UK Government To Write Off 10% Of Armenia’s Foreign Debt

UK GOVERNMENT TO WRITE OFF 10% OF ARMENIA’S FOREIGN DEBT

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9. ARMINFO. The UK Government suggests writing of
10% of Armenia’s foreign debt, says Armenia’s Finance and Economy
Minister Vardan Khachatryan.

No mechanisms are specified though. In the next few days Khachatryan
is meeting with UK Ambassador to Armenia Thorda Abbot-Watt to discuss
the terms and mechanisms of the deal.

“Now we have only the UK Government’s proposal while the
implementation mechanism will be specified by a relevant agreement,”
says Khachatryan. One possibility is the mechanism used by Armenia
and the EU: the EU gave Armenia a 28 mln EUR loan in 2004 Armenia rep
aid 7 mln EUR receiving 5.5 mln EUR; in 2005 it will have to pay off
2 mln EUR to get 1.5 mln EUR. This scheme was to help Armenia to repay
the debt by 2007 but the country has managed to repay it ahead of time.

Armenia’s foreign debt totals $1.117 bln with $700 mln to the World
Bank.

To remind, during their last meeting G-8 decided to write off debts
to the 19 poorest countries of the world: in Africa and South-Eastern
Asia. Armenia is also on the list and may enjoy writing off of 10%
of its foreign debt and 10% of accured interests.

MAIN PAGE: Teledyne Wins NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Contracto

Teledyne Wins NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Contractor Excellence
Award for Second Consecutive Year

Business Wire
Wednesday, February 9, 2005

LOS ANGELES–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Feb. 9, 2005–Teledyne Technologies
Incorporated (NYSE:TDY – News) today announced that Teledyne Brown
Engineering, Inc., for the second year in a row, has been selected by
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) to receive the Contractor
Excellence Award in the large business – service category.

Teledyne Brown was selected for the annual award based on the high
quality of the company’s services and support and heightened
performance, which resulted in cost savings to MSFC of more than $15
million over the last four years. Cross training and hiring personnel
with diverse backgrounds also allowed Teledyne Brown to keep costs to
almost nine percent below plan.

Under a contract with The Boeing Company, Teledyne Brown currently
supports payload integration for the International Space Station (ISS).
Since June 2002, Teledyne Brown has been supporting the Systems
Development and Operations Support (SDOS) contract with a team that has
been working on space hardware and software development, integration and
operation, maintenance of payload facilities and carrier subsystems on
the ISS and other space exploration initiatives.

The company is involved in several other MSFC programs including the
Operation and Maintenance of Propellants, Pressurants and Calibration
(PPC), the Engineering, Analytical, and Integration Support to MSFC’s
Material Science Glovebox and Biotechnology Programs.

Since becoming one of the first contractors to MSFC, Teledyne Brown has
continued to emphasize safety and quality assurance.

“Teledyne Brown has a vital role with Marshall in achieving NASA’s goal
of safe human spaceflight,” said Marshall Center Director David King.
“Their contributions are helping us fulfill the Vision for Space
Exploration, and inspiring the next generation of space explorers.”

“We are very honored to receive this award again,” said Robert
Mehrabian, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Teledyne
Technologies. “The award is a reflection of the outstanding team we have
supporting Marshall Space Flight Center programs. I would like to thank
everyone at NASA for this recognition. We look forward to continuing to
provide the Marshall Center with the exceptional quality of work that is
synonymous with Teledyne Brown.”

Teledyne Brown Engineering will receive a plaque at an awards ceremony
in the near future.

Teledyne Technologies is a leading provider of sophisticated electronic
components, instruments and communication products, systems engineering
solutions, aerospace engines and components and on-site gas and power
generation systems. Teledyne Technologies has operations in the United
States, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Canada. For more information,
visit Teledyne Technologies’ website at

Contact:
Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
Investors: Jason VanWees, 310-893-1642
or
Press: Robyn McGowan, 310-893-1640

Source: Teledyne Technologies Incorporated

http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050209/95299_1.html
www.teledyne.com.

ANKARA: Arinc Visits Sangachal Terminal

Arinc Visits Sangachal Terminal

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Feb 8 2005

BAKU – Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc paid a visit on Tuesday
to Sangachal Terminal, the starting point of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
oil pipeline in Azerbaijan.

Officials at the terminal told Arinc that they would start pumping
oil from the pipeline in May, and the first oil would reach Ceyhan
in August 2005. They also said that the region would become the third
biggest oil terminal of the world in 2008.

