Czech MEP argues against Turkey’s EU membership

Czech MEP argues against Turkey’s EU membership

Mlada fronta Dnes web site, Prague
24 Sep 04

Text of commentary by Czech MEP Josef Zieleniec, political leader of
the Association of Independent Candidates and former Czech foreign
minister, headlined “Cradle of dangerous new crisis”, published
by the Czech newspaper Mlada fronta Dnes web site on 24 September;
subheadings as published

Should Turkey become EU member?

No. The issue of whether Turkey should join the EU is quickly turning
into a key problem that will be decisive for the future of the EU. In
comparison with other, albeit important, disputes such as, in the past,
the discussion of the Maastricht Treaty, the introduction of the euro,
and enlargement to the East, or the ongoing debate over the European
constitution, the discussion of Turkey’s membership most concerns
the sense of European integration, and even its very existence.

Estimates of population growth demonstrate that within a few years,
Turkey will have 80 million inhabitants. That means that, if it were
to join the EU, it would become the largest country in the union,
with the greatest share in decision-making. Meanwhile, in terms
of per capita income Turkey reaches hardly 22 per cent of the EU
average, much less than even the poorest states in the current wave of
enlargement. Never before in the EU has there been such an enormous
discrepancy between demographic strength and economic weakness. The
consequences of such a dangerous combination could be inestimable not
only for the overall solidarity of the EU, but also for its ability
to resolve everyday problems.

Borders With an Explosive Region

The EU would have borders with Syria, Iraq, Iran, Armenia, and
Georgia. These are traditionally enormously explosive areas. The
EU can help to stabilize this region from the position of a global
political force, which it already represents. In the future, the EU
will become an even more significant global political force. However,
if it becomes one side in local disputes, it will rather become part
of the problem than part of the solution. Local conflicts in one of
the most explosive regions of the world would become not only European
problems, but through us, also global problems.

A different tradition and culture in combination with the demographic
growth and poverty of Turkey would transform free movement inside the
EU into the most disputed element of European integration. Enormous
Turkish ghettos would arise all over Europe, which would be a source
of constant cultural and social tensions, and of political tension
flowing from these. The result could be the return of aggressive
xenophobia to Europe.

However, the biggest problem represented by Turkey’s possible
entry into the EU does not have an immediate and direct practical
impact. Nevertheless, it is the most ominous threat. The original
meaning of unification was to overcome European nationalism by
opening the way to the formation of a feeling of connection and a
consciousness of a common identity of Europeans. This process is built
on common histories, common values, and a common way of life, and on
the common political culture that is their fruit. The consciousness
of connection and a common identity is the foundation stone of all
the political processes that are ongoing within the EU; without them,
these processes would not make any sense.

The entry of Turkey would entirely repudiate all of this. Europe
would cease to be our wider homeland and would become an enormous
purpose-made unit without an idea and without meaning, similar in many
ways to former empires in the last phases of their existence. Defining
identity in contrast to such a meaningless entity would become the
basis for the growth of new and forceful European nationalism. European
integration, instead of being the basis for resolving age-old European
problems and a definitive stabilizing factor of the continent, would
become the cradle of a new and dangerous European crisis.

Just good friends

Supporters of Turkey’s entry into the EU argue most often by referring
to this country’s geo-strategic significance (by the way, much less
now than during the existence of the Soviet Union) and the benefit
for the stability of the Middle East and the Caucasus. However, the
main result of accepting Turkey would not be stability in these areas,
which is problematic regardless of whether Turkey is accepted or not,
but the guaranteed destabilization of the whole of Europe.

The relationship between the EU and Turkey should be friendly,
intensive, and have special institutional arrangements. However, the
consequences of Turkey’s full EU membership would seriously damage
not only the EU, but also Turkey itself.

Priests in Punch-Up at Christianity’s Holiest Shrine

Priests in Punch-Up at Christianity’s Holiest Shrine

The Scotsman, UK
Sept 27 2004

“PA”

Rival priests got into a fight in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre,
Christianity’s holiest shrine in Jerusalem, after arguing over whether
a door in the basilica should be closed during a procession.

Dozens of people, including several Israeli police officers, were
hurt in the brawl at the shrine, built over the spot where tradition
says Jesus was crucified and buried.

Jerusalem police spokesman Shmulik Ben-Ruby said four priests were
arrested.

Custody of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is shared by several
denominations that jealously guard territory and responsibilities under
a fragile deal hammered out over the last centuries. Any perceived
encroachment on one group’s turf can lead to vicious feuds, sometimes
lasting centuries.

Today’s fight broke out during a procession of hundreds of Greek
Orthodox worshippers commemorating the 4th century pilgrimage by
Helena, mother of Emperor Constantine, to Jerusalem. Tradition says
that during the trip, Helena found the cross on which Jesus had
been crucified.

Church officials said that at one point, the procession passed a
Roman Catholic chapel, and priests from both sides started arguing
over whether the door to the chapel should be open or closed.

Club-wielding Israeli riot police broke up the fight, witnesses said.

After the brawl, the procession continued.

Greek Orthodox priests, dressed in black robes and donning elaborate
head-dresses, marched out of the church as bells rang loudly.
Carrying gold staves and roses, they marched through the church
courtyard and down a narrow stone alley as Greek Orthodox Christians
clapped and cheered.

In 2003, Israeli police threatened to limit the number of worshippers
allowed to attend an Easter ceremony if the denominations did not
agree on who would lead the ceremony. Police brokered a last-minute
deal and the ceremony passed peacefully.

But a year earlier, the Greek patriarch and Armenian clergyman
designated to enter the tomb exchanged blows after a spat over who
would be first to exit the chamber.

Canadian Diocese Newsonline – 09/25/2004

PRESS OFFICE
Armenian Holy Apostolic Church Canadian Diocese
Contact; Deacon Hagop Arslanian, Assistant to the Primate
615 Stuart Avenue, Outremont Quebec H2V 3H2
Tel; 514-276-9479, Fax; 514-276-9960
Email; [email protected]
Website; September 25, 2004
* * *

BISHOP GALSTANIAN VISITS ONTARIO PARISHES

His Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian, Primate, presided over several
meetings in the Province of Ontario. His Eminence accompanied by Very
Reverend Hayrik Apegha Hovhannisyan went to Toronto and met with the
Board of Trustees of Holy Cross Day School in Toronto.

In Mississauga, His Eminence met with Parish Council of Saint Vartan
Apostolic Church and discussed the current activities as well as the
future plans of the Parish in Mississauga. The Primate informed the
Parish Council members about the outcome of his visit to the Mayor of
Mississauga and asked them to work together closely in order to
achieve more success for the Parish and to create a better future for
our young generation in Saint Vartan Parish of Mississauga.

Bishop Galstanian also met with the Parish members of St Mary Armenian
Church of Hamilton and talked to them about the plans to reorganize
the Parish. His Eminence informed that once the project is complete he
will then meet with the Parishioners and discuss the possibilities to
achieve it.

* * *

HONORING THE 2004 HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES: A GREAT SUCCESS

Reporting: Talar Chichmanian

On Sunday September 19th, 2004 Armenians for Higher Education
presented certificates of achievement to over 50 high school graduates
from the Class of 2004 under the auspices of Bishop Bagrat Galstanian.
An innovative first for our community, this inaugural affair honored
Canadian Armenians graduating from any one of the high schools in the
greater Montreal and Laval areas in 2004.

Many thanks go out to the organising committee, Mr. & Mrs. Levon and
Ana Afeyan, Mrs. Maral Balian-Partamian, Ms. Talar Chichmanian and
Ms. Hilda Tursucuyan. Many thanks to Mr. Linton Garner,
representative of the Ministry of Education, Mr. Pierre Reid, and
Madame Line Beauchamp, Minister of Culture and Communications for
having taken the time to recognise this important occasion. A
heartfelt thank you as well to the students who used their free summer
months to put their hearts and energy into organising their original
community event.

The emcee of the event, Levon Afeyan, the driving force behind the
organisation, greeted the students on behalf of the organising
committee with a welcome cocktail whereby students got acquainted with
one another. Later, during the graduation ceremony, each student was
called up on stage to receive a certificate, a beautiful Bible from
Armenia as well as a commemorative T-shirt! The ceremony was followed
by a reception for all in attendance as well as a dance party for the
students. By the invitation of His Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian
the keynote speaker of the event was Mrs. Julia Dumanian.

