Ruben Torosyan Displeased With Our Court System

A1 Plus | 13:39:32 | 29-03-2004 | Politics |

RUBEN TOROSYAN DISPLEASED WITH OUR COURT SYSTEM

“In fact the Armenian Justice Minister didn’t take any steps to call any
judge-lawbreaker to account”. Ruben Torosyan, Chair of “MP Club”
organization voices concern in this appeal addressed to the Armenian
President.

According to him, analysis by his organization showed Justice Minister abets
corruption rise in the court system and spreading law transgression by the
judges through that inactivity.

Mr Torosyan states that they have informed the Justice Minister about
numerous facts of gross violation by judges for many times but the Minister
hasn’t yet appeared with any initiative over the problem resulting in
appearance of unprecedented negative phenomena in the legal system of the
CE-country, which mock at the principles of “court, democracy and protection
of human rights”.

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CENN Daily Digest – 03/29/2004

CENN – MARCH 29, 2004 DAILY DIGEST
Table of Contents:
1. Environmental Investment Program
2. Six Tones of Seeds Gathered along BTC Pipeline
3. BP Invests $ 4.1 bn in Azerbaijan in 2003
4. Botas to Finish Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum Pipeline on Time
5. New Laboratories Open to Control Food Quality
6. Armenian Ministry Denies Reports of “Security Measures” in Nuclear
Plant
7. Yerevan Realizes Anti-Russian Gas Project
8. Director of the Center for Pluralism `Inam’ Vahid Gazi Conducted a
Number of Meetings Last Week
9. Summer Course in Environmental Justice at University of Wisconsin

1. ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTMENT PROGRAM

BTC Co has developed an Environmental Investment Program for the three
countries, to go beyond reduction of ecological impacts and bring
additional benefits by supporting projects for the promotion and
conservation of biodiversity with the principles of capacity building /
technology transfer; sustainability; tangible impacts and linkages with
other relevant initiatives.

The program is focused on the protection and conservation of rare and
endangered species and also on ecologically important areas. In Turkey,
ecologically sustainable enterprise projects (ESEP) will be developed as
an integral part of most projects and also under a separate key theme
named small grants program. ESEPs are ecology focused income generation
component of the program that support the sustainability of the program
objectives, and also serve to NGO capacity building and to community
needs. Click here for information on the EIP.

Stakeholder dialogue has enabled the identification of key priority
themes for funding under the EIP. Projects for each theme are identified
through a Request for Proposals (RFP) process calling for submissions
under the key priority themes. The first proposal tranche was advertised
in 2003 and proposals evaluated according to pre-set criteria. More
projects will be funded the same way starting from 2004. The EIP budget
allocated for Turkey is US $ 3.3 million to be disbursed to
organizations, in the form of grants.

The RFP process undertaken in 2003 allowed for identification of five
projects for support. Two additional projects are currently under review
and may be awarded in the near future if they demonstrate compliance
with all the required criteria. See `Projects’ menu for information on
the EIP Projects supported by BTC Co

BTC Co’s role is to manage the EIP, including the funds, program
monitoring and communications with interested stakeholders. BTC Co is
also responsible for liaison with the implementing partners including
monitoring of project execution and provision of support and training
for the partners
BTC News Bulletin, March 26 2004

2. SIX TONS OF SEEDS GATHERED ALONG BTC PIPELINE

On recommendation of Azerbaijan biologists, 6 tons of wild plants seeds
were gathered along the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. These seeds
will be used for restoration of previous plant cover on the territories;
the pipeline passes through, stated representatives of the Institute of
Biology of NAS. The work will be realized by CCIC Company – Bp
contactor.
AzerTag, March 27, 2004

3. BP INVESTS $ 4.1 BN IN AZERBAIJAN IN 2003

Investment in BP projects in Azerbaijan, including the
Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli and Shah Deniz fields and the construction of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, amounted to $ 4.1 bn in 2003, Azer
Zeinalov, director of the BP Baku business center, said at a meeting of
the Caspian Integration Business Club. Of this amount, $ 3.9 bn was
spent on orders from subcontractors, including $ 350 mm — from
Azerbaijani companies.

“Foreign subcontractors that do not operate in Azerbaijan carried out $
1.7 bn worth of orders and foreign companies working in the republic —
$ 1.8 bn, of which $ 800 mm was spent in republic and $ 1 bn — outside
Azerbaijan,” Zeinalov said.

He said that small and mid-sized Azerbaijani companies carried out $ 48
mm worth of orders, state companies — $ 116 mm, and joint ventures — $
191 mm. Zeinalov also said that at the moment over 500 companies provide
subcontractor services for BP projects, of which over 300 are domestic
companies and 200 — foreign companies.
EIN News, March 26, 2004

4. BOTAS TO FINISH BAKU-TBILISI-ERZURUM PIPELINE ON TIME

Turkish state pipeline company Botas plans to complete the Turkish
section of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline on time.

“The Turkish side is able to build its section of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline on time, so gas supplies from the Shah
Deniz field will begin in 2006-2007, as expected,” stated
representatives of the Botas head office in Ankara. Participants in the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan project said that bad weather in Turkey is delaying
construction work on the Turkish section of that pipeline. As a result,
experts said that the construction delays may push back the launch date
for the pipeline, which would in turn lead to delays for the
Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline.

The two pipelines are being built in one corridor, using the same
construction resources. Therefore, construction of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline can only begin once the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan is completed. The Botas source said that “at the
moment research work is continuing for the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline
project and no deviation from schedule is expected.”

According to plan, the capacity of the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum, which
stretches 225 km in Turkey, will amount to 30 bn cmpy, Reserves at the
Shah Deniz field are estimated at 625 bn cm of gas and 101 mm tons of
gas condensate. Shareholders in the project to develop the Shah Deniz
field include BP — 25.5 %, Statoil — 25.5 %, LUKAgip — 10 %,
TotalFinaElf — 10 %, SOCAR — 10 %, National Iranian Oil Company — 10
% and TPAO — 9 %.
EIN News, March 26, 2004

5. NEW LABORATORIES OPEN TO CONTROL FOOD QUALITY

According to the information provided through the Ministry of Economic
Development, arbitrary laboratory for technical, chemical, toxicological
and microbiological analysis is functioned at the consumer goods
examination center.

Laboratories equipped with up-to-date technology and devices were opened
in Nakhchivan and Ganja- Gazakh towns.

Laboratory on control food and grains products quality will be created
in Jalilabad region. It will be equipped with up-to-date technology
delivered from Russia, Turkey and Germany.

Another laboratory for food analysis will be opened in Guba-Khachmaz
region, which to play particular role in providing ecologically pure
foodstuff products meeting the international norms of hygiene.
AzrTag, March 27, 2004

6. ARMENIAN MINISTRY DENIES REPORTS OF “SECURITY MEASURES” IN NUCLEAR
PLANT

The press service of the Ministry of Energy of Armenia has denied rumors
in the press that extraordinary security measures have been taken on the
Armenian Nuclear Power Station since the middle of the last week.

