Russia Has Turned From Great Power Into Big Country: ULP Leader

RUSSIA HAS TURNED FROM GREAT POWER INTO BIG COUNTRY: ULP LEADER

YEREVAN, MARCH 24. ARMINFO. Today Russia is more concerned for
its corporative business interests in Armenia rather than for
Russian-Armenian government ties with the former being presented as
high level strategic partnership, says the leader of the United Labor
Party of Armenia Gurgen Arsenyan.

Russia should pay attention to this problem as this approach can lose
that country its positions in Armenia. Russia has not yet got rid
of Soviet psychology and does not take Armenia as a sovereign state.
“They treat us as elder brothers,” says Arsenyan. They say “we will
solve your problems” while true strategic partnership implies equal
cooperation. This approach may lead to negative attitude to Russia in
Armenia. Many in the country have already begun criticizing Russia.
“I could never imaged before that I would criticize Russia myself but
I do now. Russia is turning from a great power into a big country.”
“They should understand that Armenia is a sovereign country and should
build up their relations with us accordingly,” says Arsenyan.

He is satisfied with the level of Armenian-Russian cooperation in
politics, military and culture but not in economy saying that the
countries should seek closer mutually beneficial economic integration.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

President Putin To Assist In Solution Of Karabakh Issue

PRESIDENT PUTIN TO ASSIST IN SOLUTION OF KARABAKH ISSUE

RIA Novosti
2005-03-25 17:33

YEREVAN, March 25 (RIA Novosti) – Russian President Vladimir Putin
hopes that Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents will hold a regular
bilateral meeting.

In the course of the press-conference in Yerevan the Russian President
said that he and the Armenian President discussed the settlement of
the Nagorny Karabakh issue, situation in the Transcaucasia and the
issues concerning the development of the transportation infrastructure.

Speaking about the perspectives for the settlement of the conflict in
Nagorny Karabakh (Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan, which proclaimed
its independence from Baku) Putin assured that “Russia will render
all the necessary assistance to settle the conflict.”

The Russian President noted that at the talks they both seriously
considered the regional problems.

“Our countries are interested in the stabilization of the situation
in the Transcaucasia, formation of the trustworthy atmosphere and the
formation of relations, which will contribute to the development of
the social and economic spheres,” Putin said.

Moreover, the Presidents closely considered the issue concerning the
development of the transportation infrastructure. Putin reminded that
the first ferry from the Russian port Kavkaz (situated on the left bank
of the Kerch strait, which divides Ukrainian Crimea and the Russian
Taman peninsula) came to Poti port with cargo for Georgia. “I hope that
in the future this ferry route will be used for deliveries of cargo for
Armenia and other countries in the region,” the Russian President said.

“These steps will open broad opportunities for business, serve for the
creation of new jobs, intensify the economic life of the region and
provide for the enhancement of the integration processes,” President
Putin said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

No Armenian Arms Sold Illegally to U.S.: Defense Minister

No Armenian Arms Sold Illegally to U.S.: Defense Minister
By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, YEREVAN

DefenseNews.com
Posted 03/25/05 15:04

None of Armenia’s weapons or ammunition have been illegally exported
abroad, the country’s defense minister said during investigation of
a criminal ring trafficking assault weapons to the United States.

“Joint Armenian-U.S. investigation showed that not one item of
Armenia’s weapons or ammunition was taken out to the United States
or any other country,” Serge Sargsyan said late March 24, adding that
security was stepped up at all arms depots in Armenia.

On March 15, the United States announced it was prosecuting 18 people
suspected of attempting to bring illegal assault weapons from eastern
Europe across U.S. borders. Armenia arrested three more suspected
accomplices earlier this week.

Among them is 26-year-old Armenian Artur Solomonian, who has been
sought by Armenian police for desertion since 2002.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Landslide In Voghjaberd Hinders Traffic

AZG Armenian Daily #052, 25/03/2005

Nature

LANDSLIDE IN VOGHJABERD HINDERS TRAFFIC

Quite a big part of Garni-Geghard road became totally impassable
because of the Voghjaberd landslide.

In fact, Voghjaberd landslide has reached the critical point, i.e. 900
meters of the road are ruined. Today, the road is controlled everyday.

For many years, the road wasn’t capitally renovated, as the community
and the government didn’t chose the most effective method of
annihilating the landslide and the problem grew bigger with time.

Today they do the same, they fill the ruined parts but it doesn’t
help and the landslide grows bigger. “When we fill the hole with a
bit heavier materials, the next day a new one opens. It seems that
we will have to build an overpass stretching for 1 km to secure the
work of the traffic. We need serious investments,” Andranik Manukian,
RA transport and communication minister, said.

“We shouldn’t have left that in this condition for so long. The
landslide is too big. They say that we can build a subway there,
but it can’t be built in the landslide,” Ruben Yadoyan, head of
Hydrogeology laboratory at RA National Academy of Sciences, specialist
of landslide, said.

The specialists studied the road 15 years ago. Today, many things
changed. The specialists first of all suggest creating a relevant
group for the research and study the whole territory.