During the ceremony, the students listened with rapt attention as
Julia Dumanian, CEO and President of Cambridge Memorial Hospital,
wowed parents and students with her inspirational message to always
strive for academic excellence. Her impressive educational background
and credentials coupled with her fervent enthusiasm to always reach
for the stars and never be afraid of wanting to have it all set the
perfect example for the eager and keen ears of this next generation of
strong Armenians. Mrs. Julia Dumanian’s husband Mr. Loris Dumanian is
the Chairperson of the Parish Council of St Vartan Armenian Church,
Mississauga and her sons Armen and Van serve the Holy Altar every
Sunday. Mrs Dumanian supports the mission of the Mother See of Holy
Etchmiadzin and the Diocese of Canada.

Both Bishop Galstanian and Mrs. Dumanian stressed the fact that our
forefathers survived genocide; some came to Canada as refugees and
promptly contributed to the development and culture of their adopted
homeland much like many of the Armenian families found in Canada
today. A point alluded to by Mme Line Beauchamp for Armenians in
Quebec.

Mrs. Dumanian’s message was further cemented by Bishop Bagrat
Galstanian as he conveyed his thoughts: ‘Strive higher in life, think
broader and bigger, always forget and ignore minor, life consuming
things and always create. Do good. Help and love each other in spite
of all obstacles. In one word, be Armenians and Christians which
implies quality.’

A message all Armenians should follow.

* * *

PRIMATE TO CELEBRATE WITH HOLY CROSS CHURCH OF LAVAL

His Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian, Primate of the Diocese of the
Armenian Church of Canada, will celebrate the Feast of the Holy Cross
of Varak at Laval Parish on the occasion of its name day and the 11th
anniversary.

Bishop Galstanian will celebrate the Divine Liturgy on Sunday,
September 26, 2004 which is the Feast Day of Holy Varak and St George
the Warrior. That will be followed by a banquet marking the church’s
11th anniversary.

On Saturday night a candle light dinner is organized by the Parish
Council where political dignitaries and members of Christian Churches
will be present.

* * *

THE CALENDAR OF DIOCESAN EVENTS FOR THE MONTH OF OCTOBER

On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the establishment of
Canadian Armenian Diocese the Organizing Committee has planned a
series of activities to mark this significant milestone. In the month
of October an exhibition of paintings of Montreal Armenian artists
will be held October 1-2 and 3, at St Gregory the Illuminator Armenian
cathedral in Montreal. Later that month, October 14-15-16 an Armenian
Culture Day will be celebrated in the Diocese. Both events are
dedicated to the 20th anniversary of the establishment of Canadian
Armenian Diocese (for further information please see the flyers by
visiting ).

We invite our faithful of all our parishes throughout Canada to
participate in the ceremonies and in the celebrations organized on the
occasions noted in the calendar.

* * *

NEWS FROM THE MOTHER SEE OF HOLY ETCHMIADZIN

a) Seminar and Celebration Dedicated toe the 1000th anniversary of the
Getcharis Monastery: On September 18 and 19 the 1000th anniversary of
the Monastery of Getcharis located in the Diocese of Kotayk was the
subject of a seminar and religious as well as popular festivities. On
the morning of September 18, following a religious ceremony, the
Primate of the Diocese of Kotayk Bishop Arakel Karamian presided the
opening session of the seminar dedicated to the history of the
monastery. The letter of greetings and well wishes of His Holiness
Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians, was read by Archbishop Mesrop
Krikorian, Legate of the Catholicos for Central Europe. Papers were
presented about this major educational and cultural center at the
height of the Bgratid Dynasty of Armenia, about the place of
Khatchatour of Getcharis in the annals of Middle age literature, and
about plans for completion of reconstruction of the monastery
complex. Also the launching of the book “Getcharis-1000” was held
during the first session.

The next day, Sunday, September 18, the Divine Liturgy was celebrated
in the cathedral of the monastery by the Primate of Kodayk, and
presided over by His Holiness the Catholicos, who later blessed all
participants of the seminar, the pilgrims from Southern Russia, and
the faithful, then decorated the benefactor Mr. Vladimir Harutyunian
by an honorary medal. Following the blessing of Madagh, festivities
began by the participation of local song and dance groups. Present
were representatives of the regional governing authorities.

b) The Ambassador of Poland was Received by the Catholicos: On
September 23, His Holioness Karekin II received the visit of Poland’s
Plenipotential and Extraordinary Ambassador to Armenia Domash
Gnodhe. His Holiness expressed pleasure in view of the close
collaboration between Armenia and Poland and also talked about the
challenges faced by churches in the modern world. Ambassador Gnodhe
vouched to do his best for further strengthening the ties of
cooperation between the two countries.

c) Conference on the Interpretation Schools of Armenia: Within the
orbit of the 1600th anniversary of the discovery of the Armenian
Alphabet, on September 22, a conference on the schools of
interpretations of the Holy Scriptures in Armenia since the early days
of Christianity was held in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, with
the participation of 25 scholars from Armenia and abroad. His
Holiness Karekin II presided over the sessions. Director of the
Karekin I Theological Center Azat Pozoyan opened the conference and
spoke about the necessity of compiling and publishing the
interpretations of the Bible by our forefathers of the Armenian
Church. His Holiness blessed this initiative and stressed the
importance of introducing the rich patrimonial legacy of the Armenian
Church to our clergy, scholars and people. Bishop Yeznik Petrosian
introduced the first two volumes of the series “Library of Armenian
Intrerpretations of the Bible”. Speakers highlighted the contribution
of the Armenian interpretations of the Bible to world culture and
civilization. The concluding session of the conference was held in the
lecture hall of St. Mesrop Seminary in Oshagan.

d) Meeting with Artsakh President Arkady Ghoukassian: On September 23,
His Holiness Karekin II received in the Mother see of Holy Etchmiadzin
the visit of Arkady Ghougassian, President of Artsakh (Mountainous
Gharabagh), accompanied by the Speaker of the Parliament Olek
Yessayan, Prime MinisterAnoushavan Danielian and other high ranking
officials. His Holiness blessed the delegation and wished them success
in their mission in leading the people of Artsakh. President
Ghougassian thanked His Holiness and stated that each visit to the
Holy See invigorates him and encourages him to continue his
responsibilities with renewed enthusiasm, and invited His Holiness to
conduct His pastoral visits to Artsakh more frequently.

e) Meeting with the United Nations Supreme Council of Refugees : On
September 23, head of the UN Supreme Council of Refugees Peter Nicolau
and his assistants were received by His Holiness Karekin II. His
Holiness appreciated the efforts of the Council in helping
refugees. Mr. Nicolau informed about his office’s activities and
future plans. Opinions were exchanged about the possibility of
cooperation in this sphere between the Mother See and the UN office of
refugees.

www.armenianchurch.ca

US amb meets with members of US commerce chamber …

ArmenPress
Sept 24 2004

US AMBASSADOR MEETS WITH MEMBERS OF US COMMERCE CHAMBER AND AMERICAN
BUSINESS COMMUNITY IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS: Newly appointed US ambassador
in Armenia John Evans met with members of US Commerce Chamber and
American business community in Armenia in Armenia Marriott Hotel. The
meeting passed in the presence of 45 members of US Commerce Chamber
and economy and trade department representatives of US Embassy.
According to US Commerce Chamber sources, the aim of the meeting
was to introduce the ambassador to American business community in
Armenia. According to US Commerce Chamber charter, the ambassador is
a member of Chamber Board of Directors. After being introduced to US
Chamber of Commerce members, the ambassador briefed on his activities
during the first one month.
” Close links between the embassy and the Commerce Chamber is a
priority in our strategy to increase investment in Armenia,” the
ambassador said.
During the meeting, the chamber members spoke about business
opportunities in Armenia and difficulties. The chairman of Commerce
Chamber Edith Khachatrian mentioned in his speech that US Chamber of
Commerce is an organization which opens up opportunities for
cooperation with Armenian business community and the participation of
ambassador Evans will be very decisive in their aim to create a
favorable business environment.

On this day – 09/23/2004

Sunday Times, Australia

Sept 23 2004

On this day
23sep04

1991 – Armenia declares its independence from the Soviet Union.

