Tchaikovsky’s ‘The Nutcracker’ features a cast of more than 100

Lompoc Record, CA
Nov 17 2004

Tchaikovsky’s ‘The Nutcracker’ features a cast of more than 100
By The Record Staff

11/17/04 The Santa Barbara Festival Ballet presents one of the most
cherished ballets in history, Tchaikovsky’s “The Nutcracker,”
Saturday and Sunday, Dec 11 and 12, at the Arlington Theatre in Santa
Barbara. This holiday treat celebrates the company’s 30th annual
performance. With a cast of more than 100 performers from the Santa
Barbara Festival Ballet and Santa Barbara Ballet Center, this
traditional production includes live music from members of the Santa
Barbara Symphony, under the direction of Elise Unruh. This is Santa
Barbara’s only fully-orchestrated live performance of “The
Nutcracker.”

Giant mice doing battle with toy soldiers, dancing snowflakes,
waltzing flowers and a toy nutcracker transformed into a prince make
up some of the magical elements of “The Nutcracker.” Clara,
accompanied by the Nutcracker Prince, journeys to the Kingdom or
Sweets, where the Sugar Plum Fairy calls for a festival of dances
from foreign and exotic lands. This holiday tale has always been a
delight for families throughout the world and this 30th annual
performance promises to be a wonderful family experience for young
and old alike.

This year’s guest artists are Sayat Asatryan, dancing the role of
Cavalier, and Olga Tchekachova, as the Sugar Plum Fairy. Asatryn was
born in Yerevan, Armenia, and trained in Russia at the Voronezh
Ballet School and St. Petersburg Ballet Academy. He was a principal
ballet dancer with the Moscow Kremlin Ballet, touring internationally
in South America, Europe, Japan, France, Egypt, and the U.S.
Tchekachova was formally a principle dancer with the Bristol Ballet
in England, and has toured internationally as a principle dancer with
the Kirov Ballet and St. Petersburg Ballet dance companies.

Artistic Directors Denise Rinaldi and Michele Hulse Pearson are
directing and choreographing this 30th anniversary production. Scenic
design is by Le Straburg and Marina Harris, with costume design by
Sue Stafford Kennedy.

The Santa Barbara Festival Ballet is a Santa Barbara based company
dedicated to providing a forum in which gifted, pre-professional
dancers are able to gain work experience for a future careers. “The
Nutcracker” is an opportunity for those dancers to work with
professional guest artists and to perform to live music. This fully
staged ballet has long been a cherished part of Santa Barbara
County’s traditional holiday entertainment, and is frequently young
children’s first exposure to classical music and ballet.

Tickets are available through the Arlington Ticket Agency and all
Ticketmaster outlets. Tickets are $15 to $38; discounts are available
for children, students and seniors. For more information, call the
box office at 963-4408.

Armenian Rhapsody

Salt Lake City Weekly, UT
Nov 17 2004

Armenian Rhapsody

by John Saltas

I have this friend I’ll call Auburn. Not that he doesn’t like seeing
his name in print, but Homeland Security being what it is, there’s no
real reason to reveal his true identity. One never knows. Anyway,
Auburn thinks I can’t write a column without mentioning a particular
Balkan country known in the early part of this century for importing
into America a great number of swarthy men willing to work for cheap
wages in unsafe working conditions. Remember, the key word here is
`work,’ so if you’ve guessed Albania, guess again.

I imagine it’s safe to say I may have annoyed Auburn. So much so that
he’s willing to make a bet with me. His bet is that if I don’t
mention this particular country renowned for its feta cheese and
buxom women, he will pay me 45 minutes worth of drinking my favorite
elixir, VO whiskey, which is blended just to my liking just up north
a ways in Canada. Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of fine
American distilleries. I’m just practicing for the day, if ever, that
I can actually get all of my medications from Canada. Which will be
never, by the way.

If I do mention this land of olives and shouting merchants, I will
pay him 45 minutes worth of drinking his favorite elixir, beer. He
noted in his bet that he preferred a particular favorite brand of
American beer. I don’t like seeing people suffer, so I’m going the
extra mile here in order to win lest he overindulge in a fluid that
is simply not up to worldwide taste standards. I’m not an attorney,
so I can’t make out a particular clause in his betting document that
sets the parameters of what constitutes exactly a mention of this
particular place where many people are named George, Nick, Maria and
Sophia.

Assuming I may have lost already, I’ll pay him off instead with what
are now my two favorite imported beers, Kotayk and Kilikia. They’re
not brewed in the aforementioned land that is mercifully devoid of
LaVars and Britneys, but in Armenia.

As most American schoolchildren surely know, Armenia is the home to
Mount Ararat, a revered holy place liberally mentioned in the Old
Testament of the Bible, but now just an afterthought to many
modern-day Christians who prefer the passages that reign terror on
such groups as homosexuals. As those school kids can also attest,
Armenia became settled by one of the hallmark cultures of early
civilization, the Sumerians. As luck would have it, the Sumerians
were not only good with the alphabet but with brewing beer.

