If They Understand, They Will Finance

IF THEY UNDERSTAND, THEY WILL FINANCE
Lragir.am
1 July 06

On June 30 U.S. Ambassador John Evans stated that the United States
assists in working out a long-term energy strategy in Armenia.
John Evans affirmed that the Unites States perceives the importance of
the use of alternative energy sources and diversification of energy
supply, and knows that in this context one of the options under
consideration is the building of a new atomic power plant. Evans
announced that the project of building a new atomic plant involves
participation of international donors, which depends on the
possibility to perceive fully the strategy of Armenia in the sphere of
energy and closing of the old atomic power plant.
John Evans suggested that Armenia discuss how the settlement of
complicated problems with Azerbaijan will affect diversification of
energy supply and finding new markets for generated electricity.

PACE Commission To Visit Nagorny Karabakh In October

PACE COMMISSION TO VISIT NAGORNY KARABAKH IN OCTOBER
RIA Novosti, Russia
June 29, 2006
YEREVAN, June 29 (RIA Novosti) – Armenian and Azerbaijani officials
have agreed to let a special commission of the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe on Nagorny Karabakh visit the conflict zone
in October.
Committee head Lord Russell Johnston proposed during a meeting in
Strasbourg that a seminar be held for parliamentary members from the
warring sides, an Armenian parliamentary source said.
PACE approved the structure of the commission, which will include
heads of the Armenian and Azerbaijani delegations to PACE, one
representative of the opposition from each side, rapporteurs of the
Council of Europe monitoring group on the countries, Lord Russell
Johnston, and a rapporteur on missing persons.
The conflict between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and
Azerbaijan over Nagorny Karabakh, an Azerbaijani region with a largely
Armenian population, first erupted in 1988, when the region claimed
independence from Azerbaijan to join Armenia.
Over 30,000 people were reported dead on both sides between 1988
and 1994, and over 100 others died after a ceasefire was concluded
in 1994, leaving Nagorno-Karabakh in Armenian hands, but tensions
between Azerbaijan and Armenia have persisted.

BAKU: Azeri Delegation To PACE Held A News Conference On Facts Of Ar

AZERI DELEGATION TO PACE HELD A NEWS CONFERENCE ON FACTS OF ARMENIAN VANDALISM
Author: J.Shahverdiyev
TREND, Azerbaijan
June 29 2006
Azerbaijani parliamentary delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe (PACE) held a news conference on 29 June on
the facts of fires, broken up by Armenians in the occupied territory
of Azerbaijan, Gultakin Hajiyeva, the deputy head of the Azerbaijani
delegation to the PACE, told Trend.
Journalists from different countries participated in the news
conference. “Azerbaijani delegates put forward impressive arguments
while responding journalists. It was a next step by the Azerbaijani
delegation under the PACE summer session, which unmasked the Armenian
vandalism,” she underlined.

Eurocopter Vise Un Contrat De 2 Milliards D’Euros

EUROCOPTER VISE UN CONTRAT DE 2 MILLIARDS D’EUROS
La Tribune
27 juin 2006
Eurocopter, la filiale d’EADS, va avoir aujourd’hui le regard tourne
vers la Turquie. Ankara doit en principe se decider a l’occasion
d’une reunion, a laquelle participeront le Premier ministre Turc,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, les ministres de la Defense et des Finances
ainsi que le directeur des achats d’armement, sur le choix de son
nouvel helicoptère de combat.
Ils vont examiner cinq propositions de constructeurs d’helicoptères,
qui ont repondu a un appel d’offres en vue d’equiper les forces armees
terrestres turques de 50 appareils fermes (et 43 en option) pour un
contrat de l’ordre de 2 milliards d’euros : le Tigre d’Eurocopter,
l’Apache de l’americain Boeing, l’A129 de l’italien AgustaWestland,
le Rooivalk du sud-africain Denel et enfin le Kamov 50 russe. En
contrepartie, la Turquie demande que 40 % a 50 % des helicoptères
soient fabriques sur son territoire. Cette reunion pourrait toutefois
etre reportee a mi-septembre, estime-t-on de source proche du dossier.
Les Turcs semblent hesiter pour l’heure entre le Tigre, l’Apache
et l’A129, le moins cher des trois, selon nos informations et qui
est appele Mangusta en Italie, l’unique acheteur. Le Rooivalk et le
Kamov 50 font figure d’outsiders. S’agissant d’Eurocopter, il entre
en ligne de compte la politique francaise vis-a-vis de la Turquie,
notamment la position de la France sur le genocide armenien. Il y
a dix jours, la ministre deleguee au Commerce exterieur, Christine
Lagarde, avait estime en compagnie de son homologue turc a Istanbul
que ” les relations entre les deux pays sont excellentes, toutes les
courbes sont ascendantes “.
Pour autant, estime-t-on dans les milieux de la defense, ” si les
Turcs devaient choisir techniquement le Tigre, ils attendraient de
concretiser le contrat a l’automne pour juger de l’evolution de la
proposition de loi francaise visant a penaliser les propos niant
le genocide armenien ” commis en Anatolie entre 1915 et 1917. Deja
present en Turquie, Eurocopter – qui engrange de nombreux contrats en
ce moment – a deja vendu une vingtaine d’helicoptères Cougar a l’armee
turque dans les annees 90. La Turquie avait ete aussi interessee
par le Rooivalk dans les memes annees, mais a ete econduite par
l’administration de l’ancien president Nelson Mandela, qui refusait de
vendre des armes a des pays menant sur leur territoire des conflits
contre des mouvements separatistes. L’armee turque combat depuis
vingt-deux ans la rebellion de separatistes kurdes en Anatolie où
les helicoptères sont particulièrement utilises dans les terrains
montagneux.
–Boundary_(ID_R+kdi1cH6vpvL rzFnHvfIQ)–

