ANKARA: Say to compose ballet on Akhtamar legend

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Jan 3 2008

Say to compose ballet on Akhtamar legend

Renowned pianist and composer Fazýl Say will compose a ballet piece
for the romantic and tragic love story referenced in legends of
Akhtamar Island in the eastern Anatolian province of Van. Say, with
this piece, intends to create an international project in which 100
Turkish and 100 Armenian dancers will take to the stage together in
the performance of the work.

Say said that they recently met with Culture and Tourism Minister
Ertuðrul Günay over breakfast and they talked about staging Say’s
"Nazým Hikmet Oratorio" in two events abroad, noting that he is
planning to stage it in Germany at the opening of this year’s
Frankfurt Book Fair, where Turkey will be featured as a guest
country. He added that the oratorio will also be staged in April in
Moscow in connection with the Turkish-Russian Friendship Week and
that the Culture and Tourism Ministry State Polyphonic Choir and the
Presidential Symphony Orchestra (CSO) would take part in the
performance. Say also noted that he told the culture minister that he
wanted the oratorio to be staged in several cities around the
country. "I conveyed my desire to stage it in 10 or 15 cities. He
said he would consider it," Say stated.
Say further mentioned that Günay proposed that he should compose
music on the poems of Yahya Kemal Beyatlý, noting that he is not able
to do it for the time being because he is working on other projects;
Say said after studying the poet’s life in detail, he might start to
work on it. Say, who has just completed his latest violin concerto
titled "1,001 Nights in Harem," said: "I have plans to compose three
more grand works. First I have to put them in order."

Concerning the ballet work that he will compose based on the legend
of a romantic and tragic love story on Akhtamar Island, known for its
historic church, Say said: "I want this to be Turkish-Armenian joint
production. This is because the Akhtamar legend belongs both to Turks
and Armenians." Say noted that he wants to see Turkish and Armenian
dancers on the same stage. "I took the first steps for this project
in 2004. But because of the tension caused by [the remarks on the
Armenian genocide of] writer Orhan Pamuk, we had to freeze that
project. … Furthermore, the murder of Hrant Dink led to
difficulties. … In the past, we had talks with the Yerevan Ballet and
Orchestra for such a project. But no progress has been made for
several years. Now, I am planning to resume this work," he said. Say
further explained that his second upcoming project was to compose a
musical piece concerning Nazým Hikmet’s "The Epic of Sheik
Bedrettin," where he again plans to employ a huge cast. Say’s third
project is to compose a symphony on the city of Ýstanbul.

The Akhtamar legend, which is considered the origin of the name of
the island, is about Tamara, the beautiful daughter of the clergyman
residing on the island. According to the legend, Tamara fell in love
with a Muslim shepherd from a nearby village. Every night, the
shepherd would swim to the island in order to meet Tamara. To show
her location to him, Tamara would light a candle at night. Having
learned of his daughter’s love affair, the clergyman lit a candle on
a stormy night and went down to the coast, but he frequently changed
his location to exhaust the shepherd. Finally, the young boy drowned,
but he shouted in his last breath, "Oh Tamara." The girl heard his
last shout, and she, too, committed suicide, throwing herself in the
lake. The island’s name is said to come from the boy’s last words,
"Oh Tamara."

03.01.2008

Today’s Zaman Ankara

Central Bank of Armenia Registers Valletta LLC Bonds

Economic News
December 26, 2007 Wednesday

Central Bank of Armenia Registers Valletta LLC Bonds

Yerevan. OREANDA-NEWS . On December 21, 2007 the Central Bank of
Armenia registered the announcement of registration of Valletta LLC
bonds, reported the press-centre of ARMSWISSBANK.

Let us remind that the 80% of the total volume will be allocated by
the underwriting group and another 20%, 100 million AMD, will be
allocated by subscription.

All interested legal and natural persons can make contact with
ARMSWISSBANK to acquire the bonds.

BAKU: Mamedov on the Adoption of military doctrine by Armenia

Today, Azerbaijan
Dec 27 2007

Alekper Mamedov: "Adoption of military doctrine by Armenia shows that
it does not rule out initiation of hostilities by Azerbaijan for
releasing its occupied lands"

27 December 2007 [13:28] – Today.Az

"Adoption of military doctrine in Armenia will not have a direct
influence on the settlement of Armenian-Azerbaijan conflict. Also, it
will not change the attitude of the world community towards Armenia.
In fact, this concept is a legal foundation for neutralization of
possible threats and any hostilities against Armenia, which will be
able to substantiate all its actions, including provocative and
aggressive ones, by the adopted military doctrine", Alekper Mamedov,
head of the Center of Democratic and Civil Control of Armed Forces
said, commenting on the adoption of a decree on military doctrine of
Armenia on December 25, 2007.