It’s known that the Japanese are carrying out anti-landslide programs
in Armenia for a year already. They study the landslide areas of
Armenia with the local specialists.

By Karine Danielian

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Vladimir Putin arrived on a visit in Yerevan

Vladimir Putin arrived on a visit in Yerevan
by Kira Latukhina

RusData Dialine – Russian Press Digest
March 25, 2005 Friday

SOURCE: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, No 58, p.4

The Russian President Vladimir Putin began yesterday a visit to the
capital of Armenia, Yerevan. The two-day visit is officially devoted
to the opening of the Year of Russia in Armenia. Nezavisimaya Gazeta
writes that the visit’s aim is actually to demonstrate – among the
former Soviet republics still exist such that haven’t fallen under
the influence of the West.

Despite the existence of certain difficulties in Russian-Armenian
relations, Yerevan remains one of the Moscow’s closest allies in the
former Soviet Union.

According to the paper, Vladimir Putin and his Armenian counterpart
Robert Kocharyan have enough to discuss during the talks that will
take place today. Apart from economic cooperation and expansion of
cultural contacts there are issues of reforming the CIS and the recent
crucial changes in the political landscape of numerous post-Soviet
states. Armenia, in turn, is concerned with certain priorities of
the Moscow’s foreign policy (namely, close cooperation with Turkey)
and believes that Russia must demonstrate its interest in Armenia’s
affairs more clearly.

Also, it is expected that after the talks with Kocharyan the Russian
President will finally make an official statement on the recent events
in Kyrgyzstan and comment on his yesterday’s meeting with the Russia’s
top businessmen.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian Book center in Yerevan to promote friendship

Russian Book center in Yerevan to promote friendship

ITAR-TASS News Agency
March 25, 2005 Friday

YEREVAN, March 25 — Wife of the Russian president Lyudmila Putin
and wife of the Armenian President Bella Kocharyan opened a Center
of Russian Book in Yerevan on Friday. The book center includes a
library, a video hall and a readers’ hall. The new center is hoped to
be one of the most interesting institutions of the Russian culture in
Armenia. Its task is to maintain and develop traditional Russo-Armenian
contacts in the cultural and spiritual fields.

Lyudmila Putin expressed the hope that the Russian Book Center in
Yerevan will become a place where people can familiarize themselves
with each other’s traditions and culture, learn each other better and
become close friends. “It will be another step towards peace on our
planet,” Lyudmila Putin declared at a meeting with representatives
of the Armenian intelligentsia at the centre’s opening ceremony.

‘Language is an instrument of communications between the people.
Contacts, exchange of opinions, feelings and emotions is one of the
greatest joys that life can give, and that is unthinkable without
language,” she said. Learning a language one learns to understand
the soul and character of the people whose language is studied,” she
said. “People who have once been to Armenia, Yerevan will have a piece
of that country living in their hearts forever,” Lyudmila Putin said.

The new book center is located in one of the most beautiful mansions in
the center of Yerevan that dates back to 1901. The building houses the
Armenian society for cultural contacts and cooperation with foreign
countries for more than 50 years.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Tbilisi residents block railroad, highway to airport

Tbilisi residents block railroad, highway to airport
By Eka Mekhuzla

ITAR-TASS News Agency
March 25, 2005 Friday

TBILISI, March 25 — Tbilisi residents are blocking roads to demand
the supply of electricity and natural gas.

About 200 residents of the Isani-Samgori district of Tbilisi blocked
the road to Tbilisi Airport on Friday. They said they had not had the
power supply for two days and the natural gas supply for three days.
They demand at least six or eight hours of power supply a day, the
same as it is in adjoining districts of the city.

Another group of city residents has blocked a motorway and the
railroad, which is used by commuter trains and long-distance trains
headed to Armenia. They set on fire car tires on the railroad track
and blocked the traffic.

Similar actions were held in other districts of Tbilisi. Central areas
of the Georgian capital have 18-20 hours of power supply per day,
while the majority of Georgian regions have only two or three.

Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Nogaideli has asked citizens to
understand the limits on power supply.

“An accident in the Kavkasioni power line, which exacerbated the
national energy deficit, happened on reasons beyond our control,”
he said.

“The energy deficit will persist for some time after the reconstruction
of the power line, as it is planned to stop the Inguri hydropower
plant for three-month repairs,” Nogaideli said.

Limits on power supply in Georgia result from the reduced output of
Georgian hydropower plants and the malfunction of the Kavkasioni power
line, which meets 20% of Georgian electricity needs. Heavy snowfalls
damaged two sections of the Kavkasioni power line – one in Georgia
and the other in Russia’s Karachayevo-Cherkessia – on March 2. The
snow blanket is ten meters thick in those places, so the power line
has not been restored.

