Armenian defence minister praises CIS unified air defence system

Armenian defence boss praises CIS unified air defence system

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
3 Apr 04

YEREVAN

The CIS Unified Air Defence System operates efficiently and has all
possibilities to fulfil the tasks it has been given, Armenian Defence
Minister Serzh Sarkisyan said at a meeting with a group of Russian
journalists in Yerevan today. Sarkisyan voiced his wish that “this
system should be equipped with modern armaments”.

“Armenia’s air defence troops are efficient, and they showed this
during joint military exercises at Russia’s Ashuluk training ground,”
Sarkisyan said.

“The main guarantor of Armenia’s security” are the republic’s armed
forces which have everything necessary to protect the country’s
borders, he said. The armed forces are based on motorized infantry
units headed by regular officers with great war experience. “The
Russian military base is an important component of Armenia’s national
security,” Sarkisyan said.

Russian TV profiles military base in Armenia

Russian TV profiles military base in Armenia

Channel One TV, Moscow
3 Apr 04

[Presenter] Here is a report by our special correspondent, Roman
Babayan, at the 102nd Russian base in Armenia.

[Correspondent] A small Armenian village a few kilometres from the
Turkish border. As the crow flies, it is no more than six kilometres
from here to the first Turkish border posts. You will now see how the
officers and soldiers prepare to put a battery of the Kub
anti-aircraft missile system and the well-known S-300 launcher on
combat duty. [Passage omitted]

The S-300 missile system was deployed on Armenian territory nearly two
years ago. If aircraft of the Turkish air force previously appeared on
the state border with Armenia systematically, then after the S-300
units appeared here the number of their overflights dropped
sharply. [Passage omitted]

Turkey is a member of NATO and, according to the Russian military, has
kept a major aviation group on the border with Armenia for many years
– nearly 300 aircraft, including AWACS reconnaissance aircraft and
regiments of fighter aviation. But in spite of this, the command of
the Russian base is convinced that, if the need arises, just an S-300
battery and MiG-29 aircraft from the aviation group which is based at
the military airfield near Yerevan will be sufficient to repulse any
attack.

The Russian military base was deployed on the territory of Armenia as
early as 1996, and moreover, the bilateral treaty states that the
Russian military will be here for 25 years, but both before and now
the Armenian authorities have been saying that if need be this
timeframe can be reviewed, and exclusively in the direction of
prolongation.

Azerbaijani president appoints new foreign minister

Azerbaijani president appoints new foreign minister

AP Online
Apr 02, 2004

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliev on Friday appointed a career
diplomat as the new foreign minister of the ex-Soviet republic.

Almar Mammadyarov, the former Ambassador to Italy, replaces Vilayat
Guliyev, who held the post since 1999, the president’s office said in
a statement. Officials gave no reason for the dismissal.

Before his appointment to Italy, Mammadyarov, 44 had served as
counselor in Azerbaijan’s Embassy in the United States.

BEIRUT: Agreements signed, Hariri wraps up visit to Armenia

The Daily Star, Lebanon
April 3 2004

Agreements signed, Hariri wraps up visit to Armenia
Council for businessmen to be created

By Karine Raad , and
Daily Star staff

Prime Minister Rafik Hariri wrapped up his visit to Armenia on Friday
by meeting with the country’s President Robert Kotcharian. Issues
such as bilateral relations between both countries and regional and
international developments were raised.

At 11am, the premier headed to the government house to sign a series
of agreements with his Armenian counterpart Andranik Gargarian. These
consisted of an agreement in the agricultural sector, an agreement in
the cultural sector and an agreement in the educational and
scientific sector.

The minutes of the first session of the Lebanese-Armenian Joint
Governmental Committee were also signed.

In a news conference, Hariri said that the agreements aimed at
developing bilateral relations and improving the economy in both
countries.

“We agreed to create a council for Lebanese and Armenian
businessmen,” he said, adding that the meetings were an occasion to
invite his counterpart to Lebanon.

