Iran-Armenia gas pipeline will become a reality soon

PanArmenian News
Dec 1 2004

IRAN-ARMENIA GAS PIPELINE WILL BECOME A REALITY SOON

However, the pipeline will not have a transit function yet.

The construction works of the Armenian segment of Iran-Armenia gas
pipeline started on November 30. It should be reminded that the start
construction works has been postponed several times. If the
construction works comply with the planned schedule, Iranian gas will
be supplied to Armenia already in 2007. The investments are expected
to be recompensed in nine years.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ «Sanir» Iranian company will carry out construction
of the first 42km long Meghri-Qajaran segment. According to the
agreement reached during the visit of the president of Iran Mohhamad
Khatami, the Iranian party will fund $30 million. The issue of
contract of the second phase of the pipeline is still not settled.
The second phase is estimated $90 million. As for the construction of
the Iranian part of the pipeline, the construction works are carried
out as scheduled. The cost of the Iranian segment is $110 million.

Construction works are already under way, but the Russian `Gasprom’
still hasn’t given any answer about its participation in the project.
`Gasprom’ doesn’t say `no’. The interest of the Russian company in
the Iran-Armenia pipeline is obvious. But things have gone no further
than elaboration of technical-economic justification of possible
investments. It should be reminded that during his visit in Yerevan,
the vice- president of `Gasprom’ Alexander Ryazanov stated that the
payback dates are a bit above the norms accepted by `Gasprom’.
`Gasprom’ prefers short-term investments. In other cases, political
decisions are usually made. Conflicts between commercial and
political interests are always solved in favor of political
interests. It is worth mentioning that conflicts of that sort are
quite common. Things were like that in spring when `Gasprom’
vice-president opposed to the Prime Minister Michael Fradkov, who
claimed that Moscow intended to supply Russian gas to the third world
markets through Armenia.

It is quite obvious that Moscow delays its answer due to political
considerations, although Russians do not have any grounds for anxiety
concerning the perspectives of Iran Armenian gas pipeline. The
Russian gas will not be forced out from Armenian market by the
Iranian gas, as the latter is nearly twice as more expensive. The
Iranian gas will just ensure Armenia’s energetic safety. It is known
that the Iranian gas will be processed into electricity, which will
be supplied back in its full capacity. The local consumer will
receive gas from Iran only in case of interruptions in the Russian
gas supply. As for the concerns about the plans of Iran to enter the
western market, it is already evident that the Armenian pipeline will
not have transit functions. This became clear when it turned out that
the diameter of the pipe would not exceed 700mm. A pipe with such a
diameter will not allow pumping enough gas needed for transit.

Nevertheless, the gas pipe brought to the Armenian border is 1.5m in
diameter. It means that Teheran does not exclude the possibility of
widening the diameter of the Armenian pipeline in future. However
this information should not alarm Russians. It should rather
encourage them because Moscow has too little resources to prevent the
plans of Iran concerning the outlet to European markets. If Iranian
gas is meant to enter Europe in one way or another, it would be much
better for Russia if it passed through Armenia. In Moscow they
realize it and perhaps this is why they don’t refuse to participate
in the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline construction project.

There are many alternatives to the Armenian route. At the end of
summer, during negotiations held between the first vice-president of
Iran Mohhamadreza Aref and the prime minister of Turkey Redjeb
Erdoghan a preliminary agreement was reached concerning Iranian gas
transit through Turkey. Besides, the gas pipeline passing through
Azerbaijan is currently being restored. After restoration, the
Iranian gas will get to Georgia already in spring. After this, the
project of laying a gas pipeline along the bottom of Black Sea to
Ukraine will again become relevant. It is estimated that the transit
pipeline Iran-Europe will cost $5 milliards.

Money is not going to be a problem, because the demand for Iranian
gas in Europe increases year by year, which is also promoted by the
recent political processes in Ukraine. Western power engineering
specialists accept that people living in Eastern Europe will have to
celebrate Christmas without light and heat, since the conflict
between Moscow and Kiev may bring to the closure of the pipeline. As
is well known, one third of gas going to Europe passes through the
territory of Ukraine. Creation of alternatives to this source of
energy supply is one of the most topical problems for Europe. Many
members of Russian government realize that sooner or later the
alternative will be created and the Iranian gas will go to northwest,
but the thing is in which way will it go to northwest. In current
conditions the Armenian route is the most acceptable for Moscow.
Russia’s presence in Armenia will enable to control the situation to
some extent. Thus it would be quite logical if the Russian government
ordered `Gasprom’ to participate in the construction of Iran-Armenia
gas pipeline.

Arab News Editorial: Democracy Games

Arab News
Dec 1 2004

Editorial: Democracy Games

The political drama in Ukraine is being replicated across the Black
Sea in Georgia’s breakaway region of Abkhazia. There too, Moscow has
been deeply involved. There too, its candidate faces defeat but is
busy pulling as many strings as possible in order to turn the
democratically expressed will of the people on its head – with
Moscow’s full support.

