Romancing the stones

Romancing the stones

The Guardian, UK
June 16 2004

Julian Cope may well be the only antiquarian researcher to have
appeared on Top of the Pops while stoned on acid. He talks to John
Vidal about why we venerate landscape, the politics of heritage,
shamanism, and the prehistoric nature of football worship

Julian Cope, a middle-aged man wearing a baseball cap, is sitting
under a great oak at Avebury, one of Britain’s finest megalithic sites,
holding forth on what makes a place hallowed. There are, he says, tens
of thousands of stone circles, dolmans, amphitheatres and monuments,
but these are mere pointers. “The sacred landscape is everywhere,”
he says. “Britain’s ancientness shocks me. It’s all there, just below
the surface. You can peel it away like the skin of an onion.”

Cope is an expert on stone circles, but he’s not your average
antiquarian researcher. Rock star, self-styled shaman and goddess
worshipper, his conversation roams from druids (“an elite bunch
of control freaks”) to planning policy (he calls for a new era of
megalith-building in Britain).One minute he is learnedly discussing
alignments of stones with a passer-by, the next he’s leaping around
imitating a horned God. The heritage industry, environmentalism,
prehistoric culture and the goalkeeper-as-shaman are all on his
idiosyncratic agenda.

Places can be both modern and sacred, he ruminates. The best examples
are Avebury, Stonehenge, and especially Glastonbury, where people
today still go to from the city in an updated version of western
worship. But the examples are not exclusively ancient. St Paul’s
cathedral in London is sacred – though the technological age,
embodied in the modern city buildings that surround it and dominate
it, has sapped some of its power. The Twin Towers of New York, Cope
argues, represented a sacred landscape for Americans. Each culture,
he suggests, can make its own temples.

Cope is singular. He was the lead singer of post-punk indie band,
The Teardrop Explodes, who shone brilliantly for a couple of
amphetamine-fuelled years in the early 1980s. He became a cult
solo rocker, and author of two critically-acclaimed volumes of
autobiography. He may, too, be the only bona fide antiquarian
researcher to have performed on Top of the Pops while on acid,
and to have posed naked (for an album cover) beneath the shell of a
giant turtle.

More recently, he gave two talks at the British Museum about the norse
divinity Odin – an occasion noted for his appearance in five-inch
platform shoes and the fact that his hairspray forced the evacuation
of the building after setting off fire alarms.

He plays the fool, but he certainly isn’t one. Four years ago,
his eight-year study of the ancient sites of Britain, The Modern
Antiquarian, did as much as a thousand archaeologists and academics to
drag late-prehistoric megalithic cultural studies into the present. It
sold more than 40,000 copies in hardback and won the respect of many
of Britain’s leading researchers. What impressed the academics was
not just the fact that, unlike them, he had the time and money to
visit almost every one of the hundreds of sites that litter Britain,
but that the infectious enthusiasm and knowledge of this errant,
sometimes absurd, genius was filled with the kind of insights that
could never come from the mainstream.

Cope may follow a long and honourable line of 18th- and 19th-century
amateur antiquarians who meticulously recorded ancient sites and tried
to interpret pre-history, but his take is equally informed by rock
‘n’ roll, and his experience of wildness and shamanism.

The megalith builders, he says, were these islands’ first settlers,
and humanity’s first known monument builders. Their urge to mark the
environment they lived in with monuments came out of reverence for
the sun and the moon, but also, he says, from the deep and abiding
urge to make human significance from land scape – something which,
he says, still deeply informs the British, who venerate both landscape
and the past more than in any other country in Europe.

“The stones and circles of Britain are absolutely central to who we
are today,” he says. “They have defined and shaped our society. Our
understanding of them makes us who we are. It shapes us, enriches
our culture, and allows us to reflect on our own obsessions.”

A few weeks ago, he visited the small Nine Ladies stone circle in the
Peak District national park, just a few hundred yards from where a
quarry company plans to extract millions of tonnes of stone. On one
level, he says, he was shocked by the threatened disturbance and the
“fucked up” quarriers; but he was also heartened by the intuitive
defence of the stones by a group of protesters who have been camped
in the woods nearby for more than three years.

