of poorest Armenians – those who
earn less than 7,742 drams (about $15) per month – also took a
surprising plunge — from 13.1 percent of the population in 2002 to 7.4
percent in 2003. At the same time, the survey indicated that the
country’s income gap between rich and poor narrowed slightly.

The statistics reveals that the poverty reduction rate in Armenia far
exceeds the government’s projections as outlined in its Poverty
Reduction Strategic Paper (PRSP) released earlier this year. In the
PRSP, for example, officials estimated that that it would take until
2012 before the so-called “very poor” could be reduced to less than 8
percent of the population. The NSS figures show that this benchmark has
been surpassed a full eight years ahead of the government’s schedule.

Given the NSS findings, questions are already being raised about the
accuracy and potential effectiveness of the government’s anti-poverty
blueprint. While officials have been happy to tout the reduction in
poverty, already one government minister has disputed the NSS findings.
At a recent news conference, Vardan Khachatrian, the minister of finance
and economy, described the results as difficult to trust and too
optimistic.

Some economic experts share Khachatrian’s doubts. “I cannot see the
reasons which could bring about such a drastic change in the percentage
of the population made up by the very poor,” said Ruben Yeganian, a
researcher at Yerevan’s Institute of Economic Problems. The decrease
was particularly improbable for 2003, when Armenia’s inflation rate
soared in response to an increase in foreign grain prices, Yeganian
asserted. That year, bread prices increased by 31 percent between
January and December, causing an overall 8.6 percent increase in the
consumer price index, compared with a 2-percent rise the previous year.

A recent report by the International Crisis Group (ICG) echoes
Yeganian’s assessment. The October 18 study, titled “Armenia:
Instability Ahead,” states that while the market reforms of the 1990s
may mean Armenia is now enjoying a relative boom, relatively few
Armenians have seen a vast improvement in living standards. “The
benefits of economic recovery are not equally shared,” the report found.
“There is little sign of poverty decreasing.” [For additional
information see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Contradicting the NSS, the ICG report cited statistics that show 55
percent of the population lives in poverty, with wealth concentrated in
Yerevan and in “circles close to the government.” Meanwhile, the exodus
of educated, well-trained workers — one of the main obstacles to an
Armenian economic comeback — continues. Favored labor markets include
Russia, Central Europe, Ukraine and Turkey, where potential salaries are
higher than the $78 average monthly salary to be had in Armenia.

The poverty issue has figured prominently in the ongoing power struggle
between Kocharian and opposition political parties. [For background see
the Eurasia Insight archive]. In an attempt to outflank his critics,
Kocharian unveiled a 12-year plan for fighting poverty in June. Yeganian
speculated that the government might have cast doubt on the NSS findings
in order to prevent a decrease in foreign aid programs. An additional
factor feeding official concerns, Yeganian suggested, is the decrease in
value of the US dollar against the Armenian dram over the last year. As
a result, the incomes of Armenians, when denominated in dollars, appear
to have increased.

The Armenian government counts heavily on international aid to promote
economic stabilization efforts, including anti-poverty programs. Armenia
hopes to receive $100 million for various economic development schemes
in 2004 from the US Millennium Challenge Account program, aid monies
that are contingent the country’s record for democratic reform and human
rights. Also in support of Kocharian’s agenda, the World Bank has
pledged to deliver $250 million by November 2004 for work on rural
schools, infrastructure and irrigation systems.

Some representatives of the NSS themselves have admitted to being caught
off guard by the survey’s results. Hovik Hohannisian, head of Food
Security Statistics, raised questions about the criteria used to
determine who is “very poor,” saying that the food basket used to
determine purchasing power was actually more like a “bread basket.”

Meanwhile, one of the country’s main creditors, the World Bank, said it
saw no reason to doubt the NSS data, the Bank’s Yerevan spokesperson,
Vigen Sargsian, told EurasiaNet. Aside from the World Bank, the NSS’s
data is routinely cited by international organizations, including the
International Monetary Fund. The NSS also receives advice from
representatives of the European Union and the US Agency for
International Development.

Editor’s Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer
specializing in economic and political affairs.

