Over 75 US Reps Sign Document Calling White House to Recog. Genocide

MORE THAN 75 MEMBERS OF U.S. CONGRESS SIGN TO DOCUMENT WITH CALL TO
WHITE HOUSE TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, JULY 7. ARMINFO. The American Assembly of America today
commended the Armenian-American community for rallying congressional
support for H. Res. 316, a bipartisan resolution that would reaffirm
the U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide. To date, more than 75
Members of the House have signed on as cosponsors to the bill, which
was introduced by Congressmen George Radanovich (R-CA), Adam Schiff
(D-CA) and Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank
Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ).

ARMINFO was informed in AAA, the four sponsors introduced the
resolution in the House of Representatives on June 14 with the strong
backing of the pan-Armenian community. H. Res. 316 calls upon the
President to “ensure that the foreign policy of the United States
reflects appropriate understanding” of the “Armenian Genocide” and to
“accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of
1,500,000 Armenians as genocide” in the President’s annual message.

Prior to the congressional July Fourth recess, Congressman Schiff
introduced an alternative measure without the support of the Armenian
Caucus that would also reaffirm the U.S. record on the Armenian
Genocide.

ANKARA: Aliyev’s Historic Gesture to TRNC

Zaman, Turkey
July 6 2005

Aliyev’s Historic Gesture to TRNC: Baku Begins Flights and Trade
Azerbaijan will take more concrete measures to end the isolation
imposed on Northern Cyprus, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said
yesterday, June 30.

Saying, “I have given the order for charter flights to TRNC” Aliyev
announced the Azerbaijani companies would open offices in the
northern part of the island. In Baku for a two-day official visit,
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan met with Aliyev
yesterday. In a joint news meeting, Aliyev said the Cypriot Turks
should be saved from isolation and the embargoes imposed on them,
adding that his country is ready to do its best on the subject.

Indicating that he gave the order for the start of flights to TRNC,
Aliyev said Azerbaijani companies would also go to the island, see
the investment opportunities, and open branches there. The policies
of the two countries overlapped about Cyprus said Erdogan and Aliyev
had given him “good news” during the conversation, the Prime Minister
added.

Both leaders talked about regional and international issues as well
as bilateral relations. Aliyev mentioned, the two friendly countries
would be in close cooperation in the future just as it was in the
past. The Azerbaijani President thanked the Turkish Prime Minister
for the support Turkey had given on the “Upper Karabag (Karabagh)
issue” between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Turkey and Azerbaijan would
make efforts to take their relations to a further point with the ‘two
states one nation’ understanding said Erdogan, indicating, Turkey
shared the same opinions with Azerbaijan about the Upper Karabagh
issue: “We are in favor of a solution. Armenia’s attitude will
determine the solution.” When reminded that the European Union (EU)
sets a condition for Turkey to open an Armenian border, Erdogan
responded: ” There is no such thing in the EU Copenhagen political
criteria. No such thing can be imposed on Turkey. This is Turkey’s
own decision. Turkey knows how it will decide about this.”

State Budget Revenues from Profit Tax Increase by 71.2% Jan-May 2005

RA STATE BUDGET REVENUES FROM PROFIT TAX INCREASE BY 71.2% IN
JANUARY-MAY

YEREVAN, JULY 4, NOYAN TAPAN. In January-May, 2005, the profit tax
revenues of the RA state budget grew by 71.1% to 18.9 bln drams (about
41 mln USD). According to the RA National Statistical Service, in the
months under review, VAT increased by 20.8% to 52 bln drams, the
excise tax – by 8.7% to 14 bln drams. The income tax grew by 28.1% to
9.1 bln drams in the period under review, the simplified tax – by 7%
to 2.7 bln drams, while the fixed payments – by 14.6% to 5 bln
drams. The amount of customs duty revenues grew by 39.5% to 6 bln 98.8
mln drams. Other tax revenues of the state budget increased by 138.6%
in January-May and made 1.4 bln drams.

TBILISI: Saakashvili vows to reunite Georgia – fuller version

Saakashvili vows to reunite Georgia – fuller version

Rustavi-2 TV, Tbilisi
4 Jul 05

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has pledged that the separatist
conflict in South Ossetia will be resolved “very quickly”. In a speech
at the Georgian Technical University on 4 July, he said that the
success of last year’s “revolution” in Ajaria reinforced his belief
that no challenge was too big and that Georgia would eventually also
regain control of its other breakaway region, Abkhazia. To allay
widespread fears in Akhalkalaki and Ninotsminda districts, which are
populated almost exclusively by ethnic Armenians, about unemployment
following the departure of Russian troops from the area, Saakashvili
announced that farmers in these two districts would have a monopoly on
food supplies to the Georgian armed forces. He also announced measures
to fight organized crime, which, he said, had “spread to all spheres
of life without exception”. The following is an except from
Saakashvili’s speech, broadcast live by Rustavi-2 TV; subheadings
inserted editorially:

Late PM Zhvania helped Saakashvili enter politics

[Saakashvili] Good evening. I am very pleased to see you all here. It
is a great honour for me to unveil the Zhani Kalandadze auditorium at
the Georgian Technical University this evening.