He said from the psychological point of view Armenia’s adoption of
the military doctrine might influence Azerbaijan negatively as we see
that Armenia again outstrips Azerbaijan as to the adoption of
critical decisions on the governmental level. He noted that
Azerbaijan’s lag on such issues is becoming an unpleasing tradition.

"No doubt, adoption of military doctrine by Armenia shows that it
does not rule out initiation of hostilities by Azerbaijan for
releasing its occupied lands. Moreover, the military doctrine
declares in open that in case of the threat of direct military
attacks, Armenia will have a right to undertake measures for their
neutralization and to appeal for support to its allies and partners.
It means that existence of military doctrine will allow Armenia
receiving military support of its allies, which in turn will point
out that the support is provided to neutralize possible threats to
Armenia, which is fixed in the military doctrine of the country",
A.Mamedov said.

He said in a response to the question about possible adoption of a
military doctrine by Azerbaijan that despite the repeated
declarations of representatives of Azerbaijan’s community, military
experts, political scientists, who state the necessity to adopt the
military doctrine in Azerbaijan, it has not yet been adopted.

/Day.Az/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/42069.html

States of denial

Pasadena Weekly, CA
Dec 27 2007

States of denial

Former mayor calls on Rose Parade watchers to turn their backs on
Beijing-backed float to protest against human rights abuses

By Bill Paparian

In Mayor Bill Bo-gaard’s recent letter to Beijing, he called human
rights abuses in China `allegations.’ I join in solidarity during
this Christmas season with those victims of human rights abuse and
religious persecution, who languish in China’s prisons, and challenge
Bogaard’s denialist words and deeds.

By definition, allegations are unproven claims. They are merely the
legal precedent for someone attempting to demonstrate the truth of
their claims. Bogaard’s reference to `allegations’ puts him on the
path of those who have minimized human rights atrocities and later
denied them. A frightening trend is growing in our world. Many
revisionists first minimize atrocities, then they rationalize them,
and finally they get to the point of denial. Bogaard’s reference
reminds me of those denialists who minimize the Armenian Genocide as
a mere allegation.

By using the word allegation in his letter to Chinese officials,
denialist Bogaard demonstrates his complicity with those same Chinese
government officials who deny the Tiananmen massacre and continue to
perpetrate human rights abuse.

Besides the city’s own Human Relations Commission report, he even got
the benefit of first-hand testimony. And the most he gained from this
evidence is to say that there are allegations?

It disturbs me to know that Bogaard displayed nothing less than a
callous and disrespectful attitude toward dozens of people who poured
out their souls in person to testify at Pasadena City Council
hearings about ongoing human rights atrocities in China.

Bogaard has blurred the lines between Pasadena’s corporatist
financial interest and the interests of ethics and morality. Bogaard
and his City Council collaborators do not care about what they heard
at City Council hearings from brave women and men who seek freedom
for all.

When the Pasadena City Council voted in 1998 to establish a
sister-city relationship with Xicheng, a district within Beijing, I
never imagined that it would result in a City Council in 2007 turning
a blind eye to the atrocities facing many people who only wish to
have the same rights that are incorporated in the Uni-

ted Nations International Declaration of Human Rights.

I never imagined the thoughtlessness of a denialist Mayor and his
City Council collaborators who would turn their backs on victims of
oppression and human rights atrocities.

Allegations?

Tell that to Teresa Moreau, who almost weekly attends the City
Council and asks for support for the many Roman Catholic bishops and
clergy who are imprisoned, tortured and murdered for their faith in
China.

Tell that to Maxine Russell, whose son, Darren was brutally murdered
in China and was heartsick when she watched Mayor Bogaard enjoy a
little chat with a staff member while she begged for an investigation
about the murder of her son.

Tell that to Yaning Liu – who has been refused a simple letter of
support by Mayor Bogaard for the release of Yaning’s mom, who is in a
labor prison in China for practicing the breathing and spiritual
exercises of Falun Gong.

