Armenian government expects bumper fruit crop in 2005

FreshPlaza, Netherlands
June 23 2005

Armenian government expects bumper fruit crop in 2005
Armenia will register this year a sharp increase in its crop of
fruit, which accounts for a large part of its agricultural output,
due to unusually favorable weather conditions, the Agriculture
Ministry said on Wednesday.
Garnik Petrosian, head of the ministry’s fruit-growing department,
told RFE/RL that farmers across the country are expected to collect
nearly 400,000 metric tons of grapes, apples and other fruit, or
almost 54 percent more than last year.
`We are now expecting a very big harvest,’ he said. `We will even
have trouble selling fruit.’ Petrosian added that the yield of
apricots, estimated to total 80,000 tons this year, will be
responsible for most of the anticipated gain.
The apricot harvest in 2004, as reported by the Agriculture Ministry,
stood at a modest 6,000 tons due to a brief but devastating spring
cold snap. That explains why apricots were very expensive and in
short supply in Armenia last year. Their rapidly growing supply,
which will peak at the beginning of July, is already pushing the
prices down dramatically.
The price of one kilogram of apricots, most of them grown in the
fertile Ararat Valley south of Yerevan, slumped from 1,000 drams
($2.2) to below 500 drams in the past week alone. It could be as low
as 100 drams in a few weeks time.
`This year’s harvest is really good,’ said a woman selling fruit at
one of Yerevan’s agricultural markets. `The prices are already going
down.’
`We are going to have plenty of fruits this year, especially
apricots,’ agreed another trader.
But not all buyers shared the traders’ enthusiasm. `The prices are
still high for low-income people,’ complained one elderly man. `True,
they are down but not as much as we pensioners would like.’
`I didn’t even ask fruit prices today because I can’t afford them,’
he added.
According to Petrosian, the expected bumper harvest is also good news
for Armenia’s wine industry as the aggregate output of grapes is on
course to reach 180,000 tons, up from 148,000 tons reported last
year. `The Agriculture Ministry’s key concern now is to have that
crop fully purchased by both food processing plants and exporters,’
he said.
Petrosian added that the government also expects a sizable increase
in the yields of key vegetables such as potatoes and tomatoes.
Earlier this year the Agriculture Ministry predicted further growth
of Armenia’s wheat output which should meet more than two thirds of
the country’s bread
demand in 2005. Ministry officials said they expect a slight increase
from last year’s wheat harvest which was the largest in a decade.

False call on bomb in government building received at Armenian PM

Pan Armenian News
FALSE CALL ON BOMB IN GOVERNMENT BUILDING RECEIVED AT ARMENIAN PM OFFICE
23.06.2005 05:58
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The information that there is a bomb in the building of
the Armenian Government proved to be false, senior official of the
Department of Emergency Situations of Armenia, Chief of the Civil Defense
Board (CDB) Hakob Harutyunyan told journalists. In his words, 2:45 p.m.
local time a call was received at the office of the Prime Minister that a
bomb there is a bomb in the Government building. All CDB detachments were
enabled at once. After investigation they arrived at a conclusion that the
information was false. In Harutyunyan’s words, the situation is under
control now and the telephone hooligan is being searched for, Regnum news
agency reported.