Cope, an evironmentalist, is no stranger to protest, notably at the
Newbury bypass, where he donned the white hats of the roadbuilders
and started ordering around the security guards. But the Nine Ladies
protest at Stanton Lees also made him think about how the British have,
almost uniquely, held on to their past. He has just finished a massive
book on the ancient cultures of Europe, visiting more than 400 sites –
from the temple circles of Ireland to the stone boats of Scandinavia
and the megaliths of Armenia and the Mediterranean. He found many
in a sorry state, un appreciated or even knocked down. “We dont know
how blessed we are with our monuments,” he says. “In some places in
Iberia, you have to wade through human excrement to reach rock-cut
tombs.” Moreover, there is little study being done. Even though the
earliest neolithic settlers [in Crete] were the originators of the
Greek myths, little is known about them.

The significance of the stones in Britain, he suggets, is not
dissimilar to what it was thousands of years ago. “The Peak District
national park is now a vast sanctuary for the hundreds of thousands
of people who live near it, just as in the past the megalith builders
turned the whole area into a huge limestone sanctuary reflecting the
monumental landscape.”

We should, he says, think differently about landscape today, not be
so precious about monuments, and think about using it to reflect our
own age and obsessions.

“My idea of beauty is first based on what I know about it, and then
on what it looks like,” Cope says. “Perhaps we should set windfarms
up in lines or in circles. Let’s be monumental about them.” Giant
sculptures such as the Angel of the North come, he says, from the
same urge to give meaning to place.

The heritage conservation industry is, he suggests, overprotective.
He would see nothing wrong with people today re-erecting fallen
monuments, or even re-arranging the stones, just as the megalith
builders themselves thought nothing about dismantling some structures,
carting them off to make new monuments and changing their significance
according to the needs of the times.

He deplores the kind of insensitive roadbuilding seen at Stonehenge
or Newbury, which can carelessly destroy ancient landscapes, yet
he is no lover of the government’s obsessive protectionism that
lists up to 400,000 buildings and preserves landscapes in aspic as
some kind of romanticisation. “Often, it’s for no other reason than
that something is old,” he says. “That’s got to be total bullshit.
Something is only beautiful because of what it stands for. Some of our
destroyed castles are symbolic of terrible things, and are a mess. Why
preserve the Byker estate in Newcastle? It’s a monument to suffering.”

One of the roles of the modern rock star, he suggests, is to be the
shaman in society, opening the doors of the “underground”. “It’s
as close to the shaman’s contribution in prehistoric society as you
can possibly get,” he argues. “The shaman beating on the rotten log
in Cheddar Gorge would have used the stack of speakers today. I see
myself as a shaman. We have this idea that the shaman was insane,
but I think he filtered through all society. You have always have to
have people howling at the moon.”

We are much closer to our ancient roots than we might think, he says.
“Jim Morrison was probably the first to recognise the role of the
rock ‘n’ roller as shaman,” Cope says. “It was the Doors’ epics,
such as The End and When the Music’s Over, that tipped the audience
into the magical netherworld of ritual death and resurrection. Even
a really shit band in a youth club has a barbarian eloquence. It’s
a religion substitute.”

He sees echoes of prehistory cultures in everything. “Look at
football worship,” he says. “All those people gathered in an unroofed
stadium [is] not unlike what must have gone on in pagan sanctuaries.
The goalkeeper is the ultimate shaman, guarding the gates to the
underground, wearing the No 1 jersey in a different colour and not
seeming to be part of the team. We’ve never lost it. Modern beliefs
that we are at the tail end of a culture that is killing itself is
just bollocks.”

What of today’s archaeologists, picking away at our past? “They’re
like fucking mystics,” he says. He loves and respects them, but cannot
help winding them up. “I went down to one site wearing my Archbishop
Makarios hat. ‘I’m here to declaim loudly,’ I said. ‘You spend 16
hours a day pissing around in the wind and the rain. If that’s not
mystic, what is?’