Zhani Kalandadze was governor of Guria [who was killed in a road
accident in May]. He was one of the most brilliant representatives of
Georgia’s new generation. Just as Zurab Zhvania [late Georgian prime
minister] in the past opened the way for many politicians, including
myself, into Georgian politics, I am proud that I created an
opportunity for Zhani and many of his friends – we created this
opportunity and we are still creating such opportunities every day
because these doors are open to everyone – to realize their
potential. [Passage omitted]

Fighting organized crime

There have always been two kinds of mentality in Georgia. Political
struggle is a normal phenomenon. When people quarrel or even swear at
each other because of their political convictions, this is part of a
normal democratic process. However, when people are ready to stoop to
anything, even harm their own country, just because they do not like
Saakashvili, [Education Minister Kakha] Lomaia or someone else, this
smacks of something completely different. This is about us not having
a tradition of statehood. [Passage omitted]

We know that we are facing a fierce battle. We are not going to go
back on our promises. Since we said that we would fight corruption, we
will fight to the death in order finally to defeat it. This fight will
not cease even for a minute. Since we said that we would eradicate
organized crime, we will eradicate it. The past few days have shown us
that, despite several brilliant operations by Georgian police,
organized crime in Georgia has deep roots. It has spread to all
spheres of life without exception. It has sufficient power to
influence public opinion. It has spread to politics. When I saw the
politicians who took to the street to defend bandits, I was not
surprised to see some of them, but there were several whose presence
there shocked me personally. It could not believe it was possible.

I am saying this because we are not going to put up with this. Later
this week I will be sending a bill to parliament. I am using the
president’s right to initiate legislation. It is a Georgian bill on
the fight against organized crime that will punish criminals not only
individually – all countries punish killers – but the way it is done
in America, Italy and other countries that have faced similar
problems. Membership of an organized crime gang will be punishable.

You know that that there are kingpins in some areas. Some young people
who, unfortunately, are involved in this because of social problems
look up to them as an example to follow. Anyone found guilty of being
an area kingpin will go to prison. Crime bosses will automatically
find themselves in prison, irrespective of whether or not they are
personally involved in theft and extortion. We will starve organized
crime of oxygen. We will adopt a law that our country needs. You want
to be a so-called tough guy and member of an organized crime gang, you
can do it, but only in a Georgian prison, not as a free person in any
part of Georgia.

Ethnic Armenians to supply food to Georgian troops

That is one initiative we will propose. Second, we must understand
that there are very important issues we need to address. That is what
we discussed today with the defence minister. Russian troops will soon
withdraw from Georgia, so this is the other plan we have drawn up. You
know that the population of Javakheti – in Ninotsminda and Akhalkalaki
– has always been wary of it [Russian troop withdrawal] because they
are the military base’s suppliers. This is their livelihood. Two
thousand Russian military personnel buy Ninotsminda and Akhalkalaki
potatoes, milk, cheese and other produce, helping local people to make
ends meet. Naturally, they always had fears that they could face
problems once the Russian base went.

Today, together with the Georgian defence minister, we have decided
that all 20,000 military personnel of the Georgian armed forces –
catering standards in our army are now better than they are at this
military base – will be fully supplied with agricultural produce by
residents of Akhalkalaki and Ninotsminda. We will buy this produce in
Ninotsminda and Akhalkalaki, so that none of our citizens of Armenian
origin or any person living there has any concerns about the loss of
income because the Georgian state is growing stronger in the area and
foreign influence is weakening.

No challenge is too big

Naturally, there are many problems in Georgia. What I have mentioned
are just some of our problems. Almost half of Georgia’s population
lives below the poverty line set in accordance with European
standards. That is a catastrophic problem. You know that there are
people who are still unable not only to go to university but even go
to school. However, there are two ways of looking at things.

[George] Bernard Shaw used to say: There are people who see things and
say, why? But there are also people who dream things and say, why not?

Zhani Kalandadze and all of us belong in the group of people who say,
why not? You know that we have been answering this question all the
time. When last year masked gunmen prevented the Georgian president
from crossing the Choloki [river] and entering Ajaria, it all looked
like an impossible dream. At the time, many politicians and political
pundits who are active today were saying that it was impossible, that
the situation was terrible, that there was no hope for the future and
that it was impossible to solve this problem quickly. All attempts to
solve it were described as deliberate acts of provocation and excesses
of revolutionary zeal by the Georgian government. What Georgia
witnessed in Batumi on 5 May when we arrived there on the first
anniversary of the Ajarian revolution, when the whole of Batumi was
celebrating in the streets, was indeed a dream come true.