Explorers and conquerors from the land I cannot mention made it to
Armenia a few centuries before Christ was born. Thus, they also found
beer. Since they pretty much ruled things back then, beer found its
way to ports all over the world. That’s just one more reason people
such as Auburn should go soft on me: If not for the people from the
land with great ships and strong armies, we might be drinking mead
while hoping for a Ute win this weekend.

I had a couple of Kotayks and a Kilikia this weekend at the
Leprechaun Inn and at Cedars of Lebanon. I’ve always believed the
Irish are trendsetters. And Lord knows I like the Lebanese. I prefer
Kotayk beer, as it is more of a lager style, but Kilikia holds its
own, too, if you prefer Pilsners. Both beers are new to Utah. I’d
imagine that the Bayou carries them, too. The spot where Auburn hangs
out might not have the cooler space, so come collection time, if I
lose, the payoff will have to take place elsewhere. Sorry, Jerz.

While conducting my Kotayk and Kilikia research, I happened upon yet
another aggravation of Utah liquor laws. You know those little blue
DABC stickers that are on all the liquor sold in state liquor stores
and clubs? Each one adds a nickel to the price of that individual
bottle or can of beer. All it says is something like `Utah DABC’ and
is about half the size of a postage stamp. A nickel. That’s a $1.20
additional cost for each case of beer. Kotayk and Kilikia both
already have that disclaimer printed right on their labels, yet an
additional label with a 5-cent price tag is required for some
reason – uh, let’s milk those sinners for all they’re worth perhaps?
Happily, those funds go to our school kids so they can study their
ABC’s – Armenia, Beer and Cuneiform writing.

As good as I think those Armenian beers are, I don’t think I’m going
to smuggle any into Rice-Eccles stadium this Saturday. Beer’s a bit
too wieldy for me. I’m going to stick with the standard 99-cent
plastic flask. My buddy Joe Caputo buys them in bunches at Kirkham’s.
He’s a former Vietnam combat Marine, and I believe he knows a thing
or two about packing light and sneaking through enemy lines. I’m
always grateful when he empties out his ammo canister and hands one
over to me. I’m even more grateful because he’s already filled it up,
usually with Crown Royal, which I can’t afford. That’s just what the
doctor ordered: a flask of Crown Royal and a thumping to that team
from down south.

I’ve seen too many upsets in sports to get uppity, though. However, a
Ute win would bring unprecedented joy not only to Ute fans, but to
everyone else getting screwed by the BCS. Another nice side effect of
a Ute win is that all those people stuck in the woe-is-me Kerry funk,
might actually snap out of it. To Auburn. To Armenia. To Utah by 5 – at
least.

Staff Box

Bill Frost: College football is sooo cute! It’s almost like real
football. But, since I didn’t attend either university, I don’t
really care – since the U probably has hotter cheerleaders, I’ll go
Red. Drink: Vodka (Grey Goose) & Gatorade (Red Punch).

Larry Carter: Utah all the way. I will be drinking the strongest
alcohol I can find so that I will have the pleasure of regurgitating
all over my neighbor’s BY-who banners. Do they have to hang them
everywhere?

Natalie May: Go Utah! It’s going be sa-weeet! I’ll be drinking hot
cocoa with marshmallows … it being a `dry’ stadium and all.

Kylene Stemmons: What game?

Shane Johnson: BYU, just to see their headhunting boosters eat
Crow-ton when he pulls off a Mormon Miracle. I’ll wash down the
bitter irony with an Old Milwaukee 40.

Scott Renshaw: Utah should win in a walk, but I have a certain
sympathy for BYU. Like my alma mater, Stanford, BYU has a coach who
can probably only save his job by pulling off a huge upset of their
BCS-bound arch-rival. I’ll be watching with a cold, carbonated
libation in hand.

Haigen Pearson: I only see RED, and I will be enjoying a few Pabst
Blue Ribbons as the Utes embarrass the `Y’ and all of their poor
fans.

Jennifer Van Grevenhof: The Utes of course. I’ll be drinking Corona
to prepare for the warm, sunny weather at the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe.

Brent Broadwater: The Running Utes by 21. And I will be drinking
Coca-Cola, the nectar of the gods.

Abbey Reynolds: Just thinking about football makes me feel like
drinking. It doesn’t matter what I drink, as long as it makes me
forget how our culture views university sports as more important than
education.

Mike Varanakis: Utah! Water mostly – I will end up being the designated
driver, I’m sure!

Paula Saltas: Utah by 35, and drinking peppermint patties or whatever
Charley Cayias serves at his tailgating party.

Ben Fulton: While the sight of cultural rivalries battling it out on
the sports field is sometimes amusing, it depresses me more with age.
Besides, it pales next to Glasgow’s raging war between the soccer
teams of Rangers and Celtics. If I drank Scotch, I’d drink it now.
Maybe a Bushmill’s.

Josh Wangrud: U of U (for the love!) and it’s BYOB.

Barbara Pavlinch: BY-Who? Utah, of course! I’m not quite sure yet,
but I think I will be drinking Bloody Marys. The tomato juice has
licopenes, and celery is good for me. Yeah, Bloody Marys it will be.
Go Utah!