The press service of the Ministry stated that the Armenian Nuclear Power
Station would be refueled again in summer.
Noyan Tapan News Agency, March 25, 2004

7. YEREVAN REALIZES ANTI-RUSSIAN GAS PROJECT

On March 23, 2004 Armenian Minister of Electric Energy Armen Movsiyan
announced at a session of the country s Government that Iran-Armenia
pipeline which construction is planned to be finished in the beginning
of 2005 will be prolonged through the Georgian territory, than by the
bottom of the Black Sea to Ukraine and then to Western Europe. Thus, the
gas of Iran and Turkmenistan will be supplied to countries of the EU
passing Russia. As a result the Russian budget will lose several billion
dollars every year. So, the most reliable partner of Russia in the
Caucasus Armenia is realizing what the US has not been able to do: it
creates an alternative route of gas export from Central Asia to the
West.
RIA OREANDA, March 25, 2004

8. DIRECTOR OF THE CENTER FOR PLURALISM `INAM’ VAHID GAZI CONDUCTED A
NUMBER OF MEETINGS LAST WEEK

Vahid Gazi met with an American independent expert Pam Flowers arrived
in Azerbaijan with the goal of getting acquainted with NGOs and activity
principles of NGOs in the framework of the project of BP titled
`Increasing of abilities in a civic society’. In the course of the
meeting Vahid Gazi informed the guest on nine-year activity of the
Center, as well the situation of civic society in the country, and news
in this sphere. Exchange of opinion took place on the activities could
be done by BP in the field of development of democracy and civic society
and recommendations were given related this issue.

On March 25 Vahid Gazi met in `Inam”s office with the representative of
International Church Organization for Development and Cooperation in
Holland Lisette Vandervel. Discussions concerning social and political
situation in the country, problems of democracy and civic society, local
NGOs and their activities, as well the perspectives of participation of
public organizations in solution of Garabagh conflict took place during
the meeting. The questions that interested the representative of the
organization beginning new activity in Azerbaijan were responded.

On March 26 the executive director of Human Rights House Foundation of
Norway Mrs. Maria Dahle visited the Center for Pluralism `Inam’. Mrs.
Dahle wishing to create `Human Rights’ House in our country interested
in `Inam’ opportunities in assisting to foundation of this House. Mrs.
Dahle noted about discussions to be held also with other public bodies
and state organs and informed that such bodies have been set up up to
date in Russia, Belarus, Turkey, Poland, Norway and other countries.
Vahid Gazi expressed that this initiative will be met with great
interest in society and the activity of this body will contribute
greatly to enlightenment in the sphere of human rights in the country.

Inam Center for Pluralism

9. SUMMER COURSE IN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AT UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN
June 21 – July 11,2004
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Three-Week Summer Field Course for College Students and High School
Teachers

A course for college students and high school teachers to examine major
societal concerns:
§ environmental protection
§ public health
§ social justice
§ race and poverty

The environment is where we live, work and play; justice involves making
environmental decisions democratically and with community empowerment.
In this three-week, three-credit summer class we examine issues that lie
at the intersection of major societal concerns regarding social justice,
environmental protection, and health. Approximately half of the class
days consist of field trips to communities in Wisconsin and Chicago that
are impacted by landfills, sewage treatment plants, and industrial
facilities; some of these are Superfund sites.

Classroom days will be devoted to readings, videos, and discussions,
which ill cover the history of the environmental justice movement and
its connections to the civil rights and anti-toxics movements; case
histories covering political, legal, economic, scientific, and health
aspects; critical evaluation of demographic and socioeconomic evidence
for inequitable location of hazardous waste sites; global environmental
justice; and the future of the environmental justice movement.

All participants will keep a journal. High school teachers and regular
college students will team to develop a curriculum unit in their area of
expertise.

Course readings include Dumping in Dixie: Race, Class, and Environmental
Quality; From the Ground Up: Environmental Racism and the Rise of the
Environmental Justice Movement; Ecocide of Native America; Garbage Wars;
Tilting at Mills; Exporting Harm.

Instructor: Professor Herb Wang

Enrollment begins March 29

New reentry and continuing UW-Madison students will be notified of
summer enrollment times. The schedule is also published in the
UW-Madison Summer Bulletin Register for Institute for Environmental
Studies 400 or College of Letters and Science Interdisciplinary Studies
400.

For more information
Contact:Professor Herb Wang
Department of Geology and Geophysics
1215 W.Dayton St.
Madison,WI 53706-1692

E-mail [email protected]
Phone 608/262-5932;
Web site


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

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

www.inamcfp.org
www.3-cusektor.org
www.geology.wisc.edu/~wang/SummerEJ/
www.cenn.org

Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition

High Fidelity Review, UK
March 29 2004

`Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition’
An SACD review by Mark Jordan

It depends. That’s my answer to the inevitable question this review
will raise: Who will want to rush out and buy this disc? Fans of
Mussorgsky may not find any new ground covered in this reissue of
Leonard Slatkin’s conservative performance of `Pictures at an
Exhibition’, and devotees to modern digital sound might find that
this analogue recording is smoother than an orchestra really sounds
live in concert, but aficionados of fine analog sound will be in
heaven to hear the creamy richness of this 1975 recording engineered
by the legendary Marc Aubort.

Aubort has engineered many recordings over the years, particularly of
the Saint Louis Symphony, mostly in partnership with one producer,
the late Joanna Nickrenz. They oversaw a long string of recordings
that changed the reputation Vox Records had in the 1950’s and 60’s
for indifferent sound. Many early Vox recordings of Horenstein and
Klemperer were great performances marred by rough recording
conditions. Neither of those maestros ever had it as good as what we
hear on this disc. The Nickrenz/Aubort recordings did, however, do a
great deal to establish the reputation of American conductor Leonard
Slatkin, who, as Aubort points out in his technical addendum to the
notes, was familiar with the recording production process due to his
musical family (his father Felix Slatkin was also a conductor who
frequently recorded in the 1950’s for Capitol). Thus Leonard Slatkin
was able to work efficiently and effectively under pressured studio
conditions.

As Aubort describes it, he used a pair of Schoeps CM 66 microphones
for the main front channels in an omnidirectional pickup pattern,
along with a few cardioid spot mics to highlight detail. For the rear
channels, he set a pair of Schoeps M221b microphones about thirty
feet apart in the twelfth row of Powell Symphony Hall in a cardioid
pattern to pickup hall sound for the original quadraphonic recording.
Many recordings were made during the period with a similar setup, but
few end up sounding like Aubort’s. The immediate attraction of this
recording for me is the comparatively close pickup of the front
channels. Throughout the 1980’s and 90’s, the pursuit of more and
more epic sound led to a prevailing trend of ever more distant
microphone placement, and frequent slatherings of electronic
reverberation. The more intimate sound captured here may not have the
exaggerated drama of those latter day recordings, but it retains a
freshness that they do not, making it likely to age like a fine wine,
whereas the splashiest `epic’ recordings of the succeeding decades
are already starting to sound quite quaint. Both the close pickup and
the analog technology mean that it has a smaller dynamic range that a
typical digital recording, but that feature in itself will attract
some listeners. Indeed, those who enjoy listening in the car, where
extreme dynamic range isn’t ideal, would be well served to buy this
hybrid disc just for its CD layer, which handsomely conveys the
recording better than any previous reissue. The stereo Super Audio
layer increases the depth and texture of the recording noticeably,
and the 2/2.0 multichannel layer brings a widened scope to the
soundstage, with only light bounceback from the rear channels.