And tell that to the dozens of people who took time from their lives
to testify about the facts and present documents supporting the need
to help prisoners of conscience and persecuted people in China’s
prisons, including public records by the US State Department and
reports from international organizations such as Amnesty
International and Reporters Without Borders that demand immediate
attention.

On Jan. 1, many will protest Bogaard’s cowardly decision to turn his
back on the brave people of China and deny solid proof of human
rights abuse in China. This will be done by the simple act of turning
their backs to Bogaard’s Beijing Float of Shame.

Our city has a rich history of celebrating the Rose Parade. This year
should be no different. We have a special opportunity to join the
Pasadena Coalition for Human Rights in China who have spread the word
for the residents of Pasadena to show their concern by turning their
backs to the Beijing Float of Shame as it passes.

Each back that turns will send a message to Beijing that the
residents of Pasadena want Beijing to keep its Olympics promise and
improve human rights conditions. Let us respond to this call and show
Bogaard and others who think we too have been hoodwinked by China’s
government leaders and who expect only smiles from the spectators
along the parade route. Turn your backs on Bogaard’s Beijing Float of
Shame!

4&IssueNum=104

http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/article.php?id=549

Priests brawl at Bethlehem birthplace of Jesus

Agence France Presse
Dec 27 2007

Priests brawl at Bethlehem birthplace of Jesus

BETHLEHEM, West Bank (AFP) – Seven people were injured on Thursday
when Greek Orthodox and Armenian priests came to blows in a dispute
over how to clean the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem.

Following the Christmas celebrations, Greek Orthodox priests set up
ladders to clean the walls and ceilings of their part of the church,
which is built over the site where Jesus Christ is believed to have
been born.

But the ladders encroached on space controlled by Armenian priests,
according to photographers who said angry words ensued and blows
quickly followed.

For a quarter of an hour bearded and robed priests laid into each
other with fists, brooms and iron rods while the photographers who
had come to take pictures of the annual cleaning ceremony recorded
the whole event.

A dozen unarmed Palestinian policemen were sent to try to separate
the priests, but two of them were also injured in the unholy melee.

"As usual the cleaning of the church afer Christmas is a cause of
problems," Bethlehem Mayor Victor Batarseh told AFP, adding that he
has offered to help ease tensions.

"For the two years that I have been here everything went more or less
calmly," he said. "It’s all finished now."

The Church of the Nativity, like the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in
Jerusalem’s Old City, is shared by various branches of Christianity,
each of which controls and jealously guards a part of the holy site.

The Church of the Nativity is built on the site where Christians
believe Jesus was born in a stable more than 2,000 years ago after
Mary and Joseph were turned away by an inn.

Remains of ancient civilisation discovered on the bottom of a lake

RIA Novosti, Russia
Dec 27 2007

Remains of ancient civilisation discovered on the bottom of a lake
16:35 | 27/ 12/ 2007

MOSCOW. (Nikolai Lukashov for RIA Novosti) – An international
archeological expedition to Lake Issyk Kul, high in the Kyrgyz
mountains, proves the existence of an advanced civilization 25
centuries ago, equal in development to the Hellenic civilizations of
the northern coast of the Pontus Euxinus (Black Sea) and the
Mediterranean coast of Egypt.

The expedition resulted in sensational finds, including the discovery
of major settlements, presently buried underwater. The data and
artefacts obtained, which are currently under study, apply the
finishing touches to the many years of exploration in the lake, made
by seven previous expeditions. The addition of a previously unknown
culture to the treasury of history extends the idea of the patterns
and regularities of human development.

Kyrgyz historians, led by Vladimir Ploskikh, vice president of the
Kyrgyz Academy of Sciences, worked side-by-side with Russian
colleagues, lead by historian Svetlana Lukashova and myself. All the
Russians involved were experienced skin-divers and members of the
Russian Confederation of Underwater Sports. We were responsible for
the work done under water. Scuba divers ventured into the lake many
times to study its bottom.

Last year, we worked near the north coast at depths of 5-10 metres to
discover formidable walls, some stretching for 500 meters-traces of a
large city with an area of several square kilometers. In other words,
it was a metropolis in its time. We also found Scythian burial
mounds, eroded by waves over the centuries, and numerous well
preserved artifacts-bronze battleaxes, arrowheads, self-sharpening
daggers, objects discarded by smiths, casting molds, and a faceted
gold bar, which was a monetary unit of the time.