South Ossetia conflict to be settled “very quickly”

Is it not a dream come true, for example, that at the end of this week
in Batumi, in rooms where they for years discussed future plans for
Georgia’s disintegration, we will be holding a conference, together
with our citizens of Ossetian origin, on a peaceful settlement of the
conflict in the Tskhinvali region? I promise you, as president of
Georgia, that this conflict will also be resolved very quickly.

When all this was happening in Ajaria last year, people in the first
group kept complaining, whereas we were saying, why not, everything
would be fine. That is how it worked out in the end. [Passage
omitted]

Energy problems to be resolved

Georgia is currently facing energy problems. You know that all our
power facilities were run down for many years. Yet, every family in
Georgia needs electricity. Until recently, the majority of analysts
thought this would be impossible. I say to you that this is
possible. Why not? We need to work on it and we will achieve it.

Pessimists proved wrong over Russian troop withdrawal

Or, for example, last year people were saying that we should accept
that Russian troops would not leave. They kept telling us that we
should understand that such issues could not be decided in Georgia,
that Georgian diplomats could not deal with them and that such issues
were decided somewhere else, I don’t know where. We said, why not,
this would be decided in Georgia and we would stand together and
achieve this. We have done it: an agreement has been signed and the
process has begun.

Abkhazia will “most definitely” be reclaimed

Or take, for example, people who do not believe in their own country
and say that [reclaiming] Abkhazia is impossible. I recently attended
a conference in Monaco where I received a prestigious award. I can
tell you, without any false modesty – you know that we, Georgians, are
fond of saying that we are the best, which is good – that Bichvinta
[Georgian name for Pitsunda, a sea resort in Abkhazia] and Gagra [in
Abkhazia] as well as, by the way, Kvariati and Gonio [Ajarian sea
resorts] are certainly nicer places [than Monaco], providing they are
well looked after. When I said this to one or two of my compatriots
who accompanied me there, they said, come on, Bichvinta and Gagra may
well be better, but when will Bichvinta and Gagra be [under Georgian
control again]? This is not possible.

Why not? Most definitely, yes. Most definitely, we will achieve
this. I saw a roadside poster today saying that Abkhazia is causing us
pain. Of course it is, but we should not just be writing that it is
causing us pain. Forget about pain, let’s take down these posters, get
ready and get strong instead of constantly grieving over our pain and
distress and the tragedy that has befallen us. All that could have
befallen us has done so. It is now time to get back on our feet and
improve.

Georgia to emerge as “developed European country”

I would particularly like to say this today: can Georgia ever be a
developed European country? Together with Zhani Kalandadze and each of
you, who are the best part of Georgian society and its best young
representatives – I would like to say on Zhani’s behalf and on your
behalf, why not, it certainly will.

Thank you very much. [Applause]

Antelias: H.H. Aram I delivers a lecture to professors from Vienna

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HIS HOLINESS DELIVERS A LECTURE TO 30 PROFESSORS AND
DOCTORAL CANDIDATES FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA

Thirty professors and doctoral candidates from the University of Vienna
visited Bikfaya on July 3 and listened to a lecture entitled “Christianity
in the Middle East today” by His Holiness Aram I.

His Holiness highlighted the important dates and events since the existence
of Christianity in the Middle East and outlined the challenges and
difficulties that Christianity faces today.

The Catholicos also talked about the priorities that should guide
Christianity today, emphasizing the importance of Christian unity,
evangelism, social service and Christian education.

His Holiness concluded that the churches of the Middle East are part of the
ecumenical movement and stressed the importance of their cooperation with
churches in other regions.

His Holiness also asked some questions related to the Armenian Church,
Lebanon and Christian-Muslim dialogue at the end of his lecture.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

TOL: An Arms Race Looms?

Transitions Online, Czech Republic
July 4 2005

An Arms Race Looms?

by Samvel Matirosyan and Alman Mir-Ismail
4 July 2005

Armenia and Azerbaijan differ over Russia’s decision to pull out of
bases in Georgia. From EurasiaNet.

Armenia and Azerbaijan are reacting differently to the Russian
withdrawal from bases in Georgia. Politicians and pundits in
Azerbaijan view the move as a potential security threat due in large
part to Moscow’s decision to transfer to Armenia a portion of the
military hardware now in Georgia. Armenian experts, meanwhile,
downplay the significance of the transfer, contending that it does
not alter the existing strategic balance.

After years of wrangling, Russian and Georgian officials announced on
30 May that the withdrawal of Russian troops and materiel from the
Caucasus country would be completed by 2008. Russia’s pull-out from
its two remaining bases on Georgian territory – in Batumi and
Akhalkalaki – began 1 June with the dispatch of a 15-car train from
Batumi to Armenia, loaded with ammunition, various equipment and
anti-aircraft weapons. Political analysts have spent the weeks since
the announcement of the base-withdrawal deal speculating about its
geopolitical ramifications. In particular, many have wondered whether
the Russian move could influence negotiations to end the
Armenian-Azeri struggle over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Moscow has mounted diplomatic offensive to dispel the notion that its
actions could rearrange the geopolitical order in the Caucasus. `The
withdrawal of part of Russian arms from Georgia to Armenia will not
change the balance of forces in the Transcaucasus,’ Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov told journalists on 14 June.