Armenian Foreign Minister Visits Georgia

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS GEORGIA
Armenpress
Jun 28 2006
TBILISI, JUNE 28, ARMENPRESS: Armenian foreign ministry said Georgia’s
Foreign Minister Gela Bezhuashvili received Armenia’s Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian in Tbilisi, on June 27, on the first day of Minister
Oskanian’s working visit to Georgia.
In their welcoming remarks, the two foreign ministers shared the belief
that Armenian-Georgian relations, based on solid historic ties, will
continue to develop in the spirit of friendship and cooperation. The
two ministers discussed bilateral issues in detail. They noted that the
Armenian-Georgian bilateral agenda is a full one and this broad-based
relationship is reflected in frequent and high-level visits.
The sides stressed the need to further coordinate economic and business
ties in order to encourage greater trade and more investments. They
noted that the development of economically efficient transport routes
is essential for greater economic activity.
They also discussed issues related to energy security.
The two ministers explored ways to seek the assistance of international
organizations and individual countries in cross-border rural
development programs.
Armenia’s Foreign Minister stressed the economic and political
importance of the operation of the Kars-Gyumri-Tbilisi rail line,
and its contribution to the growth of trade in the region, equally
benefiting all countries.
The Georgian Foreign Minister affirmed that Georgia is aware of its
bridging role and responsibility in the region and will continue to
work for more favorable transit conditions for Armenia. He explained
that Georgia , too, is interested in ensuring diversified transport
routes. In discussing Javakhk, Minister Oskanian stressed that
the Armenian government stands prepared to work with the Georgian
government to resolve the socio-economic problems facing the population
of Javakhk.
They addressed issues of border delimitation and confirmed that there
exists the political will on both sides to resolve outstanding issues
and reach a mutually acceptable solution. Regarding euro-integration
processes, and specifically the European Neighborhood Policy
and deepening cooperation with NATO, they noted the importance of
coordinating efforts. Minister Oskanian briefed his colleague on the
current state of the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations. In turn, Minister
Bezhuashvili spoke about the negotiations surrounding Abkhazia and
South Ossetia.
The meeting between the ministers was followed by a joint press
conference. Later on the same day, Georgia’s President Mikhail
Saakashvili received Armenia’s Foreign Minister. On Wednesday, the
Minister’s visit will continue.

BAKU: Lenmarker’s Report On NK Conflict Not To Be Discussed At OSCE

LENMARKER’S REPORT ON NK CONFLICT NOT TO BE DISCUSSED AT OSCE PA’S SUMMER SESSION
Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
June 27 2006
The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s 15th session will be held in
Brussels from July 3 to 8. Head of the Azerbaijani parliamentary
delegation to OSCE PA, Bahar Muradova told the APA that the Session
will be dedicated to the human security problem.
The vice-speaker said the discussions at the session will also focus on
frozen conflicts, energy security, human rights, results of elections
conducted in different countries, disputed problems in Asia and Eastern
Europe and activity of the OSCE missions in these countries as well as
security of economy, investment, and raw materials market in Eurasia.
“The issue on all conflict zones, including the Nagorno Garabagh will
be debated. We have presented our proposals on the Resolution to be
adopted by al of the three OSCE committees. We’ll try to achieve in
adopting these proposals during the discussions,” Ms.Muradova said.
Muradova also said the report on the Nagorno Garabagh conflict drawn
up by Goran Lenmarker, OSCE PA rapporteur on the conflict will not
be discussed at the session. She noted that Lenmarker drew up his
report after his latest visit to Azerbaijan and sent draft resolution
in two variants to Azerbaijan for acquaintance, “One of these draft
resolutions consisted of nine items and the other eleven items. As
our approaches differed from that of Goran Lenmarker in both of the
drafts resolution, we consolidated the drafts into a new 12-item
variant. In his response to us, Lenmarker wrote that Armenia also
demonstrated a different approach to the draft resolution, and
the proposals of the two countries were contrastive enough. The
rapporteur said the discussion of the Nagorno Garabagh conflict at
the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly during this session was postponed,
explaining it by short of time and the sides not having agreed on
their positions,” Muradova said.
The vice-speaker said they are going to deliver speech on the current
situation regarding the conflict and massive fires in the occupied
Azerbaijani territories caused by Armenians, “Though this issue is
not on the official agenda, we’ll put this into discussion.”

