IEC negotiates 20m Euros for reconstruction of Yerevan 1 Hydro power

ArmenPress
March 29 2004

IEC NEGOTIATES 20 MILLION EUROS CREDIT FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF
YEREVAN-1 HYDRO POWER PLANT

YEREVAN, MARCH 29, ARMENPRESS: The International Energy
Corporation (IEC), a Yerevan-based subsidiary of the Russian RAO UES,
said it is now negotiating a 20 million euro credit from German KFW
bank, which it wants for a major reconstruction of Yerevan-1 hydro
power plant, one in a chain of small hydro power plants, known as
Sevan-Hrazdan cascade. The IEC said negotiations are in the final
stage.
Yerevan-1 plant is the main supplier of electricity to the
capital. IEC experts estimate that the full reconstruction of the
Cascade, built between 1930-1962, which provides for almost 20
percent of all produced power, they will need tens of millions of US
Dollars.
The German bank had already allocated some 18 million euros for
reconstruction of Kanaker hydro power plant, which IEC has pledged to
return together with interest rates.
IEC was founded by Russia’s giant RAO UES to manage the
Sevan-Hrazdan cascade and was granted a 15 year-long permission for
energy generation.
A representative of the IEC said no negotiations are carried with
Turkey on sale of Armenian electricity, but added that the export of
Armenian electricity to Turkey is considered promising and that a
relevant scheme is being now discussed. He also said the export will
face no technical problems requiring only small-sized financial and
know-how investments.
Armenian electricity production capacities allow now to export
electricity to Iran and Georgia concurrently with meeting domestic
demands. With regard to Iran there is electricity swap in summer and
winter. The volume of electricity sold to Georgia has grown to 3
million kw/per hour daily.

Armenia continues efforts for release of 6 Armenians in Eq. Guinea

ArmenPress
March 29 2004

ARMENIAN DIPLOMATS CONTINUE EFFORTS FOR RELEASE OF SIX ARMENIANS,
ARRESTED IN EQUATORIAL GUINEA

YEREVAN, MARCH 29, ARMENPRESS: Official Yerevan is continuing
efforts with the help of third nations and international
organizations to secure the release of six Armenian nationals who
were arrested in Equatorial Guinea on charges of coup earlier this
month.
The Armenian nationals are among 15 foreigners accused by the
authorities of the West African state of plotting to overthrow
president Teodoro Obiang Nguema. In a statement, released last week
the Armenian foreign ministry said they are civilian pilots who
worked in the region on a private contract.
`The accusations of Equatorial Guinea in no way relate to their
professional activities,’ the Armenian foreign ministry said in a
statement last week. `Authorities in Equatorial Guinea present the
Armenian citizens as militant mercenaries, despite the fact that they
are professional pilots with a long work experience.’
Armenian foreign ministry said that Armenia’s envoy to the UN has
officially asked a special envoy of the UN Secretary General to
Equatorial Guinea, who was heading for that country, “to clarify the
situation on the site.” Another Armenian diplomat, Armenia’s
representative at the UN Human Rights Commission in Geneva, met with
delegates of Equatorial Guinea who were participating in the
Commission’s session to insist that Guinea’s authorities must treat
Armenian nationals according to relevant international conventions.
Concurrently Armenian diplomats have contacted two influential
international human rights organizations, Amnesty International and
the International Red Cross to help release Armenian pilots. Amnesty
International has also called on Guinea’s authorities to refrain from
mistreating the arrested.
Armenian foreign ministry said also that Armenian diplomats have
already spoken with their Guinean counterparts in Moscow and New York
to explore ways of having the pilots freed. It said Armenian
diplomats are in constant contacts with French and Russian
authorities which have embassies in the country’s capital Malabo.

BAKU: Peace in NK conflict should be reached without winners, losers

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
March 29, 2004

Peace in Karabakh conflict should be reached without winners,losers

By Sevindj Abdullayeva, Viktor Shulman

BAKU, March 29

Azerbaijan pins high hopes that Russia would play a positive role in
the resolution of the Karabakh conflict, speaker of Milli Medjlis,
Azerbaijan’s Parliament Murtuz Aleskerov said at a meeting with Duma
Speaker Boris Gryzlov on Monday.

