Facts on Cyprus

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
April 6, 2004, Tuesday

FACTFILE: Facts on Cyprus

The island republic of Cyprus lies in the eastern Mediterranean about
64 kilometres south of Turkey and 97 kilometres west of Syria. It is
the third largest island in the Mediterranean.

A few facts about Cyprus:

Population: 715,100 (south of the island, January 2004)

Size: 9,251 square kilometres

Capital: Nicosia (about 160,000 inhabitants in southern Greek part,
about 40,000 inhabitants in the northern Turkish sector)

Head of state/ government: President Tassos Papadopoulos

Population structure: Greek Cypriots 78 per cent; Turkish Cypriots 18
per cent; Maronites, Latin Roman, Catholics and Armenians 4 per
cent.(Latest estimates after immigration of Turkish settlers from
Anatolia: Greeks 70 per cent; Turks 30 per cent)

Religions: Greek-Orthodox: 99 per cent of the Greek Cypriot
community; Moslems: 100 per cent of the Turkish Cypriot community

Unemployment: 2.4 per cent (March 2004)

Currency: Cyprus Pound (CYP) 1 euro = 0.587 CYP 1 dollar = 0.4774 CYP

International vehicle CY registration:

“Hello”: “Kalimera” (Greek), “Guenaydin” (Turkish)

No official data has been released by the Turkish-occupied Turkish
Republic of North Cyprus which is not internationally recognized. The
population in North Cyprus is estimated at 220,000 Turkish Cypriots
and Turkish settlers as well as about 35,000 Turkish soldiers.

Why We Must Never Forget the Rwanda Genocide

Pambazuka 150
April 5 2004

Why We Must Never Forget the Rwanda Genocide

Fahamu (Oxford)

by Gerald Caplan

Pambuzuka News 150: A Weekly Electronic Newsletter For Social Justice
In Africa

This editorial was produced as part of a special issue of Pambazuka
News on the 10th anniversary of the Rwanda Genocide. The full issue
is also available on allAfrica.com Pambazuka News 150.

Those of us who are preoccupied, even obsessed, with commemorating in
2004 the 10th anniversary of the Rwanda genocide are often taken
aback when we’re asked what all the fuss is about. After all, just
today I received from the Holocaust Centre of Toronto an invitation
to join in commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Holocaust in
Hungary. Not the entire Holocaust, just the terrible Hungarian
chapter. Yet memorializing the genocide in Rwanda is never taken for
granted in the same way.

Isn’t it already ancient history? Aren’t there all kinds of human
catastrophes that no one much bothers with? Didn’t it take place in
faraway Africa, in an obscure country few people could find on a map.
Wasn’t it just another case of Africans killing Africans? What does
it have to do with us, anyway?

These questions deserve answers, not least because some are entirely
legitimate. Above all, it is fundamentally true that there would have
been no genocide had some Rwandans not decided for their own selfish
reasons to exterminate many other Rwandans. But once this truth is
acknowledged, a powerful case for remembering Rwanda remains, and
needs to be made.

The responsibility to remember:

First, Rwanda was not just another ugly event in human history.
Virtually all students of the subject agree that what happened over
100 days from April to July 1994 constituted one of the purest
manifestations of genocide in our time, meeting all the criteria set
down in the 1948 Geneva Convention on the Prevention and Punishment
of Genocide. Genocide experts debate whether Cambodia or Srebrenica
or Burundi were “authentic” genocides; like the Holocaust and (except
for the Turkish government and its apologists) the Armenian genocide
of 1915, no one disagrees about Rwanda. And since genocide is
universally seen as the crime of crimes, an attack not just on the
actual victims but on all humanity, by definition it needs to be
remembered and memorialized.

Second, it wasn’t just another case of Africans killing Africans, or,
as some clueless reporters enjoyed writing, of Hutu killing Tutsi and
Tutsi killing Hutu (or Hutsi and Tutu, for all they knew or cared).
The Rwandan genocide was a deliberate conspiratorial operation
planned, organized and executed by a small, sophisticated, highly
organized group of greedy Hutu extremists who believed their
self-interest would be enhanced if every one of Rwanda’s 1 million
Tutsi were annihilated. They came frighteningly close to total
success.