In last month’s presidential elections, opposition candidate Sergey
Bagapsh was widely thought to have defeated the Kremlin-backed
candidate, Raul Khadzhimba. That was recognized by the region’s
Supreme Court but it then reversed its decision because of pressure
from the outgoing government. The government has demanded a repeat
election and the outgoing President Vladislav Ardzinba now refuses to
step down until one has taken place. Bagapsh, however, intends to
have himself inaugurated this Saturday and he has a massive army of
supporters to back him.

Last Friday they stormed government buildings in the capital,
Sukhumi. The next day, perhaps sensing the direction things were
moving, Parliament recognized him as the new president. But matters
are getting messy: Moscow has threatened to intervene in Abkhazia
despite the fact that the province is part of an independent country.
Were that to happen, it would trigger a major international row.

Moscow of course cares not at all. It has done it before. It backed
the occupation of the disputed Armenian-majority region of Nagorno
Karabakh to weaken Azerbaijan; it supports the Russian-dominated
breakaway region of Transdniester to undermine Moldova; it supported
the Abkhaz breakaway from the very start to punish Georgia for
leaning toward NATO and the West. Now it is busy stirring up threats
of secession in Ukraine if the pro-Western Viktor Yushchenko becomes
president.

On Saturday, the Ukrainian representative to the EU said that Ukraine
was an old nation but a very young democracy. He could just as easily
have been talking about Abkhazia or Azerbaijan or any of the other
former Soviet states that are experiencing so many difficulties with
democracy. Not that being `a young democracy’ is any guarantee of
things working well, as the row over who won the US election four
years ago proves.

There are lessons to be learned about democracy in places where it
does not have roots. Before condemning Russia for its own retreat
from democracy or its unashamed meddling in its former empire,
however, we should not ignore the evident hypocrisy of the rest of
us. In 1996, when Boris Yeltsin defeated the renascent communists in
the Russian elections, most of us breathed a heavy sigh of relief
– because we did not want the communists to win. But the election was
fixed. Likewise, the world said nothing in 1991 when the Algerian
elections were quashed after the Islamists had won.

Definitions of democracy, it seems, are not unlike definitions of
terrorism. They can too easily depend on where we stand and who else
is involved.

Iran: Iran-Armenia gas pipeline project launched

IRNA, Iran
Nov 30 2004

Iran-Armenia gas pipeline project launched

Moscow, Nov 30, IRNA — An Iranian company started construction work
on a 41-km gas pipeline at Armenian border town of Megri on Tuesday
to carry Iranian gas to the republic.
Armenian Prime Minister Andranika Markaryan, Energy Minister Armen
Movsisian and other ministers, officials of Oil Ministry, Head of the
Presidential office Artashes Tumanian, Iranian Energy Minister
Habibollah Bitaraf and Ambassador to Yerevan Alireza Haqiqian were
present at the inaugural ceremony.

Iran and Armenia on May 13 signed an agreement to construct a 41-km
gas pipeline between the Armenian cities of Megri and Kajaran.

The 41-km pipeline is expected to cost 210-220 million dollars.

Addressing the inaugural ceremony, Markaryan said that November 30
will be recorded in the history of Iran-Armenia ties.

He said that implementation of this project would have an important
effect on the whole economy of Armenia.

Bitaraf, also speaking on the occasion, said that launching of the
project was a token of the two countries’ determination to bolster
bilateral cooperation.

The Iranian ambassador to Yerevan termed the construction of new
pipeline as a strategic measures which would lead to development of
the country and reinvigoration of the region.

The first gas consignment is to be transferred to Armenia in January
2007.

ARKA News Agency – 11/30/2004

ARKA News Agency
Nov 30 2004

RA President received secretaries of Security Council of OACS
Country-Members

Today Armenian President receives Chairman of Board of Directors of
RAO UES of Russia Alexander Voloshin

Parliamentary Delegation of Armenia left for Moscow for participation
in the 8th sitting of inter-parliamentary committee for cooperation

RA Foreign Minister receives the former head of the monitoring group
of the CE Committee of Ministers

*********************************************************************

RA PRESIDENT RECEIVED SECRETARIES OF SECURITY COUNCIL OF OACS
COUNTRY-MEMBERS

YEREVAN, November 30. /ARKA/. RA President Robert Kocharian received
secretaries of Security Council of OACS Country-Members, President’s
press office told ARKA. OACS Director General Nikolay Borduja
estimated Yerevan meeting as productive.
Press release said that the heads of departments on fight against
drugs also took part in the sitting. The parties discussed the
results of anti-drug operation Canal-2004. Kocharian paid attention
to close cooperation in given direction. L.D. –0–

*********************************************************************

TODAY ARMENIAN PRESIDENT RECEIVES CHAIRMAN OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
RAO UES OF RUSSIA ALEXANDER VOLOSHIN