According to him, Russia that is a co-chairman of the Minsk OSCE
group on Nagorno Karabakh plays an important role in the conflict
settlement. “We hope that using our powers and influence in the
region Russia will try to find ways of a just solution to this
problem,” the speaker of the Azerbaijani parliament said.

During the meeting the sides reached the agreement on the soonest
settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani settlement by peaceful means.
“It is necessary to achieve peace without winners and losers,”
Gryzlov emphasised.

Armenia’s govt plans to raise $130 mln from stake sale in ZCMC

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire
March 29, 2004

Armenia’s govt plans to raise $130 mln from stake sale in ZCMC

YEREVAN, Mar 29 (Prime-Tass) — Armenia’s government plans to raise
at least U.S. USD 130 million from the sale of the controlling stake
in the Zangezur Copper Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC), Armenia’s Trade and
Economic Development Minister Karen Chshmarityan told a press
conference Monday.

The government currently plans to auction an unspecified controlling
stake in ZCMC, but if a good offer is received, it may sell a 100%
stake, he noted.

Several foreign companies, including Australia’s Rio Tinto and BHP,
and U.S.’ Phelps Dodge, have already expressed their interests in
ZCMC, he noted.

If a contender transfers USD 25-30 million to the Armenian government
in April it will be granted the right for exclusive negotiations, he
said without elaborating.

If the negotiations succeed the transfer will be included as part of
the payment on the stake, but if they fail it will remain with the
government.

ZCMC accounts for about 3% of the world’s molybdenum concentrate
output. End

An average MP; Oliver Baldwin: a life of dissent Christopher J Walke

New Statesman
March 29, 2004

An average MP; Oliver Baldwin: a life of dissent Christopher J Walker

Arcadia Books, 355pp, GBP12.99 ISBN 1900850869

by Andrew Lycett

Photographed in flowing Coronation robes in 1953, Oliver Baldwin
looked like a portly grandee in one of his favourite Gilbert and
Sullivan operettas. His Ruritanian features masked the sad, decent,
homosexual son of the inter-war Conservative prime minister.

For six decades Baldwin fils laboured at soldiering, journalism and
politics, and for a short, hilarious time he became governor general
of the Leeward Islands. But his troubled, rebellious temperament
ensured that he never enjoyed the glittering prizes for which he
seemed destined.

His difficulties surfaced at Eton, which he loathed for its cruel
snobberies. He could not wait to leave school and sign up for the
First World War. But his experience of the trenches confirmed his
independent streak. He returned with the belief that humanity should
live in harmony. Perhaps suffering from shell shock, he dropped out,
joining the Comrades of the Great War (a forerunner of the British
Legion) in the forlorn hope that the group might initiate social
change.

He found liberation in the sunshine and Arab culture of North Africa.
A chance meeting in Alexandria inspired him to accept a job as an
infantry instructor in beleaguered Armenia, which had gained
independence from the Turks in May 1918. No sooner had he arrived in
Yerevan in late 1920 than the weak social democrat government
crumpled and Baldwin was imprisoned by pro-Bolshevik putschists.

He was freed in a counter-revolution a few months later, but while
travelling home he was arrested again by the Turks who, angry at his
espousal of the Armenian cause, accused him of spying for the
Soviets. The jail conditions were, if anything, worse, and execution
a daily threat.

Despite a brief, unconvincing engagement, he opted after his release
to live with Johnnie Boyle, a charming ne’er-do-well who had run a
tea shop. The couple set up home in Oxfordshire, where they raised
turkeys, welcomed guests such as Beverley Nichols, and referred
devotedly to each other as ‘koot’ – apparently after the phrase
‘queer as a coot’. Walker describes their domestic life as ‘one of
gentle, amicable, animal-loving primitive homosexual socialism’.

Baldwin began taking socialism seriously. He joined the Labour Party
and, after a false start, won seats at Dudley and later Paisley. An
average MP, he was better known for his journalism, incongruously
using the Rothermere press to propagate an anti-fascist message. He
also wrote books about Armenia, politics and a curious novel called
The Coming of Aissa, which emphasised the socialistic leanings of
Jesus within an agnostic, Asian, neoplatonic context.

