Beirut: Gemmayzeh changing: new habits come to an old quarter

GEMMAYZEH CHANGING: NEW HABITS COME TO AN OLD QUARTER
Not all Beirutis welcome the rise of the city’s newest clubbing district

By Jim Quilty and Leila Diab
Daily Star staff

Daily Star – Lebanon
Aug 31 2005

Editor’s note: This is the first of a two-part series looking at the
changing face of the old Beirut neighborhood of Gemmayzeh.

BEIRUT: “The neighborhood used to be quiet and calm past 9 or 10
p.m.,” recalls Pierre Comati. “I’m not against progress, but we have
had an invasion of people that we don’t know and this has completely
changed the soul of Gemmayzeh.” Comati has been a resident of the
Beirut quarter of Gemmayzeh since 1941. The change at the root of
his anxiety is as global as the symptoms are local.

Nightlife in this town is a moveable feast. When the Civil War divided
their city, Beirutis watered themselves either in Ras Beirut or in
the northern suburbs of Kaslik and Zouq. In the late 1990s, restless
clubbers migrated to Monnot Street, near Beirut’s old Green Line
between West and East Beirut.

For the last couple of years evening migrations have focused on
Gemmayzeh, named after a sycamore tree that was once a landmark here.
Since 2003, boutique-sized spaces – some derelict, others housing
daytime businesses like butchers and magazine shops – have been turned
over to miniature bars and bistros.

The change has been remarkable. In 1998 Gemmayzeh boasted two places
to buy a drink – Qahwat al-Azaz (which has since been renovated
beyond recognition and renamed the “Gemmayzeh Cafe”) and Le Chef,
which has changed only in the death of one of its senior partners.
Today Qahwat al-Azaz and Le Chef share their street with some 15
different cafe-bar-restaurants with that number again preparing to
open. The increase in street traffic has been commensurate.

Recent developments have been conspicuous, but these restaurants are
not the first “outsiders” to enter the neighborhood – this newspaper
has had its offices here since the mid-1990s and young couples have
been drifting in, looking for cheap flats, for years. Changes in
commercial usage can be ephemeral or they may signal more lasting
social changes. Gemmayzeh had identities before its most recent
metamorphosis, and there is evidence to suggest it will acquire others.

Wedged between Mar Maroun and the Ottoman mansions of Sursock Quarter
to the south and Beirut Port to the north, Gemmayzeh is most likely
recognized as the neighborhood on the eastern edge of Solidere’s
downtown reconstruction project.

Place names slide around over time and these days “Gemmayzeh” has
come to refer to Rue Gouraud, named after the general who proclaimed
the birth of “Greater Lebanon” and became the first High Commissioner
of France’s Lebanon Mandate. Before it became “Gouraud” it had a more
functional name – the Tripoli Road.

A nebulously defined quarter, Gemmayzeh is sometimes mentioned in
history books as a predominantly Greek Orthodox mercantile district.
Others argue that, given the fact that the Ottoman tramline ran through
here, it seems unlikely that it ever had the religious uniformity
of Sursock, for instance. Nowadays its older residents are Orthodox,
Maronite and Armenian, the latter seeming to have arrived after World
War I.

“We were the pioneers of the area,” says Salim Hermes, chairman
and general manager of Hermes Electrical store. The company opened
in Gemmayzeh in 1956 and Hermes says his family is famous locally
for erecting the Hermes Building, one of the first buildings in the
neighborhood.

Hermes depicts a quarter largely untouched by changes radiating from
the nearby city centre over the years, something that inspired people
to leave. “The people who used to live here are either very old, or
dead,” he says. “Their children are leaving because they don’t want
to live in a building with no lift, or central heating … This old
neighborhood has known a revolution in its mentality lately because
of the opening of all those restaurants.”

People ate out in Gemmayzeh before 2003, of course, and there seems
no uniformity of opinion among veteran restaurateurs about the
recent changes.

The owner of the 50-year-old Snack Harik, Mrs. Harik, complains that
people who’ve lived in Gemmayzeh for tens of years are now selling
their houses and leaving because daytime street life is extinct.
“Sure they increased the night-time activity,” she says, “but they
killed the movement of the daytime in the process.”

