Armenia’s Dashnaks call on authorities, opposition to begin dialogue

Armenia’s Dashnaks call on authorities, opposition to begin dialogue

Mediamax news agency
5 Apr 04

YEREVAN

The Dashnaktsutyun Party, which is part of the ruling coalition,
issued a statement today calling on the Armenian authorities and the
opposition to begin a dialogue to stabilize the domestic political
situation.

“The internal political situation in the country is reaching a
critical point of open confrontation,” reads the statement by
Dashnaktsutyun’s Supreme Body adopted in Yerevan today.

“The intolerant radical behaviour of the opposition, on the one hand,
and the opposition’s unsecured participation in solving problems of
big importance for the country, on the other hand, provide the basis
of the current political tension,” the statement said.

Dashnaktsutyun called on the authorities and the opposition to begin a
dialogue and reach an agreement “in order to solve the following key
problems: the formation of an electoral system in the country, which
will fully meet international standards; the holding of constitutional
reforms necessary for strengthening democratic mechanisms; struggle
against corruption, the shadow economy and the clan system.”

“It is necessary to effectively use this period for voluntary
compromises. Otherwise, the entire responsibility for the
confrontation will fall upon those who will lose the opportunity to
reach an agreement,” the statement read.

Center displays works inspired by obsession and compulsion

Associated Press
April 4 2004

Center displays works inspired by obsession and compulsion

By HELENA PAYNE
Associated Press Writer

BOSTON- A Boston artist has dedicated a museum exhibit to the type of
behavior that causes some to separate their M&Ms into colors, pop
bubble wrap until there is no more plastic to crush and focus all
their attention on the most minute detail out of pure obsession.

The exhibit at the Boston Center for the Arts is called “OCD,” as in
obsessive compulsive disorder. Curator Matthew Nash said it’s not
about an illness, but how the creative process can be driven by a
series of obsessions and compulsions.

“You should see my studio,” said Nash, who has shown his art in
Boston, Chicago, New York and Italy.

He is one of the people who separates his Skittles, M&Ms and Reese’s
Pieces into separate containers for each color. He used the latter
two sugary goods to create his art for the OCD exhibit, which lasts
through May 9 and features artists from New York, Pennsylvania,
Virginia and Pennsylvania.

Using the Halloween-like colors in the candies, Nash made a grid that
forms the images of soldiers, planes and other war-related pictures.

“The obsession of this is having bins and bins of M&Ms and hoping
when you’re done it looks like something,” Nash said.

Nancy Havlick has bins with objects separated by color, but they’re
filled with sugar eggs. In an attempt to fuse her multicultural roots
– English and Armenian – with her American upbringing, she decided to
start her own tradition.

With the sugar eggs, Havlick creates “rugs.” Make no mistake, they
aren’t to walk on.

The eggs are colored with a mixture of spices and foods often used in
Armenia, including mahleb, sumac, almonds, apricots, paprika and
rosebuds. She organizes them in decorative patterns on the floor.

“I’m deciding my own tradition. Rather than looking backwards, I’m
forging ahead,” Havlick said, laying one of the eggs in its position.

Havlick said she didn’t recognize her obsession with making sugar
eggs until she realized she has been doing it for a decade. But she
has also realized another fixation: carving out an identity from her
multiethnic past.

In her parents’ generation, Havlick said, it was much more common to
assimilate to the American culture rather than celebrate differences.

“My mother wasn’t cooking Armenian food. We were having hot dogs and
hamburgers,” she said.

The sugar eggs have become her own way of bridging the past to the
future and “to control the chaotic feelings” of life, she said.

And for her two children, the sugar egg tradition is working. Her
9-month-old son Jonathan’s first words were “momma,” “sugar” and
“eggs.”

Many of the exhibitors wanted their art to express something about
both the creation process and the result.

New York artist Jason Dean wanted to conquer bubble wrap after
working for an animation company where he did a lot of packing.

So he decided to make it an art project and see how much time it
would take for him to pop the largest roll of bubble wrap he could
find: 110 feet by 4 feet. It took about six hours.

That roll and other smaller ones are mounted on a wall of the exhibit
like paper towels above a kitchen sink. There is also a video that
features Dean’s “popping spree.”

“I kept thinking that they were a lot louder,” he said. “It just
sounded like fireworks and I kept thinking that someone is going to
question this odd sound.”

Joseph Trupia, another New York artist, used office supplies to make
drawings called “What I can do in 40 hours” and “What I can do in 8
hours.”

Another work in the OCD exhibit shows 600 photographs of rear ends.

“It was kind of a silly thing to do at first and it became a document
of the process of looking,” said Boston artist Luke Walker of his
gluteus photography.

Norfolk, Va., artist Jennifer Schmidt became fascinated with the
repetition of filling in ovals on test score sheets.

“The idea of the artwork showing evidence of repeated activity is
something we see in a lot of different forms,” said Martha Buskirk, a
fellow at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in
Williamstown, Mass., and author of “The Contingent Object of
Contemporary Art.”