Russia welcomes restoration of Armenian-Azeri dialogue at variouslev

PanArmenian News
March 25 2005

RUSSIA WELCOMES RESTORATION OF ARMENIAN-AZERI DIALOGUE AT VARIOUS
LEVELS, RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY REPRESENTATIVE SAID

25.03.2005 07:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia is ready to actively promote settlement of
the Karabakh problem both in bilateral aspect and as an OSCE Minsk
Group Co-Chair, Russian Foreign Ministry official representative
Alexandre Yakovenko told Novosti Russian news agency. In his words,
«Russia welcomes the restoration of the Armenian-Azeri dialogue
at various levels, first of all between the Presidents of the two
countries, supposing it will bring the stands of the parties over
the key settlement issues closer and finally – to the working out of
a formula of a mutually acceptable solution of the conflict.»

–Boundary_(ID_WYyUvxyDTzUO/vWmMscNQw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

US historian addresses parliament

US historian addresses parliament

The Independent – United Kingdom
Mar 25, 2005

TURKEY: THE US historian Justin McCarthy addressed the Ankara
parliament yesterday as part of Turkey’s campaign to counter decades-
old claims that Armenians suffered genocide at Ottoman Turkish hands
during and after the First World War. The 90th anniversary of the
alleged genocide is on 24 April.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

HALI Tour of Paris

NEWS & VIEWS
HALI Tour of Paris

Hali Magazine On-line

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Timothy Gerwin reports: To celebrate the Institut du Monde Arabe’s
momentus exhibition ‘Le Ciel dans un Tapis’ HALI organised a weekend
of carpet and textile events in Paris to coincide with a lecture
series hosted by the Institut on 11 March 2005. For those carpet
lovers who braved Paris’ most recent transit strike the events began
that afternoon, with a rendez-vous at Galerie Triff to preview its
suzani exhibition.

At the IMA the lecture series was opened by one of the carpet
exhibition’s co-curators, Roland Gilles, who interprets Islamic
architecture and art as a transliteration of heavenly bodies. He brings
the stars to ground in the constellations he perceives in the designs
of the carpets assembled for the exhibition, whence comes its title,
The Sky in a Carpet. Mr Gilles completed his imagery by suggesting
that the red medallion of a 16th-century Ushak (cat. no. 39) may be
meant to represent the Earth floating in the infinite space of the
carpet’s dark blue field. His neo-Platonist theory appealed greatly
to the French au dience.

Co-curator Joelle Lemaistre then questioned the dating of a compartment
rug fragment (cat. no. 33).  Her argument, based on related forms
and motifs in Chinese and Timurid art, pondered whether the carpet’s
origins lie in the late 15th century, rather than the early 16th
century. Ms Lemaistre points to the medallions of a later Turkish
rug in the exhibition (cat. no. 31) as possible descendants of the
fragment’s design. She persevered for her appreciative audience
despite the technical problems that plagued the slide presentations
of all the speakers.

Next Susan Day, whom HALI congratulated in the November/December
issue for her Louvre appointment as carpet advisor, spoke of the
new Department of the Arts of Islam. She elaborated on the project
to convert the Louvre’s Cour Visconti into new Islamic galleries to
house the expanded collection created by a long-term loan from Paris’
Musée des Arts Decoratifs. The winner of a concours to select the
project architect may be announced in April. The combined collection
of Islamic art will be amongst the world’s largest.

Ms Day previewed the combined carpet collection, illustrating the
collection’s history and honoring the Musée des Arts Decoratifs’
early 20th-century benefactor, Jules Maciet. She also announced her
hopes for a reunion of the 16th-century Paris-Krakow medallion carpet
in a Safavid exhibition for 2007, and her plans for a comparative
study of the many Indo/Persian carpets held in the museum. Susan Day
is authoring a catalogue raisonné planned for the opening of the
Louvre’s new galleries in 2009.

Concluding the lectures, Paris dealer Berdj Achdjian recounted tales
about a huge figure in the carpet world, a man well represented at
the IMA’s exhibition, Calouste Gulbenkian. “Monsieur Gulbenkian”,
as all knew him, said the works in his collection were like his
children; after 45 years spent gathering them their care was his
greatest concern. He insisted that repair work be done in his home
and met Berdj Achdjian’s father, a restorer, as he sat on the floor
of the Gulbenkian home working on a carpet.

A proud Armenian born in Kayseri, Turkey, Gulbenkian had no
formal education in art history. His wealth and good taste being
necessary but not sufficient, his collection’s richness is due to
Gulbenkian’s many connections with art dealers, art historians, and
related experts; he sought multiple recommendations before making
any acquisition. Fortunately for those of us who enjoy his legacy,
Calouste Gulbenkian was not cheap.

Next morning Achdjian welcomed Hali, collectors such as Betthany
Mendenhall, dealers like Mr Vrooyers from Antwerp, specialists,
including Marcel and Annettte Korolnik-Andersch, and the Louvre
to view an impressive range of North African weavings, including a
bold Moroccan Ahmar carpet. Everyone pored over three 19th-century
embroidered Tunisian silk marriage tunics, and the tour of Achdjian’s
inventory ran from a 15th-century Armenian brocade from Jerusalem to
a luxurious First Empire cape with ermine border.

After lunch under the Pyramid of the Louvre, the party ended with a
walk through the Islamic galleries.

–Boundary_(ID_vJ3cuoLrreLqLfMCSCi6kA)–

www.hali.com