1779 – US Admiral John Paul Jones captures British warship Serapis
off Flamborough Head, England.

1803 – British force takes Dutch Guinea.

1817 – Spain signs treaty with Britain to end slave trade.

1846 – The planet Neptune is discovered by German astronomer Johann
Gottfried Galle.

1870 – Death of Prosper Merimee, French dramatist and short story
writer, notably of Carmen.

1912 – Silent film director Mack Sennett’s first Keystone Cops film,
Cohen Collects a Debt, is released.

1914 – Dusseldorf is targeted by British aircraft in Germany during
World War I.

1932 – Hijaz and Nejd and other districts are merged to form the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

1939 – Death of Sigmund Freud, Austrian psychiatrist and founder of
psychoanalysis.

1940 – The George Cross, the highest British civilian award for acts
of courage, is instituted.

1952 – Rocky Marciano becomes world heavyweight boxing champion when
he knocks out Jersey Joe Walcott in 13 rounds in Philadelphia.

1965 – Roma Mitchell is appointed to the South Australian Supreme
Court: the first female judge in Australia.

1972 – President Ferdinand Marcos declares martial law in the
Philippines.

1973 – Juan Peron and his wife Isabel are elected president and
vice-president of Argentina.

1976 – South Africa decides to allow multi-racial teams to represent
the country in international sport.

1978 – Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat returns home to hero’s welcome
after Camp David summit that results in agreement on framework for
peace with Israel.

1982 – Amin Gemayel is sworn in as Lebanon’s president to replace his
brother Bashir, killed in a bomb explosion.

1988 – Rival Muslim and Christian governments threaten Lebanon with
formal partition.

1990 – Saddam Hussein says he will destroy Israel and launch an
all-out war before allowing the UN embargo to “strangle” Iraq; Swiss
citizens vote to ban the construction of nuclear power plants for the
rest of the century.

1991 – Iraqi soldiers detain UN officials in Baghdad and forcibly
confiscate documents showing Iraq had been developing nuclear
weapons; Armenia declares its independence from the Soviet Union.

1992 – France’s deadliest storm in 34 years kills at least 32 people;
General Le Duc Anh, Vietnam’s top military man and a powerful
Communist party official, is elected state president by the national
assembly.

1993 – Sydney is chosen over Beijing as the site for the 2000 Summer
Olympics; The South African parliament votes to allow blacks a role
in governing.

1996 – Greek Premier Costas Simitis defeats his conservative
challenger to win a new four-year term.

1997 – Lawyers announce that British nurses Lucille McLauchlan and
Deborah Parry have been convicted for the murder of their Australian
colleague Yvonne Gilford in Saudi Arabia; Armed men raid an Algerian
village, shooting or stabbing to death at least 200 people and
wounding 100 others; At Northern Ireland peace talks, Unionists have
their first face-to-face meeting with Sinn Fein in 75 years.

1998 – Hurricane Georges reaches Cuba and threatens the Florida Keys
after making a shambles of much of Puerto Rico, the Dominican
Republic and Haiti.

1999 – Violent protests grip the streets of Jakarta for a second day
as police struggle to contain crowds enraged by the passage of a bill
giving the military power to revoke civil liberties; Indonesia says
it is ending martial law in East Timor with immediate effect.

2000 – At the Sydney Olympics, Grant Hackett dethrones Kieren Perkins
as swimming’s 1500m king; Maurice Greene and Marion Jones capture the
100m sprint double for the US; British rower Steve Redgrave wins his
fifth gold medal at his fifth Olympics, matching Hungarian fencers
Aladar Gerevich and Pal Kovacs. Redgrave was later knighted for his
feat; Australian women win waterpolo’s first ever Olympic title with
a last-second goal against the US.

2001 – President George W Bush returns the American flag to full
staff at Camp David, symbolically ending a period of national
mourning. Thousands gather at New York’s Yankee Stadium to offer
prayers for the victims of terrorism; New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
pledges “our skyline will rise again.”

2002 – Former Vice-President Al Gore criticises US President Bush’s
policy of confrontation with Iraq saying it undermines an
international campaign against terrorism in the wake of the September
11 attacks.

2003 – An Indian court sentences one man to death by hanging and 12
others to life in prison for killing a Christian missionary from
Australia and his two young sons in an arson attack in 1999.

CENN Daily Digest – September 20, 2004

CENN – SEPTEMBER 20, 2004 DAILY DIGEST
Table of Contents:
1. BTC Co is not Disclosing Publicly its Environmental Obligations for
Borjomi Area Defined by the Conditions of Environmental Permit
2. Armenia Tree Project — ATP Executive Director Addresses UN DPI NGO
Conference
3. German co. to pump $20-$25 mln into Armenian metals plant
4. Beekeeping Center Opened in Armenia
5. Armenian Government Purchase First 10,000 Tones of Nitric Fertilizers

6. Eco-Pages 2004
7. Open Society Institute Local Government and Public Service Reform
Initiative, Expert Database
8. Issue of the Atlantic, Colchis Sturgeon Species Protection

1. BTC CO IS NOT DISCLOSING PUBLICLY ITS ENVIRONMENTAL OBLIGATIONS FOR
BORJOMI AREA DEFINED BY THE CONDITIONS OF ENVIRONMENTAL PERMIT

To: Mr. Jean Lemierre
President, EBRD

Mr. Peter L. Woicke
Executive Vice President, IFC

Mr. Ad Melkert
Executive Director, WB

Subject: BTC Co is not disclosing publicly its environmental
obligations for Borjomi area defined by the Conditions of Environmental
Permit

Dear Sirs,
September 19, 2004

Nearly a month ago we have sent you a letter where we asked the Lenders
of the BTC Project to clarify to us their position related to the
fulfillment of the Conditions of the Environmental Permit by the BTC Co.
We have not received any response from your side. Abovementioned letter
contains concrete questions regarding (significant) environmental
threats of the BTC pipeline in the most sensitive and valuable Borjomi
area. Meanwhile, having no response from you, as well as from BTC Co,
new questions are arising in that regard: this is related to information
disclosure policy of the BTC Co, awareness of international public and
awareness of Lenders about environmental obligations they assumed and
their denial of these obligations afterwards.

Information disseminated by BTC Co during last few months via mass media
or using their web-site brings us to the conclusion that BTC Co is
seriously misleading international society and the Lenders by concealing
the true facts about its environmental obligations, which have been
clearly set forth in the Conditions of the Environmental Permit issued
in 30 November 2002 by the Ministry of Environment Protection and
Natural Resources of Georgia and have been confirmed by BTC Co through
countersigning theses conditions (attachment 1). We should note that BTC
Co is quite creative in trying to misinform the public by speaking in
half truths and withholding information about other much more important
issues. For example, the General Manager of the BTC Project M.Townshend
has publicly told correspondents of the Georgian newspaper Rezonansi
that Georgian government has suspended construction activities in
Borjomi because the Georgian officials need time to read some additional
reports. But this is misleading. Everybody who has followed information
provided by the Georgian officials via mass media, and especially those
interested people, who have been acknowledged upon their request with
the letter of 21 July of the MoE addressed to BTC Co, know that real
reason for suspension of the activities in Borjomi was construction
works in legal violation with the Conditions of the Environmental
Permit. The main concern of the government was related to the
non-fulfilled obligations of BTC Co regarding pipeline environmental
security.

Other examples of misinformation practiced by BTC is provided below. In
the executive summary of the Supplementary Lenders Information Package
(SLIP) part C (Georgia), one can find the following statement: While
there are some further studies required by the ESIA approval conditions,
the route and the project have been approved as per the issuance of the
environmental permit. We know this is wrong. Within the another document
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline – Environmental and Social Action Plan,
which is part of the SLIP submitted to the Lenders for approval, BTC has
stated: The Georgian and Azerbaijani governments have attached certain
requirements for further work to their approval of the ESIAs. BTC Co.
will treat these requirements as if they were contained in the amended
Georgian or Azerbaijani ESIA, as applicable, and, as such, the
commitments will be implemented, monitored, and reported on in the
manner described below. This brief note and earlier quoted abstract from
the Executive Summary is the only information regarding Conditions,
which we have found in the SLIPs presented to the Lenders by BTC Co.
Reports and studies related to the Conditions of the Environmental
Permit have been placed in late August 2004 on the BTC Co web-site. This
has been done after suspension of the construction activities in Borjomi
by the Minister of Environment and following hard discussions in mass
media. In the BTC Bulletin of 31 August 2004 one can read following
comments on publication of the reports: Following the approval of the
BTC Environmental and Social Impact Assessment for Georgia in November
2002, BTC agreed with the government to undertake additional studies.
These ‘Continuing Activities’ provide extra assurance that the pipeline
will be constructed to the highest international standards.