Later, Arinc visited the ‘Hope Village’ where people, who are forced
to leave their homes following Armenian occupation, have been settled.

In the meantime Arinc said that Turkey had been supporting Azerbaijani
people.

“The occupation of Upper Karabakh should come to an end as soon as
possible. Turkey and Azerbaijan have been expending joint efforts on
international platforms to this end. As a result of their initiatives,
the Council of Europe adopted a resolution asking Armenians to withdraw
from the region,” Arinc added.

Condoleezza Rice Hinting At Genocide

CONDOLEEZZA RICE HINTING AT GENOCIDE

Azg/arm
8 Feb 05

Mediamax news agency quoted US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
as expressing hope that Turkey and Armenia will overcome the existing
discords.

“We know about that complicated story and recognize it. But today
we have passed a long way towards the future. We will appeal to the
sides to find ways how to bring their stances closer on the bases
of democracy, economic development and stability”, Condoleezza
Rice stated.

Launch of 1600th Anniv Celebrations Of Armenian Alphabet in Sydney

PRESS RELEASE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia & New Zealand
10 Macquarie Street
Chatswood NSW 2067
AUSTRALIA
Contact: Laura Artinian
Tel: (02) 9419-8056
Fax: (02) 9904-8446
Email: [email protected]

7 February 2005

LAUNCH OF 1600TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONS OF THE ARMENIAN ALPHABET IN
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Sydney, Australia – Sunday, 6 February, 2005 on the Feast of St Vartan the
Warrior, the Divine Liturgy was celebrated by His Eminence Archbishop Aghan
Baliozian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia and
New Zealand. During the Divine Liturgy, the Encyclical of His Holiness
Karekin II Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians dated 29
January 2005 was read proclaiming 2005 the year of commemorating the 1600th
anniversary of the discovery of the Armenian Alphabet by St Mesrob Mashdots
at the instigation of King Vramshabouh and Catholicos Sahag. Also during
the Divine Liturgy, Hayrabedagan Makhtank was performed with the full rank
of clergy and deacons as it was the name day of His Holiness Karekin II.

In this auspicious year of celebration and in acknowledgment of the national
treasure that is the Armenian Alphabet, Archbishop Baliozian will soon
launch the Inaugural Archbishop’s Writing Award aimed at stimulating thought
and consciousness in Armenian youth about the relevance of maintaining the
values and faith of Armenian heritage in communities of the Diaspora in the
21st Century. The topic for the 2005 Award is “The Armenian Alphabet is
important for the Armenian identity”.

The Archbishop’s Writing Award will become an annual event and is open to
all Armenian youth from Grades 5 to12 residing in Australia, New Zealand and
South-East Asia.

Music review trio makes it official, giving intimate performance

The Oregonian (Portland, Oregon)
February 2, 2005 Wednesday
SUNRISE EDITION

MUSIC REVIEW TRIO MAKES IT OFFICIAL, GIVING INTIMATE, SKILLFUL
PERFORMANCE

by DAVID STABLER – The Oregonian

Monday’s concert by Chamber Music Northwest at Kaul Auditorium was
both a reunion and a debut. The performers — David Shifrin, Ani
Kavafian and Andre-Michel Schub — have played together for decades,
but this concert was their debut as an official trio.

Known as the Kavafian-Schub-Shifrin Trio (KSS for short), they
brought both formidable skill and easy intimacy to four works:
Mozart’s “Kegelstatt” Trio, Robert Schumann’s “Fairy Tale Stories,”
Aram Khachaturian’s folk-filled Trio in G Minor and Bela Bartok’s
brilliant and robust “Contrasts.”

Such a program showed considerable range within the relatively small
repertoire for piano, clarinet and violin (and viola, as Kavafian
demonstrated).

How fitting that Mozart wrote his “Kegelstatt” Trio for friends, the
clarinet virtuoso Anton Stadler and his favorite piano student
Franzisca von Jacquin. Mozart himself played the viola. Shifrin,
Kavafian and Schub caught the work’s graciousness with small-scale
tone and effortless passing back and forth of the ornaments in the
first movement.

The only drawback was Schub’s tendency to play ahead of the beat,
robbing some of the music’s poise.

Schumann’s “Fairy Tale Stories” is a strange suite of pieces,
intermittently lyrical and vigorous. In texture and design it doesn’t
come up to the imaginative level of his early “fantasy” music (the
piano suite “Fantasiestcke,” for example), but the players gave warm
and vivid performances.