NATO does not view itself as mediator in Karabakh settlement

Pan Armenian News
R. SIMONS: NATO DOES NOT VIEW ITSELF AS MEDIATOR IN KARABAKH SETTLEMENT
23.06.2005 02:47
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ If the Government of Armenia `does not wish the presence
of Russian military bases in its territory, the NATO will assist Yerevan in
the matter,’ stated the NATO Secretary General’s Special Representative for
the Caucasus and Central Asia, NATO Deputy Assistant Secretary General for
Political Affairs and Security Robert Simmons. In the course of a meeting
with Armenian, Georgian and Azeri journalists and experts in Brussels,
Simons `assessed as very positive the latest Russian-Georgian talks at which
Moscow expressed readiness to abide by commitments assumed at the OSCE
Istanbul Summit in 1999 and withdraw its military bases from Georgia.’
Brussels hails the withdrawal of Russian military from the territory of
Georgia. `Meanwhile, Russia still retains its military base in Armenia,
moreover it transfers part of materiel from Georgian military bases to
Armenia,’ Simons says `this does not run counter to the Conventional Armed
Forces in Europe Treaty (CFE Treaty), however on the other hand the transfer
of arms from Georgia to Armenia is undesirable, as if Armenia does not wish
the presence of Russian military bases in its territory, certain
difficulties may appear.’ At that Simmons does not consider the presence of
Russian military bases hampers further intensification of Armenia-NATO
relations. `It is not a problem to the NATO, especially as Armenia itself
agrees with Russian military presence in its territory. The NATO does not
build relations with partner countries based on competition and does not
consider Russia its competitor in the South Caucasus,’ he added. In his
statement titled Road to NATO Membership Simmons noted that Georgia has left
Armenia and Azerbaijan far behind in intensification of relations with the
NATO.’ In his words, Georgia is the only South Caucasian country that has
expressed desire to become a NATO member. On the other hand, in his words,
expecting Georgia to become a NATO member in the near future is not real.
Touching upon the Karabakh settlement, Simmons remarked NATO does not view
itself as a mediator and `not wishing to duplicate the OSCE Minsk Group,
fully supports the OSCE.’ In his words, if the parties suggest the NATO a
larger role in Karabakh settlement, `we will discuss it.’ In Simmons’ words,
the Alliance posture is impartial and promotes peaceful settlement, reported
Regnum news agency.

Vivacell to compete with Armentel

Pan Armenian News
VIVACELL TO COMPETE WITH ARMENTEL
23.06.2005 05:27
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ K-Telecom, the second mobile telecommunication operator in
Armenia, will set about commercial activities in the country. As company
Director General Ralf Yerikyan stated in the course of a news conference in
Yerevan, K-Telecom will have VivaCell trademark in Armenia. In Yerikyan’s
words, the Government of Armenia issued the license for providing mobile
telecommunication services in Armenia to K-Telecom in November 2004. Based
on the license the company intends to launch its network first of all in
Yerevan and then in Armavir, Aragatsotn, Kotayk and Gegharkunik regions. In
his words, the company intends to raise the number of subscribers to 300
thousand within 3 months. In Yerikyan’s words, at the moment K-Telecom has
invested some $75 in Armenia. He said VivaCell provides two packages of
services: Alo that provides for payment for conversations in advance, and
Classic, which is a system of subscriber payment, which also includes a
corroborative package of services. In his words, the service packages will
be sold at 1000 sales points. VivaCell subscribers will be able to use SMS,
VMS and GPRS from the first day. Lebanese entrepreneur Pierre Fattouch is
the main shareholder of K-Telecom, as well as the Fattouch Investment Group
founded by his family members. R. Yerikyan did not specify tariffs of the
services in Armenia. He only said K-Telecom subscribers may encounter some
problems when making international calls, as ArmenTel still sustains
monopoly here. In his words, VivaCell subscribers will not pay for received
calls and will be able to use diverse packages of services based on their
needs and payment abilities.
From: Baghdasarian

=?UNKNOWN?Q?Greece’s?= ostpolitik

Kathimerini, Greece
June 23 2005
Greece’s ostpolitik
By Petros Papaconstantinou
Turkey’s EU membership aspirations appear to be a main casualty of
the crisis triggered by the French and Dutch rejection by referendum
of the European Constitution. Former Commission president Romano
Prodi, who could become Italy’s prime minister after a general
election next year, has said that `the conditions now are no longer
there for Turkey’s entry in the short or medium term.’
In Germany, Angela Merkel, leader of the main opposition
conservatives, is favored to win an early general election. She has
made opposition to full Turkish membership the main platform of her
Christian Democratic Union party. Even French President Jacques
Chirac, once a warm advocate of Ankara’s bid, is now stressing the
need to define Europe’s geographical limits. Finally, it was US
Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick who urged Ankara `to look
beyond the EU to a global context.’
Athens must adapt to these shifting parameters. By lifting its
objection to Turkish EU prospects, Greece materialized an
`ostpolitik’ toward Turkey – much like the West did with the former
communist countries of Eastern Europe – while not becoming the
scapegoat for other European nations who did not want Turkey in the
EU.
Greece should be wary of being too keen on backing Turkey’s bid. In
fact, too much zeal could cost Athens key continental allies and
leave it only with the gratification of British Prime Minister Tony
Blair, from whom the government can expect little, be it on the
Cyprus issue or the community budget.
Political pragmatism may advise us against imitating the French and
German parliaments, which raised the Armenian genocide issue. Yet
Merkel also said it would be disastrous if Ankara did not recognize
Cyprus before the start of membership talks, and it’s hard to see why
these comments did not resonate in Athens.