Lake Issyk Kul has played a tremendous role since the inception of
human history due to its geographic location at the crossing of
Indo-Aryan and other nomadic routes. Archeologists found traces of
many religions here-Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity
and Islam. Somewhere in the vicinity was Chihu, the metropolitan city
of a mighty state of Wusung nomads, which ancient Chinese chronicles
mentioned on many occasions.

The Great Silk Road lay along the lake’s coast until the 18th
century. Even today, the descendants of caravan drivers recollect
their ancestors’ stories about travelling from Asia to Europe and
back.

Tamerlane built a fortress on one of the lake islets to hold
aristocratic captives and keep his treasures. The famous Asian
expeditions of Russian explorers Dmitry Przhevalsky and Pyotr
Semyonov-Tianshansky started from that spot.

The latter left us an enticing mystery. When he visited Venice in
1850, he looked at the Catalan Atlas of 1375 and came across a
picture of a lakeside monastery with the caption: "The spot is named
Isikol. Here is a monastery of Armenian brethren, which is rumored to
possess the relics of St. Matthew the Apostle and Evangelist."

Semyonov-Tianshansky embarked on a relentless but vain search for the
shrine. To all appearances, the monastery was engulfed by water.
Hydrologists have not to this day sufficiently studied the unique
lake with regular shifts in its water level. Some changes are
gradual, others sudden and disastrous since they are caused by
earthquakes and torrents of water rush from lakes higher up in the
mountains. Floods recede sooner or later, and people come back to the
shores-only to become the victims of other floods 500-700 years
later.

Throughout the years of their partnership, Russian and Kyrgyz
archeologists discovered and examined more than ten major flooded
urban and rural settlements of varying ages. Their ample finds
generously add to present-day ideas of everyday life in times long
ago.

Some artifacts are stunning. A 2,500 year-old ritual bronze cauldron
was found on the bottom of the lake. The subtlety of its
craftsmanship is amazing. Such excellent quality of joining details
together can be presently obtained by metalwork in an inert gas. How
did ancient people achieve their high-tech perfection? Also of superb
workmanship are bronze mirrors, festive horse harnesses and many
other objects. Articles identified as the world’s oldest extant coins
were also found underwater-gold wire rings used as small change and a
large hexahedral goldpiece.

Side by side with the settlements are remnants of ritual complexes of
times immemorial, dwellings and household outbuildings. Later
expeditions will study them.

The information collected there allows us to conjecture that local
people had a socio-economic system hitherto unknown to historians. As
a blending of nomadic and settled life, it either gradually evolved
into something different or-more likely-was destroyed by one of the
many local floods. Legends confirm the latter assumption.

Nikolai Lukashov, a member of the Russian Confederation of Underwater
Sports, took part in the the Issyk Kul expedition.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s and do not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

Museum plans are stymied: Armenian dream now under threat

Worcester Telegram & Gazette
Dec 23, 2007

Museum plans are stymied
Armenian dream now under threat

By Colleen Sullivan SPECIAL TO THE TELEGRAM & GAZETTE

WASHINGTON- Since it opened in 1993, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
has attracted more than 25 million visitors, the vast majority of them
non-Jews. That number has astonished many observers: Many experts
thought that such a large museum devoted to so somber and discomforting
a subject would have difficulty attracting visitors.

It gave Anoush Matevosian, a member of the Armenian National Institute’s
board of governors, an idea. A museum could open up a new front in the
struggle to gain wider public recognition and remembrance of the
Armenian genocide "No one had quite imagined constructing a museum
dedicated to this sad subject," said Rouben Adalian, director of the
Armenian National Institute. "The Holocaust Museum set an example which
can be emulated and learned from, and I think the Armenian-American
community was very much impressed and inspired by that example." But
building it would prove more difficult than anticipated.

The Armenian National Institute is a lobbying group devoted to
preserving the memory of thousands of Armenians massacred in 1915 by the
Ottoman Empire, an event Armenians describe as genocide. Turkey, the
Ottoman state’s modern heir, vigorously objects to that description of
the event.

The institute and other Armenian groups have waged a worldwide campaign
to have governments recognize the killings as genocide; dozens of
governments have passed resolutions to that effect, including Russia,
Argentina, Sweden, and Canada. France passed a law in 2006 that made
denial of the genocide a crime.