It is part of the continuous process of misinformation employed by BTC.
All the above quoted information is seriously misleading, creating
perception as if only some additional studies and reports are required
by the Conditions, while in reality Best Available Technology, Best
Practices and multiple lines of protection and redundancy in design,
construction and operation to achieve as close to zero risk as possible
are required for the Borjomi section of the route. All these
requirements are above the highest international standards, so far as
highest international standards are not designed for pipelines to be
constructed in environmentally sensitive areas like Borjomi. In
particular, serious reevaluation of risks, change of design to meet the
criteria described in the Environmental Permit and following approval by
the Georgian government is required according to the Conditions.

BTC Co has disclosed thousands of pages of environmental and contractual
documents (like HGA, ESIAs, SLIPs, Continuing Activities and Studies for
BTC in Georgia) via their web-site. The only missing environmental
document is the Environmental Permit with abovementioned Conditions – 9
pages document entitled Continuing Activities Under the Environmental
Permit for the BTC ESIA. This is the major environmental document.
According to the internationally accepted approach regarding ESIA linked
binding documents, these documents should be publicly disclosed in the
same way as it has been done in case of major texts of the ESIA.
Publication of only part of the text, different fragments of which are
disseminated and lost within the pages of large reports, could not be
considered as equivalent to publishing entire document. The way how
the fragments of the Conditions of the Environmental Permit have been
published by BTC Co demonstrates the will to hide this major document
rather than to disclose it. This reminds us the well-known aphorism of
the G.K. Chesterton’s Father Browne : Where does wise man hide a leaf?
In the forests.

Turning back to the issue of awareness of Lenders about environmental
obligations of BTC Co, we have to note following: We have not found in
the published audit reports of the Environmental Consulting companies
hired by the Lenders (e.g. Apollonia) to execute monitoring of the BTC
project any information regarding fulfillment of the Conditions. The
construction activities in extremely environmentally sensitive Borjomi
area have started but the Lender’s auditors are reporting only about
standard constructing activities, while the major issues described in
Conditions are not addressed. Let us remind that the major environmental
issue is that the Borjomi route has been approved by the Government and
accepted by population (part of the population, by the way) only in case
of complete fulfillment of all relevant Conditions of the Environmental
Permit. Reviewing Lender’s consultants reports we have impression that
they are dealing only with BTC Co and have no contacts with the
Government, governmental advisors or civil society groups. This may be
one of the reasons that they have one-sided information, which does not
represent an accurate picture.

Considering all the abovementioned, we have impression that BTC Co is
misleading international society and Lenders regarding its commitments
defined by the Conditions of the Environmental Permit and special design
and operational solutions (exceeding those required by the best
international standards) requested for 17 km of Borjomi area in
particular conditions: 1,2,4,9 (f,g)).We have following reasonable
questions to the BTC Co, as well as to the Lenders:

o Well, public has not been informed, but has BTC Co provided complete
text of the Environmental Permit with Conditions at least to the
Lenders? We assume not, otherwise the Lenders would request the status
and fulfillment.
o Are the Lenders fully aware that without fulfillment of the mentioned
Conditions the Environmental Permit is not valid for Borjomi section of
the pipeline?
o What is the Lender’s reaction in regard with environmental and
security noncompliance issue, because of which the pipeline construction
was stopped by the Georgian Government?
o Are the Lenders not obligated in this circumstance to act under their
own charters?

Once again, we would like to stress: we appreciate the importance of
this project providing that it will be beneficial and will not bear
unacceptable risks for Environment. In 2002 we have supported compromise
solution of crossing the extremely sensitive Borjomi area only with the
condition that all requirements of the environmental permit should be
implemented. Our concerns are related to the fact that most important
Conditions of the Environmental Permit are not yet fulfilled, the design
still is not adequate, serious risk of environmental catastrophe is
still there, and information regarding the progress is not publicly
disclosed and properly delivered even to Lenders.

We are aware that additional design measures to make risks manageable
could be implemented without causing the risk of the pipeline operations

For your convenience we are attaching references to the relevant
publications in English.

Looking forward to your prompt reply,

Sincerely,

Keti Dgebuadze – International Information Center of Social Reforms
Irakli Kaviladze – International Center of Investigation and Restoration
of the Environment.
Nino Lomidze – Union of Forest Explorers (Borjomi)
Nugzar Buachidze – ECASA
Irma Shvelidze – Journalists for Save Borjomi (Borjomi)

Additional information: EnglishESIA Permit
conditions COMBINED WB PRES[1].doc

====Keti Dgebuadze
Director of the International Information Center of Social Reforms
Executive Secretary of the Second ECA NGO WG on the World Bank
Tbilisi 380086, Georgia #5, Mindeli Str
Tel/Fax: (995 32) 537161, Mob: (995 93) 301632
E-mail: [email protected], [email protected]

2. ARMENIA TREE PROJECT — ATP EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR ADDRESSES UN DPI NGO
CONFERENCE

65 Main Street
Watertown, MA 02472
617-926-8733
[email protected]

For Immediate Release
September 10, 2004

WATERTOWN, MA — Armenia Tree Project (ATP) Executive Director Jeff
Masarjian participated this week in a panel held as part of the 57th
annual United Nations Department of Public Information/Non-Governmental
Organization Conference at the UN headquarters in New York. The
conference, titled “Millennium Development Goals: Civil Society Takes
Action,” is taking place from September 8-10.

The focus of the conference is the role of NGOs as well as civil society
and governments for implementing the eight Millennium Development Goals
adopted by the UN in 2000. ATP was invited to participate in the
conference by the Armenian General Benevolent Union in association with
Rotary International, NGO Committee on Human Rights, Peace Action, and
the World Federation for Mental Health.

At the September 8 panel discussion with representatives of two other
NGOs, titled “Overcoming Obstacles to Economic Growth and Community
Development: The Role of Civil Society,” Mr. Masarjian outlined the ways
that ATP reforestation efforts are addressing many of the UN Millennium
Development Goals. The following is an abridged text of Mr. Masarjian’s
speech:

ATP Programs Contribute to Fulfillment of UN Millennium Goals in Armenia
By Jeff Masarjian, Armenia Tree Project Executive Director Armenia Tree
Project was founded in 1994 in response to the massive felling of trees
for fuel during the harsh winters of the early 1990s. The mission of
Armenia Tree Project is to improve the human, economic, and
environmental conditions of Armenia through the planting of trees,
aiding those with the fewest resources first.

Forests and trees are important and necessary components for maintaining
the environmental and economic infrastructure of a nation. They clean
the atmosphere, absorbing carbon dioxide and pollutants, while
simultaneously releasing oxygen. They attract and retain moisture, both
in the air and the soil, helping to regulate and stabilize the climate.
They prevent erosion and landslides, while retaining precious topsoil,
which is otherwise washed away with the rain, becoming silt in rivers,
streams and lakes, choking plant and animal life.

Forests also provide habitats for a diverse array of flora and fauna.
Armenia is home to over 3,600 species of flowering plants, many of which
are endangered and exist only in the ecosystems provided by the
dwindling forests.

>From 1994 – 2002, Armenia Tree Project focused its activities on
creating jobs through re-greening public spaces, many of which were
littered with the stumps of sacrificed trees. ATP works closely with the
residents of local institutions, such as schools, senior centers,
hospitals, and orphanages, as well as neighborhoods.

Once accepted as an ATP site, residents receive the training and tools
they need to plant and tend the trees. The relationship is based upon a
contract between ATP and the recipient institution or group, which
agrees to replace the trees at its own expense if less than 70 percent
survive.

By appealing to residents’ self interest, and using informal incentives
to promote compliance with the agreement, ATP is fostering a growing
respect for the environment through traditional value systems and needs
of the community. Residents–who had previously been plagued with
despair, while expecting the government or others to do something for
them to improve their lot–are now in a position of taking action to
make a direct impact on their immediate environment.