Jerre Wroble: U of U natch, but I really don’t do football. I may sip
on a coffee and Bailey’s while watching the parking gestapo issue $25
tickets to the hapless fans who park on my `restricted’ street near
the stadium.

Burke Johnstun: Utes! I will be drinking some caffeine-free Coke. I
am one wild S.O.B!

Soccer: Group leaders Romania held to draw: Romania 1 – Armenia 1

CNN.com
Nov 17 2004

Group leaders Romania held to draw

YEREVAN, Armenia — Group One leaders Romania, beset by injuries and
suspensions, have been held to a surprise 1-1 draw by Armenia in
their World Cup qualifier.

A second-half equalizer from Krylya Sovietov Samara defender Karen
Dokhoyan handed hosts Armenia their first point in the group.

Shakhtar Donetsk forward Ciprian Marica fired Romania into a 29th
minute lead after being put clean through.

Armenia keeper Edela Bete got a hand to Marica’s low shot but could
not keep the ball out.

Armenia upped their game after the break and were rewarded when
Dokhhoyan’s curling shot from a narrow angle flew in on 63 minutes.

Romania lead with 10 points from five games but could be overhauled
later on Wednesday if the Netherlands, as expected, win in Andorra.

Substitute Vratislav Lokvenc and Jan Koller hit late goals as the
Czech Republic grabbed a 2-0 win against Macedonia in their Group One
tie.

The Czechs, who lost striker Milan Baros to an early injury, had
struggled to break down a well-organized side beaten by Andorra in
their last game.

Lokvenc’s appearance as a 76th minute substitute to partner Koller
changed the course of the match.

VfL Bochum’s Lokvenc headed home Karel Poborsky’s cross three minutes
from time to break the home side’s resistance.

Koller then sealed victory in the last minute with a header from
Marek Jankulovski’s cross.

“We were very patient and we were rewarded with two goals,” said
Czech coach Karel Brueckner.

Mutu to appeal
Meanwhile, banned Romanian striker Adrian Mutu has lodged an appeal
over his sacking by Chelsea last month after a positive drugs test.

The Premier League will now set up a hearing at which both Mutu,
suspended for seven months until May by the Football Association for
cocaine use, and Chelsea can make their case.

If either party is unhappy with the verdict reached by the Premier
League following a hearing, they can make a final appeal to the
Football League Appeals Committee.

Chelsea, who sacked Mutu for “gross misconduct,” have suggested they
want to recoup some of the loss they made on the international,
signed from Parma last year for nearly £16 million ($29.74 million).

“Chelsea is actively considering all options in relation to any
financial loss as a result of this case,” the Premier League leaders
said when they sacked Mutu.

Mutu has been allowed by FIFA to train with his former club Dinamo
Bucharest while serving his suspension, which FIFA has extended
worldwide.

Georgia resumes Russian electricity imports

RIA Novosti, Russia
Nov 17 2004

GEORGIA RESUMES RUSSIAN ELECTRICITY IMPORTS

TBILISI, November 17 (RIA Novosti’s Marina Kvaratskhelia) – On
Wednesday night, the Tbilisi-based electricity distribution company
TELASI has resumed the import of power from Russia at a rate of 100
megawatts (two million kilowatt/hours daily), RIA Novosti learnt from
the company.

Electricity arrives through the Kavkasioni 500-kilovolt power
transmission line.

In addition, the company has resumed the same amount of electricity
imports from Armenia through the Alaverdi 220-kilovolt power
transmission line.

TELASI buys from Russia electricity at 2.6 cents, from Armenia at 2.7
cents per kilowatt.

Supplies from both the countries were suspended during the
spring-summer period for Georgia’s being able to meet the domestic
demand during the time.

In winter Tbilisi needs 500 megawatts.

The import of electricity enables cutting water consumption from the
water reservoirs of the Inguri and other Georgian hydropower
stations, TELASI said.

TELASI’s import of 200 megawatts is enough for smooth power supply to
the Georgian capital, Tbilisi.

The other 300 megawatts produced from firing natural gas arrive from
the ninth power unit of the Tbilisi-based power generating facility,
owned by the RAO Russia’s UES Company.

Armenian sector of Iran-Armenia gas pipeline starts late November

RIA Novosti, Russia
Nov 17 2004

CONSTRUCTION OF ARMENIAN SECTOR OF IRAN-ARMENIA GAS PIPELINE TO START
IN LATE NOVEMBER 2004

YEREVAN, November 17 (RIA Novosti’s Gamlet Matevosyan) – The
construction of the Armenian sector of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline
will start in late November 2004, head of technical development and
foreign relations department of the Armenian Energy Ministry Levon
Vardanyan told journalists on Wednesday.

According to him, the construction of the 42-km sector of the gas
pipeline 700 mm in diameter will start with Megri-Kadzharan site. In
compliance with the existing agreements, the Iranian side will
finance the construction of this sector and the remaining sector
between Yerevan and Ararat will be completed later, Mr. Vardanyan
said.