YEREVAN, November 30. /ARKA/. Today Armenian President Robert
Kocharian received Chairman of Board of Directors of RAO UES of
Russia Alexander Voloshin, as Armenian President Press Service told
ARKA. According to the press release, the sides discussed the issues
of Armenian-Russian cooperation in energy sector, particularly those
performed by RAO UES of Russia programs in Armenia.
To mention recently Midland resources officially declined the rumors
on sale of its shares in Electric networks of Armenia to Holding RAO
UES of Russia. The rumors were spread in relation to Deputy Chairman
of RAO UES of Russia Sergey Rappoport.
In Armenia RAO UES Russia owns Sevan-Hrazdan HPP Cascade, Hrazdan TPP
and manages financial flows of ANPP. In May 2003 the holding created
CJSC International Energy Corporation for management of Sevan-Hrazdan
HPP Cascade. Financial flows of ANPP are in trustee management of
CJSC Inter RAO UES – an affiliate of RAO UES Russia for 5 years.
Property complex of Hrazdan Thermal Power Station was transferred to
balance of newly created CJSC Hrazdan Energy Company. It Board of
Directors include representatives of Rusian Federal Agency for
management of state property, Russia Finance and Economy Minsitries,
Rosenergo, RAO UES of Russia, Rosenergoatom, Armenian-Russian CJSC
ArmRosgasprom as well as Armenian energy Minsitry. The financial
streams of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant was transferred with 5
years period to trust management of CJSC Inter RAO UES – affiliate of
RAO UES of Rusia (60%) of shares and concern Rosenerhoatom (40%).
T.M. -0–

*********************************************************************

RA FOREIGN MINISTER RECEIVES THE FORMER HEAD OF THE MONITORING GROUP
OF THE CE COMMITTEE OF MINISTERS

YEREVAN, November 30. /ARKA/. The RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
received Ambassador Pietro Ago, the head of the monitoring group of
CE Committee of Ministers. According to the Information and Press
Service Department of RA Foreign Ministry, during the meeting Pietro
Ago told Oskanian that the Italian Defense Ministry plans to hold a
seminar on regional strategic development and asked the RA Foreign
Minister to state Armenia’s position regarding the issues of Nagorno
Karabakh conflict settlement.
According to the press release, Oskanian acquainted the guest with
Armenia’s approaches to regional problems, especially focusing on
processes around Nagorno Karabakh. He also touched upon the process
of Armenia’ honoring the commitments to the Council of Europe.
Ago Group was founded in January of 2001 simultaneously with
Armenia’s joining the CE. It is involved in monitoring of honoring
Armenia’s commitments to the CE and functions in the framework of CE
Committee of Ministers. L.V.–0 –

*********************************************************************

PARLIAMENTARY DELEGATION OF ARMENIA LEFT FOR MOSCOW FOR PARTICIPATION
IN THE 8TH SITTING OF INTER-PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEE FOR COOPERATION

YEREVAN, November 30. /ARKA/. The Armenian Delegation headed by Vice
Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Vahan Hobhannisyan left today for
Moscow for participation in the 8th sitting of inter-parliamentary
committee for cooperation of the Federal Assembly of Russia and
Armenian National Assembly. As Armenian Assembly Public and Press
Relations Department told ARKA, the participants of the sitting that
will last until Dec 3 will discuss political and military cooperation
between Armenia and Russia, cooperation of parliamentarians of two
countries in parliamentary organizations and other issues. Chairman
of the Council of Federation Sergey Mironov and Co-Chairs of
Inter-Parliamentary Committee – the Member of the Council of
Federation Nikolay Ryzhkov, Deputy Chairman of eth National Assembly
of Armenia Vahan Hovhannisyan. T.M. -0–

Yerevan Seeks NK Res. Within MG and with The Participation of NK

YEREVAN SEEKS FOR NAGORNO KARABAKH RESOLUTION WITHIN MG AND WITH THE
PARTICIPATE OF KARABAKH: ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SPEAKER

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 29. ARMINFO. Today the chairman of National Assembly
of Armenia Arthur Baghdassarian met with the advisor on international
issues at the Italian ministry of defense, ambassador Pietro Erkolle
Ago.

According to NA press services, the interlocutors discussed the pace
of fulfilment of Armenia’s commitments in front of CE. NA chairman
briefed on the current and future work. He mentioned that PACE has
twice adopted a resolution on Armenian parliament’s performance in
terms of CE commitments. The two also conferred on regional
conflicts. P. Ago informed that a special discussion will be held in
Rome in Jan on resolution of frozen conflicts, including Nagorno
Karabakh. NA chairman mentioned that Armenia seeks a solution to
Nagorno Karabakh conflict within OSCE Minsk Group and with the
participation of Karabakh. At the same time Armenia is against changes
in the conflict resolution formats. A. Baghdasarian said that Azeri
initiative to raise the question of Nagorno Karabakh in UN is not
constructive. In terms of conflict regulation, the sides underscored
deepening of democratic processes and integration into European
structures which will reform the societies in legal and institutional
terms. The sides agreed that Turkey’s more neutral disposition will
largely contribute to conflict regulation. The sides underscored
mutual contacts and discussions of issues with the participation of
different layers of society. The two also discussed other issues. -A-

How Kiev adds to bear’s sore head ;analysis

How Kiev adds to bear’s sore head ;analysis
by Douglas Fraser

The Herald (Glasgow)
November 26, 2004

THE great Russian bear has a sore head, with the turmoil in Ukraine
simply adding to the nagging pain. Having watched its empire
disintegrate and economy crumble, it has found that the ability to
throw its weight around is strictly limited, and mainly to its near
neighbours.