Third, the west has played a central role in Rwanda over the past
century. Just as no person is an island and there’s no such thing as
a self-made man, so every nation is the synthesis of internal and
external influences. This is particularly true of nations that have
been colonies, where imperial forces have played a defining role. To
its everlasting misfortune, Rwanda is the quintessential example of
this reality. The central dynamic of Rwandan history for the past 80
years, the characteristic that allowed the genocide to be carried
out, was the bitter division between Hutu and Tutsi. Yet this
division was largely an artifact created by the Roman Catholic Church
and the Belgian colonizers.

Instead of trying to unite all the people they found in Rwanda 100
years ago, Catholic missionaries invented an entire phony pedigree
that irreconcilably divided Rwandans into superior Tutsi and inferior
Hutu. When the Belgians were given control of the country following
World War 1, this contrived hierarchy served their interests well,
and they proceeded to institutionalize what amounted to a racist
ideology. At independence in the early 1960s, this pyramid was turned
on its head, and for the next 40 years Rwanda was run as a racist
Hutu dictatorship. None of this would have happened without the
Church and the Belgians.

The Culprits:

Last, but hardly least, the 1994 genocide could have been prevented
in whole or in part by some of the same external forces that shaped
the country’s tragic destiny. But without exception, every outside
agency with the capacity to intervene failed to do so. My own list of
culprits, in order of responsibility, is as follows:

-the government of France

-the Roman Catholic Church

-the government of the United States

-the government of Belgium

-the government of Britain

-the UN Secretariat.

I name the French and the Church first since they both had the
influence to deter the genocide plotters from launching the genocide
in the first place. Rwanda was the most Christianized country in
Africa and the Roman Catholics were far and away the largest
Christian denomination. Catholicism was virtually the official state
religion. Catholic officials had enormous influence at both the elite
and the grassroots level, which they consistently failed to use to
protest against the government’s overtly racist policies and
practices. Indeed, the Church gave the government moral authority.
Once the genocide began, Catholic leaders in the main refused to
condemn the government, never used the word genocide, and many
individual priests and nuns actually aided the genocidaires.

Rwanda was a French-speaking country, and France replaced Belgium as
the key foreign presence. When the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), a
rebel group of English-speaking Tutsi refugees from Uganda, invaded
Rwanda in 1990, the French military flew in to save the day for the
Hutu government. For the following several years, right to the very
moment the genocide began, French officials had enormous influence
with both the Rwandan government and army. They failed completely to
use that leverage to insist that the government curtail its racist
policies and propaganda, stop the increasing massacres, end the
widespread human rights abuses, and disband the death squads and
death lists.

Two months after the genocide began, a French intervention force
created a safe haven in the south-west of the country through which
they allowed genocidaires leaders and killers, fleeing from the
advancing RPF, to escape across the border into Zaire. From Zaire
they began an insurgency back into Rwanda with the purpose of
“finishing the job”. Eventually this led to the Rwandans invading
Zaire/Congo to suppress the insurgency, which in turn soon led to the
vicious wars in the Congo and the subsequent appalling cost in human
lives throughout eastern Congo.

Once the genocide was launched after April 6, 1994, the American
government, steadfastly backed by the British government, were
primarily responsible for the failure of the UN Security Council to
reinforce its puny mission to Rwanda. Under no circumstances were
these governments prepared to budge. The Commander of the UN force –
UNAMIR – repeatedly pleaded for reinforcements, and was repeatedly
turned down.