“I think it’s essential there’s someone like me, if only to wind them
up. I’m past the stage of trying to theorise about these places. I
know what I believe, but I’m more interested in getting other people
to see for themselves.”

Cope stops for breath and, as if reviewing his role in life, remarks:
“In the end, I’m not a very good rock ‘n’ roller, but I’m a very good
Julian Cope.”

· As the summer solstice approaches, historian Andy Worthington
discusses sacred landscapes, public access and the politics of heritage
at SocietyGuardian.co.uk/environment

· More about Julian Cope at

www.headheritage.com

BAKU: Azeri pressure group declares OSCE envoy persona non grata ove

Azeri pressure group declares OSCE envoy persona non grata over Karabakh visit

ANS TV, Baku
7 Jun 04

[Presenter] The Karabakh Liberation Organization [KLO] has
protested against the visit by the special representative of the
OSCE Parliamentary Assembly for Nagornyy Karabakh, Goran Lennmarker,
to Azerbaijan’s area of Karabakh via Armenia.

[Correspondent, over video of traffic in an unidentified area] The
special representative of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly for Nagornyy
Karabakh is now in Tbilisi. To recap, before this Lennmarker visited
Armenia and Azerbaijan’s region of Nagornyy Karabakh. He met the leader
of the Armenian community in Nagornyy Karabakh, Arkadiy Gukasyan.

The KLO issued a statement to say that Lennmarker’s visit to Karabakh
showed the OSCE’s pro-Armenian stance. According to the statement,
the OSCE representative showed no respect for the international legal
norms, Azerbaijan’s laws and territorial integrity. The KLO believes
there is no need for the operation in Azerbaijan of international
organizations which turn a blind eye to the fact that the Azerbaijani
people’s rights have been trampled over the past 16 years.

The statement said that Lennmarker and other representatives of
international organizations actually justify Armenia’s aggressive
policy. In its statement the KLO declared Goran Lennmarker, [the
rapporteur of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
for the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict] Terry Davis and other lying
peace mediators persona non grata and stated that their visits to
Azerbaijan will be prevented by all possible means.

Mahir Mammadli, ANS.

Soccer: Addicks miss out on UEFA Cup

Addicks miss out on UEFA Cup

ESPN
June 8 2004

Charlton’s European dream for next season finally came to an end
tonight when they missed out on a place in the UEFA Cup following
the Fair Play League draw in Germany.

Armenian side FC Mika, plus a team from Ukraine yet to be decided as
their league season runs until June 19, were the lucky names drawn
from the hat during half-time at the European Under-21 Championship
final in Bochum.

After a promising start to their Premiership campaign, the Addicks
faded before dropping out of contention for the Champions League or
UEFA Cup places which came with a top-five finish.

Charlton’s name will now not be in the hat for the UEFA Cup qualifying
round draw in Nyon on June 25.

Eleven teams were in the hat for the draw, with Esbjerg of Denmark,
SK Brann of Norway, German side Freiburg, Cork City from the Republic
of Ireland, FC Lahti of Finland, Spanish side Real Mallorca, KS
Teuta of Albania and Throttur Reykjavik of Iceland the other teams
who missed out.

Alan Curbishley’s men would have faced a two-legged tie on July 15
and 29, and the Charlton manager admitted the prospect of a European
fixture right in the middle of pre-season training would have meant
a hectic schedule ahead.

‘If we do get picked, it causes us a major headache,’ said Curbishley
on the club’s official website when looking ahead to the Fair Play
Draw.

‘The players will only have been back at the training ground 10
days before we would need to play the first qualifying game, and the
international players will only have been back about five or six days
before they’ve got to go and play a game.’

Charlton finished third in the discipline-based rankings for England,
behind winners Arsenal and Chelsea.

However, with both of those clubs having already secured a place
in the Champions League, Charlton were put forward as the Football
Association’s representatives.