Commenting on obstacles hindering the implementation of agreements
between Lebanon and Armenia, Hariri said the main obstacle was the
cost of the transportation of goods and merchandise between Lebanon
and Armenia.

The premier reiterated that Armenians in Lebanon contributed greatly
in politics

and are represented in Parliament and the government as well as in
the media, economic, banking, commercial and industrial sectors.

For his part, Gargarian said that direct meetings between officials
from the commerce and industry chambers and businesspersons from both
countries will be encouraged. As for tourism, Gargarian indicated
that experience was important for Armenia in this sector and that
they could benefit from Lebanon’s expertise.

He stressed that Lebanon constituted a link between Armenia and the
Arab world and neighboring countries.

The Lebanese delegation was entertained at the Marriott Hotel before
touring the capital city, Yerevan. Hariri and the Lebanese delegation
returned to Beirut in the evening.

Calls for violent overthrow of authorities to be punished

Calls for violent overthrow of authorities to be punished – Armenian
prosecutor

Hayots Ashkarh, Yerevan
2 Apr 04

The Armenian prosecutor general has said that anyone found guilty of
calling for the authorities to be overthrown by force will be punished
within the framework of the law. Interviewed by Armenian newspaper
Hayots Ashkarh, Agvan Ovsepyan explained the recent criminal case
opened against members of the opposition Justice bloc. He said that at
unsanctioned rallies the opposition had been insulting the authorities
and calling for them to be overthrown. If the investigation finds any
MPs guilty, then parliament will be asked to lift their immunity from
prosecution. Ovsepyan said he had written to the chairman of
parliament and the prime minister, saying that some deputies were at
times engaged in criminal activity. The following is an excerpt from
Kima Yegiazaryan’s interview with Ovsepyan in Armenian newspaper
Hayots Ashkarh on 2 April headlined “Prosecutor’s Office will act
within framework of law”; subheadings inserted editorially:

An interview with Armenian Prosecutor General Agvan Ovsepyan.

[Hayots Ashkarh correspondent] Mr Ovsepyan, according to information
published recently by the Prosecutor General’s office, on 30 March an
action was brought against people who at unsanctioned meetings called
for the forcible seizure of state power and a change in the state’s
constitutional order. Against whom exactly in the Justice bloc has
this action been brought?

[Agvan Ovsepyan] The action was brought by the deputy prosecutor
general, [Zhirayr] Kharatyan, according to all the documents that the
prosecutor’s structures received in the regions and districts. All
these documents evidently fall under the second part of Articles 301
and 318 of the criminal code [public calls to change the authorities
and constitutional system by force and publicly insulting an
official], so the action was brought. We held a discussion before
bringing an action. The action was brought on the basis of the
facts. Since February representatives of the Justice bloc and their
supporters, organizing mainly unsanctioned mass-meetings in the
regions of Armenia and in Yerevan, have publicly insulted the
authorities and called for state power to be seized by force.

Parliament can lift deputies’ immunity

[Correspondent] Are there defendants or suspects? Specifically against
whom have actions been brought?

[Ovsepyan] An action has been brought over what happened and the names
of representatives of the bloc and their supporters are mentioned in
the decision. The investigation group has the objective of studying
all the evidence in detail, of interrogating participants in the
mass-meetings, those who made these calls and then to specify the
identity of each of them according to the facts.

[Correspondent] Some of those calling for the use of force are
representatives of the Justice bloc and National Assembly deputies who
have deputy immunity. In that case, how will the prosecutor’s office
settle the problem of making them responsible?

[Ovsepyan] If the criminal case substantiates that any MP committed a
crime, in that case we shall again act according to the law. The law
on the status of deputies says that before an action is brought
against them or they are arrested, the National Assembly should give
its accord.

[Correspondent] Stemming from the analysis you have already done of
the meetings, who has been arrested?