The analog provenance of this recording contributes to the buttery
warmth of the sound – as is typically the case, the aggressive,
ringing high end of percussion, trumpets, piccolos, and violins
doesn’t register well on analog tape, thus creating the oft-cited
`warmth’ and `comfort’ of such recordings. What usually was also lost
in analog was bass depth, although Aubort evidently caught a good
amount on the original tapes and the Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs
technicians were able to draw it out in this remastering, because it
captures the sort of bass that makes the air pulse around you when
you play it at a robust volume, a feature more common with audiophile
digital recordings than old analog tapes! One slight caveat is that
there is a low hum which is discernible in places, probably machine
noise or room interference picked up during the original sessions. I
also looked askance at the highlighting of the timpani in places, a
common technique that aids in clarity, though it removes the natural
throaty boom of well-played kettledrums and distorts orchestral
perspective. In sum, though not for everyone, this is a gorgeous
example of how rich and sweet an analog recording can sound after a
high definition remastering. Those desiring the velvet plush of
analog warmth would be well advised to investigate this release;
those more accustomed to live orchestral sound should be aware of its
limits. No one who picks this title up for sonic reasons is likely to
be disappointed.

In terms of performances, things are not so clear-cut. The poles of
interpretive style in the Ravel orchestration and arrangement of
Mussorgsky’s `Pictures at an Exhibition’ (or as my friend Don in
England points out, it should be more aptly translated as `Pictures
from an Exhibition’), were largely defined in the early days of
stereo LP’s by Fritz Reiner on RCA and Herbert von Karajan on EMI,
and Karajan again later with a remake on Deutsche Grammophon. The
1955 Reiner recording was one of the gems he made with the Chicago
Symphony for RCA’s `Living Stereo’ series, and it still remains a
reference point fifty years later. His approach is straightforward,
brilliant without exaggeration. The virtuosity of the Chicago players
under Reiner is still impressive, and though the finest modern
orchestras can match or surpass them in accuracy, few have the rich,
noble tone they displayed. The Karajan approach is brilliant in a
more glamorous manner, with broad tempos and the obsessive finesse
for which the old wizard was known. I don’t know if the EMI recording
has ever made it to Compact Disc, but the Deutsche Grammophon is
currently available in their `Originals’ series at mid-price. The
Reiner was one of the first CD’s RCA put out in the 1980’s, and as a
matter of fact, it was the very first CD I ever bought, way back in
1985. It has remained in the catalogue ever since. The RCA tapes have
aged more gracefully than the Deutsche Grammophon tapes, although the
Deutsche Grammophon remains sufficiently impressive to give a glimpse
of the glamour Karajan was after. Most subsequent performances have
tended to follow Reiner’s straightforwardness or Karajan’s
brilliance. Slatkin here aligns himself more closely to Reiner,
although he presided over a flashier remake in the late 1980’s on RCA
with the National Philharmonic, one of those recordings from the peak
of the CD boom which was available to the public for at least a good
fifteen or twenty minutes before the corporate accountants deleted
it. But this earlier performance is Reiner-like in its pursuit of
accuracy and detail with warmth but without moustache-twirling
theatrics.

Among more recent digital recordings, my favorites are Giuseppe
Sinopoli and the New York Philharmonic on Deutsche Grammophon, and
the controversial but engaging performance by James Conlon and the
Rotterdam Philharmonic on Erato, which is not currently available.
Sinopoli’s is strong on characterization, but without the waywardness
that crept into some of his renditions. It features electrified
playing from the New Yorkers, recorded effectively though
flamboyantly with a boatload of microphones and a sea of reverb. The
Sinopoli also includes a version of Rimsky-Korsakov’s arrangement of
Mussorgsky’s `Night on Bald Mountain’, which is of a much higher
voltage than Slatkin’s on this disc. The Conlon is a similarly
probing performance of `Pictures…’, but it offers a distinctive
angle: Conlon restores the changes that Ravel introduced (some
changed notes, altered dynamics). The only problem is that Conlon
doesn’t restore everything (the cut promenade, for instance). It is
nonetheless a fine performance with a reasonably brilliant sound,
though it is admittedly bass-shy. The Conlon disc also includes a
suite of orchestral excerpts from Mussorgsky’s unfinished opera
`Khovanshchina’, in the somber orchestration by Dmitri Shostakovich.
Slatkin’s disc includes these items (in a slightly different order)
in the more colorful orchestration of Rimsky-Korsakov. The
Shostakovich orchestration sounds more appropriate for Mussorgsky’s
style, but Slatkin emphasizes the music’s lyricism, thus keeping the
focus from moving to the orchestration.

Competitors to the Slatkin `Pictures…’ on SACD include the Philips’
multichannel hybrid disc by Valery Gergiev and the Vienna
Philharmonic, and the old Telarc recording by Lorin Maazel and the
Cleveland Orchestra, which was recorded with DSD technology back in
1978, thus allowing us to have a stereo SACD of it now. I have not
heard the high-definition incarnation of the Gergiev recording but
the regular CD version is reasonably effective, though lacking any
real sense of depth (both acoustically and psychologically!). I just
don’t find myself responding to Gergiev’s interpretation. Though he
is certainly electrifying and dramatic, his performance seems rushed
and impatient. One could imagine Gergiev having his sites set on the
flight of Baba-Yaga’s hut from the very beginning of the `Promenade’,
and everything is hurried along to get to that wild ride up and into
the Great Gate of Kiev. Though Gergiev also includes a crisp `Night
on Bald Mountain’ and the `Prelude’ from `Khovanshchina’, it doesn’t
capture the genuine melancholy that underlies `Pictures at an
Exhibition’. Maazel’s Telarc stereo SACD is predictably brilliant and
clear in recording, but Maazel takes the piece even less seriously
than Gergiev. Maazel offers maximum flash: Great for demonstrating
your sound system, but weak for demonstrating Mussorgsky and Ravel’s
combined genius. The filler performance of `Night on Bald Mountain’
is similarly flashy; however, that piece can take it. Speaking of the
Cleveland Orchestra, I might also add that there is a Sony stereo
SACD that features George Szell’s Columbia recording of `Pictures at
an Exhibition’, but surprisingly it did not seem to engage Szell nor
the orchestra to any great degree, and is deployed by Sony as filler
for a program of various composers instead of as a headliner.

In addition to all this Mussorgsky, the Mobile Fidelity disc also
includes Slatkin’s performance of Borodin’s `In the Steppes of
Central Asia’, an old chestnut that was once so commonly played,
everyone apparently got sick of it and stopped playing it. Now it
doesn’t pop up nearly as often as it ought to. Not only is it
musically evocative, it bears a simple but unforgettable lesson in
how disparate groups can weave around each other harmoniously without
losing their personal traits. Slatkin’s performance is typically
straightforward but warm. He gauges his tempo effectively, not
dragging the tempo for emphasis the way Svetlanov did, nor does he
rush it with impatience. Indeed, the performance rivals my
long-standing favorite, which is by Armenian conductor Loris
Tjeknavorian and the National Philharmonic on RCA (no longer
available).