Armenia and Iran signed an agreement on the construction of the
Iran-Armenia gas pipeline in Yerevan on May 13, 2004. According to
this agreement, 36 billion cubic meters of Iranian gas will be
supplied to Armenia over 20 years. Armenia will receive 1.1 billion
cubic meters of Iran’s natural gas annually and pay for these
supplies with its electric energy.

The construction of the 141-km long pipeline (41 km on Armenian
territory and 100 km in Iran) will be completed in the end o 2006.
According to preliminary calculations, Armenian and Iranian
investments in the project will total $90 and $120 million
correspondingly.

The gas pipeline will link Tehran and Yerevan via the Megri section
of the Armenian-Iranian border. Turkmenistan’s gas will be delivered
to Armenia via Iran on this pipeline.

ANKARA: Armenians In Ottoman Era Documents

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Nov 17 2004

Armenians In Ottoman Era Documents

DIRECTORATE GENERAL OF STATE ARCHIVES COMPLETES FIRST STAGE OF PROJECT

ISTANBUL – The Turkish Directorate General of State Archives
completed the first stage of its project compiling Ottoman era
documents about relations of Armenians with France, Britain and
Russia.

Directorate General of State Archives Department of Ottoman Archives
Director Dr. Onder Bayir told the A.A correspondent on Tuesday that
experts compiled Ottoman era documents about relations of Armenians
with France, Britain and Russia.

”In the first stage of the project, the first two volumes of the
work titled ‘Armenian-French Relations in Ottoman Documents’ were
published in 2002, and the third volume was published in 2004. The
work objectively explains France’s policy and targets about Armenians
on the basis of Ottoman era documents,” he said.

Dr. Bayir said that the work titled ”Armenian-British Relations”
will be published soon in four volumes.

”The third stage is the work titled ‘Armenian-Russian Relations’. We
have another project aiming to publish nearly 12 thousand documents
through internet. We will start the project by putting 600 documents
to our web-page: ”. In the coming months,
all these documents will be translated into English,” he added.

www.devletarsivleri.gov.tr

Armenian nuclear power plant closure to cost EU a lot

RIA Novosti, Russia
Nov 17 2004

ARMENIAN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT CLOSURE TO COST EU A LOT

YEREVAN, November 17 (RIA Novosti) – The European Union intends to
fund the search for alternative sources of power in Armenia since it
is going to close the only Armenian nuke facility. The money is
supposed to be included into the budget of the EU new programme of
cooperation with CIS commonwealth.

On Wednesday Levon Vardanyan, in charge of the main board for
technical development and external relations at the Armenian Energy
Ministry, said that the project will be carried out irrespective of
the EU other programmes regarding the Armenian nuclear power
facility.

“We are well aware that the Armenian facility will eventually be put
out of service. The problem is under what conditions this whether
there is an alternative might be”, Vardanyan siad.

The European Union insists on mothballing the Armenian nuke and is
ready to allocate 100 million euros. Armenian experts say that the
creation of alternative generating capacities will cost almost a
billion euros.

The Armenian nuclear power plant was put into operation in 1980 and
shut down in March 1989. The energy crisis in Armenia restarted it in
November 1995.

Having the Russian VVER-440 power reactor of the first generation,
the Armenian facility’s second unit accounts for an average of 30 to
40 percent of the national electricity output. Experts say the plant
can remain in use until 2016.

In September 2003 the Armenian nuclear power plant was passed in
trust management for five years to INTER RAO UES, a subsidiary of the
RAO Russia’s Unified Energy Systems and the Rosenergoatom concern.

Mosul – northern link to insurgency

Jordan Times
Wednesday, November 17, 2004

Mosul – northern link to insurgency

MOSUL, Iraq (AFP) – Mosul, scene of a major US-led offensive on Tuesday
against Iraqi rebels after a spate of deadly clashes, is an ancient and
ethnically diverse city that has become a new front in the insurgency.
Car bombings and fighting have become all too frequent in Mosul and
surrounding areas, which have gradually fallen into the sway of hardline
Islamic groups since Saddam Hussein’s regime was toppled in April 2003.

US troops were swarming into restive pockets on Tuesday to secure police
stations and restore order, with bridges straddling the Tigris River closed
and a night-time curfew in place.

Rebels overran a number of police stations last week, triggering clashes
that left several dozen people dead, mostly insurgents.

US military commanders say the events in predominantly Sunni Muslim Mosul
and other parts of the country may be a spillover from the massive assault
launched last week on the rebel hub of Fallujah. But they insist they are
still in control of the capital of Nineveh province, 370 kilometres north of
Baghdad, at the tip of the so-called Sunni Triangle and scene of the worst
violence since Saddam fell.

Mosul, whose name in Arabic means the link, is one of the most ethnically
diverse cities in Iraq with Arabs, Syriac people, Armenians, Kurds, Turkmen,
Jews, Christians, Muslims and Yazedis all calling the city home.

The area has been inhabited since 6000BC and was chosen by the ancient
Assyrians to build their glorious capitals of Ashur, Nimrud and Nineveh,
whose ruins still dot the city and surrounding areas.