Enlargement’s growing pains

Enlargement’sgrowing pains
The Guardian – United Kingdom; Jun 23, 2005
WORLD BRIEFING SIMON TISDALL

EU commissioner Olli Rehn is battling hard to convince aspiring
members that European enlargement is on course despite the
constitutional debacle and last week’s Brussels summit fracas.
But his convictions fly in the face of uncomfortable political
facts. For Europe, bigger is no longer necessarily better.
“Enlargement was a survivor of the summit, though it was a close
call,” Mr Rehn declared this week. Romania and Bulgaria would be
admitted as planned in 2007 if all entry criteria were met, he
said. Talks with Turkey should also begin on time in October.
Mr Rehn said it would be “irresponsible to disrupt a valuable
process”.
“Sticking to one’s word is a basic [EU] value,” he said.
As EU enlargement chief, Mr Rehn has a job to do. But he risks
glossing over the anti-enlargement verdict implicit in the French and
Dutch no votes on the constitution.
According to a minister who attended the Brussels summit,
“enlargement” has become a dirty word. A vaguer formulation concerning
future “European perspectives” is now preferred.
Key governments have concluded that voters were, in part, registering
disapproval of last year’s “big bang” admission of 10 poorer, mostly
east European countries, the minister said.
Despite Mr Rehn’s best efforts, two new political realities appear
unavoidable.
One is that candidate countries – Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia and
Turkey – will face closer scrutiny.
Their record on human rights, judicial and penal reform, corruption
and media freedom “will be looked at with a more powerful magni fying
glass”, said Franco Frattini, the EU’s justice and security
commissioner.
Turkey faces an even rougher ride. Ankara must also tackle disputes
concerning Cyprus and Armenia. And Paris confirmed this week that
Turkey could be blackballed in a one-off French referendum.
The former commission president Romano Prodi said yesterday that “the
conditions are no longer there for Turkey’s entry in the short or
medium term”.
All these countries’ hopes are also linked to agreement on a long-term
EU budget.
The other harsh post-constitution reality is that Serbia-Montenegro,
Bosnia, Macedonia and Albania can now expect a more protracted
application process – with no guarantee of success.
That realisation has set alarm bells ringing across the region, with
concern focusing on still simmering Kosovo. “Europe cannot be stable
without the Balkans,” warned Vlado Buckovski, Macedonia’s prime
minister.
The prospect of a neglected Balkan region sliding back into chaos led
a group of Europe’s elder statesmen, including Carl Bildt and
Germany’s former president Richard von Weizsacker to issued a joint
appeal last week: “Europe can survive the crisis with its
constitution. “What Europe cannot survive is a new Srebrenica.”
A backlash born of disappointed hopes is a possibility.
Mihai-Razvan Ungureanu, Romania’s foreign minister, said this week
that he expected the EU to honour its agreement to admit his country,
although a one-year delay until 2008 was possible.
But dishing the Balkans could be “disastrous”, he said.
Erhard Busek, special coordinator of south-east Europe’s stability
pact, said he was worried about a lack of leadership on enlargement.
“The Balkan countries have to learn to depend on themselves, to learn
self-responsibility,” he said. “But they must stay on the EU
agenda. There’s no alternative.”

