A Gift from Gugark

Sherbrooke Record (Quebec)
September 4, 2009 Friday
Final Edition

A Gift from Gugark

BYLINE: Tom Cavanagh, The Record

On my recent visit to Armenia I stayed at a summer camp in an isolated
area about 30 plus kilometres from the nearest town. It was called
Gugark camp and traces its history back to the l950’s and the Russian
controlled period when Armenia was one of many Soviet republics. After
the Soviet collapse in 1991, Armenia voted overwhelmingly in favour of
independence. They got it, but unfortunately freedom from external
control also meant dramatic withdrawals of Russian industry with
inevitable economic setbacks and problems.

Gugark was affected by the economic downturn and seeks to restore its
fortunes by expanding the time frame of the summer camp’s
operations. My sending organization (CESO) was contacted for
assistance and that is where I come in. I was somewhat surprised that
Gugark selected me from amongst possible candidates. On the other hand
I do look good on paper, and I do possess considerable international
experience. I suppose it impresses people to see the work experience
in England, Sri Lanka, Colombia, Bolivia, Russia, the Ukraine,
Jamaica, Guyana, and six years in two African countries of Ghana and
Malawi.

I do not wish to, nor do I label myself as a consultant but in effect
that is what I have been doing in many different countries. I sense
the reputations of consultants have declined in recent
times. Certainly that was the case in my CEGEP years where we
periodically brought in ‘experts’ or consultants over the years. Not
many faculty were impressed with those visitors. After 40 years
working in education at all levels I have to say that teachers were
seldom enamoured with advice from outsiders. Of course the teachers
attended the sessions and speeches, and sometimes even made
sympathetic noises; but once the expert leaves, and the door of the
classroom (the inner sanctum) is once again closed, there is no way of
knowing what effect if any the outside visitor has had. Usually it was
not much.

What I learned, and I learned the hard way, is that the consultant
must work in a collaborative relationship. Without such a relationship
his/her effect will be minimal – or non-existent. I once walked away
from an African multi-year high paying project when I learned that the
local staff were not to be directly involved. The plan was to have the
outsiders (the experts) decide and lay on the changes from above. No
thanks. You can make a good living at that sort of thing, but once the
‘reforms’ or ‘changes’ are in place and the experts are back in
Canada, the effect is transitory. Like putting your hand in that
proverbial pail of water and pulling it out again. Not much changes.

The best consultant I ever worked with came to our campus to evaluate
our situation, investigate our weaknesses and strengths, brainstorm
our best possible responses, and had us set up a schedule with about
what would and should be done, when, where, by whom, how – and why. It
was a kind of revolutionary approach. He didn’t tell us much at
all. In fact he started from the premise that the best people to
address college problems were the people who for years had lived with
and understood the problems first hand. The consultant’s name was Fred
Jervis.

Fred established a collaborative relationship. He did not offer much
in the way of answers. He was better at listening than
questioning. The insightful reader may now be thinking – "But aren’t
all your staff, who have worked there so long, too close to the
problems? Are they able to see the big picture? Are they capable of
seeing anything but trees – and never the woods?" That could be the
case, but Fred’s methodology addressed those problems. Indirectly he
taught us a lot. Listen more than you talk. There are always
politics. Hidden agendas are common.

Gugark was seeking ideas for expansion. I told them from day one that
our relationship had to be a collaborative one – that my role was more
of a guide. I hammered away during my short time there that it is a
long term project and must be thought of in terms of years, not
months. Theirs was a family-run operation that had been in place for
more than a generation. It would be ridiculous to bring a stranger
from a foreign land, language, and culture to set her/himself up as
the expert. I warned them that I was no miracle worker and no
messiah. They know and have lived the problems and understand the
culture and the issues at play. They are the ones best suited to find
solutions. Suggestions were brought up from all staff, and in the
workshops and planning sessions everyone was involved: the kitchen
staff, the doctor, the manager, the support staff, the owners, the
counselors, the campers. Everyone. I had suggestions too and in all we
ended with more than
thirty. The real work begins after I leave. The management group
(five of six are female) must now narrow that long list to four or
five manageable and agreed upon projects. I think they will succeed in
doing so. Then comes those so-important and unavoidable issues: the
schedule and the decisions about who what when where why and how. I
mentioned to them the story about belling the cat. They told me that
the tale originated in Armenia. It is a simple little legend. The mice
studied how to outwit the cat. Someone suggest they put a bell around
his neck. Great idea but . . . ‘who bells the cat?’