We rarely hear Khachaturian’s chamber music — he wrote mostly
concertos and orchestral works; anybody hear of the “Sabre Dance”? —
but the G Minor Trio is memorable for its tangy Armenian flavor.
Colorful and quixotic, it evokes East European folk music, with
snappy rhythms, modal scales and expressive ornamentation.

Apart from some heavy-handed chords from Schub that drowned out his
colleagues, the players gave a vibrant, exciting performance.

As Shifrin marks his 25th season as artistic director of Chamber
Music Northwest, it seemed appropriate that he play one of his
signature pieces: Bartok’s “Contrasts.” Longtime fans will fondly
recall previous performances he’s given of this terrific piece, but
still, Monday’s reprise sounded as fresh as ever.

In the first movement, a short introduction leads to a wild
18th-century Hungarian recruiting dance in which an army officer
prances about in order to entice young men into service. Shifrin took
off in the cadenza that ends the movement, exploiting the brilliant
run up the scale that ends with a piercing shout.

Kavafian switched to a second, deliberately mistuned violin for the
third movement as the players whirled through the irregular rhythms.
It was an exhilarating finish, and a great beginning to a new chapter
of chamber music.

French Speaker Debre expected to meet Patriarch of Armenians

IT IS EXPECTED THAT CHAIRMAN OF NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF FRANCE TO MEET
WITH PATRIARCH OF ARMENIANS OF CONSTANTINOPLE WITHIN FRAMEWORK OF
VISIT TO TURKEY

ISTANBUL, February 4 (Noyan Tapan). Chairman of the National Assembly
of France Jean-Luis Debret together with the heads of four
parliamentary factions departed to Ankara on February 4. The Chairman
of the French National Assembly, who is known with his friendly
relations with President of France Jacques Chirac, will meet with
President of Turkey Ahmed Sezer, Chairman of the parliament Bulent
Arenj, Prime Minister Recep Tayipp Erdogan, as well as with Chairman
of the officer corps Hilmi Eozkek. According to the “Marmara”
newspaper of Istanbul, Debret’s meeting with Patriarch of the
Armenians of Constantinople Mesrop Mutafian is expected in Istanbul
within the framework of the visit to Turkey. The visit of Jean-Luis
Debret’s delegataion will complete on February 5 evening. The
diplomatic circles mention the importance of the visit of the
delegation of the French parliament to Turkey both from the viewpoint
of the arguments on Turkey in France and from the viewpoint of the
bilateral political relations.

Cinq parlementaires en classe decouverte a Ankara

Libération, France
vendredi 4 Février 2005

Cinq parlementaires en classe découverte à Ankara

Visite en Turquie de Jean-Louis Debré et des quatre présidents de
groupe.

Par Didier HASSOUX

Ankara envoyé spécial

«Le club des cinq», comme on les surnomme à l’Ambassade de France, a
débarqué hier à Ankara, pour une visite intensive et médiatisée de 72
heures, avec la ferme intention d’«entendre et comprendre» cette
Turquie qui frappe à la porte de l’UE. La température locale n’a
certes pas facilité les choses, mais le président de l’Assemblée,
Jean-Louis Debré, accompagné des quatre présidents de groupe, Bernard
Accoyer (UMP), Jean-Marc Ayrault (PS), Alain Bocquet (PCF) et Hervé
Morin (UDF), non plus.

«Sans tabou». La délégation parlementaire est venue pour «poser des
questions», aborder «sans tabou» les sujets qui fchent. La place de
l’islam dans la société turque, le respect des minorités (arménienne
et kurde), le droit d’association, la réforme du code pénal, etc.
«Nous sommes loin du langage du Quai d’Orsay», commentait un
diplomate.

Dès leur arrivée sur le sol ottoman, les cinq parlementaires ont mis
les pieds dans le meze. Jean-Louis Debré en tête. Lors d’une
entrevue, à huis clos, avec le Premier ministre, Tayyep Erdogan,
promoteur d’un islam modéré, le président de l’Assemblée nationale
n’a pas hésité à rendre gloire au petit père de la nation turque,
Kemal Atatürk, instaurateur d’un Etat laïc. Selon un participant au
rendez-vous, «Erdogan a été bluffé». C’est lui-même qui a provoqué
cette rencontre.