Osters IF had claimed the automatic place in the qualifying round of
the UEFA Cup after Sweden finished top of the overall European Fair
Play League.

Last season Manchester City, and previously Ipswich, had come through
the the Fair Play League to gain entry into the UEFA Cup.

AAA: Armenia This Week – 06/07/2004

ARMENIA THIS WEEK
Friday, June 4, 2004

U.S., ARMENIA SIGN CULTURAL AGREEMENT, DISCUSS MILLENNIUM AID
Armenia and the United States committed to safeguarding the cultural
heritage of their respective citizens, and began talks on launching a new
U.S. aid program to Armenia and Kansas-Armenia state partnership in the last
two weeks.

Armenia’s Ambassador to the U.S. Dr. Arman Kirakossian signed the Agreement
on the Protection and Preservation of Certain Cultural Properties following
a December 31, 2003 request from the Chairman of the U.S. Commission for the
Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad, Warren L. Miller. The Commission
was established by Congress in 1985 and has since signed over a dozen
agreements with Central and Eastern European countries. In addition to
protection and preservation of sites of historical significance, such as
temples and cemeteries, as well as archival documents, the agreement calls
for provision of public access to same. The Commission is negotiating
similar agreements with Azerbaijan and Georgia, and is also expected to
begin negotiations with Turkey. These three countries hold cultural heritage
of special importance to the Armenian-American community.

Also last week, Major General Tod M. Bunting, the recently appointed
Adjutant General of the Kansas National Guard, made his first visit to
Armenia to explore areas of cooperation under the Pentagon’s National Guard
State Partnership Program. The program pairs Eastern European countries with
U.S. states’ national guards for civil-military training. While in Armenia,
Bunting met with Defense Ministry and other officials to discuss possible
cooperation in emergency management, health and peacekeeping operations.
Kansas’ Governor Kathleen Sibelius endorsed the partnership with Armenia in
a special proclamation earlier this year.

This week, a delegation of the U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC)
led by its Chief Executive Officer Paul V. Applegarth was in Armenia to
begin preliminary discussions about this new U.S. assistance program.
Armenia and 15 other countries were found eligible for $1 billion in
additional U.S. aid in Fiscal Year 2004. In the next two months, MCC’s
Armenia counter-part commission, which is led by the Prime Minister and
includes the ministers of Finance, Agriculture and Transport, as well as the
Chairman of the Water Management Committee, is expected to submit Armenia’s
request identifying priority areas. MCC will consider funding proposals
based on their proven impact on economic growth, civic involvement and
effective implementation. (Sources: ;
; ; Armenia This Week 5-7; Embassy of
Armenia in U.S. 5-25; Noyan Tapan 5-25, 28; RFE/RL Armenia Report 5-31; AAA
Yerevan Office 6-3)

ARMENIA LAUNCHES THINK TANK TO EXPLORE SECURITY OPTIONS
Armenia’s Defense Ministry this week established the Dro National Strategic
Research Center tasked with providing policy advice and training on defense
and security issues to the Armenian government and serve as a liaison with
similar institutions abroad. Defense Minister Serge Sargsian designated his
advisor Col. Hayk Kotanjian to run the new Center. Sargsian and other
officials this week attended the groundbreaking ceremony for the Center’s
new building. The initial construction costs are funded from Diaspora
sources.

Kotanjian is a veteran Defense Ministry official, who combines a background
in the Soviet military and academia with Western training. He had just
completed a year-long program for senior officers at the U.S. National
Defense University and had previously served as Armenia’s Defense Attaché in
Washington (1998-2001). In a recent interview, Kotanjian underscored the
importance of Armenia’s growing relations with NATO, which he described as
“the only effective military-political organization in the world today.”

A recent poll conducted by the Armenian Center for National and
International Studies (ACNIS) found that a strong majority of local experts
“think that Armenia should join NATO within 10-12 years.” Armenia,
constrained by persistent antagonism from NATO member Turkey, and resultant
alliance with Russia, has yet to make a political commitment on membership.