The clinical disorder is even more consuming, said Diane Davey, a
registered nurse and program director of the OCD Institute at McLean
Hospital in Belmont.

“Obsessive compulsive disorder is really defined as someone who has
unwanted or disturbing intrusive thoughts and who engages in a set of
behaviors that are meant to sort of neutralize the thought and help
them to feel less anxious,” Davey said.

Davey said an exhibit like “OCD” might help someone to question his
or her own behavior and seek help if necessary.

Pasadena: Community reaches out to Marshall

Pasadena Star-News, CA
March 31 2004

Community reaches out to Marshall
Students urged to work toward ending racial violence

By Gretchen Hoffman , Staff Writer

PASADENA — Community members urged students to open their minds to
diversity and take control of their school at cultural awareness
assemblies held Tuesday in response to fights earlier this month at
Marshall Fundamental High School.

A dozen students were suspended then transferred out of Marshall
after fights broke out March 5 and three students were injured . Nine
of the students were also cited by Pasadena Unified School District
police, and the school was locked down for hours.

The altercations started with a fight between two students, an
Armenian American and an African American who had been suspended
earlier in the week for fighting, and expanded to include others.

Students, parents and school officials have repeatedly stressed that
it was a fight between individuals rather than a racial issue, but
community meetings since then have stressed the need for better
interracial relations at the school and in the community at large.

“We’re very concerned when you draw lines and say, ‘ I’m on this
side, you’re on that side,’ ‘ PUSD Assistant Superintendent George
McKenna said at the assembly.

“If two people fight and 10 people watch, 12 people are guilty,’
McKenna said. “They’re participating and permitting the existence of
violence.’

McKenna said community leaders have been meeting and will form a
coalition to focus on events at the school. Leaders will return to
the school in two weeks after spring break to solicit input from
students, he said.

Krikor Satamian, chairman of the Pasadena Armenian Police Advisory
Council, told students to embrace the diversity found at Marshall.

“This is the time for you to learn about other people,’ Satamian
said. “Get along with people that’s your advantage here and that’s
what will help you when you leave here.’

Local real estate broker Aaron Abdus Shakoor told students to
remember that, despite racial or ethnic differences, everyone comes
from “one family.’

“When you’re talking and the conflict arises, try to sit down,’ Abdus
Shakoor said. “It’s very difficult to fight when you’re sitting
down.’

The school is continuing its conflict- resolution programs, which
were in place before the recent fights, and officials urged students
to take responsibility for keeping the peace at Marshall.

“I think there are too many young people going to jail and I want it
to stop,’ PUSD Police Chief Mike Trevis said. “You’ve got the power
to make it stop. You see people dogging each other, say ‘Hey, stop it
now.’ ‘

Suzanne Berberian, a community liaison specialist with the PUSD, said
bridges have been built between various segments of the community
over the past few weeks.

“I see a bright future because I see us as a school community coming
together,’ Berberian said. “It brought us together and made all of us
pay attention to each other.’

Armenian President’s Resignation Inevitable – Opposition Leader

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S RESIGNATION INEVITABLE – OPPOSITION LEADER

Mediamax news agency
30 Mar 04

YEREVAN

“The overthrow of the regime of Armenia’s illegitimate president
Robert Kocharyan is inevitable,” Albert Bazeyan, the chairman of the
Republic Party and leader of the radical opposition, said in Yerevan
today.

Addressing a briefing at the Armenian National Assembly today, Bazeyan
stated the opposition’s resolve to obtain the holding of early “free
and fair” presidential election.

“Although the power will formally go to the speaker of parliament or
the head of the government after the president leaves, diarchy will be
established in the country until the new election is held and the main
levers will be in the opposition’s hands,” he said.

Fresno plans downtown makeover

Fresno plans downtown makeover

$30 million project would bring housing and restaurants.

By Russell Clemings
The Fresno Bee
March 29, 2004

Fresno city officials are reviewing two competing proposals for a 5-acre
development that would result in the first new downtown housing in more than
two decades, plus tens of thousands of square feet of new restaurant and
shopping space.

Tentatively named “Broadway Row,” the taxpayer-assisted project is seen as a
cornerstone of the city’s 2-year-old Vision 2010 plan, an attempt to revive
the city’s neglected downtown.

“Housing is a critical component of downtown revitalization and rebirth,”
Mayor Alan Autry said. “In fact, it’s an essential component. Without it, we
cannot have true revitalization.”

The project would cover 21/2 square blocks between Stanislaus and Tuolumne
streets, from the Union Pacific railroad tracks to the alley between Fulton
Street and Broadway.

City officials say they expect to choose one of the two competing
developers — A.F. Evans Inc. of San Francisco and Tutelian & Co., the
developer of Fresno’s Civic Center Square — by the end of next month.