The city fell into the hands of the Persians, Romans and the Arabs and then
Ottomans for almost seven centuries.

Its Nabi Yunis Mosque is said to be the burial place of the reluctant
prophet Jonah, who according to the Bible fled to sea after turning down
God’s request to preach in Nineveh and was swallowed by a whale.

The area had been one of the most loyal pro-Saddam strongholds and it was a
local tribal leader who sheltered his two feared sons Uday and Qusay in his
Mosul mansion when they fled Baghdad. But the same man, Nawaf Mohammad Al
Zaidan, is believed to have tipped off the Americans on the whereabouts of
the brothers, pocketing a $30 million US bounty that had been placed on both
of their heads.

The two were killed in a fierce battle with US troops in July last year – an
incident which left a strong impact on the local Sunni population – once
Iraq’s elite and now feeling increasingly marginalised since Saddam’s fall.

Widespread looting and intercommunal fighting and killing swept through the
city in April 2003 after thousands of Kurdish peshmerga fighters and special
US forces seized the city during the US-led invasion of Iraq.

In recent months it seen a rash of suicide car bombings and ambushes against
US and Iraqi military convoys, Kurds, judges, government officials including
the Nineveh provincial governor – anyone regarded by the insurgents as
collaborating with US forces or the US-backed government.

Several Turkish truck drivers supplying goods to US military bases have been
attacked or kidnapped in the area. The north-south roads running through
Mosul have become so treacherous that many truckers have stopped coming to
Iraq altogether or travel only in US protected convoys. Iraq’s Defence
Minister Hazem Shaalan has charged that Mosul and surrounding areas are safe
havens for militants from Syria, which is about 180 kilometres to the west.
Sunni Muslims in Mosul, together with the minority Turkmen community, fear
Kurdish calls for an expanded autonomous region in districts immediately
bordering the northern metropolis, a city of about 1.5 million people.

Wednesday, November 17, 2004

ASBAREZ Online [11-17-2004]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
11/17/2004
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WEBSITE AT <;HTTP://

1) France’s Sarkozy Calls for EU ‘Partnership’ with Turkey
2) Abkhaz Government Undermined, as Interior Ministry Defies
3) Karabagh Parties Discuss Election Code
4) Construction of Armenia, Iran Pipeline Set for November
5) Armenia Rattles Romania

1) France’s Sarkozy Calls for EU ‘Partnership’ with Turkey

BRUSSELS (AFP)–French finance minister and future ruling party chief Nicolas
Sarkozy, has repeated his opposition to Turkish membership to the EU, saying a
decision next month from heads of government should focus instead on
‘partnership.’
Sarkozy, who steps down as minister later this month to head French president
Jacques Chirac’s Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), said he opposes Turkish
entry, ‘not because it is a Muslim country, but because Europe must
concentrate
on the enlargement which has already taken place.’
“On December 17, the perspective of partnership must feature in the decision
of the council of ministers,” he told French journalists in Brussels.
Sarkozy’s opposition to Turkish EU membership has put him at odds with
Chirac,
who has said the country’s eventual accession is inevitable.

2) Abkhaz Government Undermined, as Interior Ministry Defies

(Civil Georgia)–Reports say 2,000 employees of the Abkhaz Interior Minister
announced its defiance to Prime Minister of breakaway region Nodar Khashba
following the statement of the Chairman of the Abkhaz Parliamentary Chairman
Nugzar Ashuba, who recognized opposition leader Sergey Bagapsh as the
President-elect.
Vice-President of the unrecognized Republic of Abkhazia Valery Arshba,
said on
November 17 that employees of the Interior Ministry announced their
defiance to
the Prime Minister, accusing the Abkhaz government of destabilizing the
situation in the breakaway region.
“Over 2000 employees of the Interior Ministry, [everyone] except the Minister
and one deputy announced their defiance to the present government, claiming
that it pursues an anti-constitutional policy,” both Georgian and Russian
media
reported quoting Valeri Arshba.
While speaking to reporters in Sokhumi, head of the Abkhazian Parliament
Nugzar Ashuba commented over the recent crisis in the region by saying that
the
Abkhazian people “have already decided who will be the next President–Sergey
Bagapsh,” reported the Regnum News agency.
“It is widely known,” continued Ashuba, “that the elections passed without
any
serious disturbances.” He also said that Russia is a major guarantor of
Abkhazia’s security, “but Russia can not decide who has to be Abkhazia’s
President.”
The Abkhaz opposition movements Amtsakhara, Aitaira, and United Abkhazia
accused Prime Minister Nodar Khashba in urging Russia to send troops to
Abkhazia “for restoring order in the region.” But in an interview with Russian
news agency Itar-Tass Abkhaz de facto Prime Minister Nodar Khashba denied
these
accusations.