Francois Ephrem Bassil, chef and owner of Gemmayzeh’s landmark Le
Chef Restaurant, is pragmatic about the changes. “Now there are many
restaurants, and it’s better. They’re replacing old places with bars
and restaurants, resulting in more activity at night.”

Apart from the original Qahwat al-Azaz, he says, his was the first
restaurant to open in this area in 1967. “When I opened Le Chef,”
he recalls, “one of my neighbors asked me, ‘Why are you opening a
restaurant? There’s nothing here.'”

Times have changed. The proliferation of new bars and restaurants has
changed the social makeup of the night-time traffic moving through
the neighborhood. This has had its inevitable impact on the business
environment.

Gemmayzeh Mukthtar Elie Nassar estimates that residential and
commercial rents in Gemmayzeh have increased by 2000 percent in the
last three years. He hastens to add, though, that this increase can’t
be attributed to the restaurant boom alone.

Like everyplace else in the country where residency has been stable
since before 1975, Gemmayzeh operates within the “old rent” regime.
Lebanon’s currency was remarkably stable until the 1982 Israeli
invasion, being much closer to parity with the U.S. dollar than it
is today. After 1982 the currency underwent radical devaluation.

Consequently, anyone who made rental arrangements before the currency
started going terribly wrong may still pay at the old rate – LL250.00
per month, for instance. No legal provision has yet been passed
to allow landlords to bring rents up to speed with today’s exchange
rates. Tenants have the prerogative to stay at the old rates until they
leave (landlords can charge new tenants at market rates, of course) or
to renegotiate their rates voluntarily. Solvent landlords sometimes buy
out the old rent contract, effectively paying their tenants to leave.

Most of the rate increases, Nassar says, derive from landlords’
re-negotiating old rental agreements. One of the first of the new
restaurants to open in the quarter (Barouie), for instance, rents a
space that used to go for $100.00 per month. The present tenants pay
$2000.00 a month.

If the rents had been fair to begin with, Nassar continues, the recent
increase would be a mere 100 percent.

In the moral economy of what tenants should have been paying all along,
a rent increase of 100 percent may be modest. In real terms, though,
an opportunity to increase earnings by the margin separating old
rents from market rates – in otherwise sleepy Gemmayzeh, no less –
would be tempting for any landlord. There is a market engine behind
social change in this quarter.

Slovene OSCE chief discusses solutions to Nagornyy Karabakh conflict

SLOVENE OSCE CHIEF DISCUSSES SOLUTIONS TO NAGORNYY KARABAKH CONFLICT

STA news agency
29 Aug 05

Ljubljana, 29 August: Foreign Minister and OSCE chairman Dimitrij
Rupel met Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk, his personal envoy for Nagornyy
Karabakh, and the co-chairs of the US-Russia-France group, which
deals with the conflict, the ministry said in Monday’s [29 August]
press release.

According to the press release, Rupel’s guests briefed him on the
results of their Saturday meeting with Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan and his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev.

The situation and possible solutions to the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict
over the Nagornyy Karabakh region topped the agenda at the Saturday
meeting, which took place after the summit of the Commonwealth of
Independent States in the Russian city of Kazan.

At today’s meeting, Rupel urged both sides to use the opportunity
and find a compromise solution for Nagornyy Karabakh, the ethnic
Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan. This was also an opportunity for
Rupel to prepare for the visit to Azerbaijan and Armenia which is
scheduled for next week. [Passage omitted]

Saddam’s ouster brought end of religious freedom for many

The Register-Guard, Oregon
Aug 28 2005

Saddam’s ouster brought end of religious freedom for many
By Timothy Phelps

Newsday
Published: Sunday, August 28, 2005

BASRA, Iraq – For Yousef Lyon and other Christians in Basra, the
downfall of Saddam Hussein has meant a terrible loss of religious
freedom.

The social club where Lyon and his friends would gather in the
evening to play dominoes, where families danced or listened to live
music on holidays, is closed. Wedding celebrations are held quietly
at home.