To date, ATP has assisted community residents in planting over 375,000
trees at 477 sites in every region of Armenia through our Community Tree
Planting program. ATP works closely with community schools to develop
environmental lessons, which are not typically part of the standard
curriculum.

The restoration of urban green spaces is the goal of ATP’s Coppicing
Program, which employs several hundred Armenians each year in seasonal
work. Coppicing is a forestry technique by which tree stumps withintact
root systems are trimmed of shoots, leaving the strongest one to grow
into an exact replica of the original tree.

To date, ATP staff has supervised the restoration of 760 acres of land
at several sites, including the Armenian Genocide Memorial, Botanical
Gardens, Victory Park, and Paros Hill, all located in Yerevan. Over
155,000 trees have been restored through ATP’s coppicing program since
1999.

The trees ATP supplies to community sites are propagated from seeds and
cuttings in our two state-of-the-art nurseries, founded in 1996 and 1998
in the refugee villages of Karin and Khatchpar. The nursery sites were
chosen specifically to provide employment opportunities for Armenian
refugees from Azerbaijan who are supporting extended families, and who
would otherwise have no source of income. The nurseries’ 29 employees
are responsible for the production of 50,000 trees each year for
planting at community sites.

The 53 species of trees growing in our nurseries are all-indigenous to
Armenia, and were chosen for their hardiness in surviving Armenia’s
harsh climate. With the opening of the new Michael and Virginia Ohanian
Environmental Education Center at ATP’s nursery in Karin village,
students from the State Agricultural Academy and elsewhere will attend
multi-media seminars and receive hands-on field practice with our staff.

In 2001, in response to a growing body of evidence published in
documents by the UN, the World Bank, and other sources regarding the
immediate and critical state of Armenia’s deforestation and path towards
desertification, ATP initiated a series of strategic planning sessions
to devise new interventions that might have a greater impact for the
people and land of Armenia.

We realized that we needed to devise innovative new programs which would
not only plant considerably more trees, but also address the widespread
poverty and despair suffered by nearly half of all Armenians. Many
Armenians live in rural villages, and are forced to strip the
surrounding forests of trees for heating and cooking fuel, as well as
for sale to commercial interests.

In Fall 2002, ATP met with the leaders of Aygut, a small, slowly dying
Armenian refugee village, comprised of 290 families. Youth and young
adults would routinely leave seeking opportunities elsewhere, and elders
longed for their lost homes and villages in Azerbaijan.

The school principal spoke of a plot of land near the river, which she
had hoped, would someday be an orchard, supplying income to purchase
badly needed school supplies. ATP agreed to provide technical assistance
and 500 fruit and nut trees for the site, if residents could collaborate
together to clear the land, build irrigation channels and a road to the
site, and fence it in for protection from livestock. ATP also developed
an environmental curriculum for the school and trained teachers in
presenting it.

The members of the Aygut community succeeded in completing their part of
the contract within weeks of our initial meeting. By Spring 2003, 500
fruit and nut trees were planted by school children and adults, assisted
by the US Ambassador to Armenia, John Ordway, and other invitees, who
celebrated Earth Day at the new Aygut School orchard on April 22. I’m
very happy to report that I observed the first cherries blossoming on
the trees this summer.

Seventeen families also signed up to participate in a pilot project
whereby they would be trained to propagate several thousand tree seeds,
collected locally, in newly developed backyard nurseries. For each
surviving seedling that the participant will then plant in the forest,
ATP will provide a set payment.

Seven species of local tree seeds are currently being propagated, and
some have already reached a height of 12 inches and may be out planted
this fall. In this, the pilot phase of the project, 20,000 seedlings are
being grown; we hope to increase this 10 fold over the next two years by
expanding this micro-enterprise opportunity to more residents in Aygut
and other villages.

This project can potentially increase the annual income of participating
families several times over, without negatively impacting the amount of
land needed for subsistence farming. In addition, because the trees are
grown using a short-term rotation cycle of 12-18 months, the per-unit
cost is less than in our traditional nurseries, creating a win-win
situation for everyone.

There are 13 villages in the river valley where Aygut is located,
comprising 6,000 people. ATP plans to replicate programming in three new
villages in 2005, using the same methodology to promote economic,
ecological, social, and cultural development. We expect that the fruit
produced in this valley will not only contribute to residents’ food
security, but also attract the interest of businesses involved in fruit
juice production and export.

Early on in our involvement with the residents of Aygut, it became clear
that the humanitarian and development needs of this village were far
beyond ATP’s individual capacity. We took a very collaborative approach
to our work in the village, inviting other international aid
organizations and NGOs to visit the village and observe the progress
achieved over the past year.

Organizations such as UN World Food Program, UNDP, Heifer International,
Project Harmony, USDA, Peace Corps, Satsil, and Jinishian Family
Foundation, among others, have contributed expertise and support in
furthering the social and economic development of Aygut.

The Mayor recently reported that since ATP initiated programming there,
emigration from the village has halted, there has been a noticeable
improvement in the overall demeanor and perspective of villagers, and
there was even a record number of births, all indicators of a growing
sense of hope and optimism.

In addition to this innovative community development and reforestation
programming, ATP this year partnered with a local environmental NGO,
called Tsiatsan, in the city of Vanadzor, to build a six hectare
reforestation nursery that has the capacity to produce over one million
trees each year beginning in 2006. These trees will be used to reforest
the devastated hillsides around the city, which have become subject to
serious erosion and landslides over the past 13 years.

In conclusion, Armenia Tree Project is implementing its mission to
protect and restore Armenia’s forests through a unique combination of
programming that aims to plant a growing number of trees each year,
while providing opportunities for employment, sustainable economic
development, training and education.

Our goal is to empower residents to become stewards of their environment
while also enhancing their standard of living and hopes for their
children’s future. It is our hope that our decentralized approach to
developing an environmental ethic based on education, action, and
self-determination will eventually lead to a national and even regional
commitment to environmental protection and enforcement of sustainable
practice.

3. GERMAN CO. TO PUMP $20-$25 MLN INTO ARMENIAN METALS PLANT

Source: Interfax, September16, 2004

Germany’s Cronimet intends to invest $20 million-$25 million in the Pure
Iron works in Yerevan, which processes molybdenum concentrate.

The money should reach the plant in 2005-2006, in accordance with an
investment program, Genrik Karapetian, the plant’s director, told
Interfax.

Most of the money will be spent making the plant more environmentally
friendly, introducing new technology and putting new products on line,
Karapetian said.

The Pure Iron works currently produces pure molybdenum but eventually
plans to make metal plates and special alloys, he said.

4. BEEKEEPING CENTER OPENED IN ARMENIA

Source: A1 Plus, September 16, 2004

Multi Agro beekeeping center was opened Thursday in Armenia. The center
is working with 2,567 beekeepers. This year 14 tones of honey were
produced but half of honey haul was taken to feed bees.

The center director Roza Tsarukyan says honey is to be exported in the
future. She said not only honey but pollen and medicines are planned to
be exported overseas.

5. ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT PURCHASE FIRST 10,000 TONS OF NITRIC FERTILIZERS

Source: Arminfo, September 15, 2004

The Armenian Government will purchase 10,000 tons of nitric fertilizers
for forthcoming autumn and spring sowing, said Armenian Minister of
Agriculture David Lokyan at the Armenian National Assembly today.

He said that should need arise, the Government will purchase a second
lot of fertilizes. Besides, another 2,500 tons of nitric fertilizers
will be imported to the country due to a Japanese grant from Voronezh.
In 2004 the ministry distributed 18 tons of fertilizersfor 3,700 drams
for one sack to the country’s regions. However, after, the market price
of fertilizers rose and the Government allocated 72 mln drams dotations
to maintain stability of prices by the end of 2004. Lokyan said that
import of fertilizes in 2005 will become a serious problem, as “Azot”
plant in Georgia factually belonging to the ITERA International Group
intends to rise the price of its production to the international level.
The minister said that production of fertilizers in the country is
impossible in the nearest future, as the country’s chemical industry is
not ready for it. He said that Vanadzor chemical plant belonging to the
Armenian-Russian company “Prometey-Khimprom” is able to produce only two
types of fertilizers.