In sum, though this is not one of the finest performances of
`Pictures at an Exhibition’, neither are any of the others on SACD.
Thus, if the solidness of Slatkin’s likable performance is
sufficient, and especially if one loves rich, creamy analog sound,
this disc is recommendable and will bring pleasure. A truly great
Super Audio CD `Pictures…’ still waits to be born.

Comsup to invest $3.5 mln in Armenian mining outfit

Interfax
March 29 2004

Comsup to invest $3.5 mln in Armenian mining outfit

Moscow. (Interfax) – The U.S. company Comsup Commodities will in the
first year of its privatization be investing $3.5 million in Agarak
GOK (mining and benefication combine), Armenian Trade and Economic
Development Minister Karen Chshmarityan announced at a Friday press
conference in Yervan.
The GOK privatization agreement should be signed soon.

Chshmarityan noted that the investment will go to addressing pressing
problems at the combine. In the year following the moment of
privatization, the U.S. company should be providing the Armenian
government with an investment program for the enterprise’s
development.

Comsup Commodities is obligated to keep the enterprise’s jobs intact
and pay back wages. It had offered $500,000 for the GOK.

Easter, at least, for St. Ann flock

New York Daily News, NY
March 29 2004

Easter, at least, for St. Ann flock

By RALPH R. ORTEGA
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

A 157-year-old Manhattan church in danger of closing will be open for
at least one more Easter celebration.
The 50 faithful who attend the sole Sunday Mass at St. Ann’s on E.
12th St. learned yesterday that Palm Sunday and Easter services would
still be held in their beloved church.

Ushers distributed flyers directing them to other churches for all
other Holy Week Masses.

It was a welcome reprieve for those who fear the worst as the
Archdiocese of New York mulls whether to sell the aging church.
Everyone except St. Ann’s English-speaking worshipers were relocated
to other churches last month.

“We’ll be praying that it continues to stay open,” said Michael
Krzyzanowski, 61, who kissed the sooty facade of the Gothic church as
he walked inside.

St. Ann’s is the latest Catholic church to face closure. Two others
have shut their doors since Edward Cardinal Egan took over in 2001
and began work that eliminated a $20 million annual operating
deficit.

Archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling said St. Ann’s fate will be
determined as part of a “realignment” effort to close and consolidate
churches based on usage. “Selling the building is a possibility,”
Zwilling said.

St. Ann’s has not had enough congregants to be considered a parish
for more than 20 years. Still, Masses have been celebrated there in
English, Latin and Spanish. It also has allowed a rite of Armenian
Catholics to use the church as its North American headquarters since
1983.

There are signs that church leaders are preparing for a final
celebration. A statue of Our Lady of Quinche, an image of the Virgin
Mary honored by Ecuadorans, was removed when the Spanish Masses
ended.

“This is a surprise,” said Taco Guillermo, a painter who was born in
Ecuador and lives in Jamaica, Queens. “We never expected not to find
her here.”

Armenians in Javakhk Supporting The Governing Bloc

A1 Plus | 14:07:24 | 29-03-2004 | Politics |

ARMENIANS IN JAVAKHK SUPPORTING THE GOVERNING BLOC

Ruling “National Movement-Democrats” Bloc won absolute majority of votes in
Javakhk region at the parliamentary elections in Georgia. It gained 90% in
Akhalqalaq District, 70% in Tsalka, and 80% of votes in Akhaltckha.

About 90% of Javakhk electorate partook in the elections.

http://www.a1plus.am

LINKS report on the 2004 Parliamentary Elections in Georgia

Posted by Julian Broxup
Caucasus Links
41 Barnov Street, Tbilisi
tel 292399; email [email protected]

LINKS Election Report on the 28 March 2004
Parliamentary Elections (Party List) in Georgia,
issued 29 March 2004.

The new government of Georgia that came to power after the resignation of
president Shevardnadze in November 2003 inherited huge problems in all
spheres of governance. It moved swiftly and with courage and determination
to deal with some of the more serious problems, particularly corruption,
organized crime and local feudalism and with preliminary efforts to tackle
the country’s economic and social problems. Since the new government’s
accession to power was based first and foremost on the demand for free and
fair elections, expectations in this field were correspondingly high. It is
therefore unfortunate that in dealing with issues of democracy and human
rights the new government has shown a tendency to cut corners. By not
giving sufficient priority to the electoral process over other issues, the
government has initiated a worrying trend of the legitimation of significant
political changes at the ballot box only after the event.

The March 2004 parliamentary elections brought to a close the constitutional
vacuum which has persisted in Georgia since the events of November 2003.
Although there were considerable improvements in several areas compared to
the November parliamentary poll, in other areas serious problems persisted.
We reiterate that it is not possible to hold a fair and inclusive electoral
process without an accurate and comprehensive voters’ register. It is
regrettable that the high degree of political competition evident in the
November campaign has subsided to produce a significantly less pluralist
political arena. The inability of the opposition parties to join forces and
present the government with a credible challenge further contributed to a
vacuum that is dangerous in a democratic society. We also regret a
disappointing deterioration in the activity of the media over the electoral
period. We hope that the government will understand the need for an
inclusive approach to the resolution of Georgia’s many problems, and in this
regard the emergence of a younger generation of leaders amongst the
opposition forces is an encouraging development.

I Background

On 28 March a new run of the annulled 2 November 2003 parliamentary
elections was held in Georgia. It was allegations of fraud in the November
elections that triggered political turmoil in the country, eventually
leading to the resignation of President Shevardnadze. In a controversial
decision the Georgian Supreme Court ruled for only a partial annulment of
the November election results. Only the proportional representation vote
(150 of 235 mandates), whereby candidates are elected on the basis of party
lists, was annulled, while the results to the majoritarian,
‘first-past-the-post’ system were retained (75 of the remaining seats, with
10 retained by deputies representing the seceded territory of Abkhazia).
The arguments for and against this decision remained unresolved, with
numerous political forces openly declaring the majoritarian results to have
also been marred by serious fraud.

Although some saw the 28 March election as a repeat election, it in fact
represented a new electoral process in a radically changed political
environment. Following the November events, a triumvirate of opposition
leaders emerged as the country’s new leadership: Nino Burjanadze, Acting
President, Mikheil Saakashvili, leader of the United National Movement, and
Zurab Zhvania, leader (with Burjanadze) of the Burjanadze-Democrats party.
In their taking control of the country the triumvirate attempted as far as
possible to remain within the constitutional order, although many questions
regarding the legitimacy of this process persist and are likely to be
revisited in the future. A pre-term presidential election was held on 4
January 2004 to elect Shevardnadze’s successor, in which Mikheil Saakashvili
was elected with an overwhelming 96.3% of the vote. Although the
International Election Observation Mission welcomed these elections as an
expression of the new leadership’s political will to hold free and fair
elections, LINKS was more critical in its assessment. Several shortcomings
of previous elections were again seen in the January poll; furthermore, a
questionable new registration process de facto cut the electorate by nearly
one third.