After that will come lengthy negotiations over final details of the project
and its cost, part of which is likely to be paid by future property tax
revenues resulting from the project or from other public sources.

Whichever developer is chosen, city officials say the final project probably
will look quite different from the initial proposals that each submitted.

Nevertheless, some clues about the ultimate look of Broadway Row can be
gleaned from an examination of the two proposals and the features they
share. Both would:

Construct a mix of new housing and retail space, including restaurants.
Incorporate two historic buildings — the Dale Bros. building on H Street,
with its landmark coffee can on the roof, and the Parker-Nash building on
the northeast corner of Broadway and Stanislaus Street. Tutelian’s proposal
also would include the Mayflower Hotel on Broadway at Tuolumne Street.

Create pedestrian walkways through the middle of each block between
Stanislaus and Tuolumne streets.

Include loft-style apartments suitable for living and working.

Concentrate their parking spaces in a lot between H Street and the railroad
tracks, or on the major streets, or in the middle of each housing block,
hidden from public view.

The overall effect is that of a pedestrian-friendly urban village with
lively sidewalk traffic but also interior courtyards that provide more
privacy.

Despite their similarities, however, there still are significant differences
between the two plans, said project manager Michael Sigala of the city’s
Housing and Community Development Division.

“The proposals are really two different proposals,” Sigala said.

The Tutelian plan has far more retail space, 30,800 square feet, compared
with less than half as much, 14,050 square feet, for the Evans proposal.

The Evans version’s 174 housing units would be rentals, whereas Tutelian’s
120 units would all be owner-occupied.

Sigala emphasized that in either case, the initial proposals likely will
undergo heavy revision, under city supervision, once a developer is chosen
and a final plan is prepared. That process is expected to take about four
months and result in a formal development proposal to be considered by
Fresno the City Council.

Whatever the outcome, when completed, the project will place significant
amounts of new housing downtown for the first time since the 88-unit
Huntington Condominiums were built in 1980 and the 220-unit Santa Fe Villa
apartments in 1978 on the opposite side of downtown, where Huntington
Boulevard crosses Freeway 41.

In the Vision 2010 plan, city officials pledged to invest $30 million in
downtown before the end of this decade in a variety of mixed-use projects
and other improvements.

That plan’s features include new construction in Chinatown and Armenian
Town, a promenade along the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad tracks,
and a river walk and lakes complex southeast of Grizzlies Stadium.

Just last week, an Ohio developer announced plans for a $350 million to $400
million retail, housing and entertainment complex in the area designated for
the river walk and lakes.

The Broadway Row project will be less than one-tenth of that project’s size,
at an estimated $30 million. But its importance is disproportionate because
it is seen as an anchor for the entire Uptown district, the 16-block area
that Vision 2010 sees as the cultural hub of downtown, with its theaters,
museums and proposed main public library.

“If completed, Broadway Row will significantly enhance the revitalization of
the Uptown Arts District and serve as a catalyst for additional residential
development throughout Downtown Fresno,” the city’s project description
reads.

“We have to get folks living downtown,” Autry said, “and to do that, we have
to have a downtown that makes people want to live there, and we have to have
some housing available there for them.”

At present, ownership of the project area is held by nine private property
owners, including Cornerstone Church and John S. Foggy, owner of the Trade
Center building at Fulton and Tuolumne streets.

Not all are pleased; the owner of two H Street properties is wary of the
project.

Matthew Maroot’s family has owned Jon Jon’s Banquet Hall and an adjacent
building since the mid-1970s and would like to stay put.

Whether the family will have a chance to do that is uncertain; among the
tools at the city’s disposal is the power to seize property from unwilling
sellers through the process of eminent domain.

“I’m in limbo right now. I’ve been in limbo for months now. It’s frustrating
as heck,” Maroot said. “We’ve been down here on H Street for 26, 28 years,
and it’s been pretty quiet.

“We deserve to be part of this project, but no, they want to wipe us out and
put a strip mall in there.”

The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or 441-6371.

http://www.fresnobee.com/local/story/8360875p-9182337c.html

BAKU: Azeri speaker asks Russian counterpart to help settle NK

Azeri speaker asks Russian counterpart to help settle Karabakh conflict

ANS TV, Baku
29 Mar 04

[Presenter] Azerbaijani Speaker Murtuz Alasgarov has received Russian
State Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov. He said that Russia is Azerbaijan’s
strategic partner, adding that measures will be taken to expand
cooperation. For his part, Russian State Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov
said that the Interparliamentary Assembly and the intergovernmental
economic commission would hold sessions in April. Alasgarov expressed
the hope that Russia would help settle the Karabakh problem.

It should be noted that Boris Gryzlov, who is on a two-day visit to
Baku, met Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Prime Minister Artur
Rasizada.