Not only does it face the intrusions of an assertive hyperpower in the
US, but the European Union has become a much more serious player on its
border since eight of its former Warsaw Pact satellites signed up for
membership and shifted their political allegiances to far-off Brussels.

There is also other satellites lining up to join the EU, including
Bulgaria and Romania. So Moscow wonders: would a westward-leaning
Ukraine be far behind in the EU queue?

But being economically weak should not mean Russia, and its influence
on such as the Ukraine, should be forgotten. The coming issue in
geopolitics is energy security. Emerging economies, such as China’s,
are demanding more oil to fuel growth rates. Europe is looking beyond
declining North Sea reserves for its oil and gas, and, along with
America, everyone wants to become less dependent on the volatile
Middle East.

So the vast expanse of Siberia and the newly independent nations around
Russia are becoming ever more important to international politics
and economics. The key questions are who and which companies get to
the oil and gas reserves, and how they get them to the markets. That
brings together the tricky game of mixing diplomacy, multi-national
oil majors and pipeline supplies. At the heart of this question is
that Russian bear, still nursing a sore head and wanting to make sure
no-one is going to take it for granted, especially as the EU expands.

According to Brussels, the EU’s next era of diplomatic developments
will be to tie together the competing concerns of the 25 members.
While the western countries want to open up links to Russia, both
for their oil firms and to secure future supplies, the eight former
Soviet satellites want to keep Moscow at arm’s length.

America wants oil supply lines from the former southern Soviet
republics of Armenia and Georgia to be piped and freighted via a
route that by-passes both Russia and Iran. The key aim of any energy
security policy in the region is to leave options open, so that if
Russia turns off the taps then they can be turned on elsewhere. This
is not far removed from the US involvement in Iraq.

For hawks in Washington and Moscow, there is the easy familiarity
of a return to the cold war days, using client states and puppet
administrations to fight over this large eastern European and central
Asian turf.

The past Soviet policies of moving ethnic Russians into many of
its then client republics has left a complex politics of ethnic
tension in many, as with Ukraine. Its removal as the superpower
dominating the region has allowed local ethnic rivalries to threaten
instability. Ukraine’s tensions are only one part of a much messier
geopolitical battlefield.

Tbilisi: Following in the footsteps of Georgia, or Belarus?

Following in the footsteps of Georgia, or Belarus?

The Messenger, Georgia
Nov 26 2004

As the first anniversary of the Rose Revolution passes, a situation
with many parallels to Georgia’s is developing in Ukraine. A liberal,
pro-Western leader with the backing of the majority of the population
loses the presidential election to the Moscow-backed prime minister
amid cries of election falsification. Thousands of people take to the
streets to protest the apparent electoral fraud, and the situation is
balanced on a knife-edge, between peaceful resolution and civil war,
and between Russia and the West.

On Wednesday, the Ukrainian Central Election Committee announced the
official results of Sunday’s presidential election, giving pro-Moscow
prime minister Victor Yanukovych 49.46 and opposition leader Victor
Yushchenko 46.61 percent of the vote. However, Yushchenko points to
what he describes as widespread election violations in claiming that
he won the election, his arguments echoed by election observers and
supported by exit polls, which according to The Moscow Times give
Yushchenko 54 percent of the vote compared with 43 for Yanukovych.

The international community has responded in markedly different ways
to the election results. While President Vladimir Putin of Russia
congratulated Yanukovych on his victory even before the results were
announced; in Washington U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell said
the United States would not accept the official result, adding that
“there will be consequences” for Ukraine. EU President Jose Manuel
Barroso echoed Powell’s comments, adding that the EU would “make our
position clear” with Putin at an EU-Russia summit on Thursday.

While there are many parallels with the situation in Georgia
twelve months ago, there are several differences, differences
which make the possibility of violence a more real threat. For one,
although Yushchenko appears to have the backing of the majority of
the electorate, Yanukovych also has a great deal of support: across
the whole of Eastern Ukraine the largely Russian-speaking population
support the prime minister’s pro-Moscow politics. Furthermore, Russia
is less prepared to see a pro-Western president in Ukraine, which
is a much larger country, and of greater strategic importance, given
that it stands between Russia and the European Union, than Georgia.

Given the importance of Ukraine, the current developments will have an
enormous influence both on Europe and post-Soviet space. A pro-Russian
president of Ukraine will strengthen President Putin’s position in
the region, while a pro-Western president, with opinions and aims not
dissimilar to Mikheil Saakashvili’s, will inevitably provide Georgia
with a natural ally. Ukraine has historically been a good friend of
Georgia (it was the only country to provide Georgia with aircraft
to ferry refugees out of Abkhazia during the Georgian-Abkhaz war)
and there are huge prospects of collaboration should their internal
and foreign policy priorities coincide.