3) Karabagh Parties Discuss Election Code

YEREVAN (Yerkir)–A roundtable discussion in Karabagh on Tuesday detailed the
agreement between the Armenian Revolutionary Federation of Artsakh and the
Democratic Artsakh party concerning the republic’s election code. On November
8, the two majority parties in Mountainous Karabagh Republic’s parliament
agreed that two-thirds of parliament members be elected under a party-list
system, and one-third from single-mandate constituencies.
Most of the participants of the ARF-sponsored talks accepted the concept.
Other issues, including the method of forming constituencies, were also
discussed.

4) Construction of Armenia, Iran Pipeline Set for November

YEREVAN (RIA Novosti)–The construction of the Armenian section of the
Iran-Armenia gas pipeline will start in late November 2004, the head of the
Armenian Energy Ministry’s technical development and foreign relations
department Levon Vardanyan revealed to journalists on Wednesday.
The construction of the 42-km section of that pipeline will begin at the
Meghri-Kajaran site. In compliance with existing agreements, the Iranian side
will finance the construction of this section; the remaining portion between
Yerevan and Ararat will be completed later.
In May of this year, Armenia and Iran agreed to construct the pipeline which
will provide 36 billion cubic meters of gas from Iran to Armenia over 20
years.
Armenia will receive 1.1 billion cubic meters of Iran’s natural gas annually
and pay for these supplies with its electric energy.
The construction of the 141-km long pipeline (41 km on Armenian territory and
100 km in Iran) will be completed at the end of 2006. According to preliminary
calculations, Armenian and Iranian investments in the project will total $90
and $120 million correspondingly.
The gas pipeline will link Tehran and Yerevan via the Meghri section of the
Armenian-Iranian border.

5) Armenia Rattles Romania

By Khachik Chakhoyan

A depleted Romanian side kept up their challenge in FIFA World Cup qualifying
Group 1 but were denied victory in Armenia after Karen Dokhoyan’s second-half
equalizer earned his nation their first point in the pool.
With 16 players missing from Anghel Iordanescu’s visiting squad, Romania
nevertheless began brightly, with hopes pinned on speedy forward Ciprian
Marica, who scored twice in this stadium for FC Shakhtar Donetsk in their 3-1
UEFA Champions League second qualifying round win against FC Pyunik. And the
19-year-old duly found the net, running on to Sorin Paraschiv’s incisive pass
and coolly converting a one-on-one past goalkeeper Edel Bete.
Marica continued to threaten, especially down the flanks, and after one of
his
crosses Bete did well to save from Adrian Neaga. But at the other end Aram
Voskanyan, making his first competitive appearance for Armenia, was also
proving dangerous and on 33 minutes captain Harutyun Vardanyan found Edgar
Manucharyan, who fed the striker, but his shot was blocked by defender
Cristian
Dancia.
Seven minutes before the break Voskanyan went close again, sent free by Armen
Shahgeldyan but shooting straight at Romania goalkeeper Bogdan Stelea. But
after the interval, Armenia–who had lost their opening four
fixtures–continued to press and on 62 minutes leveled the scores when
defender
Dokhoyan eluded his markers at a corner.
The final stages proved open, but Armenia had the better chances as Rafael
Nazaryan shot wide, as did Edgar Manucharyan in added time. But a draw
nevertheless gives them increased confidence for their next fixture on 26
March
when they welcome Andorra. Romania play the Netherlands the same day.

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World: Survival strategies against catastrophe and disaster

Survival strategies against catastrophe and disaster

The future is now

International humanitarian organisations are in urgent need of reform.
They have to improve their capacity to advance strategic thought and
planning, even if in so doing they risk having to challenge directly
those who at present fund their work.

Le Monde diplomatique
November 2004

By Agnès Callamard and Randolf Kent

“The greatest long-term threat”, suggests the political scientist Anatol
Lieven, “is one that our media hardly ever discuss, since it is too
long-term and insufficiently fashionable: the growing shortage of water,
due to a combination of over-population, inefficient use and
conservation, and the effect of global warming on the Himalayan
glaciers. If present trends continue, it is virtually certain that in 50
years’ time, much of Pakistan will be as dry as the Sahara – but a
Sahara with a population of hundreds of millions of human beings. The
same will be true of northern India” (1).

The melting of Himalayan glaciers, probably irreversibly, is due to
climate changes that directly result from human activities over the past
century. Only during this brief period in the 10,000-year history of
modern human beings have they actually become a major factor in
determining the course of nature. They have become “planetary
engineers”, says Professor Albert Harrison of the University of
California: “We have already transformed our own planet. We have changed
Earth’s landscape through enormous pit mines and through agriculture; we
have rerouted waterways through systems of dams, locks and canals; and
we have released tons of hydrocarbons and other chemicals into the
atmosphere, creating global warming and cutting holes into the ozone
layer” (2).

Human beings are now nature’s greatest hazard. Disasters and emergencies
are not peripheral events but reflections of the ways that we live our
normal lives, structure our societies and allocate our resources. Trends
in “natural disasters” underscore this. Deforestation and destruction of
wetlands, migration from unproductive rural areas to cities that cannot
afford to provide support infrastructures or livelihoods, and relative
governmental indifference to global warming all relate to the fact that
losses from natural disasters during the 1990s were three times those in
the 1980s and 15 times those of the 1950s.