[Correspondent over video of the meeting] Armenia is behaving as a
terrorist state and is growing narcotics on the occupied territory,
[Alasgarov said]. It is committing terrorist acts at the expense of
the funds made from that. As a country which has special relations
with Armenia, we want Russia to be more active in settling the
problem. From this point of view, we have always had great hopes for
Russia. The Nagornyy Karabakh problem should be resolved only
peacefully and on the basis of international norms.

We hope that as chairman of the State Duma, you will use your
authority to help establish peace and stability in the South Caucasus.

BAKU: US official happy with Azeri visit

US official happy with Azeri visit

Azerbaijani TV Channel One, Baku
27 Mar 04

The human rights situation in Azerbaijan is not as good as it could
be, US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage has told a news
conference in the Azerbaijani capital following his meetings with the
president and opposition leaders. Asked about the failure of the OSCE
Minsk Group to yield any results in settling the Karabakh conflict,
Armitage noted that the conflict “cannot be forced down from the top”
but the sides themselves should reach an agreement as the “OSCE Minsk
Group are facilitators”. Armitage also said that he was happy to see
that “so much has changed for the better” in the country. The
following is the text of report from Armitage’s news conference
broadcast by Azerbaijani TV on 27 March

[Announcer in Azeri over video of a news conference] A news conference
by US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, 27 March 2004.

[Armitage shown addressing the news conference in English, with
superimposed Azeri translation] I can tell you how happy I am to come
back to Baku. I first came here in the 1991-92 time frame, and so much
has changed for the better.

Those of you who are here every day probably cannot see the
change. But if you, like I, come back every two, three or four years
you can really see the difference.

I have just come from a long meeting with President Ilham
Aliyev. Before that, I met six opposition leaders at the US
embassy. We had a nice discussion about their hopes and their
aspirations, and I also met our embassy family, community this morning
to thank them for their tremendous efforts on behalf of our country.

I did thank the president and through him the people of Azerbaijan for
the courage and dedication of the Azerbaijani soldiers who are serving
alongside the coalition forces in Iraq and in Afghanistan. Their
courage is quite noteworthy and an extraordinary tribute to the people
of Azerbaijan.

I am happy to be here and happy to try to answer your questions.

[A journalist, in Azeri] The USA, as a rule, cooperates with
Azerbaijan in the antiterrorist field. Could American mobile troops be
temporarily stationed in Azerbaijan as part of this cooperation?

[Armitage] As I have said, we are very gratified by the activities of
the soldiers of Azerbaijan serving alongside our own in Iraq and
Afghanistan. We are very appreciative for the tremondous assistance in
the global war on terrorism, which the government of Azerbaijan has
demonstrated to us. But I did not discuss the issue of bases because
we have no desire for a permanent base in here.

[Another journalist] Farid Qahramanli, Turan news agrency. Mr Armitage
said that he had a meeting with opposition leaders this morning. Could
you tell us please what questions were discussed at the meeting and
whether these issues were raised at the meeting with Mr Ilham Aliyev
and what the president’s reaction was? Thank you.

[Armitage] At my meeting with the opposition, I said that I was going
to do something very untypical for an American, that is, I was going
to listen and after I had heard their concerns, I would make a few
comments.

And I think that one thing that everyone agrees on is the absolute
need for independent media. I did discuss with President Ilham Aliyev
the question of independent media and I noted his recent refusal to
sign a law on public television would seem to be not or to be less
than independent [as received].

I must say that the president also agrees that there has to be
independent media, including electronic media.

We all agreed, of course, on the need to respect the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan and I noted my point that although some in
every country, including my own, would say that the duty of the
opposition is to oppose, I think that the duty of the opposition is
also to offer an alternative outlook, alternative programmes and
alternative vision of the future.

[A journalist, in Azeri] Mr Armitage, how do you assess the processes
in Azerbaijan following the 15-16 October presidential elections? A
number of international human rights organizations have assessed this
as the most serious crisis in himan rights over the past 10
years. Thank you.

[Armitage] Our own Department of State has listed Azerbaijan and
described the human rights situation certainly as not as good as it
could be or should be. But it is not a permanent situation. It is not
the one that’s etched in stone. We have no doubt that it will change
and will change for the better. We have many problems ourselves as a
government here which the government of Azerbaijan allows us to put
into play, many of which they hope to better the human rights
situation. I think it is a good thing that the government allows these
programmes to continue and even to be increased.

[A journalist, in Azeri] The OSCE Minsk Group has been operating over
12 years and up to now no concrete proposals have been put forward
that would suit the sides. The proposals that they had put forward
were rejected by both sides. What do you think, Mr Armitage, are the
reasons behind this and what concrete steps is the USA, being a
cochair [of the Minsk Group], going to take to increase efforts in
this direction and achieve positive results? Thank you.

[Armitage] First of all, the resolution of the question of Nagornyy
Karabakh cannot be forced down from the top. It has to be a lasting
endurable solution. I believe it has to be something that the two
sides agree on to the end. The OSCE Minsk Group are facilitators.