TCF: Tufenkian Fnd Presents Gifted & Talented Schlrshp Winners in NK

PRESS RELEASE
NKR Tufenkian Charitable Foundation
20 Capitol Drive Moonachie, NJ 07074
Contact: Antranig Kasbarian
Tel. (201) 221-1055
Fax: 201.221.1070
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:
TUFENKIAN FOUNDATION PRESENTS GIFTED & TALENTED SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS IN
STEPANAKERT CONCERT
STEPANAKERT, NKR-Friday, June 16 was a bright day for the people of
Stepanakert and the Tufenkian Foundation, as the Foundation sponsored
its first year-end concert featuring scholarship winners from its
Taghandavor Yeridasardner program for gifted-and-talented youth. The
concert took place at Stepanakert’s Palace of Youth and Culture, drawing
an enthusiastic crowd of more than 350.
The concert featured 14 young talents who offered outstanding
performances in a variety of settings and genres. Some performed on
instruments including the piano, violin, guitar as well as the
traditional Armenian tar and shvi. Others contributed with vocal
renditions of a wide range of musical repertoire. Prior to the concert,
there also took place an exhibition featuring medals, diplomas, and
works of other recipients active in sports and the fine arts.
The program concluded with a short speech by Armen Sargsyan, a member of
the NKR Parliament and head of the project’s supervisory commission: “We
welcome the actions of the Tufenkian Foundation in implementing this
project along with various other projects like resettlement, grape
cultivation, and infrastructure development. The current venture not
only pursues the discovery and development of talent among our youth,
but also keeps alive our national traditions and Armenian culture,”
Sargsyan noted. Taghandavor Yeridasardner can become a bridge that
connects the entire Armenian nation, spreading our centuries-old
traditions and innovations worldwide.”
Conceived in conjunction with the NKR Ministry of Education, Taghandavor
Yeridasardner (Talented Youth) provides higher education and
professional development for youth who show the potential to make major
contributions in their respective fields. During its inaugural year, the
program supported the activities of 28 young talents in Stepanakert, and
this year will expand to include Karabagh’s Martuni district as well. In
coming years, Taghandavor Yeridasardner will likely cover the whole of
Karabagh. The program’s development has been facilitated, in part, by
the generous co-sponsorship of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian
Apostolic Church (NY).
The program’s supervisory board consists of specialists drawn from
appropriate professions-specifically sports, fine arts, education, and
vocal/instrumental music. This year’s program will expand to include
film as well. Scholarship criteria are based on talent as well as need,
and recipients receive one year of support in the form of tuition
rebates or coverage of performance-related expenses.
The Tufenkian Foundation was established in 1999 by New York-based
entrepreneur James Tufenkian. The Foundation currently pursues a wide
array of humanitarian projects in Armenia and in Karabagh, and also
sponsors the “Armenian Forests” NGO. To learn more about the
Foundation’s efforts, please see the Foundation’s website now under
construction at , or contact Antranig
Kasbarian at (201) 221-1055, ext. 327 or at
[email protected] .
###
The Tufenkian Foundation, Inc.
20 Capitol Drive Moonachie, NJ 07074 ??Voice: 201.221.1055 Fax:
201.221.1070 ??TufenkianFoundation.com