Baldwin’s service in the Second World War is best skimmed over. He
found a berth in the Middle East in a propaganda job that Walker
insists had intelligence links. His claim to fame was (shades of the
Americans in Panama) to run a loudspeaker unit that tried to win over
enemy waverers by blasting out broadcasts on the battlefield in
Eritrea.

Returning to politics, he was made a peer – for no better reason, one
suspects, than that the Labour Party needed bodies in the Lords. But
before he could take his seat (uniquely, he would have sat opposite
his father in both houses of parliament), the old man died and Oliver
was elevated as the 2nd Earl Baldwin.

When he went to the Leeward Islands in 1948 he took two male friends
(one as private secretary, the other as butler) and ran an
egregiously camp governor’s household. The plantocracy was soon
complaining about foibles such as skinny-dipping with visiting
sailors. One woman alerted the Colonial Office to his enthusiasm for
steel bands with such butch-sounding names as Brute Force. She feared
that Baldwin might turn these into paramilitary units to overthrow
the constitution.

But Baldwin’s real sin, epitomised in a speech in which he quoted
from the Mahabharata, was to foster a sense of multiracial
inclusiveness. After a politi- cal storm, he was recalled to London
to explain. The colonial secretary decided to defuse matters by
sending the governor back. But his career was finished.

Walker is alert to the comedy and pathos of this intriguing slice of
alternative history. He writes crisply and sympathetically, although
a sense of his ennui occasionally intrudes. He has access to good
primary material, including letters that show his father and mother
affectionately and rather nobly coping with his ‘dissidence’ (the
author’s own word). Walker might however have made more effort to
flesh out his account from other sources, such as Turkish archives.

Ultimately, one must weigh up whether this biography of a lightweight
is worth reading as a political or even as a human-interest tale. It
scores on both counts.

Andrew Lycett’s most recent book is Dylan Thomas: a new life
(Weidenfeld & Nicolson)

Uzbekistan supports Azerbaijan’s claims in the NK conflict

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 29, 2004, Monday

UZBEKISTAN SUPPORTS AZERBAIJAN’S CLAIMS IN THE NAGORNY KARABAKH
CONFLICT

Official visit of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to Tashkent
ended on March 24. Signing The Declaration of Mutual Strategic
Partnership became the main result of his talks with Uzbek President
Islam Karimov. However, Islam Karimov’s statements related to the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict in Nagorny Karabakh aroused the biggest
interest for the meeting of both leaders.

Referring to Azerbaijani sources, Interfax agency has been citing
Uzbek president: “Mikhail Gorbachev and his team” had become a cause
which had given rise to the Nagorny Karabakh conflict. Mr. Karimov
accused former Soviet president of doing nothing to avert the
conflict; therefore, he’s supposed to be responsible for it. In
opinion of Uzbek president, package settlement of the conflict has no
future. The by-stage principle seems more practical to him.
“Liberation of the occupied areas if the first and indispensable
step,” Mr. Karimov said and noted that the Armenian side won’t like
his words. In his opinion, the status of Nagorny Karabakh could only
be defined after that.

This evaluation of, probably, most hard-to-solve and inveterate
conflict in post-Soviet area obtained from a CIS leader is an
extraordinary event. Mentioning the Karabakh problem, all CIS states
usually recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. None of
them dared to take the side of any particular conflicting party like
Mr. Karimov has done that.

(…)

It should be admitted that the stance of the Uzbek president looks
consistent. As far back as 1999, explaining the causes of Tashkent’s
withdrawal from the Collective Security Treaty (CST), Mr. Karimov
noted his disappointment for functioning of this structure. In his
words, Russia was reinforcing Armenia, one of the conflicting
parties, since the arms supplies to that country amount to $1
billion. Meanwhile, this was when Azerbaijan pulled out of the CST.

Source: Vremya Novostei, March 25, 2004, p. 5

Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin

Primate attends luncheon honoring Patriarch Bartholomew I

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

March 29, 2004
___________________

PRIMATE JOINS APPEAL OF CONSCIENCE FOUNDATION IN HONORING LEADER

Recently, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the
Armenian Church of America (Eastern), was joined by other Diocesan leaders
in attending a luncheon hosted by the Appeal of Conscience Foundation to
honor His All Holiness Bartholomew I, Archbishop of Constantinople, New
Rome, and Ecumenical Patriarch.