Russian defense officials insist that transferred arms and equipment
will be kept in storage at Russia’s 102nd base in Gyumri, in northern
Armenia, stressing that the Armenian military will not have access to
the weaponry. `We are going to closely keep the limits set up by the
[amended 1999] treaty on conventional armaments in Europe,’ Russian
Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said during a 6 June news conference,
Rosbalt news agency reported. According to Ivanov, most of the
military equipment and cargo now in Georgia will be shipped back to
Russia from Black Sea port city of Batumi.

News of the withdrawal from Georgia initially was applauded in
Azerbaijan, where officials at first interpreted the move as a sign
of declining Russian influence in the Caucasus. But approval quickly
turned into doubt following the announcement that a portion of the
Russian arms and equipment would be moved to Armenia. On 23 May, the
Azeri foreign ministry sent a protest note to Moscow, demanding an
explanation for the transfer. `From the point of view of the law, the
transfer of arms from one base to the other is quite normal. It
concerns Armenia and Russia. However, the South Caucasus requires
demilitarization. Therefore, there is no need to keep in the region
tanks and other heavy military equipment. We do not consider it
necessary,’ Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov told journalists.

Speaking at a 25 June military academy graduation ceremony, President
Ilham Aliev indicated that the Russian move could help spur a
regional arms race. He said that Azeri defense spending would
increase to $300 million in 2005, up from last year’s level of $175
million. `We had to take appropriate measures,’ Aliev said, referring
to the Russian transfer of materiel to Armenia. `We did so
immediately and increased our military spending. Military spending
will continue to increase in the future.’

`Our army should be strong to solve the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict
over [the breakaway region of] Nagorno-Karabakh,’ Aliev added.

Moscow’s statements concerning the transfer do not appear to have
fully reassured the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Alliance members have expressed carefully worded concern about the
pull-out’s impact on the regional balance. `We welcome the withdrawal
of troops. However this step should not affect regional stability in
the South Caucasus,’ NATO Assistant Secretary-General for Defense and
Policy Planning John Colton said in Baku on 27 June. The defense
alliance plans to raise the issue with Moscow `in the near future,’
the Regnum news service reported Colton as saying.

Many Azeri observers now believe that, in deciding to shift weaponry
from Georgia to Armenia, Russia’s primary intention was to strengthen
Moscow’s own geopolitical position in the region, and not to bolster
Yerevan’s strategic situation vis-a-vis Baku. A June 1 commentary
published by the independent daily Zerkalo complained that `Russia
demonstrates its unwillingness to significantly reduce its military
presence in the South Caucasus region, including [along] the borders
with Iran and Turkey.’ Nasib Nasibli, a political expert at the
Foundation for Azerbaijan Studies, agreed. `This act by Russia is
aimed at preserving their influence in the Caucasus.’

According to the Russian-Georgian withdrawal agreement, at least 40
units of armored equipment, including 20 tanks, are to be removed
from Georgia by 1 September. The Azerbaijan-based Turan news agency
published a report stating that up to 40 Russian tanks could be moved
to Gyumri from Akhalkalaki. The Azeri foreign ministry announced
that, if such a report proves accurate, Baku would consider
implementing `corresponding measures.’ Earlier, Azeri officials
stated that they might reconsider the country’s $7 million-per-year
lease of the Gabala radar facility to Russia.

Analysts in Yerevan argue that Baku’s concerns are misplaced. `[I]f
we look at the Russian military presence in the South Caucasus. .
..the bases in Armenia practically decide nothing, while the radar
station in Gabala, located on the territory of Àzerbaijan, appears to
be of great strategic importance,’ said Hayk Demoyan, an regional
political expert at the Caucasus Media Institute.

Rather than dwelling on the Russian equipment transfer, Armenia has
tried to concentrate international attention on its expanding ties
with NATO. On 16 June, Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan presented
Armenia’s Individual Action Partnership Plan (IPAP) to the NATO
Council. The country has since received assurances from US Ambassador
to Armenia Robert Evans that the Russian transfer of arms and
equipment will not preclude further cooperation between Yerevan and
NATO.

The press service of the defense ministry in Yerevan has denied the
existence of any agreement that would give Armenian military forces
access to the arms and equipment at Russia’s base in Gyumri. The
defense ministry also insists that no plans or intentions exist
concerning the potential transfer Russian military personnel to
Armenia from Georgia.

Despite such assurances, the debate continues in Baku over what
constitutes an appropriate response. Azeri analysts suggest the most
likely counter-move would be a strengthening of Baku’s relationship
with NATO. Some point out that on 6 June, Turkey – an Atlantic
alliance member and Baku’s closest ally – announced plans to allocate
$2.1 million to help the Azeri military adopt NATO military
standards.