22. A DAY TO PREVENT ENVIRONMENTAL CAUSES AND RESULTS OF WAR

Source: Environment News Service (ENS), November 13, 2004

“Across the developing world and the countries of the former Soviet
Union, old chemical stockpiles, aging nuclear reactors, damaged and
decaying factories and other assorted environmental time bombs are
ticking,” said Klaus Toepfer, executive director of the United Nations
Environment Programme on Saturday. Marking the third annual
International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in
War and Armed Conflicts
<;, Toepfer said
these time bombs create instability between communities and neighboring
countries.

“Many factors” underlie decisions by countries to engage in armed
conflict, said Toepfer, acknowledging “opposing ideologies, ancient
enmities and a scramble to plunder natural resources such as timber,
minerals and oil.”

But, he said, “it is the view of the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP), increasingly shared by others, that environmental
degradation and a scarcity of healthy natural capital plays an important
role too.”

If we are to prevent the environment becoming a victim of war, said the
UNEP leader, “then equally we need to ensure that pollution,
contamination and other environmental woes do not play their part in
triggering conflicts in the first place.”

A new report produced by UNEP in collaboration with the United Nations
Development Programme and the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe, focuses on environmental hot spots in the southern Caucasus
countries of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia.

Environmental degradation can undermine local and international security
by “reinforcing and increasing grievances within and between societies,”
the report says.

Eight environment and security priority areas are highlighted – the
Black Sea coastal zone, South Ossetia, the Ararat and Valk valleys, the
Greater Baku region and the Kura River estuary, and southern Caspian sea
coast.

Joint projects to clean up sites, treaties to better share resources
such as rivers and forests, and strengthening cooperation between the
different countries ministries and institutions may hold the key to
building trust, understanding and more stable relations.

“The work could become a blueprint for early warning for environment and
security initiatives elsewhere in the world,” said Toepfer.

Nongovernmental organizations from around the world used the occasion of
the International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment
in War and Armed Conflict to draw attention to the dangers of depleted
uranium weaponry.

Petition drives, lobbying visits, symposiums, photo exhibits, and
marches took placed in Belgium, England, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands
and the United States.

The petitioners seek an international treaty and Convention banning
depleted uranium weapons.

Depleted uranium is both radioactive and chemically toxic. Evidence of
environmental and human health damage caused by depleted uranium has
increased, despite government assertions that such impacts would not
occur. Depleted uranium weapons cause widespread, long lasting and
severe contamination to the sites of their production, testing and use.

Henk van der Keur of the Laka Foundation in the Netherlands said, “The
numbers of innocent victims exposed is incalculable and in direct
violation of the International Laws of War.”

UN Secretary General Kofi Annan called for environmental rules to govern
the conduct of modern warfare, in his speech marking the the first
observance of the International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of
the Environment in War and Armed Conflict on November 6, 2002.

The United Nations is now regularly invited to assess how conflict
affects the environment, Annan pointed out. “Such missions have
identified a wide range of environmental consequences of war, including
pollution from oil and chemical leaks caused by bombing; the unregulated
plunder of natural resources by armed forces; the danger to land,
livelihoods and lives caused by landmines, unexploded ordnance and other
war debris; and the negative impact of mass population movements on
water, biodiversity and other ecosystem services.”

“International conventions govern nuclear, chemical and biological
weapons, but new technologies – such as depleted uranium ammunition –
pose as yet unknown threats to the environment,” Annan said.

“The lesson to be drawn is that modern warfare needs environmental
rules, just as earlier wars highlighted the need to regulate the impact
of war on civilians and prisoners of war,” said the secretary-general.

The NGOs say their actions and the petition campaign will continue until
the realization of an international treaty banning uranium weapons. The
International Coalition to Ban Uranium Weapons will use the petitions in
an appeal to the European Parliament and other international bodies such
as the United Nations and will use them at forums such as the
Non-Proliferation Treaty meeting in New York and the UN Disarmament
Committee meeting in Geneva next spring.

“It is imperative that the U.S. and the international community
explicitly address DU as unconventional weaponry, and take steps to halt
its proliferation and stop its production and use,” said Tara Thornton
of the Military Toxics Project, a nongovernmental organization based in
the United States.