Existing data dispels the myth that the economic and social consequences
of such disasters are limited to the areas where they struck. This was
the central issue at a conference – Crowding the Rim – at Stanford
University, California, in 2001. Geologists and disaster mitigation and
relief experts assessed the possible effects of disasters, including
earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, on the Pacific Rim, from Lima
through to Los Angeles, Seattle, Anchorage, Tokyo and Taipei (3).

As one noted, “The linkages that we have built to connect the US west
coast and Asia are all vulnerable to echo disruptions, and much larger
and devastating earthquakes are in prospect for Seattle and San
Francisco” (4). The 1999 earthquake in Taiwan was costly there in life
and property, and also disrupted economies as distant as that of San
Jose, California, where electronic industries were halted because of a
lack of essential components usually supplied by Taiwanese companies.
The earthquake revealed a disturbing, if not totally unforeseen,
dimension of globalisation: the economic vulnerability – in large-scale
lay-offs – of Californian workers to an event thousands of miles away.

Returning to Lieven’s concern about the immediate consequences of the
melting Himalayas, hundreds of millions of South Asians will be deprived
of water and livelihood at the same time as a combination of global
warming, inadequate conservation and overpopulation cause effects
elsewhere. We need to anticipate the migratory impact that hundreds of
millions of desperate people searching for survival will have on the
urban areas of South Asia and the security and stability of states in
the region. We need to consider how such potential insecurity and
instability (in the form of globally transmitted diseases, disruptive
migration patterns, regional conflicts) might expose our large-scale
human vulnerability worldwide. Disasters and emergencies are not the
monopoly of the developing world. The current global level of insecurity
resulting from 9/11, the “war on terror” and intervention in Iraq all
dramatically remind us that we can no longer hold on to the idea of
peripheral and geographically-contained humanitarian crises. We are all
unwilling participants in a global pandemic brought upon us by human
actions, whether guided by ruthless self-interest, messianic zeal or
perceived economic survival.

Not all such trends are inevitable, but we need to change how we view
disasters and emergencies, their causes, locations and effects. The
future is now. Professor Martin Rees of Cambridge University says
categorically that by ” 2020 an instance of bio-error or bio-terror will
have killed a million people” (5). Professor Thomas Homer-Dixon suggests
that humanity has already created the conditions for major global
catastrophes. He foresees “the synchronous failure of global, social,
economic and biophysical systems arising from diverse yet interacting
stresses” (6).

Yet the structures responsible for anticipating ways to mitigate,
prevent or prepare to respond to large-scale human vulnerability seem
incapable of doing so. The organisations deemed “humanitarian” –
governmental, non-governmental or inter-governmental – are stuck with
perceptions and processes that have more to do with institutional
survival and familiar routines.

Still, we have to recognise the problems of any organisation in
attempting to anticipate the future. Professor Rees notes that in 1937
the United States National Academy of Sciences organised a study to
predict breakthroughs: “Its report makes salutary reading for
technological forecasters today. It came up with some wise assessments
about agriculture, about synthetic gasoline, and synthetic rubber. But
what is more remarkable is the things it missed. No nuclear energy, no
antibiotics, no jet aircraft, no rocketry nor any use of space, no
computers; certainly no transistors. The committee overlooked the
technologies that actually dominated the second half of the 20th
century. Still less could they predict the social and political
transformations that occurred during that time” (7).

The issue for humanitarian organisations is less that of forecasting,
more the capacity to monitor, analyse and adapt to a global environment
marked by rapid change and complexity. The institutions required to
address effectively rapid technological and political changes and
anticipate potential humanitarian crises are those that are able to cope
with rapid change and complexity.

They are adaptive organisations with the capacity to monitor compelling
trends and the willingness to invest time and energy in understanding
their consequences. Their structures are designed to integrate a
relatively wide range of expertise and they most likely have
accommodated the different languages of the scientist, the political
strategist, the policy planner, the ethicist, and the decision-maker.
They have the courage to unpack power, confront their weaknesses in
accountability and work in partnership.

And organisations, even well-prepared, future-oriented, technically
savvy ones, cannot assume the responsibility to respond to current and
future crisis unilaterally: those affected directly or indirectly must
be genuinely involved in shaping the response if the response is to be
legitimate and effective (8). Above all, adaptive organisations are
externally oriented, more focused upon understanding the environment in
which they operate, than self-referential and self-absorbed non-adaptive
organisations.

The “humanitarian community” of today does not meet these requirements.
It is inherently reactive, more often than not unable to develop
strategies to anticipate, let alone respond, to looming crises. Only at
the beginning of the past decade did humanitarian organisations begin to
anticipate the human consequences of state collapse: the idea of
“complex emergencies” was a belated recognition. Yet a range of
large-scale crises was clearly inevitable, given states’ inability or
unwillingness to provide protection and welfare for their citizens.
Decline of livelihoods, uncontrolled violence and the collapse of
infrastructures presaged mass displacement, starvation and uncontrolled
disease. The warning signs had been visible since the 1970s (East
Pakistan) and were increasingly evident in the 1980s (Sudan), but it was
only when multiple crises (former Yugoslavia, the Horn of Africa) could
no longer be explained away using the conventional language of agencies
that a new perspective emerged.

