Vanadzor residents threatened by intestinal disease epidemic

ArmenPress
July 28 2005

VANADZOR RESIDENTS THREATENED BY INTESTINAL DISEASES EPIDEMIC

VANADZOR, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS: Doctors in Armenia’s third largest
town of Vanadzor, the administrative center of Lori province, have
asked local authorities to take quick action to prevent further
spread of what they describe as ‘a situation close to epidemic,’
following 80 cases of intestinal diseases.
They say the number of cases has doubled against last year. The
spread began last June when 66 people, 30 children, were diagnosed
with salmonellosis and diphtheria. Doctors say they are short of
medications to treat the disease and there are no signs that the
number of sick people is going to fall down. The hotbed of the
disease in Vanadzor remains undiscovered.

TBILISI: Russian Military Convoy Released after ‘Misunderstanding’

Civil Georgia, Georgia
July 28 2005

Russian Military Convoy Released after Solving ‘Misunderstanding’

A convoy of four Russian military trucks and four armored vehicles
were released by the Georgian border guard service after the Russian
side submitted necessary documentation authorizing them to transport
arms.

The convoy, which was en route from Akhalkalaki military base to
Armenia, was shortly detained after the Georgian border guards found
five machine guns in vehicles, which were not listed in the papers,
which the Russian side provided Georgian border guards in advance.

Deputy Commander of the Headquarters of Group of Russian Troops in
Trans Caucasus, Col. Vladimir Kuparadze said that the incident was
just misunderstanding which has already been solved.

Georgian prez denounces emphasizing of Harutiunian’s ethnic origin

Georgian president denounces emphasizing of Harutiunian’s ethnic origin

27.07.2005 16:51

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – At a meeting with the Georgian Internal Ministry
personnel on Tuesday, Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili
criticized media and some political parties for their position to
countinously emphasize the ethnic background of Vladimir Harutiunian,
detained in the assassination attempt against US President George
W. Bush, Armenpress reported.

“I do not care for ethnic origin. Harutiunian is Armenian, but the
widow of the officer (Zurab Kvlividze) he has killed is also
Armenian. Both are Georgian citizens,” Saakashvili was quoted as
saying.

ANKARA: Armenian Attacker Confesses He Attempted to Kill Bush

Journal of Turkish Weekly
July 25 2005

Armenian Attacker Confesses He Attempted to Kill President Bush

* Georgian police have announced the arrest of a man suspected of
throwing a live hand grenade in the direction of President Mikheil
Saakashvili and his U.S. counterpart George W. Bush during their
joint public appearance in Tbilisi on 10 May. The suspect —
identified as Vladimir Arutyunian, a 27-year-old ethnic Armenian —
was captured overnight following a shoot-out that claimed the life of
a senior police officer. Today, Arutyunian confessed to throwing the
grenade with a view to harming the U.S. president.

An Armenian man suspected of hurling a grenade at President George W.
Bush during his May visit to the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, has been
charged with premeditated murder.
Georgian prosecutors say the charge against Vladimir Arutyunian stems
from the killing of a Georgian Interior Ministry security officer
during a gunfight that erupted as police tried to capture him
Wednesday.
The United States expressed sympathy over the death of the officer,
and lauded the bravery and dedication of Georgian authorities in
taking the man into custody.

Georgian officials say Mr. Arutyunian confessed to throwing the
grenade at President Bush, who was addressing tens of thousands
gathered in Tbilisi’s Freedom Square.

The grenade landed in front of the stage but the Russian-made
explosive device, folded in a red handkerchief, failed to go off. A
Georgian security officer reportedly picked it up and removed it from
the area.

Georgian authorities say the capture was made possible after police
were tipped off by some of Arutyunian’s neighbors.

Just three days ago, the Interior Ministry had increased to 150,000
laris ($80,000) the reward being offered for any information leading
to the location of the man suspected of tossing a grenade toward Bush
and Saakashvili while both leaders were addressing tens of thousands
of people on Tbilisi’s Freedom Square.