In recent weeks, President Ilham Aliev’s administration has toned
down its angry rhetoric concerning the equipment-transfer issue. Some
observers suggest that Baku has come to the realization that it
cannot stop the transfer. Others say that, with potentially pivotal
parliamentary elections scheduled for November, Aliev is reluctant to
risk a full-blown dispute with Russia. Bilateral ties have been
strengthening since 2000, and Aliev clearly wants to keep them
cordial. `We are very satisfied with the standard of our
relationship, one of strategic partnership that meets the interests
of both Russia and Azerbaijan,’ Aliev said at an economic conference
in St. Petersburg on 14 June.

Samvel Martirosyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and political
analyst. Alman Mir-Ismail is a freelance political analyst from Baku.
This article first appeared on EurasiaNet.

World Bank still financing Armenia

A1plus

| 17:57:27 | 01-07-2005 | Economy |

WORLD BANK STILL FINANCING ARMENIA

Armenia has managed to `convince’ the World Bank to continue the financing
of the Informational Technologies field till the end of 2006. {BR}

The World Bank will finance the continuation of the program `Companies’
Incubator’. It started in 2002 when the Bank allotted 5 million USD to
Armenia for the program. During the creation of the program there was
financing from other organizations as well which allowed us to `economize
means’.

Today the World Bank will not allot money to Armenia, but they will continue
to use the economized means. And as the `Companies’ Incubator’ is considered
a realized structure in Armenia, in the new stage of financing the means
will be directed to the development of the structure.

The `Companies’ Incubator’ will provide business-consultation. The head of
the company Bagrat Engibaryan informed the journalists today that the
branches of the Incubator will create new companies. In the closest future
two will be created.

It should also be mentioned that in the field of informational technologies
there are about 100 companies in Armenia which have realized production and
import of about 50 million USD.

Casualties Of Ore?: Residents Of Mining Town Say The Price Of Progre

ARMENIANOW.COM

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Phone: +(374 1) 532422
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CASUALTIES OF ORE?: RESIDENTS OF MINING TOWN SAY THE PRICE OF PROGRESS IS THEIR HEALTH
By Arpi Harutyunyan
ArmeniaNow reporter

Three or four times a week, at around 5pm, an earthquake takes place
in the town of Kajaran.

The earth shakes as workers at the Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum
Plant detonate explosions in open cast mines to extract the ore
for processing.

Kajaran is a town in Syunik marz, 346 kilometers from Yerevan, with
an official population estimated at 9,800, though many residents
insist that it is lower. The mine is some 10 kilometers outside it,
but the “earthquake” registers in the shaking of the houses and the
large cloud of dust that rises into the sky.

“We are already used to the explosions. Another question is that all
that dust covers the town later and we breathe the air. We process
waste saturated with a thousand poisonous materials, and drink
contaminated water,” says Ofik, a 62-year-old resident of Kajaran,
whose son also works at the plant and has a serious illness of
stomach. (The names of workers at the plant have been changed and
their last names are not given at their request.)

“A year ago another piece of land was allocated to the town cemetery
and it was full by the end of the year.”

Arman, 24, who left Kajaran for Yerevan with his wife and baby son,
says: “There are hardly 7,000 people in Kajaran and many leave the
town because the environment is completely destroyed. Three or four
people a day die, especially in spring, although the Municipality
may insist that this is nothing unusual.”

According to the National Statistical Service and the Municipality,
87 deaths were registered in 2004, compared to a maximum of 53 annually
in the previous four years.

Arman’s wife Ani, 22, was pregnant when they decided to leave because
of concerns about the bad air and water. She recalls: “When I was
pregnant I couldn’t stand Kajaran at all; I would always choke,
I couldn’t breathe. Even in the cold winter months, the air in the
town is heavy with sulphur gas. The snow is always yellow in Kajaran.”

Kristine, 25, from Kajaran, will give birth to her second child in a
few months. She is also concerned about her baby’s health. She says:
“I already have a 2-year-old child and we are constantly in hospital
because the boy suffers intestinal problems. There is not a single
healthy person in the town.”

Workers at the mining plant are in the incomparably worse conditions,
but are unwilling to talk about their health for one simple reason:
they are afraid of losing their jobs because that means condemning
their families to poverty. There is not a single family in Kajaran
that does not have someone working in the industry.

“Everyone is afraid of complaining because they will be fired. Where
we work in the plant there is little oxygen, it is terribly dusty and
there is high radiation. The plant has partial filtration which is why
the rest of the residents suffer along with the workers,” says Hayk,
a 24-year-old locksmith at the plant.

The head of the Industrial-Technical Department of the plant Grenik
Hambartsumyan insists that neither the workers nor the residents have
health problems.