Following the November events and President Saakashvili’s election, a
high-profile anti-corruption campaign was initiated, targeted against many
prominent figures from the previous administration. Although this had
formed part of President Saakashvili’s election manifesto, and was welcomed
by many in principle, the manner in which this campaign was conducted
involved excessive use of force by law-enforcement agencies. There were
also significant concerns voiced in Georgian society regarding the
selectivity of this campaign and breaches of human rights.

In early February a package of far-reaching constitutional changes proposed
by the new government were approved by the reconvened 1999-2003 parliament.
These altered the system of checks and balances in Georgia in important
ways, introducing the office of Prime Minister with wide-ranging powers,
weakening the legislative branch of government vis-à-vis the executive and
making the President the Chair of the Judiciary Council with new powers to
appoint and discharge judges. There are serious concerns regarding the
haste with which these changes were adopted: presented on 3 February, they
were rushed through Parliament without serious debate and adopted on 6
February. They were signed by the president on the same day. Working at
unusual speed, the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe was able to
provide an assessment of the changes by 6 February. The Commission voiced
numerous concerns regarding both the coherence and expedience of these
changes. There were also credible reports of serious pressure applied to
members of parliament to ensure support, and despite the fact that the
Georgian parliament was effectively voting to weaken its own prerogatives,
only nine MPs voted against. The lack of public debate was compounded by
the fact that several of the more respected Georgian NGOs offered no
significant criticism to these changes or the manner of their adoption,
although much stronger concerns were expressed in private.

The immediate pre-election period was dominated by confrontation between the
leadership of the Adjarian Autonomous Republic and the central government.
Simmering since the replacement of the Shevardnadze administration, with
which the Adjarian authorities had aligned themselves in the November poll,
centre-periphery relations reached crisis point in mid-March. This was
sparked by the barring of President Saakashvili from entry into Adjara,
leading to a three-day ‘blockade’ of the autonomous republic by the central
government. The dispute was resolved following intense negotiations, which
included guarantees made by the Adjarian authorities regarding the
unrestricted conduct of the elections. Both campaigning activities and
preparations for the elections in Adjara were severely disrupted as a result
of these developments.

II Political Parties and Aspects of the Election Campaign

Possibilities for a meaningfully pluralist campaign were sharply curtailed
by the prevailing political climate. Georgia’s new government disregarded
recommendations offered by the OSCE and the Council of Europe and other
international organizations, in particular recommendations that the
elections be held later rather than sooner and that the 7% threshold for
securing representation be lowered to 4-5%. In a climate where the
political arena was still extremely fluid in the aftermath of the November
events, this further narrowed the likelihood of opposition parties securing
entry into the new parliament. The campaign was consequently overshadowed
by fears that a single-bloc parliament supporting the new government would
be returned.

Parties outside the new ruling bloc continued to suffer from internal
turmoil following the change of government. Despite a number of contingency
alliances, the opposition remained fragmented. In total 5 blocs and 14
parties were registered to contest the election. Two new alliances formed
by pre-existing parties, New Rightists-Industrialists’ and ‘National
Democrats-Traditionalists’, sought to establish themselves as ‘constructive
opposition’ blocs. The Labour, Socialist and Revival parties were
consistently highly critical of the new government. The Liberty party,
headed by Konstantine Gamsakhurdia, the eldest son of Georgia’s first
president Zviad Gamsakhurdia, was a new addition to the political scene, but
appeared to be trading more on its associations with the Gamsakhurdia family
name than any substantive political programme. Regrettably, most of the
debate between parties during the campaigning period concerned abuses within
the electoral system, rather than substantive political issues on which the
electorate could make an informed choice.

The election campaign was sluggish, only gathering some momentum in the
final week before election day. Most opposition parties presented their
programmes with only a few days to spare, although some used the final days
of the campaign touring the country to get their message across. Some
opposition party representatives complained that the withdrawal of two of
Georgia’s most popular political talk-shows (see below, Media) had denied
them an important forum. Both talk shows had high viewership and were
considered the news flagships of both stations. Effectively the only access
to TV for opposition political parties was through paid advertising, which
in some cases was sharply limited by the paucity of campaign funds. By
contrast the new ruling bloc, National Movement-Democrats, enjoyed the
benefits of incumbency. There were credible reports of the blurring of
boundaries between local executive organs (particularly in the activity of
local governors appointed by the president) and the electoral
administration, repeating the pattern of previous elections. President
Saakashvili campaigned widely for the National Movement; on numerous
occasions he openly questioned the need for a parliamentary opposition.
This was regrettable, since although the changes to the Constitution adopted
in February permit the President to simultaneously hold the leadership of a
political party, the Unified Electoral Code (UEC) expressly prohibits state
officials from engaging in campaigning activity (Article 94).

In Adjara the local authorities did not provide appropriate conditions for
the conduct of a meaningful campaign. The entire campaigning period took
place under conditions of a state of emergency declared by the Adjarian
authorities, itself of questionable legality. Contrasting political
platforms were presented to the Adjarian electorate in the distorted form of
clashes between pro-government demonstrators and local security agencies and
the confrontation between the regional authorities and the central
government.

III The Electoral Process

(1) Voter Registration and Voters Lists

Voter registration for 28 March continued the process initiated before the 4
January presidential poll. Through February and March the CEC continued to
work towards the refinement of voters’ register used in that election,
including the computerization of a single centralised list. Between 8 and
21 March the CEC organized a new registration period for hitherto
unregistered voters, by the end of which some 102,700 new voters had
registered. Regrettably, as a result of fears that significant numbers of
voters would still be omitted the mechanism of same-day registration was
retained. Prior to election day some 2.2 million voters had been
registered, a figure which did not dispel concerns over the failure to
include a significant number of eligible voters. Overall, the CEC
demonstrated increased control over the voter list compilation process than
its predecessor, yet the new voters’ register was again marred by
significant inaccuracies, including repeated entries, omissions and
significant discrepancies in the numbers of new voters registered held at
the CEC and in local PECs.

Several more months’ work was required for the CEC to be able to provide a
comprehensive, accurate and transparent voters’ list. Since this is a
prerequisite for any free and fair election, the Georgian government’s
decision not to postpone the election date until May, as recommended by a
number of international organizations, raised the question of their
political commitment to an inclusive electoral process.

The Adjarian authorities failed to supply the CEC with timely or
satisfactory voters’ lists; this led in one instance to the firing of a PEC
chair in Khelvachauri district by the CEC. Amid controversy over the size
of the Adjarian electorate, the CEC initiated a new registration process in
the region. The CEC also claimed to have been presented with evidence by
domestic observers that blank voters’ certificates for those voters lacking
other ID documentation were being issued illegitimately in Adjara
(Sharabidzeebi village).