To that end, we are hopeful that the two sides can sit down under the
aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group in the not too distant future because
the Minsk Group has some new ideas they want to put before the two
sides for discussion.

If the question of the resolution of Nagornyy Karabakh was easy, it
would have been done a long time before now. But we continue our
efforts, as I say, and we hope that the two sides will sit down in the
near future.

[A journalist, in Azeri] ANS TV, Ali Ahmadov. Mr Armitage spoke about
the human rights situation in Azerbaijan. Was this issue discussed at
the meeting with Mr President? If yes, were any agreements reached on
taking steps in this sphere in the near future? Could you please tell
us about the issues discussed at the meeting with Mr President, on the
whole?

[Armitage] I am not in the habit of talking publicly about the inside
discussions that I have with any leader. I found President Aliyev to
be extraordinarily open, extraordinarily forward leaning, at least
with me, particularly on the question of independent media. I had a
discussion with him. We recalled my own history here in Azerbaijan,
how amased I was when I first came here to find out there had been
flouring religious freedom here in Azerbaijan even in Soviet
times. There were Jewish enclaves and Othodox enclaves and freedom of
religion was actually allowed even during the Soviet days. That is the
type of spirit and culture that Azerbaijan seems to embody for me. I
was able to discuss that with President Aliyev. Beyond that, I will
just keep the discussions to myself.

[A journalist, in Russian] France-Press, Sabina Aliyeva. In Yerevan
yesterday [26 March], Mr Armitage noted the need for opening the
border between Armenia and Turkey. But Baku states that this could
hinder a peaceful settlement of the conflict. Did you discuss this
issue with Mr Ilham Aliyev today and if yes, could you reach an
agreement on this? Thank you.

[Armitage] Yes, we did. Generally speaking Washington’s position has
been that the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border would be a good
thing. However, President Aliyev made it clear to me his point of view
that to do so now would actually be harmful to a resolution. So we
discussed that. I think he sees my point of view and I certainly see
his. It was a very good discussion.

[A journalist, in Azeri] Gunay Novruzqizi, Leader TV. Mr Armitage, the
situation in Armenia is now tense. The opposition may attempt to
recreate the Georgian velvet revolution in Armenia. There have been
reports that in order to stabilize the situation, [Armenian President]
Robert Kocharyan might resume the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. Another
war may start. What is the USA’s view on a war option, given that
Armenia does not accept any options, and Azerbaijan has no other way
of liberating its territory?

[Armitage] I found President Kocharyan quite relaxed. I asked him how
tense things were and how much tension he thought was around the
immediate Nagornyy Karabakh area. He said not much at all. So, from
that I was heartened. But we do know most recently from the situation
of Kosovo that things can change rather rapidly. So, this is why we
need to try to resolve this as soon as possible.

Let me thank you all very much. We are going to go and get on the
airplane and try to make all the way back to Washington. Let me just
say again what I said as I started. I am so happy to have the
opportunity to be back here and so proud of what has happened here. I
wish you all the best of luck.

Once argentinos en el “quinto Grand Slam”: Coria y Nalbandian

Diario La Capital de Mar del Plata
25.03.04

Once argentinos en el “quinto Grand Slam”

Guillermo Coria y David Nalbandian, los “top-ten” del tenis
argentino, más Paola Suárez, número uno del mundo en dobles entre las
damas, y otros ocho jugadores del país estarán desde hoy en el
Masters Series de Miami, que se desarrollará en Key Biscayne.

MIAMI, Estados Unidos – El segundo certamen de la serie Masters del
año, denominado Nasdaq-100, otorgará premios por 3.450.000 dólares
entre los hombres y 3.060.000 de la moneda estadounidense para las
damas, tiene como campeones defensores a los locales Andre Agassi (N°
5) y Serena Williams (N° 6), y otorgará puntos para las
clasificaciones de la ATP y la WTA. Por su categoría y monto de
premios, está considerado con justicia como el “quinto Grand Slam”.
El torneo, que comenzó ayer, tendrá en el cuadro principal a los
argentinos Coria, Nalbandian, Juan Ignacio Chela, Gastón Gaudio,
Agustín Calleri, Paola Suárez -debutarán directamente en la segunda
ronda-, Mariano Zabaleta, Guillermo Cañas, Mariana Díaz Oliva, y
otros dos que atravesaron exitosamente la clasificación, Franco
Squillari y Juan Mónaco.
El “Mago” Coria (N° 4) debutará recién en la segunda ronda ante el
sudafricano Wayne Ferreira (49°); mientras, el cordobés Nalbandian
(N° 9) se presentará frente al vencedor del cruce entre el armenio
Sargis Sarsgian (45°) y el checo Radek Stepanek (52°) -jugaban
anoche, al cierre de esta página-. El “Flaco” Chela (27°) debutará
ante el francés Cyril Saulnier (84°); el “Gato” Gaudio (32°) frente
al estadounidense Robby Ginepri (35°), y el “Gordo” Calleri (21°)
contra el norteamericano Jan Michael Gambill (83°) o el alemán Lars
Burgsmüller (88°) -también jugaban anoche-.
El tandilense Zabaleta (43°) enfrentará en la ronda inicial al
francés Gregory Carraz (56°) y si lo supera le tocará el defensor del
título Andre Agassi, en tanto Cañas (97°) jugará frente al alemán
Tommy Haas (356°) y si lo vence tendrá que medirse con el holandés
Sjeng Schalken (14°).
Squillari se presentará ante el coreano Hyung Taik Lee (91°) y en el
caso de pasarlo le tocará el bielorruso Max Mirnyi (30°), al tiempo
que Mónaco jugará en la ronda inicial con el sueco Joachim Johansson
(51°) y en un eventual acceso a la segunda ronda le tocaría el
brasileño Gustavo “Guga” Kuerten (19°).
Entre las damas, la pergaminense Suárez (13ª) jugará en la segunda
ronda ante la checa Denisa Chladkova (55ª) o la eslovaca Ludmila
Cervanova (59ª), mientras Díaz Oliva (159ª) enfrentará a la alemana
Anca Barna (49ª) y si la pasa le tocará la francesa Emile Loit (49ª).
Ayer, en primera ronda, el croata Goran Ivanisevic debutó con un muy
buen triunfo sobre el siempre difícil francés Nicolás Escude, por
6-4, 5-7 y 7-6.