To prevent environmental problems from becoming causes of war in the
first place, the UNEP initiative is using novel mapping methods that
link environmental problems with factors such as population movements
and socio-ethnic mix in order to pinpoint key areas where tensions could
turn to turmoil.

As part of UNEP’s new science initiative, governments have requested
more in depth studies, and Toepfer said the first of them is likely to
focus on the war-torn Great Lakes region of Africa.

Located in eastern Africa, Africa’s Great Lakes region includes
countries surrounding Lake Kivu, Lake Tanganyika, and Lake Victoria.
Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda have a combined population
of 107 million people.

The climate and rich volcanic soils in the highlands sustain intensely
cultivated croplands, encouraging the growth of human population. This
increased population is competing for habitat used by endangered species
such as the mountain gorilla and the forest elephant.

Toepfer expressed the hope that, “armed with more sound science, we can
use the environment as a new peace policy for the 21st century so that
it emerges as less the passive victim and more the active broker of a
more stable and less war ridden world.”

To find out more visit:

The International Coalition to Ban Uranium Weapons is found at:

23. EIA REPORT OF THE ASPHALT-CONCRETE PLANT IN ISAN-SAMGORI, TBILISI
SUBMITTED BY THE `VIRAGI’ LTD.

Source: `Sakartvelos Respublica’ (`Republic of Georgia’), November 11,
2004

In accordance with the Georgian legislation, `Viragi’ Ltd. submitted EIA
report to the Ministry of Environment of Georgia to obtain an
environmental permit for the activity of first category — EIA Report
of the Asphalt-concrete Plant in Isan-Samgori, Tbilisi.

EIA report is available at the press-center of the Ministry of
Environment (68, Kostava str., VI floor) and at the Department of
Environmental Permits and State Ecological Expertise (87, Paliashvili
Str., Tel: 25 02 19). Interested stakeholders can analyze the document
and present their comments and considerations until October 26, 2004.

Public hearing will be held on December 28, 2004 at 12:00, at the
conference hall of the Ministry of Environment.

24. EIA REPORTS SUBMITTED TO THE MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT OF GEORGIA

Source: `Sakartvelos Respublica’ (`Republic of Georgia’), November 12,
2004

In accordance with the Georgian legislation, `Okhiri’ Ltd. submitted EIA
report to the Ministry of Environment of Georgia to obtain an
environmental permit for the activity of second category — Project of
the `Lomisi’ Mineral Water Bottling Plant in Akhalgori, Village
Pavliani.

In accordance with the Georgian legislation, `Nori’ Ltd. submitted EIA
report to the Ministry of Environment of Georgia to obtain an
environmental permit for the activity of first category — EIA Report
of the Oil Processing Mini Plant in Gardabani Region, Village Nori..

EIA report is available at the press-center of the Ministry of
Environment (68, Kostava str., VI floor) and at the Department of
Environmental Permits and State Ecological Expertise (87, Paliashvili
Str., Tel: 25 02 19). Interested stakeholders can analyze the document
and present their comments and considerations until December 28, 2004.

Public hearing will be held on December 28, 2004 at 12:00, at the
conference hall of the Ministry of Environment.

*******************************************
CENN INFO
Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)

Tel: ++995 32 92 39 46
Fax: ++995 32 92 39 47
E-mail: [email protected]
URL:

http://www.cenn.org/info/Press-release121_14.11.2004_Eng.doc
http://www.aed.am
http://www.un.org/depts/dhl/environment_war/index.html&gt
http://www.un.org/depts/dhl/environment_war/index.html
http://www.bandepleteduranium.org/
www.cenn.org

Boutique lets you shop for goodies, help Balkan kids

Boutique lets you shop for goodies, help Balkan kids

San Ramon Valley Times, CA
Nov 13 2004

CANDY CANE BOUTIQUE TODAY. It’s never too early to shop for the
holidays … so, while you’re out and about today, stop by the
Creekside Community Church in Alamo and stock up on collectibles,
gift baskets, dolls, toys, jewelry and more.

You’ll find lots of wonderful items at the Candy Cane Boutique and
leave knowing that you’ve also helped the people in the Balkans.