[Ovsepyan] Certainly we have the video tapes, but in order to avoid
damaging the presumption of innocence, let me speak only about the
evidence gained by the criminal case. Anyway I would like to say that
in the calls of opposition representatives there were expressions
which offended representatives of the authorities and their
dignity. There were calls to break their heads, their backs. I am not
a politician, but as prosecutor general I announce that the whole
prosecutor’s system should function within the framework of the law
and should ensure the necessary protection of the values enshrined in
law. And if we touch on the Criminal Code of Armenia, as it is
foreseen in the legislation of all other countries, there are also
relevant articles in our legislation, which foresee very strong
responsibility for encroachment on the state and public system. And in
this sense our legislation is no exception.

Democracy does not mean anarchy

[Correspondent] Recently they have talked much about sanctioned and
unsanctioned meetings. The mayor’s offices have function of giving or
not giving sanction. Can you explain, according to what law Yerevan’s
mayor has the right to sanction the holding of any meeting or not to
sanction it? Is there such a law?

[Ovsepyan] Certainly there is. But first I would like to refer to an
Armenian proverb that says: you are free but you are not free to
hamper the freedom of others. Certainly, there is a right to organize
meetings and demonstrations that stems from the principles of the
democratic system, but everything, including democratic principles,
has the obligation of a certain degree of law and order. Democracy
does not mean anarchy. There is an order according to which mayor’s
offices and local authorities should sanction meetings and
demonstrations. For this reason the organizers of meetings and
demonstrations should apply to the local authorities, in particular to
the local authorities of Yerevan and coordinate these events with
them.

[Passage omitted: some points of the law on state management in
Yerevan]

If you have noticed, these people who organized all these
mass-meetings are trying to present them as meetings with their
voters, they avoid calling them mass-meetings, but they are really
mass-meetings. As for the meetings with voters, they also have
regulations, before that a deputy should apply to the local government
body and this body must give a venue and even a free hall for the
meeting. But as I know, during meetings with voters they put questions
to deputies and the deputies answer these questions. But during these
mass-meetings voters listen to the calls, they are really
mass-meetings.

Moreover, I would like to say that I sent messages to the chairman of
the National Assembly and prime minister that say, “Considering the
criminal situation that has been created on the basis of the
aforementioned phenomenon, I think it should be mentioned that
deputies of the National Assembly, who have been voted in and given a
deputy’s immunity, instead of dealing with legislative activity,
commit criminal actions from time to time, accompanied with
unsanctioned meetings, demonstrations and other public events, during
which there are public calls for power to be seized by force, the
constitutional system of Armenia to be changed by force.”

Clash of views led to disorder at Gyumri rally

[Correspondent] Albert Bazeyan [leader of the Anrapetutyun (Republic)
party] says that they have some video tapes about the Gyumri events
[some people were injured during an opposition meeting in Gyumri]. Did
the government supporters really sling eggs at opposition supporters?
Do you have any information?

[Ovsepyan] Of course I have information. Just the same day an action
was brought. I think that if we talk about a group of people that can
have their own view concerning foreign and domestic policy as well as
the activity of the authorities, other groups of people may also have
their view and it is not at all necessary that their views should
coincide. In Gyumri some people appeared who were against the calls
made during the meeting and expressed their viewpoint. That time
there was a clash during which women suffered and a disabled
serviceman, who came forward with a statement that nobody has the
right to express the view on behalf of all servicemen that everybody
agrees that there should be a change of power. This disabled
serviceman was also beaten.

[Passage omitted: more details of the event]

We have a video tape of the Gyumri events, there is no secret,
everything is obvious.

Criminal case prepared before Ovsepyan’s appointment

[Correspondent] Did the impetus to bring an action against the Justice
bloc come from the president’s administration? Or was it your own
initiative?

[Ovsepyan] The meetings were held before my appointment. So the
documents which have become grounds for bringing an action were
prepared before my appointment as prosecutor general. And as
prosecutor general, I must carry out the obligations given to me
according to the law.