Two weeks into the genocide, the Security Council voted to reduce
UNAMIR from 2500 to 270 men – an act almost impossible to believe 10
years later. Six weeks into the genocide, as credible reports of
hundreds of thousands of deaths became commonplace and the reality of
a full-blown genocide became undeniable, the Security Council voted
finally to send some 4500 troops to Rwanda. Several contingents of
African troops were put on standby, but deliberate stalling tactics
by the USA and Britain meant that by the end of the genocide, when
the Tutsi-led rebels were sworn in as the new government on July 19,
not a single reinforcement of soldiers or material ever reached
Rwanda. This was one of the darkest moments in the history of the
United Nations.

As for Belgium, notwithstanding the racist attitudes and colonial
behaviour of its soldiers, their contingent was the backbone of
UNAMIR. When 10 Belgian soldiers were murdered by Rwandan government
troops on the very first morning of the genocide, the Brussels
government immediately decided to withdraw the remainder of its
forces and to lobby the Security Council to suspend the entire
Rwandan mission. Its motive was simple: They did not want to be seen
as the sole party undermining UNAMIR. At the Security Council, of
course, it found eager allies.

The role of the UN Secretariat is somewhat ambiguous. To a large
extent, its failure to support the pleas of its own UNAMIR Force
Commander reflected its lack of capacity to cope with yet another
crisis combined with its understanding that the US and Britain would
not alter their intransigent positions. Still, there were many
occasions when the Secretariat failed to convey to the full Security
Council the dire situation in Rwanda, and many opportunities when it
failed to speak up publicly in the hope of influencing world opinion.

A multitude of betrayals:

It is not far-fetched to say that the world has betrayed Rwanda
countless times since its first confrontation with Europeans in the
mid-1890s. This previous account has presented several of these
betrayals before and during the genocide: by the Catholic Church, by
the Belgian colonial power, by the French neo-colonial power, by the
international community.

To exacerbate further this shameful record, we need to look at the
past decade. First, the concept that the world owed serious
reparations to a devastated Rwanda for its failure to prevent the
genocide has been a total non-starter.

Second, there has been precious little accountability by the
international community for its failure to prevent. The French
government and the Roman Catholic Church have to this moment refused
to acknowledge the slightest responsibility for their roles or to
apologize for any of their gross errors of commission or omission.
President Bill Clinton and Secretary-General Koki Annan have both
apologized for their failure to offer protection, but have both
falsely blamed insufficient information; in fact what was lacking was
not knowledge – the situation was universally understood – but
political will and sufficient national interest. No one has ever quit
their jobs in protest against their government’s or their
organisation’s failure to intervene to save close to one million
innocent civilian lives.

Those we must not forget:

Finally, the very existence of the genocide has largely disappeared
from the public and media’s consciousness. This is the latest
betrayal. Marginalized during the genocide, Rwanda’s calamity is now
largely forgotten except for Rwandans themselves and small clusters
of non-Rwandans who have had some connection with the country or
specialize in genocide prevention. That’s why I founded the
Remembering Rwanda movement in July of 2001. I had four targets for
remembering: the innocent victims; the survivors, many of whom live
in deplorable conditions with few resources to tend to their physical
or psychological needs; the perpetrators, most of whom remain free
and unrepentant scattered around Africa, Europe and parts of North
America; and the so-called “bystanders”, the unholy sextet named
earlier. Rather than being passive witnesses, as the word “bystander”
implies, all were active in their failure to intervene to stop the
massacres, and all remain unaccountable to this day. It is time the
Rwandan genocide is treated with the concern and attention it so
grievously earned.

* Gerald Caplan is the author of Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide
(2000), the report of the International Panel of Eminent
Personalities appointed by the Organization of African Unity to
investigate the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, and the founder of
“Remembering Rwanda: The Rwanda Genocide 10th Anniversary Memorial
Project”.

* NOTE FOR EDITORS: Please note that this editorial was commissioned
from the author for Pambazuka News. If you would like to use this
article for your publication, please do so with the following credit:
“This article first appeared in Pambazuka News, an electronic
newsletter for social justice in Africa, “. Editors
are also encouraged to make a donation.

Further details:

http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=21165
www.pambazuka.org

ANKARA: Who Would Gain What From A Solution In Cyprus?