The president is aware of this, and although in an interview on Tuesday
he said that he as president should maintain neutrality no matter what
his opinions, earlier in the day at the opening of Sameba Cathedral,
the president congratulated the people of Ukraine in their own language
(he speaks fluent Ukrainian from his student days in the country)
and wished them a happy future.

As Saakashvili also noted, some supporters of Yushchenko were
carrying Georgian flags, a sign that the Rose Revolution has set a
precedent of peaceful overthrow of corrupt regimes that they hope to
follow. Indeed, last November’s events in Tbilisi were very significant
for all post-Soviet countries, providing a possible answer to the
questions of what the opposition should do when the state authorities
manipulate election results, and how can the opposition force the
state authorities to retreat and give up.

However, there is no certainty that a Ukrainian ‘Chestnut Revolution’
will follow Georgia’s ‘Rose.’ After all, looking at other post-Soviet
countries, we can see that the same scenario did not happen in
neighboring Armenia, while in Belarus the issue was not even on the
agenda. The President of Kyrgyzstan Askara Kaev even dedicated a
whole book to formulating and defending against the threat posed by
the Georgian Rose Revolution for other post-Soviet countries.

Whether a chestnut revolution brings Yushchenko to power or not remains
to be seen. There is a real possibility that the opposition protests
could lead eventually to open conflict between the sides, which would
be a disaster for the country. As with Georgia, the eventual outcome
may depend more on the role played by external forces – by Russia
and the West.

It is precisely these external forces that are at the root of the
conflict, which is all about, in the end, whether Ukraine is to be
come an authoritarian, Russia-orientated country like Lukashenko’s
Belarus, or whether it is to tread the path, as Georgia hopes to do,
towards democracy and European integration.

BAKU: Armenian MPs miss Baku-hosted NATO seminar on purpose – Azerio

Armenian MPs miss Baku-hosted NATO seminar on purpose – Azeri official

ANS TV, Baku
25 Nov 04

Presenter Armenian MPs have not joined the Rose-Roth seminar of NATO’s
Parliamentary Assembly .

Namiq Aliyev, captioned as the head of the Milli Maclis’s international
relations department, shown speaking to reporters As you know, two
Armenian MPs were expected to join the seminar. However, about 30
minutes before their flight from Moscow to Baku, they phoned the NATO
headquarters and said that they were not coming.

Correspondent What were the reasons for their refusal to come?

Aliyev I do not have information about this. But one can judge that
they did not come here because they were afraid of the topics the
seminar was going to discuss. They have nothing to say. They would
be asked about the Karabakh problem. So, they were afraid of this
and chose not to come.

We have talked to their representative. They said that they were
discrediting themselves. This is what they said, what a NATO
representative said. It was just a game. They wanted us to deny
them entry. They wanted to deal a blow to us in this way. But they
themselves got the blow in the end.

Way to go

Al-Ahram Weekly, Egypt
Nov 25 – Dec 1, 2004

Way to go

It is now eight years since an innovative programme was set up in
Sinai to preserve and nurture the heritage of a local community.
Jenny Jobbins reports on the St Catherine’s Bedouin project

St Catherine’s new Visitor Centre

THIS IMAGE of the Archbishop of Sinai drinking tea with Bedouin in
the garden of the Monastery of Saint Catherine by Bruce White is
one of many unique photographs that grace a new publication from the
American University in Cairo Press. Saint Catherine’s Monastery: Sinai,
Egypt — a Photographic Essay is a handsome book on the Greek Orthodox
monastery and its buildings containing many newly-commissioned colour
photographs. The concise and informative text by Helen C Evans is
preceded by a special introduction by His Eminence Archbishop Damianos
of Sinai, abbot of the monastery. (Published by the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York. Distributed in Egypt by AUC Press)

Egypt’s national parks were set up primarily to protect the country’s
natural heritage. St Catherine’s, however, is also safeguarding a
historical and social legacy. The St Catherine’s Bedouin project is
centred at the small village near the famous monastery. It happens
to be the only town or village in Egypt to fall within a national
park, and its advantage of location places it in a special position
vis-ˆ-vis conservation.

When the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) established St
Catherine’s as a protected area, it found itself guardian not only
of the mountains of Sinai but also of the village that had grown up
round the Greek Orthodox monastery, largely peopled by the monastery’s
Bedouin servants and their dependents. Dozens of smaller settlements
also fell within the new park. And like the natural heritage which
the EEAA is fighting so hard to protect, the cultural inheritance
of the South Sinai Bedouin is under threat from the changes brought
about by modernisation and global shrinkage with its consequent influx
of tourists.

St Catherine’s National Park encompasses virtually all the mountainous
area of South Sinai, from the Taba-Mitla road in the north to the
borders of the Ras Mohamed National Park in the south, and from the
inner rim of the coastal plateau in the west to the Taba, Nabq and
Ras Abu Galum Managed Resource Areas in the east and north east (in
all the protected areas encompass 30 per cent of South Sinai). Its
establishment in 1996 came some time after the foundation of the
Ras Mohamed National Park, but while attention there was focussed
on ecosystems and aspects of protecting the coast and coral reefs
from mass diving and recreational fishing, it was realised that
St Catherine’s not only enveloped a stunning landscape and local
biodiversity, but also a huge number of prehistoric sites and a local
population whose way of life was under threat.