Baked goods will also be available for purchase along with raffle
prizes. I spoke with Dee Thompson, who explained that the boutique
will benefit the Macedonian Outreach, a nonprofit Christian charitable
organization to help the children of the Balkans.

Vula and Haig Rushdoony head up the Macedonian Outreach. They started
it 15 years ago after their children were grown and they were ready
to retire. The Rushdoonys live on the Alamo and Danville border and
run the program out of their home, stocking up on supplies to send
to the children of Romania, Yugoslavia, Greece and Macedonia. They
have family, and other personal ties, in Greece.

I spoke with Vula, who came to America from Greece at the age of 16.
She recalls what it was like to be cold and hungry.

“My father was killed in the war when I was 5 and my mother had no
income. We barely survived,” Vula said. “However, there were days when
we had a slice of raisin bread and a cup of hot chocolate provided
to us through the Marshall Plan the United States set up after World
War II,” Vula said.

She explained that the civil war continued in Greece, and America
continued to help the Greek people. She sent her mother money and
finally sent for her seven years later to join her in America.

Haig’s family survived the massacre of Armenia at the turn of the
century and fled to America, where Haig was born.

When the Rushdoonys retired, they decided to reach out and help,
just as America had helped their countries.

“We felt that America had done so much for us and Haig and I wanted
to give back some of the blessing this country had given us,” Vula
told me. “The greatest thing for Haig and me is freedom. When I hear
people talk against this country I become a lioness. I earned the
right to be an American. We are lucky to live here.”

She said the Outreach has been highly successful, and that people
from all over the community participate in gathering supplies for
Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, and the former Yugoslavian states
of Bosnia, Croatia, the former Yugoslavian Republic of Macedonia and
Serbia-Montenegro. Vula and Haig travel each year, along with other
volunteers, to deliver the much-needed goods to the Balkan Peninsula.

When they began this mission, Vula decided to sell some of her china
and jewelry, and urged friends and neighbors to do the same. Thus
the Candy Cane Boutique was born.

Each year the boutique offers lots of interesting “vintage” items,
as well as numerous new gifts for the holidays. Vula said the gift
baskets and baked goods are “over the top” fabulous.

The boutique is located at 1350 Danville Blvd., and runs from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Dee told me that the boutique is a success because of the
generosity of the community and efforts of the volunteers.

Since 1992, the Macedonian Outreach has also brought more than 50
children with life-threatening medical problems to the United States
or Europe for treatment. The organization also provides food, clothing,
monetary aid and spiritual guidance.

Vula explained that although the unemployment rate is high, and people
are cold and hungry, she has been told time and again that they would
rather be in this condition because it means they are free.

For more information about the Macedonian Outreach, visit their
Web site at or call Vula and Haig at
925-820-4107. See you at the boutique.

Have a great week!

www.macedonianoutreach.com

Dutch police raid Kurdish training camp, arrest 38

Dutch police raid Kurdish training camp, arrest 38

Agence France Presse — English
November 12, 2004 Friday 3:44 PM GMT

LIEMPDE, The Netherlands Nov 12 — Dutch police on Friday raided a
suspected Kurdish separatist training camp in a small village in the
southern Netherlands, and several other locations arresting 38 people,
the state prosecutor’s office said.

Police raided a camp site in Liempde where an alleged training camp
of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party PKK was set up, according to
Dutch authorities.

According to the authorities investigations revealed that some 20
people received “training to prepare for the armed struggle of the
PKK in Turkey, by committing terrorist attacks”.

Police arrested 29 people in Liempde and nine suspects in other
locations in the Netherlands. Ten houses were searched and police
seized night-glasses, documents and a fire arm.

Because the PKK is on the European Union list of terrorist
organisations the Dutch said the people were arrested on suspicion
of belonging to a terrorist organisation.

“Participants in the training were taught courses on ‘special
warfare’,” according to the prosecutors.

“There are indications that participants in the course would have
been sent to Armenia at the end of the training to join PKK actions,”
they added.

The authorities here stressed that a Dutch investigation into the PKK
had been ongoing for more than a year and the raid was not linked to
the recent crackdown on suspected Muslim extremists after the murder
of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh by an alleged Islamic radical.