Turkish Press
April 1 2004

Who Would Gain What From A Solution In Cyprus?
BYEGM: 4/1/2004
BY MURAT YETKIN

RADIKAL- While Ankara’s National Security Council is evaluating
recent development on Cyprus, other countries will hold similar
meetings. Therefore, it would be useful to summarize the expectations
of the parties involved.

The Greek part of Cyprus: This is the party least willing to reach a
solution by May 1. It has scored economic and political progress even
as its Turkish neighbor has stagnated under a political and economic
embargo. It is acting with the assurance of guaranteed European Union
membership. But due to its worries about the sovereignty of the
Turkish side and international pressure, it’s still at the table.

The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC): Nicosia’s greatest
hope is to gain EU membership and international recognition without
harming bizonality and Turkey’s guarantees. TRNC President Rauf
Denktas’s current stance is negative. The government can be a winner
if it manages to convince its people to approve an agreement.

Greece: If no agreement is reached, the Greek part of the island will
become an EU member, and Athens will be keeping its promise to the
Greek Cypriots. But it would face heavier EU pressure and would be
held responsible for a division in Cyprus and excluding Turkey from
the Union. In addition, the unresolved situation in Cyprus would make
reaching a solution in the Aegean more difficult. This situation
contradicts Greece’s policies of removing any threat from the east
and cutting its defense expenditures.

Turkey: A just and permanent solution in Cyprus will benefit Turkey
in many ways. Firstly, it will remove a real obstacle to Turkey’s EU
membership. Secondly, Anakra will have proved it can work within
Europe’s culture of political pacts. Thirdly, Turkey will be able to
conduct its foreign policy more effectively. Better steps will be
taken in the Middle East, the Balkans and the Caucasus.

Britain: The third guarantor nation for Cyprus will feel better if a
unified Cyprus joins the EU. The Cyprus problem will then be part of
the Union. If these problems end with Turkey’s own membership, this
will mean security and stability in the eastern part of Europe.

The European Union: A solution in Cyprus will boost the arguments in
favor of Turkey’s EU membership. In this respect, Germany’s claim
that Turkey as a secular Muslim country implementing Western
democratic values would constitute a bridge to other Muslim countries
would be strengthened.

The United States: Washington has more than one expectation in
Cyprus. A solution in the eastern Mediterranean could be an example
for the conflicts in Israel-Palestine and Armenia-Azerbaijan. The
solution in Cyprus on land could be an example for the Azerbaijani
land that was invaded by Armenia [upper Karabagh]. The Armenian
diaspora in the US is the only obstacle to such a solution. A Cyprus
deal would help the US convince the Armenians.

Fresno stadium-area redevelopment OK’d

Fresno stadium-area redevelopment OK’d
By Jim Davis
The Fresno Bee
March 31, 2004

A proposal for a $350 million to $400 million mix of housing, entertainment
and retailers in downtown Fresno won unanimous support Tuesday from the
Fresno City Council.

Forest City Enterprises envisions the development on 85 acres southeast of
Grizzlies Stadium. The project could include a lake, a river walk or a
series of fountains.

“We believe in downtown Fresno,” said Andres Freedman, project developer
with Forest City. “We believe it has a lot of potential, but we need to do a
lot of due diligence.”

The Fresno City Council told its staff to negotiate an exclusive agreement
with Forest City to develop in the area.

With an exclusive right to develop the area, Freedman said, Forest City can
start environmental, traffic and other studies and contact potential tenants
for the area. He said his company believes the area can be redeveloped.

“Market studies suggest that there’s a great opportunity,” Freedman said.

Council Member Tom Boyajian said the council hoped its decision to build the
baseball stadium would spur development in downtown.

“I was hoping that we would be able to attract someone to the dance like
you,” Boyajian said.

But property owners in the area and other residents expressed concerns about
the project’s impact.

Larry Kragh, president of Arrow Electric Motor Service, which is in the
study area, said his business has supported the city for years. He asked
that the city assist business owners who could be affected by the
development.