[Correspondent] According to you, what kind of actions does the
opposition have the right to carry out? Let us suppose that the
opposition holds meetings for 10 days, or three or four persons are
holding a sit-down strike in front of the president’s administration,
how will the prosecutor’s office comment on this?

[Ovsepyan] To be honest, I am not going to offer a programme to the
opposition. They themselves know very well what they can and cannot
do. Being MPs they themselves adopted that law and know that better
than me. I can definitely say that the prosecutor’s office and
law-enforcement agencies will not allow any encroachment on or
breaking of the law. One may implement any action within the framework
of the law. I was very impressed by the statement of the Armenian
president that representatives of the opposition as well as of the
government, all of them are Armenian citizens, I am the president of
them all and I must guarantee the rights of all of them.

Armenia’s energy system should be based on nuclear power – expert

Armenia’s energy system should be based on nuclear power – expert

Azg, Yerevan
1 Apr 04

Nuclear energy should be the core of Armenia’s energy system, the
director of the Russian research institute for nuclear energy has told
the Armenian newspaper Azg. Prof Armen Artavazd Abaghyan said that
Armenia has no oil, gas or coal resources, instead it has problems
with importing fuel from abroad. For this reason, Armenia should
become a nuclear state like Japan, he said. The following is an
excerpt from Ruben Ayrapetyan’s report by Armenian newspaper Azg on 1
April headlined “Armenia should become a nuclear power”. Subheadings
have been inserted editorially:

A real war for energy resources is going on in the world today. How is
nuclear energy developing against this background and is there a
larger interest in the sector? What are the prospects for nuclear
energy? The director of the Russian scientific research institute for
exploiting nuclear power stations, the vice-president of the
Rosatomenergo [Russian atomic energy] concern, a member of the Russian
Academy of Sciences, Prof Armen Artavazd Abaghyan answers these and
other questions.

Merciless struggle for energy

“It is a fact that a merciless struggle for oil is going on in the
world,” Prof Abaghyan said. “But the thing is that there are volumes
of crude oil, natural gas and coal which remain accessible sources of
energy. So one cannot say that against the background of all this,
atomic energy is developing quickly. The nuclear sector is developing
at a different pace in various countries: intensively in China, India,
Korea, Japan; moderately in Russia and slowly in Europe. But there is
no doubt that more importance will be attached to the role of atomic
energy, for the natural resources will run out at some point.
Unfortunately, people’s character is unchangeable and they will not do
anything about it until the situation becomes really critical. In this
respect, we do not have to go too far. I guess people have not
forgotten the difficult days of the early 1990s (energy crisis), when
the Armenians closed down the nuclear power plant without thinking of
its consequences. Later, they had to reopen it due to economic,
ecological and housekeeping problems. This is what will happen when
oil and gas resources are exhausted.”

[Correspondent] But uranium resources are also limited, aren’t they?

[Abaghyan] It is not really so. At present, atomic energy is extracted
mostly from the fission of uranium-235 which accounts only for 0.7 per
cent of the natural composition.

[Passage omitted: Details of nuclear fission; Russia is disposing of
nuclear waste products]

Nuclear energy should be the core of Armenia’s energy system

[Correspondent] Let’s talk about the energy sector of Armenia. You
have always been a devoted proponent of developing nuclear energy in
our country, and have made a great contribution to this issue. Has
anything changed in your position?

[Abaghyan] No. I really thought and still think that nuclear energy
should be the core of Armenia’s energy policy and the greatest
attention should be paid to it. I frequently repeat that we should
face up to severe realities: Armenia has no oil, gas or coal, but
instead, it has serious transport problems (with importing fuel from
abroad). For this reason, Armenia should become a nuclear state, like
Japan, for instance. The second bloc of the Metsamor Nuclear Power
Plant can operate till 2031.

[Correspondent] But there is external pressure demanding its closure.

[Abaghyan] That is already politics. And politics, as we know, are not
an exact science, and it is not my sphere. I base my statements on
scientific, technological and economic realities.

[Correspondent] What about rehabilitating the first bloc of the
Armenian Nuclear Power Station?