The camp site is located in a remote area near the picturesque farm
village of Liempde. Local residents said they had never seen anything
suspicious.

“They even arrested the owner of the camp site, who is such a nice
man,” hunter Toon Schuurmans said, adding that the only gunfire he
had ever heard came from his own rifle.

The PKK, now also known as KONGRA-GEL, waged a bloody 15-year war
for self-rule in the mainly Kurdish eastern and southeastern parts
of Turkey — claiming more than 36,000 lives — before announcing a
unilateral ceasefire in 1999.

The group called off the truce in June this year, threatening to
carry out attacks and warning tourists and investors to stay away
from the country.

Since then, there has been a sharp increase in clashes between the
rebels and Turkish government troops.

Two years ago Turkey heavily criticized the Netherlands for their
tolerant attitude towards the PKK.

The Netherlands has a large Kurdish community, but numbers are
difficult to pin down as official statistics group people according
to nationality, and Kurdistan, an area linking Turkey, Iran, Iraq
and Syria, is not a country.

In 1999 the NRC-Handelsblad newspaper said there were between 60,000
and 70,000 ethnic Kurds in the Netherlands. The largest part, some
45,000 people, come from Turkey.

Earlier this week, a Dutch judge ruled that Nuriye Kesbir, a senior
member of the PKK, could not be extradited to Turkey because there
were not enough guarantees that she would be treated fairly.

Turkey accuses Kesbir of being behind at least 25 attacks between
1993 and 1995 on military targets in eastern Turkey, where the PKK
party is fighting for Kurdish self-rule.

Kesbir has always denied being involved in the attacks and claims she
dealt only with women’s issues as a member of the group’s presidential
council before she was arrested at Amsterdam airport in September 2001.

Cambridge honors decade of priestly service

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

November 10, 2004
___________________

CHANGING YOUR CORNER OF THE WORLD

By Jake Goshert

It’s not the big things that necessarily take up his day. It’s the
little ways he can help people that makes Fr. Vasken Kouzouian glad he
became a priest.

“Every day you talk with people, and meet with people, and counsel
people, and you realize you’re doing something good in the lives of
people. You go to bed comfortable that you made an impact on another
person’s life. That is a joy I wish everyone would share,” said Fr.
Vasken, the pastor at the Holy Trinity Church of Cambridge, MA, who
celebrated the 10th anniversary of his ordination on Sunday, October 10,
2004.

“It’s just doing good for someone else. It is hard to comprehend, but
not once you experience it. Once we experience it, we all understand
and we can then change our corner of the world. That’s what Christ
wants us to do,” he said.

PATH TO PASTOR

Though the son of a priest, Fr. Mampre Kouzouian, Fr. Vasken’s path to
the priesthood wasn’t direct. After studying political science at
Boston College he headed to law school.

“My father encouraged me to pursue other avenues first, and if I chose
to go back to the priesthood that door would always be there. He was
encouraging but wanted me to be open-minded about it, and to go and find
what it is I wanted to be in life,” Fr. Vasken said.

But after his first year of law school, he decided to enter the
seminary. He went to study at the seminary at Holy Etchmiadzin from
1988 to 1990, before coming back to finish his studies at St. Nersess
Armenian Seminary in New Rochelle, NY.

But that was just the beginning of a journey that would take him from
being seminarian to becoming pastor.

“When I left the seminary I was very much interested in the theology of
the church. But my interest is now more in the pastoral side of it,”
Fr. Vasken said.

Previous to becoming pastor at Cambridge, Fr. Vasken served the St. Mark
Church of Springfield, MA, before he and his wife, Yn. Arpi, took on a
job with the Diocesan Center in New York City: revitalizing the youth
ministry effort.

Jennifer Morris, Central Council chair of the Armenian Church Youth
Organization of America (ACYOA) and a long-time friend who has gotten to
know Fr. Vasken and his wife through their youth ministry work, spoke
during the reception honoring Fr. Vasken’s anniversary. She told of the
first time she met them during their visit to her home parish, the St.
John Church in Southfield, MI, and how through the years their witness
has moved her.

“Between 1999 and 2000 my involvement in the Armenian Church became an
integral part of who I was and who I was becoming, and it was all
because of that initial visit to Detroit and the encouragement I
received to get involved,” she said. “It took only one priest and his
yeretzgin to help lead me down the right path.”