“Don’t make me pay for this project,” Kragh said.

The project would be in an area generally bounded by Union Pacific Railroad,
Van Ness Avenue, Tulare Street and Freeway 41.

Forest City Enterprises, a real estate company based in Ohio, is a property
owner and partner in the MarketPlace at River Park shopping center in north
Fresno.

The company is one of the nation’s largest of its kind and has developed
urban centers throughout the country, said Dan Fitzpatrick, executive
director of the city’s Redevelopment Agency.

Fitzpatrick said the company is looking at redeveloping a large area of
downtown.

“The area we’re talking about is as big as Universal Studios,” Fitzpatrick
said. “It’s as big as Old Town Pasadena.”

Fitzpatrick said redeveloping the area could be a boon for the city in many
ways, including more property taxes as property values rise.

The project — known as the South Stadium project — will be sandwiched
between two other major downtown developments.

To the west, a development group has proposed building hundreds of homes and
adding retail and commercial shopping to the historic Chinatown district.

To the east, Gunner-Andros Investments plans to build Old Armenian Town, a
series of high-rise office buildings anchored by a state appellate
courthouse.

City staffers are expected to return a negotiated agreement with Forest City
in 45 days.

The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or 441-6171.

http://www.fresnobee.com/home/story/8368873p-9189647c.html

75-Nation Study of Lying Shows Differences Among Cultures

75-Nation Study of Lying Shows Differences Among Cultures
Released: Mon 29-Mar-2004, 18:10 ET

Newswise – Americans think they can detect a lie less than half of the
time. Norwegians and Swedes rate themselves even worse. Turks and
Armenians, however, say they can spot a liar upwards of 70 percent of
the time. Worldwide, people surveyed say they can detect 53 percent of
lies.

Those are among the findings of work done by Texas Christian University
Psychology Professor Charles F. Bond, and fellow researchers. Bond
helped to explain research into international deception at a
Congressional briefing session in Washington, DC recently.

`We have conducted a 75-nation study with 4,800 participants,’ says
Dr. Bond. `Eye contact, or lack of it, was mentioned more than any
other cue as an indicator that a person is lying.’

And all that shows, apparently, is just how often people can be wrong.

`This belief is most likely inaccurate,’ says Dr. Bond.’ least in
western research, eye contact has only a weak relationship to
deception.’

While shifty eyes are regarded with suspicion across the globe, the
researchers did find some international differences.

`Around 15 percent of respondents say that liars actually make moreeye
contact,’ says Dr. Bond. `We were interested in this minority view.’

In lands where Islam is the dominant religion, just under 30 percent
of respondents said that people make more eye contact when they are
lying. Fewer than 15 percent of residents of lands where Protestant
Christianity was the dominant religion felt the same way and the
figure was about 11 percent in nations where Roman Catholic
Christianity was dominant.

People who live in the poorest nations tend to believe that they are
most effective at spotting whoppers, Dr. Bond notes.

There are differences among cultures in the estimation of how many
lies are being told. Taiwanese and Portuguese believe they are hearing
about four fibs per week. Americans think they are exposed to eight
prevarications weekly.

Pakistanis and Algerians tend to be less trusting. Those surveyed in
those nations think they are mislead between 12 and 16 times weekly.

There are also differences among nations in peoples’ evaluations
oftheir own abilities to lie. In the United States, people believe
they can get away with lying 56 percent of the time. Chileans and
Argentines, by contrast, believe that they will be caught about 60
percent of the time. Those living in Moldova and Botswana think they
are detected lying fewer than 25 percent of the time.

Protestants think they get away with lying about 55 percent of the
time while Catholics believe that about half of their lies are
detected.

`Muslims rate themselves the worst at lying,’ says Dr. Bond.

Muslims think they get away with it only 47 percent of the time.

Dr. Bond outlined his research in a presentation titled `International
Deception,’ March 19 at the Rayburn House Office Building in
Washington, DC as part of a congressional briefing titled `Detecting
Deception: Research to Secure the Homeland.’