Armenians are great people. It is a beautiful country to visit. As one
commentator said the danger is not robbery or getting mugged, but
avoiding the potholes and all those generous people who want to invite
you home for a meal. The meals are as huge as the towering mountains,
and as a matter of courtesy you must at least sample all the many
courses. And the vodka. Be warned. But you will have a good time, —
and you can always take the weight off when you get back. I hope.

(I wish to add special thanks for the very helpful assistance and
encouragement I received from Jim Brodie and David Monty in preparing
for this particular assignment.)

Progress Of Armenia’s Electoral System Is Evident

PROGRESS OF ARMENIA’S ELECTORAL SYSTEM IS EVIDENT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
04.09.2009 17:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today RA President Serzh Sargsyan received a
delegation of the European Community’s electoral authorities,
participating in the conference timed to 18th anniversary of the
formation of the electoral community.

The President of Armenia welcomed the delegation and particularly
mentioned that organizing this event in Yerevan is a good occasion
to discuss the problems of the electoral system and the exchange
good practices.

"The long road to democracy has led to such a degree of development of
our electoral system that allows us to have free and fair elections,
but this does not mean that we have an ideal political system. There
are many problems, and we must continuously improve our electoral
system, " Serzh Sargsyan said.

In turn, representatives of the community noted that the progress
of Armenia’s electoral system is evident and expressed willingness
to contribute to the further development and democratization of the
electoral system of Armenia.

Michel Legrand To Perform Solo Concert In Yerevan For The First Time

MICHEL LEGRAND TO PERFORM SOLO CONCERT IN YEREVAN FOR THE FIRST TIME

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.09.2009 15:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Renowned French composer Michel Legrand is arriving
in Yerevan on September 12 to give his first solo concert in his
motherland.

The concert is scheduled for September 15 in Yerevan in Aram
Khachaturyan big concert hall. During his past visits to Armenia,
Legran performed group concerts.

The concert is organized by RA Culture Ministry in cooperation with
City Lights Productions, headed by famous Armenian jazzman Levon
Malkhasyan.

"Michel Legrand is surely an eminent personality in world music. His
creative art produced tangible impact on many musicians, including
me. In his upcoming Concert, he will act as conductor, play music
and probably sing," Levon Malhasyan said.

Public in Yerevan will probably have the chance to listen to Legran’s
melodies, as well as jazz standards and vocal composition, Malkhasyan
added. The composer is this time coming to Armenia together with
Christine Legrand (vocal) and Catherine Michel (harp).

French composer, arranger, conductor and piano player Michel Jean
Legrand was born in 1932 in Paris in the family of French composer and
actor Raymond Legrand and Armenian piano player Haykanush Marcelle
Ter-Mikayelyan. Future musician gained his first musical experience
from his father. At age 11, he entered Paris Conservatory. Upon
graduation, he moved to United States where he started writing
music for films. Legrand’s music for The Umbrellas of Cherbourg,
The Young Girls of Rochefort and many other motion pictures became
masterpieces of cinema art. His musical compositions have been
performed by well-known piano players Oscar Peterson, Caunt Beisya
and Charlie Parker. Michel Legrand his a winner of 3 Oscar and 5
Grammy nominations.

Armenia, Turkey Agree To Start Consultations On Establishing Diploma

ARMENIA, TURKEY AGREE TO START CONSULTATIONS ON ESTABLISHING DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS

Interfax
Sept 1 2009
Russia

Armenia and Turkey have agreed to start internal political
consultations on the issue of establishing diplomatic relations
between the two countries, the Armenian Foreign Ministry told Interfax
on Monday.

Consultations will be held around two protocols, the protocol on the
establishment of diplomatic relations between two countries and the
protocol on the development of bilateral relations, the ministry said.

These documents were signed earlier at the talks mediated by
Switzerland.

The internal political consultations will be completed within
a six-week period, resulting in both protocols being signed and
submitted for ratification with the two countries’ parliaments,
the Armenian Foreign Ministry said in a press statement.

These protocols outline the framework of regulating the relations
within a reasonable period of time, the statement said.

"The parties will do their utmost to ensure swift ratification in line
with their respective constitutional and legislative processes. The
bilateral settlement will facilitate the regional peace and stability,"
the statement said.

Armenia and Turkey are willing to continue their joint efforts under
Switzerland’s mediation, the document also said.

Armenia, Turkey Move To Restore Diplomatic Ties

ARMENIA, TURKEY MOVE TO RESTORE DIPLOMATIC TIES

France 24
y-move-restore-diplomatic-ties-massacres-genocide- ottoman-empire-war
Sept 1 2009

Armenia and Turkey have announced an agreed plan towards establishing
diplomatic relations and re-opening the border after almost a century
of distrust and resentment rooted in massacres of Armenians during
the First World War.