A measure recognizing the genocide has languished in Congress since the
Clinton administration. In October, the nonbinding resolution passed the
House Foreign Affairs Committee on a 27-21 vote, but Turkish protests
and pleas from President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
succeeded in quashing the effort.

The need to preserve access to crucial bases and airports in Turkey to
supply the U.S. Army in Iraq was a factor cited by many opponents of the
resolution, but even before the war in Iraq, the desire of the U.S.
government to maintain Turkey as a close ally in the Middle East has
stymied Armenian activists.

Enter Gerard Cafesjian. A stout, balding man who wears a black eyepatch,
Mr. Cafesjian, 82, is a former executive and part owner of West
Publishing, a Minnesota-based legal database firm that was sold to
Thomson Corp. in 1996 for $3.4 billion. Mr. Cafesjian retired from West
following the sale, but still manages a wide array of business and
charitable ventures. He has a stake in a chain of restaurants, is one of
the producers behind last year’s "Prairie Home Companion" film, and paid
for the restoration of a historic carousel at the Minnesota State Fair,
now known as the Cafesjian carousel.

He is better known in Armenia, where he operates a satellite TV station
– which has come under criticism for a perceived strong bias toward the
government of President Robert Kocharian. In Armenia, ground has been
broken on a museum, funded by Mr. Cafesjian and named after him, which
will house his extensive collection of Armenian art.

The institute approached Mr. Cafesjian in 1997 for help with the
genocide museum and in 2000 his family foundation contributed $3.5
million to help purchase the former national bank building on G Street
in downtown Washington, D.C., is just a short stroll from the White
House. Mr. Cafesjian also contributed $500,000 to the project in the
form of a promissory note.

Mr. Cafesjian helped to purchase additional lots adjacent to the old
bank. In 2002, articles appeared in The New York Times, the Los Angeles
Times and The Washington Post detailing the project and its goals,
including a $75 million, 115,000-square-foot project to be opened in
2008.

And then, silence. Public silence, anyway. Behind closed doors, there
was much to discuss. Mr. Cafesjian had hired an architect, Edgar
Papazian, to create a design. The rest of the museum board raised
questions about the scale and elaborate design of the proposal. While
the board wrangled, the project remained in limbo.

Then last year, Mr. Cafesjian sued to get his money back from the board.
Lawsuits have been filed both in Minnesota – where Mr. Cafesjian’s
charitable foundation is run – and in Washington. He is seeking $15
million, more than half of the museum’s endowment. Were he to win, some
of the land purchased for the museum would have to be given to Mr.
Cafesjian to settle the claim.

"We think the reason he wants the property back is that the value of the
property has increased significantly since he donated it," said museum
lawyer Arnold Rosenfeld of K&L Gates. "He wants the property back so he
can make a big profit."

Armenian community members in Central Massachusetts expressed
disappointment over the project delays.

"It’s too bad that political games are being played," said Van Aroian of
Worcester and a member of Armenian Church of Our Saviour. "That’s a
tragedy that hurts the memory of the people, including my mother’s
family and my father-in-law’s family."

He hopes the parties will resolve their differences. While he would love
to have a museum dedicated to the Armenian genocide, he said, it would
be more meaningful if it paid homage to all the other contemporary and
ongoing genocides.

"I would incorporate it with all evil acts of humanity in the past," he
said.

George Aghjayan, chairman of the Armenian National Committee of Central
Massachusetts, agreed a museum to educate people about the Armenian
genocide in particular, as well as genocides in general, is an important
and worthwhile goal.

"We’re saddened that there are issues that are preventing the museum
>From moving forward," he said. "We think a genocide museum in the
capital would be fitting."

Even if he ultimately loses the court case, all the legal wrangling may
result in Mr. Cafesjian obtaining his wish. A provision in the original
grant returns the property he acquired to him if the museum isn’t built
by 2010.

"By stopping them now, they can’t possibly get the museum built by 2010,
and he’ll get his property back that way," Mr. Rosenfeld said.

The museum board has taken action, hiring its own architectural firm,
Martinez & Johnson, and exhibit designers, Gallagher & Associates, to
get to work on the plans.

The new plans call for a 50,000-square-foot facility, with the bank as
its centerpiece but including a modern addition, in part to accommodate
disabled visitors. The museum planners are aiming to attract not only
Armenian Americans, but the broader public as well.