The event was sponsored by the Consortium of Social Science
Associations, the American Psychological Association and the National
Communication Association with funding from the W. K. Kellogg
Foundation.

Landau adds life to Saroyan’s ‘Time of Your Life’

Alameda Times-Star, CA
March 26 2004

Landau adds life to Saroyan’s ‘Time of Your Life’

WILLIAM Saroyan was just 30 when he wrote his most famous play, “The
Time of Your Life.” Up to that point in his career, he was known for
several short stories, including “Daring Young Man on the Flying
Trapeze,” and for being a brash, confident writer who turned out to
be the best-known Armenian-American to come from Fresno.

“The Time of Your Life,” a sprawling ensemble piece set in a bar
along San Francisco’s Embarcadero, opened on Broadway in 1939 and

promptly made Saroyan a notable man of American letters. The New York
Times called his play a “prose poem in ragtime,” and major awards
soon followed. When he won the Pulitzer Prize for drama, Saroyan
refused the honor. “Commerce should not patronize art,” he said.

In the preface to the play, Saroyan wrote what has become the epitome
of Saryonesque style: “In the time of your life live — so that in
that good time there shall be no ugliness or death for yourself or
for any life your life touches. Seek goodness everywhere, and when it
is found, bring it out of its hiding place and let it be free and
unashamed … In the time of your life, live — so that in that
wondrous time you shall not add to the misery and sorrow of the
world, but shall smile to the infinite delight and mystery of it.”

That paragraph touched director Tina Landau and made her want to
direct “The Time of Your Life” for Chicago’s famous Steppenwolf
Theatre Company two years ago.

“That paragraph has truly changed my life,” Landau says. “In
rehearsals we created a tradition of reading the paragraph and
talking about it each week. We choose one of the imperatives and
really analyze it, and it was amazing because over time, we all found
ourselves in very little ways on a daily basis trying to seek
goodness everywhere.

“It’s sort of an impossible oath to see the best in everything, to
see the glass half full. And there were, at varying points, varying
levels of skepticism and despair in the measuring up against it. But
over time, we have all been deeply touched by those words.”

Years before, when she had read Saroyan’s play, Landau had dismissed
it as unwieldy and sentimental, stuck in its era and more than a
little nostalgic.

But after the events of Sept. 11, Landau returned to the play and
embraced it passionately.

“What I had seen as a weakness, a kind of rambling, non-narrative
form, suddenly became a strength to me when I read it the second
time,” Landau says. “It was free form and associative, like a giant
jazz improvisation with voices and instruments. Saroyan described
another of his works as a ‘circus, a melodrama, a lecture, a
philosophy of life, anything you like, whatever you want.’

“With that in my head, ‘Time of Your Life’ became a wonderful collage
of moments that worked in and of themselves. I grew to admire his
sense of abandon in terms of not dealing directly with a well-made
plot.”

When Landau’s “Time” opened in Chicago in 2002, the play won raves
not unlike those that greeted the original production more than 60
years earlier.

That production was re-mounted earlier this year as a co-production
between Steppenwolf, Seattle Repertory Theatre and San Francisco’s
American Conservatory Theater. Following the Seattle run, the
large-scale play with a cast of 24 re-opens Sunday at the Geary
Theatre.

Landau, one of this country’s maverick directors with a flair for
pushing theater — especially musical theater — in new directions,
was mostly unfamiliar with Saroyan’s work when she began working on
“The Time of Your Life.”

Like many of us, she had read his novel “The Human Comedy” in high
school, but after devouring his enormous body of work — novels,
short stories, plays, essays — she discovered an intriguing artist.

“Saroyan was an incredibly complex and contradictory person,” she
says. “I have to be careful what I say about him because there are
descendants and foundations devoted to him everywhere, but in his
work, he was able to express a generous spirit and world view that
maybe he was not as capable of expressing in real life.