“Of course, during the Saddam regime it was better,” said Lyon, 40,
a member of the city’s small Armenian community. “Now we are afraid
from the religious parties that maybe they will throw a bomb at us.”

Not just the Christians, but many of the city’s minorities – from
obscure sects such as the ancient Sabeans to the Sunni Muslims who
used to run Iraq and still predominate in the rest of the Arab world
– live in fear of the hard-line Shia religious parties and their
militias that now rule Iraq’s second-largest city.

advertisement Freedom has been curbed for women, too. Several decades
ago, almost no woman in Basra covered her head. Now, they all do, for
fear of harassment or worse. Women working for foreign firms or
governments, and those considered to have loose morals, have been
marked for death by militants: two Iraqi sisters who worked in the
laundry at the American compound in Basra were assassinated last
year.

Basra is an ancient port city with a proud cosmopolitan history,
where Christians, Jews, Sunni, Shia and many other groups lived in
relative peace for hundreds of years, according to local historians.
The Jews left en masse in the years following the founding of Israel
in 1948. Now, although no one keeps records or statistics, the other
minorities are leaving as well, though many had cried with joy at the
toppling of Saddam.

“Saddam Hussein was a criminal and an oppressor. Everybody knew
that,” said Majid, 45, a Sunni taxi driver who said he was afraid to
be identified further. “These new parties cry for society, but try
to drink the blood of the people.”

Saddam murdered thousands or tens of thousands of Iraqis, most of
them Kurds in the north and Shias in the south. Shias in Basra were
particularly singled out in retribution for their leadership in a
failed rebellion against Hussein in 1991, when U.S. forces refused to
intervene to protect them after the first Persian Gulf War.

But Saddam did not see Christians and other minorities in Iraq as a
threat because of their smaller numbers and because his regime was
secular and not as hostile to other religions or the rights of women
as are some current officials.

“You can’t say no to those people; they will kill you,” Majid said
of the current leaders here. “Even just if you have a different
viewpoint, you will have a problem.”

He said he is trying to sell his house and leave Iraq, but has had
few prospects. “By God, I don’t know,” he said. “I want to leave,
but where should I go?”

Basra is a city of 2 million people, predominantly Shia. An estimated
200,000 to 300,000 Sunnis, and 5,000 or 6,000 Christians, live in the
area.

http://www.registerguard.com/news/2005/08/28/a2.int.christns.0828.p1.php?section=nation_world

NKR: The Statement Of NKR CEC

THE STATEMENT OF NKR CEC

Azat Artsakh Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
26 Aug 05

The recent address of the Central Election Committee of Azerbaijan to
the citizens of Nagorno Karabakh Republic concerning the parliamentary
election on November 6 is a gross intervention in the internal affairs
of NKR. Azerbaijan has no legal and especially moral rights to call
for participation of the people of Karabakh in the elections of that
republic. The people of Nagorno Karabakh use their vote in accordance
with the NKR legislation absolutely within the framework of their own
statehood which provides for their political, social and civil
rights. Official Baku which has perpetrated the massacres and
displacement of hundreds of thousands of Armenians in the former
Azerbaijani SSR, has waged a large-scale war against NKR and its
people, is now tryingto act as an advocate of the rights of the people
of Nagorno Karabakh. This sounds especially brazen in the context of
violation of the basic rights of the people of NKR by the Azerbaijani
government, including the right for self-determination, occupation of
a significant part of the territory of NKR, the lasting blockade of
Nagorno Karabakh and instilment of intolerance by the Azerbaijani
authorities against the Armenians. Constantly violating the
constitutional rights and freedoms of its own citizens, Azerbaijan
cannot provide for the basic right for life and dignity of the
citizens of NKR, which proves that the people of Nagorno Karabakh have
had reason to choose the path of i ndependent development, which
cannot be turned back. The people of Karabakh have their own
statehood, NKR, the independence of which was declared on January 6,
1992 on the basis of the results of the referendum held earlier. The
population of Nagorno Karabakh, whose civil rights have been set down
in the NKR legislation and are defended, actively takes part in the
home political life of the country, the strengthening and further
development of its civil and governmental institutions, including the
legislative body of the republic- the NKR National Assembly. During
the years of independence three presidential, four parliamentary and
three local elections were held, which were evaluated as transparent,
free and fair by the international observers. The NKR Central Election
Committee calls the Azerbaijani party with which Nagorno Karabakhhas
had no legal and political relationships for about 20 years to abstain
from groundless and openly populist statements which confuse the
international community, and to direct their efforts towards a
constructive dialogue to reach stability in the region and peaceful
coexistence of our countries.