At an impromptu press briefing, Interior Minister Ivane (Vano)
Merabishvili described what happened next.

“As [police] went to the house of the suspect, Vladimir Vladimirovich
Arutyunian, he opened fire, causing the death of one of our men,
Zurab Kvlividze,” Merabishvili said. “Arutyunian was wounded in the
shoot-out that followed and, a few minutes later, detained by a
special police unit.”

Arutyunian sustained three gun wounds in the leg and chest and was
rushed to Tbilisi’s Republican Hospital for treatment. His condition
is reportedly not life-threatening, but doctors say it does not allow
for his immediate transfer to a prison.

Interior Ministry spokesman Guram Donadze today released a short
police video of a conversation that he said he had in hospital with
Arutyunian. In the video, broadcast on Georgian television channels,
the suspect admits to throwing the grenade with a view to harming
Bush.

In earlier comments made to Georgia’s Rustavi-2 television channel,
Deputy Health Minister Irakli Giorgobiani had quoted hospital doctors
as saying Arutyunian had confessed to throwing the grenade. But
Giorgobiani had also cast doubt on the suspect’s mental health.

Cal State Northridge Gets $7.3-Million Gift

Los Angeles Times
July 22 2005

Cal State Northridge Gets $7.3-Million Gift

The bequest, the university’s largest cash donation, came from a
couple who became wealthy buying, fixing and selling homes.

By Andrew Wang, Times Staff Writer

A retired art teacher and her husband, a former phone company
technician, left Cal State Northridge $7.3 million for scholarships,
the largest cash gift in the university’s history, school officials
announced this week.

Mary Bayramian, who died in 2001, graduated from the school in 1963,
when it was San Fernando Valley State College. After retirement, she
and her husband, Jack, who died in January, successfully invested in
real estate.

“They lived the American dream,” Don Barsumian, one of the Bayramians’
nephews and the trustee of their estate, said of his aunt and uncle,
both children of Armenian immigrants who fled Turkey in the early
20th century to escape persecution.

“Hard work, integrity, saving and investing,” he added. “You know in
books how they talk about how to get from here to there? They did it.”

Cal State Northridge President Jolene Koester said the donation from
the Bayramians’ estate “was just a very wonderful recognition for us
of the strength of Cal State Northridge and what we mean to people
who attended the university. It will help us attract top students, but
it also will help us support the excellent students we already have.”

The Cal State board of trustees voted unanimously Wednesday to name
Northridge’s student services building after the couple.

Their cash donation surpasses the $7 million given by Disney Chief
Executive Michael Eisner in 2002, though it wasn’t the largest donation
the university has received. In 2003, businessman Roland Tseng, who
briefly attended the school in the 1970s, pledged to donate Chinese
antiquities valued at $38 million.

Barsumian described his aunt as a “World War II wife” who had survived
the lean times of the Depression as a child, married young and settled
with her husband in the San Fernando Valley, first in Reseda and later
in Northridge, near the Cal State campus. The couple had one son,
Ronald, who died in 1998.

Attending college “was an opportunity for her,” Barsumian said. Mary
Bayramian enrolled at San Fernando Valley State College in 1960.
After graduating, Bayramian taught art at San Fernando High School,
where she was known by students as “Mrs. B” until she retired in 1970.

Jack Bayramian was a World War II naval veteran and worked as a vacuum
cleaner salesman and electrician after the war. He later worked as
a technician for Pacific Telephone and Telegraph.

The Bayramians moved in 1971 to Laguna Beach, where they lived for
the next 30 years, buying, renovating and selling homes.

“My uncle, he was a very handy kind of a guy, and he did carpeting and
electric work,” Barsumian, 71, said. “Mary was an artistic person, so
she would do the interiors and decorating…. They’d fix [homes] up and
resell them and move on to another one and another one and another one.