(2) The CEC

The CEC, under the direction of Mr Zurab Chiaberashvili, was far better
organized and more transparent in its work than its predecessor. However
its conduct continued to attract controversy. The CEC inherited a number of
unresolved legal ambiguities from the January presidential election. A
number of provisions that were stipulated specifically for the January
election were retained without renewal or review, including the same-day
registration mechanism and the range of legitimate ID documents permitted
for voting. Many new issues were decided by means of CEC decree (including,
inter alia, simplification of the protocol forms and timing of the mobile
ballot box run), despite the fact that the CEC lacked legal authority to
make some of these changes. In part the CEC’s exceeding of its mandate was
due to parliamentary inertia. A package of changes to the electoral code
submitted to parliament at the end of February was not considered by
parliament, which failed to gather the necessary quorum. The fact that
parliament could be sufficiently mobilized to adopt the controversial
constitutional changes of 6 February, and to rubber stamp the appointment of
senior officials, but not to review changes to the electoral code
demonstrated a lack of political commitment on the part of Georgia’s new
leaders to the electoral process.

The most significant of the CEC’s decrees was to change the basis of the
calculation of the 7% threshold for party representation to turnout on
election day rather than the total number of voters registered. In
principle this decision was to be welcomed in facilitating the accession to
the incoming parliament of opposition parties. However, we remain concerned
that important decisions affecting electoral outcomes are still being
determined on an ad hoc basis by the CEC, rather than through a transparent
and accountable legal framework. Perceptions that the CEC is acting as an
instrument of policy regarding electoral provisions diminish public
confidence in the election administration and the electoral process as a
whole.

These problems apart, the CEC made effective use of international funding to
run a wide-ranging information campaign, including TV clips (subtitled in
Russian), leaflets, a new web-site and a poster campaign. It also expended
commendable efforts to ensure that electoral materials were available in
Georgia’s main minority languages, Azerbaijani, Armenian and Russian.

III Election Day

Polling was conducted in a generally calm and orderly fashion. Turnout was
steady but by no means heavy. Election fatigue also appeared to be a factor
in some regions.

The efforts to improve the voters’ register notwithstanding, there were
still widespread instances of voters being turned away because of
inappropriate identity documentation or for being registered in the wrong
district. On the one hand this indicates that PEC staff were attempting as
far as possible to remain within official procedures. On the other, it
demonstrates that considerable progress still needs to be made in the voters
‘ list. We also observed cases where the number of persons on the voters’
list was double the actual number compiled by the PEC; in one PEC over one
thousand names were incorrect or double entries (Akhalkalaki). The
mechanism of on-the-day registration did not appear to be abused; numbers of
voters registered in this way were relatively modest.

Although in principle the significant presence of civil society and party
observers is to be welcomed, we are concerned that many observers
encountered were not familiar with their duties, or were not even aware of
which organization they were representing. Unfortunately we observed a
number of serious incidents of ballot stuffing, perpetrated, inter alia, by
uniformed policemen (Alkhalkalaki) and PEC staff (Adjara). We also observed
instances of PECs being situated in local government buildings in Kvemo
Kartli and Adjara, and the occasional presence of campaigning material
within precincts.

Once again the mechanism of voter marking did not prove to be effective,
with numerous instances observed of cases where there was no checking of
those entering electoral precincts, ineffective voter marking and the
permitting of voting without marking.

IV The Media

The pre-electoral period was characterised by deterioration in the working
environment of both state and independent media. There are some serious
issues of concern regarding the conduct of the new government towards media
channels it perceives as unsympathetic to its goals. In this context the
abrupt and surprising decision to take off air two of Georgia’s most popular
political talk-shows, broadcast on the Rustavi-2 and Mze channels, was a
source of serious concern. There were furthermore instances of intimidation
towards outlets associated rightly or wrongly with opposition groups. In
mid-February shots were fired into the apartment of Luba Eliashvili,
anchorwoman of the dialogi news programme on the oppositional Iberia TV
channel; on 19 February the offices of Iberia TV were raided by security
forces, as part of an anti-corruption operation directed against the channel
‘s holding company Omega Group, whose directors were included in the Revival
party list. Furthermore, on 19 February a knife was thrown into the offices
of Zviad Pochkua, editor-in-chief of the English-language daily Georgian
Times. However, neither outlet ceased operations. There were also credible
reports of journalists within the state-run Channel 1 being subjected to
unprecedented pressure in support of the new government.

The coverage of the elections broadcast on Channel 1 reflected a
pro-government bias, with the National Movement’s political advertising
enjoying pride-of-place interspersed with coverage of leading stories, all
of which were invariably connected with coverage of the activities of
leading government personalities. Coverage of opposition parties on TV
channels with national or near-national coverage was marginal. This was
compounded by the fact that the limited campaigning activities of opposition
groups provided relatively little newsworthy material. Channel 1 also
regularly broadcast free political advertising of the pro-governmental
movement Our Adjara under a rubric of ‘social advertising’.

In Adjara regional media outlets provided saturation coverage of the local
regime and the Revival party. Journalists from national media outlets
working in Adjara faced consistent harassment, and in some cases their
equipment was confiscated. There were also instances of physical assault on
journalists representing nationwide media in Adjara, for instance an attack
on a Rustavi-2 journalist was beaten up as he was leaving the region.

V Civil Society

The change of government confronted Georgian civil society groups, several
of which were closely associated with its accession to power, in a new and
difficult position. Overall their activities were significantly muted
compared to their leading role in the November parliamentary poll.
Furthermore, the split within one of the leading domestic observation
groups, the International Society for Democracy and Fair Elections (ISFED),
leading to the formation of the similarly named Fair Elections Foundation
(FEF), was a source of considerable confusion in the pre-election period.
Three major domestic observer groups, ISFED, FEF and New Generation-New
Initiative deployed over 2,000 observers apiece on election day, while a
fourth, the Georgian Young Lawyers’ Association (GYLA) also fielded several
hundred observers. In addition, ISFED carried out a parallel vote
tabulation (PVT) based on 20% of PECs.

Regrettably, however, the proliferation of domestic observer groups has not
resulted in improved standards of observation. We are concerned that
observers from some domestic NGOs were again seen to be actively
participating in managing the electoral process.

VI Adjara

The crisis in relations between Adjara and the central government imposed
further obstacles to an already strained electoral process in Adjara. The
period since the January presidential election was marked by regular reports
of clashes between pro-government activists and local security agencies,
against a backdrop of government-led criminal investigation of business
interests based in Adjara. Following negotiations to resolve the crisis on
18 March, the Adjarian authorities offered a number of guarantees of freedom
of association and movement and the uninhibited right of opposition groups
to meetings in public spaces. These appeared to be only partially
implemented, however, with opposition groups continuing to complain of
barred access to public buildings in the final week of the campaign.
Controversy also continued to surround the size of the Adjarian electorate.
While the Adjarian electoral administration claimed a figure in the region
of 276,000 voters, opposition groups cited figures closer to 200,000. In
the event, some 85,000 voters were registered prior to election day in
Adjara. Although Adjara TV began to advertise the need for voters to
register as of 17 March, raised tensions and a charged political atmosphere
throughout the Autonomous Republic may have discouraged voters from doing
so.

Polling in Adjara was generally peaceful but marked by a tense and
intimidatory atmosphere; we did not observe a heavy turnout. The working
environment in some PECs was highly strained, with serious confrontations
between PEC staff members; in other PECs opposition representatives and
domestic observers were passive. A large number of PECs were characterized
by the presence of unauthorized individuals, who at times attempted to
direct the electoral process. In some instances we both witnessed and
received reports of PEC members who were intimidated by local security
forces. Considerable confusion was evident both among the electorate as to
which identity documents could be used to vote, and in the list of
pre-registered voters. In some instances (e.g. Khelvachauri district) this
resulted in dozens of voters being turned away. There were credible reports
that local administrative bodies had not supplied voters without identity
documents with the appropriate certificate, or were in fact demanding
payment for its issue.