The luncheon, in New York City on March 17, was on the occasion of the 10th
anniversary of the Peace and Tolerance Conference that resulted in the
Bosphorus Declaration of 1994, which condemned violence in the name of
religion.

The Primate serves on the board of the Appeal of Conscience Foundation, an
interfaith coalition of business and religious leaders working around the
globe to promote peace, tolerance, and resolution of ethnic conflicts. He
delivered the blessing at the luncheon.

“Bless those who labor in the name of religious freedom, moral unity, and
peace for all your children,” the Primate said.

Joining the Primate were Fr. Vazken Karayan, pastor of the Holy Cross Church
of Union City, NJ; Dr. Sam Mikaelian, executive director of the Diocesan
Center; and Kevork Toroyan, chairman of the Diocesan Legate’s Committee.

Patriarch Bartholomew I was in New York City for a week of meetings and
events. The Primate met with him on several occasions as a leader in the
ecumenical dialogue between the Oriental Orthodox and Eastern Orthodox
communities.

— 3/29/04

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable on the Eastern
Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern
Diocese, delivers the blessing at a luncheon honoring His All Holiness
Bartholomew I at the Minskoff Cultural Center in New York City on March 17,
2004.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): A photographer takes a photo of His All Holiness
Bartholomew I, Archbishop of Constantinople, New Rome, and Ecumenical
Patriarch; Archbishop Demetrios, of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of
America; Archbishop Khajag Barsamian; and Rabbi Arthur Schneier, founder of
the Appeal of Conscience Foundation.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Dr. Sam Mikaelian, executive director of the Eastern
Diocese; Archbishop Khajag Barsamian; and Rabbi Arthur Schneier, founder of
the Appeal of Conscience Foundation, at a luncheon on March 17 hosted by the
foundation on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the Peace and
Tolerance Conference and the Bosphorus Declaration of 1994.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

Veteran disappoints, but newcomer dazzles

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
March 29, 2004 Monday Home Edition

Veteran disappoints, but newcomer dazzles

by PIERRE RUHE

A couple of decades ago, song recitals were declared dead and all but
buried. Fewer composers were writing for the exposed duo of solo
voice and piano; impresarios found vocalists a tough sell; young
singers didn’t see the benefits of all that discipline.

Well, the rumors were greatly exaggerated. This season in Atlanta has
heard terrific art-of-song performances. Over the weekend, a veteran
and a rookie came to town and, not surprisingly, arrived with
different agendas.

Mezzo-soprano Susanne Mentzer has been a strong presence at the
Metropolitan Opera for some 15 years. At Emory University, she and
Craig Rutenberg, a lyrical pianist, opened with a pair of “what if?”
composers — music by the wives of great men, women who didn’t
pursue composition as a career, Clara Schumann and Alma Mahler.

Where three Schumann songs from her Op. 12 sounded here like tepid,
nicely wrought parlor songs, Mahler’s set heaved with allure and
personality. In the latter’s “Balmy Summer Night,” Mentzer conveyed a
winking, almost swishy attitude.

Works by Gustav Mahler (earthy) and Eric Satie (cabaret cute) led to
Libby Larsen’s “Love after 1950,” five songs written for Mentzer and
premiered in 2000. Each song gets a treatment: One is blues, another
honky-tonk, a third tango, and so on. Fun to hear and mostly
well-written for the human voice, these songs suffer from Larsen’s
self-conscious, post-modern approach, where the music is remote from
the texts instead of interlocked. And throughout the evening, the
mezzo’s brushed velvety voice sounded a bit weary. It made for a
low-energy recital.

On Saturday, soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian, making her Atlanta recital
debut, sang with the giddy excitement of a newcomer, without a
horizon in sight. I first heard her in 1997, in a tiny role at the
Glimmerglass Opera, and wrote she was “exquisite in her pure tones,
generating a frisson of interest in her vocal possibilities.” Even
then, it was obvious here was someone special. Now just 29, she’s
starting to win acclaim in the opera house and through CDs.

Yet the first half of her Spivey recital — Grenados, Rossini and
Vivaldi — seemed more about wowing us with her technique than about
singing to her strengths.