Saakashvilli knows who threw hand grenade at George Bush

Armenpress
SAAKASHVILI KNOWS WHO THREW HAND GRENADE AT GEORGE BUSH
TBILISI, JUNE 23, ARMENPRESS: Georgia’s president Mikhail Saakashvili
revealed yesterday that the authorities have identified the man who threw a
hand grenade at US president George W. Bush when he was addressing a huge
crowd in downtown Tbilisi during his May 10 visit to this former -Soviet
republic.
Russian Itar-Tass news agency quoted Saakashvili as saying that it is “a
mean and unworthy man,” but he did not say who the man was and whether he
was arrested. FBI agents who traveled to Georgia to investigate the case on
the ground revealed that the hand grenade thrown at George Bush was live and
could have exploded, though at first Georgian officials insisted the
explosive device was an “engineering grenade” which would have had to be
very close to the president to cause any damage. FBI said the hand grenade
only failed to explode because of a chance malfunction in its detonator. The
grenade, wrapped in a dark tartan handkerchief, had been thrown towards the
podium where Bush was speaking but hit a girl in the crowd. This cushioned
its impact and stopped it detonating. FBI offered a reward of 20,000 laris
(about ?6,000) for any information that could help reveal the identity of
the man.

Karabakh Telecom connected at last

A1plus
| 17:30:45 | 23-06-2005 | Social |
KARABAKH TELECOM CONNECTED AT LAST
Today leaders of Karabakh Telecom Company, the second operator of cellular
communication in Armenia rendered a press conference in the House Museum of
Sergey Parajanov. To note, Lebanese Ambassador to Armenia Gabriel Geara was
also present at the press conference.
Member of the Board of Directors Husseyn Rifayi, who will work in Armenia
explained why the meeting was organized in the House Museum of Parajanov.
`Fatush Group, the founder of our company is fond of traditions and culture,
that is why we decided to hold our first press conference here’, he said.
He also reported that well-off Lebanese citizen Pierre Fatush has already
invested $75 million in the establishment of cellular communications, what
is a considerable sum for the Armenian economy. Why does he do all this? `He
was born in a town, where many rich Armenians lived and he loved them’, his
colleagues said.
Husseyn Rifayi promised a top -level service. Beginning with July 1 the
second operator will enter the Armenian market and slogan `Viva Sell’ (what
means Your Choice) will appear on the screen of the subscribers’ phones.
The new operator suggests two kinds of service – subscriber’s cards and
prepaid cards. Ralph Yirikian, the Executive Director of the Company did not
mention of tariffs today, promising inform about the details June 28-29. It
should be also noted that the prepaid cards `ALO’ will be in free sale like
the Armentel cards and will function according to analogous principle.
Karabakh Telecom has 140 employees in Armenia. From July 1 the company will
service 300 000 subscribers. First it will cover Yerevan, Armavir and Ararat
as well as some regions of Aragatsotn, Kotayk and Gegharkunik.
Ralph Yirikian also informed that the company will provide sms service,
voice mail, GPRS and roaming.
To note, the administration of K-Telecom informed that the incoming calls
will be free.

Kocharian approves CSTO cooperation

Kocharian approves CSTO cooperation
MOSCOW. June 23 (Interfax) – Armenian President Robert Kocharian considers
the cooperation between Collective Security Treaty Organization [CSTO] to be
effective.
The current members of the organization “don’t argue, but aim for practical
results,” he said.
“Cooperation here is developing very rapidly and efficiently, and the main
thing is a lot of issues are specifically discussed,” Kocharian told a press
conference following a summit of the organization on Thursday.

PACE to discuss Karabakh issue

A1plus
| 13:17:31 | 23-06-2005 | Politics | PACE SUMMER SESSION |
PACE TO DISCUSS KARABAKH ISSUE
Today the PACE Committee for Karabakh will hold its first sitting. As it is
already known, the committee is composed of members of PACE different
committees, representatives of the Armenian and Azeri opposition as well as
the rapporteurs on Armenia and Azerbaijan.
The Commission is headed by Lord Russell Johnston.