“He was extreme and robust and led more from his heart than from his
head. He was impassioned and opinionated. In his work, he practiced
what he preached in terms of live! His work is alive and direct and
not ornate. It goes right to the pulse.”

To research the play, Landau spent five days in San Francisco to see
if she could find all the places mentioned in the play, which means,
essentially, she went bar hopping.

“I had a great time,” she says. “I hung around the waterfront and saw
where Izzy Gomez’s bar, the one that Saroyan turns into Nick’s
Pacific Street Saloon, used to be. My impression was that whatever it
was Saroyan loved about San Francisco — he said every block is a
short story, every hill a novel — is still there.”

The concept behind the new production is, in essence, to create the
feel of a sprawling Thomas Hart Benton mural. The set has no walls,
and there is indeed a mural at the back of the stage that will be
completed little by little each day of the play’s month-long run.

The 24 actors, who play 50 roles, hang out on the set for about 30
minutes before the show, and don’t leave during intermission. There’s
also ample period music throughout the performance.

“The whole idea of this play was to create something truly alive,”
Landau says. “Saroyan said, ‘In the time of your life, live,’ so I
wanted something to actually happen in the theater between the play,
the actors and the audience. If I can’t do that, I’d rather not do
anything.”

Landau and her crew have attempted to structure the play so that it
can embrace spontaneity and what she calls “true aliveness.”

“I feel like we’ve done that somewhat,” Landau says. “I feel a bit
like I’ve been channeling Saroyan.”

“The Time of Your Life” continues through April 25 at the Geary
Theater, 415 Geary St., San Francisco. Tickets are $20-$73. Call
(415) 439-2228 or visit

www.act-sf.org

BAKU: Azeri, Armenian foreign ministers postpone meeting

Baku Today

Azeri, Armenian foreign ministers postpone meeting

Baku Today
25/03/2004 17:50

Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers will not meet in Prague on March
29, 2004, according to Trend News Agency.

The meeting of the two country diplomats under the auspices of OSCE Minsk
group chairmen has been postponed according to the foreign ministry of
Azerbaijan. A new timing of the meeting remains unclear, the agency said.
Azeri foreign minister Vilayat Guliyev and Armenian foreign minister Vardan
Oskanyan had met earlier in Bratislava during a wider Europe conference held
on March 18-19 in Slovakia.

British Airways Throws in the Towel

The Georgian Messenger
23 March 2004

British Airways throws in the towel

By Allison Ekberg
Despite an announcement in February that after a one-year break in service,
British Mediterranean would restore air traffic between Tbilisi
and London in March, senior managers from the carrier were unable to
finalize the resumption of services during a visit to Tbilisi last week
and have announced that the company will not return to Georgia. “In spite of
the ongoing and resolute efforts of the British Embassy in Georgia, the
British government, the new Georgian government and British Mediterranean
Airways to resolve this situation, the Georgian Civil Aviation Authorities
[CAA] remained determined to obstruct the resumption of air services between
Georgia and the United Kingdom by British Mediterranean Airways,” reads the
statement issued on Monday. British Mediterranean Airways (BMed), which
operates under a
franchise agreement with British Airways argues that the reasons given by
the CAA over the past year for denying their permit have constantly
changed and that most recently they demanded “an exceptionally high number
of documents including some that are not permitted under the Air Service
Agreement (ASA).” The ASA is the International Treaty that governs air
services between countries. The British carrier also objects to requests for
a commercial agreement with Airzena arguing that under the recently
negotiated Air Service Agreement “there is no
requirement for us to enter into commercial cooperation in any form.”