According to Tevan Poghosian, head of the Armenian Atlantic Association, a
local NGO working to educate the Armenian public about NATO, all three
Caucasus countries have still much to do to reach even the basic NATO
standards. “But I would be happy should Armenia undergo the necessary
reforms, whether or not we eventually join the Alliance,” Poghosian said.
(Sources: Azg 5-22; ACNIS 5-27; Regnum.ru 5-28; Noyan Tapan 5-31; RFE/RL
Armenia Report 5-31)

GEORGIA STEPS UP EFFORTS TO REASSERT TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY
Following the successful re-imposition of state authority in Ajaria, the
Georgian government is moving rapidly to reassert control over other
breakaway and uncontrolled areas, while also accelerating talks on the
withdrawal of Russian forces from the country. Should these goals be
achieved as successfully and peacefully as in Ajaria, they may have a
significant positive effect on Armenia’s economy, which heavily relies on
trade routes through Georgia.

Last month Georgia renewed settlement offers to Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
two Soviet-era autonomies that broke away from Georgian control following
bloody wars in the early 1990s. This week, Georgia sent additional security
forces to South Ossetia, while also taking steps to win over the local
population by distributing humanitarian aid and beginning TV broadcasts in
the Ossetian language.

This week Georgia sent additional forces to the Azeri-populated areas of
Kvemo Kartli province in an effort to clamp down on smuggling there.
Georgian officials also temporarily closed the country’s border with
Azerbaijan as part of the operation.

U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell this week resumed calls for withdrawal
of Russian bases from Batumi and the Armenian-populated Akhalkalaki. In the
latter case, Georgian officials are reportedly preparing U.S.-funded
assistance programs aiming to reduce the local economy’s reliance on the
military base. Russia has made a general commitment on withdrawal, but is
said to expect U.S. compensation for the move.

A leading regional analyst Elizabeth Fuller suggested this week that Georgia
and Russia are working on a deal that would lead to incorporation of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia into a federated Georgia, return of refugees and
reopening of communications. Should the effort be successful, it would lead
to reopening of the Abkhazia railroad which connects Armenia to Russia and
Europe, and provide Armenia’s economy with a major boost.

At the same time, any armed escalation in Ossetia may be fraught with
sabotage against a key gas pipeline that supplies both Georgia and Armenia,
and one of two major highways linking the Caucasus with Russia. (Sources:
; Armenia This Week 5-7; Eurasia.net 5-19, 21; RFE/RL 5-27, 6-1,
3; U.S. State Dept 6-1; In the National Interest 6-2)

Visit the Armenia This Week archive dating back to 1997 at

A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
(202) 638-4904
E-Mail [email protected] WEB

http://www.aaainc.org/ArTW/archive.php.
http://www.aaainc.org
www.accesskansas.org
www.heritageabroad.gov
www.mcc.gov
www.civil.ge

Melbourne: Migrant loved family and his motorcycle

Migrant loved family and his motorcycle
by Nicolle Nazarstian

Herald Sun (Melbourne, Australia)
June 7, 2004 Monday

Mardiros Hatsakortzian
Refugee and family man
Born: 1910-1912
Died: May 3, 2004

MARDIROS Hatsakortzian led a simple life, its world revolving around
his family and its affairs.

But this quiet man, who was somewhat of a loner, reached minor fame
for thousands of people in the Armenian and Greek communities.

You only had to say his name to evoke instant images for which he was
synonymous — Station Pier, Port Melbourne, the Anzac Day march,
ringing of the St John’s church bell at Carlton, but, above all else,
his beloved Triumph motorcycle with its Armenian flag.

These are what Mardiros will always be remembered for.

Although known by many, very few people knew him well. He was an odd
man with an eccentric streak, which made him hard to get to know.

He was a God-fearing man, with remarkably simple tastes reflected in
all facets of his life, right down to the clothes he wore and the
food he ate.

He was very humble, but at times proud and stubborn. Religious, but
at times a rogue. Not even something as simple as his true age was
clear.