“They did quite well in their retirement.”

The Bayramians are survived by five grandchildren and several
great-grandchildren.

University spokesman John Chandler said the endowment will establish
the Bayramian Family Scholarship Fund. The earnings from $5 million of
the fund will support the newly named Bayramian Presidential Scholar
awards, merit-based scholarships of $5,000 for high-achieving students,
he said.

Earnings from the remaining $2.3 million will fund the Mary Bayramian
Arts Scholars program.

Ferrero-Waldner: I am familiar with Armenian issue

Ferrero-Waldner: I am familiar with Armenian issue

20.07.2005 12:36

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Benita Ferrero-Waldner, Commissioner for External
Relations & European Neighborhood Policy, met with Avetis Patanian,
representative of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation’s (ARF)
Hay Dat Committee and Armenian Apostolic Church Uruguay diocese.

Uruguay Parliament Speaker Nora Castro too attended the meeting
held at the Uruguay Parliament. Patanian handed over a document to
Ms. Ferrero-Waldner informing her about the petition initiated by
Lillian Kejejian, an ethnic Armenian member of the Uruguay Parliament.

The petition requests that the European Union rejects Turkey’s bid to
join the Union unless that country recognizes the Armenian genocide. Ms
Ferrero-Waldner was also given a copy of the book “Armenian Genocide,”
published by the South America Hay Dat Committee and dedicated to
the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. Thanking for the gift,
the EU diplomat said she is closely familiar with the issue and would
read the book.

Has Alcatel Finally Found Mr. Right?

Has Alcatel Finally Found Mr. Right?

Mike Quigley may not speak French, but he knows the company inside out

EUROPEAN BUSINESS

BusinessWeek
JULY 25, 2005

By Andy Reinhardt in Paris

Will the third time be the charm for Mike Quigley? In April the
52-year-old Anglo-Australian was named president and chief operating
officer of Paris telecom equipment giant Alcatel (ALA ). That puts him
first in line to succeed Serge Tchuruk as chief executive next May,
when he is supposed to step down at age 68. But Quigley is Alcatel’s
third heir apparent in four years. The others resigned for personal
or undisclosed reasons.

Quigley is more likely to stick around. While his two predecessors
came from outside the company, Quigley is a 34-year Alcatel veteran
who until recently headed the company’s North American unit and
its global fixed-line business. He also gets credit for scoring the
biggest sale in Alcatel’s history — a $1.7 billion deal last year
to supply equipment and services to SBC Communications Inc. (SBC )
for its “Project Lightspeed” broadband upgrade.

LANGUAGE BARRIER?

That’s not to say Quigley faces a cakewalk to the top. After steering
Alcatel through the telecom meltdown, Tchuruk apparently wants to enjoy
the rebound. He’s expected to ask the board to let him remain chairman
for two years after stepping down as CEO. The prospect of power-sharing
may have sparked the resignation of Quigley’s predecessor, Philippe
Germond, who couldn’t be reached for comment. But as an Alcatel lifer,
Quigley might be more patient. A potentially bigger stumbling block,
insiders say, is whether the board and employees are ready for a CEO
who doesn’t speak français. Quigley’s reply: His elevation to the
No. 2 spot “sends a strong signal that you don’t have to be French
to lead Alcatel.”

Not French, perhaps, but Tchuruk’s successor will have to be
plenty bold. Alcatel has overtaken Lucent Technologies Inc. (LU )
and Nortel Networks Corp. (NT ) in the past three years, thanks to
its broader product line. Dominance of broadband DSL gear helps,
but Alcatel also sells optical systems, low-cost mobile networks,
and satellites. Profits hit $338 million last year on revenues of
$15.2 billion. Still, Alcatel’s revenues and prices are under fierce
pressure, thanks in part to the emergence of Chinese rivals such
as Huawei Technologies Co. and ZTE Corp. Net margins, at 6.2%, are
the best since 1998, but nothing compared with Cisco Systems Inc.’s
(CSCO ) 23%. Quigley will have to wring out more profits and decide
whether to keep Alcatel so diversified.