En juillet, le Premier ministre turc avait dîné à l’hôtel de Lassay
et suggéré une réciprocité. Debré a repris l’invitation au bond et
inventé cette formule inédite de voyage parlementaire en compagnie
des représentants des groupes politiques.

En mettant le ministre des Affaires étrangères devant le fait
accompli. D’ailleurs, la diplomatie française a déserté le Bosphore
depuis des lustres. Depuis la visite de François Mitterrand, en 1992,
aucun président de la République ni aucun Premier ministre n’a
séjourné à Ankara. Ce qu’on nomme pudiquement à l’ambassade «une
détérioration des relations franco-turques». Les Turcs «en ont assez
d’être considérés comme les “bougnoules” de service», tonne ce
diplomate. Ou d’entendre pérorer Nicolas Sarkozy et Philippe de
Villiers sur le même thème populiste : «Si la Turquie était dans
l’Europe. Ça se saurait !» Ce qui fait dire au président de
l’Assemblée nationale turque, Bulent Arinc : «La Turquie de votre
opinion publique n’a rien à voir avec la Turquie réelle.» Et
d’espérer que l’adhésion d’Ankara à l’UE sera examinée «sans
discrimination ni favoritisme». Les responsables parlementaires
français donnent le sentiment de s’y employer.

Mémoire. Jean-Marc Ayrault reconnaissait que ses interlocuteurs «ont
évolué», notamment à propos du génocide arménien sur lequel ils se
disent disposés à effectuer un travail de mémoire. Alain Bocquet,
partisan de l’adhésion, et Hervé Morin, qui s’y oppose, parlent de
«bonne volonté». Le plus troublé c’est Accoyer. Le président du
groupe UMP, partisan d’un «partenariat privilégié» avec la Turquie,
dit découvrir à Ankara «un vrai désir d’Europe». Même s’il martèle
que «les réponses sont insuffisantes», il répète, par deux fois
«aujourd’hui». Comme s’il se réservait le droit de changer d’avis.

New Jersey: Town Hall Meeting with U.S. Ambassador on Feb. 12

Hovnanian School
817 River Road
New Milford, NJ 07646
Contact: Vartan Matiossian (201-967-5940)

Town Hall Meeting
With U.S. Ambassador to Armenia on February 12

NEW MILFORD, NJ – The Executive Board of the Hovnanian School will host a
Town Hall Meeting with the United States Ambassador to the Republic of
Armenia, John Evans on Saturday, February 12, 2005 at the school’s
auditorium. Accompanying Ambassador Evans will be the U.S. Agency for
International Development Director for Armenia, Robin Phillips.

The Town Hall Meeting will begin at 9:30 am. The Ambassador and Mr. Phillips
will open the meeting by offering brief remarks about the ongoing work and
accomplishments of the U.S. Government in Armenia, and will then open the
floor to questions. The meeting will last approximately 90 minutes.
Admission is free. Please R.S.V.P.

The U.S. government has delivered more than 1.6 billion dollars to the
Republic of Armenia over the last decade in the form of technical and
humanitarian assistance. For more information regarding U.S. assistance to
the Republic of Armenia, please visit

www.usa.am/assistance.

Format of Karabakh settlement talks distorted – minister

Format of Karabakh settlement talks distorted – minister

Arminfo, Yerevan
4 Feb 05

YEREVAN

The format of the negotiations on the peaceful settlement of the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict is distorted, the foreign minister of the
Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR], Arman Melikyan, said at a press
conference in Stepanakert today.

The minister pointed out that using this, Azerbaijan is trying to
present Armenia as an aggressor that has territorial claims to
Azerbaijan. Speaking about British MP David Atkinson’s report on
Nagornyy Karabakh, Melikyan pointed out that “we should not identify
Atkinson with the whole of Europe. After all, there are very specific
interests – European, American, Azerbaijani or Russian, and these
interests require each country to resolve certain tasks. We also have
our own interests, which should be purposefully defended in the
general contexts of interests. However, everything boils down again to
the distorted format of the negotiations in which the NKR is not
participating,” Melikyan stressed.

The minister stressed that it is very difficult to find a solution
within the framework of such a distorted format. “It is hardly
possible to find any mutually acceptable solution without the
participation of Nagornyy Karabakh in the negotiations. But this
depends not only on our desire – there are international and
Azerbaijani interests, and our task is to make the aims and interests
of Nagornyy Karabakh understandable and acceptable to others,” the
minister said.