Armenia Transparency International Global Corruption Report 2004

TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL GLOBAL CORRUPTION REPORT 2004
(covering worldwide corruption from July 2002 to June 2003)

ARMENIA

Corruption Perceptions Index 2003 score: 3.0 (78th out of 133 countries)
Bribe Payers Index 2002 score: not surveyed

CONVENTIONS:

Council of Europe Civil Law Convention on Corruption (not yet signed)
Council of Europe Criminal Law Convention on Corruption (signed May 2003;
not yet
ratified)
UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (ratified July 2003)

LEGAL AND INSTITUTIONAL CHANGES:

The law on parties, passed in July 2002, regulates issues related to the
formation, reformation and liquidation of parties, as well as their
activities and legal status. It prohibits party members who work in the
state and local government from using their positions for the benefit of the
party.

The laws on the tax service and customs service, both passed in July 2002,
are designed to ensure that government posts are filled through open
competition and to prevent employees from working with immediate relatives.

The new criminal code, passed in April 2003, binds government officials to
conflict of interest regulations and enlarges the definition of corruption
to include the illegal involvement of public officials in business
activities. Yet it also sets milder penalties for corruption-related crimes,
such as the abuse of power and position by public officials and the giving
and taking of bribes. Punishment for abuse of power can vary from a fine of
200 times the defined minimum monthly salary to imprisonment for two to six
years.1

The bill on freedom of information regulates the rights of those who possess
information and defines the rules, procedures and conditions for receiving
information from government institutions. The law ensures access to
information as well as its dissemination and transparency. It also provides
that requested information be delivered within a five-day period, unless it
requires additional work, in which case it must be provided within 30 days.
At this writing, the bill was expected to pass into law.

The ombudsman law aims to regulate the appointment and dismissal of the
ombudsman, as well as related rights and obligations. It provides that the
ombudsman be appointed by the president and approved by the national
assembly for a five-year
term. The ombudsman is to be independent, adhere to the constitution and
enjoy immunity during the term of office. The law has passed the second
reading, but has not yet been promulgated.

A controversial law on mass media, allowing for increased state control of
the media, is in draft form. Protests prompted the justice ministry to
submit a revised draft in 2003, but critics are still not appeased.

THE UNCLEAR STATUS OF ARMENIA’S ANTI-CORRUPTION PROGRAMME

Since Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan established the state
anti-corruption commission in 2001, progress on the development of a
national anti-corruption programme has been slow and less than transparent.2
The final proposal for the programme is currently pending approval, yet its
complete contents have not been shared openly.

In early 2002, at the request of the government, the World Bank allocated US
$300,000 to draft the anti-corruption strategy programme.3 An expert group,
comprised of two international and six local experts, was formed to work on
proposals for legislative, institutional and public-involvement measures, as
well as a detailed implementation plan. Their proposals had to include
mechanisms for monitoring and evaluating anti-corruption activities.

Since one of the World Bank’s requirements was the active involvement of
civil society in a transparent drafting of the anti-corruption strategy
programme, members of the National Anti-corruption NGO Coalition were
invited to attend one of the expert group meetings.4

At the international level, the OSCE took the lead in coordinating donor
assistance in combating corruption through the international Joint Task
Force (JTF), which included all the key international organisations and
diplomatic missions. Following discussions with the president and prime
minister, an agreement was reached on maintaining regular contacts between
the JTF and the government during the strategy’s development.