Some argue that an Anglo-Saxon CEO could boost Alcatel’s global
standing. The company gets 58% of revenues from outside Western Europe,
and a third of its employees are in Asia or North America. Yet its
stock trades at a discount to its chief rivals, in part because
of Alcatel’s past as a state company and its continued role as an
instrument of French policy. Says Nomura Securities’ (NMR ) Richard
Windsor: “Some investors perceive it as being a bit opaque.”

The son of an Irish carpenter, Quigley was born in England but moved
with the family to Australia when he was 12. Summer jobs hanging
skins in a tannery and screwing tops onto bottles convinced him of
the value of education, Quigley says. He holds degrees in physics,
math, and electrical engineering.

After college, Quigley went to work for ITT Australia as a design
engineer. His group was eventually sold to Compagnie Générale
d’Electricité, which later morphed into Alcatel. At 38, the father
of three girls was diagnosed with life-threatening leukemia. After
reading up on immunology, Quigley decided to undergo a risky bone
marrow transplant, using cells supplied by his brother. He says the
disease changed him forever: “Once you’ve stared death in the face,
every day is a good day.” Life for Quigley could get even better if
he manages to break the succession curse at Alcatel.

–Boundary_(ID_ZQ5ivJNQ8a6a4K0U5ZM3CA)–

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_30/b3944082_mz054.htm?campaign_id=rss_magzn

Chess: Harikrishna hits back after minor hiccup

Harikrishna hits back after minor hiccup

Outlook , India
July 15 2005

>>From our chess correspondent Taiyuan (China), July 15 (PTI) World
Junior Champion Grandmaster P Harikrishna crashed threw the defenses
of Tigran Petrosian of Armenia to return to his winning ways in the
2nd Sanjin Hotel Cup Grandmasters chess tournament here.
It turned out to be another fine day for the Indian stalwart after he
was temporarily halted by Wang Yue of China in the previous round.

The victory gave Harikrishna another reason to celebrate as he
extended his lead yet again to a whopping 1.5 points in the
category-15 double round robin event.

With just four rounds remaining, Harikrishna took his tally to an
extremely impressive 6.5 points out of a possible 7 with his sixth
victory in the tournament.

Following him solely is Chinese Grandmaster Bu Xiangzhi drew with
compatriot Zhang Zhong.

Top seed Russian GM Alexander Motylev now has 4.5 points with an
extra game in hand slated on the rest day on 17th July against Ni
Hua.

Yue, Petrosian and world’s youngest ever GM Sergey Karjakin of
Ukraine are next in line on 4 points each while a full point adrift
of them are Hua and Wang Hao of China.

Petrosian had shown a lot of promise prior to his game against
Harikrishna but the Armenian simply could not find his form in this
very important game against the leader.

Playing white, Harikrishna showed extreme expertise in choosing the
Torre attack and the game transposed to a Pirc defense game.

Customs protocol may be signed in `next few days’

Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
July 14 2005

Customs protocol may be signed in `next few days’
By Myria Antoniadou in Brussels

THE PROTOCOL extending Turkey’s customs union agreement to all 25
member states, including Cyprus, is now before the Turkish President
Ahmet Sezer and may even be signed within the next few days, the Mail
has learned.

Sources said Ali Babacan, Turkey’s Finance Minister and chief
negotiator in the negotiations scheduled to open with the EU on
October 3, has been giving assurances to this effect during his
meetings in Brussels over the past couple of days.

Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn and Greek Environment Commissioner
Stavros Dimas are among the officials Babacan met here.

The signing of the Ankara Agreement’s additional protocol is
difficult for the Turkish government as it is seen as a de facto
recognition of Cyprus, which is why Turkey is expected to issue a
statement saying this does not constitute recognition, something it
has consistently done in the past.