The St Catherine’s covers an area of 5,750 squared kilometres, or
20 per cent of South Sinai. It contains Egypt’s highest mountain,
St Catherine’s (2,624 m), as well as Mount Sinai — held sacred as
the place where Moses received the Ten Commandments — Mount Serbal,
Mount Um Shomer and Mount Tarbush. The mountains are composed of
igneous rock between 500 and 1,000 million years old — one of the
most violent periods of activity took place in the Pre-Cambrian era
about 800 million years ago. The towering granite crags overlooking
St Catherine’s Monastery are some of the oldest in the world.

The mountains enclose wadis (dry valleys) studded with acacias and
other vegetation, while higher in the rocks are clefts where water
gathers seasonally, forming pools and nurturing the variety of herbs
and desert shrubs from which the Bedouin draw nutritional supplements
and medicinal remedies. Forty- five per cent of all the plants in
Egypt are found in Sinai: of these 320 species 19 are unique to Sinai
(including a native primrose) and more than 100 have a medicinal use.

Wildlife includes the Nubian ibex, Dorcas gazelle, Striped hyena,
Red fox, Fennec fox, Wolf, Wild cat, Sinai leopard, Rock hyrax,
Rodents, Geckos, Skinks, Hedgehogs and Hares. There are 46 reptile
species, 15 of which are found nowhere else in Egypt, among them
two species of snake, the Sinai banded snake and the Innes cobra,
which are found only in the National Park. There are 150 species of
migrating birds, including about 40 raptor species. Sinai is also
home to the smallest butterfly in the world, the Sinai Baton Blue,
half the size of a fingernail and confined for eternity to the top
of one mountain since it cannot live below a certain altitude, and
its tiny wings cannot carry it as far as the next peak.

The growing popularity of the Red Sea coastal resorts and their
proximity to the monastery has resulted in increasing numbers of
visitors. Protecting the natural and cultural values of the area was
a primary goal in the declaration of the park. A parallel aim was to
enhance the quality of local tourism by promoting its environmental
and cultural aspects.

There are more than 500 historical sites and buildings in Sinai,
dating from the round stone nawamis built about 4,000 BC to structures
from the Bronze Age and Nabatean, Byzantine and Islamic periods. There
are abundant foundations of tombs, houses, storehouses, animal traps,
and evidence of copper smelting. The sites have yielded Bronze Age
jewellery and amulets and tools and pottery from all ages. In 2002
UNESCO declared St Catherine’s a World Heritage Site.

Visitors have long been drawn here. Overlooking the village is a
palace built by the Khedive Abbas II and still used as an official
rest house. Each day 1,000 people visit the St Catherine’s Monastery,
and it is hoped that the new Visitor Centre will encourage many of
them will pause there to learn more about the park and its resources.
To maximise public access, the centre has been built on the main road
close to the village. Designed by architect Hani Manyawi of Adapt
Egypt, and built in local materials by local labour, it is housed
in seven small buildings modelled on houses left in the area 2,000
years ago by Nabatean forebears. The simple buildings in local stone
blend both architecturally and spiritually into the surrounding crags.
Built into the complex is a model of the base of a Bronze Age house,
a small circle of large, flat stone slaps up-ended; these would have
been topped by poles supporting the upper walls and a roof of wood
or palm fronds.

The Visitor Centre took a year to build with funding support from the
EU. Entry is free of charge up to the end of the year, after which
it will cost three dollars for foreign visitors and three pounds
for Egyptians.

Mohamed Nada, a member of the EEAA’s enthusiastic and knowledgeable
team and administrator of the park’s Visitor Management Programme,
guided us round the Visitor Centre. The first of the six small halls
is the Reception room, which offers an explanation of the aims of
the park. From there a path leads to the Geological hall, where we
learn that the Red Sea cleft began to form 25 million years ago,
tearing Sinai from Africa, and that it still widens at the rate of a
centimetre a year. A fascinating geological column in the hall gives
geological timelines and a stylised representation of the rocks,
including the grey granite which formed 800 million years ago and
red granite from 200 million years later.

Birdsong erupts as the door of the next hall is opened. This section
features wildlife, including the Baton Blue Butterfly, and shows the
workings of the camera traps the EEAA has placed in the park. The
trap mechanism triggers a flash — a literal shot in the dark — and
have captured on film among other animals Ibex, Gazelle, Ruppell’s
sand fox, the Fennec fox and Striped hyena.