6. ECO-PAGES 2004

The 1st ECO-PAGES 2004 Directory listing over 7,500 environmental
contacts from 140 countries is launched on 26 Jun 04 and provided free
of charge. ECO-PAGES is initiated by Hong Kong Sustainable
Communications Association (HKSCA) and supported by over 40 consulates,
trade associations, environmental organisation, private companies and a
group of volunteers. The contacts are well categorized under eight
ECO-CODES and sorted by country and company name for easy retrieval.
This includes Air Pollution Monitoring and Control Equipment; Water
Pollution Monitoring and Control Equipment; Noise Control Equipment;
Waste Management Equipment; Energy and Power Generation; Green products;
Environmental Consultancy Services and; Environmental Organizations and
Information

Should you want to reserve a complimentary copy of it, please completed
the requested form – Free Copy of ECO-PAGES 2004 via

7. OPEN SOCIETY INSTITUTE LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC SERVICE REFORM
INITIATIVE, EXPERT DATABASE

Nador utca 11, 1051 Budapest, Hungary
Tel: (+44 7947) 058875, Fax: (36 1) 327-3105,

Dear Sir/Madam,

We are writing to you to introduce a free service of OSI- Budapest,
Local Government Initiative (LGI). LGI’s mission is to support public
policy development in countries of Central and Eastern Europe and
Central Asia. Therefore we have built an online database of English and
Russian speaking experts in public administration, public sector and
public policy reform in transition countries.

Our database is designed to promote the participation of Central and
Eastern European experts in internationally funded technical assistance
projects and to support organizations both within and outside the region
in finding the best possible regional experts for their projects.

Our service is free of charge. We provide direct contact information of
experts and services for companies searching for partners. By using
LGI’s expert database you can save time and resources in finding experts
for your projects.

What can you find in the Database? It contains a very broad range of
highly qualified experts, classified in the following fields:

o Administrative and legal reform
o Democracy and governance
o Economic and finance policy
o Environmental management and conservation
o Ethnic conflicts, minorities
o Health care and social services
o Infrastructure, public utilities
o Privatization, SME development
o Public education, public finances, financial management
o Public sector management and organizational development
o Urban, regional and rural development

The database is very easy to use – you search directly or we search for
you. You can visit us on and email your
requirements to [email protected] will provide you with full CVs of the
best experts from the region.

Experts who want to be entered in our register must have a minimum of
five years experience in their profession and should complete the
Curriculum Vitae electronically through our website:

We would also be grateful if you could forward this letter to your
partners who might be interested in the LGI expert database. It is not
necessary to respond to this letter. We are looking forward to seeing
you in the LGI expert database or to helping you with consultants’ CVs.

Best regards,
LGI Expert Database Manager

Website:

8. ISSUE OF THE ATLANTIC, COLCHIS STURGEON SPECIES PROTECTION

This fresh water fish of prey, the fish of precious kind, for some time
past spawned in small branch of river Rioni, spreads from there in the
seas and oceans of the world, especially in Atlantic Ocean. Their weight
sometimes is 450 kg.

In past ten years Georgian ichthyologists discovered that the number of
the Atlantic sturgeon decreased and the reason of this was the hard
socio-economical condition in Georgia. The population use barbarian
methods of bagging of the sturgeon.

Atlantic sturgeon have selected the small branch of river Rioni
centuries ago for its freshness, temperature regime and environmental
radiation background and spawned exactly in that place.

The initiators of Association `Colchis Medea’, studied the number of
filling of world seas and oceans depths with tadpoles on the high
scientific level and have estimated that in the first ten years
approximately 10 billion of 3 months old tadpoles must be spread in the
natural zone, and afterwards, 6-7 billion per year. Three months old
tadpoles have well-developed keratinous sharp pimples on, which safely
protect them from predators.

The Association `Colchis Medea’ have agreed to receive 10 hectares of
land to establish the necessary laboratory buildings and reservoirs
exactly on the place of spawn, also they have developed program to that
should be implemented in order to protect the Atlantic, Colchis Sturgeon
Species.

The Association is looking for the partners to implement this project.

More Detailed information is available on the following address:
Association `Colchis Medea’
13 a, 1 Kazbegi ave., Tbilisi
Tel: +995 32 37 13 46
Mob: +995 77 93 78
Contact Person:
Giorgi Gogia


*******************************************
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/BTC
http://www.cenn.org/info/References.doc
http://www.eco-pages.org/frame_main/ep4requestforme.htm
http://lgi.osi.hu/experts
http://lgi.osi.hu/experts
http://lgi.osi.hu/experts
http://lgi.osi.hu/experts
www.armeniatree.org
www.cenn.org

Experts join talks of presidents at CIS summit

Experts join talks of presidents at CIS summit (adds)

ITAR-TASS News Agency
September 16, 2004 Thursday

ASTANA, September 16 — The second round of talks began at the CIS
summit that opened in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana on Thursday.

CIS delegations have joined the talks of presidents and prime
ministers.

The signing of joint documents and a wrap-up new conference are
planned after discussions.

The struggle against terrorism centres the summit’s agenda.

The CIS presidents will make a statement condemning “the terrorist
attacks of unprecedented cruelty and cynicism on civilian facilities”,
the Russian president’s aide Sergei Prikhodko told Itar-Tass.

“The heads of state describe the terrorist attacks as criminal and not
unjustifiable regardless of their motives, wherever and by whoever
they are committed. The statement expresses the determination to
fight all forms of terrorism as the UN Charter warrants it,” he said.

“Several documents on which necessary intra-state procedures have
been fulfilled are proposed for signing by the CIS presidents and
CIS foreign ministers without discussion,” he said.

Prikhodko cited documents that change and amend the frame agreement
between the CIS Council of heads of state and the CIS Council of
Heads of Government, and provisions on the Economic Concil and the
Council of Foreign Ministers.

The presidents also will make an address “to peoples of the CIS state
members and the international community in connection with the 60th
anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War”.

An official of the Russian president’s administration told Itar-Tass
that several of the CIS states had put forward a collective
initiative of including in the agenda of the 59th session of the
UN General Assembly a point on announcing May 8-9 Days of Memory
and Reconciliation.

The presidents will be informed at the CIS summit about the progress
of the initiative.

The summit is to pass a decision on sending CIS observers to Ukraine’s
president elections and on declaring 2006 a year of memory of the
Chernobyl tragedy. The nuclear accident at Ukraine’s Chernobyl nuclear
power plant occurred on April 26, 1986.

Besides, the CIS presidents are to decide on sending observers of the
Commonwealth of Independent States to elections to the Belarussian
National Assembly’s house of representatives and to a referendum on
President Alexander Lukashenko’s running for the third term. Belarus
has proposed the observer missions.

One of items on the summit’s agenda is election of a chairman and
deputy chairman the CIS Economic Court.

The status of the court is laid down by an accord signed by Russia,
Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Uzbekistan and
Tajikistan in 1992. These states elect two judges each to the CIS
Economic Court based in the Belarussian capital Minsk.

Its judges are elected for ten years.

The chairman and deputy chairman of the Economic Court are elected
by the judges by a majority vote and approved by the CIS Council of
Heads of State for five years.

The main task of the Economic Court is to ensure universal use of
accords of CIS members.

In the opinion of experts, the Economic Court should become an
effective mechanism for promotion of free trade.

ATP Executive Director Addresses UN DPI NGO Conference

ARMENIA TREE PROJECT
65 Main Street
Watertown, MA 02472
617-926-8733
[email protected]
www.armeniat ree.org

For Immediate Release
September 10, 2004

ATP Executive Director Addresses UN DPI NGO Conference

WATERTOWN, MA — Armenia Tree Project (ATP) Executive Director Jeff
Masarjian participated this week in a panel held as part of the 57th
annual United Nations Department of Public Information/Non-Governmental
Organization Conference at the UN headquarters in New York. The
conference, titled “Millennium Development Goals: Civil Society Takes
Action,” is taking place from September 8-10.

The focus of the conference is the role of NGOs as well as civil
society and governments for implementing the eight Millennium
Development Goals adopted by the UN in 2000. ATP was invited to
participate in the conference by the Armenian General Benevolent
Union in association with Rotary International, NGO Committee on
Human Rights, Peace Action, and the World Federation for Mental Health.