www.tufenkianfoundation.org
www.tufenkianfoundation.org

NDP Represents an Alternative to the Amendments of the Electoral Cod

NDP REPRESENTS AN ALTERNATIVE TO THE AMENDMENTS OF THE ELECTORAL CODE
A1+
[04:05 pm] 23 June, 2006
“The amendments to the Electoral Code are meant to contribute to the
reduction of the number of electoral fabrications”, announced Shavarsh
Kocharyan, the head of the National Democratic Party administration
in club “Pastark”.
Before referring to the conclusion of the Venice Commission about the
EC amendments, Mr. Kocharyan reminded that the electoral process in
conditioned not only by the Electoral Code by also by the will of the
authorities as well as of the opposition. According to Kocharyan, the
draft that the NDP represented to the Venice Commission was something
exclusive as both the RA authorities and the opposition signed under
it. Besides, “It also showed the absence of will of the authorities
and the opposition in the electoral process”.
According to Shavarsh Kocharyan, one of the most importance omissions
of the draft Electoral Code is the correlation of the proportional and
majority electoral systems. “If we want to have stable executive branch
of power the Parliament must be more politicized. Those individuals
who are elected by the majority system are the floating votes which
tend from here to there and do not contribute to stability. We must
have a 100% proportional system”.
Mr. Kocharyan is also worried about the way of forming the electoral
committees. He thinks that the authorities and the opposition must have
equal quantity of members in the committees, the members must not be
appointed by the President of the country and they must not be judges.
Mr. Kocharyan also said that the NDP does not have ambitions and
their version is open for broad discussions.