However, the Commission is said to have told Ankara it is its
prerogative to issue a unilateral statement, but warned it will react
if the Turkish government tries to give it an official standing.
During the meeting with Dimas, the Greek Commissioner told Babacan
that Athens is among the group of countries supporting Turkey’s full
membership, but Ankara must carry on with the reforms. He also said
Turkey must maintain good neighbourly relations with all states.

In the meantime, the Vice Chairperson of the European Parliament –
Turkey delegation, has expressed dissatisfaction with Babacan’s first
appearance before the Foreign Affairs Committee Tuesday.

In a written statement, giving a `flavour’ of the difficulties
Turkish officials will have to face, German MEP Renate Sommer say’s
Babacan `avoided talking about the most obvious shortcomings of
Turkey regarding the accession criteria such as the recognition of
Cyprus, the Armenian genocide, the status of the Kurds and the
adoption of the so-called law on foundations.’

`My question on the recognition of Cyprus according to international
law was even completely ignored,’ she says, adding `obviously, Mr
Babacan thinks that he only has to negotiate with 24 Member States
about the accession of his country.’

Dr Sommers alleged his performance `was less than convincing and
bodes ill for the course of negotiations in the future,’ and deemed
some of his remarks `completely unacceptable as he was `threatening’
Members of the European Parliament to abstain from critical questions
which may be perceived as `insults’ by the Turkish people.’

`We are setting the rules, not Turkey”, the member of the Christian
Democrat group says, adding it is `unfortunate’ that Babacan `once
again categorically excluded the alternative of a privileged
partnership. Turkey will have to accept this solution as the only
viable perspective, otherwise this will fall back on Turkey in the
long run.’

Concluding, Sommer sent strong words of warning: `Without a radical
change in mentality, a full recognition of Cyprus according to
international law, an open discussion of the Armenian question, an
end to the war against the Kurds in the South-East of the country,
equal rights for women and unrestricted religious freedom including
the right to own property, we will continue to refuse Turkish
accession to the EU.’

Turmoil Of Owners

TURMOIL OF OWNERS

A1+
13-07-2005

The company «Electricity Supply Network of Armenia» has aroused
interest in many countries. On June 30 the Russian company `United
Electric System’ announced about their desire to buy the company with
73 million USD.

Some days ago the World Bank rendered a press conference demanding to
comment on the announcements about the change of the owners of the
company.

According to the head of the Yerevan office of the World Bank Roger
Robinson the Armenian Committee Regulating Public relations officially
turned to the company `Midland Resources’ which is the owner of the
«Electricity Supply Network of Armenia» demanding to comment on the
information about the sale of the company.

`If the issue is not cleared out within days, I intend to meet the
representatives of the Armenian Government’, announced Robinson. As
for the activity of the Bank, the World Bank’s Board of Directors
today approved an Urban Heating Project (UHP) for Armenia in the
amount of US$15 million. The project will support the implementation
of the Government’s Urban Heating Strategy for multi-unit apartment
buildings and will improve heating in urban schools.

The development objective of this four-year project is to increase the
use of clean, efficient, safe and affordable heating technologies in
urban schools and multi-unit apartment buildings.

`We do hope that with the joint efforts of the Government of Armenia,
the World Bank, and other donors involved in the sector, that by the
completion of this Project the foundation for the sustainable
development of commercial heating services in Armenia will be laid’,-
said Gevorg Sargsyan, head of the World Bank team designing the
Project.

The project will also be supported by a US$ 2.9 million co-financing
Grant from the UNDP/GEF project `Improving the Energy Efficiency of
Urban Heating and Hot Water Supply in Armenia’, which is designed as
technical assistance complementing the WB project.

The Credit will be made to Armenia on standard IDA terms, including 40
years maturity and a 10-year grace period.

Since joining the World Bank in 1992 and IDA in 1993, commitments to
Armenia total approximately US$896 million for 40 operations.