“While my interactions with Der Vasken have not been as frequent over
the last few years, his ministry and passion for the youth and support
of the ACYOA has not wavered,” she added. “I feel blessed to have been
one of the many young adults that have been personally and spiritually
touched by Der Vasken. I thank him for giving of himself so unselfishly
day after day, year after year and for his love and guidance over the
years.”

FAMILY AFFAIR

Though many credit his skills and devotion for making him a successful
priest, Fr. Vasken shares his successes with Yn. Arpi and their toddler,
Alina. From pitching-in at church functions, to quietly sitting in the
sanctuary for worship each Sunday, their commitment only strengthens Fr.
Vasken’s dedication to his faith.

“I’ve never experienced not having a family like that, since I grew up
in a priest’s family, where the rhythm of the family is centered around
the church,” Fr. Vasken said. “Still today we live at home and at the
church equally. It’s certainly part of our everyday mind and I was
blessed to meet the right person to pick up where my original family
left off.”

— 11/10/04

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern
Diocese, presents Fr. Vasken Kouzouian with a pectoral cross during the
celebration on October 10, 2004, marking the 10th anniversary of his
ordination.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): Archbishop Barsamian blesses vestments donated by
Joyce Kolligian, Michael Kolligian III, Valerie and Harvey Thayer, and
Caroline and Olivia Thayer, during a special service honoring the 10th
anniversary of the ordination of Fr. Vasken Kouzouian, pastor of the
Holy Trinity Church of Cambridge, MA.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Fr. Vasken Kouzouian and his wife Yn. Arpi, gather
with family and Archbishop Barsamian during a celebration on October 10,
2004, commemorating the 10th anniversary of Fr. Vasken’s ordination to
the priesthood.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

AGBU Toronto and Zoryan Institute Host Two Lectures on Karabagh’sInd

ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
Tel: 416-250-9807 Fax: 416-512-1736 E-mail: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: George Shirinian

DATE: November 5, 2004 Tel: 416-250-9807

AGBU Toronto and Zoryan Institute Host Two Lectures on Karabagh’s
Independence

Toronto, Canada – The AGBU of Toronto and the Zoryan Institute jointly
hosted an evening of two lectures on Nagorno Karabagh on October 29, at the
AGBU Alex Manoogian Cultural Centre, covering its history of independence
and its current status in light of international law and politics, as it was
time for a new, up-to-date assessment.

The issue of Karabagh’s independence, which caused a war between Armenia and
Azerbaijan, became a critical subject in international politics during the
dissolution of the Soviet Union. The essence of the conflict was the
priority of the self-determination of the people of Karabagh, an autonomous
republic, versus the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan as
a nation-state incorporating the Nagorno Karabagh Republic (NKR). Since the
1994 ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the conflict has dropped from
the headlines, and much of what has been written on the subject in the west,
particularly in English, has generally been pro-Azeri and anti-Armenian. The
exceptions have been the publications of the Zoryan Institute, such as The
Karabagh File, The Sumgait Tragedy, and The Making of Nagorno-Karabagh: From
Secession to Republic, as well as those by a few others.

Prof. George Bournoutian, Senior Professor of History at Iona College, spoke
on “The Armeno-Azeri Academic Conflict over Karabakh.” His lecture was
particularly timely as it coincided with the appearance of his new book, Two
Chronicles on the History of Karabagh, which has just been released by Mazda
Publishers. The book documents, through two Muslim, Persian language
chronicles of the 18th and early 19th centuries, respectively, the existence
of Karabagh as an unquestioned Armenian territory. It clearly refutes modern
Azerbaijani historians, who falsify primary source materials in order to
deny the existence of the Armenians in their ancestral homelands.

Mr. Vardan Barseghyan, Permanent Representative of the Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic in the United States, spoke on “The Current Situation Regarding the
Independence of Nagorno-Karabakh and International Law.” He noted that the
population of Nagorno Karabagh never saw itself as part of Azerbaijan, as
Karabagh had never been part of Azerbaijan, and Stalin’s forced separation
of Karabagh from Armenia in 1923 remained a source of continued protest and
international conflict.