Still a growing artist, Bayrakdarian’s vocal timbre is somewhere
between Kathleen Battle’s and Sumi Jo’s, equal parts soul and
diamond-sparkle coloratura. She summoned despair for Vivaldi’s “The
Scorned Wife,” although she left a few tones (like the word “fida”)
curiously uncolored, like it sat between two regions of her voice and
she couldn’t quite reach it. And was it fatigue that caused some
misfiring vocal pyrotechnics in “Buffeted by Two Winds”? Her pianist,
Serouj Kradjian, proved an inadequate accompanist, flashy and
oblivious to the subtleties of the texts.

In any case, after intermission the Canadian-Armenian soprano finally
let us savor more than just her splendid technical gifts: She became
an interpreter and an actress, telling moving stories with her voice
— the crux of a song recital. She was at turns naive and manic in
Tchaikovsky’s “The Cuckoo” — both funny and scary — pronouncing
the bird’s song like an antique clock gone haywire. She sounded like
a non-smoking Edith Piaf for a set of cynical Kurt Weill love songs,
squatting over the low notes with a seductively nasal drawl. Is the
term “vocal charisma” adequate to describe a singer who makes time
stop, who conjures magic? Whatever that intoxicating property is,
Bayrakdarian has it in abundance — the future of the art form.

GRAPHIC: Photo: In her Atlanta recital debut, Canadian-Armenian
soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian sang with the excitement of a newcomer.
When at her best on Saturday, she was magical.; Photo: Susan Mentzer,
a regular at the Metropolitan Opera, sounded a bit weary in her
Friday recital.; Graphic: CLASSICAL REVIEW
Mezzo-soprano Susanne Mentzer, Friday at Emory University’s Emerson
Concert Hall; and soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian, Saturday at Spivey
Hall.

CIS Security Chief Arrives in Kyrgyz Capital

CIS SECURITY CHIEF ARRIVES IN KYRGYZ CAPITAL

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
29 Mar 04

Secretary-General of the CSTO (Collective Security Treaty
Organization; members are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Russia) Nikolay Bordyuzha arrived in Bishkek today to
hold talks with the leadership of Kyrgyzstan, an ITAR-TASS
correspondent has been told at the Kyrgyz Foreign Ministry.

He is expected to meet President Askar Akayev, Security Council
Secretary Misir Ashirkulov and the heads of the country’s
power-wielding agencies.

The stepping up of collaboration between the CSTO member states to
ensure security is expected to be discussed during the talks.

Another purpose of the CSTO secretary-general’s visit is to discuss
the agenda of the forthcoming session of the Security Treaty Council
scheduled to be held in Kazakhstan this summer.

It is expected that after Bishkek, Bordyuzha will pay a visit to
Astana.

ARKA News Agency – 03/29/2004

ARKA News Agency
March 29 2004

New Editor in Chief of Azat Artsakh daily appointed

RA President signs decree on awarding honorary titles to theater
artists

*********************************************************************

NEW EDITOR IN CHIEF OF AZAT ARTSAKH DAILY APPOINTED

STEPANAKERT. March 29. /ARKA/. Marsel Petrosyan was appointed as new
Editor in Chief of Karabakh daily Azat Artsakh. As reported by the
Special Correspondent of ARKA in NKR from Stepanakert with the
reference to the NKR National Assembly Press Department, prior to the
appointment the New Editor in Chief was Editor in Chief of army daily
Martik. The former Editor of Azat Artsakh Haykaz Ghahriyan was
discharged from his position according to his own request in
connection with his going to other job. T.M. -0-

*********************************************************************

RA PRESIDENT SIGNS DECREE ON AWARDING HONORARY TITLES TO THEATER
ARTISTS

YEREVAN. March 29. /ARKA/. ARKA President Robert Kocharian signed a
decree on awarding honorary titles for contribution into the theater
art on occasion of the International Theater Day. As the RA President
Press Department told ARKA, honorary titles were awarded to 13
theater artists. Congratulating the theatre artists on occasion of
the International Day of Theater, he said that `theater’s role in
public life is enormous, as well as for raising the national
consciousness’. `We consider that restoration and development of
these traditions for creation a new face of Armenia is important’,
Kocharian mentioned. T.M. -0–