AA.
26-08-2005

Armenian youth movement vows to fight “ideological interference”

Armenian youth movement vows to fight “ideological interference”

Mediamax news agency
26 Aug 05

YEREVAN

The public movement of like-minded young people We has issued a
statement, condemning external attempts to interfere in the domestic
and political life of Armenia.

The statement by the We movement says that “Armenia is persistently
moving forward on the democratic path and this is our choice”,
Mediamax reports. “There is no power able to make us give up the
freedom we have at the moment,” the statement reads.

Expressing its gratitude to countries and international organizations
“which have established equal and authentic partnership with our
country”, the We movement condemned “all those who, acting from
outside or hiding under cover of various organizations in Armenia,
interfere in Armenia’s political life and try to give us instructions
on issues of choice and building our future, assuming that we are
unable to rule our own country independently”.

“We also condemn all those who, guided by purely personal aims, are
trying to use a foreign hand to write the history of our future, thus
calling into question the sovereignty of our country and our freedom,”
the statement said. The We movement said that “it will fight any
ideological interference by peaceful and civilized means”.

The We movement also reported that it will stage a peaceful rally
outside the Armenian National Assembly in Demirchyan Street at 1100
[0600 gmt] on 29 August. The protesters are planning to urge MPs to
discuss the package of constitutional amendments and adopt a
constitution which “will lead us towards creating a prosperous and
democratic country protected from external threats”.

Writing prose in Armenia is as difficult as life itself

Writing prose in Armenia is as difficult as life itself

By Hovhannes Yeranian

Yerkir/arm
19 Aug 05

On September 10 and 11 Alvard Petrossian’s play `I Am an Apricot Tree’
will be staged at Gabriel Sundukian Drama Theater in Yerevan. Despite
being involved in political and public affairs Petrossian continues to
write.

Usually poets start writing prose but in this case Alvard Petrossian
published a volume of poetry that does not look like a piece of novice
work in the world of poetry. Whatever Alvard Petrossian writes her
works go back to her childhood being identified with her
biography. This is why we started our conversation with her with her
childhood memories that have become the source of her literary work.

A.P.: When I was in the fifth grade I used to write essays that were
discussed by the board of teachers at our school. And I was writing
because I had lived a much more saturated and difficult life than my
classmates. My father was an `enemy of the people’ and a political
prisoner. I could see that I had to go through certain things that
were never happening to other children. As a family of a `people’s
enemy’ we lived in Aresh. There were repatriates from Greece and Egypt
here, children of killed soldiers, starving kids, robbers and thieves,
excellent craftsmen that were often arrested for doing private
business. All this could not but make me write. The thieves in Aresh
were always buying pencils and paints for my brother, painter Samvel
Petrossian. People treated my mother with unbelievable tenderness
since they knew thatshe was the wife of a famous prisoner. Children at
school were getting sandwiches but I never got any since I was a child
of an `enemy of the people’. But my teacher used to give me some bread
after the classes were over. I donâ=80=99t want to tell about all
these painful things but Aresh of those times is always with me and I
can never let it go.

Q: The bitter childhood is crystallized through literary expression,
it acquires meaning and is generalized. Maybe art is a way of getting
rid of this bitterness, maybe literature is a way of revenge? A: This
bitterness can either spoil a person or crystallize him. I am proud
that I was brought up in a very proper manner. Both in literature and
in life there were several criteria for me that have always been
indispensable â=80` conscience, morality, honesty. I started writing
at a very early age and my first story was published in Garun
magazine. Then I was the most frequently published author in the
press. But I did not want to hurry with publishinga book.