Local history is featured in another hall, and the Monastery in
another. Here a model of the complex is painted in pastel shades to
represent the periods of construction. A sanctuary was originally
founded here by Queen Helena, mother of the Emperor Constantine, on
the spot considered to be where Moses came across the burning bush
— the supposed bush is carefully tended in an inner courtyard. The
monastery was built 200 years later — between 527 and 565 — by
the Emperor Justinian to house the remains of St Catherine, who was
martyred in 315 in Alexandria but whose perfectly preserved body (a
sign of her holiness) had only recently been found on the summit of
the nearby mountain which afterwards bore her name. St Catherine’s
may be the oldest continuously inhabited monastery in the world, and
is the second largest repository for illuminated manuscripts after
the Vatican. The collection contains some 3,500 volumes in Greek,
Coptic, Arabic, Armenian, Hebrew, Slavic, Syriac and Georgian. In
the early part of the 11th century the monks escaped the persecution
of the Fatimid Caliph Al-Hakim by incorporating a small mosque into
the complex.

The Bedouin cultural hall contains photographs, costumes and musical
instruments illustrating the lives led by the members of the local
communities. Most of the Bedouin in the area belong to the Jabaliya
tribe, whose original members were installed by the Emperor Justinian
to guard and serve the new monastery. The main local occupation now is
tourism. The Jabaliya and other Bedouin work as tour guides on camel
safaris, one reason why they are keen to preserve their wild animals,
birds and flora.

Local knowledge works both ways. Since the visitor programme involves
the local community, it enhances their awareness of their locality and
this proves useful when they are guiding visitors or archaeologists.

Many members of the community, such as the Community Guards, receive
a salary from the EEAA. The park also employs a dozen rangers from
various backgrounds ranging from a geologist through an anthropologist,
biologists and entomologists to a business studies graduate. They help
run the Bedouin Support Programme, which comprises nine sections:
health, veterinary services, community guards, traditional crafts,
the acacia programme, dam construction, the wildlife and botany
monitoring programme, visitor management and the awareness education
programme. In just one example of the project’s effect, the landscape
management plan — which incorporates the dam construction and clean
water projects — has successfully reduced the number of stone quarries
in operation from 72 to 24.

About 7,000 people live around St Catherine’s. While the largest
number belong to the Jabaliya tribe, others are from the Muzeina,
Gharaja, Sawalha, Aligheit, Awlad Said and Beni Hassan. All are Arabs
— that is, coming originally from the Saudi Peninsula — apart from
the Jabaliya, who were brought to Sinai from the vicinity of Macedonia
in the sixth century to provide security and service to the monks at
the new monastery. Over the generations the Jabaliya married members
of other tribes and gradually converted from Christianity to Islam,
but continued to work at St Catherine’s Monastery.

The park’s founders believed that a sustainable project must have a
built-in source of revenue, and that local support was essential. The
EU’s then representative, John Grainger, deemed it important to
ascertain the Bedouins’ needs, and in 1996 members of the seven local
tribes assembled for a meeting with environmentalists to discuss what
role they might play in the new national park. They asked for dams,
health care, and a women’s craft centre.

The health programme has proved extremely beneficial. A doctor with
a mobile 4×4 clinic travels to all 77 settlements in the park in
rotation, visiting each one every 45 days. Under the women’s health
education programme, women from each settlement are trained to train
others in community nursing and health care. Each representative is
responsible for the rest of the women in her settlement. The veterinary
programme has also proved effective in the care of livestock. All
camels are now inoculated and numbered.

The dam construction — through which rain water is chanelled and
collected to minimise wastage — and acacia rehabilitation projects
involve a large local workforce. Acacias have been so over-harvested
that the lush groves pruned of dead growth for firewood are a thing
of the past. With the aim of regenerating this essential resource,
seeds are collected and, once generated, are replanted in chosen
spots. So far 34,000 seedlings have been planted.

The medicinal plant programme — funded separately by the United
Nations Development Project (UNDP) –runs in cooperation with the
EEAA in growing medicinal plants for local use. Training is given in
cultivating, packaging and marketing the plants, while at the same time
Bedouin and ethno- pharmacologists cooperate in correlating indigenous
knowledge. Fifty-five families work on the acacia and flora programmes.

“The Bedouin themselves are natural conservationists, it’s part
of their heritage,” says Youssreya Hamid, an anthropologist with a
Master’s degree in sustainable development from South Bank University,
London. “They have a system of alliance through which they protect
wild plants and animals. They will close a certain valley for three
to six months to prevent grazing until it has regrown, to respect
sustainability. The health, craft, human and animal medical and acacia
programmes have all been well received by the Bedouin.”

Bedouin are also occupied in tourism, from running and guiding camel
and wilderness camping safaris to operating accommodation services.
These include five hotels, two main tourist camps and the St
Catherine’s Ecolodge, also built to a Nabatean design and run by a
Bedouin cooperative under EEAA supervision. Twenty-six experienced
Bedouin work as Community Guards, policing the wilderness to watch
out for infringements of EEAA rules.

Of all the projects at St Catherine’s, perhaps the best known outside
the park is the women’s cooperative. The 40 women who were initially
involved started with traditional items such as scarves, beading,
necklaces and sugar bags, but gradually they modified these ideas
into fashionable, marketable items. In 2000 the traditional programme
became a separate project under the name of Fansina. Now 350 women
are marketing their handicrafts here and internationally. They still
prefer to work with the raw materials at home in the time-honoured way.