"In the case of the Armenian genocide, the United States played a very
constructive and positive role from the very beginning, and the fact of
the matter is we know the story of the Armenian genocide primarily
because of the way American witnesses documented and recorded the
events," Mr. Adalian said.

But as long as the case remains in court, even the extent of the
facilities cannot be fully mapped out, which is a threat to the broader
public role supporters envision the museum serving.

"There have been other people who have been subjected to genocide," Mr.
Adalian said. "And the problem keeps repeating itself into our own
times."

Colleen Sullivan reports for the Washington, D.C., bureau of Boston
University News Service. Lisa D. Welsh of the Telegram & Gazette staff
contributed to this report.

The Armenia Fund Rural Development Program End Year Report

The Armenia Fund Rural Development Program
Governmental Building 3, Yerevan, RA
Contact: Hayk Petrosyan
Tel: + (3741) 56 01 06 ext. 107
Fax: +(3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

28 December, 2007

The Armenia Fund Rural Development Program End Year Report

Yerevan, December 28, 2007 – As the countdown to 2008 is nearing the end, it
is time to sum up some of the results of the year 2007. This has been a
truly milestone year for the Rural Development Program as the bold idea
conceived during the 2006 Armenia Diaspora Conference and supported by the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, gradually took shape and transformed into a
practical mechanism as an integral part of The Armenia Fund.

The concept of rural development by itself is not new. The vital strategic,
economic and social importance of developing the rural communities and
especially border communities is also common knowledge. In this sense, both
the Government and the various local and international structures are
actively involved in the field, implementing a range of projects aimed at
alleviating this or that issue. Sooner or later these projects will give
their fruits. Unfortunately, time is one luxury we cannot afford and the
welcome development may come too little too late. Years of deprivations,
war, blockade, isolation, lack of infrastructure and jobs have brought forth
hopelessness and as a result: emigration. Thus, in another ten to fifteen
years, when the good life comes to the border villages, there may be no one
there to enjoy it.

There is no magic wand solution to this issue. Turning the tidal wave is
only possible through achieving new levels of cooperation, coordination and
channeling of all the available resources in Armenia and the Diaspora at
ensuring comprehensive and sustainable development of the border villages in
Armenia and Karabakh. This is our task, our goal, our dream: a dream shared
by all Armenians around the world.

Bringing that dream down to the real world is a painstaking process. For the
last six months we have been engaged in this process carrying out extensive
background work on bringing together the various components of the Program.
In a sense, this preparatory stage is probably the hardest as most of the
activities are going on under the surface and there are no physically
visible results. We are also very much aware of the high expectations both
From the Diaspora and the members of border communities as The Armenia Fund
has a rich history of undertaking seemingly impossible tasks and
successfully completing them.

At the same time, this meticulous preparatory process is the key to the
Program’s long term success, as it has allowed us to establish the vital
cooperation links, to gather both the governmental and non governmental
bodies around one table and work out a concrete action plan, where the many
diverse projects by different organizations come together in the same area
to form one comprehensive solution.

Thus, as a result of extensive negotiations with the governmental
institutions, we have been able to solve two of the major infrastructural
issues in the Program’s pilot Khashtarak cluster encompassing six villages
in Tavush region. The Ministry of Finance and Economy will redirect some of
the available resources at rehabilitating the roads of the region, while the
Ministry of Agriculture has undertaken the task of providing the communities
with access to natural gas.

Lack of access to natural gas is a universal problem in almost all the
border villages. Universal problem requires a universal solution and we
engaged into active negotiations with ArmRusGasArd. The result of these
negotiations is the organization’s commitment to co-finance the gasification
projects in all the border villages included in the Program.

We are also working on ensuring maximum involvement of local and
international organizations. At this point we are working with the following
structures:

. Armenia TV
o Preparation of vocational training DVDs
. Armenia School Foundation
o Provision of furniture to border village schools
. Armenian Technology Group (ATG)
o Conducting seminars/trainings in the pilot Khashtarak cluster
communities
o Seed betterment initiatives
. Center for Agricultural and Rural Development (CARD)
o Establishment of a milk collection unit, which will serve the needs
of the communities in and beyond the cluster
. International Center for Human Development (ICHD)
o Conducting community meetings in the cluster communities, ensuring
that the community members have their say in shaping the future
projects.
. Heifer International Armenia Branch
o Animal husbandry development initiative
o Young farmers training project
. Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
o Establishment of up-to-date veterinary points in the six villages of
the cluster
o Economic facilitation analysis in the prospective clusters
. UNDP and the Government of Italy
o Infrastructural amendment and agricultural development initiatives
in the Khashtarak cluster village of Lusadzor.