Q: Your generation had many difficulties with entering the world of
literature. Did you have problems with all kinds of publishing
procedures and ideological corrections? A: I did not have such
specific and serious problems as some of my fellow writers. As I said,
I was taking my time with publishing a book and this was in a way an
act of solidarity with my fellow writers whose books were kept
unpublished in for years, sometimes decades. On the other hand, I
canâ=80=99t stand protectionism. I never wanted and never allowed
anyone to treat my work with an air of condescension because the
author is a woman. I have always competed with men in my work. I
didn’t want to publish a book because therewas a generation of
rejected writers, a literary brotherhood and I was part of it. There
is a need for such a brotherhood today. The door to our house was
always open and my friends and my husband Lorents Arushian’s friends
could always stop by even late at night. We had discussions and
debates on art and literature all night.

Q: Let’s talk about the present. Your play `I Am an ApricotTree’ was
staged at Sundukian Drama Theater. What are your feelings when you see
your first play staged in the theater? A: To be honest, ,maybe you
won’t believe me, but I have never felt anything like that before. You
know that I have never lacked audience and applauses. But what you
feel when you appear on the stage as the author of the play, it’ s an
incredible feeling. When I looked at the audience from the stage I
felt like a child. Now I want to have another premiere performance
just so thatI can appear on the stage once again. My soul was filled
with a strange feeling that I had never experienced before.

Q: Summing up our conversation let’s speak about your last poetry
book. What does this transition from prose to poetry mean? A: There
comes a moment when you turn out to know much more than you can
express in writing. It is very difficult to express beautiful and deep
meaning in a short story, in Armenia it is as difficult as life. I was
too tired for writing a novel, I didn’t have time and strength for
that and I was in a depression. And I started writing poetry. I have
to say I was always ashamed of writing poetry. But I collected my
poems, I don’t know what came out of it – you are the ones to read and
judge.

P.S. – Alvard Petrossian has always surprised and sometimes made me
angry, poet Davit Hovhannes says. I am surprised and angry that
whatever Alvard does she succeeds in it. And I am filled with
masculine anger – why should a woman write so well and not a man?

Azeri leader says no need for authorities-opposition dialogue

Azeri leader says no need for authorities-opposition dialogue

ANS TV, Baku
19 Aug 05

[Presenter] President Ilham Aliyev has visited Ismayilli District
[central Azerbaijan]. [Indistinct sentence omitted]

[Aliyev] There have been no results [in the Nagornyy Karabakh
settlement] and we can see this. At the same time, there are hopes.
As long as we have hopes, we should continue the talks because as a
result of the work done, the international community has adopted an
unambiguous approach to the issue.

I believe that the achieved progress is important but does not
guarantee the signing of a peace agreement. The occupied territories
must be freed. Refugees and displaced people should return to their
native lands.

[Correspondent] President Ilham Aliyev said Azerbaijan’s military
potential is much higher than that of Armenia and that the Armenians
should understand the importance of acting in accordance with this
reality.

[Aliyev] We understand that the security of the Armenians of Nagornyy
Karabakh should be ensured and this is natural and normal. However,
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity is not a subject of negotiations and
can never be so. Separatism is unacceptable. No-one and no structure
can exist for a long time in an isolated form.

[Correspondent] The president highly valued the authorities-opposition
dialogue and commented on the [opposition] Azadliq electoral bloc’s
calls on Ilham Aliyev to participate in this dialogue.

[Aliyev] There has never been a dialogue between the authorities and
opposition since our independence and we have not had such a political
experience. This was a major shortcoming.

In general, there is no need for dialogue since the public have made a
clear-cut choice and support our policy. But dialogue between parties
is important, of course. Major disagreements usually take place
between parties. From this point of view, I believe, the current
format is appropriate. High-ranking officials and an MP from the
[ruling] New Azerbaijan Party have attended the dialogue and I think
this level is enough for the present time.

[Correspondent] Ilham Aliyev believes it is pointless for the president
to intervene and stop smear campaign in the media.