JANM Show Questions Identities and Seeks to Demystify the Term ‘Hapa

LA Downtown News Online, CA
June 24 2006
JANM Show Questions Identities and Seeks to Demystify the Term ‘Hapa’
by Tami Mnoian
I’m not saying this is the end-all-be-all of experiencing hapa,”
artist Kip Fulbeck announces. “This is my experience.”
Fulbeck is sitting in a low-key Santa Barbara coffee shop as he
makes this statement, but his words resonate to Downtown Los Angeles
and beyond. His current project, part asian, 100% hapa, is both a
recently published book and a new exhibit at the Japanese American
National Museum (it runs through Oct. 29). It explores assumptions
of race and ethnicity and seeks to demystify “hapa,” the Hawaiian
word for half. Despite its derogatory origins, hapa is embraced by
people of Asian or Pacific Islander descent. Part asian is like a
hapa coming-out party, and Fulbeck is the host.
The exhibit is simple in format: a collection of more than 80 headshots
taken from the collarbone up, no glasses, no jewelry, no smile. A
handwritten answer to the question “What are you?” sits opposite
each photograph, along with a self-declared list of the subject’s
racial and ethnic background. The inclusion of this simple query is
inspired by the forms – a standardized test or a college application,
for example – that ask people to choose between their ethnicities. Part
asian allows them to freely affirm who they are.
The responses land all over the map, literally and culturally. One
Japanese-German-Romanian-Russian man confesses (responses written as
they appear in the exhibit), “Many of my ex-girlfriends were habitual
half-asian daters. These women considered half-asian men ‘exotic,’
‘sexy,’ and ‘just-like-Keanu Reeves-in-the-Matrix. I consider these
stereotypes appropriate because I got laid.” A Chinese-Palauan-Austrian
woman says that Palau is “an island nation between Guam and the
Philipines. If I only had a dollar for every time I had to explain
that.” A part-Chinese, part-Japanese man writes, “I have this big jar
in my kitchen which I fill with a mixture of Corn Flakes, Cheerios,
Raisin Bran, and sometimes granola.
My breakfast is a daily statement on the excellence of mixture.”
These testaments are personal evidence of part asian’s significance in
a world where, like the abovementioned breakfast selection, mixture is
on the increase. According to the 2000 U.S. Census, almost 7 million
people described themselves as being of two or more races.
“It’s been a subject, I think, that nobody has actually sat down and
tried to tackle,” said JANM spokesman Chris Komai. “That’s why this
is the first of a series of programs that the museum intends to do
in the future.”
Consistent Theme
Fulbeck, 41, has been deconstructing his identity for most of his
life. He is Chinese, English, Irish and Welsh, and was raised in a
Chinese household in Covina, Calif., then a predominately white Los
Angeles suburb.
“My siblings are 100% Chinese, so I grew up in this family where I
was the white kid,” he remembers. “Every weekend we were in Chinatown
and I was the one who didn’t fit in.”
Fulbeck has a varied career as a filmmaker, writer, photographer,
professor and chair of art at UC Santa Barbara. Yet ethnicity is a
consistent subject in his work. His 1991 award-winning short film
Banana Split focuses on being hapa, as does Paper Bullets, a novel
Fulbeck describes as a “fictional autobiography.” Part asian is a
departure in that Fulbeck doesn’t take the stage, but rather sets
it up for others like him. Though he notes, “The book isn’t just for
hapa people. It’s for anyone who’s dealing with identity.”
Fulbeck laments that he didn’t have a book like part asian while
growing up, which is when the idea first took root. He says that
his artistic and professional commitments made it easy to postpone
a venture of this size. But, he recalls, in 2001 a friend warned,
“If you don’t do this, someone else will. And they’re going to do it
the way you don’t like, so you might as well do it.”
At a hapa issues conference in San Francisco that same year, Fulbeck
took his camera and put out a sign that read “Hapa Project.” He hoped
to photograph five or 10 people.
“That day I shot 60,” Fulbeck smiles. In ensuing years he traveled
all over the country snapping mugshots of willing participants. “They
were all really excited,” he says. “It’s this kind of thing where
you’re around your tribe.”
Avoiding the ‘Hot’ Girls
Fulbeck ultimately documented more than 1,000 subjects. Then came
the difficult cutting process. Fulbeck and three editors laid out the
pictures on a giant table and made their selections. One editor chose
only people with “cool hair,” says Fulbeck, and unconsciously or not,
everyone tried to avoid picking the “hot” girls.
“All of us didn’t want it to be the Devon Aoki book,” says Fulbeck,
referring to the Japanese-German-English model and actress. “Yes, there
are some hot girls in there, but I didn’t want to add to the stereotype
that all of us are gorgeous and smart and have good figures.”
Ultimately, Fulbeck wants the word hapa to be known by those other
than hapas themselves. “I would like hapa to be a term that people
understand,” he says, not wanting to offer up a laundry list of famous
hapas every time the subject comes up: Keanu Reeves, Tiger Woods,
Apolo Ohno, Michelle Branch, Eddie Van Halen. “I just want people to
be aware that we’re a really multiracial society and deal with it.”
On Saturdays during the show, JANM visitors will be able to take a
Polaroid of themselves and respond to the question “What are you?” in
an interactive display area. With the audience’s participation, part
asian will grow throughout the next few months. It’s also an effort
to celebrate the past and the future.
“If you look at the history of the United States, and you look at most
ethnic communities,” Komai cautions, “eventually, they just sort of
disappear. What we believe is that people should have a choice. If they
want to be part of the mainstream and just be considered American,
that’s fine, their choice. If, on the other hand, they feel like
there’s a link they want to continue, then there ought to be a way
that they can do that and institutions like the Japanese American
National Museum will be part of their ability to pass that down to
their children and grandchildren.”
Kip Fulbeck: part asian, 100% hapa runs through Oct. 29 at the Japanese
American National Museum, 369 E. First St., (213) 625-0414 or janm.org.
Tami Mnoian is half-Japanese, half-Armenian. “Mr. Astani has a track
record of great projects and does a great job contributing to the
area,” said Franco. “This sends a message to other developers if they
want to go this route.”
Pacific Atlas Development Corp. bought the property in 1990 and
received city approvals to develop two office towers, an open-air plaza
and a hotel. But after the downturn in the economy in the early 1990s,
the project was shelved. In 2005, Astani bought the 129,000-square-foot
lot for a reported $38 million.
Astani is responsible for about 5,000 units in Los Angeles, including
the Concerto, which broke ground last month at the corner of Ninth
and Figueroa streets. That project, which took two years to make its
way through the city approval process, is scheduled to open in 2008.
The Concerto will offer two 27-story residential towers and one
five-story mixed-use building, creating a total of 619 units, along
with 27,500 square feet of retail and a 2,510-square-foot park.
Another Astani project, at Wilshire and Bixel in City West, will hold
200 units, 30 of them priced as affordable housing. The development
is under construction and occupancy is scheduled for the fall.
Altogether, Astani is working on plans to create nearly 1,700 units
in Downtown, making him one of the area’s biggest developers.
“If buildings don’t get built,” he said, “the city loses money and
jobs, and homeowners stay renters.”

Train Carrying Russian Military Equipment Leaves Georgia’s Adjaria

TRAIN CARRYING RUSSIAN MILITARY EQUIPMENT LEAVES GEORGIA’S ADJARIA
RIA Novosti, Russia
June 22 2006
TBILISI, June 22 (RIA Novosti) – A fifth train with Russian military
equipment has left the northwestern Georgian region of Adjaria for
Armenia, the Georgian defense ministry said Thursday.
Under an agreement Russia and Georgia signed March 31, Russian
troops and hardware are to leave Georgia’s two Soviet-era bases in
Akhalkalaki and Batumi by 2008. The withdrawal is being monitored by
a joint Georgian-Russian commission set up under the March agreement.
The bulk of Russia’s weapons will return to Russia and the rest of
it will be delivered to a Russian base in Armenia.