These organisations also continue to perpetuate the divide between
“natural” and “man-made emergencies”, despite their obvious interactive
dynamics. Even now most organisations responsible for disasters and
emergencies do not focus on the links between natural disasters
(droughts and decline in livelihoods) and their potential political
impact upon the stability of affected societies. That natural disasters
and political emergencies are intertwined is an idea that eludes the
response mechanisms and often the perceptual frames of reference of most
humanitarian organisations.

Another telling example has to do with the relationship between
crisis-threatened communities and humanitarian organisations. Some in
the humanitarian sector have over the past 10 years addressed questions
of their accountability and unequal relationships with crisis-affected
populations (9). At the centre of this is the realisation that relief
workers do exercise power over the lives of such individuals and
communities and that humanitarian power can be abused or mismanaged.
Some agencies insist that the humanitarian ethos should take its moral
cue from those who suffer and survive crises rather than be defined only
through and by the well-intentioned intervener (10). The search for
accountability mechanisms is one of the most important ethical
developments. Yet these developments have failed to permeate mainstream
humanitarian thinking and practices. The security and political
challenges arising from operations in Afghanistan and Iraq have
sidelined the search for greater accountability.

Failure to anticipate the sources of humanitarian crises, to be
strategic in efforts to mitigate as well as to respond to disasters and
emergencies can be explained in several ways. First there is the
organisational culture of much of the humanitarian community; the
community’s underlying ethos, like that of firemen, is to respond to the
most acute immediate challenge. Then there is the competitive aid
environment in which NGOs and United Nations agencies operate. Four
recent independent studies have concluded that increased funds for
humanitarian assistance have led to an unseemly rush for donor
resources, often at the expense of the needs of both the disaster
victims and of the organisations’ integrity (11).

Humanitarian organisations are often guided by the interests of their
donors, who put national interests first when allocating funds (12).
There are no institutional rewards for those organisations that think
strategically about future vulnerabilities. This encourages agencies to
perpetuate the belief that disasters and emergencies are aberrant
phenomena that cannot be anticipated. Organisations, and those that fund
them, are reluctant to invest energy, let alone funds, in activities
thought speculative and theoretical. The perceived inability to forecast
provides everyone with an organisational excuse not to try to think more
strategically.

Organisations supposed to be on the front line of emergency prevention
and response are averse to taking risks. If they did, they might have to
embark on advocacy (warning against the sources of growing
vulnerability) and prescription (bold measures to offset disaster and
emergency agents). Both risk pitting them against funders who ensure
their organisational survival. According to Jean-François Rischard,
World Bank vice-president for Europe, there are at least 20 global
issues that must be resolved quickly if the world is to survive, from
global warming to global regulation of biotechnology. But there is no
pilot in the cockpit. Our present methods of dealing with global
problems are inadequate (13); consider the persistent attempts of the
governments of the US, and other countries, to ignore the threat of
climate change and derail global treaties to reduce the rate of change (14).

NOTES

(1) Anatol Lieven, “Preserver and Destroyer,” London Review of Books, 23
January 2003.

(2) Albert Harrison, Spacefaring: the Human Dimension, University of
California Press, Berkeley, 2001.

(3) Ibid.

(4) Donald Kennedy, “Science Terrorism and Natural Disasters”,
Science,18 January 2002

(5) Martin Rees, Our Final Century: Will the Human Race Survive the 21st
Century, William Heinemann, London, 2003.

(6) Lecture note by T Homer-Dixon, “The Real Danger of the 21st
Century”, part of a series on security sponsored by the US Congress
bipartisan study group, 1 December 2003.

(7) Martin Rees, op cit.

(8) See arguments by Amy Bartholomew and Jennifer Breakspear against
Ignatieff’s position on the war in Iraq: “Human Rights as Swords of
Empire”, in Socialist Register 2004, Leo Panitch and Colin Leys, eds,
Merlin Press, 2003.

(9) See the work of Sphere <;, Humanitarian
Accountability Partnership () and the Active
Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarian
Action <;.

(10) See Hugo Slim, “Doing the Right Thing” in Studies on Emergencies
and Disaster Relief, no 6, Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, 1997.

(11) Development Initiatives, Global Humanitarian Assistance Flows 2003,
May 2003; Larry Minear and Ian Smillie, The Quality of Money: donor
behaviour in humanitarian financing, Humanitarianism and War Project,
Feinstein Famine Centre, Tufts University, April 2003; James Darcy,
“Measuring humanitarian need: A critical review of needs assessment
practice”, Overseas Development Institute, Humanitarian Policy Group,
Feb 2003.

(12) Minear and Smillie, op cit.

(13) Jean-François Rischard, High Noon: 20 Global Problems, 20 Years to
Solve Them, Basic Books, New York, 2002.

(14) So far 124 states, not including the US, have ratified, acceded to
or accepted the Kyoto protocol on climate change.

Original text in English

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