We witnessed the extensive use of so-called ‘carousel’ voting, particularly
in Kobuleti district. During the count we observed evidence of blatant
ballot stuffing by PEC staff. Furthermore, envelopes were not counted
lessening control of further manipulation during the counting process, and
we also saw ballot papers being discarded on the floor. Unfortunately,
party and NGO observers remained passive in the face of these flagrant
violations.

VII The Role of the International Community

The role of the international community vis-à-vis the electoral process in
Georgia has long ceased to be only one of observation. International
governmental organisations, non-governmental organizations and individual
governments are involved deeply in all stages of the election process. What
started off as a modest process of support for Georgia’s fledging democracy
has turned into an expensive operation involving thousands of people. This
has tended to distort the role of the international community as an
objective detached observer of the Georgian electoral process. There is
increasing questioning in some Georgian political circles regarding the role
of international community vis-à-vis the electoral process. This issue needs
to be addressed through greater transparency and accountability since the
international community still has an important role to play in promoting
free and fair elections Georgia.

In the run up to the 28 March elections the international community could
have done more to persuade the Georgian government that elections should
only be held when a proper electoral register had been compiled and to
ensure that conditions were provided for a more level playing field for
meaningful choice. Given the seismic changes in the Georgian political
system after November 2003, a full reappraisal of strategies and tools was
required to ensure that the electoral process, including the election
mechanism, the political parties, and both domestic and international
observers, provided for a system of checks and balances guaranteeing voter
confidence in the process.

VIII National Minorities

Some limited gains were achieved in the enduring problem of raising the
quality of national minority participation in Georgian elections. For the
first time in recent elections the CEC provided ballot papers and voters’
lists in minority languages, as well as other electoral materials. This
represents a positive step in making the electoral process accessible to
non-Georgian speaking populations. However, it remains a source of
considerable concern that problems in the Georgian electoral process
continue to be particularly prominent in areas of compact minority
settlement. Furthermore, the underlying problem of raising national
minority participation in the Georgian body politic remains outstanding.
According to 2002 census data national minorities account for some 17% of
the population in Georgia. However, representatives of national minorities
accounted for less than 3% of the party list candidates fielded in this
election, with the result that the incoming parliament will consequently be
the least representative parliament ever so far as national minorities are
concerned.

IX Conclusion

Georgia now has a new political and constitutional order, which enjoys
legitimacy among a majority of the Georgian people. However, given the
shortcomings persisting in its conduct the 28 March poll cannot be
considered to put to rest the many criticisms that have dogged the Georgian
electoral process over recent years. Given this the government must remain
open to constructive relations with opposition forces, even those outside
parliament. The resolution of Georgia’s many problems will be difficult and
will require a significant degree of agreement among the country’s disparate
political forces . All political groups in Georgia must now work within the
new order to hasten the process of democratic state-building in Georgia.
The first priority of this process must be the elimination once and for all
of continuing doubts regarding the Georgian electoral process.

for further information please contact:

in London Niall Blackwell on +44 2077352080 or [email protected]
in Tbilisi Julian Broxup on +995 32 292399 or [email protected]

Policemen Provoking and Appearing in Hospital

A1 Plus | 18:26:09 | 29-03-2004 | Politics |
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POLICEMEN PROVOKING AND APPEARING IN HOSPITAL

“Justice” Bloc held a meeting in Gyumri. Naturally, the meeting organizers
had beforehand appealed to Municipality for permission. {BR}

Gyumri Mayor Vardan Ghukasyan had informed the meeting organizers that
Municipality couldn’t guarantee safety of meeting participants.

Meeting took place irrespective of everything. “Justice” Bloc leader Stepan
Demirchyan, “Republic” Party Chair Albert Bazeyan, Arshak Sadoyan and other
bloc members partook in it.

Some women in the square were holding posters with “Go away! Leave us alone,
Stepan Demirchyan, Artashes Geghamyan!”.

Some police employees in civil clothes tried to provoke disorders.
Provocation was prevented but a few policemen received bodily injuries and
are now in hospital.

But the provokers didn’t stop. Eggs were thrown at the meeting organizers
from the building roof. It’s a new method of self-protection by Authorities
since no eggs had been thrown at Opposition leaders and no provocations had
occurred before serious steps directed to power change were announced for.

4 people – Karen Margaryan /Albert Bazeyan’s driver/, Hamlet Lazarian
/non-Party man/, Tigran Ter-Margaryan /People’s Party of Armenia/ and Karen
Lazarian /Republic Party/ were arrested after the incidents.

Albert Bazeyan and Viktor Dallaqyan are now in Gyumri to make more accurate
the legal bases and reasons for their arrest.

It is to state that a few days ago President Robert Kocharyan instructed all
the policemen to wear uniforms to keep the public vigilant.

Suren Surenyantc, head of Information Service of “Republic” Party, is sure
that Authorities are the masterminds of disorders. He said that Opposition
is ready to resist those provocations. He informed that after clarifying the
status of those arrested Bloc will appear with a political assessment.

http://www.a1plus.am

Utah: Transitions and Inequality in the 21st Century – Conference

PRESS RELEASE
2004 Middle East & Central Asia Conference Committee
c/o Political Science Department
260 S. Central Campus Dr.
OSH Building, Room 252
The University of Utah
Salt Lake City, UT 84112
USA
Tel: +1-801-581-6047
Fax: +1-801-585-6492

The 2004 MIDDLE EAST & CENTRAL ASIA
POLITICS, ECONOMICS, and SOCIETY CONFERENCE:
Transitions and Inequality in the 21st Century

September 9th to 11th, 2004
The University of Utah
Salt Lake City, USA

*** Deadline for proposals: May 15, 2004 ***

The second annual multidisciplinary conference on the Middle East and Central
Asia will be held on the picturesque campus of the University of Utah in Salt
Lake City. The objective of the conference is to bring together academics,
analysts, and policy makers with interests in the Middle East and Central Asia
who wish to network and share research endeavors.

The three-day conference will include at least two prominent keynote speakers:
Dr. Michael Collins Dunn, editor of the Middle East Journal of the Middle East
Institute in Washington, DC.; and Prof. Shirin Akiner, lecturer in Central
Asian Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University
of London. There will be an estimated 44 conference sessions, and a special
plenary discussion panel on `The Post-9-11 World’. Other attractions include
two complementary meals, an evening of Middle Eastern and Central Asian dance
and music performances, and screening of films and documentaries.