AFP – Armenia and Turkey said Monday they had agreed on a plan to
establish diplomatic ties and re-open their border, seeking to end
decades of distrust and resentment on both sides.

The two countries have no diplomatic relations, a closed frontier and
a long history of hostility rooted in massacres of Armenians under
the Ottoman Turks during World War I.

Ankara and Yerevan said they would hold six weeks of domestic
consultations before signing two protocols on establishing diplomatic
ties and developing bilateral relations.

"The political consultations will be completed within six weeks,
following which the two protocols will be signed and submitted to
the respective parliaments for ratification," the countries’ foreign
ministries said in a joint statement with mediator Switzerland.

According to copies of the protocols released by the Armenian foreign
ministry, the two countries have agreed to re-open their common border
"within two months" of the deal taking effect.

The agreement also calls for the creation of a joint commission
to examine the "historical dimension" of their disagreements,
"including an impartial scientific examination of the historical
records and archives."

The two countries said in April that they had agreed to a road map
for normalising diplomatic ties after years of enmity.

Turkey has long refused to establish diplomatic links with Armenia
over Yerevan’s efforts to have World War I-era massacres of Armenians
by Ottoman Turks recognised as genocide — a label Turkey strongly
rejects.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were systematically killed
between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, Turkey’s predecessor,
was falling apart.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says between
300,000 and 500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil
strife when Armenians took up arms in eastern Anatolia and sided with
invading Russian troops.

Turkey also closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
ally Azerbaijan over Yerevan’s backing of ethnic Armenian separatists
in the breakaway Nagorny Karabakh region.

Rare talks between the two neighbours gathered steam last September
when Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a landmark visit to Yerevan
to watch a World Cup qualifying football match between the countries’
national teams. It was the first such visit by a Turkish leader.

Gul invited Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian to attend a rematch
in Turkey in October. Sarkisian said in July that he would not attend
unless Ankara took "real steps" at mending ties.

Washington has backed the reconciliation effort, with President Barack
Obama calling on Armenia and Turkey to build on fence-mending efforts
during a visit to Turkey earlier this year.

Late Monday, French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s office issued a
statement saying France encourages Turkey and Armenia to "redouble
their efforts so they can quickly sign an accord… which will be an
historic event and contribute to stability in the region."

But Azerbaijan has demanded that any final deal be linked with the
withdrawal of Armenian forces from Nagorny Karabakh, which broke from
Baku’s control during a war in the early 1990s.

Officials there have hinted that energy-rich Azerbaijan would consider
cutting gas supplies to Turkey if Ankara ignored the Karabakh issue
in its talks with Armenia.

The plan could also face domestic opposition in both countries, where
the issue of the Ottoman-era massacres continues to raise strong
emotions. One of Armenia’s most influential political parties, the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), left the country’s
governing coalition in April in protest over the talks with Ankara.

http://www.france24.com/en/20090901-armenia-turke

New Novel By Orhan Pamuk Presented In Moscow

NEW NOVEL BY ORHAN PAMUK PRESENTED IN MOSCOW

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.08.2009 20:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On August 27-30, renowned Turkish writer and Noble
Prize laureate Orhan Pamuk visited Moscow to present his new novel
entitled "Museum of Innocence".

The visit was organized under the aegis of Turkish Embassy in Russia
and Turkish General Consulate in St. Petersbutrg. Within presentation
frameworks, the Institute of Asian and African countries organized
a press conference and a lecture

Orhan Pamuik currently resides in Germany where he found a shelter
after nationalists’ threats and the assassination of Armenian-Turkish
"Agos" newspaper’s Editor-in-Chief Hrant Dink. In a 2006 interview
with a Swiss newspaper, Pamuk used the word Genocide to characterize
the slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians and 30 thousand Kurds in Turkey.

Majority of republicans think President won’t leave for Turkey

Majority of republicans think President won’t leave for Turkey

armradio.am
29.08.2009 16:50

Football diplomacy is not an accurate description. It’s accurate to say
football match which is used in diplomatic goals, NA Republican
Fraction member Rafik Petrosyan told at news conference.
Official says although Turkey adopted a flattering policy, Armenia was
right to start negotiations with them. NA deputy says it has raised the
rate of Armenia before the international society, and revealed the
intentions of Turkey.
Regarding President Sezh Sargsyan’s visit to Turkey, the official says
although it is the president who defines his traveling, the majority of
the Republicans think he will not leave for Turkey as all the questions
put by him remain open. `In this case Armenia should accuse Turkey
using foreign media in breaking the agreements and breaking the
advancement and rejecting compromises. If our President does not travel
to Turkey, they will start doing that,’ official said.