Mr. Barseghyan described how, in August 1991, Azerbaijan announced it was
seceding from the Soviet Union. Two days later, in compliance with then
existing Soviet law, which gave the right of self-determination to
republics seceding from the Soviet Union, the NKR declared its independence
from the newly established Azerbaijan Republic. This was followed in
December 1991 with a referendum, in which an overwhelming majority of
Karabagh’s population voted for independence. A principle was being
challenged: if the Republic of Azerbaijan had the right to secede from the
Soviet Union, then the Autonomous Republic of Nagorno Karabagh had the right
to secede from Azerbaijan.

Mr. Barseghyan explained how the NKR meets international criteria for
sovereignty.

1. Effective control over a defined territory.
2. A permanent population.
3. Regular armed forces, which are under civilian control.
4. A democratically elected government with executive, legislative and
judicial branches.
5. Effective conduct of its foreign affairs.

The NKR seeks three main points in its negotiations with Azerbaijan.

1. The existence of Karabagh.
2. Peer-to-peer relations between Azerbaijan and Karabagh.
3. International guarantees for the NKR.

“The most important prerequisite for negotiations,” stated Barseghyan, “is
security and stability in the region, which can not be achieved without
stability in each state..The NKR seeks a political end to the war.Democratic
Karabagh can not be subordinated to Azerbaijan, which violates the rights of
its own citizens.” He explained his government’s position, that in order to
resolve the conflict, the reasons for the conflict have to be addressed,
before the consequences can be eliminated. Karabagh’s status is at the heart
of the conflict. The consequences include the displacement of people on both
sides, creation of a security belt around Karabagh, and the detrimental
impact of the war on the parties’ respective economies. Barseghyan stressed
that had Azerbaijan succeeded in its attempt to crush Karabagh’s assertion
of its freedom, Karabagh would have been the victim of another genocide. “If
Karabagh were to concede any of Azerbaijan’s demands unilaterally,” he
stated, “without any concessions in return, we are convinced that, having
improved their military position at virtually no cost would embolden
Azerbaijan to consider renewing military action.”

Barseghyan pointed out that the Azerbaijani government implemented policies
designed to effect the “ethnic cleansing” of the Armenians from Karabagh.
These policies included economic and cultural discrimination, and the
encouragement of Azeri settlement in Karabagh. After the outbreak of
violence, they also included government-sponsored falsification of the
region’s history.

This view was supported by the main theme of Prof. Bournoutian’s lecture.
Bournoutian described several examples of how, since 1988, Azerbaijani
historians have falsified primary sources by removing all mention of Armenia
and the Armenians from them, in an attempt to deny Armenians’ ancestral
claims to this territory. “Historians have a duty to facts,” Bournoutian
emphasized. “Such desperate acts not only reduce Azeri historical claims to
Karabagh, but strengthen the Armenian case,” he remarked.

The reason it seems that most of the publications in the west are very pro
Azeri, he observed, is that “Azerbaijan, as well as its staunch supporter
Turkey, give lots of grants to western writers. Armenians are not producing
enough books and articles giving a more balanced point of view. There are
very few academics who deal with modern Armenian history; universities
discourage them, feeling it is too political. In this regard, I must say
that there are very few organizations or individuals who address this
critical problem, but I must acknowledge the efforts of the AGBU, the Zoryan
Institute, the National Association of Armenian Studies and Research, and
Mr. Kourken Sarkissian.”

“The political impasse and neglect of the Karabagh issue is somewhat
surprising,” commented K.M. (Greg) Sarkissian, President of the Zoryan
Institute. “The recent secessionist movements in East Timor in South East
Asia, and Eritrea in Africa, for example, are vivid examples of how the
Karabagh conflict could be resolved by the international community. In both
cases, history shows us that two distinct cultures can not be forced into a
successful union. Therefore,” he continued, “it is essential to understand
this conflict not just from an Armenian perspective, but to know the larger
history surrounding it, as well as the international legal and political
realities. We hope that through such analytical and informative lectures, we
are able to provide people with an understanding of the situation in
Karabagh from a universal perspective.”

www.zoryaninstitute.org