The topics to be covered by the conference encompass interdisciplinary social
science approaches to analysis and problem solving in the regions of Middle
East and Central Asia and may fall within the following themes:

* Problems of Economic and Democratic Transitions
* State and Society Relations
* Religion and Politics
* Islam and Islamic Movements
* Challenges of Post-Communism
* The Impacts of Globalization
* Culture, Gender, and Ethnicity
* Natural Resources, Conflict, and Sustainability
* Media, Cinema, and Film
* Diaspora
* Human Rights and Minorities
* Post-9-11 Regional and International Affairs
* Afghanistan and Iraq Nation-building Projects
* Politics of External Actors (U.S., Russia, EU, China, etc.)
* Israel and Palestine Studies
* U.S.-Iranian Relations
* Uighurs
* Chechnya
* Armenia-Azerbaijan Relations
* Cypriot Reunification
* Terrorism and State Violence
* Conflict Prevention and Resolution
* Regional Organizations and Cooperation
* Civil Society

Selected papers from the 2003 conference were subsequently provided to editors
of The Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs and Critique: Journal of Critical
Studies of the Middle East.

Those interested in presenting papers in the 2004 Middle East and Central Asia
Politics, Economics, and Society Conference are asked to submit the following:

* Title of paper
* 250-word paper abstract
* Your full name
* Brief academic Resume
* Institutional affiliation
* E-mail address
* Telephone numbers (work and home)
* Postal address
* Indicate willingness to serve as a session Chair or Discussant

Please e-mail the above to the conference committee:

[email protected] OR [email protected]

*** DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS: May 15, 2004 ***

Updates will be included in the conference web page:

Please note that the Conference Committee is unable to provide for participant
travel and lodging expenses. All prospective participants are expected to seek
funding from their own institutional and organizational affiliations. We will,
however, assist overseas participants whose paper proposals have been approved
by sending official letters necessary for acquiring entry visas into the U.S.
For all information, go to the website.

http://www.utah.edu/CentralAsia-MiddleEast/

Opposition parties say change of power only weeks away

ArmeniaNow.com
26 March 2004

Say You Want a Revolution?: Opposition parties say change of power only
weeks away

By Zhanna Alexanyan ArmeniaNow reporter

Armenia ‘s fractured and, so far, politically impotent oppositional parties
are rumbling again with talk of a change of power and comparing their aim
with Armenia ‘s break from Soviet control nearly 16 years ago.

The republic’s 10 or so oppositional parties maintain that President Robert
Kocharyan’s election a year ago was illegitimate. Some are whispering
revolution, and hanging hopes on a resolution adopted by the Constitutional
Court last April 17, which allows for a Referendum of Confidence within a
year of that date.

Since February 2, the Ardarutiun (Justice) oppositional bloc of the National
Assembly has boycotted Assembly meetings in protest of the current
government.

And in something like pre-election campaigns, the bloc, led by secretary of
the Justice faction at the Parliament Victor Dallakyan, has organized
meetings to strategize and even established a headquarters it says will be
used for the eventual change of power.

The coalition of opposition parties strengthened this week, when the
National Unity Party, led by one-time presidential candidate Artashes
Geghamyan added its support to the Justice Bloc.

But, typical of 2003’s pre-presidential campaign, when 16 parties agreed to
form a union, but couldn’t agree on a single candidate to represent the
union, the bloc lacks a unified aim at how to achieve its purpose.

“Some (bloc members) insist it’s still possible to try to pass a law in the
National Assembly and hold a Referendum of Confidence. Others believe it’s
not possible,” says Hanrapetutiun (Republic) party leader Albert Bazeyan.
“The nearest time for the beginning of activities was set for the end of
March and the furthest date is from April 10 to 12.”

The People’s Party of Armenia (PPA) agrees with the Justice Bloc’s
timeframe, however, the National Unity party says May is the time for
action.

In any case, while Kocharyan’s “illegitimate” government has a year of
relative calm on its ledger, oppositional leaders – perhaps still envious of
Georgia ‘s successful opposition that overthrew a president – are calling
for revolution.

“Only one constitutional possibility for change of power is left, which is
mentioned in the second paragraph of the Constitution, ‘In the Republic of
Armenia power belongs to the people’,” says Hanrapetutiun secretary Suren
Surenyants. “People can gain that right only with the help of revolution,
the way it was in 1988.”

Surenyants says former Prime Minister Aram Sargsyan is the man to lead the
revolution. But then adds that another or two might also fulfill the task.

“Our party offers a model of change of power by means of democratic
revolution and we are sure under the leadership of Aram Sargsyan it will be
the best way of bringing that model into life,” Surenyants says. “However,
Hanrapetutiun doesn’t exclude the possibility of having Stepan Demirchyan or
Artashes Geghamyan as a leader because in any case people must decide by
means of elections, who will become president.”

A strategy of action is still somewhat a bloc secret, as it doesn’t want to
tip the administration to its intentions.

It is clear, however, that any groundswell of support will start in the
regions, where oppositional rallies are already routine. In response, in
fact, Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan has urged members of the government
to visit the regions to offset the influence of opposition propaganda.

Press Secretary of the Justice Bloc Ruzan Khachatryan says visits to regions
are very important for the opposition, as during those visits they prepare
people for a change of power. She says April 10 to 13 will be the time for
revolt.

The Justice Bloc is also expected to organize two mass rallies in Yerevan ,
after which it will urge supporters to conduct sit-ins outside the
Presidential Residence.

“Power must be changed,” says leader of the National Democratic Union Vazgen
Manukyan. But he raises questions concerning things which must be done after
the change.

“People will agree to rise in the name of some ideas, in the name of change
of power only in case they know for sure what is taking place,” the former
presidential candidate says.

Manukyan further concludes that the opposition lacks unity and needs a clear
leader.

“We need unity to change the power. Different candidates from the bloc got
different percents (during presidential elections) but the opposition has no
leader as it was in 1988 when the Karabakh Committee was a valuable leader,”
he says. “All of them are ‘black boxes’ for me as none of them are
experienced in political struggle and none of them have strongly pronounced
ideas.”

If revolution is to come, it will count on the opposition’s belief that
there is widespread discontent and a crisis of confidence – claims Kocharyan
rebutted recently in an address at Yerevan State University .

“To say there is a political crisis in the country where there is 13.9
percent of economic growth, where, according to all showings, considerable
developments are obvious, means not to understand quite well what ‘political
crisis’ means,” Kocharyan said.

The President further elaborated the achievements of his first year of his
second term.

“They are unprecedented indexes in our modern history, after declaration of
independence, they are the best accounting among CIS countries,” he said.

A day after the President addressed students, oppositional party leader
Geghamyan met with the same students and countered Kocharyan’s claims.
Armenia is 217 th out of 220 countries in percentage of malnourished,
Geghamyan claimed, and:

“Tens, hundreds of organizations and services sectors don’t pay taxes to the
state budget. Forty to 60 percent of the economy is ‘shadow’. The reason the
President didn’t mention it is because the people in power are the owners of
the shadow economy.”

Ten days ago date, Kocharyan fired his Prosecutor General and replaced him.
He has also held meetings with heads of police – both measures seen by some
as the president preparing for a showdown.

Kocharyan told reporters he would continue measures to increase internal
stability.

“We strengthen these bodies and we strengthen them in all directions,” said
Kocharyan. “The psychology of a bum in the poitical field is dangerous for
the country.”

Next Tuesday, the Justice Bloc is expected to make an announcement calling
on citizens to rally for a change of power.

http://www.armenianow.com/2004/march26/news/opposition/index.asp