At the September 8 panel discussion with representatives of two other
NGOs, titled “Overcoming Obstacles to Economic Growth and Community
Development: The Role of Civil Society,” Mr. Masarjian outlined the
ways that ATP reforestation efforts are addressing many of the UN
Millennium Development Goals. The following is an abridged text of
Mr. Masarjian’s speech:

ATP Programs Contribute to Fulfillment of UN Millennium Goals in
Armenia By Jeff Masarjian, Armenia Tree Project Executive Director

Armenia Tree Project was founded in 1994 in response to the massive
felling of trees for fuel during the harsh winters of the early
1990s. The mission of Armenia Tree Project is to improve the human,
economic, and environmental conditions of Armenia through the planting
of trees, aiding those with the fewest resources first.

Forests and trees are important and necessary components for
maintaining the environmental and economic infrastructure of a
nation. They clean the atmosphere, absorbing carbon dioxide and
pollutants, while simultaneously releasing oxygen. They attract and
retain moisture, both in the air and the soil, helping to regulate
and stabilize the climate. They prevent erosion and landslides, while
retaining precious topsoil, which is otherwise washed away with the
rain, becoming silt in rivers, streams and lakes, choking plant and
animal life.

Forests also provide habitats for a diverse array of flora and fauna.
Armenia is home to over 3,600 species of flowering plants, many of
which are endangered and exist only in the ecosystems provided by
the dwindling forests.

>>From 1994 – 2002, Armenia Tree Project focused its activities on
creating jobs through re-greening public spaces, many of which were
littered with the stumps of sacrificed trees. ATP works closely with
the residents of local institutions, such as schools, senior centers,
hospitals, and orphanages, as well as neighborhoods.

Once accepted as an ATP site, residents receive the training and
tools they need to plant and tend the trees. The relationship is based
upon a contract between ATP and the recipient institution or group,
which agrees to replace the trees at its own expense if less than 70
percent survive.

By appealing to residents’ self interest, and using informal incentives
to promote compliance with the agreement, ATP is fostering a growing
respect for the environment through traditional value systems and
needs of the community. Residents–who had previously been plagued
with despair, while expecting the government or others to do something
for them to improve their lot–are now in a position of taking action
to make a direct impact on their immediate environment.

To date, ATP has assisted community residents in planting over 375,000
trees at 477 sites in every region of Armenia through our Community
Tree Planting program. ATP works closely with community schools to
develop environmental lessons, which are not typically part of the
standard curriculum.

The restoration of urban green spaces is the goal of ATP’s Coppicing
Program, which employs several hundred Armenians each year in seasonal
work. Coppicing is a forestry technique by which tree stumps with
intact root systems are trimmed of shoots, leaving the strongest one
to grow into an exact replica of the original tree.

To date, ATP staff has supervised the restoration of 760 acres of land
at several sites, including the Armenian Genocide Memorial, Botanical
Gardens, Victory Park, and Paros Hill, all located in Yerevan. Over
155,000 trees have been restored through ATP’s coppicing program
since 1999.

The trees ATP supplies to community sites are propagated from seeds
and cuttings in our two state-of-the-art nurseries, founded in 1996
and 1998 in the refugee villages of Karin and Khatchpar. The nursery
sites were chosen specifically to provide employment opportunities for
Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan who are supporting extended families,
and who would otherwise have no source of income. The nurseries’
29 employees are responsible for the production of 50,000 trees each
year for planting at community sites.

The 53 species of trees growing in our nurseries are all indigenous to
Armenia, and were chosen for their hardiness in surviving Armenia’s
harsh climate. With the opening of the new Michael and Virginia
Ohanian Environmental Education Center at ATP’s nursery in Karin
village, students from the State Agricultural Academy and elsewhere
will attend multi-media seminars and receive hands-on field practice
with our staff.

In 2001, in response to a growing body of evidence published in
documents by the UN, the World Bank, and other sources regarding
the immediate and critical state of Armenia’s deforestation and path
towards desertification, ATP initiated a series of strategic planning
sessions to devise new interventions that might have a greater impact
for the people and land of Armenia.

We realized that we needed to devise innovative new programs which
would not only plant considerably more trees, but also address
the widespread poverty and despair suffered by nearly half of all
Armenians. Many Armenians live in rural villages, and are forced to
strip the surrounding forests of trees for heating and cooking fuel,
as well as for sale to commercial interests.

In Fall 2002, ATP met with the leaders of Aygut, a small, slowly
dying Armenian refugee village, comprised of 290 families. Youth and
young adults would routinely leave seeking opportunities elsewhere,
and elders longed for their lost homes and villages in Azerbaijan.

The school principal spoke of a plot of land near the river which
she had hoped would someday be an orchard, supplying income to
purchase badly needed school supplies. ATP agreed to provide technical
assistance and 500 fruit and nut trees for the site, if residents could
collaborate together to clear the land, build irrigation channels and
a road to the site, and fence it in for protection from livestock. ATP
also developed an environmental curriculum for the school and trained
teachers in presenting it.

The members of the Aygut community succeeded in completing their part
of the contract within weeks of our initial meeting. By Spring 2003,
500 fruit and nut trees were planted by school children and adults,
assisted by the US Ambassador to Armenia, John Ordway, and other
invitees, who celebrated Earth Day at the new Aygut School orchard on
April 22. I’m very happy to report that I observed the first cherries
blossoming on the trees this summer.

Seventeen families also signed up to participate in a pilot project
whereby they would be trained to propagate several thousand tree seeds,
collected locally, in newly developed backyard nurseries. For each
surviving seedling that the participant will then plant in the forest,
ATP will provide a set payment.

Seven species of local tree seeds are currently being propagated,
and some have already reached a height of 12 inches and may be out
planted this fall. In this, the pilot phase of the project, 20,000
seedlings are being grown; we hope to increase this 10 fold over the
next two years by expanding this micro-enterprise opportunity to more
residents in Aygut and other villages.

This project can potentially increase the annual income of
participating families several times over, without negatively impacting
the amount of land needed for subsistence farming. In addition, because
the trees are grown using a short-term rotation cycle of 12-18 months,
the per-unit cost is less than in our traditional nurseries, creating
a win-win situation for everyone.

There are 13 villages in the river valley where Aygut is located,
comprising 6,000 people. ATP plans to replicate programming in three
new villages in 2005, using the same methodology to promote economic,
ecological, social, and cultural development. We expect that the
fruit produced in this valley will not only contribute to residents’
food security, but also attract the interest of businesses involved
in fruit juice production and export.

Early on in our involvement with the residents of Aygut, it became
clear that the humanitarian and development needs of this village were
far beyond ATP’s individual capacity. We took a very collaborative
approach to our work in the village, inviting other international aid
organizations and NGOs to visit the village and observe the progress
achieved over the past year.

Organizations such as UN World Food Program, UNDP, Heifer
International, Project Harmony, USDA, Peace Corps, Satsil, and
Jinishian Family Foundation, among others, have contributed expertise
and support in furthering the social and economic development of Aygut.

The Mayor recently reported that since ATP initiated programming there,
emigration from the village has halted, there has been a noticeable
improvement in the overall demeanor and perspective of villagers,
and there was even a record number of births, all indicators of a
growing sense of hope and optimism.

In addition to this innovative community development and reforestation
programming, ATP this year partnered with a local environmental NGO,
called Tsiatsan, in the city of Vanadzor, to build a six hectare
reforestation nursery that has the capacity to produce over one million
trees each year beginning in 2006. These trees will be used to reforest
the devastated hillsides around the city, which have become subject
to serious erosion and landslides over the past 13 years.

In conclusion, Armenia Tree Project is implementing its mission to
protect and restore Armenia’s forests through a unique combination of
programming that aims to plant a growing number of trees each year,
while providing opportunities for employment, sustainable economic
development, training and education.

Our goal is to empower residents to become stewards of their
environment while also enhancing their standard of living and hopes
for their children’s future. It is our hope that our decentralized
approach to developing an environmental ethic based on education,
action, and self-determination will eventually lead to a national and
even regional commitment to environmental protection and enforcement
of sustainable practice.

Agency questions Armenia’s readiness to become NATO partner

Agency questions Armenia’s readiness to become NATO partner

Mediamax news agency, Yerevan
14 Sep 04

It was announced on 6 September during Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan’s official visit to Poland that Yerevan would send about 50
military specialists to serve as part of the Polish contingent in Iraq.