He was born between 1910 and 1912 in Dikranaged, a town on the
Armenian/Turkish border, the youngest of seven siblings.

World War I broke out and the then Turkish Ottoman Government used
the opportunity to exercise its form of ethnic cleansing against more
than a million Armenians living in the border towns and provinces
between the two countries. It became known as the Armenian Genocide.

His father, Tateyos, who had a haberdashery stall in the town’s
market, died as a result of the violence, as did many of his
neighbours.

In the chaos and whirlwind of those events, for his own safety and
survival, his mother placed Mardiros and his youngest sister in an
Armenian orphanage.

Like millions of his country’s people, he became a refugee. The
refugees spilled out to different parts of the world.

>>From about age seven, Mardiros spent the next 10-12 years in
orphanages and international relief missions throughout the Middle
East. Some were no more than tent camps, where he lived for months at
a time with thousands of other children.

He spent seven years in a Greek orphanage, from which came his love
affair with its people and traditions.

None were more loved than the blessing of the waters ritual, which
explains why in early January every year he dived into the Port
Melbourne water and raced for the cross with men less than half his
age.

At about 18, Mardiros left Greece for Egypt and eventually made his
way to Palestine by 1937. There he married Jeanette, who was 14 years
old.

When World War II began, he joined the Royal Electric Mechanical
Engineers of the British army as a fitter and turner.

It was during this time that he discovered his true love and passion:
motorcycles. It was also where he acquired the electrical and
mechanical skills that enabled him to come up with so many crazy
inventions many years later.

His two daughters were born during the war years, after which he
worked as a transport driver before migrating to Australia in 1963
and settling in Blackburn.

In Melbourne, Mardiros worked for Wormald Security alongside his
son-in-law for 15 years before retiring in 1978.

After retiring, he could almost always be found in his garage
tinkering with his motorcycle or the family Mazda, or doing something
to drive Jeanette crazy, like painting all the outdoor fittings on
their property in the colours of the Armenian flag.

Unbelievably, it was only this year, aged well into his 90s, that he
failed to dive for the cross.

I can vividly recall being with him the previous year on the pier
with hundreds of other people, all wanting to shake the hand of an
old man who had just come out of the water wearing nothing but his
underwear and a wooden crucifix.

Uncharacteristically, he made a point of wanting me to be there to
see him that year.

You could see it in his eyes on that warm, sunny day — he was tired
now, and you couldn’t help but sense that he knew this was the last
time.

Nicolle Nazarstian

(granddaughter)

BAKU: Ukraine Backs Azerbaijan’s Territorial Integrity

UKRAINE BACKS AZERBAIJAN’S TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY

ANS TV, Baku
3 Jun 04

Visiting Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Ukrainian President
Leonid Kuchma have held a joint news conference. Kuchma made a
statement supporting Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. He expressed
the hope that Karabakh will soon be returned to Azerbaijan peacefully.

Leonid Kuchma noted that there are no differences in the two countries’
positions on the Karabakh problem, the Armenian-occupied Azerbaijani
districts and the situation in the region.

He said that it was necessary to call a spade a spade. He described
as a tragedy the fact that 750,000 people who used to live in those
areas are now looking for vacant accommodation. Ukraine has always
supported and will continue to support Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity. In these terms, we have no other point of view. I think,
time will work in your favour, end quote.

(Passage omitted: Similar ideas)

New Armenian TV chief outlines future plans

New Armenian TV chief outlines future plans

Yerkir web site
1 Jun 04

on 1 June entitled “Yerkir-Media on the air”

Yerevan, 31 May: On 28 May Yerkir-Media, a new television station,
began to broadcast on channel 56, Rubina Kazaryan, Yerkir-Media’s
director-general, presented the plans of the station.

She said the station will air its programmes on a trial basis for a
while before starting its main programmes. “Usually, a long trial
period precedes the main programming of a TV station,” Kazaryan
said. “But, we started a news broadcast off on 28 May. What we did
was quite risky.”