British textile artist Sally Hampson was involved from the very early
stages. “My job was to see what the women were already making and how
they were accessing materials and selling their projects,” Hampson
says. “What was happening was that the women would make things and
the men would be working close to the people at the monastery and
taking tourists on treks, and they would sell them the things the
women made. It was all very ad hoc. When this programme was set up
the women showed a desire for support in their textile production.”

Hampson’s job was to assess what was going on and find out how the
system worked. She had to become acquainted with the crafts including
some unfamiliar to her, such as beadwork.

“The most pressing need they had was accessing materials, and because
of where they were they depended on passing traders — men selling
household goods and sometimes carrying wool and sewing thread. The
women were in the hands of what these vans had on board. The variety
and quality wasn’t there. It seemed important to give the women access
to good quality materials, like colourfast cotton.”

Some of the first items they sewed together were the embroidered sugar
bags they made for their husbands, sons and brothers to take on their
trips into the mountains to graze flocks or gather herbs. The bags
were of white cotton and had a little inside pocket for the tea. “They
drew their inspiration for their embroidery from their surroundings,”
Hampson says. “They stitched little desert plants, camels and other
animals, stars and the sun, fish and flowers, both stylised and
abstract. Tourists wanted to buy them, and it evolved from there.

“I was trying to get them to work with good materials but keep the
narrative. For tourists this becomes part of the story they bring
home — it isn’t just an anonymous bag.”

Everything the women made had a reason and a purpose. “It’s not
that they can just knock up this and that. I was very cautious about
not dictating the design. I know I had things to offer because as a
Westerner I had sensibilities for the people who buy this, so I was
trying the bridge the two. But for myself, I want something genuine.”

A Bedouin woman’s dress is a sign of her social standing, her hairstyle
of her age or marital status. Every unmarried Bedouin girl, for
instance, sports a lock across her forehead, but this is substituted
by a plait in an elderly woman. Married women of the Jabaliya tribe
wear a black shawl ( Al-ghurna ), unmarried girls a white one ,
( Al-malfah ). A married woman wears a long face veil ( Al-burgah
), a bride a short one until she has had her first child. In North
Sinai women wear an open veil, a beaded breastplate ( Al-mallab ),
and metal accessories given by her husband in the first months of
her married life.

Hamid stresses the strong position held by women in Bedouin society.
“From my point of view women are equal to men,” she says. “Each has
her own job, and the women keep their own money.”

While the craft programme has brought new economic strength for the
women, the health programme has also brought benefits, improving
maternity services and reducing the infant mortality rate.

Hamid, a native of Alexandria, has worked at St Catherine’s since 1998,
taking a year off to study in London. She also teaches environmental
education to children at the 30 primary and local secondary schools
within the protected area. As part of the educational programme, a
traditional healer teaches the children how to find, recognise and use
plants. Bedouin knowledge is thus being used to protect the natural and
cultural resources of the area, and transferred down the line. “Being
forgotten because of the interaction with other cultures would be a
tragedy,” Hamid says. “It needs to be transferred to new generations.”

In eight years the EEAA’s care and intervention has meant a great deal
to the area, and the local Bedouin are backing the programme to the
hilt. The village, though founded on the pickings of the monastery,
has taken up a mantle of its own.

However St Catherine’s Park is constantly growing and taking shape.
The national parks recently made the transition from EU to Egyptian
stewardship, and one of the services disrupted by the changeover has
been the Bedouin-staffed mountain rescue service, temporarily suspended
because of logistical use of equipment, notably mobile phones. But
the park staff see such blips are minor. “The programme is working
well, and it serves as an inspiration and a model for similar areas
in Egypt and elsewhere,” Nada says.

–Boundary_(ID_6EHs31K0IPlwk7J7cLVG6w)–

CIS prosecutors agree joint antiterror fight in Kazakh forum

CIS prosecutors agree joint antiterror fight in Kazakh forum

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
24 Nov 04

Almaty, 24 November: A meeting of the coordinating council
of CIS prosecutor-generals was held in Almaty today. Russian
Prosecutor-General Vladimir Ustinov and prosecutor-generals of
Azerbaijan, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova and Tajikistan
and the Belarusian and Georgian deputy prosecutor-generals took part
in its work.

Kazakh Prosecutor-General Rashid Tusupbekov said that at the meeting
decisions had been made “on eight issues related to countering
international terrorism, corruption and the illegal circulation of
drugs and psychotropic substances”.

The meeting, Tusupbekov said, also decided “to take comprehensive
measures to prevent and thwart terrorism”, that would stop various
extremist organizations from taking root within the CIS.

“The main focus in the fight against international terrorism will be
interaction, exchange of information, including the sources of its
finance, making quick and clear decisions on all issues related to the
extradition of criminals and giving legal help in criminal cases linked
to terrorism, specific monitoring of which will be conducted and the
most skilful staff will be entrusted to do this,” Tusupbekov stressed.

Russian Prosecutor-General Vladimir Ustinov was unanimously elected
the chairman of the coordinating council of CIS prosecutor-generals
in 2005.