While British Airways states that it would be willing to discuss mutually
beneficial cooperation with Airzena after flights are resumed, they
“will not however cooperate in a manner that financially and commercially
disadvantages our company.” “These facts have been communicated to the
Georgian government at the highest levels,” says British Airways. Despite
the fact that a decree was signed by the
current Speaker of Parliament Nino Burjanadze when she was interim
president, the return of the airline remained the subject of controversy.
Opponents maintain that local companies are short-changed by this agreement,
though others note that the issue is of political and economic importance to
Georgia and that resolving it in this way is in the strategic interests of
the country and its future economic development, including attractiveness to
investors. The new government has repeatedly stated its interest in
re-establishing relationships with foreign companies. “I am not afraid of
lobbying for British Airways and Turkish Airlines because I believe that
settling this issue is crucial for our integration into Europe,” Parliament
Speaker Nino Burjanadze told journalists in February. The speaker told The
Messenger that while she already signed the decree, she would fully legalize
it by passing it through Parliament as well. The outgoing Parliament failed
to approve the decree this year due to the lack of a quorum. In March 2003,
British Airways and Turkish Airlines (Turkish later re-turned) were forced
to discontinue flights to and from Tbilisi when the Parliament voted not to
extend their flight permits. The reason for this was complicated but
included disagreements over the
nature of Commercial Agreements and observation of the “parity principle”
between foreign and domestic companies. According to this principle, if
Georgian Airlines did not carry out as many flights as a foreign carrier,
the latter was obliged to pay financial compensation.
Some Georgian authorities also alleged that the British and Turkish
companies received extra privileges and as a result Georgia did not
collect the tax revenues it should according to international practices.

It was also reported at the time that BMed had problems with the Georgian
Tax Department. On Monday the companysaid that the taxation is-sue raised by
the previous government “never had any substance.” The company adds that
through meetings with the Ministry of Finance and Tax Department “we have
agreed to a satisfactory resolution of this issue.” Reached at the time for
comment, Temur Tetradze, Head of the Transportation Department of the CAA
told The Messenger, “we are following the decision of the
Parliament.Parliament issued the order to restrict the flights.” Just last
week the former head of the Civil Aviation Administration Zurab Chankotadze
was sentenced to three months pre-trial detention in connection with
charges that he exceeded his official duties, is guilty of mismanagement and
stole over GEL 750,000 from
the state budget. British Airways claims that due to many years of
continuous difficulties with the Georgian Civil Aviation Administration it
has been unable to increaseits investment in Georgia where it previously
operated three flights a week compared to seven flights a week to Baku.
While it would consider resumption of services if there are “positive
changes in the Civil Aviation Administration,” it adds that “if the business
environment does not significantly change, it is unlikely that we will
resume flights between Tbilisi and London.

British Airway’s Tbilisi office will remain open through March 31, 2004
after which passengers should contact the British Airway’s office in
Yerevan.

Romania-Armenian commerce and industry chamber established

ArmenPress
March 19 2004

ROMANIA-ARMENIAN COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY CHAMBER ESTABLISHED

BUCHAREST, MARCH 19, ARMENPRESS: The Romanian-Armenian commerce
and industry chamber was established lately in Bucharest at the
initiative of Varuzhan Voskanian, the chairman of the local Armenian
Union.
Addressing the meeting Armenian ambassador to Romania, Yeghishe
Sarkisian, spoke about democratic and economic reforms in Armenia and
its achievements in offering a business friendly environment and
favorable legislation.
A local lawyer, Maria Udrian, member of the Armenian Union board,
was elected chairperson of Romania-Armenia commerce and industry
chamber.

Slovenian ambassador hands credentials

ArmenPress
March 19 2004

SLOVENIAN AMBASSADOR HANDS DUPLICATES OF HER CREDENTIALS

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, ARMENPRESS: The newly appointed ambassador of
Slovenia to Armenia, Mrs. Jozefa Puhar, seated in Athens, Greece,
handed over the duplicates of her credential to deputy foreign
minister Ruben Shugarian today .
Reiterating Armenia’s commitment towards deeper integration with
European organizations, Shugarian emphasized Slovenia’s accession to
the European Union in two months and expressed his country’s
willingness to develop diverse relations with Slovenia and learn its
accession experience.
The ambassador was quoted by the foreign ministry as saying that
her country looks towards deepening ties with the South Caucasus and
Armenia in particular.