[Abaghyan] Time goes by and its operation requires more funds that
Armenia does not have. The matter should have been dealt with in time,
though not everything has been lost yet.

[Correspondent] Russia has acquired the major energy generating
stations of Armenia, and RAO YeES [Unified Energy Systems of Russia
Joint-Stock Company] is currently the managing company of the Armenian
Nuclear Power Station. I don’t know what this means. But I have a
question: If Russia ever becomes the holder of the controlling block
of shares of the Nuclear Power Station, will then the “tone” of the
European Union change in this matter? For Russia is not as small as
Armenia.

[Abaghyan] Everything is possible. Right now, I am not very
well-informed about the political-legal nuances of the contract on
managing the Nuclear Power Station. Maybe I will have a clearer idea
of the issue after I meet the Armenian president in Yerevan within the
framework of the Nuclear Security Council.

Weekend: Spirit

Weekend: Spirit: Wellbeing: STRIKE A BALANCE: This week: David Dickinson

The Guardian – United Kingdom
Apr 03, 2004

INTERVIEW: STEVIE BROWN

I’m 62 now, and have got to a stage where I feel comfortable with my
life and confident in myself. To relax, I go in the garden with my
wife – she likes gardening; I sit in a deckchair and soak up the rays.

I smoke a packet of cigarettes a day, started when I was 14 or
15. I’ve thought about giving up, especially at my age when you get
wheezy. It’s a fool’s game.

To be on form when filming, I’m in bed by 8.30pm. I am bloody tired
after a day in front of the cameras, and I can be filming for 10 to 15
days straight.

I am conscious of keeping my appearance smart, but not in an
egotistical way. I go on holiday as many times as I can. I have olive
skin as my grandfather is Armenian, and when I spend a week in the
sun, it stays for a couple of months. It’s not from a bottle. Sipping
a cool drink, sitting around the pool, I am happy.

David Dickinson presents BBC’s Bargain Hunt. His autobiography, The
Duke: What a Bobby Dazzler (BBC Books), is out now.

BAKU: Aliyev aide warns Turkey against opening border with Armenia

Azeri president’s aide warns Turkey against opening border with Armenia

ANS TV, Baku
3 Apr 04

[Presenter] If Turkey opens its border with Armenia, this will mean
that this country has surrendered to the small Armenian state, the
head of the foreign relations department of the presidential
administration, Novruz Mammadov, has said. He believes that public
discontent with this issue is quite justified.

[Novruz Mammadov] In general, this issue has become more topical of
late. Armenia raised the issue of opening the border with Turkey as
soon as it gained independence. It is continuing to work in this
direction and is clearly putting more pressure in this connection. It
takes advantage of all means to attain this goal. Therefore, I believe
that public discontent with this issue is well-founded. It is very
natural and it is very good at the same time that the public wants to
prevent this course of events, and this anxiety is justified.

Weekend: Space: Food:

Weekend: Space: Food: SWEET TEMPTATION: Trays of sticky Middle Eastern
pastries will not only infuse your kitchen with the sweet aromas of
the Levant, but they will also offer an exotic alternative to the
usual Easter parade of cakes and chocolate, says NAYLA AUDI

The Guardian – United Kingdom

Apr 03, 2004 NAYLA AUDI

I’ve always been in the enviable position of coming from two religions
– at least, when it came to the delicious world of Lebanese sweets. As
a child, I longed for the Muslim Eid (festivities) to begin. I’d wait
impatiently for my paternal grandparents to bring two huge, flat trays
from the sweet shop. One tray would be filled with a dizzying array of
baklava, all drenched with sticky syrup made from sugar, water and
orange blossom, and sweets cooked with a heavy ashta (clotted)
cream. The other would hold several kilos of maamoul – traditional
semolina-based pastries – all of them individually wrapped. The
baklavas would be reserved for the family, but the dozens of maamoul
were duly handed out, along with a steaming cup of Arabic coffee, to
the many visitors who would come over the Eid to wish us good
fortune. (According to Lebanese tradition, guests should be served a
meal before the maamoul are passed around, but these days they only
get the biscuits.)