“Don’t you see that everyone looks fresh? We provide special food,
including compulsory milk. I’ve worked here for many years, do you
see anything strange about me?” he says.

Some people at the plant recall that special conditions existed in the
past, but not now. Valeri, 50, says: “What milk are they talking about
when we don’t even respirators to protect us against the dust? Our
mouths are full only of dust and dirt.”

It is known that the molybdenum dust affects human and especially
men’s fertility. Nina, 50, whose son works in the industry, says:
“It is shameful to say, but men here become impotent after 30. The
majority of women have tumors of the uterus and while still very
young are no longer able to deliver children. The number suffering
from cancer is also high.”

Lernik Davtyan, a construction engineer, also witnesses the high
level of radiation in the locality. In the 1980s he was a member of
the Armenian National Movement Environmental Commission and studied
the environmental situation in Kajaran.

“We studied the moss that accumulates radiation most of all. There
were places where the reading went off the dial on the measuring
apparatus. We sent samples to France and the response was that there
was a ‘Chernobil cocktail’ in the moss,” says Davtyan.

Even Hambartsumyan does not deny the effects of molybdenum. He says
amicably: “I know how men’s genitals go out of use as a result of
molybdenum. The radiation is high especially in the mine and the
plant. That is why I did everything to be engaged more in office
work and I reached the position of the head of production-technical
department.”

That a significant part of the people in Kajaran are ill is
obvious. People even joke that the town is distinguished from others
by its collective cough. A significant part of residents have lung
problems.

The chief doctor in the town Vartan Avagyan, of the Kajaran Medical
Center, says: “The town is considered a hotbed of illnesses of
the thyroid, female genitals and breast. The number of pregnancy
pathologies is also high. One can say that the number of births and
deaths is close to the norm.”

The center’s urologist Virab Minasyan confirms that illnesses of the
male genitals are common. He has worked in Karajan for several months;
previously the hospital had never had an urologist.

Emil Babayan, head of the Industrial Toxicology Laboratory at the
Research Institute for General Hygiene and Professional Diseases,
explains the possible effects of the industrial processes on health.

“Waste from the plant includes elements of molybdenum, quartz, lead
and other metals. These agents first of all affect lungs, genitals,
reproduction function, the development of the embryo in the uterus,
the central neural system, intestines and liver,” says Babayan.

“Since Soviet times, cases of silicosis, breathing illnesses and blood
disorders have been most frequently seen in Kajaran. Silicosis is an
industrial illnesses linked to breathing mine dust.”

The health of the population worsened especially in 2000 after
molybdenum processing resumed at the complex. Every day for four years,
round the clock, the flues of the works belch sulphur dioxide into
the town’s air.

“The gas expelled from the works affects especially the lungs and
hemoglobin in the blood. That is why people get tired quickly, the
body weakens. The contaminated air affects the mental abilities of
children as well,” says Svetlana Hayrapetyan, a chemistry and biology
teacher at Kajaran’s School Number 2.

Vladik Martirosyan, an engineer at the Environmental Department of
the industries confirms the danger of the exhaust fumes.

“There were times when there was no pipe and the sulphur would fall
directly onto the town. Now the pipe is 300-400 meters above the town,
but sulphur and dust still affect people. We still can’t totally
neutralize the sulphur fumes and sulphur after all has a destructive
character, it is natural that it can’t be safe,” says Martirosyan.

The director of the industries, Maxim Hakobyan, believes people in
the town do not have serious health problems.

“The works can’t cause significant damage. The industry has studied
many times the influence the production may have on people’s health
and I can tell you there are no serious problems today,” he says.

Klement Hakobyan, head of the Kapan Mining Metallurgy and Enrichment
Laboratory, says he created a technology in the 1970s that almost
totally removes sulphur gas from fumes released into the atmosphere.

“The management of the plants does not want to apply this technology
to avoid extra expense. Today, nearly 35 per cent of the sulphur gas
in the atmosphere is the product of emissions. It is destroying nature
and causing a thousand breathing illnesses,” he says.

Despite everything, Mayor Vartan Gevorgyan sides with Hakobyan, the
director of the plant, in arguing that gas releases do not affect
people’s health.

“The geographical location of our town does not allow the emissions
to reach it. In Soviet times, releases were poured directly into the
river if there was an accident, but now everything is under strict
control. We take drinking water from that river, catch trout there,”
says the Mayor.

Today the Ministry of Health conducts no studies on the
possible influence of the environment on the health of the
population. Responding to ArmeniaNow’s inquiry, Norayr Davidyan,
the Minister of Health, said: “No separate financing is allotted for
the National Program on Activities in the Sphere of Environmental
Hygiene…at present the RA Ministry of Health does not conduct any
survey on the morbidity of the population in Syunik marz.”

The Ministry of Environmental Protection has never conducted monitoring
of air quality in Syunik marz. The water basin has been studied in
1988, 1989, 1990 and 2004.