[Aliyev] How can I intervene in this process? We have freedom of the
press and freedom of expression. Newspapers write what they want and
you know that we are not going to influence any media outlet. This is
why these requests should be made to those media outlets that have
specific flaws. As the president, I am in favour of the free press
and at the same time, I believe that for the normal development of
our country, any political struggle should be fought in compliance
with ethical standards.

[Correspondent] Speaking about the list of candidates [to run in
November parliamentary election], Ilham Aliyev said it was satisfactory
and was drawn up under his personal supervision.

[Aliyev] As the [New Azerbaijan] party chairman, I played an important
role in drawing up this list and my opinion was reflected there. I
believe that those who have done a lot for the party and influential
public figures should definitely be included in the list. At the same
time, there should be refreshing changes, like those in society. There
are refreshing changes taking place in our party.

[Passage omitted: reported details]

Armenian officials free Duke student

Armenian officials free Duke student

Chicago Tribune, IL
Aug 18 2005

Items compiled from Tribune news services
Published August 18, 2005

ISTANBUL, TURKEY — A Turkish scholar who was arrested in Armenia
two months ago was ordered freed after receiving a 2-year suspended
sentence for attempting to take old books out of the country.

Yektan Turkyilmaz, a doctoral student at Duke University whose plight
had prompted protests from intellectuals and former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole,
was convicted Tuesday of two counts of smuggling.

At the request of prosecutors, the sentence was suspended. Authorities
said Turkyilmaz can leave Armenia after the verdict takes effect
Aug. 31. He has been held for almost two months in a former KGB
facility in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital.

“I was, I am and I will remain a friend of the Armenians,” Turkyilmaz
was quoted as saying in the Armenian media as he announced plans to
continue studying the history of relations between the Armenians and
the Turks.

The Armenian government has not yet returned the computer disks on
which he had stored months of research from the Armenian national
archives.

Officials have said the research material will be returned to
Turkyilmaz when he leaves the country.

Avetisian: We hope Armenia will attract $20m WB credit by end of yea

D. AVETISIAN: WE HOPE ARMENIA WILL ATTRACT $20 MILLION WB CREDIT BY END OF YEAR

PanArmenian News Network
Aug 5 2005

05.08.2005 02:48

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Deputy Minister of Economy and Finance
David Avetisian gave a positive assessment to the preparatory
works carried out in Armenia during the initial half of 2005 for
the attraction of World Bank credit for poverty reduction. During
yesterday’s press conference he noted that this June the Armenian
government has ratified the list of measures to be completed till
August 15. “We hope that as result of accomplishment of the programs
Armenia will attract World Bank credit totaling in $20 million by the
end of the year”, he noted. The Deputy Minister also reported that
the Mission of the International Monetary Fund will arrive in Armenia
August 25 to assess the work carried out during the recent months.
David Avetisian expressed hope that the assessment by the experts will
serve as a basis for the further ratification by the IMF Council of
Directors. When touching upon the cooperation with the U.S. within the
Millennium Challenge Account program Avetisian said that by the end of
2005 Armenia will come through with the qualification phase and start
negotiations on bilateral agreement on attracting the appropriate
funds. In his words, first real investments can be expected in 2007
while the year 2006 will be devoted to the successful accomplishment
of the preparatory works. At that David Avetisian brought the example
of Georgia, which can “approach the signing of the document.” To note,
Armenia will be allocated $60 million with the Millennium Challenge
Account. The financing will be carried out on the basis of precise
programs and will be targeted at poverty reduction, public health,
education and social field, IA Regnum reports.

Armenia & Thailand to sign agreement on scientific-engineeringcooper

ARMENIA AND THAILAND TO SIGN AGREEMENT ON SCIENTIFIC-ENGINEERING COOPERATION

PanArmenian News Network
Aug 4 2005

04.08.2005 07:06

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Government has approved of the proposal
to sign an agreement between the Governments of Armenia and Thailand
on scientific-engineering cooperation. Today the Government also
approved of the proposal to sign a memorandum on legal assistance
and cooperation between Offices of Prosecutor General of Armenia
and Georgia, the Press Service of the Armenian Government told
PanARMENIAN.Net.