Our guests would either eat the maamoul there and then, or take some
home. Either way, I’d always manage to hide a few of these delicious
little pastries for myself, and would later munch them in my room,
savouring the crumbling, shortbread-style pastry filled with either
crushed walnuts, almonds and pistachios or crushed dates, and then
covered with powdered sugar.

No sooner is the Eid over than the Christian festival of Easter
begins. As tradition dictates, women in my mother’s family gathered a
few days earlier and began the ritual of making the Christian version
of maamoul. These are similar to the Muslim kind, just smaller. Once
the semolina and butter was mixed, my strict Armenian Orthodox
grandmother would then pass the dough through incense, to “purify it
against the evil spirits”. The dough was then shaped – either with
old-fashioned wooden moulds or by hand – and stuffed with crushed
dates or nuts. The walnut, almond and pistachio-stuffed maamoul were
formed into oval, egg-like shapes; the date variety were more circular
and doughnut-like. The shape was important: the round maamoul
signified the crown worn by Jesus as he was led to be crucified, while
the egg-shaped one symbolised the sponge he was given to quench his
thirst. Each woman would then be handed a small pair of tweezers and,
with meticulous care, we’d pinch the surface of the maamoul, the
resulting effect symbolising the thorns on Jesus’s crown. The dozens
of maamoul were stored away and taken out to offer to well-wishers.

Unlike the Muslim version, however, the Christian maamoul are not
wrapped. They are eaten on Easter day itself – as a way to break the
40-day Lent. Real eastern Christian fasting requires abstention from
animal products, including butter, eggs and milk, so the maamoul
pastry made with butter was a perfect way to break the fast. Modern
women, however, see Lent as a way to abstain from sweets altogether
(as a great weight-loss technique) and use the maamoul to ease
themselves back into the world of desserts.

Today, such traditions remain relatively unchanged. As Easter
approaches, the main question among Christian women is still, “Have
you made the maamoul yet?” (I must add that sampling each other’s work
, and seeing whose are best, is a great source of gossip.) Sweet shops
do a roaring trade to those who didn’t perform the Easter ritual.

Lebanese sweets have earned a distinct reputation worldwide. One
well-known Beirut pastry shop, Bohsali, receives emails from all over
the globe asking for its sweets to be shipped over to ex-pats and
non-Lebanese alike (abohsali.com.lb). It was the same Bohsali family
who, in the middle of the 19th century, first “Lebanised” Turkish and
Greek sweets. Back then, they had a little shop near the port, and the
owner, Salim, came across baklava in shipments from Turkey and
Greece. The sweets were a big hit among Beirutis and, in time, Salim
learned to make his own. Soon, he and his son had expanded their
repertoire, and the store’s reputation began to spread. (In 1914,
while Lebanon was still under Ottoman rule, it was officially
appointed supplier to the king.) The sweets began to grab the
attention of the Lebanese bourgeoisie, who had until then ordered
their baked goods from swinging Cairo, thus establishing Lebanese
sweets as a favourite delicacy.

Last December, the Bohsalis won first prize at the Academie Lebanese
de la Gastronomie (a branch of the international Academie de la
Gastronomie). Today, there are dozens of Lebanese sweet shops
throughout the country and their pastries are distributed worldwide.

Another Lebanese sweet offered regularly is ghoraybeh, an off-white,
crumbly biscuit made with butter and flour. Whether bought in or
homemade, the pastry can either be large or small – the small ones are
only slightly bigger than a nut. Again, it was the Bohsali family who
were behind both the size and initial popularity of ghoraybeh.

Whichever sweet is offered, however, no visit to a Lebanese home is
complete without a cup of hot Arabic coffee. It’s usually made in a
special kettle, or raghweh, which you can buy in most Middle Eastern
shops.

Ghoraybeh

Makes 40 biscuits.