This list is by no means complete and will grow as the Program enlarges its
scale to reach out to all the border villages. Overall, the Rural
Development Program has been blessed by the strong support of both official
structures and ordinary people who simply care and want to make a
difference. To maximally widen the opportunities of getting involved in the
Program, we conceived the small projects initiative. These financially
low-cost projects cannot solve major issues but can nevertheless have strong
impact on the communities concerned, bringing hope and empowering people. We
truly felt the practical importance of these kinds of initiatives for the
border community members when we visited six villages in the Program’s Lori
cluster to distribute school consumables to 208 students, as part of the
small projects initiative. The project implementation date coincided with
the approaching holidays and the children received the consumable packages
as New Year gifts. We tried telling them otherwise, but in the end it all
very much made sense.

This is a very interesting notion, as it shows just how much these children
need that attention from the outside world, not only on New Year, or
holiday, or any other special occasion, but everyday and always. Driving
through the half empty villages through rocks, ice and mud and seeing the
scale of work that needs to be done, you really understand the importance of
this kind of additional incentive not only for the children but also men and
women who live in these conditions day after day, everyday and have the
strength and the resolve to carry on. They truly deserve a better life and
these kinds of projects give them the hope that help is on the way, that
there is someone who cares and wants to help.

In this sense, 2008 promises to be a very interesting, intense and rewarding
year as we will see many of the specific initiatives become a reality and
improve life in the border villages whether it’s on infrastructural,
economic or social level. The measure of success here is that this time next
year more families living in the border villages will decide not to travel
abroad and stay in their villages as they will feel and see that change is
coming and life is actually getting better. Of all the things, this would be
our New Year wish and we hope that you will join us on this one. Happy New
Year and Merry Christmas!!!

The Armenia Fund Rural Development Program

http://www.himnadram.org/villages

ICG: There Is Real Opportunity To Prevent War In Karabakh

ICG: THERE IS REAL OPPORTUNITY TO PREVENT WAR IN KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.12.2007 17:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ If the OSCE Minsk Group could get the parties to the
Nagrono Karabakh conflict commit to a document on basic principles, it
would be a very valuable achievement, Sabine Freizer, the International
Crisis Group Europe program director writes in the The Boston Globe.

Even such a lowest common denominator agreement would help
minimize the Nagorno Karabakh issue in the 2008 elections in both
countries. Removing the temptation for politicians to play with
that fire during the campaign seasons will cool public resistance
to talks and ease the way for leaders to start proper negotiations
quickly afterward.

When war breaks out, the international community usually wakes up
too late. But what if we could stop a war before it starts? What if
we could run a test of prevention, on the ground, in a real situation?

We have that opportunity in the case of Nagorno Karabakh, where Armenia
and Azerbaijan are preparing to go to war. A real opportunity exists
to prevent an explosion before it happens.

‘Electric Networks Of Armenia’ To Name The Winner Of The Tender On U

‘ELECTRIC NETWORKS OF ARMENIA’ TO NAME THE WINNER OF THE TENDER ON UPGRADING OF 13 ELECTRIC POWER SUB-STATIONS BY THE JBIC CREDIT

arminfo
2007-12-21 16:58:00

ArmInfo. In February 2008 "Electric Networks of Armenia" [ENA] will
name the winner of the tender on upgrading of 13 electric power
sub-stations by the JBIC Japanese bank credit, Director General of
the ENA Evgeniy Gladunchik said at the press-conference, Friday.

He also added that the tender was declared in the middle of 2007
and first six companies were taking part in it. At present four
participants in the tender remain – ABB, Siemens, a Chinese company
and a Russian company "Uralelektrotyazhmash". At present the tender
commission is learning technical suggestions of the participants. After
that at the beginning of January it will start revising the price
suggestions and will declared the winner in a month. Gladunchik that
unfortunately within the frames of the credit they will be able to
upgrade only 13 out of the 33 sub-stations planed to be upgraded
earlier.