Initially, the expert group prepared a broad strategy outline of more than
200 pages, which had to be discussed in detail with the JTF and civil
society. The group also prepared a detailed plan for implementation. By July
2002, two workshops were organised to present and discuss the draft
strategy. Its main elements included issues such as the economic transition
and shadow economy; energy, infrastructure and natural resources; oversight
and regulation; the legislative and regulatory environment; the political
system and elections; civil society participation in anti-corruption
initiatives; e-governance and access to information; and international
cooperation.

The expert group completed the first version of the programme later than
expected, in August 2002, and circulated it to ministries, agencies and the
JTF. The delay may be explained by the fact that the presidential and
parliamentary elections were due to take place in 2003. The public sector
reform commission, which serves as the secretariat for the anti-corruption
commission, then announced that the ministries and agencies had reviewed the
programme and that the final version had been submitted to the prime
minister for approval in March 2003. At 23 pages, however, the revised
action plan is a fraction of the length of the original plan, eliciting
heavy criticism from the JTF.

The revised plan has not been reviewed by civil society, which is still
concerned about several issues. One particular area of concern relates to
the establishment of an independent body that would be responsible for
implementing and monitoring the anticorruption strategy programme. One model
suggested by the expert group was that the current anti-corruption
commission itself take on this role. In this case, a secretariat that could
coordinate everyday work and implement decisions would have to be formed to
serve the commission.

An alternate suggestion called for the creation of an anti-corruption agency
with full investigative and law enforcement powers. Critics of this model
argue that, instead of creating a new enforcement body, the capacity of
institutions that already have such powers should be strengthened.

A third option envisions the establishment of an anti-corruption council
responsible to the prime minister or the justice minister. This council
would consist of the representatives of the president’s office, national
assembly, constitutional court, as well as the chief of staff of the
government, key ministers, the prime minister’s adviser on anti-corruption
and the general prosecutor. The council would also include five
representatives of civil society, appointed by the president.

Regardless of which model is accepted, the anti-corruption body must secure
the trust of the people, most of whom are unaware that the government has
even developed anti-corruption initiatives. Those who are aware have little
confidence that the initiatives are effective, because they view government
officials as the main initiators of corruption. They do not believe that
those who are corrupt can be truly committed to fighting corruption.5

ARMENIA’S 2003 ELECTIONS: A CASE FOR REFORM IN POLITICAL PARTY FINANCING

A civil society monitoring project, undertaken during parliamentary
elections in May 2003, revealed troubling inadequacies in the regulation and
monitoring of political party financing.6

Using the project’s findings, the opposition Ardarutyun (Justice) alliance
appealed to the constitutional court to nullify the election results. The
alliance pointed to violations of election procedures and voting
irregularities, alleging that tens of thousands of ballots cast for
Ardarutyun were allocated to other parties. The official result was that
Ardarutyun won 14 per cent, rather than the 50 per cent or more that it
claimed. The opposition also contested the election results in 19
single-mandate constituencies.

Although Ardarutyun’s appeal was dismissed due to insufficient evidence, the
court admitted that the issue required attention and proposed to promote
greater transparency and accountability in the management of political party
financing. Armenia’s election process is regulated by an electoral code that
needs considerable revision. The provisions that cause most concern relate
to the opaque system of party financing and the lack of enforcement
mechanisms.7

According to article 25 of the code, the parties’ declaration forms must be
published by the Central Electoral Commission (CEC) in the format determined
by the CEC. During the recent elections, the sources of the parties’
pre-election income were never published though the issue drew strong public
interest and was regularly discussed in the media.8 Although required by law
to present this information to the CEC, the parties and blocs were willing
to publicise only the number of contributors to preelection funds. In some
cases, parties did not reveal any information at all.

Reasons for concealing the revenue sources vary. Some parties may be
involved in money laundering or using foreign funding, which is prohibited
by law. Furthermore, as Armenia’s business sector is not well regulated and
many businesses tend to hide their real turnover, they may wish to prevent
the tax authorities from learning of their donations to party pre-election
funds. Finally, rivalry between the opposition and government does not
encourage businesses to publicise their contributions to preelection funds.

After two rounds of presidential elections in February and March 2003, only
the candidates’ total campaign revenues and expenditures were published.
When queried about the rationale behind not publishing more detailed
information, the CEC head, Artak Sahradyan, replied that the commission had
not published itemised accounts because it had not identified any violations
of party finance regulations.

The monitoring team found that two of the 11 parties and blocs that agreed
to provide campaign finance information had exceeded the limit of the
pre-election fund.9 An analysis of the figures showed discrepancies for all
other parties except one, whose reported data was consistent with that of
the project’s findings. Indeed, the overall tendency observed was that
almost all the parties avoided registering their campaign expenses in the
pre-election fund and that they spent most of their money ‘outside the fund’
.