200g butter or lard

100g icing sugar

300g fine semolina

100g shelled pistachio nuts

Work the butter until soft, ideally by hand. Blend in the sugar, then
add the semolina making sure you get a homogenous mixture. Shape the
dough into small round biscuits or into half-moons, sticking the edges
together. Decorate each biscuit with a pistachio nut.

Bake at medium heat (180C/350F/ gas mark 4) for 10 to 15 minutes. The
biscuits should not be allowed to brown – a proper ghoraybeh retains
the initial off-white colour of the dough.

Maamoul

Traditionally, these pastries are filled with a mixture of almond,
pistachio and walnut or with dates. These days, orange blossom water
and rosewater are sold as a matter of course in most major
supermarkets; failing that, try a Middle Eastern store or
delicatessen. These quantities are enough to make 80 pastries – that
may sound a lot, but once you’ve tried one, you’ll get through them in
no time at all.

For the pastry

500g butter, melted

1kg fine semolina

250ml rosewater

250ml orange blossom water

Pour the melted butter over the semolina, mix well, cover, and leave
the mixture at room temperature overnight. The next day, add the
rosewater and the orange water and blend well. The resulting dough is
the basis for the biscuits.

Now make the stuffing of your choice:

Almond, pistachio and walnut stuffing

200g crushed almond, pistachio and walnut

2 tbsp sugar

1 tbsp orange blossom water

1 tbsp rosewater

Combine the ingredients in a bowl, then stuff the mixture into the
prepared dough either by hand, or with a traditional wooden maamoul
mould. Shape into round or oval biscuits. Bake on medium heat for 10
to 15 minutes.

Crushed date stuffing

200g crushed dates (called tamer, sold ready-crushed in Middle Eastern
stores )

50g butter

1 tbsp orange blossom water

1 tbsp rosewater

Mix the dates, butter, orange blossom water and rosewater, then stuff
and bake as with the nut stuffing above.

Lebanese coffee

You can find this in Middle Eastern stores where it is sold plain or
flavoured with cardamom. Use a small kettle, or buy a raghweh. Use
small coffee cups, one of which should be used to measure out the
correct amount of water. Makes four cups.

6 coffee cups water

7 full tsp Lebanese coffee

6 tsp sugar (optional)

Place the ingredients in a small kettle or pan, then bring to a boil
and take off the heat. Bring the resulting liquid to the boil a
further two times, then begin by transferring the coffee-infused foam
from the top of the pot in to each of the cups. Now pour in the
coffee, leave for several moments, in order to allow the grounds to
settle, and serve piping hot

Now you see them, now you don’t for Cyprus Gypsies

Now you see them, now you don’t for Cyprus Gypsies

NICOSIA, April 3 (Reuters) – For three days last week, the thousand or
so Dom people, or Gypsies, of Cyprus looked set finally to join
Greeks, Turks, Armenians and others as one of the island’s official
ethnic groups.

But, after 600 years, it was not to be.

Greek and Turkish Cypriot leaders negotiating reunification vetoed a
proposal by United Nations mediators to extend minority rights to the
Dom, including a special seat in parliament.

“Neither side wanted to give them the status that including them would
have provided,” said a diplomat involved in the talks in Switzerland
last week. The final draft — which makes no mention of the Dom —
goes to referendums on April 24 in a bid to end 30 years of division
between Greek and Turkish Cypriots.

The Dom, whose ancestors came to the island in the 14th century, had,
however, been recognised in an earlier draft of the constitutional
arrangements, seen by Reuters.

Three other minority groups — Latin, Maronite and Armenian Christians
— whose numbers are in the thousands out of a total population of
800,000 have their own, non-voting representative in the Cypriot
parliament under a 1960 constitution.

That constitution offers recognition to ethnic or religious minorities
numbering at least 500 people.

A Greek Cypriot official said he did not know why the Dom, referred to
as Roma by the U.N., had been excluded. Dom were not immediately
available for comment.

04/03/04 06:02 ET