“In terms of contamination Zangezur (an historical name for Syunik),
particularly Kajaran, Kapan, Agarak as industrial towns are in the
risk zone: but the Armenian Environmental Monitoring Agency does not
conduct regular observations of the air in these settlements. Nor
does the Armenian Environmental Monitoring Agency conduct regular
surveys of soil contamination,” says Rudolf Torosyan, director of
the Center for Environmental Influences at the state Ministry of
Environmental Protection.

Kajaran is first of all known for its molybdenum mines, and therefore
also for the copper and molybdenum industries through the Zangezur
Copper and Molybdenum Plant Closed Joint Stock Venture. Armenia has
7.6 per cent of the world’s molybdenum reserves, and 90 per cent of
that is exploited by the Zangezur plant. The Kajaran mine is unique
not only for its large size, but also for the high molybdenum content
of the ore.

“Owing to these industries, 60-65 per cent of the population has
well-paid jobs. In Soviet times, it had 1,600 people working there
and now there are 2,800. We consider Kajaran’s social problems
solved. There are 450-500 million drams circulating inside the town
each month, that’s 50,000 drams per capita,” says Gevorgyan, the Mayor.

The Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Plant was founded in 1951. By
1957, nearly 1 million tons of mine ore had been extracted. The peak
year was 1989, when ore extraction reached more than 9 million tons,
but by 1992-1993 the industries had ground to a halt following the
economic collapse. Regular production resumed in 1994.

The Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Plant was sold in December 2004
for $132 million. A German company, Chronimet, bought 60 per cent of
the stock, with 15 per cent going to the Yerevan Makur Yerkat plant,
12.5% to Zangezur Mining organization (whose president is the plant’s
director Maxim Hakobyan), and 12.5% to Armenian Molybdenum Production
enterprise.

According to Hakobyan, the plant entered new phase of production
this year. He says: “In 2005 the volume of production will grow by
15 per cent, the amount of molybdenum and copper extraction from the
mining ore will increase. We will double the volume of production in
coming years.”

The intensified production will bring significant environmental
problems, admits Artur Ashughyan, head of the Economics of Natural
Resource Use and Mining Industries at the Ministry of Trade and
Economic Development.

“Of course, an increase in production will lead to environmental
problems, the appearance of Kajaran will change, the mountains will
equal the town and there may be a need to move the town. But we will
become the first in the world for molybdenum production. We can say it
is inhuman but productive business can’t be done another way,” he says.

Klement Hakobyan, the head of the Kapan Mining Metallurgy and
Enrichment Laboratory, also believes the consequences may be grave
for the town.

“If the mine is exploited on a larger scale than environmental
catastrophes will be inescapable. It means that the amount of emissions
and waste will increase: the air and water will be contaminated,”
he explains.

According to data for 2004 from the Ministry of Environmental
Protection, the River Voghji, which runs through Kajaran, is
contaminated with nitrite, ammonium, copper, sulfate ions and
petroleum products.

The head of Environmental Protection at the ministry, Aram Gabrielyan,
states “no monitoring is made of the influence of the plant on the
environment”. That is to say, the ministry is content to accept the
data the plant provides.

“As a result of short term studies by the Ministry in 2004 it was
found that the activities of the plant have caused significant damage
to the environment. Consequently the Ministry obliged the plant to
reimburse the damage with 20 million drams,” says Rosa Julhakyan,
head of Accounting and Analysis Department.

Mayor Gevorgyan asserts that the environmental situation in the town
is regularly studied and no serious problems have been found. He says:
“Last year, the municipality invited the Eco-Balance organization
to study the ecological situation in the town. We were glad all the
results were positive.”

Gor Petrosyan, director of Eco-Balance, presents a different
picture. The organization was invited by the Mayor to conduct an
environmental survey in Kajaran and Kapan, but he says the mayor
intervened shortly afterwards to prohibit the continuation of the
survey.

“I was prohibited from studying the environment in Kajaran, but I
can say for certain that the situation is not just dangerous, but
terrible. This kind of ruthless exploitation of nature will have
tragic consequences,” says Petrosyan.

“The major problems are connected with the wastes poured into
gorges. Those agents are very mobile and if the waist tail storages
ever move and cause landslides, the local population will disappear. I
think the heavy metal in agricultural products will also exceed
the allowed norms and that will, of course, significantly impact on
people’s health.”

Srbuhi Harutyunyan, the President of the Social-Environmental
Association, who was also prohibited from continuing the research,
holds the same opinion.

“In 2004 the Mayor invited us to Kajaran to develop environmental
programs. We went there and got acquainted with the situation. But
when we said that we needed to focus on the influence of the copper
and molybdenum plant, they prohibited the studies.

“Both before privatization and after, there was no evaluation of
the influence of the plant on the environment. Wastes from the
industries are continuously poured into the River Voghjy without
necessary cleaning.”