[Passage omitted: quotes Polish president, Armenian defence minister]

The news about the forthcoming dispatch of military specialists to
Iraq caused mixed reaction in Armenia though it first became known
about Yerevan’s intention to contribute to the peacekeeping operation
in this country in August 2003.

The main reason of this mixed reaction, most likely, lies in the
fact that nobody wants to clearly explain to the people why Armenia,
the only country in the South Caucasus not included in the anti-Iraq
coalition, has decided to send its military specialists to Iraq. For
instance, the authorities of Georgia, which is going to increase
the number of its servicemen in Iraq to 300 in the near future,
sincerely state that in such a way they fulfil their commitments
before the United States. Representatives of official Baku are also
making similar statements. As to Armenia, the decision to dispatch
peacekeepers to Iraq was not accompanied by any PR-support and this,
of course, tells upon the public perception.

[Passage omitted: background information; reported speculations about
Armenian general’s statement]

Armenia’s rapprochement with NATO, and as a result, Armenian officers’
training at US military academies will sooner or later lead to
a situation when representatives of Western and Russian military
schools within the Defence Ministry will begin “conflicting” with each
other. And if rapprochement with NATO continues, those few officers
who study in the United States today will have much more opportunities
for professional and career growth than dozens of their colleagues
who graduate from Russian military academies every year.

It is natural that this kind of situation can bring about a gap
between the disposition of the officers who are going to become the
new Armenian military elite. The older generation of the officers and
their younger colleagues having studied in Russia, whether they want
it or not, continue to perceive NATO as a potential enemy. Unsettled
Armenian-Turkish relations only heat up these moods. On the other
hand, the officers trained in the United States admire the power of
the US military machine and are disposed correspondingly. Such state
of affairs can be considered normal for any country going through a
transition period. However, already today it is necessary to think
about how to minimize the possible risk and to create a homogeneous
officers’ staff.

[Passage omitted: quotes a Russian political expert]

As to the suppositions of the Armenian deputy defence minister [Yuriy
Khachaturov] that the parliament of the country might not ratify the
agreement on sending the Armenian contingent to Iraq, most likely this
is groundless. At any rate, last June the Armenian National Assembly
without any problems ratified an Armenian-Kuwaiti agreement on the
status of Armenian armed forces in Kuwait. The agreement outlines
procedures for the presence of Armenian servicemen in this country
before being dispatched to Iraq.

It is natural that the dispatch of Armenian military specialists is
fraught with a threat to their lives. However, first, every man who
has become a professional serviceman knows that at any time he might
have to risk his life. And, second, many people think that Western
values, integration into Europe, contribution to the world security are
only words. In reality, one should go a thorny path full of unpopular
decisions to achieve all these. And today we must answer the question:
Is Armenia ready for this?

Azerbaijan, NATO relations under strain

Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Sept 15 2004

AZERBAIJAN: NATO RELATIONS UNDER STRAIN

Heightening of anti-Armenian sentiments appears to have put paid to
partnership for peace operation.

By Mamed Suleimanov and Shahin Rzayev in Baku

Relations between NATO and Baku may have been damaged after the
alliance was this week forced to cancel a military exercise in
Azerbaijan this week, commentators here warn.

The alliance called off Cooperative Best Effort 2004 following
Azerbaijan’s change of mind about the scheduled involvement of three
Armenian officers in the partnership for peace operation.

The authorities’ move seems to have been a response to a heightening
of public hostility towards Yerevan in the wake of the unexpectedly
harsh jail sentences handed down to a group of Azerbaijani veterans
who protested against a recent visit by Armenians to a NATO conference
in Baku.

Visiting the town of Barda on September 11, President Ilham Aliev spoke
out against the Armenian officers coming to Baku. On the previous day,
the Azerbaijani parliament passed a resolution appealing to the NATO
Secretary General to stop the visit.

On September 13, the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia were

invited to NATO headquarters in Brussels to discuss the issue.
Following the meeting, the alliance issued a press release saying,
“We regret that the principle of inclusiveness could not be upheld
in this case, leading to the cancellation of the exercise.”

NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer expressed similar
sentiments in comments to Armenian foreign minister Vardan Oskanian.

Both Armenia and Azerbaijan are members of NATO’s partnership for
peace programme, which works on the principle that all parties who
wish to take part in an exercise must be allowed to do so. So the Baku
authorities knew that by refusing to receive the Armenian delegation
under pressure from the public, they were running into direct conflict
with the alliance.

A group of parliamentary deputies have said the cancellation of
the exercises is a “victory for the Azerbaijani people”, while
other commentators have warned it has badly damaged the country’s
relationship with NATO.

Anti-Armenian propaganda in Azerbaijan has reached unprecedented
levels recently and was strengthened by the jail sentences given to
the leaders of the Karabakh Liberation Organisation.

Six members of the KLO, including its chairman Akif Nagi, were
sentenced on August 30 after they had protested the participation
of two Armenian officers in a NATO preparatory conference in the
Evropa Hotel in Baku on June 21. The activists attempted to disrupt
the meeting, with security staff apprehending them only at the last
moment after they had broken glass panes in the doors of the conference
room. No one was hurt in the attack.

Nagi and his organisation are well known for their extremely negative

stance on any contacts with Armenians, while the Nagorny Karabakh
problem remains unresolved. Since it was created in 2000, the KLO has

called for a military solution to the Karabakh issue and condemned
the peace talks sponsored by the international Minsk Group.

Last year, KLO members organised violent protests in front of the
offices of two human rights organisations – the Human Rights Centre
of Azerbaijan (headed by Eldar Zeinalov) and Institute for Peace and
Democracy (headed by Leila Yunus), whom they accused of maintaining
close ties with Armenian colleagues.

After it was announced that Armenian officers were to come to Baku,
Nagi told IWPR in an interview on December 19, 2003, that his
organisation would do everything in its power to foil the visit.
“This visit will turn out to be a tragedy and blood for them,” he said.

Many thought that the trial of the activists would be a formality and

the defendants would walk free from the courtroom with suspended
sentences. Nagi was jailed for five years – his colleagues were handed
slightly shorter terms.

On September 2, the president criticised the court’s decision –
unprecedented in the history of independent Azerbaijan – saying it was
“too severe a punishment”.

“As president I cannot and do not wish to interfere with the decision

of the court,” he said. “But as a citizen I believe that the punishment
passed by the court is disproportionate to the defendants’

actions. As a citizen I cannot support this decision.” The president
advised the offenders to apply to the court of appeal.

In Armenia the sentencing of the KLO activists received
mixed reviews. The head of the Democratic Party of Armenia,
Aram Sarkisian, said, “I am convinced that the KLO protest was a
result of the anti-Armenian hysteria launched by the authorities in
Azerbaijan. And this court sentence is a result of their domestic
policy and propaganda.”

David Shakhnazarian, a former government member who advocates closer
contacts with Azerbaijan, welcomed the sentences. He told IWPR, “I
hope that this helps lead to a decline in anti-Armenian propaganda in

Azerbaijan. Knowing well that in Azerbaijan, just as in Armenia,
the courts are not independent, I see it as an impulse coming from
the current authorities of Azerbaijan. I hope that this will not just
be a one-off case.”

In Baku, Eldar Zeynalov, director of the Human Rights Centre of
Azerbaijan, called the court verdict an example of double standards.
“After the same people had trashed our office last May the case against
them was closed shortly afterwards,” he said. “So the government
actively encourages pogroms against human rights defenders. And now
they turned this trial into a political show. I am sure that very
soon the

appeal court will reduce the punishment for the KLO activists and
free them all. The authorities will find more use for these lads…”

The events of recent weeks have succeeded in uniting both government
and opposition in a rare show of unanimity. Rasim Musabekov, an
executive committee member of opposition party Musavat, told IWPR,
“Of course, the image of our country was damaged by our failure to
observe our NATO commitments. However, we demonstrated that Azerbaijan
is capable of standing its ground on national questions, refusing to
compromise. And that is more important.”

Mamed Suleimanov is a correspondent for the Regnum news agency in
Azerbaijan. Shahin Rzayev is IWPR’s Azerbaijan coordinator. Regnum
correspondent Vigen Hakobian in Yerevan contributed to this report.