On the first day on the air, the station showed programmes dedicated
to the first Armenian Republic. The day was concluded by the movie
“Nahapet”.

During the trial period, the company will broadcast news programmes
twice a day. The broadcast license, the company won in a tender late
last year, requires that Yerkir-Media broadcast 18 hours a day starting
from 20 June. Kazaryan says that the company will have a wide range
of programmes to satisfy every viewer.

Political shows will take an extensive part of the air. Every two hours
there will be newscasts to cover domestic and international affairs,
as well as weekly analytical programmes. “We are going to present
pure news which will be free of comment,” Kazaryan says. “Commentary
will be presented in separate shows.”

The station will begin its day early in the morning with domestic and
international news, press reviews and shows for housewives. There
will also be history programs on Artsakh [Karabakh], Eastern
and Western Armenia. Zori Balayan will host programmes about on
Karabakh. Programmes on Armenia’s monuments and prominent figures in
history will also be shown. The station will also air youth shows.

Besides, Kazaryan says, the station plans to prepare three programmes
on the issues that society faces, including one on consumers’
rights. There will also be educational shows, including those on
environmental issues. Children will also have their share.

A programme on Armenian regions will cover events there as “Armenia
does not begin and end with Yerevan”, according to Kazaryan. “We
have reached agreements with regional TV stations.” Yerkir-Media
will present a number of cultural programmes on theatres, museums,
etc. Kazaryan said that Yerkir-Media will not air pirated movies.

The station signed a five-year contract with Armenfilm and a number of
Moscow-based companies which sell licenses for films. The station’s
board decided not to show “silly” soap operas. “We might lose out
financially, but we would rather show more good quality films,”
she said, adding that preference will be given to documentaries.

The station has been cooperating with five TV and radio companies
run by the Armenian diaspora, and will exchange shows with them.

“We started broadcasting on 28 May, but we have already shown
that we have something new to say,” Kazaryan said. “We will be
unbiased. There are TV stations that serve the interests of various
groups or individuals.”

In 2005, Yerkir-Media will be on the air for 24 hours a day
broadcasting throughout Armenia and its diaspora.

Municipality Forbidding Opposition

MUNICIPALITY FORBIDDING OPPOSITION

A1 Plus | 19:14:57 | 01-06-2004 | Official |

Yerevan Municipality forbade Opposition to hold a rally on June 4 at
6:00 PM near Matenadaran.

In reply to the letter of “Justice” Bloc, “National Unity” Party
and Communist Party representatives Municipality made a decision on
forbidding the mass public measure, reasoning criminal cases over the
rallies held before were instituted in Office of Prosecutor and being
guided by the 13th article of the Armenian Law on “Holding Meetings,
Rallies and Marches” and N 856-A decision by Yerevan Mayor.

New Union Created In Armenia

NEW UNION CREATED IN ARMENIA

A1 Plus | 18:29:33 | 31-05-2004 | Politics |

Eleven Armenian organizations functioning in public services area
have united to protect utilities consumers’ interests with joint
efforts. The newly created union intends to establish close ties with
Utilities Regulations Commission and cooperate with it.

The union will be functioning as advice-giving structure. The most
common are gasification-related complaints, the union activists
say. Complainants say shadow dealing is accompanying gasification
works.

Armenian porducers apply codes on goods

ARMENIAN PRODUCERS APPLY CODES ON GOODS

ArmenPress
May 25 2004

YEREVAN, MAY 25, ARMENPRESS: According to the chairman of Armenian
goods coding IEN Armenia Pap Aslanian, 9 percent increase is reported
in companies using goods codes as compared to 2003. If only 95
companies received “485” linear codes in 2001, today their number
totals 250 (mainly food, alcohol and non-alcohol drinks, medicine
production) with 5000 coded goods names.

To make coding more affordable for small scale companies, IEN Armenia
has applied new payment rates which is calculated according to number
of employees. This initiation has increased the number of small scale
companies asking for codes.

In Yerevan the number of shops using code reading machines has
increased. Twenty more shops use such machines now.