Gorges near to the villages of Gharazam, Pukhrut, Voghji and Atsvanik
have served as plant waste tail storages since the 1970s. The first
three have been re-cultivated and are covered with topsoil of 50-60cm,
and today only the Artsvanik storage is operating.

“Big sums of money have been invested over the years to re-cultivate
the waste and cover it with a soil layer to avoid damaging the
environment. Trees have been planted on the territory; people cultivate
the land and rest there,” says Maxim Hakobyan.

Vladik Martirosyan worries most that attempts to use the re-cultivated
soil layer will result in landslides. He says: “In previous times,
people cultivated those lands, but now it is prohibited: those lands
can’t be irrigated, otherwise there may be landslides.”

Hakob Sanasaryan, President of the Union of Greens of Armenia, says
two key issues face Kajaran; the volume of open cast mining that is
destroying the ecosystem, and the amount of industrial waste.

“According to the data we have, nearly 90 million cubic meters of
waste are piled up there. It means that the pastures and the forests
will be useless for hundreds of years. Very aggressive agents are
moved there though pipes that frequently explode,” says Sanasaryan.

“Those agents mixed with rain and snow waters reach into the
lithosphere waters. That is both soil and water are contaminated. Since
the River Voghjy provides drinking water to the marz, people can
become carriers of dozens of illnesses.”

Sanasaryan continues: “I can vividly remember how Artsvanik was
destroyed, when industrial wastes began being poured into storage
there. Many gardens dried up, animals began dying. Many kinds of
chemicals and dangerous heavy metals have been poured into the
surroundings in an activated state and this has continued for over
30 years.”

Anahit Davtyan, a laboratory researcher at the Yerevan Center for
Hygienic and Epidemic Control, says toxic substances in irrigation
water easily affect people’s health.

“People do not drink that water, but dangerous combinations transfer
from the water into plants, from plants to animals, from animals to
people. As a result people get numerous illnesses,” she says.

The management of the plant now seem concerned about the health
of Kajaran’s inhabitants. Contracts have been signed with a number
of Yerevan hospitals to treat people working in the plant and their
families for free if needed. However, this has provoked irony rather
than happiness in the people.

“It seems like the plant makes people ill and then pays for them to
have treatment. It’s a kind of eyewash. We ordinary residents have no
alternative: either keep silent or lose the means of living. Complaints
would bring nothing: that’s for sure,” assures Seda, a 50-year-old
inhabitant of Kajaran.

www.armenianow.com

Azerbaijan to establish border control with Armenia, official says

Azerbaijan to establish border control with Armenia, official says

Interfax news agency, Moscow
23 Jun 05

BAKU

Azerbaijan intends to establish border control with Armenia, a country
it is at war with, the deputy commander of the Azerbaijani State
Border Service (SBS), Ilham Mehdiyev, has told an international
seminar on threats to border security in the South Caucasus. The
seminar opened in Baku today with support from NATO.

“Due to the military conflict with Armenia, we have been unable to
create proper border infrastructure in this direction, which is the
longest (1,007 km) section of our state border,” Mehdiyev said.

“We have already started preliminary work on creating the logistics
for establishing control over this section of the state border. I have
to say that this is an enormous project and, naturally, it will be
difficult to implement it without international support,” he said.

Mehdiyev also said that Armenia’s occupation of Azerbaijani
territories was adversely affecting regional development. He said a
threat was being posed to the East-West transport corridor and to the
implementation of international projects to produce and transport
Caspian hydrocarbons.

The deputy commander of the SBS also pointed to the difficult
situation on the southern border, especially in fighting illegal
migration and drug trafficking on the border with Iran.

“The situation in the north is also difficult. The tense
public-political situation in Chechnya and Dagestan affects the
security of the Azerbaijani-Russian section of the border. As is the
case with the Azerbaijani-Iranian border, smuggling and illegal
migration are still the most frequent types of violations on the
northern and northwestern sections,” he said.

[Passage omitted: importance of cooperation within the framework of
the regional alliance of Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova]

Armenia to develop relations with democratic Iraq, minister says

Armenia to develop relations with democratic Iraq, minister says

A1+ web site
23 Jun 05

Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan attended an international
conference in Brussels on 21-22 June dedicated to the restoration of
Iraq at the invitation of US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana.

[Passage omitted: background details]

The Armenian foreign minister said addressing the conference that “it
is very important to inform the people living in Iraq of the
consistent participation of the international community in the
restoration of the country. Even small countries like Armenia, which
participates only formally, understand very well the importance of
moral assistance.”

Speaking about Armenia’s participation in Iraq’s restoration, the
minister pointed out that “this country has natural resources. I mean
not only the wealth which is under the ground but also the numerous
ethnic groups populating Iraq.”

“The Armenian community living in Iraq is part of this wealth and they
are expected to make a contribution to the prosperity and peaceful
future of their country. In turn, Armenia wishes to develop its
relations with peaceful, unified and democratic Iraq,” the minister
said.