Erdogan and Aliyev exchanged views on Armenian-Turkish ties and NK

Erdogan and Aliyev exchanged views on Armenian-Turkish ties and
Karabakh issue
29.08.2009 15:53 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
Azeri President Ilham Aliyev had a phone conversation, during which
they exchanged views on recent developments in Caucasus. Erdogan gave
Azeri President information about normalization process between Turkey
and Armenia. Aliyev in turn briefed Erdogan about the recent
developments regarding Karabakh settlement talk, World Bulletin
reported.

Demand For Armenian FM’s Resignation In Context Of Disadvantage For

DEMAND FOR ARMENIAN FM’S RESIGNATION IN CONTEXT OF DISADVANTAGE FOR ARMENIA, DIASPORA

Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am
Aug 28 2009
Armenia

A few weeks ago, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) demanded
the resignation of RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan. One of the
principal reasons for the ARF’s position was the Armenian side’s
inconsistency in the negotiations over the roadmap with Turkey,
writes Jorge Rubén Kazandjian, Editor of Diario Armenia.

The mistake was not recognized, as the Armenian Government’s steps
were not properly understood. The response to the ARF’s demands that
the details of negotiations be published was as follows: there are
no preconditions nor will there be any concessions that would run
counter to our demands in any way. Nevertheless, this confidence
vanished soon after the Turkish Government announced its position
through some of the high-ranking officials. Ankara made it clear that
the Turkish-Armenian border would not be reopened nor any diplomatic
relations be established until a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh
problem acceptable to Azerbaijan was found.

On this evidence, Minister Nalbandayn was expected give a response,
which was not done – except for languid denials of statements made
by Turks. Seeing the palsy of its Armenian counterpart, the Turkish
foreign office launched unprecedented activities, especially in the
countries where the Armenian communities succeeded in getting the
Armenian Genocide officially recognized.

Supported by USA-based Jewish politicians, the Turkish lobby gained
its first great victory when it forced U.S. President Barack Obama
to renege on his campaign promises to officially recognize the 1915
evens as genocide.

What was the argument? A very simple one: Armenia and Turkey started
a rapprochement process, which comprises numerous issues. Of course,
Turkey’s activities aimed at making the Nagorno-Karabakh problem part
of the roadmap context just a few days after the anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide are by no means coincidence. The Turkish foreign
office showed comprehension: its "dialectics" applied in the United
States was similar to that applied in Europe and Middle East. After
President Obama reneged, Turkey launched diplomatic operations in
Argentina, Uruguay, Chile and Brazil. The Turkish ambassadors to
European countries proved to be "up to the mark" as well. As regards
Ankara’s representative in Baku, he had a special mission…

Armenia has never been able to do anything to "temper" that strong
contrary wind. Ankara is reaping dividends from the political
scenarios, whereas Armenia proved impotent.

The results of Turkish diplomats’ activities can be felt in Argentina
as well. News about the developing ideology of Genocide denial keep
on coming. Meetings with parliamentarians and officials, as well as
invitations to journalists and other people to visit Turkey, have
become usual practice. Against this background, the sluggish Armenian
diplomacy strikes the eye. So the demand for Edward Nalbandyan’s
resignation fits in with the context, which is unfavorable for both
Armenia and the Diaspora. This is an issue to be considered in all
seriousness.

Vimpelcom Posts $719.75 Mln Net Profit In 2009

VIMPELCOM POSTS $719.75 MLN NET PROFIT IN 2009
Alexander Alpatkin

RIA Novosti
14:2627/08/2009

MOSCOW, August 27 (RIA Novosti) – Russian mobile phone operator
VimpelCom posted on Thursday a net profit of 22.6 billion rubles
($719.75 mln) calculated to International Financial Reporting Standards
for the second quarter of 2009.

The company had a net loss of 8.5 billion rubles ($271 mln) in
January-March 2009.

Revenue rose 3.3% to 69 billion rubles ($2.2 bln) in the reporting
period.

The company’s managing director Boris Nemshich said the improved
results were due to a 19% year-on-year increase in the number of
subscribers to 63.7 million people. VimpelCom currently provides mobile
and broadband internet services to 1.7 million people, compared to
0.6 million last year.

VimpelCom, which operates under the Beeline brand, is the second
largest cellphone operator in Russia, and also provides services in
Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Georgia and Armenia. In
2008, VimpelCom acquired licenses in Vietnam and Cambodia.

The operator covers a territory with a population of 340 million.