Further results showed that violations of party finance regulations fell
into two major categories. First, large sums were not properly accounted
with respect to political advertising on television. TV companies either
offered certain parties discounts, or provided more airtime to selected
parties than was officially declared.10 Second, the code requires all party
publications to mention the number of copies printed and the name of the
publisher. Several parties and some experts revealed that parties often
printed more copies than officially declared.

In some cases, campaign materials were ordered before the campaign period
and paid for from the party account. Moreover, a number of parties conducted
transactions with service providers without a contract; money for these
services was paid in cash, which is prohibited by law.11

These types of violations are motivated by several factors. By paying cash,
parties avoid the 20 per cent VAT and service providers evade taxes. For
parties, especially those exceeding fund limitations, such dealings
represent a way around the preelection fund.

Another concern is that the law is vague about what expenses should be
covered by the pre-election fund, as opposed to the party account. During
the campaign period, for example, parties continued to pay expenses related
to their permanent office(s) through the party accounts, while expenses
related to temporary sub-offices were covered by the fund. In general,
parties hid the cost of temporary offices, stating that party members or
relatives provided office space free of charge.

Salaries were another issue of concern, since parties concealed their true
expenses to avoid paying taxes. Violations related to travel expenses and
administrative costs were also apparent but difficult to monitor
systematically.

The Control and Review Service (CRS) – established ad hoc under the CEC – is
responsible for regulating such violations and taking the necessary action.
Despite substantial media coverage and the results of the monitoring
project, the CRS filed no reports of party finance violations by the review
deadline. While the law itself provides too much flexibility to parties and
does not allow for easy monitoring, the reluctance of Armenia’s state
institutions to enforce the law is at the root of ongoing abuses in
political party financing.

Arevik Saribekyan (Center for Regional Development/TI Armenia)

FURTHER READING

Armenian Democratic Forum, ‘Sociological Survey on Public Sector Reforms’,
for enterprises and households, 2001; see
lnweb18.worldbank.org/ECA/ecspeExt.nsf/0/1B062B0DC8A543B485256C63005D49FD?Op
endocument&Start=1&Count=1000&ExpandView

CRD/TI Armenia:

NOTES
1. The minimum monthly salary is 1,000 drams (around US $2), so the fine
would be equivalent to US $355.

2. Decision No. 4, adopted on 22 January 2001. The commission is headed by
the prime minister and includes the vice speaker of the national assembly
(as deputy head), heads of key ministries and the chief of staff of the
president.

3. The grant was provided through the World Bank Institutional Development
Fund.

4. The National Anti-corruption NGO Coalition was established in March 2001
under the CRD/TI Armenia. Currently the Coalition has 26 members
representing different fields, including journalism, business development,
human rights, environment, local government, the army, tourism and
education.

5. See the ‘Country Corruption Assessment: Public Opinion Survey’, carried
out by CRD/TI Armenia in March – April 2002. The sample of the survey
included 1,000 households, 200 entrepreneurs and 200 public officials. In
answering the question, ‘Who mainly initiates corruption in Armenia?’, all
three groups of respondents identified government officials as the most
corrupt.

6. Implemented in March – June 2003, the CRD/TI Armenia project, ‘Monitoring
of the Political Parties’ Finances during the 2003 Parliamentary Elections’,
was funded by the Open Society Institute, Assistance Foundation at

The amended electoral code was adopted in August 2002. See par03.elections.
Legislation requires that participating the election campaign period.
Actually, three parties exceeded the information within the framework limit
is 60,000 times the minimum 60,000,000 drams (US $110,000).parties and
blocs.

Article 18.3 of the electoral code requires the same price to all parties.
Article TV and radio agencies must announce pre-election campaign. Article
25.7 notes that if during the financial means other than the pre- or party
registration invalid.

http://www.globalcorruptionreport.org/download/gcr2004/10_Country_reports_A_K.pdf
www.transparency.am
www.transparency.am

First Group of Repats to Arrive in Armenia from Russia Late Summer

FIRST GROUP OF REPATRIATES TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA FROM RUSSIA IN LATE SUMMER

23.03.2004 17:18

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The first group of repatriates from Russia will arrive in
Armenia from Russia in late summer, said Chief of the Department of
Migration and Refugees under the Armenian Government Gagik Yeganian. It
should be noted that he is in Moscow at present to acquaint Armenian
citizens living in Russia with the details of the Armenian-Russian agreement
on voluntary resettlement. It should be noted that the document, signed
already in 1998, remained idle due to absence of mechanisms for its
realization. In the course of the visit to Moscow members of the Armenian
delegation met with the Consul of Armenia in Russia, representatives of
Armenian non-governmental organizations, head of the New Nakhichevan Diocese
of the Armenian Apostolic Church Bishop Yezras and local Armenians. “These
meetings are called to contribute to our compatriots getting to know about
benefits being granted in case of their return to the fatherland. For
example, many people do not know that in case of moving, the Armenian party
will assume all property transportation expenses,” G. Yeganian said, noting
that repatriates are generally preoccupied with issues referring to paper
work.